Spring

CRWR 10406 Section 2/30406 Section 2 Beginning Nonfiction Workshop: The Written Portrait

What makes a portrait come to life? Whether through a camera’s lens or the written word, portraits expose truths, reveal choices, and capture the complexity of a person or moment. In this course, we’ll explore how the creative process of nonfiction writing parallels photography, using the tools of framing, perspective, and composition to capture the essence of a subject. We’ll dive into this intersection between writing and visual art through activities like ekphrastic writing prompts and a field trip to the Smart Museum of Art, discovering along the way how these experiences can inform our writing and deepen our understanding of truth and representation. We’ll study photographs by Ansel Adams and Lewis Hine, read Maggie Nelson, and analyze films like I, Tonya to explore how to tell stories with multiple truths. The first half of the term will focus on testing and broadening your skills with photography-inspired assignments. By midterm, you’ll pitch your own written portrait of a local Chicago resident using the techniques we’ve studied. The second half will be dedicated to workshopping these portraits, allowing for collaboration and feedback to refine your work. By the end of the course, you’ll submit a final portfolio that includes a fully realized written portrait and that reflects the evolution of your creative voice, showcasing your ability to authentically capture the complexity and humanity of real individuals.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 12168 Reading as a Writer: Art vs. the Algorithm

An inquiry into what makes art “good” or “lasting,” particularly in the age of our algorithm-shaped exposure. Students will read “viral” texts across three genres from ~1750 to 2024, including Matthew Lewis, 20th century gossip columns, and BookTok sensations like R.F. Kuang. Texts will be read in conversation with both historical and contemporary writing on craft, allowing students to respond both critically and creatively to the virality of these texts, ultimately deciding for themselves how we can begin to approach the role of the artist in the age of the algorithm.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 23144/43144 Advanced Poetry Workshop: Voice

This course will focus on poetry’s rich histories of poetic voicings, building multiple definitions of what voice “sounds” like, how it is constructed, how it says, and how to quiet and amplify one’s own poetic voice. We will use our readings and findings to generate our own poetic voicings for student-led workshops.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 23143/43143 Advanced Poetry Workshop: Mask, Persona, and Translation in Twenty-First Century Poetry

This advanced workshop engages the play of mask and persona in contemporary poetry, including how these have been utilized in poets’ theater, dramatic monologue, confessional writing, autobiographical play, and translation of poems. Participants will be invited to experiment with voice and persona in writing and consider questions such as: How does the mask offer a means of engaging core aspects of self, society, and language? Writers for discussion include John Canaday, Denise Duhamel, Duriel Harris, Ilya Kaminsky, Yang Lian, Ed Pavlic, Fernando Pessoa, and Evie Shockley.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 24010/44010 Advanced Nonfiction Workshop: Memoir

Memoir is the most pilloried genre in literature, not without reason. Many memoirs *are* self-indulgent, and they’re inevitably fictionalized to some degree. Memory is an unreliable narrator. It’s our imagination working in reverse, and as such, it invents things. It fictionalizes, and yet we have no choice but to rely on it. The best way to learn about its pitfalls is firsthand, by writing your own.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 24002/44002 Advanced Nonfiction Workshop: Writing About the Arts

Crosslistings
ARTH 44002, ARTH 24002

Thinking about practices is a way of focusing a conversation between creative writers, art historians, curators, and working visual artists, all of whom are encouraged to join this workshop. We ourselves will be practicing and studying a wide variety of approaches to visual art. We’ll read critics like John Yau and Lori Waxman, memoirists like Aisha Sabbatini Sloan, inventive historians like Zbigniew Herbert, and poets like Gwendolyn Brooks and Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon, as well as curatorial and museum writings, catalogue essays, artists' statements, and other experimental and practical forms.
The course hopes to support students both in developing useful practices and experimenting boldly. Classes will be shaped around current exhibitions and installations. Sessions will generally begin with student-led observation at the Smart Museum, and we will spend one session on close looking in the study room at the Smart. Students will also visit five collections, exhibitions and/or galleries and, importantly, keep a looking notebook. Students will write a number of exercises in different forms (immersive meditation, researched portrait, mosaic fragment), and will also write and revise a longer essay (on any subject and in any mode) to be workshopped in class.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR Advanced Fiction Workshop

Instructor TBD

 

Course Description TBD

 

 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22155/42155 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Writing about Work

Writing about work, jobs, and vocational experiences may seem contradictory— or even antithetical—to our goals in fiction. After all, if we aim to inspire, to invigorate, to otherwise wield a narrative “axe for the frozen sea within us” (as Kafka wrote), why write about the very day-to-day tasks so often charged with numbing and blurring our sensation of life? In this workshop, we will explore and answer this question with our own work-focused fictions, developing strategies for defamiliarizing the mundane, and using routines to build dramatic tension. Utilizing a combination of creative workshops and exercises—and drawing upon models from the job-focused fiction of Eugene Martin, Dorothy Allison, Lucia Berlin, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, Edwidge Danticat, and other writers—we will also deepen and develop our characters through precise depictions of their work environments.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22130/42130 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Inner Logic

In this advanced workshop, we will explore the range of strategies and techniques that fiction writers employ to make readers suspend their disbelief. We will consider how imagined worlds are made to feel real and how invented characters can seem so human. We will contemplate how themes, motifs, and symbols are deployed in such a way that a story can feel curated without seeming inorganic. We will consider how hints are dropped with subtlety, how the 'rules' for what is possible in a story are developed, and how writers can sometimes defy their own established expectations in ways that delight rather than frustrate. From character consistency to twist endings, we'll investigate how published authors lend a sense of realism and plausibility to even the most far-fetched concepts. Through regular workshops, we will also interrogate all students' fiction through this lens, discussing the ways in which your narratives-in-progress create their own inner logic. Students will submit two stories to workshop and will be asked to write critiques of all peer work.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22113/42113 Advanced Fiction Workshop: The Love Story

This advanced fiction workshop will examine the ways we write about love in fiction: romantic love, familial love, unconventional love, etc.  Our basis will be the notion that love is ultimately self-knowledge, which lies at the core of all great fiction, and like self-knowledge it involves an endless and inexhaustible act of seeking.  We will read and discuss stories centered on the topic of love, this act of seeking, and we will do writing exercises that help us write compellingly, convincingly, and unsentimentally about deeply sentimental things.  Every student will also complete and workshop a full-length story that explores the idea of love on some level.  They will additionally write a significant revision of this story, which they will either present for a second workshop or turn in at the end of the quarter.  Please expect a rigorous but constructive workshop environment where being a critic and an editor is as essential as being a writer.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops
Subscribe to Spring