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Writing About a Different Time with Kathleen Alcalá

This class will concentrate on the clues we offer our readers that the story takes place in the past or the future. This might be through language, dress, or what things are important to our characters.

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Writing About a Different Time with Kathleen Alcalá

Writing About a Different Time with Kathleen Alcalá

This class will concentrate on the clues we offer our readers that the story takes place in the past or the future. This might be through language, dress, or what things are important to our characters.

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Registrations Closed

About

This class is for those curious about stretching the possibilities of language in order to captivate the reader and propel them into another world.

Today, we might consider a dead phone battery a small tragedy. But in 14th century France, a tragedy was when you were kidnapped and sold into slavery or serfdom. In the future, a tragedy might be when your telepathic connection to your animal companion, who monitors your stuttering heart, fails. But don’t just imagine the situation. Ask yourself what language was used at that time that you can selectively use to further the description. What language will be invented to encompass the situations that will arise? We already see ourselves shedding language from 20 years ago to make room for the new words and situations in which we now engage.

By showing what the world of the character looks, sounds, and feels like, we can take the reader to the interior spaces occupied by our characters and provide a “whole body” experience of the past and the future. The first part of the class will concentrate on the past; the second part, after a break, on the future. There will be discussions and exercises.

If you're working with draft material, this class should give you some direction for constructing dialogue, action, and motivation.

Class Policies

Ages 14 and up are welcome.

Instructor
Kathleen Alcalá

Kathleen is the author of three historical novels set in the American Southwest and 19th century Mexico, a collection of essays, a collection of short stories, and a creative nonfiction book about food and sustainability on Bainbridge Island. Kathleen’s work has received a Washington State Book Award, a Western States Book Award, and numerous other awards. She has a bachelor's degree in linguistics from Stanford University, a master's from the University of Washington, and a master of fine arts from the University of New Orleans.

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