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Pages:
4 pages/≈1100 words
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Style:
MLA
Subject:
Literature & Language
Type:
Essay
Language:
English (U.S.)
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Topic:

So Long a Letter Revision. Literature & Language Essay

Essay Instructions:

For extra credit, you can revise a response paper that you've turned in. Revision is not copy-editing for grammatical errors though you may be doing that as a part of revision. Revision is substantially grappling with the core components of writing and making rhetorical choices towards improving your writing by addressing issues like the argument, organization, sentence-level clarity, and paragraph cohesion. You must:
Highlight everything that you have changed in the new version. You should expect to revise 35-40% of your paper.
Write a 2-page reflective letter on how your experience at the writing center and the revision process helped you understand or learn something about your writing.
basically you could revise the first two page of the response, then write two pages of the reflective letter on revision.

Essay Sample Content Preview:

Student Last Name 1
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“The empty promises of Marie Kondo”: Edited Response
In “The empty promises of Marie Kondo and the craze for minimalism,” adapted from The Longing for Less: Living with Minimalism, Kyle Chayka discusses a global, emerging pattern: minimalism. The pattern, or concept, informed by a long lineage of practitioners (e.g. Marie Kondo, a Japanese cleaning guru whose minimalism books and courses are bestsellers), is about keeping less possessions to “spark joy” in one’s life. By getting rid of one’s “unnecessary stuff, so minimalism goes, clutter is not only eliminated but, more importantly, one gains a new perspective of space – and life – at a home no longer full of extravagance or, rather, show of extravagance. The central argument in “The empty promises of Marie Kondo” is less about minimalism per se. Instead, Chayka puts under scrutiny evolving conceptualizations of minimalism as a function of happiness. Specifically, Chayka questions current minimalism as less a matter of personal persuasion informed by actual life choices and more as a necessity, or a frugality of sorts, mandated by radical changes in recent years informed by economic scarcity.
The article starts off by an interesting story of Sonrisa Andersen. A minimalist convert, Andersen has experienced similar accumulation addictions her mother when through after divorce and on. The story appears, at face value, to praise minimalist as a radical force of change and, more importantly, as a sure way for happiness and peace of mind. Indeed, Chayka goes on to praise minimalism, still in face value, by, for instance, showing benefits of minimalism such
Student Last Name 2
as saving and, not least, going against mainstream by liking one has, not seeking more only to
please everyone but oneself. More, Chayka continues by spending several paragraphs
explicating negativity and, no less, unhappiness associated with (hyper)consumerism. Further,
goes on Chayka, consumerism, or materialism, has destroyed environment (literally) by an
excessive drive to possess and accumulate. In contrast, counters Chayka, minimalism is a
personal choice everyone could make. This is where Chayka shifts to question minimalism now
more critically and away from face value endorsement.
For acolytes, argues Chayka, minimalism has become a brand. Like Kondo, followers are adopting minimalism less out of personal persuasions and more out of a fascination of a new cool craze made more acceptable and mainstream by changing economic realities. Now, many more people are freelancers compared to salaried employees. Financial stability, let alone wealth, is now a dream of millions and realized less in physical assets and possessions and more in equity and stock, usually in international tax havens. The prohibition of (easily) buying more online using credit cards and getting deeper into debt has made minimalism, asserts Chayka, a panacea to balance out needs for coolness (by adopting latest craze) and needs for respectability (by living minimal at affordable cost). Thus, minimalism, now a commodity, shifts from an all too perfect concept of pers...
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