Award-winning creative writers upbeat about their art
In each of the past two years, a CU-麻豆影院 faculty member has won a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts鈥攐ne for prose and one for poetry.
These achievements are notable but not surprising. The winners and their program director note that recognition for the program鈥檚 innovative work in creative writing is common.
鈥淚n the last two academic years, at the very least, there hasn鈥檛 been a member of the program who hasn鈥檛 had a wide release, a public performance, a national award,鈥 says Ruth Ellen Kocher, associate professor of English and director of the University of Colorado鈥檚 Creative Writing Program.
鈥淭he program has a highly productive faculty,鈥 Kocher adds.
鈥淭he unique thing about our faculty is that we really inspire our students to not only be innovative, but we also try to inspire them to consider and reconsider what it is to be innovative.鈥
Elisabeth Sheffield, associate professor of English, won a $25,000 NEA Creative Writing Fellowship in Prose this year. In 2011, Julie Carr, assistant professor of English, won a $25,000 NEA Creative Writing Fellowship in Poetry. Both are members of the Creative Writing Program.
As Kocher emphasizes, the program鈥檚 faculty have a large literary footprint: Noah Eli Gordon, assistant professor of English, has won the SFSU Poetry Center Book Award and been named a winner or finalist for many other awards. English professor Stephen Graham Jones has won a Kayden Book award and many others. And Associate Professor of English Marcia Douglas won a Poetry Book Society Recommendation, among other distinctions.
Emphasizing the quality of their program more than their own personal recognition, Sheffield and Carr talk about their program, the state of writing and the life of a writer.
As Sheffield notes, studying creative writing stimulates the life of the mind, but may not convey great remunerative benefits.
鈥淲hat I think we do is provide a sanctuary for people to think intensely about language, literature, about their own writing.鈥 It is a place where people can join the community of writers, Sheffield adds.
It鈥檚 important to think about writing as a verb rather than as a condition or state of being, she continues. 鈥淎s soon as you think, 鈥業 am a writer,鈥 then you鈥檙e not a writer. You鈥檙e not writing.鈥
鈥淲riting is about the act of writing. It鈥檚 often very painful and frustrating. At the same time, it鈥檚 intensely satisfying.鈥
鈥淵ou can sit in front of your computer and sometimes hate yourself at the end of the day.鈥 But, 鈥淭here鈥檚 a satisfaction in struggling so hard with something and being so engaged with it that you forget yourself.鈥
Sheffield won the NEA fellowship on the basis of excerpts of a novel in progress she鈥檚 been crafting for nearly four years. The NEA fellowship and other support will allow her to finish it.
Like many in the world of writing and publishing, Sheffield sees a landscape in flux. Readers are buying fewer books, magazines and newspapers. Many small publishers (and publications) have been subsumed by large corporations. In their latest incarnations, these companies are less interested in literature and taking risks, Sheffield observes.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e publishing memoirs by celebrities.鈥
But in the digital world, people spend prodigious amounts of time reading and writing. 鈥淓ven as we talk about the dumbing down of culture, people are thinking about putting their thoughts into words more than ever.鈥
Sheffield is not writing the obituary of small publishing houses or the recognition of stellar writing: 鈥淚鈥檓 not entirely pessimistic. The people who are really interested in language as an art form, I don鈥檛 think they鈥檙e a bigger or smaller part of the population than they were before.鈥
She cites James Joyce, whose masterpiece was published serially in an American magazine. 鈥淲hat portion of the populace was waiting for the next installment of 鈥楿lysses鈥?鈥 Yes, literati and critics touted Joyce, 鈥渂ut who was listening to them?鈥
Carr鈥檚 NEA grant supported her writing projects titled 鈥淭hink Tank鈥 and 鈥淩ag.鈥
Like Sheffield, Carr contends that good writing is neither in decline nor disfavor. 鈥淲hy would literature be of any less use to us now? If anything, we need poetry and other forms of literature more now than ever,鈥 Carr says.
The political, economic and ethical crises facing the nation and world demand that individuals think critically about and respond creatively to the cultural environment, Carr adds. 鈥淭his is very general statement, but I believe that where pressures are acute, art is most needed.鈥
Like Sheffield, Carr rejects the notion that social media necessarily erode the quality of intellectual discourse.
鈥淪ocial media provide avenues for writers and readers to connect and to share work and ideas,鈥 Carr says. 鈥淭he time we all spend online can be used meaningfully or not; that鈥檚 up to each of us. As teachers, we help to guide students toward meaningful engagements with their world. Art is meaningful engagement.鈥
鈥淥ur Creative Writing Program is, in my humble opinion, one of the best programs in the country for students who are interested in more innovative ways of writing,鈥 Carr adds. 鈥淲e are a very active group of writers, publishing at an almost alarming rate!鈥
The program offers courses in publishing via its onsite press, Subito. Students are asked to learn modern and contemporary literature, and often study theory and the other arts as well.
The program has 鈥渁 lively and exciting reading series,鈥 Carr says. The program conducts outreach through which students can work in the public schools teaching creative writing.
Carr and her husband are co-publishers of Counterpath Press and co-own small bookstore/gallery/performance space in Denver called Counterpath:
Assistant Professor Gordon runs a small press called Letter Machine:
For more information about CU-麻豆影院鈥檚 Creative Writing Program, see: