FICT 146 — Make a Scene: The Essence of Storytelling
Quarter: Summer
Instructor(s): Ellen Sussman
Date(s): Jul 11
Class Recording Available: No
Class Meeting Day: Saturday
Grade Restriction: NGR only; no credit/letter grade
Class Meeting Time: 10:00 am—4:00 pm (PT)
Tuition: $305
Refund Deadline: Jul 4
Unit(s): 0
Enrollment Limit: 18
Status: Registration opens May 18, 8:30 am (PT)
Quarter: Summer
Day: Saturday
Duration: 1 day
Time: 10:00 am—4:00 pm (PT)
Date(s): Jul 11
Unit(s): 0
Tuition: $305
Refund Deadline: Jul 4
Instructor(s): Ellen Sussman
Grade Restriction: NGR only; no credit/letter grade
Enrollment Limit: 18
Recording Available: No
Status: Registration opens May 18, 8:30 am (PT)
A dramatic scene takes hold of a reader and insists: Pay attention. Live here. Engage fully. While you’ve undoubtedly heard the adage “Show, don’t tell” and may already understand the importance of dramatization in fiction, developing images and ideas into fleshed-out, vivid scenes challenges us all. In this course, we will examine the elements that go into great scenes: gripping narrative, revealing inner thoughts, sensory detail, pitch-perfect dialogue, great backstory, and flawless prose. Each student will write a scene without exposition, then build on that foundation by layering in interiority, flashback, sensory imagery, and more. Students will come away with a new set of skills for writing cinematic, emotionally charged scenes in fiction, the kind that pull readers into the story and refuse to let go long after the final line.
ELLEN SUSSMAN
Author
Ellen Sussman is the author of four novels: A Wedding in Provence, The Paradise Guest House, French Lessons, and On a Night Like This. She is also the editor of two anthologies, Dirty Words: A Literary Encyclopedia of Sex and Bad Girls: 26 Writers Misbehave, which was a New York Times Editors’ Choice and a San Francisco Chronicle bestseller. She has taught at Pepperdine, UCLA, and Rutgers. Textbooks for this course:
There are no required textbooks; however, some fee-based online readings may be assigned.