Course Catalog

All Creative Writing courses are now open bid. Pre-registration for all course types is available through my.uchicago.edu

Pre-registration for Fundamentals in Creative Writing, Technical Seminars, and Advanced Workshops prioritizes students who have officially declared the Creative Writing major, minor, or MAPH Creative Writing Option.

Contact instructors to be added to a waitlist. Additional details, including course times and locations, are listed on my.uchicago.edu

Beginning Autumn Quarter 2023, students are no longer required to submit a separate application or writing sample for Creative Writing courses.

Autumn Quarter begins Tuesday, September 26. Creative Writing courses are offered once per week for two hours and 50 minutes. The current canonical hours policy is here; view the academic calendar here.

Please sign up for the program's listserv for additional information and course application updates. 

 

CRWR 12112 Reading as a Writer: City on the Remake

This course invites writers to reconsider the influence of Chicago’s public spaces on artistic impulse. In particular this quarter, we will examine aspects and depictions of a "fantastic Chicago." If Chicago is a city that "dreams itself," what do its spaces of violence and environmental devastation say about that dream? Students will analyze and explore Chicago writers' work in prose and poetry, then develop their own creative responses, building connections to adopted critical approaches. To these ends, we will examine work by writers including Jeffrey Renard Allen, Daniel Borzutzky, Bette Howland, Erik Larson, Bayo Ojikutu, and Ava Tomasula y Garcia, as well as the city's rich legacies in documentary and the visual arts.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist. 

2024-2025 Autumn

CRWR Technical Seminar in Nonfiction: TBD

Instructor TBD

Course Description TBD

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR Technical Seminar in Fiction: TBD

Instructor TBD

 

Course description TBD

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 20226/40226 Technical Seminar in Fiction: Beginnings

 

This technical seminar will investigate the purposes and possibilities of beginnings in fiction. Students will read opening lines, paragraphs, pages, and occasionally chapters, from Aimee Bender, Miranda July, Dorthe Nors, Kobe Abe, and others, asking: what work do these beginnings do—and why, to what end? Of course, this means we will also read the stories that follow, to analyze these introductions in the framework of their narratives. How do openings guide—or mislead—the reader? How should they balance introduction and momentum? How do they orient us, not only to character, setting, and conflict, but also to elements like tone and sensibility, to a story’s own sense of itself? What archetypes or common “moves” can we identify and use? What are the implications and meanings of beginnings—of starting in a particular place and way, when a story might very well start in any number of places? And how do such authorial decisions ripple through the story? Students will be responsible for reading responses, short craft analyses, vigorous class participation, and several creative exercises putting what they learn into practice.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 12123 Reading As A Writer: Ecopoetics: Literature & Ecology

This course will introduce students to recent debates in the environmental humanities while exposing them to a range of works spanning fiction, documentary prose, poetry, and film that engage what has come to be called the Anthropocene era (despite substantive challenges to the term that we will address). We will read foundational texts in environmental perception and activism (John Ruskin’s “Storm-Cloud of the Nineteenth Century” and Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring) in dialogue with modernist work surrounding urban landscapes (William Carlos Williams’s Paterson). We will then open onto a wide range of contemporary texts that engage the natural and constructed environment in crisis. Students will be asked to conduct fieldwork on an environmental theme of their choosing (climate change, petrol economies, watershed issues, air quality, pandemics and the management of wild animals, species extinction, etc.) and to produce a portfolio of short creative pieces in response to an issue or debate that interests them. Students are asked to ponder possible topics of interest prior to the first class meeting.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist. 

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 12167 Intro to Genres: Mysteries Abound

Perhaps no other narrative genre is more compelling or popular than the mystery. True Crime, Thrillers, and Whodunits consistently top the charts of bestsellers each year. In this Arts Core class, we will explore the mechanics of this fascinating genre. We will take the classic mystery tale written by masters like Arthur Conan Doyle and Raymond Chandler as an archetype, then examine what can be done with them. Together, we’ll dive into tales of intrigue by Poe and Kleist, psychological thrillers by Patricia Highsmith and Jeffery Eugenides, neo-noir films such as Chinatown, noir-poetry by Deryn Rees-Jones and Sean O’Brien, and postmodern mystery-parodies like those of Jorge Luis Borges. Together, we'll look at the way they hang together, the desire and fear that drives them, and the secrets they tell—or try to keep hidden. Along the way, we will attempt to design and plot our own mysteries, and find ways to improve them in a workshop setting.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

Valer Popa
2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 12138 Intro to Genres: Evil Incarnate

 

Some of the most compelling pieces of writing across all genre deal with, and often feature, deeply problematic central adversarial characters without which the poem, story, or essay would have no forward motion, and no cause to exist. From Capote’s In Cold Blood to Milton’s Paradise Lost, from Bulgakov’s Master and Margarita to Arendt’s Eichmann in Jerusalem and Sabato’s The Tunnel, literature returns again and again to the question of evil and the concept of opposition. This course is designed to explore this question alongside authors who have devoted their lives to understanding the role of evil in literature, its necessity, its appeal, its frivolity and its betrayal. The course will be divided into three section, each section devoted to a specific genre during which two to three texts will be explored, discussed and analyzed in class, and at the end of which one brief analysis paper will be due. One creative piece, in any of the three major genres, exploring the said topic will be due at the end of the course.

Prerequisites

Contact the instructor for a spot on the waiting list.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 17003 Fundamentals in Creative Writing: Truth

In this class we'll study how writers define and make use of truth--whatever that is. In some cases it's the truth, singular; in others a truth, only one among many. Some writers tell it straight, others slant. Some, like Tim O'Brien, advocate story-truth, the idea that fiction tells deeper truths than facts. To get at the heart of these and other unanswerable questions we'll read writers who've written about one event in two or more modes. Nick Flynn's poems about his father, for example, which he's also set down as comic strips as well as in prose. Jeanette Winterson's first novel as well as her memoir, sixteen years later, about what she'd been too afraid to say in it. Karl Marlantes' novel about the Vietnam war, then his essays about the events he'd fictionalized. Through weekly responses, creative exercises, and longer analytic essays you'll begin to figure out your own writerly truths, as well as the differences-and intersections-between them.

Prerequisites

Register via myuchicago.edu. Creative Writing Majors and Minors will be given highest priority during pre-registration. If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Fundamentals

CRWR 17015 Fundamentals In Creative Writing: Sincerity (And Irony)

What does it mean for a piece of writing to be “sincere”? How do we know a (character, poem, “I,” essay) is “sincere”? What does it mean to make that judgment, and what does it commit us to? How does that judgment change a reader’s orientation to the object? We will approach these questions obliquely first, by thinking about how irony works. Are irony and sincerity opposites? We’ll look at a range of contemporary and historical objects in fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. This will include essays by Kierkegaard, Oscar Wilde, Wayne Booth, Jonathan Swift, and R. Magill Jr., fiction by Vladimir Nabokov, Joanna Ruocco, and Kathy Acker, and poetry by Chelsey Minnis, Jenny Zhang, Amiri Baraka, and others. We’ll also consider certain internet objects and think about their relationship to sincerity (and irony). This course will give students a more nuanced and historically grounded handle on these questions, and will help them develop a style of writing that’s able to more intentionally (and interestingly) choose its tonal legibilities.

