Bringing together essays from neurodivergent and disabled writers, and writers with chronic illnesses, this collection explores the impact of these experiences and the struggle against such biases within the field of creative writing. Whilst neuro-divergent and disabled writers publish world-class poetry, prose, and drama that moves readers and wins awards, they face many difficulties accessing these achievements — difficulties which often go unnoticed, unmentioned, and underappreciated. Visibility, insight, alternative approaches, and thorough research are all needed to create more inclusive writing environments. This book confronts these issues head on, calling for diversity in the creative writing field, community and industry, and more equitable spaces in adjacent arenas from academia to publishing.
Broken into four sections, this anthology focuses on creative writing programs, classrooms, the community, and its people, combining narrative, research and practical contributions to the field to offer a mix of practical strategies, personal and pedagogical interventions, critiques, and craft meditations that explore teaching, transformation, evolution, embodied craft, visibility, belonging, injustice, otherness, and views from the outside. With essays and excerpts written by authors and educators from across seven countries, who are each impacted by a wide range of disabilities, including ADHD, autism, blindness, dyslexia, dyspraxia, stroke aphasia, cerebral palsy, bipolar, fibromyalgia, and rheumatoid arthritis, this collection informs, deconstructs and re-imagines to reform and revolutionize normative structures within writing institutions and communities.
Introduction
Part One: The Programs – Interventions and Revolutions
1. Perfection of the (Care) Work: MFA vs. Disability-Centric Workshop Experience, Shane Neilson, poet, physician, and critic, University of Ottawa, Canada
2. Harm by Omission: (Auto)Ableism, Neurodivergence, and Trauma in Creative Writing PhD Programs, Christie Collins, Mississippi State, USA
3. Bipolar Disorder and Creativity: The Importance of Accommodation Plans, Celeste Maria Schueler, poet and education, USA
4. The Impact of Racism, Ableism, and Islamophobia on an Undiagnosed Autistic & ADHD Black Immigrant in a Graduate Writing Program, Said Shaiye, Twin Cities, USA
5. The Mad Writer: On Myth & Reality, Audrey Heffers, Illinois State University, USA
6. Achievement our Authenticity: Challenges Facing Neurodivergent Creative Writers in a Neurotypical Education System, Beth Rees, independent author, UK
Section Two: The Classrooms – Pedagogy, Transformations, and Evolutions
7. The Power of Words: Vulnerability and Neurodiversity in the Creative Writing Classroom, by Rachel Carney, Cardiff University, UK
8. The Impact of Standard Grading Systems and Late Penalties on the Creative Process, by Jennifer Schneider
9. Poem Brut: What the Workshop can Learn from the Outside World, by Julia Rose Lewis
10. Balancing Self-Expression and Tradition in the Pedagogy of ASL Literature, Gina Yang, independent scholar, South Korea
11. Aphasia as Form of (Dis)content, Aidan Coleman, Southern Cross University, Australia
12. Serving the Neurodiverse Writer: The Ultimate FAQ for Teaching All Brains Better, Leigh Camacho Rourks, Beacon College, USA
Section Three: The Community – Embodied Craft, Visability, and Belonging
13. There is a Charge for the Eyeing of My Scars: Writing the Neurodivergent, Disabled Body for a Dominant Audience, by Grace Quantock, author and psychotherapeutic counsellor, UK
14. Why Write? Reframing Personal Creative Writing Practice in the Light of Changing Diagnoses, by Oz Hardwick, Leeds Trinity University, UK
15. Spinning Words: An Experience of Poetry Creation by Autistic People, by Gustavo Henrique Rückert, Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil
16. A Wholly Different Course: How Arbitrary Timelines Exclude Chronically Ill and Neurodivergent Writers, by Miranda Lynn Barnes, Loughborough University, UK
17. NaWays Publishing Entities can be Kinder to Neurodivergent Writers, Nathan Spoon, independent poet, USA
Section Four: The People – Injustice, Otherness, and Views from the Outside
18. Excerpt from Planet of the Blind, by Stephen Kuusisto, Syracuse University, USA
19. The Gallery Effect: How Disabled Bodies are Consumed by Outsiders, What that Means, and How it Makes it even More Difficult to Untable Our Stories, by Tyler Darnell, independent writer, USA
20. You Spelled Your Name Wrong: A Dyslexic’s Journey Through the Writing World, by Saul Lemerond, University of Louisiana, USA
21. Excerpt from Story of a Poem, by Matthew Zapruder, Saint Mary’s College, USA
22. Who Wrote This?: Revisiting My Disability, Myself, and My Work, by Leigh Camacho Rourks
Bibliography
Index
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