Syllabus

SYLLABUS

ENGL 210-1: Introduction to Creative Writing

Spring 2009

MWF 9-9:50 am

Wheatley W01-0009

Jeremy Lakaszcyck                                                                                     Office Hours:               Monday 10-11 a.m.

Office: 6th Floor, 73                                                                                                                or by appointment

                                                                      e-mail:Jeremy.Lakaszcyck001@umb.edu

Required Text:

Burroway, Janet.  Imaginative Writing: The Elements of Craft (2nd Edition).  Penguin Academics, 2007.

E-Reserve Texts, Handouts including numbered packets (P1, P2, P3)

Course Goals:

This course is an introduction to the process of writing poetry and fiction, and is designed to embolden you to think and write creatively, enable you to read and respond critically/helpfully, and introduce you to the terminology and basic elements of writing craft.  In a friendly, supportive environment, we will examine a variety of published poems and stories from our text and hand-outs, as well as each other’s work, in an effort to shed light on what makes for effective writing (including, but not limited to: image, voice, dialogue, character, conflict and setting).  You will be putting these ideas directly to work in the poetry and fiction you produce for class.  During the course of the semester, you will complete in class writing exercises, and out of class assignments, including individual and group exercises, free writing, and formal assignments.  By working in both poetry and fiction, and receiving feedback (in the form of written and oral critiques) from your peers and from me, you will begin to develop a working understanding of how poetic and narrative techniques work.  It is hoped that by the end of this course, you will have learned to write more creatively—artfully—about the things that matter to you.  We all have something unique to say about the world in which we live; this course aims to help you develop the skills to deliver your poetic and fictional expressions in an artful, engaging way.

During the first two thirds of the course, we will read and write poems with emphasis on imagery, rhythm, and voice, and we will read and write fiction paying close attention to character development, conflict/plot, setting and dialogue.  The third part of the semester will be devoted to the continuation and revision of your work in both forms.  Throughout the semester, we will be “workshopping” each other’s work, first in small groups and then as a class.

Course Requirements:

1.          Creative Writing: You are responsible for one weekly out-of-class writing assignment, as well as in-class exercises as assigned.  Most of your writing will take place out of class.  These assignments will lead to a final portfolio of work that will include 4 complete poems (4-6 total pages) and 1-2 complete stories, story beginnings OR story fragments (6 – 15 pages total), all of which will go through at least one revision.   Both original and revised versions of all creative work (poems and stories) are to be included in the final portfolio. While no individual poem or piece of fiction you hand in will be graded, the complete portfolio is a measure of your growth as a writer over the course of the semester.  There’s no time to wait for inspiration to strike!  Writing is a daily habit that must be developed.  As such, it is important for both your grade and your growth as a writer to keep up with the weekly writing assignments.

***The final portfolio is due May 15, the Friday after classes end.  If you would like your portfolio back from me, please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope in which I can mail it to you.***

  • Reading: You are responsible for weekly reading assignments from the text, as well as occasional hand-outs.  You will be responsible for writing 2 brief Craft Response Essays in response to reading done for the course(1 - 2 double-spaced pages) over the course of the semester (one in response to a single poem, one in response to a piece of fiction). Craft Response Essays should focus on one of three things: 1) the way a particular craft element discussed in class is being put to use; 2) why and how a particular image, phrase, line, etc., really struck you, and why/how it’s effective; or 3) any craft-based question the poem or story raised for you. Craft Response Essays are not to be summaries of what the story or poem was about, nor litanies of what the poem or story reminded you of from your own life.  Rather these papers should engage critically with something we have read, asking the question “how/why did the author do that?” Craft Response Essays will be graded.

You will also be responsible for bringing in one poem or story segment from unassigned reading to share with the class.  We will spend the first few minutes of most class sessions reading and discussing these pieces.

