orange_blob said:
Imaginative - Creative, your own completely original work.
Interpretative - Taking an existing peice and interpreting it yourself, like making a film from part of a shakespeare play - it rquires your interpretation and creativity but has it's basis in another work. (I'm really not sure about this one)
Analytical - Looking at other work/s and analysing them, like you would do in the other english courses.
I don't see "creative" as having to be completely original. For example, there are some 'adaptations' which I think were highly imaginative. whilst not being totally original, once can't say it wasn't imaginative.
I'm also not sure interpretive requires us to take inspiration from 'a piece' - it could be just a concept. Similar thing for analytical - it could just "analyse" a concept, ideal or style, without having to actually analyse someone else's work.
In regards to EE2, you won't ever be called upon to define your work as "EITHER/OR" imaginative, creative and analytical. If you feel drawn to some of these words, or if they feel "right", sure. Feel free to use them. But if they sound kind of foreign to you, don't use them!
- you may all bow down and worship Lynny Logic now, if you wish