Creative Writing Innovations: Breaking Boundaries in the Classroom
Editat de Dr Michael Dean Clark, Dr Trent Hergenrader, Assistant Professor of Creative Writing Joseph Reinen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 feb 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781474297172
ISBN-10: 147429717X
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 1 b/w illustration
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 147429717X
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 1 b/w illustration
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Covers
multi-media
writing,
collaboration
and
identity
in
the
creative
writing
classroom
Notă biografică
Michael
Dean
Clarkis
Associate
Professor
of
Writing
at
Azusa
Pacific
University,
USA.
Formerly
an
award-winning
journalist,
his
fiction
and
non-fiction
work
has
appeared
inPleiades,
Fast
Forward,
Relief,
and
a
number
of
other
periodicals.Trent
Hergenraderis
an
Assistant
Professor
at
the
Rochester
Institute
of
Technology,
USA.
He
is
a
co-founder
of
the
Creative
Writing
Studies
Organization
and
the
Journal
of
Creative
Writing
Studies
and
the
author
ofCollaborative
Worldbuilding
for
Writers
and
Gamers.Joseph
Reinis
Assistant
Professor
of
Creative
Writing
at
the
University
of
Wisconsin,
River
Falls,
USA.
He
is
the
editor
of
Dispatches
from
the
Classroom
and
his
fiction,
poetry
and
essays
have
appeared
in
such
publications
asThe
Pinch
Literary
Magazine,
Iron
Horse
Literary
Review,
and
Ruminate
Magazine.
He
is
also
an
award-winning
short-film
screenwriter.
Cuprins
1.
IntroductionPart
1:
Rethinking
the
Workshop2.
Invention
and
Early
Process:
A
framework
for
the
introductory
multi-genre
Creative
Writing
course(Timothy
Mayers,
Millersville
University,
USA)3.
Against
Undergraduate
Creative
Writing:
Or,
how
to
trick
students
into
wanting
what
they
need(Katharine
Haake,
California
State
University-Northridge,
USA)4.
Space
Changing
and
Time
Traveling:
Empowering
evolutionary
creative
writing(Graeme
Harper,
Oakland
University,
USA)5.
Rocks
are
Hard;
There
Are
Many
Kinds
of
Rocks:
A
meta-workshop
for
undergraduate
writers(Rachel
Himmelheber,
Warren
Wilson
College,
USA)6.
Emphasizing
the
Macro:
An
argument
for
the
sequence
graduate
workshop(Derrick
Harriell,
University
of
Mississippi,
USAPart
2:
Expanding
Genre7.
The
Poetry
of
Music,
the
Music
of
Poetry(Tom
Hunley,
Western
Kentucky
University,
USA)8.
Musico-Literary
Miscegenations:
Word
and
sound
relationships
in
creative
writing
pedagogy(Hazel
Smith,
University
of
Western
Sydney,
Australia)9.
Words
with
Borders,
Projects
Without:
The
collaborative
possibilities
of
screenwriting(Joseph
Rein,
University
of
Wisconsin-River
Falls,
USA)10.
Non-Sensical
Sense:
Impressions
as
connections
in
creative
nonfiction(Michael
Dean
Clark,
Azusa
Pacific
University,
USA)Part
3:
Creative
Collaborations11.
Collaborative
Story
Writing
and
the
Question
of
Influence(Mary
Ann
Cain,
Indiana
University-Purdue
University
Fort
Wayne,
USA)12.
Steampunk
Rochester:
A
collaborative,
location-based,
interdisciplinary
project(Trent
Hergenrader,
Rochester
Institute
of
Technology,
USA)13.
Place-Based
Pedagogy
and
Creative
Writing
as
a
Fieldwork
Course(Janelle
Adsit,
Humboldt
State
University,
USA)14.
Our
Town:
Teaching
Creative
Writing
students
to
love
research
and
collaboration(Cathy
Day,
Ball
State
University,
USA)Part
4:
Identity
and
the
Creative
Writing
Classroom15.
Radical
Inclusivity:
Honesty
and
agony
in
an
"imperfect"
Creative
Writing
classroom(Tonya
Hegamin,
Medgar
Evers
College,
USA)16.
Genre-Queering
the
Creative
Writing
Classroom(Ching-In
Chen,
University
of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee,
USA)17.
