Questions and Comments from Our Readers
Dear WB:
Trying to find the origin of the phrase "cup of joe." Have
looked everywhere and no one seems to know ... much speculation but
no definites. Can you help?
Regina LeMasurier
Josephus Daniels (1862–1948) was appointed Secretary of the
U.S. Navy by President Woodrow Wilson in 1913. Among his numerous
reforms of the Navy was the abolition of the officers’ wine mess.
From that time on, the strongest drink aboard navy ships was coffee
and over the years, a cup of coffee became known as "a cup of Joe."

S. D. Liddiard
Origins Guy
***
Dear WB:
I checked out your site for the first time and was immediately
aggravated by your feature subtitled "In Defence of Non-Literary
Writing" (Winter 2000–2001). Granted all writers have something
in common — they write. There are good writers and there are bad
writers of all kinds. But I do not accept the postulate that would
lead to considering a technical manual equivalent to a Shakespeare
sonnet or a Michael Ondaatje novel. There is a difference, one is
literature — the other is not.
The pseudo-egalitarism of those who suggest there is no
difference, or no way to tell the difference between literary
writing and non-literary writing are misguided. It is dead easy. And
on top of this some literature is better than other literature,
though it may take some time to tell. The fashionable pose that
everything must be the same to be fair is death to the imagination
and to civilization. Literary writing, like life, is not fair. It is
not an egalitarian enterprise. It’s also damn hard work most of
the time, fun some of the time and pays diddly-squat. I’d suggest
there is never going to be a big rush to get into the sanctified
literary writing field from other forms of writing that usually pay
a whole lot better. Literary writers are often quite envious of the
earnings of the non-literary writers — but the thing is, every
writer can make those choices. The glory factor is quite over-rated
by the author of the piece, and some of the prejudice seems to be
paranoia. But lets get back to choices again. They go beyond Glory
or Paycheque. The intention of a literary writer is to make the best
work of art that he can — good enough to provide the reader with a
tranformative experience; one in which the reader is changed, or
brought to consider life’s big questions (i.e., what is good, what
is evil?) or the reader will see the world differently as a result
of reading the work. This is the intention of the best of literary
writing — remember that I also suggest there is good and bad
literary writing; and there is, often because the writers fail to
make good on their intentions; or have become so cynical they have
stopped trying.
This is much longer than I intended. Just wanted to say that
literary writing IS better than non-literary writing and it’s easy
to tell the difference.
Victor Jerrett Enns, literary writer, non-literary writer, and
magazine editor
I appreciate your comments on my article; however, at no point
did I suggest that a technical manual is equivalent to a
Shakespearean sonnet, nor does the thesis of my article logically
extend to this conclusion. I argued that there is a hierarchy of
writers and writing that is sustained by those inside and outside of
the writing trade. Statements such as yours that "literary writing
IS better than non-literary writing" support my thesis. I did not
infer that the alternative to this hierarchy is indiscriminate
egalitarianism. There is certainly a difference between literary and
non-literary writing, and, as you say, it is easy to distinguish
between the two. My contention is that literary and non-literary
writers apply their skills to different ends and fulfill different
needs. As such, excellence in literary and non-literary pursuits
must be measured separately — not in relationship to each other. I
agree that there are good and bad writers of all kinds. Let them be
judged in accordance with their ability to meet and exceed their
objectives, and not against the existing continuum topped by
supposed "real" Writers.
Lorie Boucher
Contributing Editor
Writer’s Block
***
Dear WB:
I logged onto your Web site this morning and got a real treat.
As a writer with almost 20 years in the computer science and
engineering fields, I was intrigued by Lorie Boucher’s article on
the snobbery of the literary toward technical writers.
There is also a reverse snobbery. Technical writers who aspire to
literary fame but don’t take their professional efforts as
seriously are referred to as "artistes."
I suspect that most of the literary snobbery comes not from those
who produce novels, short stories, and poems, but from those who
aspire to be writers but never seem to get published.
Terry Walbert
Senior Technical Writer
Teledyne Energy Systems
|