- WTG 244 The Creative Process
In Creative Process, students study their own creative process as well as what artists, writers, and filmmakers have shared about creative inspiration. The purpose of this class is to break boundaries and rediscover an easy relationship with the inner Muse. The primary textbook is The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron. The Syllabus Reader contains material by a wide range of authors such as Annie Dillard, Jorge Luis Borges, Eudora Welty, Ann Patchett, Patricia Hampl, William Saroyan, John Ciardi, Frank Conroy, Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner, Ernest Hemingway, Thomas Wolfe, William Stafford, Rainer Maria Rilke, Lu Chi, Mark Strand, Jane Hirshfield, Billy Collins, Elizabeth Gilbert, plus interviews with great authors by Bill Moyers and material from creativity experts Anne Lamott and Natalie Goldberg. A variety of guest lecturers working in different media will come to the class to discuss their work, career paths, and creative process. Students keep a daily journal and engage in various creative projects during the course. As a final project, students produce a portfolio and can choose to participate in a group installation/exhibit on creativity. Lab fee: $35 for materials. (4 credits)
- WTG 204 Introduction to Poetry Writing
In this course, you’ll learn how to read and assess a poem and construct your own poetry. We explore the building blocks of craft and technique in poetry — imagery, figurative language, sound devices, rhyme, rhythm, repetition, meter, point of view, and form. Our textbook is Frances Mayes’ The Discovery of Poetry: A Field Guide to Reading and Writing Poems. This course heightens the senses to illuminate the beauty in the most mundane corners of life and uncover the lost poems hiding in the attic of the mind. By the end, you have a collection of poems that you cherish and take with you on your journey forward. (4 credits)
- WTG 220 The Personal Essay
The personal essay celebrates heart and mind, exploring age-old questions about the human experience. Students learn the history of the personal essay, reading examples of personal prose discussion in Oriental and classical Literature, then tracing the origins of the modern essay tradition to the European Renaissance with the work of Michel de Montaigne. Students learn about the range and freedom of this brief “formless form” by acquainting themselves with modern and contemporary masters: Mark Twain, Virginia Woolf, Zora Neale Hurston, Jorge Luis Borges, Flannery O’Connor, Annie Dillard, David Sedaris, Dave Eggers, Amy Tan, Mark Spragg, and more. The class also focuses on experimental, contemporary hybrids, tracing the relationship between the personal essay and flash nonfiction, the lyric essay, the “hermit crab” essay, and prose poetry. Students are encouraged to keep a daily journal in which they record memories, observations, insights, and reflections. Students also create a substantial portfolio of at least three personal essays, learning about prewriting, drafting, and revision in the process. Students are encouraged to find a natural, authentic personal voice, intimate yet not self-indulgent. In the specificity of personal reflection, it is possible to touch upon the universality of human experience. (4 credits)
- FOR 206 Writing for Life
In this course, students practice incorporating writing, creative expression, and rest into their everyday life. If find writing daunting, this will make it more approachable for those. And if you already enjoy writing, this will reinforce that experience. The main projects are a daily journal and a personal essay. Optional three-day retreat. (2 credits)
- For 207 Myth Forest
When taken literally, mythology appears to be little more than a collection of entertaining stories. However, when approached symbolically, mythology reveals how different cultures relate to the cosmos and to themselves. Gods and goddesses, heroes and heroines, demons, and monsters come to represent human emotions, psychological structures, seasonal patterns, laws of nature, and so on. In this course we take small sampling from world mythologies with a focus on their thematic relevance to contemporary life and to consciousness. In addition to applying an archetypal approach to mythology, we also apply principles from the Science and Technology of Consciousness to the narratives. We hold an on-campus star-watching session where we identify constellations from the Egyptian, Greek, and Vedic traditions, accompanied by their corresponding cosmological mythologies. At the end of the course, students select a myth they resonate with and describe how it relates to their own life. (2 credits)
- FOR 208 Little Writing, Big Play
Haiku are small but mighty poems. They can encapsulate the extraordinary and the mundane in three simple lines–the black bead of a bluejay’s eye peering through snow or the cacophony of car horns and jackhammers on a city street. Haiku offer inexperienced and experienced writers alike an opportunity to play with language and expand the way they view the world. In this course, students will study the 16 principles of the Science of Creative Intelligence (SCI) through the practice of haiku and by reading the work of Basho, Issa, Buson, and Shiki, as well as excerpts from Natalie Goldberg’s Three Simple Lines: a Writer’s Pilgrimage into the Heart. The course will culminate in the creation of individual chapbooks featuring students’ haiku and original artwork. (2 credits)
- WTG 206 Introduction to Rhetoric
