Online Course

Advanced Personal Essay: Finding a Way Through

January 09 - March 19, 2023

Level Advanced

Transform actual people and events into characters and plot elements, and turn your personal anecdotes into publishable essays.

Additional Information

“If other people are to care about your life, art must intervene.” – Hilary Mantel

Transforming actual people and events into characters and plot elements in an essay can be disorienting, but this is how we turn what would otherwise be journal entries—written for the author’s benefit—into literature, which exists for the benefit of readers.

This class is designed for those who have already explored the basics of personal writing and wish to explore specific techniques for turning a personal anecdote into a publishable essay.

Specifically, you will look at some typical structures of the personal essay, and how those formats help authors avoid common pitfalls of the form, such as getting lost in a giant pile of information and/or coming off as solipsistic/maudlin.

Some of the forms we’ll explore:

Course Schedule

Week 1: Getting Started / Sourcing Material

This week you’ll learn about the ways writers locate promising material for personal essays. How much ground (i.e. time and space) can an essay reasonably cover? How many characters does a good essay have? You will also get to know your classmates and receive your initial writing prompt. Finally, you’ll make a list of potential subjects you might want to write about.

Week 2: Approaches and Pitfalls

This week you’ll read examples of several forms of essays and examine how the authors avoid common pitfalls. The instructor will offer examples, from his own work, of first drafts versus published drafts from the Guardian, and the NYT’s “Modern Love”. This week we will also have a video conference.

Week 3: Structure and Form

We’ll discuss the difference between scene and summary and explore how you can balance these two approaches in crafting an essay. You will read portions of several essays and will write new work from two prompts. First brief writing samples are due for instructor review.

Week 4: Tone and Voice

This week we’ll look at what tone and voice can contribute to an essay.  You will read two essays and examine the variations in tone and voice between them. You’ll also experiment by writing the opening of one essay in two different ways.

Week 5: Theme vs Motif

The lecture and reading this week will focus on how essays with less “plot” use theme and motif as binding ingredients to create  purpose and direction. Workshop begins! You will receive guidelines on how to respond to one another’s work.

Week 6: Structure

This week is dedicated to structure and how the outer framework of an essay can reflect and strengthens its focus and make space for more stories and information. . We’ll read and discuss an essay by John McPhee, a master of structure. You’ll also read an essay about structure from John McPhee. This will also be the second significant workshop week.

Week 7: Setting and Space in Essay

This week you will look at how a clear setting, when handled carefully, can heighten emotional impact and build atmosphere in personal essays. Along with that, you'll also learn how setting is often overused in essays.  Finally, this week in addition to workshopping, you will listen to the Leslie Jamison interview with David Naimon from the “Between the Covers” Podcast.

Week 8: Dramatic Tension and Plot

This week we’ll consider essays that are “plotted”—that is, that contain overt or covert dramatic tension. How can you create tension, and how do you know where to start or stop (or pause) a narrative for maximum effect? In addition to workshop this week, you will  turn in further ideas for essays or expand on some of the ideas you had earlier.

Week 9: The “Drama of Ideas”

David Shields has often remarked, in various ways, that what distinguishes essay from fiction is that essays offer the “drama of ideas” (whereas fiction presents “drama of action”). This week’s reading is  an essay by Lauren Slater that perfectly embodies this notion. This is the final week for workshopping.

Week 10: Revision and Marketplace

In this final week you’ll learn specific techniques for revision and self-editing. You will also learn about the different marketplaces for personal essays, both in print and online. You will also learn about residencies, artist colonies, summer workshops, MFA programs, and other resources that can help you find a writing community and connections to other writers.

View Complete Syllabus

Course Instructor

Course Registration

$485.00

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Please Note

It is not uncommon for classes to fill up before the end of early registration, particularly in the last few days before the deadline. If you know for certain that you wish to take a particular class, we recommend registering early. If you'd like to be added to a waitlist for a sold-out class, please email our director of education, Sharla Yates, at [email protected].

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Testimonials

I enjoyed reading other peoples work and getting feedback about my own work– the handouts/video links and class lessons were also very informative and relevantly paced to the give structural guidelines.

Catherine O’Neill