Connections Through Literature
Connections Through Literature: LGBT+ Voices

Connections Through Literature: LGBT+ Voices

Wed 25 May 2022 18:30 - 20:30

Online Zoom Event

Connections Through Literature: LGBT+ Voices

Wed 25 May 2022 18:30 - 20:30

Online Zoom Event

Description

Course Summary: 

In this six-week course for writers of all levels, you will use fiction to give voice to the LGBT+ experience. In class, you will perform close analyses of key passages from LGBT+ novels and short stories and will undertake writing experiments based on what you find. As homework each week, you will read one novel extract or short story and complete one short writing exercise. In each session you will focus on a single topic, such as selfhood, identity, viewpoint, and defamiliarisation, with the aim of producing one finished short story of your own by the end of the course.

Course Outline:

Beginning on Wednesday 25 May, the group will meet once a week: Wednesday at 18:30. Each class will be two hours long. The classes will be structured in the following way:

  • The first 20-30 minutes will be spent informally sharing our writing experiments (homework).
  • The following 45-60 minutes will be spent performing close textual analyses of a short story or novel extract.
  • The final 30 minutes will be spent performing writing exercises based on the themes of our analyses. Students will be invited to work on these experiments (expand them and/or edit them) as homework. Students will then be invited to share these experiments with the class via Google Drive. All sharing of work will be voluntary. There will be no obligation to share, if you do not wish.

Each week, we will focus on specific themes relevant, in some way or another, to LGBT+ writing:

Week One: Secrets

Week Two: Avowal/Confession

Week Three: Voice/Selfhood/Identity

Week Four: Desire and Violence

Week Five: Desire and Illness

Week Six: Defamiliarisation/Queerness

(These themes might change according to the make-up of the class, and the students’ responses and interests.)

The authors we have looked at the past include: Edmund White, Jennifer Egan, Ali Smith, CN Lester, Édouard Louis, Allan Gurganus, Maggie Nelson, David Wojnarowicz, Thom Gunn, Kathy Acker, Juliet Jacques, Roland Barthes, Jeanette Winterson, Anne Enright, Colum McCann, Thomas Page McBee and Colm Toíbín.

Course Outcomes: 

Beginners will find starting points for the stories they want to tell, or even discover stories they did not know they wanted to tell. More seasoned writers will clarify their ideas, hone their technique, and add depth to their work. Students are invited to try and write an entire short story over the six weeks of the course, though there is no pressure to achieve this. The priority is to demystify the writing process a little and to have fun.

Short personal biography: Gavin McCrea is the author of two critically acclaimed novels, Mrs Engels (2015) and The Sisters Mao (2021), both published by Scribe. His first work of non-fiction, Cells, will be published by Scribe in November 2022. Most recently, he has been commissioned by Hachette/John Murray to write a collection of essays on Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Gavin is currently Guest Lecturer in Literature and Creative Writing at Bard College Berlin. www.gavinmccrea.com

You will be sent Zoom login details before the event.

This course will take place online every Wednesday evening for 6 weeks on 25th May, June 1st, 8th, 15th, 22nd, 29th from 6:30pm - 8:30pm

Please only book a ticket if you can attend all 6 classes.

Kildare Library Service Privacy Statement for Events

Location

Online Zoom Event

Join waiting list

Share this event

Need help with your order?

Contact the event organiser


Free event ticketing by Ticket Tailor

Need help with your order? Contact the event organiser Privacy Policy