Taking a piece of writing and composing it for a new genre is a critical skill for
any writer to have. The purpose is to shape the writing to better fit this new genre and
new audience that comes along with it. A good example of this would be Jon Krakauer
and his book “Into the Wild.” Krakauer was originally a journalist for Outside magazine,
wrote an article about a kid Chris McCandless who cut ties with his life and ran away to
live in the remote wilderness of Alaska. After writing this article he became fascinated
with the story and began collecting more and more information and eventually
transformed this article into a novel. Not just any novel I might add on of the best selling
of all time. So there lies the importance of composing in a new genre, you can take any
piece of your writing and transform it into a completely new genre and outlet. The
purpose of my endeavor will be to take the research project I have been working on all
quarter and make it usable for publication in the student newspaper the Clarion.
Next it’ll be key to make this attract to the same audience but yet still appealing to
the new discourse community I’m attempting to appeal to. The main change I will have
to make within the paper is change the focus more towards DU itself. The Clarion is a
very school focused paper and anything in the opinions section has to directly relate to
DU students and facility. The writing will also have to be shortened and more focused
because of the new genre that it is being placed in. No one wants to read a ten page
newspaper article, not even in the New York Times, so the points will have to become
more direct for the reader. At the same time though the content and message will have to
remain the same in the shortened version so it doesn’t lose it core purpose.
The new genre outfit for my research assignment will be the well-established
Clarion the official newspaper of DU. As a published writer of the newspaper I have a
very good sense of what will need to be transformed in the current piece. Conventions of
this new genre I’m entering will be quite a few things. This piece is will fall into the
opinions section of the paper which means I will need to add much more personal voice
in with the findings. With lines such as “The drinking age is a tired old law in the use and
needs to be lowered.” Establishing a strong voice in this section of the paper is the
success to really drawing in the reader who will either agree or make their own opinion
based on the views you express. Also the word count will have to be drastically reduced
to about 450-500 words opposed to the 3,000 plus it currently is. This part can be tricky
and particularly difficult because many important points and discoveries I’ve made will
have to be left out. I experienced this once already as I transformed a paper written in
WRIT 1122 about the death of the manual transmission into a Clarion article. The
sliming process was difficult mainly because you have to make every sentence count as
much as possible no words can be wasted space on the page. I think the Clarion is a
perfect outlet for my research project because the focus of it is drinking on college
campuses and all my primary research is done at DU. This means the article can really
resonate with the student and hopefully facility that read it because it is directly about the
culture of this campus. Also drinking on this campus and the troubles many students have
with the school is a critical issue across the school. Many feel Campus Police and Student
Life have unfairly treated them for drinking underage. A practice so common in America
as I’ve shown in my research that it feels very unjust that only a few are singled out. So
Hopefully this article can really attract the attention of the student body.
One piece I really wish to highlight from my research is the article, “AN
EXAMINATION OF UNDERAGE DRINKING IN A SAMPLE OF PRIVATE
UNIVERSITY STUDENTS”. This article took a look specifically at small private
universities like DU and studied how drinking effected its student population. It found
that at smaller schools like DU students did a much job of balancing drinking and school
then those students at larger schools like CU Boulder. This is great for my argument in
the article for letting students drink because most can handle the balance. The next article
I want to highlight from the research I’ve already done is “Underage drinking and the
drinking age” by C. T. Main. In this article she really breaks down the flaws of our
current system under the current drinking laws. She looks at how it is actually causing
more problems than good influencing binge drinking and getting good smart kids into
trouble with the law. It’s clearly a very broken system in her eyes and she cites people
like the Dean of Middlebury College in Vermont, John McCardell Jr., wrote a piece in
the New York Times highlighting the stupidity and backwards nature of our current
drinking laws.
One of the new sources I’d like to cite is Dean McCardell’s New York Times
article itself. He talks extensively about his experiences with college students and seeing
some get in trouble for no other reason than for the fact that they had drank a little that
night. He cites how backwards and outdated the current laws are with the rest of the
world and how more harm than good is actually coming of it. He also recognizes that no
matter what college students are going to drink no matter what laws you put in place so
you might as well make it legal for them.
The last thing I would like to cite in the article is information about our own
current Chancellor Rebecca Chopp. She actually signed petition along with 130 college
presidents in 2008 in support of lowering the drinking age. If our own Chancellor
supports this idea shouldn’t it be allowed? Great food for thought amongst the other
information in the article.
Reference:
Main, C. T. (2009). Underage drinking and the drinking age. Policy Review, (155), 33-46.
Retrieved from http://0-
search.proquest.com.bianca.penlib.du.edu/docview/216455758?accountid=14608
Coll, J. E., Draves, P. R., & Major, M. E. (2008). AN EXAMINATION OF UNDERAGE DRINKING
IN A SAMPLE OF PRIVATE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS. College Student Journal, 42(4), 982-985.
Retrieved from http://0-
search.proquest.com.bianca.penlib.du.edu/docview/236588640?accountid=14608
McCardell, J. M., Jr. (2012, June 23). Let Them Drink at 18, With a Learner’s Permit
[Editorial]. New York Times. Retrieved from
http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/05/28/do-we-need-to-redefine-adulthood/let-
them-drink-at-18-with-a-learners-permit
College Presidents Debate Drinking Age. (n.d.). Retrieved from
http://abcnews.go.com/WN/story?id=5612870