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Prenez votre cerveau en compte les dates (pour améliorer votre écriture)

Michel Archambault
juillet 25, 2024 | 4 lire la lecture

« Lisez, lisez, lisez », proclamait William Faulkner. « Lisez tout : les livres de pacotille, les classiques, bons et mauvais, et voyez comment ils s'y prennent, comme le charpentier qui travaille comme apprenti et étudie le maître. Lisez ! Vous l'assimilerez. Puis écrivez. »

William Faulkner a écrit de nombreux romans et nouvelles primés, et en 1949, ses prouesses littéraires ont été récompensées par le prix Nobel de littérature. Cet homme maîtrisait manifestement son art et soulignait l'importance de consommer l'art avant de le créer.

Qui sommes-nous pour être en désaccord ?

Explorons cette technique de création d'inspiration pour vous-même, peu importe ce que pensent les muses .

Soyez un lecteur, puis un écrivain

Être lecteur est essentiel à l'écriture. Lire les œuvres d'autrui permet de s'immerger dans leurs approches et d'élargir ses horizons.

Lisez des ouvrages dans votre genre ou domaine d'expertise, et même au-delà. Cela vous permettra non seulement de découvrir des auteurs qui excellent dans votre domaine, mais aussi de découvrir un univers d'écriture totalement différent, d'élargir votre point de vue (littéralement !) et de tester de nouvelles techniques.

« Si vous n'avez pas le temps de lire, vous n'avez pas le temps (ni les outils) d'écrire. C'est aussi simple que ça », a déclaré un jour Stephen King, le « Roi de l'horreur ».

Remarquez-vous cette mention du manque d'« outils » ? Cette formulation est révélatrice. King sous-entend que les outils dont nous avons besoin pour écrire vont bien au-delà de la grammaire et de l'orthographe.

En réalité, Stephen King a consacré beaucoup de temps à explorer d'autres genres. Ceux qui ne le connaissent que par ses œuvres grand public seront peut-être surpris d'apprendre qu'il a également étendu son champ d'expression littéraire aux univers du polar, de la science-fiction et de la fantasy.

Et cette exploration ne devrait pas se limiter à la littérature.

Offrez-vous un rendez-vous avec un artiste

Si la lecture est un excellent moyen d'améliorer son écriture, les écrivains ne se limitent pas aux mots lorsqu'ils cherchent l'inspiration. S'exposer à différents supports artistiques peut stimuler la créativité et offrir une inspiration sans fin.

Julia Cameron, auteure de The Artist's Way , a introduit le concept populaire des « rendez-vous d'artistes ». Elle explique cette idée comme une activité ou une excursion en solo pour stimuler l'imagination.

En nous immergeant dans diverses formes d’art et expériences uniques, nous créons une vision du monde plus riche et acquérons des connaissances qui peuvent affecter nos processus d’écriture de la meilleure façon possible.

Cameron suggère de vous offrir un véritable rendez-vous. Laissez derrière vous votre partenaire, votre ami et même votre chien : c'est un événement pour vous et votre cerveau.

Ne vous concentrez pas sur la productivité, mais plutôt sur un superbe sens du jeu.

Plus facile à dire qu'à faire dans notre monde actuel obsédé par la productivité, n'est-ce pas ? C'est pourquoi Cameron suggère de considérer cela comme un rendez-vous. Planifiez un rendez-vous avec un artiste une fois par semaine et tenez-vous-y.

Ne vous levez pas.

Offrez-vous un rendez-vous. Laissez derrière vous votre partenaire, votre ami et même votre chien : c'est un événement pour vous et votre cerveau.

Comment alimenter votre créativité

Si l'idée de consommer de l'art pour trouver l'inspiration vous semble prometteuse, mais que vous avez besoin d'aide pour savoir par où commencer, nous pouvons vous aider. Outre la lecture, vous pouvez explorer les arts visuels, les arts du spectacle, le cinéma et la télévision, les médias numériques, la musique et même la nature.

