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A personal journal or diary is a book for writing discrete entries arranged by date reporting on what has happened over the course of a day or other period. Such logs play a role in many aspects of human civilization, including governmental, business ledgers, and military records. In more personal diaries, the writer may detail more personal information, such as romantic interests and the like.

Contents

Diaries by type and function

Diaries run the spectrum from business notations, to listings of weather and daily personal events, through to inner exploration of the human psyche, a place to express one\'s deepest self, or record one\'s thoughts and ideas.

Some use the words "diary" and "journal" interchangeably while others apply strict differences to journals, diaries and the practice of journaling (dated vs. undated, inner focused vs. outer focused, sporadic entries vs. regular entries, etc.). While traditionalist preferred the use of the term diary, the current preference (based on book and article titles) is to use the word "journal." The phrase "journaling" is often used to describe such hobby writing, similar to the term "scrapbooking."

Some diarists think of their diaries as a special friend, even going so far as to name them. For example, Anne Frank called her diary "Kitty". There is a strong psychological effect of having an audience for one\'s self-expression, a personal space, or a "listener," even if this is the book one writes in, only read by oneself. Friedrich Kellner, a justice inspector in the Third Reich, thought of his diary as a weapon for any future fight against tyrants and terrorism, and he fittingly named it "Mein Widerstand" - "My Opposition." The German word Tagebuch (a literal translation being \'day book\') is normally rendered as diary in English, thus leading to what are really work books being included as diaries; the notebooks of the Austrian writer Robert Musil being an example of this.

Social aspects

As known forms of personal information management, diaries and personal journals are part of the culture and may be appropriated by individuals in imitation of what they observe. However, social influence can play a large role in this process. Schools or parents may teach or require diary-keeping. There are husbands and wives, brothers and sisters, etc., who have journaled in various forms of tandem. There are numerous examples of diarist families as well, including those of Sir Walter Scott, Bronson Alcott, Leo Tolstoy and Henry James.

History

The word diary comes from the Latin diarium ("daily allowance", from dies, "day", more often in the plural form diaria). The word journal comes from the same root (diurnus, "of the day") through Old French jurnal (modern French for day is jour).

The oldest extant diaries come from Middle Eastern and East Asian cultures. Pillowbooks of Japanese court ladies and Asian travel journals being some of the oldest surviving specimens of this genre of writing. The 9th century scholar Li Ao, for example, kept a diary of his journey through southern China.

Similarly in the medieval Near East, Arabic diaries were first being written from before the 10th century, though the medieval diary which most resembles the modern diary was that of Ibn Banna in the 11th century. His diary was the earliest to be arranged in order of date (ta\'rikh in Arabic), very much like modern diaries.Makdisi, George (May 1986), "The Diary in Islamic Historiography: Some Notes", History and Theory 25 (2): 173-85

Sales of "page a day" diaries go back hundreds of years (Letts, for example, is over 200 years old). At first, most of these books were used as ledgers, or business books. Samuel Pepys is the earliest diarist who is well-known today, although he had contemporaries who were also keeping diaries, such as John Evelyn. Pepys also was apparently at a turning point in diary history, for he took it beyond mere business transaction notation, into the realm of the personal.

Until, it seems, around the turn of the 20th century, with greater literacy and industrialization throughout the globe, particularly the Western world, diary writing was mostly limited to the members of the higher social classes. In the West, at least, a high proportion of historical and literary figures from the Renaissance to the 20th century seem to have kept a diary.

Tristine Rainer\'s 1978 The New Diary expanded awareness of diary-keeping as a literary genre, particularly among feminists. Acknowledging key figures in the resurgence of diary writing such as Carl Jung, Marion Milner, Ira Progoff and Anaïs Nin, she identified techniques that people use either spontaneously or have employed in their daily writing to explore themselves and their experience of the world. Rainer\'s idea, as expressed in the title, is that a diary is much more than a dry record of weather or daily events—it allows the writer to communicate deep and often spiritual realizations. Social historians were particularly interested in this, as it expanded greatly the number of historical texts available to them.

In the United States during the 1990s, various K-12 educators used a variety of journals across subject areas to encourage and document student progress, including pre-literate picture journals and "math journals" to aid in developing mathematical concepts in an individualized way, in accordance with Lev Vygotsky\'s concepts of instructional scaffolding. Another popular adaptation of the diary is the personal use of time management tools such as the Filofax or Franklin Planner.

Appeal

Qualities that some find appealing regarding diaries include that anyone can write one; the only educational prerequisite is literacy, with proper spelling and grammar not required.

