LITR 3731: Creative Writing
Lecture Notes

fiction workshops & readings

midterms

assignments & handouts

fiction: Peter, Paul

quiz

[break]

reading discussion: Veronica

fiction: Hillary, Tara










 

Thursday, 15 October: Fiction workshop + discussion of reading assignments

Reading assignmentThree Genres, ch. 12 (pp. 145-154);

Reading highlight: Veronica Nadalin

1st Fiction Author: Peter Becnel

1st fiction Author’s Discussion Leader: Paul Acevedo

2nd Fiction Author: Hillary Roth

2nd fiction Author’s Discussion Leader: Tara McGee


Thursday, 22 October: Fiction workshop + discussion of reading assignments

Reading assignment: ch. 14 (pp. 167-174); ch. 15 (pp. 175-181)

Reading highlight: J J Torres

1st Fiction Author: Jackie Baker

1st fiction Author’s Discussion Leader: Karina Ramos

 


midterms

 

What's left for you to do with poetry?

Revise / Resubmit for webpage?--

Optional

Email me a fresh file any time this semester (or beyond)—doesn’t take long for me to make changes on the webpage.

Resubmissions aren’t required and don’t necessarily help or change any grades, but a few students usually want this option, and sometimes it’s part of your overall improvement during a semester > grade considerations.

Possibility of resubmission at any point before or soon after final

 

Regardless . . .

Submit poem(s) to Bayousphere

 

Bayousphere, Marrow

Student Research Conference

or many other publications, print or online

Even if I criticized your poem and you think I didn’t like it, consider submitting  

I’m judging only from an academic standpoint, having to do not only with poetic appeal but with what you’re showing from class + poetic standards I’ve learned as a scholar and teach—not as an editor.

Your poem’s positive reception in the workshop and draft exchanges may indicate its potential popularity

Just how exclusive is Bayousphere? The answer depends on the competition or standards set by other submissions.

Writers’ proverb: “the worst they can say is No.”

 

What's left for you to do with poetry?

 

Revise / Resubmit for webpage

 

If you want to revise your posted poem, you may send in a fresh file at any time this semester—it doesn’t take long for me to make changes on the webpage.

 

Resubmissions aren’t required and don’t necessarily help or change any grades, but a few students usually want this option, and sometimes it’s part of your overall improvement during a semester > grade considerations.

 

Already one completely new poem posted.

 

Possibility of resubmission at any point before or soon after final

 

Confer over poetry, submissions, work in general

 

welcome to follow up on my response to your poetry submission--by email, phone, or conference. I’ll be around during Spring Break or after.

 

Submit to Bayousphere or other publications

 

Even if I criticized your poem and you think I didn’t like it, consider submitting their poem to Bayousphere

I’m judging only from an academic standpoint, having to do not only with poetic appeal but with what you’re showing from class + poetic standards I’ve learned as a scholar and teach—not as an editor.

 

Your poem’s positive reception in the workshop and draft exchanges may indicate its potential popularity

 

Just how exclusive is Bayousphere? The answer depends on the competition or standards set by other submissions. Writers’ proverb: “the worst they can say is No.”

 

 

Possibility of resubmission at any point before or soon after final

 

 

Note for first lecture: students swap emails, phones

 

 


assignments & handouts


introduction to fiction

basic instruction--

comparable to lesson on poetry re "sight and sound"

sight: visual images--picture in the mind

sound: rhythm, rhyme, muting, repetition / chant

poem on screen

 

fiction: narrator + dialogue

fiction scene on screen

 

fiction scene overdoing narrative

fiction scene overdoing dialogue

 

ch. 12 (pp. 145-154) Fact and Fiction

 

145 three types of prose writing: factual, creative, and creative nonfiction

145 fiction +- lying

145 analyses

145 experiences, details > reshape: divide , mix, alter, transform

145 select what we need and invent the rest

145 creative or literary nonfiction: informal essay

146 concern for language + personal, informal tone

146 [chart]

146 x “untrue” > “seems true”

146 real life: jumble of unconnected events and repetitious activities

147 edit unconsciously

147 fictional totally liberated from experience as it happened

147 [no arguing taste]

147 simple x sophisticated

148 comic strip x Catcher in the Rye

148 sophisticated x suave and urbane

149 large circulation magazines: New Yorker, Harper’s, Atlantic

149 literary journals and quarterlies

149 plot, characters, setting, theme

149 plot: conventions, formulas

149 characterization: simple x get to know

149 ambivalence

150 setting: simple: cliché + exotic

150 quick entertainment x memorable themes

150 five narrative modes of fiction: dialogue, thought, action, description, & exposition