Voici quelques idées pour commencer votre voyage inspirant :

  • Lisez tout et n’importe quoi : faites une pause dans vos lectures habituelles et explorez des genres que vous n’envisageriez pas habituellement.
  • Explorez l’histoire : Trouvez l’inspiration dans les histoires du passé dans les musées d’histoire et les associations historiques de votre région.
  • Assistez à un événement en direct : regardez un concert, une pièce de théâtre ou une comédie musicale en personne pour découvrir différentes méthodes de narration.
  • Regardez des films et séries primés : découvrez comment les scénaristes relèvent des défis communs tels que le développement des personnages et des dialogues. Allez voir un film au cinéma pour un rendez-vous inoubliable.
  • Promenez-vous dans un musée d'art : visitez un musée d'art local et promenez-vous sans plan ni guide.
  • Jouez à un jeu vidéo : oui, ça compte ! Découvrez comment les développeurs de jeux racontent des histoires et plongent les joueurs dans d'autres mondes.
  • Apprenez des autres : lisez les conseils d’autres écrivains et créatifs, comme ici sur le blog Freewrite .
  • Changez de musique : Écoutez un genre musical différent, découvrez les tendances ou découvrez des classiques qui sortent de votre zone de confort. Dansez sur différents genres sans vous juger sur la façon dont la musique vous émousse.
  • Plongez dans la nature : partez en promenade ou voyagez dans un nouvel endroit. Observez les couleurs, les textures et les créatures qui peuplent ce nouvel endroit.
  • Mangez dans un nouveau restaurant : commandez quelque chose que vous n'avez jamais mangé auparavant et mangez lentement, en décrivant chaque nouveau goût à vous-même.

En d’autres termes : Consommez et expérimentez ce qui vous appelle.

Vous seul saurez ce qui stimule votre créativité en tant qu’écrivain, et la meilleure façon de commencer est d’expérimenter.

décembre 30, 2025 3 lire la lecture

It’s Freewrite’s favorite time of year. When dictionaries around the world examine language use of the previous year and select a “Word of the Year.”

Of course, there are many different dictionaries in use in the English language, and they all have different ideas about what word was the most influential or saw the most growth in the previous year. They individually review new slang and culturally relevant vocabulary, examine spikes or dips in usage, and pour over internet trend data.

Let’s see what some of the biggest dictionaries decided for 2025. And read to the end for a chance to submit your own Word of the Year — and win a Freewrite gift card.

[SUBMIT YOUR WORD OF THE YEAR]


Merriam-Webster: "slop"

Merriam-Webster chose "slop" as its Word of the Year for 2025 to describe "all that stuff dumped on our screens, captured in just four letters."

The dictionary lists "absurd videos, off-kilter advertising images, cheesy propaganda, fake news that looks pretty real, junky AI-written books, 'workslop' reports that waste coworkers’ time … and lots of talking cats" as examples of slop.

The original sense of the word "slop" from the 1700s was “soft mud” and eventually evolved to mean "food waste" and "rubbish." 2025 linked the term to AI, and the rest is history.

Honorable mentions: conclave, gerrymander, touch grass, performative, tariff, 67.

Dictionary.com: "67"

The team at Dictionary.com likes to pick a word that serves as “a linguistic time capsule, reflecting social trends and global events that defined the year.”

For 2025, they decided that “word” was actually a number. Or two numbers, to be exact.

If you’re an old, like me, and don’t know many school-age children, you may not have heard “67” in use. (Note that this is not “sixty-seven,” but “six, seven.”)

Dictionary.com claims the origin of “67” is a song called “Doot Doot (6 7)” by Skrilla, quickly made infamous by viral TikTok videos, most notably featuring a child who will for the rest of his life be known as the “6-7 Kid.” But according to my nine-year-old cousin, the origins of something so mystical can’t ever truly be known.

(My third grade expert also demonstrated the accompanying signature hand gesture, where you place both hands palms up and alternately move up and down.)

And if you happen to find yourself in a fourth-grade classroom, watch your mouth, because there’s a good chance this term has been banned for the teacher’s sanity.

