HUMOR II: Your Best Defense Against the Hot Mess That Is the Holiday Season by Chelsey Clammer
START DATE: Monday, November 18, 2024
END DATE: Sunday, December 15, 2024
DURATION: 4 weeks
LOCATION: Private Website
FEEDBACK: Weekly instructor feedback and edits with weekly or bi-weekly peer feedback
COURSE DESCRIPTION: Holidays are stressful. We know this. What’s the best way to battle the annual holiday-induced chaos? Humor! Because making your relatives die of laughter does not carry the same prison sentence as actually killing them. Starting a week before Thanksgiving, this four-week class will gleefully prance around the different techniques that make a piece of writing humorous.
Participants will be provided with 3-5 essays/stories/odd visuals to read every week that will be our tour guides of sorts in an exploration of literary humor. Focusing on imagery, word choice, format, tone and structure, we’ll discover the various ways we can give readers—and ourselves!—a good chuckle just from the inventive ways we put words on a page. The goal of this workshop is to understand the function of humor in literary texts and how it reaches beyond the ability to entertain. More important, the class will probably become a type of therapy to get you through the holidays. You’re welcome.
Throughout the course, participants will take turns giving and receiving feedback on each other’s writing, and each participant will receive line edits on her own writing from the instructor every week. Members will also engage in discussions online through the course’s website. The group will be coordinated through email and a private forum.
This is an updated version of the original class. There will be new readings and topics explored.
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Having Chelsey for a writing teacher happily exceeded my expectations. She a gifted and accomplished writer, fully dedicated to the writing life and to sharing her talent and knowledge with others, and it felt to me she was a much a member of our class as she was the instructor, which allowed me to trust her and take risks with my writing. ~ Patricia Heim I have taken two of Chelsey Clammer’s classes and I cannot wait to take my third. She is a very accomplished author and is so generous about sharing her talents with her students. The materials are timely, relevant and inspirational. I have no problems balancing coursework with other commitments; in fact, the work is so much fun that I find myself easily pushing everything else out of the way to write. Thanks to Chelsey and the feedback of classmates, I have several new writing projects that I plan to submit soon for publication! ~ Ashley Memory (Previous WOW class participant)
Chelsey Clammer is one of the best writing teachers I’ve ever had. When I signed up for this course, I had hit a dead period in my writing, when I felt I might not be able to write another essay ever. After 20 years as a publisher of a magazine I founded and years of coming up with a personal essay and a prose poem for the cover every month, I simply hit a wall. I was convinced I’d lost my mojo, but a friend had taken the same class with Chelsey and raved about it. This course was a major breakthrough for me, and I came up with drafts for three essays over the course of the four weeks! Thank you, Chelsey, for helping me find my words and my self-confidence. ~ Nikki Hardin (Previous WOW class participant)
Having Chelsey for a writing teacher happily exceeded my expectations. She a gifted and accomplished writer, fully dedicated to the writing life and to sharing her talent and knowledge with others, and it felt to me she was a much a member of our class as she was the instructor, which allowed me to trust her and take risks with my writing. ~ Patricia Heim
Chelsey’s class has been absolutely amazing. I have produced three refined and excellent pieces—one has already been pubbed by The Nervous Breakdown, and I just got an acceptance from Hippocampus for the second (pub in January)! The third is still out there, submitted to three places. Chelsey provided me excellent edits and emailed back quickly when I had questions. The class was fun, I learned a lot and was inspired to continue writing after it ends using the prompts she gave. She was even generous enough to answer questions I had about MFA programs. I am thankful that I ended up in her class. ~ Sarah W. (Previous WOW class participant)
This past August I signed up for Chelsey Clammer’s four-week WOW! course, The Women Writers’ Book Group: Furiously Happy. Not only have I never participated in an online book club or writing class, but I have never tried my hand at flash/short fiction or humorous fiction. But I can read, and thought it would be fun to dissect the book with an instructor and other writers. And laugh a little along the way. I was blown away. Not only was the online class a lot of fun and very informative, but Chelsey’s exceptional insights into the book combined with her weekly exercises and feedback gave me some confidence and inspiration to try my hand at writing humor. She kept the pace and energy level of the class high, not easy to do online. Chelsey also expertly guided me with her edits and encouragement. She suggested I submit a couple of my pieces that came out of her exercises. I was so new to all this, I didn’t even know where to begin to submit. Chelsey walked me through that process, too! I thought you’d like to know that one was published online. I couldn’t have been published without Chelsey and the WOW! classroom. Thank you so much for offering the opportunity to grow as a writer! ~ Kate Bradley-Ferrall (Previous WOW class participant)
In May, I took Chelsey Clammer’s course on writing memoir based on the empathic writings of Leslie Jamison. Discussion and analysis of Jamison’s essays, formed the backdrop for our approaches to our essays. I worried; I’d been writing only poetry for the past five years. Would I have enough ideas and skills to shape a coherent essay for feedback from the mentor and classmates? Ms. Clammer taught me that, whether published or not, all of my writings are important. She showed me how rewarding it is to investigate a portion of one’s life and share it with an audience. I discovered I could write about a tiny segment of my past. The resultant essay gave information and a degree of entertainment to my readers. Two of the essays completed during the four-week course are now under consideration by editors: one at an essay contest at Under the Gum Tree and the other at Mom Egg Review. ~ Carole Mertz
Working with Chelsey I feel I’m in a rich partnership that as much about preparing essay drafts for publication as it is about growth, discovery, and the joy that comes from telling the stories that matter to me. ~ Kineret Yardena
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WEEKS AT A GLANCE:
Week 1: OMG! Did You See That?!?