3.        Literary Reading Attendance:  During the semester, you will attend a literary reading. You will write one short (1-2 page) response paper on the reading of your choice (due within 1 week of the scheduled reading). There are numerous readings scheduled on campus throughout the semester, and local bookstores, other universities, and literary organizations regularly sponsor readings around Boston.  Your response paper should focus on what you found interesting or uninteresting about the reading, and how hearing the work helped or didn’t’ help illuminate the text.  This paper will be graded.

4.        Class participation:  This is an interactive, discussion-based class.  Your presence and participation are necessary and required.  Aside from discussing published pieces we read outside of class, and completing in-class writing assignments, you will be split into small groups where you will be required to “workshop” your classmates’ work and be “workshopped” by your classmates.  Part of this process involves written critiques of your classmates’ work. You will be required to write comments on the work of everyone in your group, and one critical response in letter form to one other student.  Each such letter will consist of at least the following: 2 things you felt were strengths of the piece, two inquiries into or questions about the piece, and one helpful suggestion.  Pay special attention to Burroway’s suggestions on page xxvii of the Invitation to the Writer section of the Introduction for help with this.   More specific instructions for critiques and workshop participation will be given out later in the semester. These critiques will be graded.

Class participation will also include posting your work to the class website prior to workshops.

Finally, I may announce quizzes on vocabulary or works we’ve read.  These would be graded and count toward your participation grade.

5.        Attendance:  You are allowed no more than FOUR unexcused absences.  Unexcused absences are ones you have not notified me of in advance.   Please take the time to call my voicemail or email me if you find you cannot make class.  In case of emergency, I appreciate contact with you as soon as possible.  Don’t just disappear—let me know what’s happened to you.   Please exchange phone numbers or email addresses with someone in class to find out about a class you’ve missed. If you exceed 4 unexcused absences or, for any reason, miss more than 8 classes, you WILL fail the course. 

Out of respect for your classmates and me, please turn cell phones off for the duration of each class period.  Texting, checking messages, emailing, etc. during class is unnecessary and rude.  Please also refrain from eating during class, and take care of all personal needs prior to or after class.  It is disruptive to have people coming in and out of the classroom.

6.        Conferences: You will be required to attend two 15-minute progress conferences with me near the midway point and the end of the semester.  Weeks 6 and 15 (see schedule for dates) are set aside entirely for these.  To this conference, you are expected to bring all of your creative work (poems, fiction, revisions) produced so far.  We will discuss the state of your portfolio and any specific questions you have about how to move forward.  Conferences are an important part of this course and will be graded.  Please do not skip your conference appointments.  As you will not be attending this class during conference weeks, missing a conference is equivalent to 3 classes and will be counted as such.  I encourage you to schedule meetings with me at any other point during the semester, or show up for my office hours, to discuss your work, your progress, course expectations, readings, etc. 

Grading:

Please note that you will not be graded on “talent” for this course.  Rather, your grade will be a reflection of your growth and development as a writer, as well as your adherence to the course requirements outlined above.  To determine your grade, I will weigh the timely completion of creative assignments; the growth displayed in your portfolio (first drafts to revisions); your critical responses to class readings, attendance at a literary reading, and responses to the work of your classmates; class participation; and class and conference attendance.

Your grade will be determined as follows:

25% - Response Papers (2 Craft Response Essays; 1 Literary Reading Response)

25% - Portfolio (timely completion of assignments; revision efforts; growth; self-assessment)

25% - Class participation/Attendance (discussion, web-posting, quizzes, etc.)

15% - Workshop (Classmate Critiques; 4 Critical Responses; discussion)

10% - Conferences

Students with Disabilities

If you have a disability and feel you will need accommodations in order to complete course requirements, please contact the Ross Center for Disability Services (M1-401) at 617-287-7430.

