CONCEPT
Freewriting
Peter Elbow's companion practice to Murray's
discovery draft: sustained, unedited composition in which the writer
keeps the pen moving no matter what, silencing the internal critic long enough for discovery to occur.
Freewriting is a specific composition technique developed by
Peter Elbow in the early 1970s and described most fully in
Writing Without Teachers (1973) and
Writing With Power (1981). The writer sets a timer —
ten minutes, twenty, sometimes an hour — and writes continuously, refusing to stop, refusing to judge, refusing to revise until the timer runs out. Elbow's insight was that the internal critic — the
voice in the writer's head saying 'this is bad, start over, you don't know what you're talking about' — is the primary obstacle to discovery. Freewriting silences the critic by refusing to give it anything to evaluate. The result is bad writing containing, buried inside the mess, the raw material of discovery.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Freewriting and the discovery draft are closely related but not identical. The discovery draft is a stage in the writing process; freewriting is a technique that can be deployed at any stage. A writer can