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Alliteration: yes or no?

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by sirvaliantbrown, Apr 15, 2009.

  1. UPChip

    UPChip Well-Known Member

    I also have a nasty habit of rhyming headlines. Probably for the same reason.
     
  2. jlee

    jlee Well-Known Member

    So do I. Wherever they went, I wish them the worst.
     
  3. Some Guy

    Some Guy Active Member

    In my opinion, great sportswriting should strive to go above and beyond. It should, to some extent, be poetic.

    Even game stories.

    Can such poetic license be deadly in the wrong hands? Absolutely. Can such devices make our writing too flowery and/or saccharine? You betcha.

    Knowing when and how to use all of the tools at our tool bags is what separates the great ones from the mediocre ones from the out-and-out hacks.

    I would never say never about any sort of literary device. What purpose does alliteration serve the reader? If he's advanced above the level of meathead jocksniffer, maybe it gives him a boner. I don't know.
     
  4. J-School Blue

    J-School Blue Member

    Going to go with the "never say never" consensus here.

    Like any literary device, alliteration has its place. It wouldn't have become over-used if there wasn't a reason writers were using it in the first place. It can very be handy in developing a certain 'rhythm' in a sentence (I don't know how to describe that, exactly, but there's a certain way things 'sound' in my head when I read them, and alliteration sometimes makes them read-sound better).

    Like any literary device, it's also been over-used by hacks to the point where it's gained a certain stigma.
     
  5. ralph russo

    ralph russo Member

    No offense to anyone else, many of whom made good points, but this thread probably could have ended right after this post. Here is your answer, Sir Val.
     
  6. mike311gd

    mike311gd Active Member

    Or always.

    "Always is just as dangerous a word as never." -- Wilson Wilson.
     
  7. Thanks to all for the thoughts. I still want to hear a more substantial WHY, though. Some of you have mentioned rhythm, some of you have mentioned poetry, some of you have mentioned pleasing sounds. Why, though, are consecutive Ps or Qs pleasing or rhythmic? Is the answer simply "They just are"? Again, I run down the list of devices - onomatopoeia, allusion, simile, hyperbole, whatever - and can logically explain why it should be employed, why its use assists the reader or strengthens the writing. Consecutive consonants? Seems like something we've decided we should do for no reason at all.

    I'll quit arguing with you all...guess I remain unconvinced. But thanks for humoring me.
     
  8. Honesty Kills

    Honesty Kills New Member

    The unfortunate truth is that style speaks in vagaries. A writer may use alliteration because to him it sounds better, and when words strung together sound better they tend to resonate with the reader. Alliteration is just one form or function - one way for an individual writer to make his words feel better to him. Thusly, in his or her mind making them better in the minds of the reader.

    Me, when I come across a passage, or a sentence, or a line, or a phrase i like - i tend to repeat it aloud, and maybe even have it carry over into my speech patterns.

    Good words become a part of my life.

    Pardon me if people aren't pleased with my plain way of putting it. Sometimes you have to dumb it down to good words, good lines, and bad words, and bad lines.

    Alliteration is just a curveball, it's just a slant route, it's just a ball-screen: It's not the only way to do something, it's simply a way of getting what you want out of what you're doing. And if it plays to your strength, or it fits your play book, or works into your writing ideology - then that's great.

    But if you as a writer don't believe it enhances your writing - then there is a good chance that putting it in there WOULD come across forced: for the simple reason that you don't agree with it in the first place.

    I've always enjoyed the writers whom most make me feel as if i'm being spoken with. I think it's influenced the conversational tone of my writing. And, because that' how i envision the writing - i like people that have a talent to both write for text AND the ear.

    "Yes or No" in writing doesn't exist. There is only "....for you?"
     
  9. Johnny Dangerously

    Johnny Dangerously Well-Known Member

    Tom (on air): "George Weln is at the Pentagon and reports that the attack, presumably by a lone Libyan pilot, has resulted in a massive movement of U.S. military might."

    Aaron (watching on TV): "A lot of alliteration from anxious anchors placed in powerful posts."

    Aaron (later, to Tom): "Pretty peppy party, isn't it, pal?"



    (From memory and not guaranteed to be 100 percent accurate)
     
  10. Honesty Kills

    Honesty Kills New Member

    Anyway.... to the OP, i hope i was able to explain why i use it, even if i don't necessarily believe that your question is framed correctly....
     
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