Essay On Hidden Intellectualism

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Hidden Intellectualism Responsive Essay Gerald Graff’s argument that boyhood conversations about sports provided a solid foundation for his later intellectual life, in a way, makes a lot of sense. When one is constantly in conversations and arguments that one can relate to and is passionate about, that person can bring more to the table than just a boring explanation with no life or emotion in it. As Gerald Graff says, “It trains you to write a sharply argued, sociologically acute analysis of an issue.”(They Say I Say, pg. 386) At first, good arguments like those would only appear in conversations one likes but later on one would become accustomed to talking “intellectually”, as Graff says, in any argument that person gets into. Just like anything else in life, it takes practice, and you will get better out of practice when you like the certain field than when you don’t, a good reason to why these types of arguments should be included in school arguments. School work sometimes isolates you from others. Graff says that “When you entered sports debates, you become part of a community that was not limited to your family and friends, but was national and public.”(They Say I Say, page 384) Also, schools don’t really notice how good arguments are made due to sports coming into play.…show more content…
Think about it, you can be a dunce when talking about the Civil War or politics but all of the sudden you become an expert at making amazing arguments when a conversation about the Super Bowl or the World Series comes in, or maybe it can be about comic books, TV shows, movies, anything you are interested in. I don’t really get involved much in school arguments if I really don’t care much about the subject. One I find a topic I like or find interested or I can relate to, no one can stop me in my argument. Gerald Graff brings up a really good point in his essay, Hidden

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