Pedagogy
and
Authority
in
TeachingThe
Wasteland:
Authorial
voices
and
postcolonial
criticism(Prageeta
Sharma,
University
of
Montana
in
Missoula,
USA)Index
Recenzii
Written
by
practitioners
for
practitioners
whose
hackles
might
still
raise
at
the
suggestion
that
theirs
is
a
soft
option,
there
is
a
sense
of
community
in
these
pages
which
speak
to
those
already
working
in
the
field
and
so
do
not
waste
time
explaining,
but
move
swiftly
to
examine
the
subject's
dynamics
and
potential.
It
aims
to
challenge
practitioners
in
order
to
provoke
newer
forms
and
studies
in
this
field
.
Does
the
book
achieve
what
it
sets
out
to
do?
Certainly.
It
points
towards
the
'vast
possibilities
of
our
field'
and
it
offers
discussion,
debate
and
practical
resources
and
it
provokes
newer
enquiries
.
Our
students
need
to
be
in
safe
hands
for
the
exciting
journeys
they
embark
on,
and
this
book
is
a
strong
map
for
those
of
us
who
direct
and
point
out
the
possible
routes.
Clark (Azusa Pacific Univ.), Hergenrader (Rochester Institute of Technology), and Rein (Univ. of Wisconsin, River Falls) have produced a compelling follow-up to their edited collectionCreative Writing in the Digital Age(2015). This new offering assembles 16 essays with the shared goal of rethinking and restructuring university-level creative writing curricula. The essays are organized in four sections-'Rethinking the Workshop,' 'Expanding Genre,' 'Creative Collaborations,' and 'Identity and the Creative Writing Classroom'-and many of the contributors express dissatisfaction with the hallmark of creative writing instruction in the US: the creative writing workshop. For example, in his manifesto 'The Unworkshop,' Graeme Harper radically revises the workshop method by prioritizing intellectual curiosity and student autonomy above expectations for traditional academic coursework. By contrast, Derek Harriell proposes a sequenced graduate writing workshop that improves rather than dismantles the traditional workshop. Another remarkable essay, Ching-In Chen's 'Gender Identity and the Creative Writing Classroom,' articulates an approach to creative writing pedagogy that values and affirms the work of genderqueer and nonbinary writers. Taken together, the essays in this collection expand the emergent field of creative writing studies and provide thoughtful, replicable strategies for guiding and supporting student writers. Summing Up: Highly recommended.
Essential reading for undergraduate and graduate-level creative writers who teach ... [It] advance[s] the rigor of creative writing as an academic discipline with deep ties to the sister world of composition and rhetoric while nudging teacher-writers toward innovative, process-oriented pedagogies and heuristics.
Clark (Azusa Pacific Univ.), Hergenrader (Rochester Institute of Technology), and Rein (Univ. of Wisconsin, River Falls) have produced a compelling follow-up to their edited collectionCreative Writing in the Digital Age(2015). This new offering assembles 16 essays with the shared goal of rethinking and restructuring university-level creative writing curricula. The essays are organized in four sections-'Rethinking the Workshop,' 'Expanding Genre,' 'Creative Collaborations,' and 'Identity and the Creative Writing Classroom'-and many of the contributors express dissatisfaction with the hallmark of creative writing instruction in the US: the creative writing workshop. For example, in his manifesto 'The Unworkshop,' Graeme Harper radically revises the workshop method by prioritizing intellectual curiosity and student autonomy above expectations for traditional academic coursework. By contrast, Derek Harriell proposes a sequenced graduate writing workshop that improves rather than dismantles the traditional workshop. Another remarkable essay, Ching-In Chen's 'Gender Identity and the Creative Writing Classroom,' articulates an approach to creative writing pedagogy that values and affirms the work of genderqueer and nonbinary writers. Taken together, the essays in this collection expand the emergent field of creative writing studies and provide thoughtful, replicable strategies for guiding and supporting student writers. Summing Up: Highly recommended.
Essential reading for undergraduate and graduate-level creative writers who teach ... [It] advance[s] the rigor of creative writing as an academic discipline with deep ties to the sister world of composition and rhetoric while nudging teacher-writers toward innovative, process-oriented pedagogies and heuristics.