CREA W1001x and y Beginning Fiction Workshop 3 pts. The beginning workshop in nonfiction is designed for students with little or no experience in writing literary nonfiction. Students are introduced to a range of technical and imaginative concerns through exercises and discussions, and they eventually submit their own writing for the critical analysis of the class. Outside readings supplement and inform the exercises and longer written projects.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W1001
CREA
1001
52597
001
M 4:10p - 6:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
E. Avery 15 / 15 [ More Info ]
CREA
1001
91900
002
M 2:10p - 4:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
A. Hamburger 14 / 15 [ More Info ]
CREA
1001
95846
003
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
N. Jones 15 / 15 [ More Info ]
CREA
1001
97300
004
Th 6:10p - 8:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
T. Antrim 15 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W1101x and y Beginning Nonfiction Workshop 3 pts. The beginning workshop in nonfiction is designed for students with little or no experience in writing literary nonfiction. Students are introduced to a range of technical and imaginative concerns through exercises and discussions, and they eventually submit their own writing for the critical analysis of the class. Outside readings supplement and inform the exercises and longer written projects.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W1101
CREA
1101
83783
001
M 4:10p - 6:00p
206 Lewisohn Hall
G. Lichtenberg 14 / 15 [ More Info ]
CREA
1101
45847
002
W 2:10p - 4:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
A. Benson 14 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W1201x and y Beginning Poetry Workshop 3 pts. The beginning poetry workshop is designed for students who have a serious interest in poetry writing but who lack a significant background in the rudiments of the craft and/or have had little or no previous poetry workshop experience. Students will be assigned weekly writing exercises emphasizing such aspects of verse composition as the poetic line, the image, rhyme and other sound devices, verse forms, repetition, tone, irony, and others. Students will also read an extensive variety of exemplary work in verse, submit brief critical analyses of poems, and critique each other's original work.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W1201
CREA
1201
89532
001
Tu 6:10p - 8:00p
206 Lewisohn Hall
C. Inez 13 / 15 [ More Info ]
CREA
1201
53248
002
Tu 2:10p - 4:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
P. Becker 13 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W2001x and y Intermediate Fiction Workshop 3 pts. Prerequisites: Professor approval required through writing sample. Please see 612 Lewisohn for submission schedule and guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing Intermediate workshops are for students with some experience with creative writing, and whose prior work merits admission to the class (as judged by the professor). Intermediate workshops present a higher creative standard than beginning workshops, and increased expectations to produce finished work. By the end of the semester, each student will have produced at least seventy pages of original fiction. Students are additionally expected to write extensive critiques of the work of their peers.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W2001
CREA
2001
56846
001
W 2:10p - 4:00p
206 Lewisohn Hall
J. Offill 15 / 15 [ More Info ]
CREA
2001
61047
002
M 4:10p - 6:00p
506 Lewisohn Hall
R. Harty 13 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W2101x and y Intermediate Nonfiction Workshop 3 pts. Prerequisites: Professor approval required through writing sample. Please see 612 Lewisohn for submission schedule and guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing The intermediate workshop in nonfiction is designed for students with some experience in writing literary nonfiction. Intermediate workshops present a higher creative standard than beginning workshops and an expectation that students will produce finished work. Outside readings supplement and inform the exercises and longer written projects. By the end of the semester, students will have produced thirty to forty pages of original work in at least two traditions of literary nonfiction.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W2101
CREA
2101
62800
001
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
206 Lewisohn Hall
C. Beam 9 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W2201x and y Intermediate Poetry Workshop 3 pts. Prerequisites: Professor approval required through writing sample. Please see 612 Lewisohn for submission schedule and guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing Intermediate poetry workshops are for students with some prior instruction in the rudiments of poetry writing and prior poetry workshop experience. Intermediate poetry workshops pose greater challenges to students and maintain higher critical standards than beginning workshops. Students will be instructed in more complex aspects of the craft, including the poetic persona, the prose poem, the collage, open-field composition, and others. They will also be assigned more challenging verse forms such as the villanelle and also non-European verse forms such as the pantoum. They will read extensively, submit brief critical analyses, and put their instruction into regular practice by composing original work that will be critiqued by their peers. By the end of the semester each student will have assembled a substantial portfolio of finished work.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W2201
CREA
2201
67146
001
Th 6:10p - 8:00p
206 Lewisohn Hall
E. Fragos 13 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W3001x and y Advanced Fiction Workshop 3 pts. Prerequisites: Professor approval required through writing sample. Please see 612 Lewisohn for submission schedule and guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing Building on the work of the Intermediate Workshop, Advanced Workshops are reserved for the most accomplished creative writing students. A significant body of writing must be produced and revised. Particular attention will be paid to the components of fiction: voice, perspective, characterization, and form. Students will be expected to finish several short stories, executing a total artistic vision on a piece of writing. The critical focus of the class will include an examination of endings and formal wholeness, sustaining narrative arcs, compelling a reader's interest for the duration of the text, and generating a sense of urgency and drama in the work.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3001
CREA
3001
70796
001
W 6:10p - 8:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
W. Tower 15 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W3101x Advanced Nonfiction Workshop 3 pts. Prerequisites: Professor approval required through writing sample. Please see 612 Lewisohn for submission schedule and guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing Advanced Nonfiction Workshop is for students with significant narrative and/or critical experience. Students will produce original literary nonfiction for the workshop, with an added focus on developing a distinctive voice and approach.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3101
CREA
3101
43399
001
Tu 11:00a - 12:50p
606 Lewisohn Hall
S. Shepard 8 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W3201x and y Advanced Poetry Workshop 3 pts. Prerequisites: Professor approval required through writing sample. Please see 612 Lewisohn for submission schedule and guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing This poetry workshop is reserved for accomplished poetry writers and maintains the highest level of creative and critical expectations. Students will be encouraged to develop their strengths and to cultivate a distinctive poetic vision and voice but must also demonstrate a willingness to broaden their range and experiment with new forms and notions of the poem. A portfolio of poetry will be written and revised with the critical input of the instructor and the workshop.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3201
CREA
3201
72148
001
M 2:10p - 4:00p
206 Lewisohn Hall
C. Parks 9 / 15 [ More Info ]

