|
Product Description
During and just after World War II, an influential group of American writers and intellectuals projected a vision for literature that would save the free world. Novels, stories, plays, and poems, they believed, could inoculate weak minds against simplistic totalitarian ideologies, heal the spiritual wounds of global catastrophe, and just maybe prevent the like from happening again. As the Cold War began, high-minded and well-intentioned scholars, critics, and writers from across the political spectrum argued that human values remained crucial to civilization and that such values stood in dire need of formulation and affirmation. They believed that the complexity of literature—of ideas bound to concrete images, of ideologies leavened with experiences—enshrined such values as no other medium could.
Creative writing emerged as a graduate discipline in the United States amid this astonishing swirl of grand conceptions. The early workshops were formed not only at the time of, but in the image of, and under the tremendous urgency of, the postwar imperatives for the humanities. Vivid renderings of personal experience would preserve the liberal democratic soul—a soul menaced by the gathering leftwing totalitarianism of the USSR and the memory of fascism in Italy and Germany.
Workshops of Empire explores this history via the careers of Paul Engle at the University of Iowa and Wallace Stegner at Stanford. In the story of these founding fathers of the discipline, Eric Bennett discovers the cultural, political, literary, intellectual, and institutional underpinnings of creative writing programs within the university. He shows how the model of literary technique championed by the first writing programs—a model that values the interior and private life of the individual, whose experiences are not determined by any community, ideology, or political system—was born out of this Cold War context and continues to influence the way creative writing is taught, studied, read, and written into the twenty-first century.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Finks: How the C.I.A. Tricked the World's Best Writers
- Dispatches from the Classroom: Graduate Students on Creative Writing Pedagogy
- Who Paid the Piper? : CIA and the Cultural Cold War
- We Wanted to Be Writers: Life, Love, and Literature at the Iowa Writers' Workshop
- A Delicate Aggression: Savagery and Survival in the Iowa Writers' Workshop
- The Program Era: Postwar Fiction and the Rise of Creative Writing
- Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom (Harvest in Translation)
- The Elephants Teach: Creative Writing Since 1880
- Meander, Spiral, Explode: Design and Pattern in Narrative
- A Sand Book
*If this is not the "Workshops of Empire: Stegner, Engle, and American Creative Writing during the Cold War (New American" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 18, 2024 13:51 +08.