2003 Retreat First Retreat for Committed Women Writers A Brief Account of A Room of Her Own Foundation’s First Annual Retreat Based on the Words of Women Who Were There
Ghost Ranch, New Mexico
August 11 — 17, 2003 The AROHO retreat
at Ghost Ranch gathered nearly fifty women writers from nineteen states
for an intense week of writing, discussion, and mutual support. Seventeen
of us had received scholarships of various sorts from AROHO
to make our participation possible. Each day we retreatants met in small groups of six to hone
skills and share insights. Each group was led by an outstanding, accomplished
writer—Kim Addonizio, Rebecca Brown, Breena Clarke, Anne Finger, Ellen
McLaughlin, and Gail McMeekin—and discussed topics from poetic imagery
to overcoming creative obstacles to developing characters to using Virginia
Woolf’’s writing to inform their own. Visiting writer Denise
Chávez and the 2002 AROHO Gift of Freedom Finalists,
Jennifer Tseng, Kitsey Canaan, Rebecca Carroll, Camille Dungy, and Deborah
Lubar also led morning classes and participated in the keynote discsussion. In the early afternoons and evenings we gathered
as a large community to read from the work of each writer present and to
listen to that work with attention and care. We withdrew, pen and pad or
laptop and extension cord in hand, to various corners of the Ranch to continue
our work. We shared meals and discussed authors and poets, listened to presentations
on publication and promotion, and, encouraged by Darlene, we prepared concrete
plans to help us bring creative projects to fruitful completion. And we
still found time and energy to hike the Ranch’’s magnificent
mesas, watch meteors fall, and visit the haunts of Georgia O’’Keeffe,
creating new friends and a viable community of women writers along the way. For more details about workshops and classes, and to read
faculty bios, continue below. Top Main Workshop Groups Kim Addonizio
POETRY: IMAGERY AND EXPERIENCE Ideally, a poem doesn't simply describe an
experience, but becomes an experience for the reader. One way this happens
is through imagery's appeal to the reader at the level of sensual, bodily
experience. Our focus will be on reading and writing poems rich in physical
detail, with an eye to both keen observation of the external world and exploration
of the images we carry within us. There will be a combination of reading published work, in-class
writing and a chance to critique some work by participants. This workshop
should enhance your appreciation of an important craft element, and guide
you towards more powerful poems of your own. Please bring the following
to the workshop: The Poet's Companion: A Guide to the Pleasures of Writing
Poetry, authored by myself and Dorianne Laux; and several photographs
that are important to you from various stages of your life, including at
least one family photo (past or present) and a childhood photo of yourself. Top Rebecca Brown
THE WORK OF THE ARTIST: WOMEN'S WORK WITH VIRGINIA WOOLF. In this workshop we will write creative texts
of our own (fiction, poetry or memoir) generated by our discussion of
Virginia Woolf's images of creative women. We will look primarily at To
The Lighthouse and A Room of One's Own. We will look at
the characters of Mrs. Ramsay, the matriarch, and Lily Brisco, the painter,
in To The Lighthouse to see what Woolf may be suggesting about
art and domesticity and the historic position of women as writers in A
Room of One's Own. We will use what we learn about Woolf and her
work to inspire our own personal, fanciful, grave and goofy words.
Participants in this workshop should read To The Lighthouse and
A Room Of One's Own before coming to the retreat and bring copies
of these books to the retreat. Participants in this workshop should also
bring at least one photograph each of 1) herself at sometime in her twenties,
2) her mother, and 3) someone she was in love with or dated or whatevered
in her youth (whenever that was...) Top Breena Clarke
POTS, PANS, BOWLS AND BUCKETS: Engaging items of material culture as an
aid in developing the identity of fictional characters. This is a workshop for writers working on
character-driven fiction who would like to explore a dynamic way of imagining
characters. I am a suggestible, excitable and easily stimulated writer,
and use a dynamic method of observing and handling tools and ephemera as
a technique for achieving a fuller understanding of the people upon whom
I base my fiction. I focus my interest on work tools because my characters
are most often not members of the elite class. And since I place women in
the foreground of my fiction, I am most interested in the very broad category
of objects considered household work tools. I routinely ask about objects
and collect the vernacular expressions and odd names associated with them.