Plagiarism and Academic Honesty

Plagiarism is defined as the attempt to use or pass off as one’s own the ideas or writings of another. This includes copying from a friend, downloading material from the Internet and pretending it’s yours, or using passages either reproduced word-for-word or paraphrased from another’s writing without giving the author credit. If you’re confused about the right way to quote sources, please see me and I’ll be glad to clarify. Because plagiarism involves stealing someone’s ideas, it’s considered a serious matter in academic life. Anyone committing plagiarism risks failing the course.

All students are accountable to the definitions and the regulations concerning Academic Honesty contained in the University of Massachusetts Boston “Code of Standard Conduct.”  For more details see: www.umb.edu/student_services/student_rights/code_conduct.html

 

Week 1 (1/26-30):               Course Intro

M 1/26:              Course intro

W 1/28:              Reading Assignment (RA) – (P1) Sylvia Plath “Metaphors;” Joyce Peseroff “Discovering the Power of Metaphor”

                            In-class Writing Exercise

F 1/30:                RA – Invitation to the Writer (pgs. xxi – xxviii)

Which author do you appreciate most? Bring in an example of exemplary writing to read to the class (either poem or paragraph length excerpt of fiction)

Writing Assignment (WA) – Due: Poem #1 (riddle/metaphor poem)

Week 2 (2/2-6):               Image (poetry)

M 2/2:              RA – Chapter 1: Image (3-15); Annie Dillard “The Giant Water Bug” (pgs 15-16); Billy Collins “Snow Day” (pgs 27-28); Yusef Komunyakaa “Facing It” (pgs 28-29); AND Chapter 9: Poetry (309-319);

W 2/4:              RA – (P1) Rainer Maria Rilke “I Live My Life;” (P1) Li-Young Lee “Pillow”

                          In-Class Writing Exercise

F 2/6:                            RA – (P1) Allen Ginsberg “A Supermarket in California,” “Howl”

WA – Due: Poem #2 (Image poem)

Week 3 (2/9-13):               Voice (poetry)

M 2/9:              RA – Chapter 2: Voice (pgs. 37-50); (P3) Charles Bukowski “I’m not all-knowing but...;” (P1) Frank O’Hara “The Day Lady Died;” (P1) William Wordsworth “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud”

                          In-Class Writing Exercise

W 2/11:              In-class Poetry Reading

F 2/13:                            NO CLASS due to AWP Conference

Week 4 (2/16-20):                Poetic Forms

M 2/16:              NO CLASS – President’s Day

W 2/18:              RA: Chapter 9: Poetry (pgs 320-333); Appendix “A Basic Prosody” (pgs. 375-382) Quiz on poetic forms.

WA – Due: Poem #3

F 2/20:              Sonnets, Haiku

                          In-Class Writing Exercise

Sign up for CONFERENCE

Week 5 (2/23-27):               Revising Poetry

M 2/23:              Mary Oliver Revision essay (e-reserve)

                          In-Class Poetry Revision Exercise

WA—Poem #4

WA – Revise a poem; Post it to the class website by 5pm for workshop on Friday

W 2/25:              Discussion on workshop format; practice format

WA – Revise a poem; Post it to the class website by 5pm for workshop on Friday

F 2/27:              Poetry Workshops

                          WA –  1) Classmate Critiques 2)1 Critical Letter (2 copies -- one for instructor, one for fellow student)

Week 6 (3/2-6):               Conferences (bring all poetry to date and Craft Response Essay)

NOTE: You should have 4 complete poems by now, and one revision.  Bring ALL of these to your meeting with me.

