Magical Realism and Feminist Subversion in China and Beyond




Thursday, Nov. 7, 4:00 pm in Liberal Arts Building #136



How do Chinese activists today get around increasingly repressive political censorship? While the pro-democracy demonstrations in Hong Kong, and Beijing’s severe reaction to them, confirm the lack of rights in China, young people on the Mainland are creating more roundabout ways to communicate their subversive ideas. 

Online literature in China flourishes, with reinventions of traditional genres such as sword-fighting, with a subversive, contemporary edge. Young women use creative linguistic innovations to subvert censorship of feminist social media. After the censorship of the Me Too movement, they used the emojis of rice (mi) and rabbit (tu) in place of the English words (homophones for “Me” and “Too”). 

Persecution of feminists in China is on the rise, with both activists and authors imprisoned. Through the veil of magical realism, brave women continue to voice opposition via hugely popular online novels. As repression increases, so does resistance. This is similar to how magical realism was originally used in Latin America to criticize dictatorships while avoiding political censorship and persecution. In addition to the China focus, this lecture provides keys to understanding magical realism, including how the imagination shapes our ways of seeing and acting in the world. Drawing from my book Décoloniser l’imaginaire: du réalisme magique chez Maryse Condé, Marie NDiaye; et Sylvie Germain (L’Harmattan, 2007), it includes examples from China, the Francophone world, and beyond. 



Professor of Literature Kate Rose is currently on leave from China University of Mining and Technology. She graduated Magna Cum Laude from Boston College and went on to get her PhD in Comparative Literature from Université de Montpellier, France. 

She is the author or co-author of multiple books, chapters, academic articles, and reviews on feminism, traumatic memory in literature, social linguistics, French Literature, Chinese literature, and indigenous literature of the Americas. She is also the author of several fictional short stories and one novel.

She is the editor of a forthcoming book in Routledge’s Series on Contemporary Literature, titled Displaced: Migration, Indigeneity, and Trauma. Currently she is seeking a department at NAU interested in integrating her interdisciplinary and international teaching and research. In the meantime, she works as a freelance editor, and part-time for a local publishing house. 



Nature Writing Retreat: Eco Poetry & Prose

with 
poet, author, and writing instructor
Pam Davenport
“Tell me what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?”
~Mary Oliver, The Summer Day
Spend the day remembering you are part of Nature. This all day retreat in a Garden Setting will break down the barriers between you and the natural world. See things differently and discover how to use your Poetry and Prose to live and breathe and even to facilitate change.
Saturday, September 14
Check-In at 9:30 am
Instruction 10 am-4 pm
at


Fee $50 before Sept 1 
and $60 in Sept.
(Includes entrance to Arboretum)
Participants limited to 25


Register by mailing Registration Form and Check payable to  Nancy Brehm
925 N. Sinagua Heights Dr.
Flagstaff, AZ 86004

For more info call or email Nancy at: 

928-527-3188


Arrive early and stay until 5 pm to enjoy the gardens. The Arboretum has lots of paths, a butterfly garden, a mushroom garden, art, a pond, and a climate change center. Maps and tours will be available after 9 am.


Participants should bring a brown bag lunch. Coolers will be available. Coffee, tea and muffins will be furnished in the morning. Healthy snacks and desserts will be available during the day. Participants are asked to bring a water bottle for refilling.

Pam Davenport's writing is inspired by the mountains and deserts of Arizona. After decades of teaching college writing and literature classes, Pam earned a Masters of Fine Arts in writing from Pacific University in Oregon. Her chapbook, A Midwest Girl Thanks Patti Smith won the Slipstream Chapbook Competition and will be published this summer. She has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and recipient of Arizona Authors' Assc. Annual Award for Poetry. Her poems have been published in Nimrod, Tinderbox, Slippery Elm, Poetry of the American Southwest, Chiron, New Verse News, and Pittsburgh Poetry Review.


After the Workshop

We had a great group on Sat for this workshop. The facilities were beautiful and the weather was perfect for our outside writing. Thanks to all who participated for making the workshop and the readings extraordinary.