Answers I collect to questions about how people interact with objects help
me build a complete and specific picture of my character. If she's going
to tote a bucket, I need to know how heavy and how wide it is to know if
she is well able to heft it or struggles under the weight or will scrape
her hand on it. The "Pots" workshop will discuss museum collections
and their real value for this methodology, but more importantly will actually
handle and discuss objects for what they "say" about humans. Examples
of the dynamic tools used by women that the workshop will look at and handle
are: flat irons, cake mixers, hair products, sanitary napkins, cooking utensils,
brooms, keys, suitcases, clothing, dolls, needlework crafts and tools, memorial
objects, grave markers, bibles and the full range of pots, pans, bowls and
buckets. Our workshop will also read unfamiliar photographs and construct
fiction. We'll build character-driven work from what we see, from what we
don't see and from what we imagine. Workshop participants should bring an object that is descriptive
of, made by or used by a woman. The object must be portable and not fragile.
Participants should also bring a portrait style photograph of an unknown
individual or scene. Common sense and practicality be your guide, but leave
the gate open for passion. Top Anne Finger
I AM NOT MAKING THIS UP: WRITING CREATIVE NON-FICTION We will begin this workshop with an exploration
of the territory carved out by the genre that has come to be called "creative
non-fiction," exploring its differences from journalism and fiction
and (briefly) thinking about its history and development. In-class writing exercises- dealing with memory, sensory
detail, and structure-will be used to both generate new material and to
hone and develop work-in-progress. Each participant will also submit up
to forty pages of a work-in-progress to be critiqued by the group as a whole.
Please think carefully about the piece you bring for a critique: ideally,
it will be writing that does not feel finished to you-rather, it should
be work that you feel would benefit from other perspectives. Feedback will
be given in an honest and supportive manner, both by the group and by the
instructor in individual sessions. Participants needing disability accommodations in order
to fully participate in the class should contact the instructor as soon
as possible. Top Ellen McLaughlin
HEARING THE CHARACTER VOICE
"...it is as easy as lying." Hamlet Playwrights, more than writers in any other
medium, need to have an ear for the idiosyncrasies of speech and a fluency
in writing credible and compelling dialogue. This workshop will concentrate
on attuning writers to the essential structural aspect of the medium-the
character voice. Students will be led through a series of writing exercises
intended to help them engage with the medium by addressing their literary
intentions using only the spare but eloquent means of speech. Students will
be encouraged toward that state playwrights most aspire to-the moment when
the character, rather than the playwright, begins to speak. Sessions will entail writing and reading the participants'
work primarily but I will be bringing in examples of playwriting ranging
from Chekhov to Tennessee Williams and Tony Kushner. No preliminary reading or purchase of books is necessary.
Nor is any prior involvement with the medium. Top Gail McMeekin
OVERCOMING CREATIVE OBSTACLES Your creativity-your capacity to innovate-has
the potential to give you an edge in living a fulfilling life. The creative
process flourishes with commitment, positive choices, fear management, and
a rendezvous with your spiritual self. Too often, as women, we succumb to
silence, self-doubt, distraction, fear, or the needs of others, and our
creative work stalls or stays unexpressed In this interactive, supportive
workshop, you will have a chance to identify and develop strategies and
an action plan to resolve your personal creative obstacles. Using written
exercises, visualization, journaling, creative rituals, and peer coaching,
you will learn to master your personal saboteurs (both internal and external)
to inspiration and completion. We will work intensively with the following
success strategies:
- Leveraging your Personal Creative Style
- Using Passion to Squelch Fear and Take Risks
- Mastering the Art of Self-Focus
- Negotiating Protection/Support for Your Creative Life
- Managing Self-Talk, Time, and Old Ghosts
- Transcending Rejection and Roadblocks
You will leave this workshop with more self-awareness of
your creative strengths and challenges, increased self-confidence, and a
step-by-step action plan to facilitate your creative journey and productivity. Please bring a symbol of what creativity means to you and
a creative writing work in progress to our first session. Hand-outs and
a reading list will be provided at the workshop and there will be homework
in-between sessions. Top Other Activities Keynote Panel, on Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own
Presenters: Kim Addonizio, Rebecca Brown, Rebecca Carroll,
Kitsey Canaan Hour-Long Classes Denise Chávez: "Telling Family Stories"
Breena Clarke: "Who's Afraid of Aunt Jemima?"
Camille Dungy: "Poetry as Witness"
Anne Finger: "To Tell the Truth: A One-Hour Workshop
in Creative Nonfiction"
Mary Johnson: "Imagery for the Imageless: Writing
about the Self-Transcendent"
Deborah Lubar: "Writing and Healing: Seeking the
Sanity that Grows Like Small Purple Flowers through the Thick Stone Walls
of Our Time"
Ellen McLaughlin: "Equal Truths: Memory and Fiction"
Gail McMeekin: "Positive Choices for the Creative
Life"
Jennifer Tseng: "Found in Translation: What Poets
Can Learn from Poetry in Translation"
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