CREA W3302x and y Fiction Seminar: Approaches to the Short Story 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing The modern short story has gone through many transformations, and the innovations of its practitioners have often pointed the way for prose fiction as a whole. The short story has been seized upon and refreshed by diverse cultures and aesthetic affiliations, so that perhaps the only stable definition of the form remains the famous one advanced by Poe, one of its early masters, as a work of fiction that can be read in one sitting. Still, common elements of the form have emerged over the last century and this course will study them, including Point of View, Plot, Character, Setting and Theme. John Hawkes once famously called these last four elements the "enemies of the novel," and many short story writers have seen them as hindrances as well. Hawkes later recanted, though some writers would still agree with his earlier assessment, and this course will examine the successful strategies of great writers across the spectrum of short story practice, from traditional approaches to more radical solutions, keeping in mind how one period's revolution -Hemingway, for example - becomes a later era's mainstream or "common-sense" storytelling mode. By reading the work of major writers from a writer's perspective, we will examine the myriad techniques employed for what is finally a common goal: to make readers feel. Short writing exercises will help us explore the exhilarating subtleties of these elements and how the effects created by their manipulation or even outright absence power our most compelling fictions.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3302
CREA
3302
77947
001
Tu 4:10p - 6:00p
507 Lewisohn Hall
S. Lipsyte 21 / 20 [ More Info ]

CREA W3305x Fiction Seminar: First Person 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing Today, in the age of memoir, we don't need to apologize for speaking in the first person, but we still need to find a way to make a first person, fictional narrative forceful and focused. The logic is different, the danger the same: we must find a form that will shape an "I" account and render it rhetorically compelling, giving it the substance and complexity of literary art. In this seminar, we will begin by reading critical background about the early uses of first-person in fiction. We will study how these functioned in the societies they commented on, and chart the changing use of first person in western literature from the eighteenth century to today. Through reading contemporary novels, stories and novellas, we will analyze first person in its various guises: the "I" as witness (reliable or not), as elegist, outsider, interpreter, diarist, apologist, and portraitist. Towards the end of the semester we will study more unusual forms: first-person plural, first-person omniscient, first-person rotating. We will supplement our reading with craft-oriented observations by master-writers. Students will complete four to five fiction pieces of their own in which they will implement specific approaches to first-person. At least two of these will be complete stories; others may be the beginning of a novel or novella or floating scenes. Students will conference several times with the instructor to discuss their work.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3305
CREA
3305
82099
001
W 4:10p - 6:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
R. Curtis 19 / 20 [ More Info ]

