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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130518T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130519T170000
LOCATION:TBD
GEO:45.445733;-122.671119
SUMMARY:Daily Writing in the Spirit of William Stafford
UID:20130518T160000Z-17845@www.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130513T095048Z
URL:https://www.lclark.edu/live/events/15151-nwi-daily-writing-in-the-spi
rit-of-william
LAST-MODIFIED:20130513T212254Z
ATTACH:https://www.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/481/width/80/height/80/crop/
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X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:William Stafford won the National Book Award in
1963 and served as Poet Laureate from 1971-72.
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:In this workshop\, we will feed on examples from the
daily writing of William Stafford\, and practice in the spirit of his wor
k. Offered through the Northwest Writing Institute. \;Instructor:
Kim Stafford
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130715T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130719T160000
LOCATION:Heritage Room\, Undergraduate Campus
GEO:45.450919;-122.669177
SUMMARY:(NWI) Stafford Studies
DESCRIPTION:This Northwest Writing Institute course consists of reading\,
writing\, discussion\, and special projects growing from the poetry and
prose of William Stafford. Using the resources of published books and the
William Stafford Archives at Lewis &\; Clark College\, participants w
ill practice inquiry into Stafford's approach to writing\, thinking\, tea
ching\, and witness for reconciliation\, and from this inquiry develop th
eir own approaches to writing\, teaching\, and witness. We will become f
amiliar with the poetry of William Stafford\, his habits of daily writing
\, his practice of publishing widely in little magazines\, his unstinting
correspondence\, his witness for peace and reconciliation\, his love of
Kansas\, Oregon\, and other places\, and his "let's talk recklessly" appr
oach to life and writing.Who should attend? This course is for anyone wi
th an interest in the work of William Stafford\, the life of a writer\, a
nd the power of words to witness for peace and social justice. This inclu
des teachers\, writers\, librarians\, and others with an abiding interest
in William Stafford's work\, and a dedication to developing community pr
ograms for Oregon libraries and schools. \;Northwest Writing Institut
e (https://graduate.lclark.edu/programs/northwest_writing_institute/)
0\;(NWI) classes are offered to teachers\, counselors\, parents\, veteran
s\, and all community members interested in the power of stories to help
us understand and practice human connections for the good of all. Course
Details &\; RegistrationDates: Monday-Friday\, July 15-19\, 2013Time:
9 a.m.-4 p.m.Instructor: Kim Stafford\, PhDDegree-applicable credit: W
CM 506\, 2 semester hours\, $804 Non-Lewis &\; Clark students seeking
degree-applicable credit\, please contact the CCE for more information.C
ontinuing education credit: CELA 806\, 2 semester hours\, $700Register no
w for continuing education credit (PDF) (https://www.lclark.edu/live/file
s/597-registration-form)Noncredit/CEU: \;30 hours\, $500Register now
for Noncredit/CEUs (https://mylc.lclark.edu/graduate/cce/cce.nwi.stafford
-studies.07.15.13) If you need scholarship support to take part in this
program\, please contact Pam Hooten at \;phooten@lclark.edu (mailto:p
hooten@lclark.edu). About the InstructorKim Stafford (https://graduate.l
clark.edu/faculty/members/kim_stafford/) \;is the founding director o
f the Northwest Writing Institute at Lewis &\; Clark College\, and the
author of a dozen books of poetry and prose\, including \;100 Tricks
Every Boy Can Do: How My Brother Disappeared \;(a memoir)\, and 
\;The Muses Among Us: Eloquent Listening and Other Pleasures of the Write
r's Craft \;(a book about writing and teaching). He approaches writin
g as a chance to compose stores we have carried into poems\, essays\, rad
io commentaries\, blessings\, rants\, parables\, and other forms of "tikk
un olam\," the healing of the world.New workshops and trainings are added
to our calendar regularly. For the latest on professional development re
lated to your specific interests\, sign up for our mailing list! (https:/
/lclark.tfaforms.net/4735441)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
This Northwest Writing Institute course consists of reading\, writing\, discussion\, and special projects growin g from the poetry and prose of William Stafford. Using the resources of p ublished books and the William Stafford Archives at Lewis &\; Clark Co llege\, participants will practice inquiry into Stafford's approach to wr iting\, thinking\, teaching\, and witness for reconciliation\, and from t his inquiry develop their own approaches to writing\, teaching\, and witn ess.
We will become familiar with the poetry of William Stafford\ , his habits of daily writing\, his practice of publishing widely in litt le magazines\, his unstinting correspondence\, his witness for peace and reconciliation\, his love of Kansas\, Oregon\, and other places\, and his "let's talk recklessly" approach to life and writing.
Who should attend?
This course is for anyone with an interes t in the work of William Stafford\, the life of a writer\, and the power of words to witness for peace and social justice. This includes teachers\ , writers\, librarians\, and others with an abiding interest in William S tafford's work\, and a dedication to developing community programs for Or egon libraries and schools. \;
Northwest Writing Institute \;(NWI) classes are offered to teachers\, counselors\, parents\, veterans\, and all community members interested in the power of stories to help us understand and practice human connections for the goo d of all.
< strong>Dates: Monday-Friday\, July 15-19\, 2013
Ti me: 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
Instructor: Kim Staffor d\, PhD
Degree-applicable credit: WCM 506\, 2 se mester hours\, $804