The word "diary" has fallen into disrepute in recent decades. The modern Western stereotype of a diary is a record kept by teenage girls, usually concerning such matters as school, parents, and immature attempts at romantic liaisons. For many years, the only inexpensive diaries on the market featured pastel covers with naively romantic cover art and flimsy locks and keys, thus perpetuating this illusion. However, this type of diary and the accompanying cultural associations did not exist until the 1940s. Many people now prefer the word "journal" so as to avoid this stereotype and to expand the diary\'s use beyond a mere catalog of events.

Keeping a record of one\'s daily life provides the diarist with a tool with which to "time travel" to times gone by, providing a snapshot of past thoughts, feelings, and life events. In this case, the diary or journal can be used not only as a tool to fuel nostalgia, but also as a cure for nostalgia; if one feels nostalgic for certain times gone by, then he or she may use the journal to see his or her perspective of those times as they were being experienced, perhaps casting light upon negative features that the diarist had previously overlooked due to idealism.

Internet diaries

Main article: Online diary

As Internet access has become commonly available, people have adopted it as another medium with which to chronicle their lives with the added dimension of an audience (negating, to some, the very definition of diary). The first online diary is thought to be Claudio Pinhanez\'s "Open Diary", published at the MIT Media Lab website from 14 November 1994 until 1996.a copy of his "open diary" is still in existence Other early online diarists include Justin Hall, who began eleven years of personal online diary-writing in 1994, Time to get a life — pioneer blogger Justin Hall bows out at 31. SFgate (2005-02-20). Retrieved on 2006-06-09., Carolyn Burke, who started publishing "Carolyn\'s Diary""Carolyn\'s Diary" on 3 January 1995, and Bryon Sutherland, who announced his diary The Semi-Existence of Bryon in a USENET newsgroup on On 19 April 1995 USENET announcement.

The number of people publishing web journals grew quickly. Initially the practice was limited to people who had both Internet access and a familiarity with HTML. Several diverse communities of web diarists eventually developed.

Blogs

Web-based services soon appeared to streamline and automate online publishing, but the great explosion in personal storytelling came with the emergence of weblogs, or "blogs." While the format first focused on external links and topical commentary, widespread weblog tools were quickly used to create web journals, thought of as short, spontaneous entries rather than crafted essays. The weblog community was more naturally comfortable with networking and linking, creating an online community. As had been the case in the web-diarist community, there were cliques and protests over a supposed A-list of authors. Like online journals, "personal weblogs" are frequently maligned in the broader weblog community as a form of "navel gazing".

Some weblog services are small and offer simply a way to publish one\'s writing, while others have become true communities offering opportunities for feedback and communication with fellow diarists.

A study of blogging in the United States, released by the Pew Internet & American Life Project in July 2006, found that 12 million adults (8% of U.S. Internet users; 4% of the U.S. population) kept blogs, while 57 million adults (39% of Internet users) read blogs. Thirty-seven percent of bloggers used blogs as personal journals, but 50% said their major reason for blogging was to record their personal experience; 54% were under age 30; men and women used blogs equally; 60% were white, while 74% of all American users of the Internet were white.Pew Internet: Pew Internet - Bloggers

Journal writing software

While some people use standard word processing software to keep electronic journals or diaries there are computer programs that are designed specifically for journal writing. Many have templates for daily, weekly, monthly or random entries. These programs have been designed to allow journal and diary writers to capture their thoughts as well as images, links or other notable information easily and in one location. It should be remembered that all such software is an aid in the keeping of a journal or diary and not the actual creation of it. A number of these programs offer the ability to post journal entries to Blogs. Some examples of journal & diary software are: LifeJournal, MacJournal, WinJournal & Alpha Journal. Some organizer software like Outlook and GoBinder have the ability to make diary entries.

Travel journals

Main article: Travel journal

A travel journal, or road journal, is an initialliy blank book carried by a traveler for the purpose of documenting a journey. Clippings, tokens, or tickets may be included as they are collected. The journal may also include notes written by acquaintances.

Workout journals

A workout journal, or exercise tracker, is a journal where one registers what kind of workouts one has done. One usually also writes down the length of workout and writes a comment about the workout. Workout journals can also be online; one might be able to share experiences and find new workout partners.

Audio journals

An audio journal records the spoken word instead of the written word. Some people use tape recorders or voice recorders to document their life. There is also a company called LifeOnRecord that allows people to make a journal entry by making a call from any phone. Those recordings can then be preserved onto CD.

Unusual Diaries

Some officer cadets at the Royal Military College of Canada wrote their diary on their t-square in india ink. The Royal Military College of Canada Museum retains examples of college diaries from the 1890s.

See also

External links

References and notes

  • The New Diary: How to Use a Journal for Self-Guidance and Expanded Creativity by Tristine Rainer, 1978.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


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