Literary Journalism (ENGL/COMM 312)
Spring 2007 
Jackson Hall 109 
MWF 9-9:50 
David Havird
dhavird@centenary.edu
Office: JH 311, 869-5085 
Office Hours: MTWTh 2-3 and by appointment
Syllabus Required Texts 
  • Kerrane, Kevin, and Ben Yagoda.  The Art of Fact: A Historical Anthology of Literary Journalism.  Scribner, 1998.  0684846306. 
  • Sims, Norman, and Mark Kramer.  Literary Journalism.  Ballantine, 1995.  0345382226. 
Course Description and Goals 

Literary Journalism is an advanced course in writing.  The format combines seminar and workshop.  The primary goal of each of you is to produce a substantial piece of literary journalism, a 3000-word nonfiction narrative based on the on-site gathering of facts and other research.  As a genre, literary journalism has its roots in the early 18th century.  Later examples include nonfiction narratives by such novelists as Dickens, London, and Hemingway--as well as the New Journalists of the 1960s.  It was the New Journalism (a term coined by Tom Wolfe) that called attention to the genre as a distinctive type of journalism.  Such literary devices and techniques as plot, description, dialogue, character development, and personal style, all in the service of fact-based exposition and sometimes argumentation, are characteristic of such classic examples of New Journalism as Wolfe's The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (1968), Capote's In Cold Blood (1966), and Mailer's The Armies of the Night (1968).  In addition to producing a substantial work of your own, you'll both survey the genre and analyze contemporary examples that may serve as models. 

Procedures and Requirements

  • Reading Assignments.  Approximately half of the course will be devoted to reading and analyzing in class examples of literary journalism other than your own.  (The other half will consist of out-of-class conferences on work in progress and in-class workshops.)  Weekly reading assignments from the anthologies appear on the calendar. 
  • Active Participation.  You'll be participating actively in this course if you attend class regularly (missing only for official, College-sponsored activities or for emergencies), meet all deadlines, and demonstrate your engagement in the course by contributing valuably to in-class discussions and workshops and as a peer-editor and by scoring consistently well on reading quizzes.  It is unlikely that you will receive full credit for participation if you miss more than two weeks (six days) of class.  It is the Department's policy that anyone missing more than three weeks of class for any reason will fail the course.  Understand that the Department does not distinguish between excused and unexcused absences.  Miss this class more than nine times and you will fail the course.  Reading quizzes will come, if they do, at the beginning of the period.  If you are late for class, you will miss the quiz. 
  • Preliminary Writing Assignment.  A short written assignment (750-1000 words) is due at the end of Week 4 (February 2).  This assignment should focus on a person whom you don't know (or know well), whose life is very different from your own; an unusual event; or a place, which a Centenary student isn't likely to have frequented, where something is happening.  You are the observer; ideally, your personal involvement with the subject is minimal at most.  Though you may be a character in the piece (and not merely the observer), this is not to be about you.  Your aim is to provide your readers an intimate glimpse of the person, place, or event.  If it's important to your purpose that the reader feel a certain way about the subject, rely on a selection of sensory details to arouse the feeling.  Where appropriate, involve your reader by using such literary techniques as narrative, visual description and other kinds of imagery, direct quotation, dialogue and indirect discourse, and humor.  We'll devote a week of workshop to discussing a limited number of these preliminary assignments. 
  • Project.  The primary writing assignment is a project of some 3000 words.  As with the earlier assignment, your subject will be a person, place, or event.  With this assignment you must choose an off-campus subject unrelated to your family.  As with the earlier assignment, the success of this one will depend mainly on your skill with literary devices and techniques, especially narrative.  However, this project should be richer in information--facts--gleaned not only in the field but also from research.  For instance, it might be possible for you to observe a hospital emergency room over the course of several nights, perhaps even conducting some tactful interviews while there.  But the project should also include information from personal interviews (at other times) with healthcare professionals and pertinent facts about the subject gathered from other legitimate sources. 
    • Conferences and Workshops.  You will contract with me on the project in conference during Week 7 (February 26-March 2).  You'll demonstrate your progress on the assignment in weekly conferences during Week 10.  Workshops during Weeks 12-13 will be devoted to critiques of these projects.  Each of you must make your project accessible to the class in Blackboard by a due date in advance of the workshop (March 30 or April 2--to be determined); everyone else will read it then and provide a critique during the workshop. 
    • Peer Editing.  Each of you will also have and serve as a peer editor, and your editorial responsibility will be to read that classmate's project with special care, offer a thorough critique in writing, and then assist the author in evaluating the seminar's advice from the workshop and incorporating within the final version valid suggestions for improvement.  (You must submit the written critique to me as well as to the author.  Again, your contribution as a peer editor is an element in "active participation.")
    • Final Version.  You'll make the final version of your project accessible to the class no later than Friday, April 20.  Discussion during Preparation Week and, if needed, during the exam period will certify that each final version not only succeeds as an example of literary journalism but also represents a successful response to the earlier critique. 
Grading 

A=90-100; B=80-89; C=70-79; D=60-69; F=0-59 

  • Participation=20% 
  • Preliminary Assignment=20% 
  • Project=60% 
Calendar of Assignments

Note: Read also the editors' introductions to the selections. 

Week 1 (January 8-12)--Note: no meeting Friday!
From The Art of Fact 
Yagoda, Preface (13) 
Kerrane, "Making Facts Dance" (17) 
Markey, "Drift" (93)
Orwell, "The Spike" (245)
Hecht, "The Pig" (407)
Week 2 (January 15-19)--Note: no meeting Monday!
Talese, "The Silent Season of a Hero" (143)
Winerip, "Holiday Pageant: The Importance of Being Bluebell" (549)
Liebling, from The Earl of Louisiana (258)
Agee, from Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (417)
Week 3 (January 22-26)
Mitchel, "Lady Olga" (439)
Heinz, "The Day of the Fight" (115)
Cannon, "Lethal Lightning" (461)
Orwell, "Marrakech" (433)
Didion, "Los Angeles Notebook" (480)
McPhee, from The Pine Barrens (485)
Week 4 (January 29-February 2)
Rosenbaum, "The Last Secrets of Skull and Bones" (316)
Mahoney, from Whoredom in Kimmage (367) 
Writing assignments due Friday
Week 5 (February 5-9)
Workshop
Week 6 (February 12-16)
Covington, from "Snake Handling and Redemption" (391)
Gellhorn, "The Third Winter" (422)
Simon, from Homicide (522)
Mardi Gras Break (February 19-23)
Week 7 (February 26-March 2)
Conferences on project
Week 8 (March 5-9) 
from Sims and Kramer, Literary Journalism
Sims, "The Art of Literary Journalism" (3) 
Kramer, "Breakable Rules for Literary Journalism" (21)
Trillin, "First Family of Astoria" (75)
Orlean, "The American Man at Age Ten" (97) 
Week 9 (March 12-16)
Harrington, "A Family Portrait in Black and White" (153)
LeBlanc, "Trina and Trina" (209) 
Jane Kramer, "Fernande Pelletier" (385)
Week 10 (March 19-23) 
Conferences
Week 11 (March 26-30)
from Kerrane and Yagoda, The Art of Fact
Capote, from In Cold Blood (161)
Wolfe, from The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test (169)
Drafts of projects due Friday
Week 12 (April 2-6)--Note: no meeting Friday (Easter Break)!
Workshop
Week 13 (April 9-13)--Note: no meeting Monday (Easter Break)!
Workshop
Week 14 (April 16-20)
Conferences
Projects due Friday
Week 15 (April 23-27)
Project Assessments