THE UNIVERSITY OF DERBY CREATIVE WRITING ARCHIVE - INAUGURATION

Similar documents
The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark Dennis R The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark Dennis R MacDonald on FREE shipping on qualifying offers

Course Revision Form

PROFESSORS: George Fredric Franko (chair, philosophy & classics), Christina Salowey

The Cambridge History Of Classical Literature, Vol. 1: Greek Literature (English And Greek Edition) READ ONLINE

Ancient Greek Literature By C. M. Bowra

Ed. Carroll Moulton. Vol. 1. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, p COPYRIGHT 1998 Charles Scribner's Sons, COPYRIGHT 2007 Gale

Classics. Affiliated Faculty: Sarah H. Davies, History (on Sabbatical, Fall 2017) Michelle Jenkins, Philosophy Matthew Bost, Rhetoric Studies

DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS

Chapter 2 TEST The Rise of Greece

The University of Melbourne s Classics

Arts and Literature Breadth Fall 2017

INSTRUCTOR S MANUAL CHAPTER 2: THE RISE OF GREECE

An Analysis of the Enlightenment of Greek and Roman Mythology to English Language and Literature. Hong Liu

DEPARTMENT OF ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES. I. ARCHAEOLOGY: AR_H_A COURSES CHANGE TO AMS (pp. 1 4)

Humanities Learning Outcomes

Semester V. Core Course: 08-State and Societies in the Ancient World

In order to enrich our experience of great works of philosophy and literature we will include, whenever feasible, speakers, films and music.

THE GOLDEN AGE POETRY

English English ENG 221. Literature/Culture/Ideas. ENG 222. Genre(s). ENG 235. Survey of English Literature: From Beowulf to the Eighteenth Century.

The Odyssey Of Homer... (Greek Edition) By John Jason Owen, Homer

COURSE OUTLINE Humanities: Ancient to Medieval

Knowing Your Bible. Lesson 1.1. The Making of Ancient Books

Katsaiti Alexandra Πάτρα

Your Task: Define the Hero Archetype

Essential Learning Objectives

India: Brief History Of A Civilization By Thomas R. Trautmann

History Alive The Ancient World Lesson Guide

California State University, Sacramento HRS10, sec.2: Introduction to the Humanities, Art and Ideas of the West Fall 2008 GE Area C3

Math in the Byzantine Context

Human Progress, Past and Future. By ALFRED RUSSEL WAL-

University of Missouri. Fall 2018 Courses

ELA High School READING AND BRITISH LITERATURE

The Odyssey (Ancient Greek) (Greek Edition) By Homer READ ONLINE

Correlation. Grade Three

21H.301 The Ancient World: Greece Fall 2004

Raffaella Cribiore Office: Silver 503L Office phone: Office Hours: and by appointment

Please purchase a copy of Edith Hamilton s Mythology and read the following sections:

of all the rules presented in this course for easy reference.

INTRODUCTION TO CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION: GREECE

The Evolution of Egyptian Hieroglyphs

Warm-Up Question: How did geography affect the development of ancient Greece?

College of Arts and Sciences

Introductory Remarks

Fall HISTORY 110A: WORLD CIVILIZATION California State University, Los Angeles PROFESSOR S. BURSTEIN

Aristotle's Poetics By Aristotle READ ONLINE

Greek Intellectual History: Tradition, Challenge, and Response Spring HIST & RELS 4350

Classical civilisation. GCSE subject content

Theories of linguistics

Logos, Pathos, and Entertainment

ELA High School READING AND WORLD LITERATURE

ANCIENT AND ORIENTAL MUSIC

The Shimer School Core Curriculum

Historiography : Development in the West

Course Syllabus: MENG 6510: Eminent Writers, Ralph Waldo Emerson

Course Outline TIME AND LOCATION MWF 11:30-12:20 ML 349

Cambridge Pre-U 9787 Classical Greek June 2010 Principal Examiner Report for Teachers

Ms. Ishrat. Key words: Orality, literacy, writing, speech, shortcomings of writing, situational, abstract

Global Philology Open Conference LEIPZIG(20-23 Feb. 2017)

Humanities 2 Lecture 2. Review from Lecture 1

Ideas of Language from Antiquity to Modern Times

Virginia English 12, Semester A

CLAS 131: Greek and Roman Mythology Spring 2013 MWF 2-2:50 Murphey Hall 116

Champions of Invention. by John Hudson Tiner

DR. ABDELMONEM ALY FACULTY OF ARTS, AIN SHAMS UNIVERSITY, CAIRO, EGYPT

Learning Objectives Lower Grammar Stage. Kindergarten: The Cradle of Civilization Year First Grade: The Greek Year Second Grade: The Roman Year

Old Western Culture. A Christian Approach to the Great Books. Workbook and Answer Key THE GREEKS THE EPICS. The Poems of Homer.