Prerequisites

Register via myuchicago.edu. Creative Writing Majors and Minors will be given highest priority during pre-registration. If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

Kirsten Ihns
2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Fundamentals

CRWR 10606/30606 Beginning Translation Workshop: Writing What's Been Written

This workshop will explore literary translation as a mode of embodied reading and creative writing. Through comparative and iterative readings across multiple translations of both poetry and fiction, we will examine the interpretive decisions that translators routinely encounter when assigning an English to a work of literature first written in another language, as well as the range of creative strategies available to translators when devising a treatment for a literary text in English. Students will complete weekly writing exercises in retranslation and English-to-English translation, building to the retranslation of either a short piece of fiction or selection of poems.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10306 Section 1/30306 Section 1 Beginning Poetry Workshop: Boundaries of Poem and Prose

This workshop-centered course introduces writers to foundational concepts and tools in the craft of poetry, including form, diction, voice, line, and meter. In particular, we will explore the boundaries of "poetic language" and utterance through bordered genres like prose poem, concrete/visual poem, sound poetry, and lyric essay, including work by poets visiting the UChicago campus. Regular assignments include both prompts and imitations in poetry writing, and will culminate in a final portfolio developed in working consultation with the instructor.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10306 Section 2/30306 Section 2 Beginning Poetry Workshop

This workshop focuses on writing and revising poems, and the related art of giving helpful feedback to other writers. One of the course’s goals is to help you reflect on your writing as a process. Most weeks you will write drafts that focus on the poetic concepts we are studying. At the end of the quarter, you’ll revise your drafts and collect them in a portfolio, accompanied by an artist’s statement you’ll write. As a class, we’ll form a community of readers and writers that will support you in this process. You’ll receive feedback on your drafts from your classmates and will respond constructively to theirs. At the same time, this course will introduce you to poetry from a variety of time periods, languages, and approaches to content and structure. You’ll learn to apply critical tools and terminology by drafting poems that experiment with elements such as form, voice, rhythm, imagery, translation, and creative response. We’ll discuss not only how and why poems are written, but also what relationship they have to the worlds in which they are written and read.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10406 Section 1/30406 Section 1 Beginning Nonfiction Workshop: Profile Writing

“Write what you know,” as a literary motto, doesn’t mean writers focus narrowly on their own experiences. Thankfully, we can get to know other people as well—through conversations, careful observation and research. Writing a profile is an act of empathy. Though weekly reading assignments and writing exercises, students in this profile writing workshop will learn how to conduct interviews and do basic reporting, and they will hone their skills as nonfiction storytellers. Some of the reporting and writing will look at Chicago and Chicagoans—getting to know and make sense of people around us. Other subjects will visit during class time. In considering the extent to which we can’t fully know the people we portray, students will also consider how writers (along with documentary filmmakers, historians, journalists, obituary writers) address these limitations creatively in their work. Students will complete a short profile each week, and they will write one longer and revised profile as a final. If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist. 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10406 Section 2/30406 Section 2 Beginning Nonfiction Workshop Section 2

Instructor TBD

Course Description TBD

 

 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10406 Section 1/30406 Section 1 Beginning Nonfiction Workshop Section 1

Instructor TBD

Course Description TBD

 

 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 2/30206 Section 2 Beginning Fiction Workshop: The Engines of Narrative

This nuts-and-bolts of fiction writing class begins with the question: what drives a story? What are the different engines that a writer can use to craft momentum in a story, and how does one tune these engines for greatest effect? We will cover such engines as plot, conflict, suspense, narrative questions, worldbuilding, and narrative pacing through revelations about characters and their world. In addition to submitting two stories or excerpts for workshop (plus a revision of one), expect to read and discuss a selection of published work.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 4/30206 Section 4 Beginning Fiction Workshop: The Basics of Narrative Design

Describing fiction writing as an “art” is perhaps a misnomer. Depending on who’s describing it, the process of creating a narrative is more like driving in the dark, or woodworking, or gardening. The metaphors abound, but the techniques for creating effective fictional prose are often quite consistent. This course will begin with a weeks-long consideration of selected works of fiction where discussion will aim to distinguish the basic devices of effective storytelling. Weekly topics will range from subjects as broad as point of view and plot arrangement to more highly focused lessons on scene design, dialog, and word choice. Throughout the term, the writing process will be broken down into stages where written work will focus on discrete story parts such as first pages, character introductions, and dialog-driven scenes before students are asked to compose full-length narratives. Along the way, students will chart their processes of conceptualizing, drafting, and revising their narratives. Finally, in the latter weeks of the quarter, emphasis will shift to the workshopping of students’ full stories.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 1/30206 Section 1 Beginning Fiction Workshop: Somebody Somewhere

Character and setting are nearly inextricable forces in storytelling. In effective fiction, we often experience one through the other. We will explore this dynamic relationship and study how writers often put their characters at odds with their chosen setting to create and sustain tension in a story. We’ll also give attention to rendering our characters and settings with specificity—learning how to create the sense of “somebody somewhere” instead of “anybody anywhere.” Our reading list will focus on short fiction. Students will write many exercises at the beginning of the quarter and fully realize one complete story to submit for workshop discussion by the end.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 3/30206 Section 3 Beginning Fiction Workshop Section 3

Course Description TBD

Instructor TBD

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 23141/43141 Advanced Poetry Workshop: Visitations

 

This class will explore how visitations, hauntings, suspense, uncertainty, grotesquerie, uncanny repetitions, unholy resurrections, phenomenal midnight meetings, and other gothic manipulations of matter, time, and space figure in a range of poems and texts. Because hesitance, fragment, the ever- presence of history, and notions of closure come into play whenever ghosts and others returning from beyond make visitations, our conversation will inevitably turn to the question of the openness of text, and in addition to gothic themes, we will examine form and strategy to wonder together how language turns and returns upon itself like the vampire that rises again and again in various shape-shifting guises. What is natural? What is unnatural? What is supernatural? How do the inexplicable and the explicable meet in poems? And how do poems vex the unstable categories of the past and the present?

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 23142/43142 Advanced Poetry Workshop: Poetic Forms of Brevity

Brevity is the soul of wit, and in some definitions, it’s also an essential characteristic of lyric poetry. In this course, we’ll read diverse examples of relatively brief poetic forms, such as epigrams, aphorisms, haikus, tankas, prose poems, and sonnets, to generate our own writing. Finally, we’ll also practice revising poems for economy: that is, cutting as many words as possible from every draft. Students can expect to complete weekly prompts, give a presentation, participate in workshops, and turn in a final portfolio.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 24013/44013 Advanced Nonfiction Workshop: The Great American Essay

This course aims to expand the writers' understanding of the genre and broaden their skillset by reading, discussing, responding to and challenging the notion of one cohesive and unquestionable nonfiction canon as we examine the birth and evolution of the cisatlantic essay in all its forms. From the Popol Vuh to the political mural, from the manifesto to the Facebook post, from Tecayehuatzin's elegy for the city that fell to the Spaniards in 1524 to Torrey Peters Facebook elegy for all the transgender people who fell prey to violence and indifference in 2016. Examining the development of the essay within the contained cisatlantic space will allow for, not merely, a focused dissection of what are sometimes termed the foundational elements of the genre, but also a close examination of the development of a literary identity throughout the Americas, and of the concept of Americanness throughout the cisatlantic canon. What did literary nonfiction mean to the earliest American literature? What does `America' mean to essayists writing at the borders of countries, and the edges of society? What makes the great American essay great and what American?

