English 201------Writing Fiction
Class: Meets MWF 10-10:50, English House Seminar
Room (basement)
Instructor: James Plath Office: English House 104
Hours: M-F 9-10 and by appointment
Phone: 556-3352
Url: http://titan.iwu.edu/~jplath/
Email:
jplath@iwu.edu
Texts: An Introduction to Fiction, Tenth Edition, ed. by X.J. Kennedy & Dana Gioia, literary links and instructor handouts.
Suggested Reading for Independent Study
Course Objectives: This is not a hobby course, schedule filler, or easy grade. This is the basic nuts-and-bolts course on writing fiction for students serious about their writing. Students will be expected to approach the writing of fiction in workmanlike fashion, with the goal of learning characteristics and techniques, as well as formal and stylistic options. Yet, there must be freedom to experiment and fail. Writers must be readers, and each week students will be expected to read and discuss the week's reading and other elected reading. Perhaps the toughest expectation: despite taking the craft of writing seriously, students must learn to relax and enjoy the act of literary creation.
Course Requirements:
Grades will be determined on the following basis:
Tentative Schedule:
NOTE: Due dates for all short story drafts and final versions
will be announced IN CLASS, based on the pace at which the class
seems
comfortable working; due dates for all reading assignments are
the first class period every week, unless otherwise noted.
Week of Jan. 8, 10--Taking inventory; where ideas come
from;
setting standards.
In-class handouts.
Week of Jan. 13, 15, 17--Combining
"facts" and fiction. Read
"Cathedral" (Raymond Carver) for Jan. 15. For the curious and
insatiable, access
two Carver interviews
published in Clockwatch Review. Outline for fiction based
on inventory due the 17th.
Week of Jan. 20, 22, 24--Stories vs. narratives: Read "Story of an Hour" (Kate Chopin) and "Girl" (Jamaica Kincaid) for Jan. 20; read "Everyday Use" (Alice Walker) for the 22nd; story vs. narrative exercise due the 24th.
Week of Jan. 27, 29, 31--Openings: Read ALL openings (the first two pages) from stories in the text and be prepared to discuss your top five and worst five picks. Due the 31st: three of your own story openings, for workshopping.
Week of Feb. 3, 5, 7--Character: Read "The Yellow
Wallpaper" (Charlotte
Perkins Gilman) for Feb. 3; read "The Chrysanthemums" (John
Steinbeck) for Sept. 5. Character-based or -inspired fiction
(scene or story) due the 7th.
Week of Feb. 10, 12, 14--Point of view: Read "I Stand Here
Ironing" (Tillie Olsen) for the 10th; read "Sonny's Blues" (James
Baldwin) for the 12th; point-of-view exercise due the 14th.
Week of Feb. 17, 19, 21--Dialogue: Read "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place" (Ernest Hemingway) for the 17th; in-class dialogue exercise on the 19th. No formal class on the 21st; instead, meet in assigned groups for a coffee-house class.
Week of Feb. 24, 26, 28--Plotting (linear design) Read "A&P" (John Updike) for Feb. 24 and "A Good Man is Hard to Find" ( Flannery O'Connor) for Feb. 26. Plotting exercise due the 28th.
Week of Mar. 3, 5, 7--Plotting (modular design): Read
handout (tba) for Mar. 3; "The Things
They Carried" (Tim O'Brien) for Mar. 5; draft of complete story
due the 7th.
Week of Mar. 17, 19, 21--Settings and description:
fleshing out stories (in-class lecture and exercise) for Mar. 17.
Read "Shiloh"
(Bobbie Ann Mason) for the 19th; "The Handsomest Drowned Man"
(Gabriel Garcia Marquez) for the 21st.
Week of Mar. 24, 26, 28--Draft of second complete story
due Mar. 24; workshopping
Week of Apr. 7, 9, 11--Putting together a portfolio;
rewriting strategies; workshopping
Week of Apr. 14, 16, 18--Workshopping
Week of Apr. 21--Getting published
Final Exam PUBLIC READING/PERFORMANCE (tba)