Rhetoric concerns itself with both creating and interpreting messages and cultural artifacts, emphasizing the value of understanding both one’s own and others’ perspectives when communicating with others. This survey course will help you improve your communication skills by examining the dynamic relationships between author and audience within their social contexts. We read and discuss articles by prominent thinkers in fields of rhetoric and communications studies, including genre theory, metaphor theory, feminist theory, cultural rhetoric, queer theory, rhetoric of the body, visual rhetoric, ecocriticism, and critical theory. Your final project calls on knowledge in the readings to dig deeper into the challenges and possibilities of human communication. (4 credits)
- WTG 300 Hidden Figures
In this course we listen to and celebrate voices and narratives that too often have been marginalized, over-simplified, or silenced in the literary world — whether on the grounds of race, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, lifestyle choices, immigration status, economic or political status, mental illness, trauma, and/or disability. We read poets and writers such as Maya Angelou, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Henry L. Gates, Alison Bechdel, David Sedaris, Sandra Cisneros, Li-Young Lee, Joy Harjo, and many more, to explore the importance of not viewing life according to “a single story” (Adichie) or limited point of view. In our own writing, we explore themes such as loss of speech, erasure of memory, exile from community, loss of identity, stereotyping, and silencing of any kind. Even more, we focus on the exhilaration and empowerment of finding community and voice, emphasizing inclusivity, diversity, acceptance, empathy, and interconnection. Instead of “reducing complex human beings and situations to single narrative, taking away people’s humanity,” as Adichie says, we celebrate how “each individual life contains a heterogeneous compilation of stories.” You’ll use poems, essays, and stories by established poets and writers as springboards to tell your own silenced narratives, bringing to life the hidden figures of your personal memories and ancestral histories. The course culminates in a written portfolio and a public reading. (4 credits)
- WTG 303 Women and Contemporary Short Story
In this course, we examine the contemporary short story and celebrate its talented female authors in the last fifty years. Looking back over the history of fiction, it is far too easy to default to a collection of work, though brilliant, authored primarily by the male spectrum. Alongside these talented gentlemen has been a parallel historical narrative from the minds of brilliant women. We follow in the footsteps of these women and learn from their creative genius while writing our own collection of short stories. By looking critically at the meaning of voice, short-form plot, character, setting, and other devices, we gain a deeper understanding of this amazing art form and the role we play as writers in its making. (4 credits)
- WTG 304 Poetry and Transcendence
Poetry can express the unsayable and touch upon the intangible. Throughout the ages, mystics have used the language of poetry to give voice to longing, devotion, and the exaltation of consciousness. This course focuses on great mystical poets of all time: Lao Tzu, Rumi, Hafez, Mirabai, Lalla, Hadewijch, St. John of the Cross, Romantics Blake and Keats, American visionaries Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson, and more. The course also explores modern and contemporary poets whose work explores transcendence in subject and/or form — among others Rainer Maria Rilke, Pablo Neruda, Octavio Paz, Thomas Tranströmer, A. R. Ammons, Charles Wright, Tony Hoagland, Pattiann Rogers, and Mary Oliver. Students create a portfolio of their own transcendental poetry, practicing open and traditional forms, including the ghazal, pantoum, villanelle, and chant. Focus is on techniques that evoke transcendental experience — sound devices, repetition, figures of speech — as well as the relationship between words and white space, sound and silence. In this course, students learn to “see into the life of things,” as Wordsworth put it, “with an eye made quiet by the power / of harmony.” (4 credits)
- WTG 205 Introduction to Fiction
In this course, we explore the range of short stories in popular fiction. This means stories that are science fiction, fantasy, romance, crime, and other popular genres. The short story offers the writer the possibility to explore story themes in the short form. This provides the freedom to convey a message, a vision or experiment with ideas without committing to a lengthy manuscript. The short story is a powerful and highly regarded literary form. Short stories like Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Fall of the House of Usher,” or Phillip K. Dick’s short story collections, are outstanding works of art. In this course, we examine the short story form and write short stories in a range of popular genres. (4 credits)
- WTG 212 Writing and Nature
Writing about nature celebrates our primal sources and explores ancient questions about the human experience. There is something deeply inspiring about being out in nature and this class offers the opportunity to dive into that inspiration. Taking in the fresh air, feeling the sun or rain on your face, listening to the wind rustle the leaves, or dipping your toes in a runaway stream can be transformational, and nature writing can provide you with the tools to capture it on paper. You will learn the history of nature writing through modern and classical examples, and then use those examples to help form your own nature writing. The class will also include several outings and experiences in nature to help spark the creative process, so you will keep a daily journal to record memories, observations, insights, and reflections and how they connect and are inspired by your experiences. By the end of the course, you will have created a substantial portfolio of your best work, through prewriting, drafting, and revision. (4 credits)
