Elbow's distinctive contribution was the believing and doubting game — a discipline of reading in which the reader first tries to believe every claim the text makes, finding the strongest version of its argument, before switching to the doubting game in which every claim is tested against objections. The practice trains a reader to hold multiple perspectives simultaneously, a capacity that conventional argumentative writing instruction often suppresses.
His later work, especially Vernacular Eloquence: What Speech Can Bring to Writing (2012), argued that speech has cognitive and rhetorical resources that formal writing instruction has systematically undervalued. The argument is relevant to the AI moment: language models trained on written prose reproduce the biases of written prose, losing the 'vernacular eloquence' that Elbow identified as a lost resource. The writer who works with AI and also works with her own speaking voice — dictating, reading aloud, writing in the rhythms of talk — maintains access to a cognitive instrument the machine does not possess.
Elbow and Murray were personal friends and professional collaborators over four decades. They appeared together at conferences, contributed to each other's volumes, and influenced each other's thinking in ways neither fully documented. Their shared commitment was to what Murray called 'the writing that only you can do' and Elbow called 'voice' — the irreducibly specific quality of a particular person's engagement with language. Both died before the AI moment made their commitments urgent in new ways; both left bodies of work that turn out to be precisely the frameworks the moment requires.
Freewriting. Sustained, unedited composition that silences the internal critic and produces the raw material of discovery.
Believing and doubting game. A disciplined reading practice that trains readers to hold multiple perspectives, first steelmanning then testing.
Voice. The irreducibly specific quality of a particular person's engagement with language, parallel to but articulated differently from Murray's concept.
Vernacular eloquence. The cognitive and rhetorical resources of speech that formal writing instruction suppresses — resources AI trained on written prose cannot access.
Writing without teachers. The pedagogical claim that writers can develop through structured peer response, without the authoritative teacher as gatekeeper of quality.