CREA W3307x Fiction Seminar: The Unhinged Narrator 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing Some of the greatest works of fiction are narrated by characters who have become unhinged from the norms of society. They may stand apart from the mainstream because of willful eccentricity, madness, even social disgrace, but in each case their alienation provides them with a unique perspective, one that allows the reader to see the world they describe without the dulling lens of convention. We will explore what authors might gain by narrating their works from an "outsider" viewpoint, and we will study how the peculiar form and structure of these books reflects the modernist impulse in literature. This is a seminar designed for fiction writers, so we will spend time talking about not only the artistic merits of these books, but also about how the authors, who include Dostoevsky, Knut Hamsun, Jean Rhys, Denis Johnson, Joy Williams, Samuel Beckett and Amos Tutuola, achieve their specific effects. Over the course of the semester, we will use these texts as a springboard for writing original fiction.

NOTE: This seminar has a workshop component.

CREA W3308y Seminar: Short Prose Forms 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing The prose poem and its siblings the short short story and the brief personal essay are the wild cards in the writer�s deck; their identities change according to the dealer. We will consider a wide range of forms, approaches, and styles, spanning centuries. In addition to works in English, we will read translations from the French, Spanish, Russian, Italian, Japanese, and Chinese. Seminar discussions will be complemented by frequent writing exercises (inside and outside of class) and some abbreviated workshopping of student pieces. Each student will make one brief classroom presentation.

Authors include: Matsuo Basho, Charles Baudelaire, Thomas Bernhard, Aloysius Bertrand, Jorge Luis Borges, Anne Carson, Gianni Celati, Luis Cernuda, Bernard Cooper, Lydia Davis, Russell Edson, David Ignatow, Max Jacob, Juan Ramon Jimenez, Joseph Joubert, Franz Kafka, Yasunari Kawabata, Etgar Keret, Stephane Mallarme, Czeslaw Milosz, Harryette Mullen, Edgar Allan Poe, Francis Ponge, Arthur Rimbaud, Nathalie Sarraute, Sei Shonagon, Charles Simic, Mark Strand, Luisa Valenzuela, Diane Williams, James Wright, Mikhail Zoshchenko.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3308
CREA
3308
21848
001
Tu 6:10p - 8:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
A. Ziegler 15 / 12 [ More Info ]

CREA W3333y Nonfiction Seminar: Traditions in Nonfiction 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing The seminar provides exposure to the varieties of nonfiction with readings in its principal genres: reportage, criticism and commentary, biography and history, and memoir and the personal essay. A highly plastic medium, nonfiction allows authors to portray real events and experiences through narrative, analysis, polemic or any combination thereof. Free to invent everything but the facts, great practitioners of nonfiction are faithful to reality while writing with a voice and a vision distinctively their own. To show how nonfiction is conceived and constructed, class discussions will emphasize the relationship of content to form and style, techniques for creating plot and character under the factual constraints imposed by nonfiction, the defining characteristics of each author's voice, the author's subjectivity and presence, the role of imagination and emotion, the uses of humor, and the importance of speculation and attitude. Written assignments will be opportunities to experiment in several nonfiction genres and styles.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3333
CREA
3333
92948
001
M 6:10p - 8:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
M. Rozzo 20 / 20 [ More Info ]

CREA W3335x Nonfiction Seminar: The Lyric Essay 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing While nonfiction is perhaps known for its allegiance to facts and logic in the stalwart essay form, the genre conducts its own experiments, often grouped under the term "lyric essays." Lyric essays are sometimes fragmentary, suggestive, meditative, inconclusive; they may glance only sidelong at their subject, employ the compression of poetry, and perform magic tricks in which stories slip down blind alleys, discursive arguments dissolve into ellipses, and narrators disappear altogether. Lyric essayists blend a passion for the actual with innovative forms, listening deeply to the demands of each new subject. In this course, students will map the terrain of the lyric essay, work in which writers revise nonfiction traditions such as: coherent narrative or rhetorical arcs; an identifiable, transparent, or stable narrator; and the familiar categories of memoir, personal essay, travel writing, and argument. Students will read work that challenges these familiar contours, including selections from Halls of Fame by John D'Agata, Don't Let Me Be Lonely by Claudia Rankine, Plainwater by Anne Carson, Letters to Wendy by Joe Wenderoth, The Body and One Love Affair by Jenny Boully, Roland Barthes by Roland Barthes, Running in the Family by Michael Ondaatje, Neck Deep and Other Predicaments by Ander Monson. They can expect to read essays selected from The Next American Essay edited by John D'Agata and In Short: A Collection of Brief Creative Nonfiction edited by Judith Kitchen and Mary Paumier Jones, as well as essays by Paul Metcalf, David Foster Wallace, Sherman Alexie, Michael Martone, and Sei Shonagon. The course will be conducted seminar style, with close reading, lecture, and classroom discussion. The students will be expected to prepare a written study and comments for class on a particular book/author/issue. They will also complete writing exercises and their own lyric essay(s), one of which we will discuss as a class. Their final project will be a collection of their creative work accompanied by an essay discussing their choices.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3335
CREA
3335
96848
001
Th 4:10p - 6:00p
701 Lewisohn Hall
A. Benson 19 / 20 [ More Info ]