- WTG 214 Creativity
In this course, students explore the range of their creativity through reflection and expression. They examine the creative process through the eyes of artists and filmmakers as well as other writers. The class is designed to help students eliminate creative boundaries and develop a closer relationship with themselves and their inspirational process. (2 credits)
- WTG 215 Genre Fiction Writing
Intro to Genre Writing builds a toolkit. By studying different genres, you will experience the world of options. Writing is a combination of choice—whether you choose to write in first or third person, past or present tense, or decide to write flash fiction or the beginning of a novel. You can choose to use real historical backdrops or create new worlds of your own. Understanding genres gives you a chance to explore and understand deeper truths about the human condition, from a variety of perspectives and through new lenses. We will explore sci-fi, historical, and action/adventure fiction, both by reading and writing each form. (4 credits)
- WTG 220 The Personal Essay
The personal essay celebrates heart and mind, exploring age-old questions about the human experience. Students learn the history of the personal essay, reading examples of personal prose discussion in Oriental and classical Literature, then tracing the origins of the modern essay tradition to the European Renaissance with the work of Michel de Montaigne. Students learn about the range and freedom of this brief “formless form” by acquainting themselves with modern and contemporary masters: Mark Twain, Virginia Woolf, Zora Neale Hurston, Jorge Luis Borges, Flannery O’Connor, Annie Dillard, David Sedaris, Dave Eggers, Amy Tan, Mark Spragg, and more. The class also focuses on experimental, contemporary hybrids, tracing the relationship between the personal essay and flash nonfiction, the lyric essay, the “hermit crab” essay, and prose poetry. Students are encouraged to keep a daily journal in which they record memories, observations, insights, and reflections. Students also create a substantial portfolio of at least three personal essays, learning about prewriting, drafting, and revision in the process. Students are encouraged to find a natural, authentic personal voice, intimate yet not self-indulgent. In the specificity of personal reflection, it is possible to touch upon the universality of human experience. (4 credits)
- WTG 250 The Power of the Word
In this course, students be introduced to persuasive communication. Methods of evaluating and responding to arguments will be covered. Students learn the fundamentals of effective speech, writing and presentation, and examine those fundamentals in the contexts of storytelling, activism, advertising, and business. (4 credits)
- WTG 313 Writing Short Fiction
Edgar Allen Poe once stated that everything in a short story works toward a “single effect.” Economy and precision of language make the short story the perfect narrative form. In this course, we read and study intriguing stories such as Hemingway’s “Hill’s Like White Elephants,” Grace Paley’s “A Conversations with My Father,” Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s “The Very Old Man with Enormous Wings,” and Eudora Welty’s “Why I Live at the P.O.” as models for short fiction we write. We also look closely at elements of fiction: character, structure, point of view, imagery, and figurative language as building blocks for our own stories. Students write and workshop three short stories during the class. (4 credits)
- WTG 316 Hybrid Literary Forms
This course celebrates untraditional forms of creative writing and blurs classic genre lines. In the hybrid universe, no structure is off limits and no idea is too farfetched. Students learn how to change their definition of writing to be as unbounded as their imaginations. Why can’t a series of text messages turn into a short story, what is stopping us from pulling a poem out of Ikea furniture instructions, or a memoir from a food recipe? The answer is…nothing! The world has drastically changed and how we express our experience in that world can change too. Content from this class will explore authors who bent and broke the genre rules hundreds of years ago leading up to the last decade. By the end of the course, students have developed a unique portfolio and learned ways to discuss their creative choices. This is a class to break free, spread wings, and go wild with freedom of expression. (4 credits)
- WTG 319 Flash Fiction & Prose Poetry
Flash fiction/prose poetry is one of the world’s most tantalizing and intriguing literary hybrids. A piece of flash, in the spirit of its name, can illuminate the awareness like a cognition, sparking transformation. A prose poem is a poem written in prose rather than verse. But what does this all really mean? In this course we explore this mysterious sub-genre in all of its dazzling variety, examining the way in which it encompasses the history of modern poetry (romanticism, symbolism, modernism, postmodernism) through the inclusion of writers such as Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Kafka, Cortazar, Poe, Emerson, Bishop, Simic, and Edson. We learn how to slow down our attention and sculpt a piece of flash fiction (a piece of 150 words or more) so that it becomes a happening, striking the heart of the reader and encouraging a feeling of expansion. We excavate stylistic devices and techniques used by contemporary and bygone masters of this craft for use in our own creations. Students be guided to produce a small, chiseled body of flash pieces. Evaluation will be based on participation, completion of weekly writing assignments and prompts. (4 credits)
