FALL
2007 HONORS COURSES
HONR238Y Creative Writing: Concepts
of Authorship in Literary History and Creative Writing
Tuesday/Thursday 2-3:15 p.m.
Dr. Sibbie O’Sullivan, Senior Lecturer in University Honors
In this course students will examine certain authors
and their works while developing their own creative writing talents.
By examining specific literary modes, we will see how concepts of authorship
evolve in conjunction with the rise of the individual and certain developments
in literary history, such as the birth of the novel and Modernism. Students
will then write in response to these modes, exploring their own sense
of authorship and individuality, discovering both the restrictions and
possibilities of a given literary form.
The modes are the meditative mode; the epic mode; the
novelist as Artist; the Romantic mode, or the writer as one who walks
and sees; the nonfictional and autobiographical mode; the Modernist
mode; and the critical mode, or is the author really dead?
The format of the course will be split between discussion
of the readings and critique of student writing. For each discussion
unit, students will turn in questions pertaining to the style and content
of the assigned reading. In response to each specific mode, students
will turn in a creative example to be critiqued in a workshop setting.
These responses are not imitations so much as demonstrations of specific
forms. For example, students will not write an epic, but they can write
in the epic voice. Or, in response to the modern mode, students can
discover the playful or absurd qualities of language. The assignment
for the critical mode will be to write a literary manifesto expressing
both a theory of art and authorship; this can be either a solo or a
group project. The final creative project will be a portfolio of the
student’s best and revised writing done throughout this course.
The reading list includes, but is not limited to the
following authors and texts: John Donne’s Devotions upon Emergent
Occasions; Audre Lorde’s The Cancer Journals; selections
from John Milton, Walt Whitman, Ezra Pound, Charles Wright and Jorie
Graham; Flaubert’s Madame Bovary; stories by Ernest Hemingway;
Wordworth’s Preface to Lyrical Ballads; Lia Purpura’s On
Looking; Donald Hall’s “Poetry and Ambition”; Thomas De Quincey’s
Confessions of an English Opium-Eater; selections from The
Education of Henry Adams; Mary Karr’s The Liar’s Club;
Rita Dove’s Thomas and Beulah; Gertrude Stein’s Tender
Buttons; Samuel Becket’s Not I; selected essays by Roland
Barthes, Michel Foucault, David Lodge and Stanley Plumly.
CORE:
Literature (HL)