Mark James, Flagstaff Arboretum Docent, gave a wonderful talk prior to our workshop on Sat. Plants discussed included columbine, yarrow, larkspur and puke weed. Thank you Mark for all the interesting info.






Point of View & Voice Workshop

by Margaret Erhart


This all day workshop will help you with effective use of Point of View and Voice.

June 1st
9am to 4pm

The day includes:
              • Presentation
              • Discussion
              • Writing Activities

The workshop will be held at the Flagstaff Senior Meadows Clubhouse.
1351 N. Pine Cliff Dr. in Flagstaff.

Parking is limited but you can park in the Basis School parking lot across the street.



Fee $40

(Includes Lunch)
Participants limited to 20
Register by mailing Registration Form and Check payable to  Nancy Brehm
925 N. Sinagua Heights Dr.
Flagstaff, AZ 86004

For more info call or email Nancy at: 

928-527-3188


Margaret Erhart earned an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She is the author of five novels and many essays and articles. Her work has appeared in the New York Times, the Christian Science Monitor, and most recently in Northern Arizona’s Mountain Living Magazine. Her commentaries have aired on NPR. Her fourth novel, Crossing Bully Creek, won the Milkweed National Fiction Prize. Her fifth, The Butterflies of Grand Canyon, was a finalist for an Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award. She has taught poetry to first-graders in Tuba City, and fiction to college students. She lives and works in Flagstaff, Arizona.


Writing and Publishing on the Colorado Plateau


and the 
present 
a showcase of local authors of the Colorado Plateau from a variety of different genres who will share their writing and publishing experiences:

Samantha Burton, Publications & Bookstore Manager

Samantha Burton works as a Bookstore and Publications Department Manager at the Museum of Northern Arizona. She holds a BA in English with an emphasis in Native American Literature. She has contributed to museum exhibits as a freelance Indigenous Consultant and has presented on the representation of Indigenous people in literature, media, and popular culture.

Jean Rukkila, author & illustrator 

Jean Rukkila fills blank pages with words and drawings. She's taught Arizona teachers and students how to make one-of-a-kind books. Her essays, poems, and stories have appeared in Mountain Gazette, Sonora Review, FlagLive and The Sun.


Don Lago, author 

Don Lago has published a dozen books, half of them from university presses, and writes creative non-fiction and history. As well as essays in national magazines and literary reviews, he's published three books about the history of the Grand Canyon and has lived in Flagstaff for 30 years. 
Gwen Waring, author, illustrator, ecologist

Gwen Waring is an ecologist and writer who is based in Flagstaff. Her love of the region is expressed through landscape painting and the writing of natural history. She's conducted research in most ecosystems in Arizona. Her new book, The Natural History of the San Francisco Peaks (2018) tells the story of this fabulous mountain based on research conducted over the last 130 years. 


Location and Time:

May 4th, 2019 2-4 p.m.

Branigar Hall @ Museum of Northern Arizona 
Free with admission to museum (Adults/$12 Seniors/$10)

Book Signing:

Presentations will be followed by a Question and Answer session which will be moderated by Flagstaff author, Margaret Erhart. The authors will be selling and signing their works following the presentation.


More Information, Contact:

www.flagstaffwritersconnection.com 

Barbara Shovers, Co-Coordinator, Flagstaff Writers Connection
Barbara@WisdomSeekers.org
480-612-2461

Nancy Brehm, Co-Coordinator, Flagstaff Writers Connection
nbrehm@aol.com
928-527-3188

Margaret Erhart, Flagstaff Writers Connection Member
mherhart@gmail.com
928-773-4939

Fantastic Writer's Salon



What can we, as writers, learn from a fanciful children’s movie?

At the height of Potter Mania, 6 hr after Deathly Hallows was published, it sold 5000 books a sec. Deathly Hallows sold more books in the first day than any other author that YEAR.

Fantastic Beasts, Rowling’s first foray into screenplay writing, grossed $814 million worldwide. The film was nominated for 5 BAFTAs (British equivalent of an Academy Award), including Best British Film, winning Best Production Design. In this country the movie took two Academy Awards,winning Best Costume Design, and becoming the first Wizarding World film to win an Academy Award.