Humanities 1A Reading List and Semester Plan: Fall Lindahl, Peter, Cooper, Scaff

English 12A. Syllabus. Course Overview. Course Goals

PETERS TOWNSHIP SCHOOL DISTRICT CORE BODY OF KNOWLEDGE ADVANCED PLACEMENT LITERATURE AND COMPOSITION GRADE 12

Upper School Summer Required Assignments Books & Topics

Fall 2018 TR 8:00-9:15 PETR 106

CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY Department of Classics Fall 2019

HAMLET'S MILL: AN ESSAY INVESTIGATING THE ORIGINS OF HUMAN KNOWLEDGE AND ITS TRANSMISSION THROUGH MYTH BY GIORGIO DE SANTILLANA, HERTHA

HUM2X "THE ANCIENT GREEK HERO": RELEASE DATES AND ACTIVITIES

RELEASE DATES AND ACTIVITIES FOR HUM2X "THE ANCIENT GREEK HERO"

DOWNLOAD OR READ : THE ILIAD THE ODYSSEY PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

DEPARTMENT OF CLASSICS

HOW TO WRITE A LITERARY COMMENTARY

Classical Civilizations

HUM2X "THE ANCIENT GREEK HERO": RELEASE DATES AND ACTIVITIES

Anglo-Saxon Period. The Anglo-Saxon period is the earliest recorded time period in English history.

CLASSICAL STUDIES. Written examination. Friday 16 November 2018

The Iliad / The Odyssey By Homer, Robert Fagles READ ONLINE

Travel, Middle East and Asia Minor

The Voyage of the Hero in Greek and Roman Literature

Part One Contemporary Fiction and Nonfiction. Part Two The Humanities: History, Biography, and the Classics

AN INTRODUCTION OF THE STUDY OF LITERATURE

The Library at Nineveh. M. Laffey

English Poetry. Page 1 of 7

Performing Arts in ART

Read the invocation and the first few lines of Book One of The Odyssey below. Follow the instructions below as you annotate:

Mythology: Timeless Tales Of Gods And Heroes Free Ebooks

Óenach: FMRSI Reviews 5.1 (2013) 1

Twelfth Grade. English 7 Course Description: Reading, Writing, and Communicating Grade Level Expectations at a Glance

Advice from Professor Gregory Nagy for Students in CB22x The Ancient Greek Hero

Humanities 4: Lecture 19. Friedrich Schiller: On the Aesthetic Education of Man

The Ancient And Medieval World

Postcolonial Literature Prof. Sayan Chattopadhyay Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur

I FLORIDA. Application Form for General Education and Writing/Math Requirement Classification C.) CREDIT HOURS: 3 D.) PREREQUISITES: none

Reading Ribbon Diagrams

Transcription:

THE UNIVERSITY OF DERBY CREATIVE WRITING ARCHIVE - INAUGURATION A short talk inaugurating the Creative Writing archive at University of Derby, delivered to the Learning, Teaching and Research Conference, University of Derby, Buxton, 2 July 2007 Carl Tighe 1