[> narrator + dialogue]

151 character < dialogue & thought

151 four categories: short-short story, story, novella, novel

152-3 three motives for writing fiction

Private motive

Commercial motives

Literary motive (measure against best)

 

 

ch. 13 (pp. 155-166) Where Stories Come From

155 fresh material < own life, original, unique

what we know well + invent

155 formula writing

156 seven deadly sins of fiction

156 High-Tech Melodrama

search-and-capture / kill

156 Adolescent Tragedy: Lack of perspective, sentimentality, &

warning signs (perspective): real names, plot “how it happened”

157 avoid the big familiar pattern

157 Twilight Zone Rerun

gimmick x character, subject, theme

158 vampires resurrected

158 baby-boomer gone wrong

158 Temptations of Ernest Goodwriter

159 My Weird Dream

160 authenticity of personal experience

160 short fiction x high drama

160 one foot in circle of familiar + one foot reaching out

160 “waiting for inspiration” = procrastination

161 genuine emotions are always fresh

161 try a page or two from perspective of other character

162 memory

163 transformation: from facts to fiction

163 conscious transformation

164 transformation = psychic liberation

165 “Not even your best friend would read it”

165 junk details

165 fuse 2 people into single fictional character

 

 

Classical idea from Socrates, Plato, Aristotle:

Art is an imitation of reality.

Art: Not just visual art, but writing as art, creation

imitation: representation, mirror

reality: nature, the world, society, life, the soul, etc.

Another way: art is "like" life

doesn't pretend to be exactly the same

 

146 real life: jumble of unconnected events and repetitious activities

147 edit unconsciously [humans are story-telling creatures--we can do this without thinking about it--but can get better with thinking about it]

 

 

 

 

 

 

Leftover notes from previous classes

 


Many different meanings, ways to interpret poetry and fiction

Everyone needs to learn something, but de-emphasize "rules" for sake of learning process, life-time learning, good learning habits and models

Compared to other areas, literature teachers or language practitioners do not so much provide rules and definite answers (though we're supposed to know more about language), but to help people use language ask questions, think for themselves, develop thoughts, express insights, and discuss answers.

hard to fit with "teaching to the test" but important to civilization

testing and accountability = minimal skills

But some resources and efforts have to go beyond minimal skills

> leadership, imagination toward a better society

Literature and language teachers can't make that better society happen by themselves, but language and literature classes are often the only places where young people ever get a glimpse of another reality.

 

 

3. art is imitation & reshaping of life, reality

Classical idea from Socrates, Plato, Aristotle:

Art is an imitation of reality.

Art: Not just visual art, but writing as art, creation

imitation: representation, mirror

reality: nature, the world, society, life, the soul, etc.

Another way: art is "like" life

doesn't pretend to be exactly the same

 

146 real life: jumble of unconnected events and repetitious activities

147 edit unconsciously [humans are story-telling creatures--we can do this without thinking about it--but can get better with thinking about it]

1. form of fiction (compare-contrast lyric poetry and drama)

 title of book: Three Genres

What's a genre?

"A class or type of literature"

Concept of genre is a part of everybody's common sense:

What kind of book are you reading? A mystery, a thriller, a love story.

 

Genre can mean lots of different things.

151 four categories: short-short story, story, novella, novel

 

Our book mostly uses a more academic sense: what are the forms or elements of poetry (line, image, figure of speech, metaphor, etc.)

or of fiction

p. 150 five narrative modes of fiction: dialogue, thought, action, description, & exposition

A critic can constantly subdivide elements, but simpler options available

LITR 4533 Tragedy: handout on genres

[ > narrator + dialogue]

 

Review last class on poetry > fiction

1. form of fiction (compare-contrast lyric poetry and drama)

2. fiction as fact or invention / lies > truth?

3. art is imitation & reshaping of life, reality

 

instructor's follow-up

 

Fiction discussion

Many different meanings, ways to interpret poetry and fiction

Everyone needs to learn something, but de-emphasize "rules" for sake of learning process, life-time learning, good learning habits and models

Compared to other areas, literature teachers or language practitioners do not so much provide rules and answers (though we're supposed to know more about language), but to help people use language ask questions, express insights, and discuss answers.

Difficult approach for "teaching to the test" but more important to civilization

Can defend testing and accountability in terms of minimal skills

But some resources and efforts have to go beyond minimal > leadership, imagination toward a better society

Literature and language teachers can't make that better society happen by themselves, but language and literature classes are often the only places where young people ever get a glimpse of another reality.

 

Review last class on poetry > fiction

1. form of fiction (compare-contrast lyric poetry and drama)

2. fiction as fact or invention / lies > truth?

