One take on one take writing
Lucius Webster (’23) meditates on the value of one take writing, “Your writing was meant to be, your writing was meant to exist, and then float away like a wish lantern.”
Read More One take on one take writingLucius Webster (’23) meditates on the value of one take writing, “Your writing was meant to be, your writing was meant to exist, and then float away like a wish lantern.”
Read More One take on one take writingAgni Gupta (’24) writes about lack of representation in fantasy literature. “All the protagonists had similar traits to me but none of them truly reflected me, my family, or my heritage.”
Read More Lack of RepresentationBy: Alison MacGillivray Second-Year Tutor + Writing Center Co-President In my humanities class, we learned about Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. We watched her TedTalk on the dangers of a single story. She grew up in eastern Nigeria, but upon coming to the United States to continue her education, she was disappointed when there was only one […]
Read More Why You Should Write: Telling Your Own StoryMany tutors feel that helping writers with creative work is too personal, but it is possible with focused training and a different mindset.
Read More Tutoring Without A Rubric: Creative Writing in the Writing Center