CNF 103 W — Memoir Workshop: Writing About Small Things in Big Ways
Quarter: Summer
Instructor(s): Mike Scalise
Date(s): Jun 26—Aug 28
Class Recording Available: Yes
Class Meeting Day: Thursdays
Class Meeting Time: 6:00—7:00 pm (PT)
Tuition: $1000
Refund Deadline: Jun 28
Unit(s): 2
Enrollment Limit: 18
Status: Open
Quarter: Summer
Day: Thursdays
Duration: 10 weeks
Time: 6:00—7:00 pm (PT)
Date(s): Jun 26—Aug 28
Unit(s): 2
Tuition: $1000
Refund Deadline: Jun 28
Instructor(s): Mike Scalise
Enrollment Limit: 18
Recording Available: Yes
Status: Open
Writing about our personal lives can feel overwhelming. With so much lived material to choose from, where to begin? The tools to tell a meaningful personal story can be anywhere, even in our daily routines. This course is designed to help personal essayists and memoirists focus on daily routines, practices, and meaningful objects as a way to write about complex experiences, light topics that invite a deeper consideration, and everything in between. Students will study the personal writing of authors who managed to connect life’s most specific moments and the largesse of the world—whether it’s John Green on scratch-and-sniff stickers, Damon Young on greeting rituals, Alexander Chee on tarot, or Elisa Gabbert on productivity apps. Prompts, exercises, and group discussions will serve to generate three personal works (25 pages total) for peer and instructor feedback.
During weeks 1–3, we’ll write a “recommendation” essay (as in The New York Times), and in weeks 4–6, we’ll formulate an “against” essay. We’ll close the course by working on a memoir-style meditation on an object or practice to explore how it helps you both to live in and make sense of our present moment. Students will leave this course versed in the fascinating landscape of stories driven by the everyday and understanding the next steps for how to publish their own.
During weeks 1–3, we’ll write a “recommendation” essay (as in The New York Times), and in weeks 4–6, we’ll formulate an “against” essay. We’ll close the course by working on a memoir-style meditation on an object or practice to explore how it helps you both to live in and make sense of our present moment. Students will leave this course versed in the fascinating landscape of stories driven by the everyday and understanding the next steps for how to publish their own.
There are no required textbooks; however, some fee-based online readings may be assigned.
MIKE SCALISE
Author
Mike Scalise’s memoir, The Brand New Catastrophe, received the Christopher Doheny Award from the Center for Fiction and praise from The New York Times, BuzzFeed, and The Baltimore Sun. He’s written for The New York Times, IndieWire, The Paris Review Daily, and elsewhere. He received an MFA in creative writing from George Mason University and was the Philip Roth Writer in Residence at Bucknell. Textbooks for this course:
There are no required textbooks; however, some fee-based online readings may be assigned.