3. art is imitation & reshaping of life, reality

 

3. art is imitation & reshaping of life, reality

Classical idea from Socrates, Plato, Aristotle: Art is an imitation of reality.

146 real life: jumble of unconnected events and repetitious activities

147 edit unconsciously [humans are story-telling creatures--we can do this without thinking about it--but can get better with thinking about it]

 

 

2. fiction as fact or invention / lies > truth?

 

Chapter 13: Where Stories come from

145 experiences, details from real life > reshape: divide , mix, alter, transform

145 select what we need and invent the rest

160 one foot in circle of familiar + one foot reaching out

 

conclusion: Literature may not be as real as reality, but it can be more true than reality

denser, richer, more intense than everyday life

 

Minot's changes in what really happened > "Sausages and Beer"

176 memory of own life

176 combination of emotions, odd mix of fascination, revulsion, & fear [when you make something completely up, your emotions become predictable—reality is stranger and richer than our power to invent—but we can rearrange]

176 language of insane, x-invention

177 mother, not father

takes pressure off

major transformations > delicious discovery

 

 

 

189 viewpoint, point of view, means of perception, [perspective]

viewpoint does not equal attitude

 

189 1st person = I

190 third person [limited]

 

190 increases readers’ sense of identification

 

190 maintains suspense

 

191 deliberate withholding of information

 

 

 

197 4 first aid steps

 

198

 

1 don’t tear up draft

 

2 write sample x abstract analysis

 

3 trust instinct

 

4 focus: look at first and last pages

 

 

 

200 episodes in life > scenes in fiction: basic units

arrangement of scenes = plot

 

200 “Sausage & Beer”: 3 major blocks: hospital, visit, bar

 

 

 

206 pace < style: length & complexity of sentence structure

 

206 rate of revelation

 

206 high-speed car crashes & catastrophic explosions x subtlety of theme and richness of character

 

 

Effect and organization of poetry and fiction < numbers and types of voices

 

"genres"—types or classes of literature

 

Lyric poetry: intense impression < single voice (usually one speaker "sings" the poem, like a song on the radio)

 

Fiction: moments of intensity, but effects are more varied, less centrally focused < more than one speaker: narrator + dialogue of characters

 

 

 

 

 

 

178 cutting blocks of material is painful > Lost Gems file

 

180 initial memory

 

borrowed memories

 

pure invention

 

181 imagine self as new reader

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Today’s tastes in literary fiction discount third-person omniscient viewpoint in favor of more limited perspectives like “first person” and “third-person limited.” With their internal views, these limited styles expose deeper psychological identities and conflicts. In contrast, “omniscient” or “all-seeing” view may appear old-fashioned and shallow. Along with first-person style, omniscient perspective dominated the early novel, with third-person limited perspective developing later. Yet third-person omniscient viewpoint remains standard for mass-market fiction—e. g., The Da Vinci Code or The Hunt for Red October—which rapidly shifts perspective from one character or scene to another like a movie camera. For later readers this resemblance between Cooper’s viewpoint and cinema remains one of the author’s greatest appeals.

 

Two effects make the third-person omniscient an useful vehicle for Cooper’s Tales. Omniscient or “all-seeing” perspective observes action like a wide-screen movie camera watching people move through vast landscapes, as in films like Dances with Wolves or Braveheart. In the historical novel Waverly (1814), the British novelist Walter Scott used such a technique to describe battles between English and rebel forces in Scotland. Cooper skillfully adapted this point of view for the military maneuvers, perilous journeys, and spacious landscapes of his frontier and sea romances. Pathfinder employs this technique strikingly in the opening chapters, where Leather-stocking and others help Mabel escape a river ambush to join her father at Fort Oswego.

 

Third-person omniscient also succeeds with populous social scenes in which characters’ speech and gestures declare their identities and, to an extent, their inner states of mind. Cooper found this style comfortable for novels of manners like Precaution and The Spy. In Pathfinder he relocates it to the frontier of North America. The novel’s richest social scene is a “shooting match” at Fort Oswego. Like medieval ladies at jousting tournaments in Scott’s Ivanhoe, the spectators—officers’ wives, Mabel, and the common soldiers’ wives—seat themselves on planks according to “the etiquette of rank” (XI). Everything glitters, but all is witnessed from outside.

 

By 1840, however, fashions in literature were changing. As fiction matured, perspective became more personal. “Third-person limited” point of view focuses selectively on the internal consciousness of individuals. Fiction by Nathaniel Hawthorne such as The Scarlet Letter influenced this style’s development. Abandoning the omniscient’s wide scope, limited viewpoint deepens psychological intensity. The resulting ambiguities appeal to modern tastes for irony and self-deception.

