BROAD PURPOSE OF COURSE: An introduction to the stylistic and technical elements of fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, and writing for performance through assigned readings of professional examples and writing exercises. This course is provided in a workshop format and focuses on the production, critique, and revision of student writing. Prerequisite: EN 102. Liberal Arts Core/University Requirements Designation: WI. (3)
COURSE OBJECTIVES: Upon successful completion of this course students will be expected to
Discover and develop strategies for the composition and revision of poems, short stories, nonfiction essays, and short dramatic scenes
Participate constructively in the workshop process by reading and commenting upon the works of fellow students
Apply the terms, tools, and techniques of the craft
Demonstrate an ability to read and appreciate poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and drama as writers
Analyze literature from both scholarly and writerly points of view.
Produce creative texts in a variety of genres through a process that involves drafting and revision based on feedback.
Produce focused and coherent creative texts that address a specific audience, move effectively between generalizations and details, make honest use of sources, and engage complex ideas without distortion.
Produce creative texts that show careful attention to fluent sentence structure, grammatical correctness, and proper documentation.
Identify a suitable subject for their writers’ statement, analyze their own creative writing and course materials about the craft of creative writing, and support a focused thesis or argument in a clear and coherent product.
TEACHING METHOD: Workshop, lecture, discussion, seminar, group work, tutorial
GRADING POLICY
25%: Midterm Portfolio (includes drafts of creative assignments completed on time)
25%: Final Portfolio (includes drafts of creative assignments completed on time)
15%: Community-based projects (including participation and drafts as well as final product)
10%: Immigrant/refugee OR digital story project(including drafts as well as final product)
10%: Exercises
15%: Participation and attendance (includes in-class responses to readings and workshop feedback)
IMPORTANT DETAILS
Midterm and final portfolios (25% each): Over the course of the semester you will be expected to write two poems, one nonfiction essay, one short story, one short dramatic piece, and one piece of your choice to submit to large and small group workshops. You will collect these pieces in your midterm and final portfolios; the midterm portfolio will contain your two poems and nonfiction essay and the final will contain your short story, dramatic piece, and piece in the genre of your choice. Together, these portfolios will contain a minimum of 14 pages of revised writing, and they will include the original workshop drafts of each work, substantial revisions, and an analysis of the writing and revision process you went through for each work. Your portfolio will not be graded on the absolute quality of your creative work (i.e., whether or not you write like T.S. Eliot or Toni Morrison), but on the extent to which you engage the process of revision and demonstrate an understanding of your own creative process. Detailed instructions for the portfolios will be available on Canvas.
Community-based Projects (15%): During the semester, we’ll be completing two service projects together as a class. The first will involve editing and providing positive, encouraging feedback on the short creative pieces of 826DC students. The second will involve a trip to a HART (Homeless Animals Rescue Team) adoption event or a KEEN (Kids Enjoy Exercise Now) event. I will organize two group trips for us, or you can go on your own. You will write a 2-page revised reflection about your experience and incorporate your experience into one of your creative pieces. More details will be available on Canvas.
Refugee story OR Digital story (10%): Toward the end of the semester, you will choose one of two projects. The first option is to select one of your creative pieces (or compose a new one) to work into a short digital film (around 3 minutes) that incorporates images, video, music, and/or sound with your written text. We will spend time in the computer lab learning how to use appropriate software, record a voice track, and create visual effects. We will also discuss how to adapt a written script for film, how to create our own images/ video/ music, and how to employ copyright-free images, video, sound effects, and music from the creative commons.The second option is to interview an immigrant or refugee about their experience to create a piece for use by 1 Journey Festival. Whichever project you choose, you will also discuss the project and its creation in a short reflection piece. More details about both projects will be available on Canvas.
Exercises (10%): In addition to the formal creative assignments, you will also complete weekly exercise assignments designed to help generate material and explore new approaches to subject matter. Sometimes we will have time to work on these exercises in class. All exercises should be posted to Canvas by 12 midnight on the day they are assigned and cannot be turned in late.
Participation and attendance (15%): Because this is a creative workshop, the success of this course is dependent upon every student’s presence and active participation. I expect you to be in class on time and prepared; missing more than four classes will drop your participation grade to a D. Missing more than six classes will drop your participation grade to a zero and most likely result in failure of the class. Your participation grade includes active engagement in our discussion of your classmates’ work, in addition to reading the assigned text(s) carefully and being able to discuss them in conversation and in writing.
Device use: Devices may be useful at certain moments in our course (you can compose exercises on a laptop, for example, and your digital story will be created entirely on a computer). I am also happy to grant permission to use devices for note taking and other activities under certain circumstances. However, during workshops where student writing is being discussed, the use of devices is distracting and disrespectful and will not be tolerated. If you are using a device without permission, you will receive a zero for the day’s class participation grade.
Plagiarism: Plagiarism occurs when a student submits someone else’s work as her own and includes copying from printed materials, from internet cheat-sites, or from any other source in any form without giving credit to the original author. This course focuses on your individual creative work, and I would much rather have your own, honest effort even if it falls short of excellent. If you use another person’s work or an outside source on your creative or critical work for this course and fail to acknowledge the original source, I WILL GIVE YOU A GRADE OF ZERO on the plagiarized assignment and report the incident to academic integrity.
