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Creative Writing Blog Posts - Page 67 of 72 - The Open College of the Arts

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Creative Writing


Take me back thumb

Take me back

Writers seeking a sense of historical authenticity in their work have to consider both style and content. At the height of the popularity of historical fiction after the Second World War, writers such as Josephine Tey and Anya Seton, combined narrative dialogue and period detail in a manner which by the 1960s had fallen out of fashion. Peter Ackroyd and Hilary Mantel, two contemporary writers whose work aims to recreate a sense of time and place, aim to achieve this in rather different ways.

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Arvon and after

At the beginning of March 2012, 15 OCA creative writing students spent six days at The Arvon Foundation’s Lumb Bank in West Yorkshire, the former home of poet Ted Hughes. There, they found the time, space and inspiration to write. Arvon and OCA are both keen to continue their partnership so that OCA students can combine the ongoing structure of open learning with the intense experience of a residential writing retreat.

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Must try harder

The essay has evolved since its beginning in France and England more than 400 years ago from a pithy work of flawless logic to a prose form adopted by schools, think tanks and broadcasters, as well as by writers categorised as essayists. It’s time for the essay to reassert itself and for essayists to help readers understand what this misunderstood form capable of.

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21st century essayist new creative writing lead thumb

21st century essayist new creative writing lead

OCA has broken with convention by appointing a religious studies scholar as its new curriculum lead for creative writing. Northern Irish essayist and poet Chris Arthur has a background in religious studies, first as an undergraduate and postgraduate at Edinburgh University and subsequently at Lampeter University, where he taught for more than 20 years. Fellow Irish writer Patrick O’Sullivan has credited him with ‘rescuing the meditative essay for the twenty-first century’.

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Non-writing

It’s not always the case that writers have to produce draft after draft of a short story, as OCA creative writing student Guy Barriscale found when he wrote his prize-winning story ‘Jamesy’ in just one sitting. Prompted by an incident in this childhood, the story came to him fully formed when he saw an old man pushing his bicycle up a hill in a rural part of County Leitrim, with additional ideas for the life of gthe central character being inspired by his speculations about the lives of three farmer brothers. Commended in the Seán Ó Faoláin competition in 2011, the story was published in the Munster Festival’s ‘Southword’ at the beginning of 2012.

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Short story writers take note! thumb

Short story writers take note!

The Royal Society of Literature (RSL) has just announced that submissions for the thirteenth V.S. Pritchett Memorial Prize are now open.  There is a prize of £1,000, and the winning entry will be published in Prospect and the RSL Review. In addition to this, there will be an opportunity to appear at an RSL event […]

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Copycats

Last week’s Wikipedia blackout and journalist Johann Hari’s decision not to return to ‘The Independent’ put plagiarism in the news. But plagiarism, imitation, forgery, flattery, call it what you will, the discipline of writing in the voice of another writer is a good way to find your own voice.

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Art books for the new year

In the competitive and fast moving world of art exhibitions and artistic reputations, it is easy to get ignored or forgotten. A number of belated biographies were published last year that bring to the public’s attention some of these artists: Alasdair Grey (b.1934) is a Scottish artist who along with John Byrne (b.1940) made his […]

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Food of the Gods … or tinned rice? thumb

Food of the Gods … or tinned rice?

Listen to this fascinating piece about writing good quality reflective commentaries. OCA tutor and Creative Writing assessor, Liz Cashden, explains what makes a good creative commentary, and reads out some revealing samples by John Wrigglesworth, who stands up for A(a)mbrosia!Liz Cashden – John Wrigglesworth_11012012

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