*
Selected List of Literary Gear Shift Moves
Created by Rebecca McClanahan
. . . narrate, describe, record, persuade, quote, document, ask a question, argue, inform, make a scene, weave, collide, list, sidewind, sidestep, skip a step, inventory, time travel, tell a tale within a tale, interview, meditate, speculate, ruminate, intrude, interrupt, deconstruct, reconstruct, reveal, talk back to an earlier self, talk back to your present self, interrogate, extrapolate, characterize, generalize, theorize, contextualize, summarize, rhapsodize, dramatize, imagine, rant, echo a word or phrase or sentence, use camera or editing moves (pull back for big view, zoom in for close-up, dissolve, cut, stop action, splice together, split screen, reverse, flip image, colorize, speed up or slow down, replay), employ negative space (What lies outside the frame of the subject? What is being omitted? What didn’t happen? What might have, should have, would have if only…), expand, shrink down, rewrite history, say it again in a different voice or a different rhythm, rewrite same scene in a different way, get inside characters’ thoughts, flesh out the bones, remove the bones so we see only the skeleton of the subject, don a mask, remove the mask you have worn, create or discover metaphor, mix a metaphor, switch pronouns (I, you, she, we, etc.), switch tenses, change tone, change audience, rewrite sentences in a different musical key (open vs. closed syllables, etc.), change rhythm of sentences, return to earlier statement and overturn it, create a visual disturbance on the page, mute one or more senses to create a description employing the remaining senses, start the piece over several times until you exhaust your original intent and find a more complex one…
Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteLove this!
ReplyDeleteI challenged my graduate students to write a 300 word experiment in which they employed as many of these shifts as possible and used footnotes to identify them (the record was 15). I don't usually use prompts, but this turned out to be an incredibly effective exercise. Every student's writing experienced a significant shift in voice, rhythm, form, and playfulness. Thanks for posting and thanks to Rebecca McClanahan.
ReplyDeleteSweet. That does sound intensely fun!
ReplyDelete