LEARN YOUR CRAFT. LOVE YOUR WORDS.
What are we trying to accomplish when we write of our own experience? Beyond recounting what happened, how can we understand our past or current selves? Writing about a specific theme or subject, how do we make our experiences mean something new? By clearly understanding what we are trying to accomplish, and assessing the writing choices we have made and need to make, our work becomes better and more meaningful.
In this webinar, we will consider different ways of thinking about what makes narrative work. What is the difference between telling what happened, and making an experience felt? What is the difference between a piece that is good, and one that changes our understanding of ourselves, of others, or of the world?
We will explore a conceptual model for creative nonfiction craft adapted from the teaching of Ehud Havazalet that allows us to understand and name how our work is functioning (or not). We’ll also discover how the model might be applied, by close reading a short essay or two by Ira Sukrungruang and/or Joe Wilkins.
We will then consider how this model might be tailored to our own intentions and tendencies as writers so that it works for each of us as we figure out what kind of writer we wish to be.
This webinar is for…
Closed captioning is available ✔
All registrants receive the recording ✔
MICHAEL COPPERMAN’S prose has appeared in The Oxford-American, Guernica, The Sun, Creative Nonfiction, Boston Review, Salon, Gulf Coast, Triquarterly, Kenyon Review and Copper Nickel, among many others, and has won awards and garnered fellowships from the Munster Literature Center, Breadloaf Writers Conference, Oregon Literary Arts, and the Oregon Arts Commission. His memoir TEACHER: Two Years in the Mississippi Delta (University Press of Mississippi 2017), about the rural black public schools of the Mississippi Delta, was a finalist for the 2018 Oregon Book Award in CNF. His work is represented by David Dunton of Harvey Klinger.
Questions? Please email info@craft-talks.com