WRITING ADVICE

Can Great Writers Be Taught?

After almost a decade of teaching creative writing, the only professional writer to come out of my class . . . was me.

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A 2009 New Yorker piece written by Louis Menand (“Show or Tell: Should creative writing be taught?”) has a cynical and comical view of creative writing programs.

“Creative writing programs are designed on the theory that students who have never published a poem can teach other students who have never published a poem how to write a publishable poem. The fruit of the theory is the writing workshop, a combination of ritual scarring and twelve-on-one group therapy where aspiring writers offer their views of the efforts of other aspiring writers.”

It’s a good read for anyone who wants to teach writing or anyone who wants to dump money into a writing program. However, at times, Menand offers a limited view of how creative writing classes operate, in order to prove his point — until eventually coming around to defend a rather flimsy reason for such…

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David Hopkins

Writer of many things. Sign up for my newsletter and receive sneak peeks, fiction freebies, writing tips, and creative insights. https://thatdavidhopkins.com