Students will be expected to read and discuss a broad array of cisatlantic nonfiction, respond to prompts crafted around these readings, and then to make their own contribution to this strange and defiant corner of the literary world.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

 

This course will be offered in Autumn Quarter 2024

 

 

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 24031/44031 Advanced Nonfiction Workshop: Excavating the Self

What does it mean to make sense out of lived experience? How do we claim ownership of our own stories, and shape those narratives on our own terms, independent of pressures that originated elsewhere? How do we craft narrative personas that readers deem trustworthy; how do we capture voices that feel compelling, urgent, and help to reorder the fallout of our lives into a coherent structure that can offer insight, even to readers we have never met? In this advanced nonfiction workshop, we will attempt to grapple with some of these concerns. With a particular emphasis on memoir and personal essay, we will explore what it means to excavate the self and map out the vast terrain contained within. Readings will include Vivian Gornick, Leslie Jamison, Aleksandar Hemon, James Baldwin, William Maxwell, Orhan Pamuk and Thomas Browne. Class time will be split between discussion of readings and student led workshops of original essays/memoirs in progress. By the end of the quarter, students will have workshopped two pieces of writing and submitted a final portfolio.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

Valer Popa
2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR Advanced Nonfiction Workshop

Instructor TBD

Course description TBD

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22137/42137 Advanced Fiction Workshop: The College Novel (& Story)

In this advanced fiction workshop, we will examine and write narratives set at college, the so-called campus and varsity novels (and, in our case, short stories). We will try to capture the attendant promise and uncertainty of life on the cusp of adulthood, asking what it means to come of age, to age, to experiment, and possibly, to regress. We’ll attempt to veer away from cultural cliché and caricature to portray the truth of life on campus and come to grips with the way you live right now, as we consider what it means—to borrow the title of one novel—to make our home among strangers. Students will read published works and submit two stories or novel excerpts for workshops. Please expect a rigorous but constructive workshop environment where being a critic and an editor is essential.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22150/42150 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Radical Revision

Like so many essential and life-sustaining processes—relationship maintenance, money management, digestion—revision is something we often talk about without “really” talking about it (to use the words of writer Matthew Salesses). Yet by refusing (or failing) to “really” talk about revision, writers deny themselves the opportunity to actively engage with the potentialities of their work: the different shapes, forms, and shifts it might take. In this class, we will demystify the revision process by analyzing the works of writers—such as Anna Kavan, Annie Ernaux, Lily Hoang, Edwidge Danticat, and Suzanne Scanlon—who have pursued radical revisions to their projects, including expansions (short stories developed into novels), compressions (longer works condensed into shorter pieces), point of view changes, and dramatic stylistic transformations. With a combination of creative exercises and workshops, we will also work toward our own radical revisions.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22156/42156 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Narrator as Personality

 

While aspiring writers usually grasp quickly how to write direct dialog—we hear it all around us, in public and private spaces—narration is a trickier enterprise. In this writing workshop, we will look at the narrator as personality, a voice that exists to tell the story, but not always to enter it. The narrator can be a constant, like an elbow in the side, or effaced, touching down to only give us the basics of time and place. They can be all knowing, summarizing scenes, people and events from a distant, God-like vantage, or reportorial, speaking in present tense as events unfurl. Some narrators make us laugh but are conning us with their charm; others explain the psychology of events like a great therapist or moralize like a member of the clergy. We will read a wide range of examples from writers like Edward P. Jones, Anton Chekhov, Salman Rushdie, Amy Hempel, Yiyun Li, and Louise Erdrich. Students will be encouraged to experiment in both writing exercises and story revisions. By the end of the course, you will have generated significant raw material and workshopped one story, which you will revise for the final.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22110/42110 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Exploring Your Boundaries

This workshop will focus on the boundaries that all of us knowingly and unknowingly impose on ourselves as writers, whether out of inexperience, external pressures, or an evolving (often imperfect) sense of our own ambitions and capabilities. Such boundaries can limit and paralyze us but can also bring clarity to our emerging voice, and it’s in experimentation and risk-taking that we can minimize the former and maximize the latter. To that end, this course will examine the work of writers who offer distinct visions of the world through innovative and often controversial approaches to storytelling. With their example in mind, everyone will also workshop a piece of fiction that attempts a significant risk in form or content, which will be significant and “risky" relative to each author. This class will push everyone not necessarily to be “experimental” writers, but to be bolder about the formal as well as emotional, thematic, and aesthetic possibilities in their fiction, so that they’ll discover more effective and honest ways of telling the stories they want to tell.  

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Autumn
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 29300 Section 2 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Poetry (2)

Crosslistings
49300

This thesis workshop is for students writing a creative BA or MA thesis in poetry, as well as creative writing minors completing the portfolio. Because it is a thesis workshop, the course will focus on various ways of organizing larger poetic “projects.” We will consider the poetic sequence, the chapbook, and the poetry collection as ways of extending the practice of poetry beyond the individual lyric text. We will also problematize the notion of broad poetic “projects,” considering the consequences of imposing a predetermined conceptual framework on the elusive, spontaneous, and subversive act of lyric writing. Because this class is designed as a poetry workshop, your fellow students’ work will be the primary text over the course of the quarter.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 29400 Section 2 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Nonfiction (2)

This thesis workshop is for students writing a creative BA or MA thesis in nonfiction, as well as creative writing minors completing the portfolio. Student work can be an extended essay, memoir, travelogue, literary journalism, or an interrelated collection thereof. It’s a workshop, so come to the first day of class with your work underway and ready to submit. You’ll edit your classmates' writing as diligently as you edit your own. I focus on editing because writing is, in essence, rewriting. Only by learning to edit other people’s work will you gradually acquire the objectivity you need to skillfully edit your own. You’ll profit not only from the advice you receive, but from the advice you learn to give. I will teach you to teach each other and thus yourselves, preparing you for the real life of the writer outside the academy.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 29400 Section 1/29400 Section 2 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Nonfiction (1)

This thesis workshop is for students writing a creative BA or MA thesis in nonfiction, as well as creative writing minors completing the portfolio. Student work can be an extended essay, memoir, travelogue, literary journalism, or an interrelated collection thereof. It’s a workshop, so come to the first day of class with your work underway and ready to submit. You’ll edit your classmates' writing as diligently as you edit your own. I focus on editing because writing is, in essence, rewriting. Only by learning to edit other people’s work will you gradually acquire the objectivity you need to skillfully edit your own. You’ll profit not only from the advice you receive, but from the advice you learn to give. I will teach you to teach each other and thus yourselves, preparing you for the real life of the writer outside the academy.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 29200 Section 5/49200 Section 5 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Fiction (5)

This thesis workshop is for students writing a creative BA or MA thesis in fiction, as well as creative writing minors completing the portfolio. It is primarily a workshop, so please come to our first class with your project in progress (a story collection, a novel, or a novella), ready for you to discuss and to submit some part of for critique. As in any writing workshop, we will stress the fundamentals of craft like language, voice, and plot and character development, with an eye also on how to shape your work for the longer form you have chosen. And as a supplement to our workshops, we will have brief student presentations on the writing life: our literary influences, potential avenues towards publication, etc.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 29200 Section 4/49200 Section 4 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Fiction (4)

This thesis workshop is for students writing a creative BA or MA thesis in fiction, as well as creative writing minors completing the portfolio. It is primarily a workshop, so please come to our first class with your project in progress (a story collection, a novel, or a novella), ready for you to discuss and to submit some part of for critique. As in any writing workshop, we will stress the fundamentals of craft like language, voice, and plot and character development, with an eye also on how to shape your work for the longer form you have chosen. And as a supplement to our workshops, we will have brief student presentations on the writing life: our literary influences, potential avenues towards publication, etc.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 29200 Section 3/49200 Section 4 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Fiction (3)

