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Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
LESSON
41
WRITING
THE ARTICLE
There
are four elements of a good
article encompassing the write-up
from the beginning to the end
which
are primarily used for
keeping readers' attention intact, as
these help in making your
article
interesting.
Four
elements
Following
four elements are aimed at
getting the readers' attention, and make
them take interest in the
write-up
and want to reader the
article.
·
What
the article is about?
A
reader must immediately get an
idea about the subject of the article,
and it must be clear
immediately
in the few initial lines, if
not in the first two to three
lines.
·
How
specifically stated is the subject of
the article?
There
should not be an ambiguity
about the subject of the article, as it
must clear for the reader
to
understand
it as well. Clarity in the writer's
mind must be clarity for the
reader too. It is always
a
two-way
traffic.
·
Is
there a subjective
ingredient?
Every
subject being discussed must have
tangible material for the
readers. Mere statements do
not
make
good articles, rather the arguments must
be well-supported by facts and
figures.
Various
parts of article
1.
The lead or the
Intro:
Articles'
jumping `point of view' is to be done in
one or two initial paragraphs, as the
lead is built into
the
very
first one or more paragraphs is the bait
that hooks bother reader and
editor into reading on into
the
story.
A good lead is the best
selling tool.
Every
professional magazine writer
can pick up an article and
know instinctively. "That's a great
lead!"
or
"Boy! What washout of a lead!"
Most of the great writers have been
found writing the
lead
instinctively,
while giving a little room
to deliberate effort though an
effort can make a lead
better
certainly.
It
is always good that one
brings the subject to life immediately,
and the easiest way to get the
reader
involved
in the subject. There are various
approaches to make it so.
Some writers lead off
with an
anecdote,
while choosing the most dramatic examples
are uncovered by research.
Secondly
the formula "It's happened to
somebody" - "it could happen to you" is
also used to
intrigue,
excite
or startle the reader, besides incorporating questions
into the lead.
Readers,
editors and even writers
like to puzzle over paradoxes of the
all kinds. These too make
an
intriguing
leads. Besides using of
paradoxes, writers used both
questions and startling statements to
hook
his
readers into wanting to know
more.
A
really powerful quote can
also make an exciting, intriguing
article lead.
Another
way of writing a good lead
is coming up with an appeal to the readers'
emotions.
2.
The topic sentence
It
is important to let readers
know early just what
you plan to talk about in
your article so they do
not
expect
something more or something different from
what you are prepared to
deliver. Disappointed
reader
lead
of loss of readers. The place to
announce your topic is in
your topic sentence, which
always comes
right
after the lead.
The
topic sentence can be a
phrase or may have several sentences
long. It can be very simple
and obvious,
or
can be disguised in a quote, question or
statistic. It may be tactfully and
smoothly sewn onto the end
of
the
lead, stand by itself or
begin the next paragraph.
137
Feature
and Column Writing MCM 514
VU
The
focus or objective parameter is always
part of the topic sentence,
while the slant or subjective
approach
your own point of view
about the topic not
written directly, but
implied or between the lines.
This
is how it is revealed. The
`Slant' is what you are
writing about or how you
write about it. It is
author's
point of view
basically.
3.
Main body
To
comprehend fully how you get
meat onto the body of an
article Long section between the
beginning
and
end you must understand the techniques
that every professional
writer learns to use.
When
it comes to writing the body, there is no
choice for the writer: The slant
must pervade in every
paragraph.
A
writer brings in anecdotes,
quotes, and exposition (data supporting
your point of view) to fill
the main
body,
but these are always
relevant to the subject, and nothing is
divorced from the idea,
which is being
considered
for writing.
Pros
and cons? Moderate or extreme?
Reasoned or impassioned? These questions
should be answered by
the
writer himself, whereas most
of the writers do not often
tell what will be the
slant.
4.
Ending
When
you have said everything, there is to
say, it not enough simply to
stop writing. When the
time
comes
to an end your article, it is important
to create a proper ending,
which is the fourth
essential
element
in a magazine article.
The
ending leaves readers
feeling that the article has
come to a successful, satisfying
conclusion. This is
not
to say that you must
save your conclusion about
your subject for the ending.
The general pros and
cons
of the topic are most often
assessed within the focus
and slant messages of the topic
paragraph.
Hence
the ending must impart an impression to
the reader that the article
has come to an end, successfully
and
satisfyingly.
The
ending is a reiteration, summation, and even in
some cases a statement that
there is more to be
learned
or to be said than the reader
has been told. End it
like they way you
want to remain in readers'
mind!
138
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