Annoyed yet? Don’t be. As Dictionary.com points out, 6-7 is a rather delightful example at how fast language can develop as a new generation joins the conversation.

Dictionary.com honorable mentions: agentic, aura farming, broligarchy, clanker, Gen Z stare, kiss cam, overtourism, tariff, tradwife.

Oxford Dictionary: "rage bait"

With input from more than 30,000 users and expert analysis, Oxford Dictionary chose "rage bait" for their word of the year.

Specifically, the dictionary pointed to 2025’s news cycle, online manipulation tactics, and growing awareness of where we spend our time and attention online.

While closely paralleling its etymological cousin "clickbait," rage bait more specifically denotes content that evokes anger, discord, or polarization.

Oxford's experts report that use of the term has tripled in the last 12 months.

Oxford Dictionary's honorable mentions:aura farming, biohack.

Cambridge Dictionary: "parasocial"

The Cambridge Dictionary examined a sustained trend of increased searches to choose "parasocial" as its Word of the Year.

Believe it or not, this term was coined by sociologists in 1956, combining “social” with the Greek-derived prefix para-, which in this case means “similar to or parallel to, but separate from.”

But interest in and use of the term exploded this year, finally moving from a mainly academic context to the mainstream.

Cambridge Dictionary's honorable mentions: slop, delulu, skibidi, tradwife

Freewrite: TBD

This year, the Freewrite Fam is picking our own Word of the Year.

Click below to submit what you think the Word of 2025 should be, and we'll pick one submission to receive a Freewrite gift card.

[SUBMIT HERE] 

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Sources

décembre 18, 2025 6 lire la lecture

Que peuvent apprendre les lettres personnelles de Jane Austen aux écrivains ?

décembre 10, 2025 6 lire la lecture

Singer-songwriter Abner James finds his creativity in the quiet freedom of analog tools. Learn how his creative process transcends different media.

Abner James went to school for film directing. But the success of the band he and his brother formed together, Eighty Ninety, knocked him onto a different trajectory.

The band has accrued more than 40 million streams since the release of their debut EP “Elizabeth," and their work was even co-signed by Taylor Swift when the singer added Eighty Ninety to her playlist "Songs Taylor Loves.”

Now, Abner is returning to long-form writing in addition to songwriting, and with a change in media comes an examination of the creative process. We sat down to chat about what's the same — and what's different. 

ANNIE COSBY: Tell us about your songwriting process.

ABNER JAMES: The way I tend to write my songs is hunched over a guitar and just seeing what comes. Sounds become words become shapes. It's a very physical process that is really about turning my brain off.

And one of the things that occurred to me when I was traveling, actually, was that I would love to be able to do that but from a writing perspective. What would happen if I sat down and approached writing in the same way that I approached music? In a more intuitive and free-form kind of way? What would that dig up?

AC: That's basically the ethos of Freewrite.

AJ: Yes. We had just put out a record, and I was thinking about how to get into writing for the next one. It occurred to me that regardless of how I started, I always finished on a screen. And I wondered: what's the acoustic guitar version of writing?

Where there's not blue light hitting me in the face. Even if I'm using my Notes app, it's the same thing. It really gets me into a different mindset.

 "I wondered: what's the acoustic guitar version of writing?"

I grew up playing piano. That was my first instrument. And I found an old typewriter at a thrift store, and I love it. It actually reminded me a lot of playing piano, the kind of physical, the feeling of it. And it was really fun, but pretty impractical, especially because I travel a fair amount.

And so I wondered, is there such a thing as a digital typewriter? And I googled it, and I found Freewrite.

AC: What about Freewrite helps you write?

AJ:I think, pragmatically, just the E Ink screen is a huge deal, because it doesn't exhaust me in the same way. And the idea of having a tool specifically set aside for the process is appealing in an aesthetic way but also a mental-emotional way. When it comes out, it's kind of like ... It's like having an office you work out of. It's just for that.

"The way I tend to write my songs is hunched over a guitar and just seeing what comes. Sounds become words become shapes. It's a very physical process that is really about turning my brain off."