This advanced fiction course is for BA, MA, and Minor students writing a creative thesis or portfolio, as well as for any advanced student on campus working on a major fiction project. It is primarily a workshop, so we will spend the majority of the quarter reading excerpts from your projects in progress and offering ways of improving and moving them forward. As in any writing workshop, we will stress the fundamentals of craft (like language, point of view, plot and character development), with an eye also on how to shape your work for the longer form you have chosen. To supplement our workshops, everyone will give presentations on the authors and works of fiction that have informed their writing and on publishing, literary magazines, and the first steps of getting one’s work out into the world. If the schedule allows, we can also spend class-time in conversation on a topic of particular interest or urgency to the writers in the class, whether student-recommended or stemming from previous classes. 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 29200 Section 2/49200 Section 2 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Fiction (2)

This thesis workshop is for students writing a creative BA or MA thesis in fiction, as well as creative writing minors completing the portfolio. It is primarily a workshop, so please come to our first class with your project in progress (a story collection, a novel, or a novella), ready for you to discuss and to submit some part of for critique. As in any writing workshop, we will stress the fundamentals of craft like language, voice, and plot and character development, with an eye also on how to shape your work for the longer form you have chosen. And as a supplement to our workshops, we will have brief student presentations on the writing life: our literary influences, potential avenues towards publication, etc.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 20313/40313 Technical Seminar in Poetry: Against or Onto "The Road"

This technical seminar in poetry offers writers an opportunity to examine an essential American poetic space: the road. A core question is how one reads the road’s poetic surface versus its depths. Does journey itself lay out a clear narrative, admitting its forks, detours, and breakdowns? How is a basic American “compass” disrupted by poetic reconsiderations of “the road?” Does every road run “west?” How is the road itself as much about dislocation as it is about coherent journey?

As an orientation to a poetics of space, participants will engage critical perspectives set up by Gaston Bachelard, CS Giscombe, and Rebecca Solnit. Then, writers will develop their own critical/creative responses, exploring models established by Gabe Gudding, William Least Heat-Moon, Ed Roberson, and Muriel Rukeyser. Inviting her readers to remap historical and mythic journeys, Rukeyser resets the road as a conduit into a reassessment of national narrative through The Book of the Dead. Taking his own road east, Gudding overturns a “beat poetics” of travel in his Rhode Island Notebook. Least Heat-Moon (Blue Highways) and Roberson (MPH and Other Road Poems) invite explorations of “the road” as much in time as in space or personal journey. Overall, the course remaps that road, in the words of Giscombe, itself a “scattering [where] nothing cohered.”

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 20413/40413 Technical Seminar in Nonfiction: Dramatizing the Moment

How do we convincingly recreate important episodes from our life? How do we help our readers inhabit those moments that continue to live so urgently within our memory? How much invention are we allowed to employ, and how do we ensure that such accounts remain “truthful”? In this technical seminar in nonfiction, we will explore the craft of dramatization in personal essay and memoir. We will discuss many tools that are familiar to the fiction writer, including scene-building, characterization, and dialogue, as well as aspects unique to the art of nonfiction, such as the incorporation of testimonials, research, and letters, all in the service of dramatizing significant moments from our lived experience. Students will produce reading responses, craft analyses, and short creative exercises putting learned skills into practice.

Prerequisites

Contact the instructor for a spot on the waiting list. 

Valer Popa
2024-2025 Winter
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 20218/40218 Technical Seminar in Fiction: Third Person Narration

Third-person narration is a crucial tool in the writer's toolbox, handy--and in some cases practically crucial--for a variety of tasks. Yet its use and various possibilities can seem intimidating to some writers who may be far more comfortable with the "I". In this seminar, we'll examine third-person point-of-view, seeking to understand its uses more fully. We'll learn about free indirect discourse, psychic distance, artifice, tone, and omniscience. We'll carefully dissect a variety of texts, including excerpts or stories from Jonathan Dee, James Agee, Jennifer Egan, Danielle Evans, Ottessa Moshfegh, and others. Students will be responsible for reading responses, short craft analyses, vigorous class participation, and several creative exercises putting what they learn into practice.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 20215/40215 Technical Seminar in Fiction: The Mechanics and Aesthetics of Plot

What is plot—beyond the dramatic events that take place in a work of fiction? Why is it important—beyond engaging us in what happens to a story’s characters? Can plot be just as consequential to character-driven, aesthetic-driven, or idea-driven fiction as it is to fiction that privileges incident and action? And what exactly do we mean when we label stories in this fashion? This technical seminar will examine these questions and the many others that concern this crucial but often underrated element of craft. We will begin with the basic mechanics of plot and work towards a deeper understanding of all its effects on a narrative, whether they be dramatic, formal, characterological, even philosophical. Most importantly, we will try to apply these lessons to our own work, no matter the label we assign to our narrative and aesthetic interests. The course will include writing exercises, weekly reading responses, presentations, and a final essay.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 20203/40203 Technical Seminar in Fiction: Research & World Building

Writing fiction is in large part a matter of convincing worldbuilding, no matter what genre you write in. And convincing worldbuilding is about creating a seamless reality within the elements of that world: from setting, to social systems, to character dynamics, to the story or novel’s conceptual conceit. And whether it be within a genre of science fiction, fantasy, historical fiction, or even contemporary realism, building a convincing world takes a good deal of research. So while we look closely at the tools and methods of successful worldbuilding, we will also dig into the process of research. From how and where to mine the right details, to what to look for. We will also focus on how research can make a fertile ground for harvesting ideas and even story. Students will read various works of long and short fiction with an eye to its worldbuilding, as well as critical and craft texts. They will write short weekly reading responses and some creative exercises as well. Each student will also be expected to make a brief presentation and turn in a final paper for the class.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 29200/49200 Section 1 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Fiction (1)

This thesis workshop is for students writing a creative BA or MA thesis in fiction, as well as creative writing minors completing the portfolio. It is primarily a workshop, so please come to our first class with your project in progress (a story collection, a novel, or a novella), ready for you to discuss and to submit some part of for critique. As in any writing workshop, we will stress the fundamentals of craft like language, voice, and plot and character development, with an eye also on how to shape your work for the longer form you have chosen. And as a supplement to our workshops, we will have brief student presentations on the writing life: our literary influences, potential avenues towards publication, etc.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

Valer Popa
2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 12140 Reading as a Writer: Writing War

In the aftermath of war, we attempt to make sense of the senseless. We grapple with the pieces, we organize, we mold, and we give shape to the shapeless. In this course, using the Nigeria-Biafra War as a case study, we’ll investigate the practices that constitute authorship of war. We’ll read works by writers of the war generation, like Ken Saro-wiwa, as well as those who have inherited it, like Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. We’ll identify and study their methods for reconstructing the past—lived experiences, research, and the imagination. We’ll consider the ethics of leaps of the imagination as we read works of realism alongside the speculative, like Nnedi Okorafor’s AfricanFuturist comic book take LaGuardia. We’ll study narratives like Chinelo Okparanta’s queer coming-of-age story Under the Udala Trees to consider what it means to depart from the national narrative in order to recover silenced or erased voices. In critical papers, we’ll analyze how genre, form, and media inform these works. Using the questions, techniques, and practices we identify, you’ll be asked to write and research narratives using a real war as its basis.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 12166 Reading as a Writer: The Spiritual, Psychedelic, and Visionary

In this class we’ll think about and try to generate literary forms capable of holding, inviting, or emitting a kind of otherworldly glow; expressing or representing access to some other mode of being. How have writers done this in the past?