Late Work: Work that is late will be penalized one letter grade for each day it is late. Work more than two weeks late will not be accepted. If you’re unable to come to class the day an assignment is due, please email me the assignment by the beginning of the class period in which the assignment is due so that I can give you credit for completing it on time.
CLASS SCHEDULE
All reading assignments refer to our course text, Imaginative Writing, except where otherwise noted.
T Jan. 15 Introductions, workshop nuts and bolts, taking refuge
Exercise 1due on Canvas discussion board by midnight
F Jan. 18 Image
Chapter 1: Invitation to the Writer (pp. 1-14); Chapter 2: Image (pp. 13-46)
Exercise 2 due on Canvas discussion board by midnight
T Jan. 22 Voice
Chapter 3: Voice (pp. 47-93)
Exercise 3 due on Canvas discussion board by midnight
F Jan. 25 Poetry; workshop rules and procedure
Chapter 10: Poetry (pp. 297-325); The Workshop (pp. 208-211)
T Jan. 29 Poetry Workshop
Poem due, 20 copies (please print double-sided)
F Feb. 1 Poetry Workshop; Character
Chapter 4: Character (pp. 94-109, 118-127)
Exercise 4 due on Canvas discussion board by midnight
T Feb. 5 Poetry Workshop
Poem 2 due, 4 copies
F Feb. 8 Poetry Workshop; Nonfiction; 826DC pieces distributed
Chapter 8: Creative Nonfiction (pp. 225-258)
Exercise 5 posted to Canvas by midnight
T Feb. 12 Poetry workshop; Nonfiction workshop; 826DC feedback and review of student work
Nonfiction essay due, 4 copies
F Feb. 15 Nonfiction workshop; Setting
Chapter 5: Setting (135-148; 153-158)
826DC edits and feedback due
Exercise 6posted to Canvas by midnight
T Feb. 19 Story, Service project intro (HART or KEEN)
Chapter 6: Story (166-175); Wallace (179-181); Hass (187); Goldbarth (188); Lee (189-190)
Exercise 7 posted to Canvas by midnight
F Feb. 22 Revision workshop, service
Chapter 7: Development and Revision (195-224); Empathy and engagement readings on Canvas
Bring current drafts of your three creative pieces to class with you (electronic or paper copies)
Exercise 8 posted to Canvas by midnight
Individual midterm conferences outside of class, at least one revision due at conference
SERVICE TRIP—HART/KEEN
T Feb. 26 Revision workshop
Empathy and engagement readings on Canvas
Revised piece due, 4 copies
F March 1 Fiction
Midterm Portfolio due in class
SERVICE TRIP—HART/KEEN
T March 5 Fiction, reflection workshop
Chapter 9: Fiction (259-270); Le Guin (280-85); Carlson (290-93)
Service reflection draft due, 4 copies
Exercise 9 posted to Canvas by midnight
F March 8 Fiction workshop
Short story due, 20 copies (6 for small-group folks)
March 11-15: SPRING BREAK: NO CLASS!
T March 19 Poetry reading with David Gewanter: Meet in Lee Reception Room
Poetry by David Gewanter
Revised service reflection due on Canvas
F March 22 Film Fest: The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly; meet in Reinsch
Bloom (270-79); Hemingway (279-80); fiction on Canvas
T March 26 Fiction Workshop
Chapter 11: Drama (328-341); Rivera (353-56); Dipietro (363-66)
F March 29 Fiction Workshop, Drama
Chekhov (pp. 341-352); Dunne (pp. 356-362)
Exercise 10 posted to Canvas by midnight
T April 2 Fiction workshop, Drama workshop
Short dramatic piece due, 20 copies (6 copies for small-group folks)
F April 5 Drama Workshop
Mary Karr selections on Canvas
Exercise 11 posted to Canvas by midnight
T April 9 Drama workshop
Exercise 12 posted to Canvas by midnight
F April 12 Digital storytelling/Interview workshop: Meet in computer lab
Draft of digital story script OR plan for immigrant/refugee interview due
T April 16 Small group workshops
Piece of choice due, 4 copies
Thursday, April 18, Mary Karr visits, attendance strongly encouraged
F April 19 NO CLASS: EASTER BREAK
T April 23 NO CLASS: MONDAY CLASSES MEET
F April 26 Digital storytelling/Interview workshop: Meet in computer lab
Digital story revised script, images/ video, and music due OR draft of interview and photo due
Individual final conferences outside of class
T April 30 Digital story/Interview showcase
Digital story due (post to Vimeo, turn in hard copy of script) OR final Interview and photo posted to class blog
Individual final conferences outside of class
F May 3 Revision workshop
Revised piece due, 4 copies
Individual final conferences outside of class
Final reading and portfolio due date: Friday, May 10, 12-2:30, St Jo G102
Disclaimer: This schedule is approximate and may vary based on the needs of the class. Workshop courses in particular need frequent adjustments depending on the discussions the written work generates.
6. REQUIRED TEXT
Burroway, Janet. Imaginative Writing: The Elements of Craft. 4thed. New York: Penguin, 2014. Print.
Photocopies of creative works for classmates
A journal to record ideas, images, interesting thoughts, overheard conversations, etc. that might be material for a creative piece