Module Identifier WR30920  
Module Title WRITING AND PLACE  
Academic Year 2004/2005  
Co-ordinator Dr Matthew C Francis  
Semester Semester 1  
Course delivery Seminars / Tutorials   10 x 2-hour seminars  
Assessment
Assessment TypeAssessment Length/DetailsProportion
Semester Assessment ASSIGNMENT 1 Students will write a short story set in the place visited on their field trip, together with a commentary detailing their research there. Total word-length 2,500 words, of which the commentary should account for a minimum of 500 words and a maximum of 1,000 words.50%
Semester Assessment ASSIGNMENT 2 Students will produce a portfolio of fiction, travel-writing and/or poetry, showing a strong sense of place, together with a commentary. Total word-length 2,500 words, of which the commentary should account for a minimum of 500 words and a maximum of 1,000 words50%
Supplementary Assessment RESUBMIT FAILED ELEMENTS   

Learning outcomes

On completion of this module, students should be able to:

1. demonstrate an ability to research, remember and describe the physical details of places;

2. demonstrate, in both creative and evaluative writing, an awareness of the symbolic significance of certain places;

3. demonstrate, in critical prose, an awareness of their own writing processes;

4. demonstrate, by the revision of work previously discussed in workshops, an ability to improve their writing in response to criticism.

Aims

This module will encourage students to develop a sense of place in their writing.

Brief description

The course will pay equal attention to places as geographical and human realities, and as symbolic constructs. On the first, realist level, students will be asked to remember and describe places they have known, and to explore a new place. On the second, imaginative level, they will be asked to think about the symbolic resonances of certain categories of place (city, forest, ocean etc), to read and discuss texts which evoke a range of different places, and to create new fictional places of their own. While these two levels will be distinguished for teaching purposes, the interaction between them will also be emphasized: symbolic ideas colour our attitude to real places, and our experience of real places informs the creation of fictional ones. At all times, the essential writing skills of prose and poetry will be borne in mind, and the assignments will test not only the evocation of place, but the wider ability to produce well-constructed stories, essays and/or poems.

Content

Session 1.
Home. Students will write about their own home or homes, and consider a range of texts describing homes great and small, past and present.

Session 2.
Institutions and public buildings. Schools, universities (including this one), places of worship, places of work, government buildings.

Session 3.
The country. Farming communities and pastoral myth.

Session 4.
Students will report on a visit they have made during the first three weeks of the course. (Their own homes are not eligible for this purpose.) This will form the basis of the first assignment.

Session 5.
The city. Business and commerce, technology, crime, poverty.

Session 6.
Land and water. Oceans and shores, rivers, lakes, marshes.

Session 7.
Journeys and in-between places. Travel by sea, land and air. Harbours, stations, airports.

Session 8.
Abroad. Tourism, war, colonialism, exile.

Session 9.
The forest. The greenwood and the jungle.

Session 10.
Deserts, hot and cold. From the Sahara to the Antarctic.

Reading Lists

Books
No set texts, but students will receive an advisory reading list

Notes

This module is at CQFW Level 6