CREA W3336x and y Translation 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing. Corequisites: You don't have to be bilingual to take this course. Several years of study of another language is enough. This course is open to Undergraduate & Graduate students. In this introductory course to literary translation, students will learn about the art of translating prose and poetry. We will read essays on translation by writers such as Jorge Luis Borges, Vladimir Nabokov, and Anne Carson, and discuss the benefits and drawbacks of different approaches to the craft. Students will present their own translations for discussion and become familiar with a range of perspectives on literary translation that will inform their revision process. We'll also discuss the way works in translation are reviewed and each student will review a recent translation for the end of the semester.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3336
CREA
3336
98497
001
M 4:10p - 6:00p
411 Dodge Building
I. Rosenberg 16 / 20 [ More Info ]

CREA W3351x Poetry Seminar: Approaches to Poetry 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing One advantage of writing poetry within a rich and crowded literary tradition is that there are many poetic tools available out there, stranded where their last practitioners dropped them, some of them perhaps clichéd and overused, yet others all but forgotten or ignored. In this class, students will isolate, describe, analyze, and put to use these many tools, while attempting to refurbish and contemporize them for the new century. Students can expect to imitate and/or subvert various poetic styles, voices, and forms, to invent their own poetic forms and rules, to think in terms of not only specific poetic forms and metrics, but of overall poetic architecture (lineation and diction, repetition and surprise, irony and sincerity, rhyme and soundscape), and finally, to leave those traditions behind and learn to strike out in their own direction, to write -- as poet Frank O'Hara said -- on their own nerve.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3351
CREA
3351
42149
001
W 4:10p - 6:00p
212A Lewisohn Hall
J. Bell 20 / 20 [ More Info ]

CREA W3377x Traditions in Creative Writing 3 pts. Prerequisites: Please see 612 Lewisohn for registration guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing Creative writers are faced with dizzying options. We know we want to write, but what should we write, and how? To what degree should we study the accomplished writing of the past in order to produce writing for today and the future? What are some enticing strategies for making art out of language, and what are some striking examples from history that can guide us? This craft seminar�a course in the techniques of creative writing�will explore the fundamentals of fiction, poetry, literary nonfiction, and dramatic writing, as well as hybrid forms that are harder to name. Students will learn to read as writers; they will study literary forms and styles, they will become familiar with accomplished work from a range of genres, and they will compose creative work of their own.

CREA W3697x and y Senior Fiction Workshop 4 pts. Prerequisites: Professor approval required through writing sample. Please see 612 Lewisohn for submission schedule and guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing This course is restricted to seniors who are majors in creative writing. Enrollment is limited, and is by permission of the professor. The senior workshop offers students the opportunity to work exclusively with classmates who are at the same high level of accomplishment in the major. Students in the senior workshops will produce and revise a new and substantial body of work. In-class critiques and conferences with the professor will be tailored to needs of each student.

Course
Number
Call Number/
Section
Days & Times/
Location
Instructor Enrollment
Autumn 2009 :: CREA W3697
CREA
3697
76254
001
Th 4:10p - 6:00p
206 Lewisohn Hall
R. Curtis 12 / 12 [ More Info ]

CREA W3898x Senior Poetry Workshop 4 pts. Prerequisites: Professor approval required through writing sample. Please see 612 Lewisohn for submission schedule and guidelines or go to http://www.columbia.edu/cu/writing This course is restricted to seniors who are majors in creative writing. Enrollment is limited, and is by permission of the professor. The senior workshop offers students the opportunity to work exclusively with classmates who are at the same high level of accomplishment in the major. Students in the senior workshops will produce and revise a new and substantial body of work. In-class critiques and conferences with the professor will be tailored to needs of each student.