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9780130994424

Shadow Boxing Art and Craft Creative Nonfiction

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780130994424

  • ISBN10:

    0130994421

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2003-10-10
  • Publisher: Pearson

Note: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.

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Summary

Unique in approach and content, this book presents specific definitions of the subgenres of creative nonfictionmemoir, the personal essay, literary journalism, nature writing, biography and history, and the nonfiction novel.Providing model readings to illustrate these definitions, this First Edition also offers practical writing exercises and strategies for readers to apply what they are learning in each subgenre.For professionals with a career or interest in writing, journalism, education, publishing, and/or media.

Author Biography

Kristen Iversen is the author of Molly Brown: Unraveling the Myth, winner of the Colorado Book Award in Biography, and the forthcoming Full Body Burden, based on her experience of growing up near Rocky Flats, a nuclear weaponry facility in Colorado. She has taught in the creative writing programs at Naropa University and San Jose State University, and currently teaches at the University of Memphis.

Table of Contents

When is Nonfiction not Creative?
Types of Creative Nonfiction
Memoir
Excerpt fromThis Boy's Life
Excerpt fromThe Liars' Club
Excerpt fromSilent Dancing: A Partial Remembrance of a Puerto Rican Childhood
Mother From Heaven
Student Readings
Lost at a Love-In
Dancing Girls
Chester
Personal Essay
Thank You in Arabic
Texas Women: True Grit and All the Rest
The Stone Horse
Student Readings
Fifteen Minutes
Coming to Shelter
Waiting Is the Hardest Part
Literary Journalism
Excerpt fromFear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream
Excerpt fromThe Professor and the Madman
On AIDS
Excerpt fromComing Into the Country
Student Readings
All That Stands Between Me and Heaven Is My Husband's Fork
Are You My Mother?
Escape from Italy, or No Fear and Loathing in the Rome of the North
Nature Writing
Excerpt fromRefuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place
Excerpt fromAccident: A Days News
Excerpt fromThe Solace of Open Spaces
At Cloudy Pass: The Need of Being Versed in Human Things
Student Readings
The Tolerable Naturalist
Naupaka In Bloom
Biography and History
The Devil and Ambrose Bierce
Excerpt fromSon of the Morning Star
In Search of History
Excerpt fromMolly Brown: Unraveling the Myth
Student Readings
Rebecca Tucked Away
Dear John Barry
The Nonfiction Novel
Excerpt fromIn Cold Blood
Excerpt fromCloudsplitter
Excerpt fromBecoming
Excerpt fromThe Hours
Student Readings
Rossiya East
Talk Story
The Writing Life
The Writing Life
So Long Ago, So Near
On Keeping a Notebook
Journal of a Solitude
Appendix
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

Shadow Boxing: Art and Craft in Creative Nonfictionis a book unlike others on the subject and presents a new approach to a relatively new genre. What is creative nonfiction, and why is everyone talking about it? This book will begin to answer that question and pose some interesting new questions about it.A balance of model readings and practical writing exercises,Shadow Boxing: Art and Craft in Creative Nonfictionis primarily designed for students in creative writing workshops at the undergraduate and graduate level, and may also be useful in composition courses. However, writers outside of academia who are interested in creative nonfiction--and there are many of them--will find this book helpful as well.Just as theterm creative nonfictionis problematic (how many genres are defined by what they are not?), it is almost impossible to draw distinct, irrefutable lines between its various subgenres: memoir, the personal essay, literary journalism, biography/history, and the nonfiction novel. One form merges into the next, and even the line between fiction and nonfiction can be (as any good writer knows) oblique, blurred, or downright invisible. How closely must the creative nonfiction writer adhere to fact? What role does imagination play? One of the goals of this book is to examine the ethics of creative nonfiction and, inevitably, the ethical questions that any writer of prose or poetry faces whenever they put words on a page.The termshadow boxinghas a long history. In contemporary sport boxing, it is most often used to describe sparring with an imaginary partner for exercise or training purposes. The writer of creative nonfiction spars with all sorts of shadowy opponents: readers, critics, writers, and peers, who are quick to point out what should and shouldn't be done when one chooses to write in a genre that engages both fact and imagination. Each particular genre also poses its own particular problems: for example, a memoirist may feel the shadow of a parent, living or dead, as a heavy influence on the work. The literary journalist might struggle with the professional standards of conventional journalism and the literary technique that allows the development of character-driven narrative. Ultimately, though, writing--like shadow boxing--is a solitary battle. In Chinese shadow boxing, the boxer struggles with his or her own shadow to attain the highest form and expression of the self. The shadow becomes representative of the ego itself. Thus each of us as writers must struggle with our own shadows, internal and external, to determine our own highest form of meaning and creative expression.My interest in creative nonfiction arises from years of working as a journalist and editor before deciding to return to graduate school and pursue a Ph.D. in English/ Creative Writing. I began to teach fiction and creative nonfiction, and the readings and exercises in this book grew from those years of workshop experiences. This book follows the approach I take in my workshops: a focused discussion of genre and style; an analysis of model readings that represent various approaches to the genre; writing exercises intended to spark and generate new creative work; and, finally, a thorough approach to revision and re-visioning.I am deeply indebted to the people who helped bring this book to fruition: Julie Lewis, Dan Choi, Shannon Rauwerda, my good friend and colleague Chris Fink, and all the students over the past few years who have graced me with their presence.I also want to thank the reviewers who helped me to improve this book: David Lenoir, Western Kentucky University; Andrew Furmar, Florida Atlantic University; Howard Kerner, Polk Community College; Glenda Conway, University of Montevallo; Stuart C. Brown, New Mexico State University; and Alex Albright, East Carolina University.

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