DocumentCode
1332573
Title
Lessons from Benjamin Franklin, America´s first great technical writer
Author
Brogan, John A.
Author_Institution
Information Systems and Research Div., Philco Corp., Philadelphia, Pa.
Volume
8
Issue
1
fYear
1965
fDate
6/1/1965 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
3
Lastpage
7
Abstract
Benjamin Franklin acquired the qualities of style that have given him the title “America´s first great technical writer” through self-study of the style of others, notably Addison. Franklin rewrote Addison´s Spectator papers from notes, then compared his imitation with the original to see where he had failed to be as concise and readable. Other great writers have testified to the efficacy of this kind of imitation as an exercise in style improvement, and the technical writer of today will find it still one of the best ways to attain clarity and fullness of expression.
Keywords
Art; Crystals; Earth; Electron tubes; Protons; Speech; Writing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Engineering Writing and Speech, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9405
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TEWS.1965.6594555
Filename
6594555
Link To Document