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How I Write

How I Write
Author: Stanford University
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Host Hilton Obenzinger brings faculty and advanced writers from across the disciplines to explore the nuts and bolts, pleasures and pains, of all types of writing. In conversation with his distinguished guests, Hilton examine writers' habits, idiosyncrasies, techniques, trade secrets, hidden anxieties, and delights. We will discuss how a writer generates ideas, sustains large-scale projects, combines research with composition, overcomes various impediments and blocks, and cultivates stylistic innovations. Writing communities share experiences (even bad ones), so that all writers can learn and grow; Stanford is an exceptionally rich community for gaining such insights.
57 Episodes
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"From 1968 through 2002, Albert Gelpi taught American literature, particularly American poetry, from its Puritan beginnings to the present day. Gelpi’s books include Emily Dickinson: The Mind of the Poet and The Tenth Muse: The Psyche of the American Poet,which centers on American Romantic poetry; its sequel, A Coherent Splendor: The American Poetic Renaissance, 1910–1950,continues the historical argument by relating American Modernist poetry to its Romantic antecedents. He is also the author ofLiving in Time: The Poetry of C. Day Lewis and has edited The Poet in America 1650 to the Present; Wallace Stevens: The Poetics of Modernism; Denise Levertov: Selected Criticism; and (with Barbara Charlesworth Gelpi) Adrienne Rich’s Poetry and Prose. With Robert Bertholf he edited The Letters of Robert Duncan and Denise Levertov. His latest book is American Poetry After Modernism: The Power of the Word, and his next project is the selected prose of C. Day Lewis, The Golden Bridle.
Join Hilton Obenzinger, an accomplished fiction and nonfiction writer and lecturer in the Stanford Department of English, American Studies Program, and Stanford Continuing Studies, as he engages Gelpi in conversation, focusing on the techniques, quirks, and joys of writing."
"Harriet Scott Chessman is the author most recently of the acclaimed novel ""The Beauty of Ordinary Things"", the story of the unexpected love between a young Vietnam veteran and a Benedictine nun. Her other books include the novels ""Someone Not Really Her Mother"", ""Lydia Cassatt Reading the Morning Paper"", and ""Ohio Angels"" as well as ""The Public Is Invited to Dance"", a book about Gertrude Stein. Her fiction has been translated into ten languages. She has taught literature and writing at Yale, the Bread Loaf School of English, and Stanford Continuing Studies. She received a PhD from Yale.
Join Hilton Obenzinger, an accomplished fiction and nonfiction writer and lecturer in the Stanford Department of English, American Studies Program, and Stanford Continuing Studies, as he engages Harriet Scott Chessman in conversation, focusing on the techniques, quirks, and joys of writing.
This program is co-sponsored by Stanford Continuing Studies and the Hume Center for Writing and Speaking."
Join Hilton Obenzinger, an accomplished fiction and nonfiction writer and lecturer in the Stanford Department of English, the American Studies Program, and Stanford Continuing Studies, as he engages Ian Morris in conversation, focusing on the techniques, quirks, and joys of writing.
Marilyn Yalom is the author of numerous books and articles on literature and women's history, including Maternity, Mortality ,and the Literature of Madness; Blood Sisters: The French Revolution in Women's Memory; A History of the Breast.
Feminist Beat poet Diane di Prima was born in Brooklyn, New York, a second-generation American of Italian descent. She began writing at the age of seven, and at the age of fourteen, decided to live her life as a poet. After attending Swarthmore College for two years, she moved to Greenwich Village, becoming a writer in the emerging Beat movement. She co-founded the Poets Press and the New York Poets Theatre and founded Eidolon Editions and the Poets Institute. After joining Timothy Leary's international community in upstate New York, she moved to San Francisco in 1968.
Di Prima has published more than forty books. Her poetry collections include 'This Kind of Bird Flies Backwards', 'Revolutionary Letters', the long poem 'Loba', 'Seminary Poems', and 'Pieces of a Song: Selected Poems'. She is also the author of the short story collection 'Dinners and Nightmares', the semi-autobiographical 'Memoirs of a Beatnik', and the memoir ' Recollections of My Life as a Woman: The New York Years'.
In this special event, Diane di Prima will read some of her poems and join Hilton Obenzinger in a "How I Write" conversation.
Hilton Obenzinger sits down with Dr. Terry Root, Senior fellow at Woods Institute for the Environment and professor of Biological Sciences to talk about her writing process.
Eavan Boland talks about how she writes in her work as a poet.
John Rickford, professor of linguistics and humanities at Stanford University and author of The Story of Black English, shares his perspective on writing.
Hilton Obenzinger talks with Terry Karl, Ph.D about writing in her field of Political Science
Renato Rosaldo shares his perspective on he writing process as a cultural anthropologist.
Shelly Fisher Fishkin, Professor of English and Humanities talks about herself as a writer at Stanford.
Paula Moya talks about her writing process as an Author in the Department of English at Stanford University.
Anne Firth Murray talks about her writing and how she has used it throughout her career.
Irvin Yalom talks about his life as a psychotherapist and how that has influence his writing of both textbooks and novels. (January 30, 2013)
Adam Johnson discusses his writing process specifically regarding his last book "The Orphan's Master's Son" and his experience of writing a story based in North Korea. (October 23, 2012)
Tom Hare talks about what inspires him to write, how he organizes his thoughts and ideas, and what his future projects will entail. (May 14, 2012)
Shelly Fisher Fishkin explains her writing and editing processes, her inspiration from Mark Twain, the benefits of collaboration, and how to make non-fiction prose accessible to readers. (May 12, 2005)
Biology Professor and Primatologist Robert Sapolsky discusses how his writing skills developed while he was doing field work in Africa. Sapolsky recounts specifically how he generates his ideas for articles. (April 3, 2009)
Estelle Freedman talks about what inspires her to write, how she organizes her thoughts and work, and what her future projects will entail. (October 29, 2003)
Hazel Markus, sits down to discuss the work that she has done. She has focused much of her efforts on how gender, ethnicity, religion, social class, or region can influence thought and feeling. (November 8, 2005)