Reading is a type of seeing, and visuals create a story we can read. For this first week, we’ll take a look at the importance of how a text actually looks. Discussing the ways that images, font, and structure can together create some sly humor, we’ll begin our conditioning of those thinking-out-of-the-box muscles that are the foundation of all things funny.
Assignment: Read the assigned essays, and complete at least one of the writing exercises on your own. Post your response to one of the discussion questions online. Email the instructor your writing-in-progress for the week (1000-word limit). Comment on your peers’ essays as assigned.
Week 2: I Sure am Going to Take the Tone with You
On more than 8 million occasions, my ex-husband and I had argued because of a miss-heard text message. When you can’t pick up on someone’s sarcasm, you’ll think they’re rude and then question why you keep that person in your life. Thus, creating and conveying your intended tone of voice in humor writing is super-important. This week we’ll enhance our sarcasm skills and work on perfecting our narrative voice—with the added bonus of perhaps saving a future marriage.
Assignment: Read the assigned essays, and complete at least one of the writing exercises on your own. Post your response to one of the discussion questions online. Email the instructor your writing-in-progress for the week (1000-word limit). Comment on your peers’ essays as assigned.
Week 3: Open Mouth, Insert Foot
What’s up red face?!? Those embarrassing moments in life truly suck, but in hindsight they become funnier than hell. Facing those awkward and terrible moments in writing can bring the reader closer to your work. This week we’ll learn how to write about those moments we’d rather forget.
Assignment: Read the assigned essays, and complete at least one of the writing exercises on your own. Post your response to one of the discussion questions online. Email the instructor your writing-in-progress for the week (1000-word limit). Comment on your peers’ essays as assigned.
Week 4: Zingers
Making something funny doesn’t necessitate volumes of extended jokes or maze-like narratives that will one day lead to laughter. In fact, sometimes just a single word choice can shift an LOL to an ROTFL. Whether it’s unusual imagery, quirky metaphors, a well-placed cuss word, or witty one-liners, for this last week of the class we’ll look at how going short can create long-lasting laughs.
Assignment: Read the assigned essays, and complete at least one of the writing exercises on your own. Post your response to one of the discussion questions online. Email the instructor your writing-in-progress for the week (1000-word limit). Comment on your peers’ essays as assigned.
Materials needed: The instructor will provide the participants with all of the reading materials.
ABOUT THE INSTRUCTOR: Chelsey Clammer is the award-winning author of the essay collections Human Heartbeat Detected (Red Hen Press, 2022; finalist for the Memoir Magazine Book Awards 2023), Circadian (Red Hen Press, 2017; winner, Red Hen Press Nonfiction Manuscript Award), and BodyHome (Hopewell Publications, 2015). Her work has appeared in Salon, The Rumpus, Brevity, and McSweeney’s, among many others. She was the Fall 2019 Jack Kerouac Writer-In-Residence through the Kerouac Project. Chelsey teaches online writing classes with WOW! Women On Writing and is a freelance editor. Visit her website at: www.chelseyclammer.com.
COST: $180, which includes weekly assignments and individual feedback from the instructor. You will also be invited to a private group for student interaction and discussion.
BUY NOW: HUMOR II: Your Best Defense Against the Hot Mess That Is The Holiday Season with Chelsey Clammer (4 weeks, starting 11/18/2024) Limit: 10 students. Early registration is recommended.
For Class Session Starting 11/18/2024
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Notes: Upon successful completion of payment, your name, email address, and contact info will be submitted to your instructor. Just before class begins, she will e-mail you with instructions on how to get started.
Questions? Email Marcia & Angela at:
classroom[at]wow-womenonwriting[dot]com
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