ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Writing Elements and Process Videos 47 videos
Choosing a topic can be extremely difficult—even more difficult than deciding which Ben & Jerry's flavor to try next. No, scratch that. Nothing w...
No busque una palabra negativa. Sino una palabra que pueda ser positiva. Tales son "no se caiga", " no molestes a tus maestros" "no se coma toda...
Reading repetitive essays can bore teachers to death because the essays repeat the same ideas repetitively. You don’t want your teacher to get bo...
Can My Essay Be in First Person? 438 Views
Share It!
Description:
Well, if you're crafting a formal exposé on the accomplishments of Abraham Lincoln, you probably shouldn't use first-person pronouns. You don't really belong there. However, writing about your latest hike up Mt. Everest might be difficult without a few I's and me's.
Transcript
- 00:07
Can My Essay Be in First Person? a la Shmoop. So you’re writing an essay and you have
- 00:13
something exciting to say. Don’t you always?
- 00:16
Or worse, you’re writing a boring essay and you need to spice it up a bit.
- 00:21
Is it okay to use the first-person pronouns I or me when writing an essay? It is your
- 00:28
essay, after all…
Full Transcript
- 00:29
The short answer is… it depends on the essay.
- 00:35
The slightly longer answer is… it depends on the essay… and on your teacher.
- 00:41
Let’s talk about essays first.
- 00:43
There are certain essays where it’s more appropriate to use the first-person pronoun…
- 00:47
…just like there are some places where it’s more appropriate to wear a rainbow bobble
- 00:51
hat.
- 00:52
If you’re writing a personal narrative, you should be using the first person pronoun.
- 00:56
You’re the star of that show. You should be I-ing and Me-ing that essay to death.
- 01:04
Any writing genre that involves the writer’s own taste, recollections, or feelings can
- 01:08
absolutely use first person.
- 01:10
Now let’s talk about teachers.
- 01:13
You may have heard from teachers that the first person is never appropriate in an essay.
- 01:18
Those teachers are wrong.
- 01:20
However, if your teacher says you shouldn’t use the first-person pronoun, don’t do it.
- 01:25
You can rework it later into what you ideally envisioned from the start… versus something
- 01:29
that gets a good grade… for that quirky online journal with the unusual name that
- 01:34
you love.
- 01:35
If they leave it up to your discretion, well, that’s when things get complicated.
- 01:40
In critical, expository, or research papers, the first-person can be used like a spice
- 01:46
for a stew.
- 01:47
If you are writing about, say, Tom Sawyer getting kids to whitewash that fence… an
- 01:51
essay that has been written more times than there are people on the planet… you’re
- 01:55
going to want to jazz it up a bit.
- 01:58
Include a personal anecdote. An anecdote is a great way to demonstrate reading comprehension.
- 02:03
You’re showing that you really understand what Tom Sawyer did and why he did it.
- 02:08
You’re also showing yourself to be kind of a manipulative jerk if you identify with
- 02:12
him, but whatever. Own that.
- 02:17
Just make sure the paper isn’t about you, you, you.
- 02:20
Yes, you’re awesome, but your critical essay isn’t the place to talk about yourself.
- 02:25
So, if you’re writing a personal essay, go for it. First-person all over the place.
- 02:30
You can liberally use the first-person when you’re writing a review that expresses your
- 02:33
personal opinion.
- 02:34
You can sparingly use the first-person in critical, research, or expository writing.
- 02:40
But if your teacher says no, just don’t do it.
- 02:43
Standing under the spotlight for too long burns.
- 02:46
Even if you’re wearing a rainbow bobble hat.
Related Videos
This video offers some rules of thumb for writing a good introduction. It covers everything from tone (confidence is key!) to phrases and clichés...
Even the best essays can go wrong in the conclusion—this video covers what not to do in a conclusion to help avoid any essay-ending problems. The...
You want to be as picky with your citations as Goldilocks was with her porridge—not too many, not too few... juuust right. You want to prove that...
Want even more deets on wordiness? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.
Want even more deets on Run-on Sentences? Click here to review. Or take a look at our entire grammar section for all the goods.