Fall 2013

English 261: Craft of Fiction Professor Rosemary Graham

Dante 320; ext. 8016 Office Hours: TTh 4:45-5:45; W 3-4

And by appointment

Beyond Setting: Locating Character in Time and Place

“The writer operates at a peculiar crossroads where time and place and eternity somehow meet. His problem is to find that location.” Flannery O’Connor, Mystery and Manners

This course will give you the opportunity to focus on two of the three parts of O’Connor’s famous “peculiar crossroads.” Weekly readings will guide weekly experiments in which you will be encouraged to take your fiction into unexplored territory: other decades, other continents as well as the here and now.

Texts:

Frank O’Connor, Complete Stories

Peter Behrens, The O’Briens

Ellen Sussman, Paradise Guest House

Jennifer Egan, A Visit from the Goon Squad

Joan Silber, The Art of Time in Fiction: As Long As It Takes

Requirements: Weekly informal written responses to the reading and weekly 2 pp. experiments, one of which to be expanded into a 15-20-page story or novel excerpt. Attendance, active participation in lively class discussion.

Attendance Policy: You should not miss class except for illness and other unavoidables. Please do not schedule job interviews, dentist appointments, weddings (or wedding dress fittings, cake tastings, etc.) during our class time. Excessive absence (more than two) may result in your not passing the course.

Cell phone policy: Silenced, out of sight.

Official Learning Outcomes for English 261, Craft of Fiction

In this course, students will:

·  read fiction with attention to the techniques writers use to create place and manipulate time

·  create original fiction using these and other techniques to create place and manipulate time

·  relate the content of the course to their own fiction and to the practice of writing fiction in our time

September

3 Read: Eudora Welty “Place in Fiction”; “Why I Live at the P.O.,” and “Petrified Man.” Isolate two or three points in Welty’s stories where “the place in which [they happen] is accepted as true.” Bring to class: One (xeroxed) page of fiction where, for you as a reader, “The moment the place in which the novel happens is accepted as true.” Annotate the text, underlining or highlighting the words, phrases, images, etc. that make you “accept the place as true.” Write: a brief paragraph or two about the passage as preparation for presenting it in class.

5 Read (and re-read) “Guests of the Nation” in Frank O’Connor’s Collected Stories, paying particular attention to the various spaces the characters move through in its 12 pages. Make a list of the different spaces. Then identify what we know about each and note how we know what we know. Write: No more than three paragraphs in which at least three characters move among exactly three rooms.

10 Read: “Bridal Night” and “The Majesty of the Law” in our O’Connor reader, focusing on physical detail. How does O’Connor render the physical worlds of these characters? What makes us “accept as true” the lie of seaside cottage in “Bridal Night” and Dan Bride’s cottage in “Majesty”?

12 Write: a scene modeled on opening of “The Majesty of the Law” where the police sergeant enters Dan’s domestic space. Let the details of the dwelling spark revelations about the person whose space is being entered, the relationship between that person and the visitor, and let the conversation suggest—without revealing explicitly—something of the reason for the visit.

17 Read “News for the Church” and “First Confession.” How does O’Connor use the different sides of the confessional?

19 Write a two-character scene where the point of view character either reveals or hears some kind of confession or secret. Pay as much attention to creating a real space as to the dialogue spoken.

24 Read “Uprooted.” How does O’Connor move between city and country, mainland and island? Isolate three passages in the text where Ned Keating perceives these three locales. Write A paragraph or two unpacking one of your selected passages.

26 Write two paragraphs using either a character you are already familiar with or a new one. One paragraph should begin “It was night(fall) when (he/she/they) reached home.)” and the second should begin “Nothing was changed . . .” Your character is returning home after having definitively left. How he or she sees the old domestic space should tell us something about his or her emotional state.

October

1 Read “Babes in the Woods,” and “The American Wife.” Isolate one passage in each story where O’Connor’s depiction of physical space communicates something vital about cultural space.

3 Write a companion piece to any of the prompts you’ve produced so far using physical space to convey something about cultural space. You might make this piece about a character you’ve already depicted, but at the a distinctly different time in his/her life (the future or the past). Or you might make the point-of-view character someone whom the original point-of-view character encountered or remembered or otherwise engaged with in your original.

8 Read to p. 96 in The Obriens. Keeping in mind what Welty said about Place in Fiction, note as you read (and re-read) how Behrens re-creates these events of the early twentieth century for a twenty-first-century audience. Pay special attention to language and word choice. How does he make his characters’ thoughts and words believable for their time and to ours? Choose a passage you find particularly effective in transporting us through time and write a paragraph or two about it.

10 Read the first half of The Art of Time in Fiction. Bring to class the names of three (in)famous (non-psychotic) historical figures with brief accounts of their (mis or heroic) deeds and a list of three historical events you might explore through fictional characters. Have at least one be from a place other than the U.S. In class we will discuss the possibilities these figures’ lives and/or events present for fiction. Start researching. (We’ll discuss resources a bit.)

15 Read to p. 175. in O’Briens. Behrens makes huge leaps in time in these pages. How does he do this? How do the devices he uses—letters, telegrams, etc.—function? Isolate and be prepared to explicate in discussion two or three passages where present and past meet.

17 Use your research to write two (2 ish page) scenes depicting your historical figures/ witnesses to history engaged in a daily activity while also introducing plot possibilities. Include a list of sources. Read the second half of The Art of Time in Fiction.

22 Read to p. 259 in The O’Briens, continue focusing on Behrens’ handling of time.

October 24 No Class.

29 Read to p. 321 The O’Briens, continuing to focus on how Behrens moves his characters through time. How does he manage to cover so much ground and at the same time bring his characters to vivid life? Pick a passage where Behrens is doing both things and write two paragraphs about it.

31 Create 3 documents that you could use as devices to move your characters through time. Brownie points for execution.

November

5 Read to the end of The O’Briens. Let’s continue talking about the techniques we’ve been following and also think about how final episode functions.

7 Write two to three paragraphs placing your historical character in a strange place.

8 Read to p. 91 of A Visit from the Goon Squad. Put the events in this section of the novel on a time line. Then outline its page-by-page, chapter-by-chapter structure.

10 Using the first two sections as a model, write two episodes in a character’s life, separated by years. Write and present the older character first.

15 Read 92-186. In this portion of the novel, Egan continues to cut back and forth and sideways through time. How do the experiments with form further her enterprise?

17 Experiment with form. Using a character you’ve already worked with this semester, figure out a way to get at something about him/her you otherwise couldn’t using more conventional narrative. You may borrow, as Egan does, from journalism

26 Finish Goon Squad.

Read The Paradise Guest House over Thanksgiving Break.

December

3 TBA

5 TBA

Exam week:Turn in 15-20 pp. of fiction based on any exercise you’ve done this term.