 

 

Hard to summarize fiction b/c multi-voiced

"Novel theorists" defend fiction as best imitation of modern reality

 

modern reality is multi-voiced > novel automatically multi-voiced (narrator + characters in dialogue, each expressing a different take on the world)

 

poems make you feel, open up your heart-mind to totally new impressions

 

fiction makes you see or experience reality from different angles, perspectives

 

 

Preview final exam: what are you learning? About creative writing, teaching it, or both?

 

 

 

 

 

 


business

Baby card for Mary Bel

good example of "greeting card verse"

 

Friday email from Mary Bel 

Thomas Silas Garza arrived on October 17, 2006 at 4:39pm. He weighed 5lbs. 9oz and 18 1/2 in. He was small but everything is great and healthy. From the birth to the arrival at home on Thursday all is going well and we are loving every minute of it. With everything going smoothly so far I should be seeing you all in a couple of weeks. . . .
PS Note to : Dr. White will you please let Anissa know for me? She is keeping notes for me in a another course.

 

 

 

(leftover notes from 2005)

Online student communications:

2 emails from Devon to Audra on class of 7 March

 

Ok, well I am just full of technical difficulties...this time it is minor, I can't find Audra's e-mail address so lets hope my memory hasn't failed me! 

So here goes...HI Audra, how are you?  We loved your picture of the munchkin, you are so lucky that the school is working with you to finish classes.  I dunno if you remember me, but I had Paolini's class with you last semester.  You usually sat with Glenna and I was always on the back row, sometimes right in front of you, depending on how late I got to class and what classroom we were in (due to the construction!). 
Sorry I didn't e-mail you sooner!  I guess Dr. White knew what he was doing when he gave me the week before Spring Break to talk to you.  My reputation (procrastination) precedes me!  Actually, the sad thing is that I keep telling myself to do it, but I just hate getting on the computer.  i have a little girl who just turned 1 and she loves the blue lighted button that turns the computer off!!  I bet you are having an absolute blast with your little one...its an experience you just can't describe to people and friends without kids.  Its crazy...
Well, I will shut up and get to business or this e-mail will turn into a novel! 
 
Our last class was a lot of fun!  First, we read "The Call Goodbye" which i am sure you have already read.  I am horrible with names so I didn't get everyone's name during the discussion, but I will try to relay what we talked about.  No one in the class predicted the ending of the story; the gift she bought that ended up being a gun was a nice twist ending.  Someone suggested that she remove the word suicide from the last paragraph since the meaning was implied without saying the word.  After the respondent (Lindsay) asked for our comments, she began with her questions.  First, "Did you want the reader to feel sorry for her?"  JAMIE: "No, just to have her realize how trashy she looked and how others perceived her."  Jamie said she didn't think too much about what the audience would feel towards the main character.  JAMIE remarked that she felt like it was hard to read and that she had trouble reading it.  KAREN: "Fix the past and present tense problems, that's why its harder to read".  DR. WHITE: "Consider doing part of it in present tense and part of it in past".  KAREN: "Change to past when she flashes to memories". 
SHERRY: "The end goes too fast".  There was more build-up at the beginning of the story than at the end.  ANDREA: "Turn it into conversation instead of detail".  Andrea was talking about the part where Brad asks her what had happened to her...the paragraph immediately following could be written in dialogue instead of a paragraph of details.  SHERRY: "Should we feel sorry for Brad?"  LINDSAY: "Make it longer and do more character development  so that we know more about Brad and their relationship".  ANDREA:  "A loud noise went off...doesn't sound right.  A gun doesn't just go off, noises don't just go off.  It's like my daughter when she says she is 'going' with a boy and I say 'well, where are you going?'  They aren't going anywhere".  JENNIFER J.: "How does she feel when she leaves the hotel looking all beat up?"  we want more info on the main character's feelings after the experience.  We then had a brief discussion about brainstorming and where jamie got the idea.  Jamie said that she has never written fiction and the idea just came to her.  The class especially enjoyed the line "I don't care to hear anything that comes out of a million man dick hole"...it was definitely creative and unique.  DR. WHITE:  Pointed out that the story leans too heavily on the character's names...ie: Brad, the insurance salesman and Enrique the hot stud :).  Perhaps the names can be changed, or you could just add more description.  let us know more about Brad and Enrique...hwo was the marriage, how did they meet, etc.  DR. WHITE:  "Keep the line, 'Since she's an interior decorator, it was the perfect lie', but bring in her profession earlier in the story, perhaps to tell how she met Enrique.  ANDREA: "take out 'it was the perfect lie'".  Personally, I ! like the line, but Dr. White had a good point about discussing her profession earlier in the story rather than it being an afterthought.  JENNIFER J.: "Add in some wifely duties of hers".  The class thought that the monotony of taking care of the kids and husband should be accentuated early in the story.  perhaps a comment like "make the kids lunches for school" or " making the beds, as she did every morning".  Some people figured this would show how frustrated she was with her life.  I think it would be good to add the wifely duties into the story, but I think it should be done carefully so as not to make the reader feel sorry for her.  Jamie want s the reader to see how trashy she behaved, not to feel sorry for her.  Also, by alluding to the children earlier in the story the reader knows that they exist rather than having them appear out of nowhere at the end of the story. 
i think this is way too long, but I am trying to give you all the details...SORRY!!  I am going to send this, then send the second half of class separately b/c I am afraid AOl will cut me off or something and I will lose this forever long e-mail!!  By-yee for 2 seconds...Devon 

