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Tag Archives: writing
My Chula
Chulalongkorn University is a mythical place for young Thai students who aspire to come here. What is it to actual students, past and present? Please share your story.
John and Mary
Margaret Atwood, in “Happy Endings,” presents us with John and Mary. Through several plot scenarios, she makes the argument that what matters is not Who does What, but How and Why. Jane Martin’s Beauty has a debate about what matters. … Continue reading
Posted in Study of Literature 2017
Tagged Happy Endings, Margaret Atwood, plot, short story, values, writing
4 Comments
Picture Challenge
Back in 1818, Percy Bysshe Shelley wrote “Ozymandias” in playful competition with his friend Horace Smith. Their sonnets seemed to be “responding independently to a conversation about the scene,” probably a description and an illustration in Richard Pococke’s A Description … Continue reading
Posted in Reading and Analysis 2016
Tagged Chris Jordan, creative writing, Midway, writing
12 Comments
Conceptual Play
Jane Martin’s Beauty takes the concept of beauty and examines its advantages and drawbacks, what it enables and disables. Pick a concept that you think needs investigation. Write a two-minute play that exposes its myths and its realities. What idea … Continue reading
The Bangkok
David Ives’ one-act The Philadelphia is a serious comedy that creates some problems and solves them. If a Philadelphia is where “you can’t get what you ask for” (79), and a Cleveland is “like death, without the advantages” (82), what … Continue reading
Posted in Reading and Analysis 2016
Tagged Bangkok, David Ives, play, The Philadelphia, writing
16 Comments
Villanelle Challenge
Write a villanelle using the two rhymes: /ɪŋ/ and /iː/.
Battles in “Defender of the Faith”
Philip Roth’s “Defender of the Faith” takes place at a “new front” during the last months of World War II (161). Focus on a “fight” in the story and show how characters acquit themselves on that “field of battle” (166). … Continue reading
Posted in Reading and Analysis 2016
Tagged Defender of the Faith, fight, literature, Philip Roth, short story, writing
16 Comments
Stillness in “Defender of the Faith”
While there are several confrontations at Nathan Marx’s “new front” in Philip Roth’s “Defender of the Faith,” are there also moments of what Charles Baxter calls stillness, which he says “is simply one of the hardest psychic conditions to get … Continue reading
Posted in Reading and Analysis 2016
Tagged Charles Baxter, Defender of the Faith, literature, Philip Roth, short story, stillness, writing
12 Comments
First Grade Recollections
What do you remember most from your first year at grade school? In as few words and lines as possible and without saying what the lesson is (as in explicitly announcing “from this experience I learned that…”), convey the scene, … Continue reading
A Fairy Story
Orwell’s subtitle for Animal Farm is “A Fairy Story.” What fairy characteristics are present in the work? Consider the unrealistic features of the novel. What role(s) does the fantastic, unbelievable, or impossible play in this short tale?
Posted in Reading and Analysis 2015, Uncategorized
Tagged 235-2015b, Animal Farm, George Orwell, novel, reading and analysis, writing
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Defamiliarization
Pick an object, behavior or phenomenon, like Craig Raine in “A Martian Sends a Postcard Home,” and defamiliarize it. What are you able to say now that the thing is something else?
Posted in Reading and Analysis 2014
Tagged 235-2014b, creative, defamiliarization, writing
10 Comments
How Was Your Loy Kratong Night?
In answering this question with a descriptive paragraph that vividly recreates the experience and atmosphere, 1) write at the scene, that is, make sure you have a piece of paper and a pen with you during that night to record … Continue reading