Clearly, J. K. Rowling resonates with a large audience of people. I believe that's because she is one of the most complex and layered writers of our time. I mean to convince you today that the more you dig into her work, the deeper the meaning, the more complex and interesting her work becomes.

Join us on Sunday, November 18 to watch the second installment in the Fantastic Beasts saga, Crimes of Grindelwald. We will hold a writer's salon at 2:30 pm at Nancy Brehm's house, 925 Sinagua Heights Dr. in Flagstaff.


I'll give a brief presentation about the peculiarities of Rowling's writing and things to consider while watching the movie. I'll cover how Rowling hooks you with:
  • Genre Bending Worldbuilding
  • Confirming your Postmodern Beliefs
  • Masterful Narrative Slow Release.
Rowling has been called the most important Christian writer since C. S. Lewis. I'll talk about how she delivers meaning:
  • Meaningful Resonance
  • Ring Composition
  • Subversion of stories we share in common
  • Characters and elements that symbolize larger concepts
  • Literary Alchemy
  • Dante's Divine Comedy

At 4 or 4:30 pm we will watch the movie together.

After the movie we'll meet back at Nancy's house for BBQ sandwiches, while we discuss the film.

Please RSVP at authorCAlexSmith@gmail.com if you think you're coming so we can get an approximate head count. You can let us know right up to and including Sunday the 18th.




A Path to Creativity Workshop with Sandra Marinella

Your Story Matters


Ignite you passion for writing down the self in ways that will tap into your personal creativity. This 5 hour workshop will help you find the stories you need to tell while giving you the chance to explore a path to your personal creativity. There will be opportunities to share your writing in a nurturing environment. This workshop will engage writers of all levels, novice to advanced.

After the workshop there will be a book signing and Meet and Greet at Oakwood Restaurant.


Sandra Marinella is an award-winning writing instructor and author of The Story You Need to Tell, an inspirational guide to transformational storytelling. The book is the result of Marinella’s pioneering work with veterans and cancer patients, her years of teaching writing, and her research into its profound healing properties. Riveting true stories illustrate Marinella’s methods for understanding, telling, and editing personal stories in ways that foster resilience and renewal. She also shares her own experience of using journaling and expressive writing to navigate challenges including breast cancer and postpartum depression. Each of the techniques, prompts, and exercises she presents helps us “to unravel the knot inside and to make sense of loss.

Profits from her work support cancer research. 


Find out more at www.storyyoutell.com.


Book Signing


Sandra Marinella will be signing her book, The Story You Need to Tell.
There will be gifts & treats & a talk by the author.
Saturday, August 11
5:30 – 7:30pm
Bright Side Bookshop
18 N San Francisco St, Flagstaff, AZ 86001

Workshop



Saturday, Oct 13th, 2018
10:00 am - 4:00 pm
Continental Rm., 2nd Floor
2380 N. Oakmont Drive, Flagstaff, AZ 86004

Price $55

Lunch on you own at Oakwood Restaurant





Register with Nancy Brehm:
nbrehm@aol.com

928-527-3188


Or Send Registration Form and Check to:
925 N. Sinaqua Hts. Dr.
Flagstaff, AZ 86004


Virginia G Piper Center Summer and Fall Courses

NEW CREATIVE WRITING CLASSES AND WORKSHOPS (THE PIPER WRITERS STUDIO | SUMMER AND FALL 2018)
The Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing at ASU is proud to announce new creative writing classes and workshops in fiction, creative nonfiction, memoir, poetry, screenwriting, flash, hybrid forms, and more for Summer and Fall 2018:

Start Date
Class & Instructor
July 10
Aug 4
Aug 4
Sep 4
Sep 8
Sep 10
Sep 15
Sep 24
Advanced Fiction Workshop with James Sallis
Sep 29
A Deeper Image: A Poetry Workshop with Joshua Marie Wilkinson
Oct 2
Oct 4
Oct 20
Oct 27
Nov 16

All classes take place at the Piper Writers House (450 E Tyler Mall, Tempe, AZ 85281). Hours and costs vary. Discounts are available for students and ASU affiliates. To learn more and register, you can download a flier, find classes on facebook, visit our website at http://piper.asu.edu/classes.