workshop-bw

THE STORIES WE TELL

A writing workshop for survivors and witnesses of gender based violence - virtual

Take part in The Stories We Tell, a testimonial writing workshop for survivors of gender-based violence and other human rights violations.

 

Every survivor story has power and purpose. During The Stories We Tell, The Voices and Faces Project’s two-day testimonial writing workshop, participants will read and discuss testimonial writing, reflect on how to share their own stories, and engage in a series of innovative, real-time writing exercises. With a focus on memoir, fiction, non-fiction and poetry, “The Stories We Tell” was created to support those who seek to use writing as a vehicle for personal or political change. 

December 4-5, 2021

10am-5pm (Saturday) 11am-5pm (Sunday) 

 

Virtual workshop, with the support from The Manaaki Foundation

Applications due: Wednesday Nov. 17, 2021

Meet our workshop co-founders

Anne K. Ream is the founder of The Voices and Faces Project and the author of Lived Through This, a memoir of her global journey spent listening to the testimonies of gender-based violence survivors. Anne’s writing has appeared in The New Republic, Los Angeles Times, The Cambridge Companion to Bob Dylan, The Washington Post, and elsewhere. A founding board member of Art Works for Change and an advisory board member of RAINN, the country’s largest anti-sexual violence organization, Anne is also a founding co-chair of World Without Exploitation.

 

R. Clifton Spargo is a novelist and cultural critic. An alumnus of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he is author of the novel Beautiful Fools, as well as award-winning stories in outlets such as The Antioch Review, Glimmer Train, and The Kenyon Review. His essays on literature, music, and culture have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, Huffington Post, Newcity, and The Cambridge Companion to Bob Dylan. An expert in ethics, testimony, and Holocaust studies, he is a former fellow at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and author of two books of literary philosophy on ethics, mourning, and the cultural memory of injustice. He currently teaches creative writing at Yale University.

Event Details

Saturday 12-4 & Sunday 12-5, 2021
9.00 Am
Applications due: Wednesday 11-17, 2021

Register Now

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