We’ll look to a wide range of sources for models, including the visionary writings of William Blake, poems by Allen Ginsberg, narratives by early Christian mystics (Margery Kempe, Julian of Norwich, Hildegard of Bingen), Buddhist sutras, 20th century phenomenological artworks and writing about them (including films and/or writing by Joan Jonas, Michael Snow, Robert Irwin, and Peter Kubelka), poetry and narratives of channeling (Alice Notley, James Merrill), writings of and about psychedelic experience (Aldous Huxley, Terence McKenna), immersive experimental poetics (M. NourbeSe Philip), and contemporary Thai experimental film (Apichatpong Weerasethakul), among others.

Students will leave this class with an enhanced familiarity with an array of visionary forms and their history in Western writing and poetics, as well as hopefully new or renewed access to another mode of writing and thinking for themselves

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

Kirsten Ihns
2024-2025 Winter
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 12163 Reading as a Writer: Obscenities

“Obscenity” is a term for what is repulsive, abhorrent, excessive, or taboo in a society; and yet many artworks once considered to be obscene are now celebrated as landmarks of world literature, from the ancient poetry of Sappho to modern novels like Ulysses. In this course, we will study literary works that have been banned or censored as “obscene” to examine our own perspectives, attitudes, and assumptions as literary artists. How does obscenity shape our understanding of gender and sexuality, race and ethnicity, or public and private speech? What are the uses of obscenity in constructing new possibilities for literary expression? Authors studied will include Toni Morrison, Tanizaki Jun’ichirō, Vladimir Nabokov, Hilda Hilst, and Allen Ginsburg; and we will supplement these readings with works of literary theory, psychoanalysis, and case law. Students will produce their own original poetry, fiction, and nonfiction to reimagine what is permissible—and possible—in language and society for contemporary literary artists.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 12148 Intro to Genres: Speculative Women

Despite common misconceptions, women have been at the forefront of the speculative genre from its earliest inceptions. They have not merely defied the limitations and restraints of literature as defined by their contemporary society, but invented whole worlds and genres which continue to influence writers and writing as a whole today—from Mary Shelley’s 1818 publication of "Frankenstein" to Virginia Woolf’s 1928 publication of "Orlando," and even Margaret Cavendish’s 1666 novel, “The Description of a New World, Called The Blazing-World." This course will be a brief foray into the strange and yet familiar worlds of various women across the history of speculative writing, ranging from Mary Shelley to Ursula K. Leguin, from Lady Cavendish to Margaret Atwood, from Alice Walker to Octavia E. Butler.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 17013 Fundamentals in Creative Writing: Touchstones

Most passionate readers and writers have literary touchstones --those texts we return to again and again for personal or aesthetic influence and inspiration. When we are asked what book we would want with us if we were stranded on a desert isle, our touchstones are the ones that leap immediately to mind. Some texts are fairly ubiquitous touchstones: The Great Gatsby, Harry Potter and the [take your pick], The Bell Jar, Little Women, Letters to a Young Poet, Leaves of Grass. Others are quirkier, more idiosyncratic. What -- if any -- qualities do these touchstones share, within and across genres? What lessons about writing craft can be drawn from them? In this course, we'll read texts that are commonly cited as touchstones, along with fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction that students bring to the table -- their own literary touchstones. In that sense, our reading list will be collaborative, and students will be expected to contribute content as well as an analytical presentation on the craft issues raised by their selections. Our assignments will include reading responses, creative writing exercises, short essays and presentations.

Prerequisites

Register via myuchicago.edu. Creative Writing Majors and Minors will be given highest priority during pre-registration. If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Fundamentals

CRWR 29300/49300 CRWR 29300 Section 1 Thesis/Major Projects Workshop in Poetry (1)

This thesis workshop is for students writing a creative BA or MA thesis in poetry, as well as creative writing minors completing the portfolio. Because it is a thesis workshop, the course will focus on various ways of organizing larger poetic “projects.” We will consider the poetic sequence, the chapbook, and the poetry collection as ways of extending the practice of poetry beyond the individual lyric text. We will also problematize the notion of broad poetic “projects,” considering the consequences of imposing a predetermined conceptual framework on the elusive, spontaneous, and subversive act of lyric writing. Because this class is designed as a poetry workshop, your fellow students’ work will be the primary text over the course of the quarter.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Thesis/Major Projects

CRWR 10306 Section 1/30306 Section 1 Beginning Poetry Workshop: Shaping Poems

This course introduces students to poetry writing by guiding students through generative exercises focused on imagery and diction, then revising the material with an eye toward formal shaping choices. We read diverse contemporary and classic poets, write several poems, and workshop peer work weekly, culminating in a portfolio of new poems as a final project.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10406 Section 1/30406 Section 1 Beginning Nonfiction Workshop: Anecdotes and Reflections

In the same way that water is composed of two elements—hydrogen and oxygen—the personal essay essentially consists of anecdotes and reflections, i.e., facts and thoughts, or the objective and the subjective. What happened, and what what happened *means*. Our goal is to not only balance these two elements but to combine them so that they complement but also contradict one another.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 1/30206 Section 1 Beginning Fiction Workshop: The Short Story

In this class we will encounter short fiction in many forms, considering a range of narrative lengths, concepts, and writing styles, examining all of them from a craft perspective in an effort to decipher the ways in which stories can be put to paper with an efficiency of prose without sacrificing richness of language or conceptual creativity.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 2/30206 Section 2 Beginning Fiction Workshop: Crafting Complex Characters

Beginning Fiction Workshop: Crafting Complex Characters

In life and in fiction writing, character development is often synonymous with major challenges: obstacles that demand deep investigation, adaptation, and change. Using the character-driven models of Tove Ditlevsen, Ottessa Moshfegh, Lucia Berlin, Edwidge Danticat, Eileen Chang, and other writers, this Beginning Fiction Workshop will explore strategies for crafting complex characters: illustrating their motives, perspectives, and arcs of evolution. Through a combination of generative writing exercises and writing workshops (wherein students will share original work and receive critical feedback from the class), each student will produce at least one complete short story.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 21505/41505 Advanced Translation Workshop Prose Style

Purple, lean, evocative, muscular, literary, exuberant, lucid, stilted, elliptical. These are all labels that critics and reviewers have used to characterize prose styles that call attention to themselves in distinct ways. Of course, what constitutes style not only changes over time, but also means different things in different literary traditions. How, then, do translators carry style over from one language and cultural milieu to another? And to what extent does style structure storytelling? We will explore these questions by reading a variety of modern and contemporary stylists who either write in English or translate into English, paying special attention to what stylistic devices are at work and what their implications are for narration, characterization, and world building. Further, we’ll examine the range of choices that each writer and translator makes when constituting and reconstituting style, on a lexical, tonal, and syntactic scale. By pairing readings with generative exercises in stylistics and constrained writing, we will build toward the translation of a short work of contemporary fiction into English. To participate in this workshop, students should be able to comfortably read a literary text in a foreign language.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 23132/43132 Advanced Poetry Workshop: Poets' Prose

