Short Story Writing Class

Description

SHORT STORY WRITING: This class is for those who have an inkling of an idea for a short story, whether fiction or nonfiction, and would like the help or the collaboration, to put the words onto screen or paper.

Led by two authors with extensive writing experience, this class will be a kaleidoscope of tips to build a better story, and an opportunity to tell your own.

*Instructors:

Michele DeLuca: Journalist & Author

Michelle Kratts: Author, Historian & Librarian

ATTEND ONLINE or IN PERSON

Registration Required

A PATHWAYS THROUGH THE DARK PROJECT

The Niagara Arts & Cultural Center hosts creative writing & art workshops focused on sharing the personal stories of those who have visual impairments, their friends and family.

Our project is about learning to tell your story and about discovering the underlying common human experience of loss, grief and resilience. Storytelling is the core of culture. Storytelling brings people together to entertain each other, to learn from each other, and often to teach about life and ways of interacting with the world. The stories gathered by our group will focus on the challenges, hardships, victories and coping mechanisms incorporated by those impacted by vision loss. These will become someone else's guide post, passing on knowledge, creating empathy, and helping create a shared understanding among those individuals dealing with vision loss as well as those dealing with other types of loss, or life altering circumstances.

This project is important because so many people are currently dealing with loss and are searching for ways to redefine themselves and their relationship to the world around them.

Sponsored by Humanities New York

Using dialogue, reflection, and critical thinking, Humanities New York applies the humanities to strengthen democratic society.

In Partnership with

VIA :VISUALLY IMPAIRED ADVANCEMENT