Module: CW7019-30 Context Module: Narrative Non-Fiction
Level: 7
Credit Value: 30
Module Tutor: Richard Kerridge
Module Tutor Contact Details: r.kerridge@bathspa.ac.uk
1.Brief description and aims of module
Like other context modules, this one aims to help students explore the relationship between their own creative writing and the large public world as represented by an important theme, tradition or genre, or by an aspect of contemporary literary culture. This is where students step back and situate their own work, understanding some of its wider implications and an aspect of its context. The aim is that this different set of questions and pressures should pose new challenges, invigorating the writing and taking it in new directions – or at least enabling the writer to consider new possibilities. Detailed aims are as follows:
2.Outline syllabus
Students will read a selection of texts, each of which has been chosen to provide a different perspective on the topic. Most of the texts will be identified in advance to allow for preparatory reading, but up to three may be chosen after group discussion. Most will be literary works, but a small proportion may be works of critical argument or theory. To some extent, the tutor’s selection of texts will reflect the composition of the group, especially in terms of the balance between prose-writers and poets.
Indicative text list for CW7019:
This module encompasses a number of popular non-fiction genres, including lifewriting, memoir, travel-writing, nature-writing, popular history and popular science. Choices will be made according to the interests of the students in the group. We will workshop your non-fiction writing, and, in relation to the set texts, we will examine various questions, such as problems to do with writing about real people, questions of the balance between expert information and an approachable style of writing, problems to do with writing about one’s own life, how to work a personal story in with other kinds of material, and methods of research.
Set texts (indicative):
Horatio Clare, Down to the Sea in Ships
Marion Coutts, The Iceberg: A Memoir
Joan Didion, On the Year of Magical Thinking
Jay Griffiths, Wild
John Lanchester, Family Romance
Helen Macdonald, H is for Hawk Henry Marsh, Do No Harm
Matthew Oates, In Pursuit of Butterflies
W.G. Sebald, The Rings of Saturn
Jean Sprackland, Strands
Lynn Margulis , Luminous Fish: Tales of Science and Love
3.Teaching and learning activities