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Winter Registration Opens Dec 02
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CW 83 — Unlock Your Creativity: Idea Generator and Block-Breakers for Writers

Quarter: Winter
Instructor(s): Daniel White
Duration: 5 weeks
Location: Online
Date(s): Jan 27—Mar 3
Class Recording Available: Yes
Class Meeting Day: Mondays
Grade Restriction: No letter grade
Class Meeting Time: 6:00—8:00 pm (PT)
Please Note: No class on February 17
Tuition: $375
   
Refund Deadline: Jan 29
 
Unit(s): 1
   
Enrollment Limit: 30
  
Status: Registration opens Dec 2, 8:30 am (PT)
 
Quarter: Winter
Day: Mondays
Duration: 5 weeks
Time: 6:00—8:00 pm (PT)
Date(s): Jan 27—Mar 3
Unit(s): 1
Location: Online
 
Tuition: $375
 
Refund Deadline: Jan 29
 
Instructor(s): Daniel White
 
Grade Restriction: No letter grade
 
Enrollment Limit: 30
 
Recording Available: Yes
 
Status: Registration opens Dec 2, 8:30 am (PT)
 
Please Note: No class on February 17
 
This supportive, creativity-boosting course is designed to overcome writer’s block and spark fresh ideas for stories, essays, poems, and books. We’ll start with “radical defamiliarization,” making the ordinary strange and the strange familiar. Inspired by Virginia Woolf’s “Street Haunting,” you’ll take a walk through your neighborhood with fresh eyes, writing about it in new ways. This practice of "weirding" everyday life sets the stage for exploring the surrealist tradition. Next, we’ll delve into a story by Japanese writer Yukiko Motoya, examining how absurdist twists and surrealistic flourishes can heighten the impact of fiction. Finally, we’ll focus on “world-building,” guiding you to create vivid, imaginative realms inspired by authors such as Ursula K. Le Guin, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, and Charlie Jane Anders. Through close reading, experimental prompts, and the dynamic energy of our writing community, your creativity will be unlocked, helping you craft stories that linger long after they’re told. More importantly, this course will teach you how to tap into your hidden reserves of imagination, empowering you to break out of tired patterns and tropes.

DANIEL WHITE
Author

Daniel White is the author of Under the Stars: How America Fell in Love with Camping and The Cactus Eaters: How I Lost My Mind—and Almost Found Myself—on the Pacific Crest Trail. His writing appears in Outside, The Washington Post, and The New York Times. He has taught writing at Columbia and San Jose State and in classes associated with Catamaran Literary Reader.

Textbooks for this course:

There are no required textbooks; however, some fee-based online readings may be assigned.