LITR 3731: Creative Writing
Lecture Notes 

2nd class on fiction

midterm postings, schedule, email issues

fiction submission

final exam

handouts

fiction: Ryan, Naomi

quiz

[break]

reading highlight: Jackie Baker

genres > fiction basics:

 


Thursday, 8 October: First fiction workshop + discussion of reading assignments

Reading assignmentThree Genres, ch. 13 (pp. 155-166)

Reading highlight: Jackie Baker

1st Fiction Author: Ryan Smith

1st fiction author’s Discussion Leader: Naomi Gonzales


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

 


update poetry postings

Final submissions for poetry + revision accounts due within 36 hours of class

due this weekend--but if there's a problem with meeting the deadline, don't run and hide--email and explain the situation

poetry submissions 2006

 

Grading process:

You'll receive a note and grade by email.

If your submit your final poetry assignment by the deadline, I'll try to read and return it before our next meeting, so check your email on Sunday night or Monday morning.

Welcome to reply by email or confer by phone or in person.

I try to limit the length of my notes to 1-2 paragraphs because most students don't want more than that, but it's hard to guess what helps an individual student, so follow-up can be good for everyone.

Quality issues in grading:

It's conceivable that you may be disappointed in your grade, especially if you received positive feedback from your readers, etc.

Please reflect that instructor is the only one who reads all the poems, which are judged relative to each other.

 


review assignments

This class begins the fiction phase of our course, which is most of the second half of the semester.

Two issues:

1. schedule

2. what's expected

 

1. schedule

The arrangement of presentations and draft exchanges is similar to the poetry phase, but the names are reversed. 

 

The poetry authors who did poetry draft exchanges

now do fiction presentations

 

The poetry authors who did poetry presentations

now do fiction draft exchanges.

 

Everyone gets experience of a presentation and a draft exchange.

 

 

 

Instructor's addition:

The fiction submission seems "challenging" to a lot of students,

maybe because it's more pages, more voices to handle than with poetry.

Also uncertainty about genre

students used to novels of many pages and short stories several times longer than the assignment

"fiction scene" hard to imagine, new concept

 

Suggestion: review last class's fiction submissions

model assignments

 


onscreen presentation demo

 

purpose:

this semester, demonstrate possibilities in case one of you wants to use this approach (anticipated by Tanya)

but mostly for poetry passage next time course is offered

may do similar exercise first class

may also call in a former student in the class (one of you?) to stage a poetry presentation / discussion lead

 

 

 

 

 

 


reading discussion: Keely

 

 

Instructor's points:

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

2. fiction as fact or lies > truth?

3. art is imitation & reshaping of life, reality

 

 

 

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]

 

 

2. fiction as fact or lies > truth?

 

Chapter 13

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

145 select what we need and invent the rest

155 fresh material < own life, original, unique

what we know well + invent

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

 

3. art is imitation & reshaping of life, reality

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

146 real life: jumble of unconnected events and repetitious activities

147 edit unconsciously

 

 

 

 

 


 


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 charcter

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Notes from 2005)

 


reading discussion

 

Three Genres, ch. 17 (pp. 189-198) Viewpoint: who’s seeing this?

 

189 fiction x-drama, film: eyes of a specific character

enter character’s mind, only guess what others thinking

other characters reveal minds through thought, action

 

195 x-phonetic spellings > phrasing for accent

 

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

 

 

ch. 18 (pp. 199-208) Structure: from scenes to plot

199 clock time, psychological time > sequence of episodes

episodes: setting, character

links blur

 

200 episodes in life > scenes in fiction: basic units

arrangement of scenes = plot

 

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

 

flashback

200 flashback = scene within scene

200 number and length of scenes

202 flashback = episode before main flow or base time of plot

202 past perfect > flashback

past of past

202 how come out of a flashback?

Action or dialogue clearly from base time

202 or present > past (“Three Hearts”)

202 even careless readers follow cues without idea how they work; writers aware of techniques

203 flash-forward increases distance

206 rate of revelation

slow down: digression, speculation, description, any exposition

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

206 openings = high rate of revelation

207 alternate between vitality of fresh plot development and richness of description and exposition