UC English Professor John Drury Featured at Annual Antioch Writers' Workshop
More than 20 years ago, Judson Jerome co-founder of the Antioch Writers Workshop wrote in Writers Digest magazine, I dont know whether writers workshops are an American invention, but they are certainly a characteristically American phenomenon . And the most important opportunity they offer is not the instruction, not the readings, not the public performances, not the criticism of manuscripts. It is the chance to rub elbows with other writers, to create a temporary literary community in which unknowns can meet the better known, in which associations and friendships may form that will generate the literature of the future. (Rubbing Elbows, April 1986).
Drury, a professor of poetry in UCs McMicken College of Arts and Sciences, Department of English and Comparative Literature, led the morning poetry lectures. In the daily sessions, he examined poetry forms from around the world, giving examples of his favorites and reading some of his own. He also provided writing prompts and suggestions for the participants to craft their own poems.
Paul Dickson, author of 48 books including Sputnik and The Bonus Army, led the daily nonfiction workshop. The nonfiction participants were delighted when Dickson solicited their input on which topic he will tackle next. Dicksons PBS documentary, "The March of the Bonus Army," was screened at one of the evening presentations, which were open to the public. Next to hit the screens near you will be a film version of Sputnik, entitled Fever of 57.
Rounding out the faculty were memoirist and novelist Lynne Hugo, novelist Katrina Kittle, mystery writer Jeffrey Marks and poet Cathy Smith Bowers. Special guests also talked to the participants, such as humorists Bill Brohaugh (writer for the Gary Burbank Show) and Sharon Short (columnist for the Dayton Daily News), as well as literary agents Jenoyne Adams and Michelle Andelman.
Participants had an opportunity to attend open sessions in fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, as well as focused intensive manuscript workshops in the afternoon. The intensives were offered in specific genres as well as in how to get started as a writer. The faculty challenged the participants to write in new ways.
I havent been interested in poetry since 1943, said Bloomington, Ind., participant John Morgan. But John Drury has gotten me excited about the beauty of words again.
The next Antioch Writers Workshop will take place July 1218, 2008, and will feature Myla Goldberg, author of the best-selling novel Bee Season, as keynote speaker and fiction teacher.
John Drury is the author of two collections of poetry,
The Disappearing Town
and
Burning the Aspern Papers
(published by Miami University Press). He is also the author of
Creating Poetry
and
The Poetry Dictionary (
published by Writer's Digest Books). His poems have appeared in many literary journals, including
The American Poetry Review, The Hudson Review, The New Republic, The Paris Review, Ploughshares, Poetry
, and
The Southern Review.
He has won the Bernard F. Conners Prize for Poetry and two Ohio Arts Council grants, as well as the Dolly Cohen Award for Distinguished Teaching and the
George Rieveschl Jr. Award for Creative and/or Scholarly Works
at the University of Cincinnati.
Related Stories
University of Cincinnati grads make Forbes 30 Under 30 list
August 30, 2024
From an equitable development advocate to a global comedy sensation, Forbes highlighted five young University of Cincinnati graduates whose talents and ambitions are transforming the region’s startup scene.
Maya power plants
August 27, 2024
Archaeology Magazine talks to UC Professor David Lentz about his research team's use of environmental DNA to unlock secrets about ancient Mayan culture.
Next, Now Campaign closes with $2.19 billion in gifts
August 27, 2024
Benya Coleman, A&S ’26, and Silas Curry, CECH ’27, say that without the support of the Marian Spencer Scholars Program, they would not be enrolled at the University of Cincinnati.