M 3/2:              NO CLASS – Conferences

WA – First Craft Response Essay Due (on Poetry)

W 3/4:              NO CLASS – Conferences

WA – First Craft Response Essay Due (on Poetry)

                         

F 3/6:              NO CLASS – Conferences

WA – First Craft Response Essay Due (on Poetry)

Week 7 (3/11-15):              Character (fiction)

M 3/11              RA – Chapter 3: Character (pgs 79-93); Jhumpa Lahiri “Interpreter of Maladies” (pgs. 100-117); Junot Diaz “How to Date a Browngirl, Blackgirl, Whitegirl, or Halfie” (e-reserve)

W 3/13:              RA – Junot Diaz “Drown” (e-reserve)

In-Class Writing Exercise

F 3/15:                            WA – 1-3 pages of fiction (focus on character)

Week 8 (3/16-20):                SPRING BREAK – NO CLASSES

Week 9 (3/23-27):              Setting (fiction)

M 3/23:              RA – Chapter 4: Setting (pgs. 131-142); Benjamin Percy “Refresh, Refresh” (e-reserve); T.C. Boyle “Greasy Lake” (e-reserve);

W 3/25:              RA – Charles Baxter “Snow” (284-293)

                          In-Class Writing exercise

F 3/27:              RA – Donald Barthelme “The School” (146-149)

WA – 2-4 pages of fiction

Week 10 (3/30-4/3):              Story (fiction)

M 3/30:              RA – Chapter 5: Story (pgs. 163-172); Joyce Carol Oates “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” (e-reserve); Ernest Hemingway “Hills Like Elephants” (e-reserve); Tobias Wolf “Say Yes” (e-reserve)

W 4/1:              RA - Chapter 8: Fiction (pgs. 273-284);

In-Class Writing Exercise

                         

F 4/3:              RA – Breece D’J Pancake “A Room Forever” (e-reserve)

WA – 2-4 pages of fiction

                         

Week 11 (4/6-4/10):  Fiction Workshop

M 4/6:              RA – Chapter 6: Development and Revision (pg. 207-222)

                          In Class Radical Revision exercise

                          WA – 2nd Craft Response Essay Due

                          WA – Post your fiction (no more than 5 double spaced pages) to the class website by 5pm for workshop on Friday

W 4/8:                            Student Makeup/Extra Credit Day

                         

F 4/10:                            RA – Classmates work for workshop: stories for your group

                          WA – 1) Classmate Critiques 2)1 Critical Letter (2 copies -- one for instructor, one for fellow student)

Small Group Workshops

Week 12 (4/13-17):                Revising Poetry/Workshop

M 4/13:               RA – (P3) Charles Bukowski; (P2) Lucille Clifton

                            WA – Post 1 revised poem by 7pm for Friday’s workshop

W 4/15:               In-class poetry revision exercise

                           

F 4/17:                            Poetry Workshop

                            RA – Read poems by your group-mates

                          WA – 1) Classmate Critiques 2)1 Critical Letter (2 copies -- one for instructor, one for fellow student)

Week 13 (4/20-24):               Revising Fiction

M 4/20:              NO CLASS: Patriot’s Day

W 4/22:               Revision Video 

F 4/24:              RA – Lorrie Moore “How to be a Writer” (e-reserve)

             

Week 14 (4/27-5/1):               Fiction Workshops

M 4/27:              RA – Tom Perrotta Chapter “Sex Log” from “Little Children” (Handout)

                          WA – Post your REVISED fiction (no more than 10 double spaced pages) to the class website by 5pm for workshop on Wednesday and Friday

W 4/29:              RA – Classmates work for workshop

                          WA – 1) Classmate Critiques 2)1 Critical Letter (2 copies -- one for instructor, one for fellow student)

                          Small Group Workshops

F 5/1:                Continuation of Monday’s Small Group Workshops: Final 2-3 fiction pieces for your group

Week 15 (5/4-5/8):                CONFERENCES

M 5/4:                            Conferences – no class

W 5/6:                            Conferences – no class

F 5/8:                            Conferences – no class

Week 16 (5/11-13):               Class Readings

M 5/11:              TBA

W 5/13:              Class Reading ***LAST CLASS***

Week 17:                             No Class Meeting

M 5/15:              DUE—FINAL PORTFOLIO

  • 4 poems, originals and revisions
  • 5-10 pages of fiction, original and revisions