Fiction Writing (English 90) Stanford University, Fall 2014 Monday & Wednesday 11:00 - 12:50 Building 20, Classroom 21G
Fiction Writing (English 90) Stanford University, Fall 2014 Monday & Wednesday 11:00 - 12:50 Building 20, Classroom 21G
Fiction Writing (English 90) Stanford University, Fall 2014 Monday & Wednesday 11:00 - 12:50 Building 20, Classroom 21G
There comes a time when you realize that everything is a dream, and
only those things preserved in writing have any possibility of being
real.
- James Salter
English 90 is a beginner course for those who have a passion (or wish
to cultivate a passion) for fiction writing. Any and all Stanford majors
and minors are more than welcome. I prefer to think of this class not
in the usual way of a teacher instructing their students, but as a
community of devoted artists who will spend ten weeks supporting
one another in the difficult work of writing good prose. Our first and
foremost goal is to write and write and write, both in class and out of
class. We will also be reading literature that I hope will inspire and
instruct us in the challenging but rewarding art of sentence-making. It
is my hope that you will walk away from this class with a passion for
writing that will only grow in the years ahead. My wish is that this
class will set you on your way to becoming a writer.
Texts
You can leave The Writing Life on the shelf for a while: well be
looking at this luminous book on the life of the writer after
Thanksgiving break.
Films
We will be watching two films this quarter. The first is Dead Poets
Society, because I think its a film that celebrates the wild, exuberant
energy that becoming an artist demands. The second is a
documentary called Forever. It is about a very famous cemetery in
Paris called Pere Lachaise, but is also very much about the
transcendent power of art.
Class Blog
I will be setting up a class blog simply for the sake of giving us a
medium to share thoughts, ideas, songs, readings, YouTube videos,
what have you. It will be very informal. I expect that some students
will be more active on it than others, which is perfectly fine. I just
hope it can be a place where our work can continue outside the
bounds of the classroom.
Course Requirements
Short stories are very hard to write! While many great short stories
have been written at one sitting, you will be writing only two short
stories this quarter, at least one of which you will thoroughly revise
after considering the comments of your classmates and (perhaps)
instructor. Engrave these dates on your writing desk:
When you hand in your stories, you must also hand in handwritten or
typewritten first drafts. Writing first drafts on the computer is a bad
habit: much good work gets deleted or lost, and the computer
contains distractions that a piece of paper or a typewriter do not. It
doesnt matter to me if the handwriting is illegible to everyone who
isnt you. This is simply my way of getting you in the habit of writing
the first draft in the healthiest and most concentrated way possible.
At the end of the quarter you will write a short response paper on the
novel you chose to finish, either Stoner or Light Years. Creative
responses are encouraged (i.e. A letter to Salter or Williams; an
imitation of the style; etc.).
Honor Code