OOTA WRITING CLASSES AND LITERARY EVENTS

OOTA Creative Writing Classes 

We are pleased to announce that Dr. Bruce Russell’s prose writing classes will continue this year.

The classes will be held on the first Friday of each month, between 10am too 12pm, at Mattie Furphy House, Clare Copse, Swanbourne.

Class Dates: 2 February, 1 March, 5 April, 3 May, 7 June, 5 July, 2 August, 6 September, 4 October and 1 November.

Cost per session: $25 for OOTA members, $30 for non-members payable in cash at each session.

Bruce is planning an exciting program to stimulate and support your writing.

The overall goal of Bruce’s classes this year will be to build confidence is creating works that fit the forms of the traditional short story (1,000 – 3000 words), the essay or literary non-fiction. Longer forms, such as the memoir, novella and the novel will also be considered. The classes will begin with the study of extracts from published works written by masters of these forms. What makes these stories “work”? What draws us in, what makes us want to read to the end?

As in the past two years, Bruce will encourage new writing by setting short tasks in each class. Critiques will go beyond “I like it/don’t like it” to explore the above questions: what draws us in, what makes us want to read to the end … and further questions such as the role of research and the nuts and bolts of fiction: plot, character, voice, point of view, sentences, dialogue.

As the term progresses and some participants embark on the adventure of longer works, readings and discussion about the challenges of creative writing will continue, with particular emphasis on useful feedback.

Literary Events 2024

We are also pleased to announce that our Literary Fridays will continue in 2024 on the third Friday of each month between 10am and 12pm in the Seed Room at the Fremantle Arts Centre.

The next event will be on Friday 15 March and will be a poetry workshop hosted by Glen Phillips.

These sessions are for OOTA members only and a contribution of $5 towards the cost of the room hire will be payable in cash on the day. RSVP to ootawriters@gmail.com if you intend to attend.

FRESH STARTS: LET’S WRITE SOME POEMS

Presented by: Glen Phillips, poet, painter and professor. 

This workshop will bypass the usual difficulties of getting poetry written in a fairly brief workshop situation. You will be led to write several kinds of poems you may have never tried before and complete them in time to share with your fellow workshop attendees.

The basic theme of the session will be the immediate world around us including landscapes. Some new forms of poems will be introduced. But the emphasis will be on having work to show at the end of the session. Who knows, but you may even be able to finish a poem you already had in mind? 

Glen Phillips: Poet and university professor, born in Southern Cross, Western Australia. He served on the Board of Writing WA and is Patron of the KSP Foundation. His books include:  The Moon Belongs to No One (Salt, 2010), Singing Granites: Poems (Oversteps Books, 2008 with Anne Born), Redshift: 42 Name Day Poems (ICLL, 2009), Shanghai Suite (ICLL, 2009), and Spring Burning (Salt, 1999). Additionally, he co-edited Contrary Rhetoric (Fremantle Press, 2008) - a collection of Kinsella’s landscape lectures and co-edited Lines in the Sand (TCH Press, 2008). His Collected Poems 1967-2017: In the Hollow of the Land (Wild Weeds Press, 2018) and more recently, Seeing Trees (Pinyon, 2020 with John Ryan) and To Islands (ICLL Press, 2024). Glen is internationally published in eight languages and Director of the Landscape and Language Centre at Edith Cowan University. He is represented in more than 40 anthologies and is author or editor of over 80 books. Glen has published 50 short stories in book form, a novella, children’s books and composed in excess of 2000 poems.

STATEMENT OF ACKNOWLEDGEMENT TO COUNTRY

Out of the Asylum Writers acknowledges that this land upon which we meet and write is the traditional land of the Whadjuk people and we respect their spiritual relationship with their country.

We acknowledge the Whadjuk people as the Traditional Owners of the greater Walyalup area, and that their cultural and heritage beliefs are still important to the living Whadjuk people today. We also pay our respects to their elders past, present and emerging.