Tuesday, October 8, 2013


The past actually happened, but history is what someone wrote down
A. Whitney Brown
Writing Personal Histories

Multnomah Art Center
Wednesday 10 am - 12:30 pm
Instructor
Meg Eberle/eberlemk@comcast.net /503/281-6499 503-891-0338 (cell) http://memorycatching.blogspot.com (class blog)
Course Description
Our class is a creative collaboration of writers with memoirs in progress. In our class, we provide supportive feedback and encourage our fellow writers to move their memoir and personal history projects forward. We write and research stories that are waiting to be told, stories that will be lost to future generations unless they are put to paper. We embrace an open-genre approach, with nonfiction prose, poetry and as well as multi-media possibilities so you find the approach that works best for your writing.  We explore research, archives, conduct interviews and creatively gather information to strengthen our narratives by developing the “back stories.” Techniques such as dialogue, sensory descriptions and humor are explored to enhance our writing.
Objective
Each participant will select a project to research and write about, aiming to produce a stand-alone piece of writing or a chapter/vignette that also can be used for a larger project. You might choose a personal memoir, the stories of family members or friends that you wish to interview, or a person or place that you are interested in researching. Your final piece of writing might be non-fiction prose or combine poetry, mix-media and prose.
Course Materials
Please bring a notebook and pen to each class meeting for in-class writing. Other materials will depend on your writing and research. You might gather photographs, documents, maps, and mementoes….
About the instructor
Meg Eberle Ainsworth is a journalist who specializes in biographical writing. She recently collaborated with her mother on Good Timber, a memoir of her mother’s childhood.  As a former newspaper reporter, she interviewed hundreds of people, and was especially drawn to human-interest stories.

Class meetings
Class meetings will include a combination of sharing writing; more in-class writing; introductions to various approaches to the project such as research, interviewing, and publication ideas; and new assignments to pursue.
We will meet alternate Wednesday mornings until Dec. 4.  Classes will be held from 10 am - 12:30 pm on Oct. 9, 23; Nov. 6, 20; and Dec. 4.
Wednesday, Oct. 9 Introduction and exploration of future class topics, in class writing, readings, discuss preliminary project commitment
Wednesday, Oct. 23  Final project commitment, in class and outside writing/reading.
Wednesday, Nov. 6  In class and out-of-class writing/reading
Wednesday Nov. 20 Overview of printing options, in class and out-of-class writing/reading
Wednesday Dec. 4. Final project, (optional in class binding) potluck, and share our writing

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