- WTG 322 Memoir Writing
We look many forms of memoir — childhood memoir, graphic memoir (memoir in cartoon form or illustrated memoir), travel or journey memoir, eyewitness account, lyric and mosaic memoir, and more. We examine the history of the memoir and experimental techniques and contemporary hybrid forms. We read selections from memoirs by authors such as Sei Shonagon, Frank McCourt, Janet Frame, Bill Bryson, David Sedaris, Annie Dillard, Shoba Narayan, Anne Patchett, Mark Spragg, and Yang Erche Namu. The main textbook is Tell It Slant by Brenda Miller and Suzanne Paola, which explores the craft and technique of memoir writing in-depth. Old Friend from Far Away by Natalie Goldberg provides students with useful writing prompts for their journals. Students create their own portfolio — a series of linked or unlinked memoir essays or the opening chapter(s) of a book-length manuscript. Ultimately, students learn to stand back and — in the words of Anaïs Nin — consciously experience their life twice, “in the moment and in retrospection.” (4 credits)
- WTG 346 The Alchemy of Imagination
Imagination is often dismissed as being unrealistic — a subject of whim and wishful thinking reserved for children, dreamers, and the like. In truth, imagination is foundational to the arts, the sciences, and everyday life. Its existence is easily confirmed through subjective experience. For example, anyone can say, “Imagine a bright red barn with big white doors,” and suddenly it appears, wholly visible to the imaginer. That the image exists is irrefutable. However, the question of where and how it exists is open to speculation. Nonetheless, many artists, philosophers, mystics, and researchers have made significant progress in the field. Based on several of their findings, this creative writing course approaches imagination as an environment where the subtle matter of an inner image or idea is consciously encountered or fashioned. Through the study of applicable selections from literature and art, accompanied by the implementation of traditional and contemporary creative exercises, students cultivate a deeper relationship with imagination and naturally improve their ability to generate original, creative content. Throughout the course, students gradually build a collection of relatively shorter written works, each of which may be in any literary genre of their choosing. The content of each work will be determined by nothing less than the images, ideas and inspirations that naturally emerge from each student’s unique interaction with their own imagination. (4 credits)
- WTG 348 Beautiful Monsters
The author Billy Collins encourages his students to “…take a poem/and hold it up to the light/like a color slide…” rather than confine the poem to a specific meaning and form. In this course, we will take Collin’s advice and walk inside the rooms of our poems to “feel the walls for a light switch.” With new eyes, we will explore foundational aspects of poetry, including lineation, white space, alliteration, assonance, form, and figurative language. Through this exploration, we will expand, twist, and pull the meaning of poetry to its limits. This course will include sensory approaches to poetry, such as painting, collage, and the use of video and audio. In addition, students will create a final project designed to demonstrate their newfound vision of poetry and poetics.
- WTG 349 Images
On one level, imagery is among the most basic aspects of poetry. Composed, for the most part, in highly specific and concrete language, images provide tangible content that appeals directly to the sensory faculties of the reader. Well-crafted images allow us to “see” a garden, to “smell” a flower, or “feel” a breeze. They give the reader a distinct, literally sensual experience. On another level, however, images function as gateways to the abstract. For example, symbols and metaphors employ images that “steer” readers into the abstract regions of concept, emotion, intuition, and meaning — all of which render experiences every bit as profound as those that appeal to the senses. In this creative writing course, the image serves as a familiar and tangible center from which we may venture into subtler poetic content and devices, and to which we may return to ground our findings. Our readings will focus mostly on modern and contemporary poetry, interspersed with selections from other periods of history. Most importantly, we write our own poetry, inspired (or not) by our studies. This will involve daily in-class writing and occasional workshops. By the end of the course, students have completed a portfolio of what they consider to be their best work. (4 credits)
- WTG 352 Novel Writing
When we read novels, we get lost in unfamiliar or familiar worlds, find new best friends, spend hours with characters we root for, learn from, or who open our eyes to our common humanity, changing our sense of self. But transformation in fiction is not just about story; it’s also about language, imagery, dialogue, innovations in form, and moments of epiphany. Second in a two-block novel writing workshop, this course makes the daunting task of writing a novel approachable. This workshop takes a practical approach, systematically working through specialized techniques of novel writing: How to come up with a book idea that will carry you through for the long haul. How to create memorable, multidimensional, and believable characters that a reader will identify with and root for. How to map out plot and create suspense or profluence, keeping the reader riveted. How to choose point of view and handle complicated POV choices. How to take stories beyond autobiographical writing. How to find motivation to keep going. Students create storyboards, outline their books, and learn how to pitch and market fiction so it can find its niche audience. All through the block, students be exposed to the works of a wide variety of prize-winning novelists, whose methods of handling craft and technique will serve as inspiration. Please note that this course’s main focus is adult literary fiction, though the class is also relevant for those interested in genre fiction, sci-fi, teen fiction, and/or book-length memoir. (4 credits)
