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Sewanee Writers on Writing (Southern Literary Studies)
Description
For two weeks every year, literary figures from throughout the country gather in rural Sewanee, Tennessee, to lead the Sewanee Writers' Conference, a series of workshops and colloquia aimed at cultivating the craft of writing. Gleaned from the first ten conferences, the "craft" lectures collected in Sewanee Writers on Writing offer a range of perspectives on writing as practiced by various playwrights, poets, and fiction writers whose gifts have made the Sewanee conference a mecca for developing talent.
The essays offer a banquet of topics that will whet the appetite of all authors, professional and amateur. Russell Banks ponders the role of research in the constitutive power of the imagination, John Casey considers simultaneity in art, and Ellen Douglas describes how a writer confronts the changing shape of memory. Horton Foote offers his perspective on the collaborative spirit of the theater, and Ernest Gaines explains why his subject matter must always remain the people of Louisiana. Anthony Hecht responds to W. H. Auden, revealing the ways both poets pair talent with subject, and John Hollander explores the delicate subtleties of Robert Frost's figurative thought.
Diane Johnson offers a witty and frank answer to the question all writers face at one time or another: "Write what?" Donald Justice expounds on the virtues of obscurity in poetry, and Romulus Linney offers practical guidelines for using dramatic action to revise a play. In her examination of Nabokov's Bend Sinister, Alice McDermott demonstrates that fiction writers are bound by no rules other than "do whatever you can get away with". Marsha Norman provides a witty list of the dos and don'ts playwriting, and FrancineProse stresses the importance of detail to a story's credibility. Finally, volume editor Wyatt Prunty discusses the figure of vacancy in the stories of Flannery O'Connor and Peter Taylor.
Together, these wise and wised-up essays offers a treasure trove of insight on the art of writing. Creative writers and scholars alike will benefit from the enthusiastic support and astute advice of these masters of the written word.
Other Books in Series
Undead Souths: The Gothic and Beyond in Southern Literature and Culture (Southern Literary Studies)
The Bad Poor: Race, Class, and the Rise of Grit Lit (Southern Literary Studies)
Faulknerista (Southern Literary Studies)
Circles of Sorrow, Lines of Struggle: The Novels of Toni Morrison (Southern Literary Studies)
Six Poets from the Mountain South: Sherman's Troops in the Savannah and Carolinas Campaigns (Southern Literary Studies)
A Talent for Living: Josephine Pinckney and the Charleston Literary Tradition (Southern Literary Studies)
God's Loud Hand: Poems (Southern Literary Studies)
Short Stories Are Not Real Life: Stories (Southern Literary Studies)
Kate Chopin: A Critical Biography (Southern Literary Studies)
The Political Philosophy of the New Deal (Southern Literary Studies)
Peter Taylor: A Writer's Life (Southern Literary Studies)
Southerners Acting Southern: On Celebrities and Their Star Personas in the Imagined South (Southern Literary Studies)
Southerners Acting Southern: On Celebrities and Their Star Personas in the Imagined South (Southern Literary Studies)
Literary New Orleans: Essays and Meditations (Revised) (Southern Literary Studies)
Scary Mason-Dixon Line: African American Writers and the South (Southern Literary Studies)
River Road Rambler: A Curious Traveler Along Louisiana's Historic Byway (Southern Literary Studies)
Faulkner and the Politics of Reading (Southern Literary Studies)
Guide to Louisiana Confederate Military Units, 1861--1865 (Southern Literary Studies)
