Thirteen Ways of Beginning With Ella Jacobson

Writers

Thirteen Ways of Beginning With Ella Jacobson

A generative writing workshop guided by a member of the Bloedel Reserve’s Creative Residency program.

Tuition Assistance and Other Policies

Meeting Times
  1. Sat, 11/9/2024 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM

Sat, 11/9/2024

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Type:
Class, No Prerequisite

Location:
Small Classroom

Interests:
Fiction, Generative Writing, Writing Workshop and Critique

About

This workshop is for writers of any genre who want to generate new material, experiment with different writing styles, and integrate different types of play into their process.

You’ll practice generating beginnings using a variety of rapid-fire writing prompts. You’ll look to poems, music, and letters for inspiration. This practice will be useful to anyone who is on the hunt for new writing projects, who wants to explore different genres, or who is curious about what might happen when they write with a different set of expectations in their head.

Using prompts that, weather permitting, will bring us outside, you'll then write longer pieces and have the option to share with the group. We'll preserve some time to discuss how people find their topic and tone for a piece of writing, what you can do when you feel stuck, and how to build a writing process around writing prompts.

Details

  • Experience level: Open to all writers of any genre and experience. Writers who are currently working on a project are welcome to apply these prompts to their current project.
  • Wear clothing that will allow you to be comfortable outside. Unless there is rain, you'll have the option to spend part of the workshop outside.
  • Bring a notebook or paper and a writing utensil.
  • Ella is one of 12 artists and writers selected for the 2024 creative residency at Bloedel Reserve, intended to foster creative thinking inspired by nature.

Class Policies

Ages 14 and up are welcome.

BARN Policies

Instructors or Guides

Ella Jacobson

Ella is a cultural critic and creative nonfiction writer from Alaska. Her writing has appeared in The Los Angeles Review of Books, Slate, The Guardian, High Country News, and Real Life, among other publications. Much of her work explores how people metabolize their exposure to violence and death. She earned a master's degree in cultural reporting and criticism from the Arthur L. Carter Institute of Journalism at New York University, and is the recipient of residencies from The Edith Wharton-Straw Dog Guild, Monson Arts, and Elsewhere Studios. She is a former New York University Abu Dhabi Fellow in Writing.

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