This paper serves to inaugurate what I hope will in time become a substantial archive of teaching materials and articles at Derby University on the subject of Creative Writing and the Classics an archive mainly written by the teachers of the Creative Writing team. This paper describes some of the ideas that lie behind my approach to Creative Writing as a university subject and which underlie my teaching. I am going touch on four areas: The Rise of Creative Writing Why the Classics? What use does Creative Writing make of the Classics? Writing as Citizenship But I am only going to touch on these things. I hope that if people want more detail they will go to the archive. The decline of the Classics at British Universities has been well documented. At about the same time the rise of Creative Writing has also become clear. Are these things connected and if so, in what ways? Perhaps the fact that one subject is taught mainly at the older universities and the other is taught mainly at the newer universities is significant. But within that shift there other connections to be made. Creative Writing is usually characterised as a newcomer to the academy, sometimes as an illegitimate and rather dodgy upstart. Some claim that it is not a real university subject. I have even heard it said that the places where it is taught are not real universities. The Welsh poet John Tripp said that to find a writer in a university is like finding a cow in a dairy. It is a very apt metaphor because as a cow is to the dairy, so Creative Writing is to the university. Creative Writing is not the newest comer to the academy, but rather the oldest, the original, university subject. Without the scribal schools of the Egypt, Mesopotamia and Palestine, the Classical Schools of Rhetoric in Athens, Rhodes and Rome, without the ancient storytellers, historians, philosophers, dramatists and Creative Writers like Homer, Herodotus, Plato, Euripides, Virgil, Ovid, Euripides, Pliny and the rest - the people we now call the Classics - there would be no English, Politics, Philosophy, History, Theatre, Sociology, American Studies, no Sciences, there would be no university. Wikipedia defines the Classics as: texts written in the ancient Mediterranean world. The Concise Oxford Dictionary defines the Classics as: outstandingly important works of acknowledged excellence or value in Latin or Greek. These are useful starting points, but the Classics has a much wider range of meaning than either of these. The Classics, in addition to polished and sophisticated works in Latin and Greek, also refers to work from further afield, and it includes texts that began life as oral compositions. The Classics are the foundation texts of literary culture and modern civilisation, texts like: Sanskrit Hymns of the Rigveda, The Bible, the Koran, the Babylonian/Sumerian epic Gilgamesh, the Iliad and Odyssey, the Irish Táin Bó Cúalnge, the Welsh Mabinogion and the Anglo Saxon Beowulf are all classics. 2

I put these foundation texts to work as part of the module Focus 1: Representation. There I try to get students to step back from what they think of as the certainties of language, writing, literature, literary culture [established by A levels] and to look at these things as if for the first time. I invite students to investigate the origins of language in humans, the invention, growth and development of the alphabet, the transition from an oral to a literary culture, to think about some of the things than can happen to stories when you write them down, what can happen to them when they are transmitted in hand-made copies, and to consider the differences in organisation between oral and literary texts. I think it is important that Creative Writing students consider the nature of language and the uses to which it is put. In the same way that a student of sculpture would consider the particular qualities of stone, metal or wood, or a student of fine art might compare the properties of poster, water, acrylic or oil paints, language is the material with which Creative Writers work. Our students need to develop an awareness of the history, nature and capabilities of language, words, the alphabet and writing. We look at the human experience that lies just behind the classics and we look at these things in a particular writerly way. Among many other questions, I ask students to focus on the following: What is writing and where does it come from? What does writing do? What are we doing when we write? What do writers do when they write? What can we expect of writing? What can writers expect to achieve in their writing? What does writing do well and what does it do badly? What are some of the effects [positive and negative] of writing? How effectively does writing record language? In what ways is a world without writing different from a world with writing? When dealing with the foundation texts these fundamental questions are often much clearer than when asked in relation to contemporary writing. But by using the classics in this way and by asking these questions we can then also ask students to imagine the opposite of our world that is, a world without writing. I direct students to contemporary fiction where writers have imagined the world before writing was invented, or how it might be after civilization has been destroyed, when writing has fallen into disuse, or a world where the only literary activity is oral storytelling: novels like: Bruce Chatwin s Songlines; Stanislaw Lem s Memoirs Found in a Bathtub; Ray Bradbury s Fahrenheit 451; Walter Miller Jnr s A Canticle for Liebowitz; William Golding s The Inheritors; Russell Hoban s Ridley Walker; Jean Auel s The Clan of the Cave Bear; Frank Delaney s novel Ireland. In asking students to address these very fundamental issues I am aware that I am inviting them to think about themselves, about their place in the world, about what they 3