- WTG 380 Advanced Poetry Workshop
The poet Victor Hernandez Cruz says, “Poetry gives us revelations, flashes, which illuminate those things which were mysterious to us.” Becoming a great poet has to do with tuning in to your own voice — the rhythm, sound, images, and form of your poems — in a deeply self-referential way. The Advanced Poetry Workshop offers students the opportunity to profoundly hone craft and technique while focusing on a serious body of work. Students familiarize themselves in-depth with the contemporary canon, using the work of great poets to analyze the precise mechanics of form, line break, punctuation, sound devices, imagery, figurative language, point of view, and more. Textbooks are The Poet’s Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing Poetry by Kim Addonizio and Dorianne Laux and The Discovery of Poetry by Frances Mayes. Part of this course is a workshop; students receive rigorous feedback on their work from peers as well as faculty, since revision and experimentation are a vital component of the mature poet’s process. The final portfolio in this class should be of publishable quality. The procedures for submitting work for publication will be discussed, and at the end of this course, students are required to submit several poems to a literary magazine or contest of choice. The culminating event of the course will be a public reading. (4 credits)
- WTG 371 Writing to Publish
Writing to Publish is an advanced writing course designed to guide experienced writers through the publication process. This class teaches writers how to acutely edit their work, select a market for their work, and the intricate details about what publishers and editors and looking for. Upon completion, students have submitted several pieces for publication. (4 credits)
- WTG 306 Graphic Narrative
Graphic narrative — a genre of literature combining writing and art — has become increasingly popular in the past decades. The term “graphic novel” broadly refers to any fictional or nonfiction story told by means of both writing and illustration — often, though not necessarily, in cartoon form. Students read selections from various award-winning graphic novels and memoirs, among them Logicomix by Apostolos Doxiadis and Christos Papadimitriou, Persepolis by Marjane Sarpati, and Fun Home and Are You My Mother? by Alison Bechdel, and Principles of Uncertainty by Maira Kalman. Students are expected to write and illustrate their own graphic narratives during the class, studying craft and technique relevant to the genre with help of the textbook Making Comics by Scott McCloud. Lab fee: $35 for materials. (4 credits)
- WTG 372 Memoir as Resistance
As Margaret Atwood once said, “A word after a word after a word is power.” The act of writing about oppressions we have personally experienced or witnessed can be liberating. Many authors have empowered themselves and their communities by writing about social justice issues, such as racism, homophobia, transphobia, sexism, classism, ableism, and the growing climate crisis. In this course, students will read and discuss the memoirs of Audre Lorde, Janet Mock, Kate Bornstein, James Baldwin, Julia Butterfly Hill, Winona LeDuke, and other activists. In addition, students will create a portfolio–a series of linked or unlinked essays or the opening chapter(s) of a book-length manuscript–that explores their connection to issues of Social Justice.
- WTG 396 Advanced Creative Nonfiction
We all carry stories inside of us. Memories of significant moments, wild summers, treks through foreign countries, and childhood adventures echo through our everyday. We carry these little fires with us but sometimes lack the tools to truly transform them into the literary works of art they were meant to be. This course offers an advanced study in the art of creative nonfiction — innovative techniques in the art of personal essay, flash nonfiction, memoir, and other hybrid forms in the genre that build on the instruction from previous nonfiction courses. Through advanced workshops and reworking a piece through multiple drafts, students learn the power of true revision and submit one piece for publication by the end of the block. The result: a master portfolio of a few select pieces of nonfiction that represent each person’s true heart and mind. The goal is to learn to translate from experience to the page. (4 credits)
- WTG 474 Creative Writing Studio
The Creative Studio is for advanced students seeking concentrated, high-level immersion in craft. Students receive in-depth, challenging feedback on their Senior Project or another advanced project of their choice during this course. Students are encouraged to reach beyond their boundaries, experiment, and keep an open mind. The studio offers a master class diving into the subtle mechanics of technique. The aim is to create a body of work that can be submitted as a portfolio for publication. The Creative Writing Studio provides the perfect preparation for publication and/or graduate work in creative writing, allowing students to try out the professional writing life. (4 credits)