“Which one of us, in his moments of ambition, has not dreamed of the miracle of a poetic prose," wrote Charles Baudelaire in Paris Spleen,"... supple enough and rugged enough to adapt itself to the lyrical impulses of the soul, the undulations of reverie, the jibes of conscience?” This genre-blurring workshop will explore elements of the history and practice of the prose poem, and other poems and texts that combine strategies, forms and gestures of prose (fiction, nonfiction, etc.) with those of poetry. We will also read texts that are difficult to classify in terms of genre. “Flash Fiction,” “Short Shorts,” the fable, the letter, the mini-essay, and the lyric essay will be examined, among others. We will discuss the literary usefulness (or lack of it) of genre and form labels. The class will be taught as a workshop: students will try their hand at writing in their choices of hybrid forms, and will be encouraged to experiment. Writers from all genres are welcome, as what we will be studying, discussing, and writing will involve the fruitful collision of literary genres.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 23123/43123 Advanced Poetry Workshop: Form and Formlessness

Wallace Stevens suggests that “The essential thing in form is to be free in whatever form is used.” How does form provide a kind of freedom for a poet? How does it manifest itself in a poem? Does it mean we have to follow prescribed rules, or is there a more intuitive approach? This course will give students a chance to try out a range of traditional and experimental forms, both as an attempt to improve as writers and in order to interrogate form and its other, what Bataille called the formless, or “unformed” (l’informe). We’ll explore traditional and contemporary takes on a variety of forms, such as sonnets, odes, aphorisms, serial poems, and poetic collage. Students should expect to write exercises, submit new poems, contribute feedback on peer work, write short response papers, and submit a final portfolio.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 24024/44024 Advanced Nonfiction Workshop: Writing Reading

There are many creative ways to write of, about, from, and because of reading. In this class, serious readers will have the chance to practice forms they love and may not often get chances to write: the incisive review, the long-form reading memoir, the biographical sketch of a writer in history, the interview, the essay about translation, diaristic fragments. In this course, we’ll develop individual approaches, styles and regular practices. We’ll make use of both creative (and traditional) research, analysis, and criticism, and explore the wide terrain available to creative writers. We’ll go back to foundational essayists including Toni Morrison and Virginia Woolf, study contemporary writers of reading such as Jazmina Berrera, Claire Messud, Niela Orr, Ruth Franklin, Emily Bernard, Hanif Abdurraqib, and Parul Sehgal. Students will keep a reading/writing notebook, conduct an interview, and write and revise a longer essay for workshop.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

 

For the 2024-2025 academic year this course will be offered in Winter Quarter.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 24032/44032 Advanced Nonfiction Workshop: CyberWorkshop – Writing the Web

An inquiry into the ways we write about the internet, this workshop will survey works spanning across narrative nonfiction genres, from writing by William Gibson and Naomi Klein to the rise of the YouTube video essay as a sub-genre. Students will write and workshop essays that arise from hyper-contemporary corners of the internet, defining, as they go, a new kind of ekphrasis for the digital age.

 

 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22138/42138 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Short Story Collection

In this course, we will not only explore how stories function individually, but also how they can come together in a collection to form a coherent and unified story or experience. Please come prepared to read and discuss published story collections, focusing in particular on the formal and thematic ties of discrete narratives. With this in mind, we will also workshop two to three of your own short stories. By the end of the course, you will have written the first three stories of your collection and developed a plan for how to proceed with the project.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22135/42135 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Narrative Time

The Long and the Short of it: Narrative Time
A story's end point determines its meaning. The history of a life can be covered in a sentence, a few pages or seven volumes. How do writers decide? In this advanced workshop, we'll look at different ways to handle narrative time, paying special attention to building blocks like direct and summary scene, flashback, compression, slowed time and fabulist time. We'll examine work by writers whose long stories feel like novels, like Alice Munro and Edward P. Jones, alongside those who say everything in a short single scene of a page or two, like Grace Paley and Kate Chopin. Students will be encouraged to experiment with time in both writing exercises and story revisions.By the end of the course, you will have generated significant raw material and workshopped one story. Two stories, one polished and one in draft, will be prepared for the final.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22140/42140 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Killing Cliché

It’s long been said that there are no new stories, only new ways of telling old ones, but how do writers reengage familiar genres, plots, and themes without being redundant? This course will confront the literary cliché at all levels, from the trappings of genre to predictable turns of plot to the subtly undermining forces of mundane language. We will consider not only how stories can fall victim to cliché but also how they may benefit from calling on recognizable content for the sake of efficiency, familiarity, or homage. Through an array of readings that represent unique concepts and styles as well as more conventional narratives we will examine how published writers embrace or subvert cliché through story craft. Meanwhile, student fiction will be discussed throughout the term in a supportive workshop atmosphere that will aim not to expose clichés in peer work, but to consider how an author can find balance—between the familiar and the unfamiliar, between the predictable and the unpredictable—in order to maximize a story’s effect. Students will submit two stories to workshop and will be asked to write critiques of all peer work.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Winter
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 20309/40309 Technical Seminar in Poetry: Generative Genres

From ancient Sumerian temple hymns to 7th-century Japanese death poems to avant-garde ekphrasis in the 21st century, the history of poetry is as rich in genres as it is in forms. Why does it feel so good to write a curse? What is an ode and how is it different from an aubade? In this technical seminar we will study the origins, transcultural functions, and evolving conventions of some of the oldest-living genres of lyric poetry – the ode, the elegy, the love poem, the curse, to name a few. We will read living writers such as Alice Oswald, Danez Smith, Kim Hyesoon, and Natalie Diaz alongside historical forerunners including Aesop, Sei Shonagon, John Keats. Federico Garcia Lorca, Sylvia Plath, and Paul Celan. Students will write weekly experiments of their own in response to our readings, and for a final project they will edit a mini-anthology of a genre of their choice, including a short critical introduction.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR Technical Seminar in Nonfiction

Instructor TBD

 

Course Description TBD

 

 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 20214/40214 Technical Seminar in Fiction: Writers in Conversation

Whenever we write stories, we are in conversation with other writers, living or dead. Sometimes that conversation is quiet and intimate—a matter of subtle influence, much as we take on unconsciously the diction and cadences of admired mentors and beloved friends. Other times, the conversation is boisterous, a meeting of minds, a deepening of our collective discourse. Still other times, the conversation gets heated. We feel the need to set the record straight, give voice to a neglected or misrepresented character, vindicate a monster or indict a hero. In this technical seminar, we will read writers responding to other writers—Victor Lavalle & H.P. Lovecraft, Haruki Murakami & Franz Kafka, Doris Lessing & Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Joyce Carol Oates & James Joyce, among others—and examine how these writers retell, modernize, and comment upon influential stories, making the stories their own while incorporating familiar elements. The emphasis of this course will be on critical writing, but students will also have opportunities to write creative responses to the readings and experiment with the craft techniques we discuss.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 20232/40232 Technical Seminar in Fiction: Narrative Influence

T. S. Eliot once said that “good writers borrow, great writers steal.” In this class we will look at modeling as a springboard for original creativity. What makes a piece of writing original? Is it possible to borrow a famous writer’s story structure, theme, or even attempt their voice, yet produce something wholly original? How specifically are writers influenced and then inspired? Readings will pair writers with the influences they’ve talked or written about, such as Yiyun Li and Anton Chekhov; Edward P. Jones and Alice Walker; Sigrid Nunez and Elizabeth Hardwick, and George Saunders and Nikolai Gogol. Writing exercises will experiment with aspects of voice, narrative structure, point of view, tone, and use of dialog. While this is not a workshop course, come prepared to write and share work in class. Students will pursue both creative work and critical papers.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 20217/40217 Technical Seminar in Fiction: Elements of Style

