This is the blog of the Arts Reviewing and Reporting Class Spring 2018 at the University of San Francisco. As Oscar Wilde wrote, “To the critic, the work of art is simply a suggestion for a new work of his own.”
Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Review
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Monday, August 18, 2014
Those Things in My Ears
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J. Michael Robertson directs the journalism program in the Department of Media Studies at the University of San Francisco. He was an editor/staff writer at the San Francisco Chronicle, 1980-1991, and Atlanta Magazine, 1976-1980. He received a Ph.D. in English Literature from Duke University in 1972.
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Building Vocabulary
Reviewing Books
Reviewing Drama
Reviewing the Fine Arts
Reviewing Restaurants
A More Academic Approach
Big Critics
Reviewing Music
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Blog Archive
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2014
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August
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- Ian Port, Late of the SF Weekly, Sums Up the Local...
- My 'Smart' Restaurant Review
- Irony is a Useful Tool. Here a Cartoonist Explains...
- Snark: I Sneer, Therefore I Am
- Checklist for the Restaurant Review
- The 50 dorkiest songs you secretly love
- Last Year's 19 Most Scathing Restaurant Reviews
- The Bechdel Test: or Why Old Actors Get the Girl a...
- It's Gold Coins That Keep People Reading, Not Gold...
- A Meal Can Have a Purpose
- When You Write Your Leads, Think of Me and Remembe...
- An Actual Arts Journalism Job
- In Reviewing, the Problem of Shared Vocabulary, of...
- Simpsons 'Greatest Show in TV History' - FXX Runs ...
- How Netflix is Turning Us into Puppets
- Shared Taste in Music Predicts Sexual Attraction
- Those Things in My Ears
- Why "Gravity Falls"?
- Fasthion website removes post amid plagiarism charge
- Reviewing Using a Checklist? Call it Cookie Cutter...
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August
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