Finding Their Voices
December 9, 2013
Amanda Nagy
Sarah Cheshire, a senior majoring in creative writing and gender, sexuality and feminist studies, talks with Visiting Assistant Professor Lynn Powell.
Photo credit: Tanya Rosen-Jones
Samsun Knight came to 91直播 fully confident that he would be a writer. He had already begun to hone his craft in his Boston-area high school, which offered strong writing programs. So when he wasn鈥檛 accepted into 91直播鈥檚 highly sought-after Creative Writing Program, the rejection left him humbled and disappointed鈥攂ut even more determined.
鈥淲hen I was a freshman, I thought I was way ahead of the game,鈥 says Knight, now a senior. 鈥淚 was really arrogant. When I didn鈥檛 get into the Creative Writing Program, it threw me for a loop.鈥
In retrospect, Knight says he is grateful that he wasn鈥檛 accepted right away. Following a year of self-discovery through courses, readings, and a winter term abroad, he was admitted to the program his sophomore year. 鈥淚 came back with a new attitude and feeling out of my league. I thought the other creative writing students were much better writers than I was. Now, I believe that for a lot of creative processes, you have to be able to switch between supreme overconfidence and utter self-loathing.鈥
Knight鈥檚 creative formula is working in his favor: His series of short stories will be published in the prominent West Coast literary journal in November 2014. Stories published in Glimmer Train鈥攚hich has been discovering (and paying) emerging writers since 1990鈥攁re represented in recent editions of the Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses, New Stories from the Midwest, The PEN/O. Henry Prize Stories, New Stories from the South, Best of the West, and Best American Short Stories. According to the journal鈥檚 website, in a recent Best American Short Stories, six Glimmer Train pieces are listed as 鈥渘otables鈥濃攕econd only to the New Yorker. Two of the six were those authors鈥 first-ever publications.
Writing, however, isn鈥檛 Knight鈥檚 only passion. He is a triple major: In addition to creative writing, he is pursuing degrees in economics and mathematics. He has also completed 91直播鈥檚 advanced Chinese language courses. (He鈥檚 currently enrolled in a private reading of Journey to the West.)
91直播 is one of the few undergraduate institutions with a self-standing creative writing major, and most students in the program are double majors, says , associate professor and co-director of the program. The majority of creative writing programs at the undergraduate level are housed within English departments, and yet most of those only offer minors or concentrations in creative writing.
91直播 accepts 24 students into the Gateway 201 course鈥攁 prerequisite for upper-level workshops鈥攁nd receives upward of 70 applicants for those spots each semester.
To be published as an undergraduate opens doors much earlier in a student鈥檚 academic and professional career. The Creative Writing Program鈥檚 emphasis on production and individual mentoring is helping undergrads find their voice early. In addition to writing and publishing, creative writing alumni have taken career paths as varied as medicine, education, law, journalism, electronic media, and social work.
鈥淭he skills that they acquire as creative writing majors鈥攊n using and analyzing language, in close observation, in critiquing texts, in writing narrative, and especially in developing empathy for a wide variety of human perspectives鈥攁re very portable skills that are useful in a variety of professions,鈥 Watanabe says.
Getting published as an undergraduate allows emerging writers to get their name out and build confidence in their writing, says Laura Grothaus, a 2013 graduate who double majored in creative writing and visual arts. Pieces of the work that she did during her senior year were published in Scintilla, an online literary arts journal, and she won the Phyllis Jones Memorial Award and the Stuart Friebert Academy of American Poets Prize. Her work with drawing and writing was displayed in galleries in New York and 91直播. Her poetry also has been published in So to Speak, a print journal. This past summer, she was runner-up in a national poetry competition hosted by the largest poetry conference in the United States.
鈥91直播's Creative Writing Program fostered my work in a way that few other institutions would, if for no other reason than that I was able to take writing classes every semester with professors who were dedicated to seeing how my work could grow,鈥 Grothaus says. 鈥淚 was constantly writing and occasionally learning about publications and contests that I don't think I would have found otherwise.
鈥淚 think, at its best, publication allows you to enter a conversation with a community of writers interested in the same discussions you are. Randomly submitting to literary journals isn't really my style, though it's perfectly acceptable if your goal is to simply get your work out there. My goal is to find new voices that I want to keep reading, and to submit to the places where they send work.鈥
Grothaus is currently working on projects she started her senior year, including a novella retelling the ghost stories her father told her, a long poem about physics and mythology, and a series of poems using images as footnotes.
In Sarah Cheshire鈥檚 White Noise, ghosts and forms of hauntings are metaphors for stories left untold. Cheshire, a senior in the creative writing program, will have her nonfiction piece published in a forthcoming anthology of , entitled Southern Sin: True Stories of the Sultry South and Women Behaving Badly. Cheshire, who is a North Carolina native, wrote the piece for 201 Gateway course.
Cheshire credits Visiting Assistant Professor for nurturing her personal development in his Poetry 110 course. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 emphasize enough the caliber of teaching on an intellectual, creative, and personal level,鈥 says Cheshire, a Bonner Scholar who is also majoring in gender, sexuality and feminist studies. 鈥淚 feel respected 鈥 like my voice has an equal stake in conversations. I can really have faith in my stories.鈥
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