What we call style is more than literary flourish. Control of a story begins with a writer’s characteristic approach to the line. Style dictates and shapes immersive and impactful worlds of our creation. It’s also indicative of a work’s larger themes, philosophies, and aesthetic sensibility. In this class, we’ll examine fiction by wordsmiths such as James Baldwin, Gabriel García Márquez, Toni Morrison, and Marguerite Duras in order to contemplate the influence that elements such as diction, syntax, rhythm, and punctuation have on a writer’s style.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Technical Seminars

CRWR 12168 Reading as a Writer: Art vs. the Algorithm

An inquiry into what makes art “good” or “lasting,” particularly in the age of our algorithm-shaped exposure. Students will read “viral” texts across three genres from ~1750 to 2024, including Matthew Lewis, 20th century gossip columns, and BookTok sensations like R.F. Kuang. Texts will be read in conversation with both historical and contemporary writing on craft, allowing students to respond both critically and creatively to the virality of these texts, ultimately deciding for themselves how we can begin to approach the role of the artist in the age of the algorithm.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 12168 Reading as a Writer: Art vs. the Algorithm

An inquiry into what makes art “good” or “lasting,” particularly in the age of our algorithm-shaped exposure. Students will read “viral” texts across three genres from ~1750 to 2024, including Matthew Lewis, 20th century gossip columns, and BookTok sensations like R.F. Kuang. Texts will be read in conversation with both historical and contemporary writing on craft, allowing students to respond both critically and creatively to the virality of these texts, ultimately deciding for themselves how we can begin to approach the role of the artist in the age of the algorithm.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 12152 Intro to Genres: The Immigrant Experience Through Literature

In this course, we’ll study the subgenre of immigrant literature, and through the examination of novel excerpts, short stories, poetry, plays, biographies, and memoirs, we’ll discuss the politics and aesthetics of canonized writers such as Amy Tan, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and Emma Lazarus, as well as lesser-known writers. From the outset, we’ll discern the characteristics that define immigrants, refugees, exiles, expatriates, and how they, therefore, might show up differently on the page. We’ll consider how authors create engaging characters, by articulating their characters’ evolving sense of identity in the face of conflicting notions of “otherness,” assimilation, and acculturation. To gain a better understanding of how authors shape compelling, and moreover, believable plots, we’ll examine the push and pull factors that situate immigrants differently in the new land, and how their host societies regard them. In short critical papers, we’ll analyze the trends, features, and conventions of the subgenre, and in short exercises, you’ll write a story, poem, essay, or play about immigrants, informed by research, that utilizes the catalogue of questions, techniques, and practices that we identify.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Arts Core Courses

CRWR 17001 Fundamentals in Creative Writing: Testimony

To give testimony is to bear witness and to provide evidence. To give testimony is also to draw the reader or listener into an individual point of view. In this course, we will study the first-person voice in various forms of personal testimony. Drawing from a mix of memoirs, personal essays, letters, fiction, and other first-person narratives, we will analyze the techniques and rhetorical devices used by writers, standup comedians, memoirists in transporting the listener or reader into unknowable, unfamiliar experiences. Expect to engage with texts by authors such as Franz Kafka, Patricia Lockwood, and William Maxwell. We will compose our own personal writings through creative exercises. Come prepared to engage in creative writing exercises.

Prerequisites

Register via myuchicago.edu. Creative Writing Majors and Minors will be given highest priority during pre-registration. If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Fundamentals

CRWR 17018 Fundamentals in Creative Writing: Desire and Longing

In fiction, it is often said that an effective character must have a clear desire. Kurt Vonnegut famously advised, “Every character should want something, even if it is only a glass of water.” The idea is that desire is an animating, energizing, and focusing force in storytelling. In this course, we’ll attempt to apply the animation, energy, and focus of desire to personal essays, poems, and fiction, and explore how writers depict desire and longing in a wide range of work. We’ll also attempt to catalog different kinds of desire: crushes, obsessions, nostalgia, and farsickness, to name a few. We'll pay special attention to how we can write about strong emotional experiences without resorting to cliches or sentimentality. Potential texts will be Simple Passion by Annie Ernaux, Safekeeping by Abigail Thomas, Eros the Bittersweet by Anne Carson, Crush by Richard Siken, The Pillow Book by Sei Shonagon, and Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Fundamentals

CRWR Fundamentals in Creative Writing

Instructor TBD

 

Course Description TBD

 

 

 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Fundamentals

CRWR 10306 Section 2/30306 Section 2 Beginning Poetry Workshop: Things of this World

"I love the thingness of things," Sylvia Plath wrote in her journal. By concentrating on poems that are rooted deeply in the material world, this workshop will focus beginning poets on the art of description and the importance of image-making. Poets will to attend to the intensity of the sensorium, rooting their art in the material world as a strategy, albeit a counterintuitive one, to access the emotional and abstract.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10306 Section 1 Beginning Poetry Workshop (1): Imaginary Music

This course guides students in exercises that work with both the actual sounds of poetry, like alliteration and rhythm, and the inaudible, “imagined” music of the mind, to write and workshop poems. We read diverse contemporary and classic poets, write several poems, and workshop peer work weekly, culminating in a portfolio of new poems as a final project.

Prerequisites

 

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10406 Section 2/30406 Section 2 Beginning Nonfiction Workshop (2)

Instructor TBD

Course Description TBD

Prerequisites

 

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10406 Section 1/30406 Section 1 Beginning Nonfiction Workshop (1)

Instructor TBD

Course Description TBD

Prerequisites

 

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 1/30206 Section 1 Beginning Fiction Workshop: Understanding Narrative Point of View

Writers at all levels learn through the careful reading of works they admire. We spend more than a third of our time in this class reading stories worth learning from, both classic and contemporary, with focus on the choices that writers make, the nuts and bolts of craft, with special emphasis on point of view (who speaks and why?). In-class exercises fire your creativity and get you writing. In workshop, each student has the opportunity to present work to the group.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 3/30206 Section 3 Beginning Fiction Workshop: Scene

Scenes are often considered the building blocks of narrative story-telling. In this course, we’ll examine short fiction through the lens of scene, starting from the basics: What are scenes, how do they work, and what should they accomplish in a story? We’ll consider the scene’s relationship with context, tension, subtext, narrative arc, and other story elements. Together we’ll examine how authors like Bret Anthony Johnston, Rebecca Lee, and Jhumpa Lahiri use scenes to great effect, with a particular focus on setting, dialogue, action, and detail. In addition to readings, students will complete several short writing exercises and one longer story, which you will workshop and substantially revise. You will also engage with the work of your peers, delivering thoughtful, encouraging, constructive critiques.

Prerequisites

 

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 4/30206 Section 4 Beginning Fiction Workshop: Mapping the World

Nature writer Barry Lopez suggests that knowing a place intimately and writing about it — whether that place is an Arctic ice floe or an urban taco stand — creates an important “sense of belonging, a sense of not being isolated in the universe.” In this course, we will read fiction by writers who explore the impact of place on community, culture, and the individual. We will take Lopez’s advice to “become vulnerable to a place,” and to represent that place and its people with rich and complex detail. Writing exercises and the occasional field trip will help to generate material, while responses to assigned readings will give you a bit more direction as you address issues specific to writing about places, as well as other fundamentals of fiction writing.

