Monday, October 25, 2010

Support Safe Sex w/GLBTF, Sexperts, and the OU Writing Center

Support Safe Sex w/GLBTF, Sexperts, and the OU Writing Center

This week, Wednesday the 27th at 8pm, the OU Writing Center will be sponsoring a movie night with GLBTF. Come join us at 8pm in Devon Energy Hall room 270. But if you have time, show up before that for a fun and interesting discussion about safe sex and positive, healthy environments for sex.

On Monday, come check out the Nondiscrimination Laws Teach-In to join OU law students in a discussion on nondiscrimination laws at 4pm in Dale Hall. After this meeting, there will be a Pride Rally Against Intolerance to stand together against harassment and intolerance.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Spirit Day/Waffle Wednesday-- October 20th

Spirit Day October 20th

Purple shirts, purple waffles. Pride, pride, pride. In remembrance of the recent suicides and all those who have suffered due to homophobia and transphobia and in support for those still with us, on October 20th, we will be wearing purple and pink—purple for pride, pink for solidarity against bullying.

If you want to share this news with your friends on Facebook, here is the page for the official event. http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=132152593500819

This day also happens to coincide with the day in the writing center when we make waffles, so the writing center will be adding blueberries to the waffles on this day as a special nod to those who are grieving the loved ones they have lost to hatred and harassment.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Working With Writers Course

Do you want to learn more about writing and writers? Do you want to work with writers one-on-one or as a professional editor someday?

If so, you can enroll in our course, held every spring-- ENGL 3193: Working with Writers. This class will be of particular interest to those who would like to work as a writing consultant at The University of Oklahoma Writing Center and is open to all majors.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Flash Fiction Workshop: Oct 19, 21, and 23

I sit on a train as I type this. The train lolls from side to side, and people stumble along the aisle to and from the cafĂ© car. They’re hungry. They want coffee. As they lurch past, they do not swap pleasantries. And neither will I.

Here is what I want to tell you: The Writing Center and I will host a flash fiction workshop in a couple weeks (details below). If you write poetry or fiction and want to explore the territory between the short story and the prose poem, join us. It’s free. We’ll have up to a dozen writers. Some spots are already taken.

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Flash fiction is a mongrel genre, one that resists definition and goes by other names: sudden fiction, small fiction, quick fiction, postcard fiction, microfiction, and the short-short story. Flash has a good deal in common with the prose poem. And flash is arguably the best way for a young fiction writer to hone the craft and get published sooner rather than later.

Which is not to say that flash fiction comes easily. A good flash is as rare and hard to come by as a good poem. Yet flash fiction is booming. Many dozens—probably hundreds—of online journals feature flash fiction. Publishing houses have printed anthologies devoted to the genre. Harper’s Magazine featured a few flashes this summer. So, it’s around.

If you want a firm definition, here’s the best I can do: a short story told in fewer than one thousand words.

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This train passes farms and industrial wastelands, mostly, but from time to time we rumble through a neighborhood. Beyond a tall fence, I glimpse a yard with an empty pool, a three-legged dog, and a shovel. The shovel is propped against an overturned wheelbarrow. Beyond another fence, an old man in pastel-green coveralls blasts the eaves of his house with a garden hose while a younger, much heavier man sits at a picnic table and stares into a toolbox. Another yard, another untold story.

I cannot help but imagine such stories.

A dental hygienist rescued a three-legged dog from a highway median and brought him home. A week later, while she worked late, the dog clawed right through her pantry door and ate every bread slice, burger bun, and cracker. A month later, he took a dump on her freshly made bed. When her new boyfriend came for dinner, the dog got excited and pissed in his lap. This sent the man into a drunken rage. He strangled the hygienist’s cat. She buried the cat in her yard and vowed never to let the dog back into the house. But tonight, when she drives home from work, she will realize the dog saved her from a dangerous relationship. She will open her back door to let him in. He will be gone. Another train will pass.

Wasps have infested the eaves of the house where the old man in pastel stands with his garden hose. His middle-aged son was stung fifty times while spreading insulation in the attic. After gently coating his son’s wounds with calamine lotion, the old man does what he can to spray the wasps away. His son gazes into the toolbox, but he’s not looking for a tool. He’s trying to figure out why, for all these years, he thought his father didn’t love him.

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Flash fiction works like these glimpses into the back yards of strangers. The author sketches a few details and draws the outlines of a story. Then it’s up to the reader to see and feel the rest. Done well, flash fiction evokes deep emotion and powerful insight. Flash can also be funny, of course, and sexy, and mysterious. The genre need not be restrictive. In fact, sometimes I doubt that flash fiction is its own genre at all. It’s a condensed short story. It’s a tightly wound, narrative prose poem. The art of flash is, to some extent, the art of compression and omission. How few words, how few details, how few moments can a story use to convey the power of a larger story-behind-the-text? What can be cut yet remain hovering between the lines?

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In this workshop, we will meet three times. Each participant will write six to ten flashes. We will read and discuss a few of our own, and we will consider the extraordinary work of several published authors. We will compare flash fictions to prose poems and jokes, and we’ll find the form’s roots in ancient parables.

Along the way, we’ll develop our understanding of what works and what does not work in flash fiction. We will analyze the techniques flash fiction writers use to cultivate multiple layers of meaning, and we will experiment with those techniques in our own work. Through guided exercises, independent projects, and timed freewrites, workshop participants will compose several flash fictions and, at the end, choose one to revise with an eye toward publication.

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If you want to read a few flash fictions, here’s a good place to start: WIGLEAF'S TOP FIFTY. If you want to write a few, this workshop will be a fine place to start. Send an email to ericbosse@ou.edu if you’d like to enroll.

[Eric Bosse is a lecturer in Expository Writing. He has published more than forty stories, some flash fiction and some longer, in such magazines and journals as The Sun, Mississippi Review, Exquisite Corpse, Zoetrope, Eclectica and Night Train. His story collection, Magnificent Mistakes, will be released this winter by Ravenna Press.]

Workshop will be held in Wagner Room 280, October 19th and 21st from 6pm-8pm and October 23rd from 2pm-4pm