(2nd email)

After break we read Jennifer Jones' "water fairy".  It was a really nice story that is aiming for YA lit.  that was the first question from KAREN: "iS IT ya LIT?"  JENNIFER:  eventually wants to write a Ya novel, but this is just a chapter.  It was funny b/c every question we asked her, she already had an answer to.  we wanted to know the reasons she did certain things, but they are elements that she will reveal in later chapters.  Also, even though the chapters in our textbook said that using dialects can hurt a story, DR. WHITE SAID THAT IT REALLY WORKED IN THIS STORY.  She only uses the Irish dialect for the grandmother because she didn't want to over-do it. Most of the story will take place in Ireland, but she still didn't want to stress the dialect.  Jennifer has never been to Ireland but she is very interested in the land and culture.&n! bsp; The plants that she alludes to are actually plants that would be in Ireland.  JAMIE: "The readers questions are answered as the story goes on.  She doesn't give things away, but lets us wonder."  I wrote that Sherry suggested that she take the name setup at the beginning of the story and imply it through the dialogue, but I don't remember quite what she meant by that.  I listened too much without writing enough. I think she wanted Jennifer to discuss Morgen's name problem through dialogue rather than a couple of paragraphs of detail.  Jennifer assured us that everything will be revealed in the end and we are all dying to find out.  ANDREA:  "How did you set everything up, having never been there?" Jennifer has done a lot of research and I think that Andrea has actually been helping her with some of the research.  It turns out that they have been doing peer review for each other ever since we had the guest speaker talk to us.  They invited the rest of us to join them in e-mail peer reviews.  Andrea also asked if we felt like there were any parts that would lose the reader's interest, but we were all intrigued throughout the chapter.  We decided it will be a great story for girls, but that most guys won't be able to relate.  DR. WHITE commented on the flashback about Miami right before Finola is introduced.  it needs to be expanded and worked in a little bit better, b/c it seems out of place.  I didn't mind it b/c it seemed like  daydream and then the grandmother snapped her back to reality.  We are all excited to read the rest of her book since we are kept in suspense and promised the rest of the story. 
 
After that we talked about the readings...
In ch.17, focus on Viewpoint, knowing different viewpoints, telling a story from two different viewpoints can reveal different avenues.  P 198 has four points to pay attention to, a checklist to follow.  A quick fix in case of emergency. 
In ch. 18, clock time vs. psychological time...psychological time is how we chunk up our days, we don't see it as a flowing process.  Brad was written in clock time whereas the woman was written in psychological time.  Flashbacks...effective when they are done right.  Bad when overdone (wayne's world).  ANDREA:  "talked about flash forwards, how else does it work?  How can you see into the future?"  DR.WHITE:  In two weeks we will read a story that has a flash forward.  A flash forward gets out of the stream of the story.  p203 "oddly even careless readers...aware of the technique."  TARA: "OPENINGS AND CLOSINGS, ESPECIALLY CLOSINGS leave the readers unsatisfied when they aren't done right".  When she said that, i commented on my own dissatisfaction with YA books today.  I don't know if you read a lot of YA books, but I have read several recently The Giver, The Chocolate War, Green Angel, and Anna of Byzantium that all had these morbid unresolved endings.  Ia m a happy ending kind of person.  I need closure or I go nuts!!  Anyways...Dr. white concluded by reminding us about the required elements of our fiction piece (make sure its long enough, etc)...and that was that!!!   ten years later, I hope your eyes aren't falling out of your head by now.  Once i start, you really can't shut me up!!  Have fun and I'll talk to you later!!  By-yee, Devon

 

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