Law in Contemporary Society

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BrandonNesfieldFirstEssay 3 - 10 Mar 2016 - Main.EbenMoglen
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-- By BrandonNesfield - 19 Feb 2016
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  I can’t attribute with any certainty the extent to which nature, rather than nurture, or vice versa, influenced the risk aversion that pushes me toward a corporate career that I must rationalize or justify with talk of “financial stability” and the thoughts of satiating my licentious appetites while developing new ones. The cold fire that fuels one’s dissent into safety and security at the expense of creativity and risk still burns within me—it would be disingenuous to suggest otherwise. I’d like to think that I can rediscover the type of passion that emboldens the career frontiersman who eschews the warmth of security blankets to brave the cold, empty, and infinite fields of possibility.
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This seems to have been a good draft for clearing the building site. You've explained an ambivalence, documented an internal conflict. But even though the pronoun most in use is "I," the draft in the end has as its subject what the sociologist David Riesman famously called "other-direction," in his book The Lonely Crowd. We see that others' attitudes (about work, about money, about "licentiousness") are defining an identity in which life choices are presented as outcomes of a process you do not fully inhabit, and which is "yours" only in the sense that others have created it in you. The next draft of the essay is the one in which, having allowed those voices their way, the "inner-directed" person who is engaged in learning about the world and himself speaks not about an "I" manufactured from the views, preferences, and obsessions of others, but from the interior uncertainties those powers usually silence.

Your writing here is capable, but too complex to be forceful. Simplify next time around. Use shorter sentences. Avoid "experiential schooling in South African history," "brilliantly burning dreams" and so on. You saw a burned child and wanted to help the wretched of the earth. You went back to Duke and reassumed the identity and values of pampered rich people whose consumption is more important to them than others' misery. You confronted status anxiety, and it was stronger than you were. These are good things to write about, but the more simply the more effectively. This is merely prologue: you need to reserve deeper words for the deeper process of forgetting all that and listening intently to who you are inside these days.

 
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Revision 3r3 - 10 Mar 2016 - 12:56:50 - EbenMoglen
Revision 2r2 - 25 Feb 2016 - 15:50:26 - BrandonNesfield
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