Flash Nonfiction 6-Week Online Workshop, Starts Monday, November 4th, 2024
Begins Monday, November 4th, 2024 (we'll skip the week of Thanksgiving and finish the week of 12/16).
Any questions about this class? Use the Chat Button (lower left) to talk with us.
Instructor Jack Christian is an essayist and poet who recently relocated to Minneapolis, where he will begin teaching creative writing, literature, and first-year writing to undergraduates at University of Minnesota in Fall 2024. Recently, Jack's essays have appeared in Diagram, Cleveland Review of Books, and Atticus Review. Currently, he is completing a third poetry manuscript titled "In Plain Air," that considers Impressionist and Post-Impressionist landscape paintings through a contemporary lens, and also a collection of essays about collisions of art, landscape, and money.Jack's poems, essays, and stories have appeared in periodicals including Artforum, Bennington Review, Black Warrior Review, Carolina Quarterly, The Collagist, Conjunctions, Denver Quarterly, jubilat, Los Angeles Review of Books, Mississippi Review, The New York Times Magazine, Slate, and Verse Daily. Previously, he has taught creative writing to students at University of North Texas, Marist College, Westfield State University, and University of Massachusetts Amherst. Jack holds an MFA in poetry from University of Massachusetts Amherst, a Certificate in Documentary Studies from Duke University, and an MA in Creative Writing from Hollins University.
Read an Interview with Jack on the art of writing flash nonfiction.
Urgent truths briefly told: In this course, each week you'll read and write short nonfiction that brings together elements of the essay and prose poetry within an encouraging and nurturing community of writers.
In this class, we’ll examine together the creative act of distillation that is central to the flash essay. We’ll do so in community with one another and in conversation with some of the brightest practitioners of the form--including Joan Didion, Diane Seuss, Jill Talbot, Jamila Osman, Ander Monson, and Ira Sukrungruang. Along the way, we’ll think about how our writing can flourish within and even seem to transcend the tight space of the flash essay. Through this practice, we’ll gain and share insights about the art of compressing time and space.
You will leave the course with a portfolio of six flash nonfiction essays, advice and encouragement for continuing to hone your craft, suggestions about where potentially to submit it for publication, and new relationships with fellow writers with similar creative interests.
COURSE TAKEAWAYS:
- Portfolio of 6 polished flash essays.
- Sustained practice compressing time and space into immediate, engaging forms.
- Detailed, personal feedback on your writing from your instructor and classmates.
- Knowledge of contemporary writers producing flash fiction essays along with the periodicals that publish them.
COURSE OUTLINE:
Week 1: The body of memory / Embodied Memories
Week 2: The 1-sentence essay
Week 3: The Essence of Place
Week 4: Formal experiments: Found language, lists, etc
Week 5: Self-Portrait
Week 6: Choose Your Own Adventure
COURSE TEXTS:
- I will suggest several example essays each week that will either be available online, or offered as .pdf.
TESTIMONIALS:
"I wanted to let you know how much I enjoyed your class. Prior to this, I had given up all creative writing and thought I could only produce academic writing. I cannot thank you enough for all of the kind and helpful comments you have left on my experiments, and the confidence you have given me to start actually writing things that I am proud of. This has been my favorite class I have ever taken, and I am sad that I didn't take a class of yours earlier."
"This one of the best classes I've ever taken - seriously. I had never written creatively before, but your and class' encouragement, critique, and enthusiasm was unmatched. The types of assignments we had pushed all of us out of our boxes and let us learn a new skill/style."
"Jack has an amazing way of engaging conversations and my peers were immensely helpful with their feedback. I felt both encouraged/validated while also seeing the room for improvement within my pieces. I never felt discouraged after receiving feedback, and Jack fosters a great culture within his class."
ONLINE COURSE STRUCTURE:
This class is entirely asynchronous which means you complete the weekly assignments on your own schedule. There are no set meeting times in order to allow for greater participation; your cohort will consist of writers from across different time zones, which allows for a wonderful diversity of voices.
Along with your weekly deadlines there is plenty of interaction with Jack and your peers within Wet Ink, our dedicated online classroom. Craft materials, lectures, reading assignments, and writing prompts are all available through the online classroom. Students also post work and provide and receive feedback within the online classroom environment.
You can get the work done as you see fit week-to-week, so it is perfect for any schedule. There are discussion questions each week inspired by the assigned readings and topics in the lecture notes. Students are encouraged to take these wherever is most compelling and/or useful for them. Jack engages with these discussions throughout the week and you will receive feedback from all assigned writing activities.
HOW DOES WET INK WORK?
Wet Ink was built and designed specifically for online writing classes. Wet Ink is private, easy to use, and very interactive. You can learn more about the Wet Ink platform by Watching a Class Demo.
PAYMENT OPTIONS:
Tuition is $395 USD. You can pay for the course in full or use Shop Pay or Affirm to pay over time with equal Monthly Payments. Both options are available at checkout.
-
Instructor: Jack Christian
-
Begins Monday, November 4th, 2024
-
We'll skip the week of Thanksgiving and finish the week of 12/16.
- Tuition is $395 USD.