We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website. By continuing to use our website, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. You can change your cookie settings at any time. Find out more

Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $17.95

Format:
Paperback
160 pp.
8" x 5.25"

ISBN-13:
9780195417623

Publication date:
April 2002

Imprint: OUP Canada


A Matter of Style

Writing and Technique

Matthew Clark

Good prose - fiction and non-fiction alike--is part mystery and part technique. Mystery cannot be taught, but technique can, and if it is well taught it can open a window onto the mystery. In &IA Matter of Style Matthew Clark draws on examples from real writers, past and present, to examine the stylistic techniques that lift written language from bare communication to art.

Clark assumes that his readers know the basics of grammar and style. But everyone, even the best writers, can make mistakes. Therefore he begins with a brief look at the problems such as ambiguous pronouns, dangling modifiers, and confusing word order before moving on to the fundamental subject of rhythm. Drawing on his training as a musician, he demonstrates how important it is to write for the ear as well as the eye.

Many style books advocate a clear and simple style, but simplicity is not the only virtue. To show how effective--and varied--ornate style can be, Clark points to examples ranging from Dickens to Beckett. In the process he reveals how adeptly even an "anti-rhetorical" writer like Hemingway can use the techniques of classical rhetoric. He then examines in detail a number of the most useful figures in that tradition. In the following chapters Clark's perspective widens steadily as he moves from the basic principle of parallelism ( and antithesis ) to the complexity of the periodic sentence and on to the level of the paragraph and, finally, the conventions of plot structure in novels.

Throughout, the approach is descriptive rather than prescriptive, and every point is generously illustrated with examples, good and bad, from writers that Clark respects and even loves. An invaluable resource for writers and editors at every level, from the novice to the professional, A Matter of Style will delight readers who want to know more about how the writers they love achieve their effects.

Readership : Advanced undergraduate university writing, creative writing, and editing courses.

Introduction
1. A Few Points of Grammar
2. The Arrangement of Words
3. Rhythm
4. Ornate Style
5. A Few Figures of Speech
6. More Figures
7. Parallelism and Antithesis
8. Periodic Sentences
9. Excess
10. The Paragraph and Beyond
11. The Morpology of the Novel
Notes
Works Cited/Credits
Index

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Matthew Clark is a professor in the Division of Humanities at York University in Toronto. A specialist in classical literature, he is the author of Out of Line: Homeric Composition Beyond the Hexameter (1997) and over 60 other publications ranging from fiction and verse to book reviews, music journalism, and academic articles.

There are no related titles available at this time.

Special Features

  • Contains extensive analysis of actual passages from known writers.
  • Includes a discussion of the theoretical tradition in style from ancient to recent times.