Prerequisites

 

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 2/30206 Section 2 Beginning Fiction Workshop: Finding a Narrative Home

“All writers are exiles wherever they live and their work is a lifelong journey toward a lost land.” So wrote Janet Frame, a singularly talented author who was institutionalized at the age of 21, then saved from a lobotomy only because she won a literary prize. In keeping with Frame’s reflection, this craft-based course will focus on strategies for saving our lives through fiction writing: how to cultivate a convincing voice; how to extract strength from our writerly weaknesses; and, ultimately, how to forge a home for ourselves in our own words. Through a combination of creative exercises, we will explore and examine the craft components of strong, original fictions, including character development, descriptive detail, compelling dialogue, and rich sentences. We’ll also learn how to read the works of published writers for creative inspiration, mining texts by masters such as Janet Frame, Alice Munro, Julio Cortazar, Sofia Samatar, and Yasunari Kawabata. Primarily, we will workshop original student writing throughout the term, developing a portfolio of stories that reflect our individual interests, desires, and needs as writers.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 10206 Section 6 Beginning Fiction Workshop:

Instructor TBD

Course Description TBD

Prerequisites

 

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Beginning Workshops

CRWR 23144/43144 Advanced Poetry Workshop: Voice

This course will focus on poetry’s rich histories of poetic voicings, building multiple definitions of what voice “sounds” like, how it is constructed, how it says, and how to quiet and amplify one’s own poetic voice. We will use our readings and findings to generate our own poetic voicings for student-led workshops.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 23143/43143 Advanced Poetry Workshop: Mask, Persona, and Translation in Twenty-First Century Poetry

This advanced workshop engages the play of mask and persona in contemporary poetry, including how these have been utilized in poets’ theater, dramatic monologue, confessional writing, autobiographical play, and translation of poems. Participants will be invited to experiment with voice and persona in writing and consider questions such as: How does the mask offer a means of engaging core aspects of self, society, and language? Writers for discussion include John Canaday, Denise Duhamel, Duriel Harris, Ilya Kaminsky, Yang Lian, Ed Pavlic, Fernando Pessoa, and Evie Shockley.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 24002/44002 Advanced Nonfiction Workshop: Writing About the Arts

Crosslistings
ARTH 44002, ARTH 24002

Thinking about practices is a way of focusing a conversation between creative writers, art historians, curators, and working visual artists, all of whom are encouraged to join this workshop. We ourselves will be practicing and studying a wide variety of approaches to visual art. We’ll read critics like John Yau and Lori Waxman, memoirists like Aisha Sabbatini Sloan, inventive historians like Zbigniew Herbert, and poets like Gwendolyn Brooks and Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon, as well as curatorial and museum writings, catalogue essays, artists' statements, and other experimental and practical forms.
The course hopes to support students both in developing useful practices and experimenting boldly. Classes will be shaped around current exhibitions and installations. Sessions will generally begin with student-led observation at the Smart Museum, and we will spend one session on close looking in the study room at the Smart. Students will also visit five collections, exhibitions and/or galleries and, importantly, keep a looking notebook. Students will write a number of exercises in different forms (immersive meditation, researched portrait, mosaic fragment), and will also write and revise a longer essay (on any subject and in any mode) to be workshopped in class.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 24010/44010 Advanced Nonfiction Workshop: Memoir

Memoir is the most pilloried genre in literature, not without reason. Many memoirs *are* self-indulgent, and they’re inevitably fictionalized to some degree. Memory is an unreliable narrator. It’s our imagination working in reverse, and as such, it invents things. It fictionalizes, and yet we have no choice but to rely on it. The best way to learn about its pitfalls is firsthand, by writing your own.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22155/42155 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Writing about Work

Writing about work, jobs, and vocational experiences may seem contradictory— or even antithetical—to our goals in fiction. After all, if we aim to inspire, to invigorate, to otherwise wield a narrative “axe for the frozen sea within us” (as Kafka wrote), why write about the very day-to-day tasks so often charged with numbing and blurring our sensation of life? In this workshop, we will explore and answer this question with our own work-focused fictions, developing strategies for defamiliarizing the mundane, and using routines to build dramatic tension. Utilizing a combination of creative workshops and exercises—and drawing upon models from the job-focused fiction of Eugene Martin, Dorothy Allison, Lucia Berlin, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, Edwidge Danticat, and other writers—we will also deepen and develop our characters through precise depictions of their work environments.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22113/42113 Advanced Fiction Workshop: The Love Story

This advanced fiction workshop will examine the ways we write about love in fiction: romantic love, familial love, unconventional love, etc.  Our basis will be the notion that love is ultimately self-knowledge, which lies at the core of all great fiction, and like self-knowledge it involves an endless and inexhaustible act of seeking.  We will read and discuss stories centered on the topic of love, this act of seeking, and we will do writing exercises that help us write compellingly, convincingly, and unsentimentally about deeply sentimental things.  Every student will also complete and workshop a full-length story that explores the idea of love on some level.  They will additionally write a significant revision of this story, which they will either present for a second workshop or turn in at the end of the quarter.  Please expect a rigorous but constructive workshop environment where being a critic and an editor is as essential as being a writer.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22142/42142 Advanced Fiction Workshop: The Fantastical

This workshop will focus on the fantastical in contemporary literature, and the logistical issues and questions that commonly arise around it. We will look at the role of fantastical in puncturing the veil of "realism." What is the fantastical doing that can't be done through other narrative modes? How does the narrative metabolize this disruption? How should the fantastical be tempered by the mundane? Students who apply for this course should already have developed drafts of speculative fiction. Note that this course does not focus exclusively on fantasy or science fiction, though there may be some genre overlap. Readings may include works by Rachel Ingalls, Ted Chiang, and Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah.

 

 

Prerequisites

Open bid through my.uchicago.edu. Attendance on the first day is mandatory. Contact the instructor for a spot on the waiting list. Course requires consent after add/drop begins.

 

 

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22128/42128 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Novel Writing, the First Chapters

In this workshop-focused class we will focus on the early stages of both developing and writing a novel: choosing the POV, establishing the setting, developing the main characters and the dynamics between them, setting up the conflicts and seeding the themes of book, etc. As a class we will read, break down and discuss the architecture of the openings of several published novels as you work on your own opening chapters, which will be workshopped during the course. 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR 22130/42130 Advanced Fiction Workshop: Inner Logic

In this advanced workshop, we will explore the range of strategies and techniques that fiction writers employ to make readers suspend their disbelief. We will consider how imagined worlds are made to feel real and how invented characters can seem so human. We will contemplate how themes, motifs, and symbols are deployed in such a way that a story can feel curated without seeming inorganic. We will consider how hints are dropped with subtlety, how the 'rules' for what is possible in a story are developed, and how writers can sometimes defy their own established expectations in ways that delight rather than frustrate. From character consistency to twist endings, we'll investigate how published authors lend a sense of realism and plausibility to even the most far-fetched concepts. Through regular workshops, we will also interrogate all students' fiction through this lens, discussing the ways in which your narratives-in-progress create their own inner logic. Students will submit two stories to workshop and will be asked to write critiques of all peer work.

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops

CRWR Advanced Fiction Workshop

Instructor TBD

 

Course Description TBD

 

 

Prerequisites

If you wish to add this course during add/drop please email the instructor to be added to the waitlist.

2024-2025 Spring
Category
Advanced Workshops