And all of the pragmatic limitations — like you're not getting texts on it, and you're not doing all that stuff on the internet — that's really helpful, too. But just having the mindset....

When I pick up a guitar, or I sit down at the piano, it very much puts me into that space. Having a tool just for words does the same thing. I find that to be really cool and inspiring.

"When I pick up a guitar, or I sit down at the piano, it very much puts me into that space. Having a tool just for words does the same thing."

AC: So mentally it gets you ready for writing.

AJ: Yeah, and also, when you write a Microsoft Word, it looks so finished that it's hard to keep going. If every time I strummed a chord, I was hearing it back, mixed and mastered and produced...?

It's hard to stay in that space when I'm seeing it fully written out and formatted in, like, Times New Roman, looking all seriously back at me.

AC: I get that. I have terrible instincts to edit stuff over and over again and never finish a story.

AJ:  Also, the way you just open it and it's ready to go. So you don't have the stages of the computer turning on, that kind of puts this pressure, this tension on.

It's working at the edges in all these different ways that on their own could feel a little bit like it's not really necessary. All these amorphous things where you could look at it and be like, well, I don't really need any of those. But they add up to a critical mass that actually is significant.

And sometimes, if I want to bring it on a plane, I've found it's replaced reading for me. Rather than pick up a book or bring a book on the plane, I bring Traveler and just kind of hang out in that space and see if anything comes up.

I've found that it's kind of like writing songs on a different instrument, you get different styles of music that you wouldn't have otherwise. I've found that writing from words towards music, I get different kinds of songs than I have in the past, which has been interesting.

In that way, like sitting at a piano, you just write differently than you do on a guitar, or even a bass, because of the things those instruments tend to encourage or that they can do.

It feels almost like a little synthesizer, a different kind of instrument that has unlocked a different kind of approach for me.

"I've found that it's kind of like writing songs on a different instrument, you get different styles of music that you wouldn't have otherwise... [Traveler] feels almost like a little synthesizer, a different kind of instrument that has unlocked a different kind of approach for me."

AC: As someone who doesn't know the first thing about writing music, that's fascinating. It's all magic to me.

AJ: Yeah.

AC: What else are you interested in writing?

AJ: I went to school for film directing. That was kind of what I thought I was going to do. And then my brother and I started the band and that kind of happened first and knocked me onto a different track for a little while after college.

Growing up, though, writing was my way into everything. In directing, I wanted to be in control of the thing that I wrote. And in music, it was the same — the songwriting really feels like it came from that same place. And then the idea of writing longer form, like fiction, almost feels just like the next step from song to EP to album to novel.

For whatever reason, that started feeling like a challenge that would be deeply related to the kinds of work that we do in the studio.

AC: Do you have any advice for aspiring songwriters?

AJ: This sounds like a cliche, but it's totally true: whatever success that I've had as a songwriter — judge that for yourself — but whatever success I have had, has been directly proportional to just writing the song that I wanted to hear.

What I mean by that is, even if you're being coldly, cynically, late-stage capitalist about it, it's by far the most success I've had. The good news is that you don't have to choose. And in fact, when you start making those little compromises, or even begin to inch in that direction, it just doesn't work. So you can forget about it.

Just make music you want to hear. And that will be the music that resonates with most people.

I think there's a temptation to have an imaginary focus group in your head of like 500 people. But the problem is all those people are fake. They're not real. None of those people are actually real people. You're a focus group of one, you're one real person. There are more real people in that focus group than in the imaginary one.

And I just don't think that we're that different, in the end. So that would be my advice.

AC: That seems like generally great creative advice. Because fiction writers talk about that too, right? Do you write to market or do you write the book you want to read. Same thing. And that imaginary focus group has been debilitating for me. I have to silence that focus group before I can write.

AJ: Absolutely.

"I think there's a temptation to have an imaginary focus group in your head of like 500 people. But the problem is all those people are fake... You're a focus group of one, you're one real person. There are more real people in that focus group than in the imaginary one."

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Learn more about Abner James, his brother, and their band, Eighty Ninety, on Instagram.