Companion Website for AWC

Untitled-2.inddThe companion website for my textbook A Writer’s Craft is now available at Bloomsbury Online Resources.

Materials for teachers and students are publicly available, including:

  • Teaching with A Writer’s Craft
    • Why Teach 4 Genres
    • Cross-Genre Teaching
    • The Small Group Workshop
    • Full-Class Workshop
    • Midterm and Final Portfolios
    • Teaching Creative Writing with Literary Magazines
    • Plagiarism
  • For Students
    • Journal Exercises
    • Online Resources

For those who adopt the textbook, additional resources are available once you register with Palgrave and request access to the textbook’s restricted materials. These include:

  • Lecturer Materials
    • In-Class Exercises
    • Small Group Workshops (sample exercises)
    • Powerpoint presentations for
      • Chapters 4 & 8-14
      • Publishing
      • Workshop Guidelines

I hope the public materials will be useful to anyone teaching creative writing, though of course if they are, I also hope that provides an incentive to try using the book. I hope the restricted materials will make using the book easier or at least provide some models that you can use to create your own materials for the book that match your teaching style.

Published by Kendall Dunkelberg

I am a poet, translator, and professor of literature and creative writing at Mississippi University for Women, where I direct the Low-Residency MFA in Creative Writing, the undergraduate concentration in creative writing, and the Eudora Welty Writers' Symposium. I am Chair of the Department of Languages, Literature, and Philosophy, and I have published four collections of poetry, Tree Fall with Birdsong, Barrier Island Suite, Time Capsules, and Landscapes and Architectures, as well as a collection of translations of the Belgian poet Paul Snoek, Hercules, Richelieu, and Nostradamus, and the textbook A Writer's Craft: Multi-Genre Creative Writing. I was born and raised in Osage, Iowa, and have lived for over thirty years in Columbus, Mississippi, where my wife Kim and I let wildflowers grow in our yard to the delight of spring polinators and only some of our neighbors.

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