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    1. more public texts

      Q3. Kaitlin Breuchel Ball and Loewe’s ideas connect well with “Only Geniuses Can Be Writers.” Both challenge the belief that writing is something only a few talented people can do. They remind us that everyone can be a writer and that creativity shows up in many different kinds of writing, not just in what’s seen as “artistic.”

    2. For more information about the development of creative writing

      Q4. Kaitlin Breuchel In concluding their argument, Ball and Loewe assert that there is creativity in all writing, and not just what we term "creative writing." They argue that setting a definition for creativity to be used in some forms of writing makes people imagine and thought that enter ordinary writing. From what I have read, I view "creative writing" differently i think it cannot just be referring to poetry or fiction but any form of writing where a person is deciding, communicating ideas, and speaking with others.

    3. writing is marked off as creative while others are de-valued.

      Q1. Kaitlin Breuchel I have authored styles like academic reports and technical reports, which Cheryl E. Ball and Drew M. Loewe have termed weaker in terms of creativity. I used creativity in organizing arguments, picking examples, and crafting my papers yet persuasive explanations in an effort to make complex ideas comprehensible and persuasive.

    4. thinking of themselves as writers

      Q2. Kaitlin Breuchel I'd identify more with being a writer because I like to think about how to communicate my ideas and engage other individuals with them. Most individuals are okay with labeling themselves as readers because reading is natural and simple it's something that we all do every single day without even thinking about it. Writing, is intimidating since people seem to think that it needs to be perfect or "creative." I think that expectation makes a lot of people wonder if they are really writers, even though everyone writes in some capacity.