This module explores the negotiation of identity in writing as potential material for the creative writer. It involves exploring the identities of the fictional characters created by authors, and your own identity as a writer and creative thinker.
You will engage with a wide range of fictional, biographical, autobiographical, poetic, and theoretical material. As well as exploring memoir, biography and other forms of non-fiction, you will also explore the ways in which the raw material of memory, observation, experience and an informed imagination might contribute to producing poetry, fiction and essays. You might also choose to write about you own experiences of identity, exploring selfhood, personality, memory, and examining the degree to which any written identity has a fictional component. Implicitly, you will engage in critical, ethical and moral debates centred around identity in the twenty-first century.
You will consider the responsibility of writers to represent groups or individuals with care and intelligence, particularly in relation to equality, diversity and inclusivity (EDI). Teaching delivery will embed discussions of identity in relation to issues such as place, race, gender and class, particularly the formation of postcolonial identities, and the role of intersectionality in the construction and negotiation of identity.
Assessment: Writing Identity Portfolio (100%)