Download - Creative writing

Transcript
Page 1: Creative writing

Creative writing

Session 1

Page 2: Creative writing

Creative writing as part of English• English communication skills • You need to be able to understand, describe and produce

English language for different and specific purposes. • Academic writing – a genre you need to master at the

university and can use elsewhere• Grammar – formal and functional understanding of the

English language• Basics of translation – comparative language skills

Page 3: Creative writing

Cntd.• Creative writing - will not teach you to be artists

• But you still have to study all four creative genres: fiction, poetry, drama and non-fiction. You will mainly produce creative non-fiction.

Page 4: Creative writing

Writing game 1

• Write a poem in five minutes.

• Reflect on the ’creativity’ of it. Is it creative? Why/why not? (Class discussion, but take notes for later use)

Page 5: Creative writing

Writing game 2

• Consider the following instructions. Try it out. Will it work as a way of getting your creative writing going?

Page 6: Creative writing

Instructions’Whatever you write is right. You can’t write the wrong thing!

It doesn’t even have to be in proper English. Write when and where you feel like it; day or night, in bed, in a café (difficult on a bike). Write only two lines, or lots – in a notebook, on scraps of paper, perhaps in a folder.

Scribble whatever comes into your head for 2 minutes – don’t stop to think! It might be a list, or odd words or phrases – spelling and proper sentences don’t matter!

Page 7: Creative writing

And the source:• Gillie Bolton, ’Writing or Pills’ in The Self on the Page, ed. Celia Hunt and

Fiona Sampson (Jessica Kingsley; 2002; first published 1998), p. 83

• FROM A PATIENT LEAFLET TO HELP ANXIOUS OR DEPRESSED PATIENTS!

Page 8: Creative writing

4 perceptions of writing

• Life-writing (me)

• Cultural practice (us)

• Dissemination (“Formidling”)(me and you)

• Professionalism (them)

Page 9: Creative writing

WRITING THE INVISIBLE• Something profound and invisible ‘comes out’ in writing. • ‘Whether the ‘source’ of the writing comes from ‘inspiration’ or from expressing

‘self’, that source cannot be seen. Writing does not involve any manipulation of pre-existing materials, beyond paper/screen, and pen/fingers. There is no musical instrument, no clay, no paint and canvas/paper, no marble. It is not structurally dependant on organised group activity: a choir or orchestra with a conductor, a drama group with a script and a director. It is stringently individuated, with its materials (source, as in the brain/mind; language as the means and mode) all invisible until words are put on paper. It is an imaginative mode of thought until organised in and through written language’

• BUT language is not magical and unteachable – it is cultural and acquired and applied through practical knowledge of its forms and written conventions.

Page 10: Creative writing

WRITING AS READING• If you don’t read, you cannot write. Read literary history, criticism, theory,

and aesthetics.

• All writing does not come from personal experience, but from reading, analysing and thinking about the above.

Page 11: Creative writing

WRITING AS WORK AND REWRITING• “All completed writing involves preparation, taking notes, writing

rough, perhaps fragmented versions, rewriting, producing drafts, revising, editing, proof-reading”

• The muse doesn’t hand down to writers complete and perfectly formed novels, poems or plays

• Writing is (hard) work.

Page 12: Creative writing

Myth 1

• Myth: you need inspiration to write – good writing begins spontaneously in an inspired moment

• Reality: Inspiration emerges from writing.

Page 13: Creative writing

Myth 2

• Myth: you have to think before you can write

• Reality : you think when you write or after you have written

Page 14: Creative writing

Myth 3

• Myth: you need a sense of control and coherence in your thinking before you can write.

• Reality: control and coherence appear when you write

Page 15: Creative writing

Myth 4

• Myth: it is important to begin well

• Reality : the best beginning is often written as the last thing. It is more important to begin at all than to begin well! begynde!

Page 16: Creative writing

Myth 5

• Myth: all texts must be original – you always have to write something new

• Reality: very little is thought, written or said which is completely new.

Page 17: Creative writing

Myth 6

• Myte: all texts must be flawless and perfect

• Reality: There is no such thing as a perfect text.

Page 18: Creative writing

Myth 7

• Myth; good writing progresses easily

• Reality: writing is full of ’relapses’. You need to rewrite, delete and be patient!

Page 19: Creative writing

Myth 8

• Myth: writing is most effective if you write in very long sessions, and writing demands long streches of uninterrupted time.

• Reality: the above leads to long breaks and getting burnt out. Creativity is arises from continuously working with writing

Page 20: Creative writing

Writing game 3

• Word Hoard (15 minutes)

• Finish as home work

• Post your writing on the blog

Page 21: Creative writing

Word hoard

Page 22: Creative writing

Word hoard 2

Page 23: Creative writing

For next week

• Post your writing on the blog (writing games 1 & 3)

• Bring the ingredients on the list on the next slide for next session...

Page 24: Creative writing

Data-ingredients for next week• 1 overheard conversation• 3 species of birds• 2 brand names for food• Text from 4 signs• The name of a planet or a star• The name of a lipstick• 1 time of day• The title of a book• The title of a painting• The name of a dead politician• 2 types of vegetables• 3 items from a hardware store• A make of gun