do, and to ask what it is to be human, what is it that humans do and why reading, writing and speaking are unique, amazing deeply mysterious and worthy of further study. For me Creative Writing the creation of fiction, poems, scripts is a multi-faceted subject: it is an introduction to a university discipline, an end in itself, a hobby, the extension of an ancient tradition, the perfection of individual expression and, also and perhaps confusingly, a part of the entertainment industry. Creative Writing, as with every other university subject, since it involves the organisation of thought and materials and an analytical approach to language and ideas, is also, as the historian Thomas Carlyle pointed out, democratic voice in action, and as such it is also part of preparation for the responsibilities of citizenship, a transition to professional life and the real world. 1 In emphasising this I am not making a new point but I am harking back to the classics. The great Classics scholar C.M.Bowra made it clear that the Greeks regarded writers as public teachers, not in any pompous or arid sense but with a lively conviction that the highest lessons about men are best conveyed in a noble and satisfying form : For this reason Greek literature is always to some degree a public art [..] Writers were keenly aware of their responsibilities [.] in speaking for themselves they addressed their words closely and candidly to their compatriots [.] they belonged to an attentive, appreciative, and critical society [.] This enhanced their sense of public duty since they knew that with such an audience anything fake or feeble would soon be detected and derided. They could always draw support from the knowledge that they were at once the interpreters and the instructors of a national consciousness [ ] and this provided a basic culture which intellectual leaders could take for granted and through it have some assurance that, if they had something serious to say, it would be taken seriously by a circle far wider than that of their intimate friends. 2 For many classics scholars the study and practice of Rhetoric was what was once termed a liberal education. 3 Accordingly, this passage raises a number of difficult 1 Literature is our Parliament too. Printing, which comes necessarily out of Writing, I say often, is equivalent to Democracy: invent Writing, Democracy is inevitable. Writing brings Printing; brings universal everyday extempore Printing, as we see at present. Whoever can speak, speaking now to the whole nation, becomes a power, a branch of government, with inalienable weight in law-making, in all acts of authority. It matters not what rank he has, what revenues or garnitures: the requisite thing is, that he have a tongue which others will listen to; this and nothing more is requisite. The nation is governed by all that has tongue in the nation: Democracy is virtually there. Add only that whatsoever exists will have itself by and by organised; working secretly under bandages, obscurations, obstructions, it will never rest till it get to work free, unencumbered, visible to all. Democracy virtually extant will insist on becoming palpably extant. T. Carlyle, The Hero as Man of Letters [1841], On Heroes, Hero-Worship and the Heroic in History [California, 1993], 141-2. 2 C. M. Bowra, Landmarks in Greek Literature, [Harmondsworth, 1968], 31-2. 3 T. R. Glover, The Ancient World [Harmondsworth, 1953], 152. 4

issues which I ask students to take up in their third year. There, on a module which examines the nature of a writer s responsibilities, I encourage them to consider their role as writers, to attempt a definition of their responsibilities as writers, to consider who their audience might be and what it might expect of them. And these issues have become more, rather than less important. Unlike the writers of the ancient world who for the most part inhabited tiny city-states where the alphabet was the latest techno-kit, our student writers graduate into a contradictory, multi-voiced, multi-cultural, multi-media, high-tech world where, with the advent of the new technologies, the possibilities and the limits of creative participation are as yet uncharted and where articulate and active citizenship, when it is not irrelevant or merely a convenient political buzz-word, is often seen as a threat. I feel it is important to put our students in touch with the origins of Creative Writing since this helps develop an awareness of their historical line of descent, and helps provide them with the content of their subject. For students and tutors of Creative Writing, it is a legitimating experience to grasp that we are part of a tradition, that we are linked to the ancient Scribal schools and Classical Schools of Rhetoric, the Holy men of ancient India, Palestine and Arabia, the poets and storytellers of Africa and Australia, to the Anglo Saxon scop and the Celtic bard. To feel connected in this way to the mental habits, professional responsibilities and the creative practices of the people who helped found civilisation and who provided the texts that make universities possible, is a heady business. In using the Classics in this way, I am also aware that we may be producing materials that will one day be studied as part of the English Literature syllabus, perhaps even the Classics of the future. I am also aware that in our own way we are helping to shape a generation of thinkers, writers and social leaders whose behaviour, decisions and sense of themselves will be crucial to the future of humanity and to life on this planet. As I said at the start, I hope this paper will serve to introduce a growing archive of teaching materials and articles on the subject of Creative Writing and the Classics. In particular I hope that Dr Simon Heywood will share some of his materials on oral storytelling and Homer and that Dr Moy McCrory will write up some of her teaching materials on the use she makes of Ovid. The materials will be housed in Creative writing and I hope that colleagues [of all disciplines] will add to the archive in the future. 5