Campus Stories - Creative Writing

Stanford University Libraries. (Photo: Colin Reeves-Fortney/Stanford Online)
Campus Stories

In her research and in a new online course, Stanford scholar delves into the secrets of medieval texts

Most people don’t realize that medieval manuscripts carry in them not only the words of people centuries ago, but also a history in blood, sweat and tears – quite literally. Take the 13th-century British tome that did double duty as an impromptu shield for a hapless monk when the Vikings attacked his monastery. Bloodstains that…

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Stanford students illustrate public online ‘Adventures in Writing’ class
Campus Stories

Stanford students illustrate public online ‘Adventures in Writing’ class

After a team of Stanford writing instructors created storyboards for an online class to teach writing skills to high school and college students, they turned to a team of Stanford undergraduates to bring their stories to life as a graphic novel. Adventures in Writing, a non-credit course, will be available to the public starting Jan….

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Weston Gaylord, “Paper Chains: Cultivating Creativity”
Campus Stories

Weston Gaylord, “Paper Chains: Cultivating Creativity”

Stanford+Connects is a 16-city world tour that brings the best of Stanford University to alumni around the world. Designed as a full afternoon of learning and connecting, attendees meet up with new “classmates” then head to the classroom for micro lectures and seminars taught by top Stanford faculty. Each event offers a broad program with…

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Alex Tamkin
Campus Stories

November State of the Arts – Imagining the Universe

“Imagining the Universe” is a collaborative campus-wide program bringing together a broad array of partners on campus and in the Bay Area.* The cosmos has long inspired our imaginations – fueling research, reflection, and creative response. There’s a lot to be learned from this vast topic. That’s why the series will host exhibitions, performances, public…

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Imagining the Universe: Cosmology in Art and Science series launches with words
Campus Stories

Imagining the Universe: Cosmology in Art and Science series launches with words

OCT. 27 – Out of this world: Italo Calvino’s Cosmicomics Author Italo Calvino’s whimsical view of the universe will be explored at 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 27 at Stanford Humanities Center as part of Stanford’s “Another Look” book club and in conjunction with the series Imagining the Universe. Acclaimed author Robert Pogue Harrison, professor of…

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Stanford exhibit spotlights medieval ‘world of words’
Campus Stories

Stanford exhibit spotlights medieval ‘world of words’

Open a book, and you discover a whole new world – especially if that book is several centuries old. That is the case with The Circle of the Sun, a new Stanford University Libraries exhibit on display through June 14 in the Peterson Gallery and Munger Rotunda of Green Library. It features the secular works…

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L.A. Cicero
Campus Stories

Stanford to offer new undergraduate majors integrating humanities, computer science

In a new experiment aimed at integrating the humanities and computer science while providing students with unique educational experiences, Stanford will offer undergraduates the opportunity to pursue a new “joint major” in computer science and either English or music starting in fall 2014. The Faculty Senate approved the new joint majors on Thursday. English Professor…

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Emerging Creatives
Campus Stories

Emerging Creatives

Last month, Stanford hosted the first ever “Emerging Creatives” conference, organized by the Alliance for the Arts in Research Universities. During this three-day intensive experience, one hundred students from twenty-five universities across the country explored connections among the arts, design, technology, and business while learning from pioneers and leaders in interdisciplinary collaboration. The students participated…

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Photo by Nancy Crampton
Campus Stories

All-star panel to discuss Philip Roth’s The Ghost Writer at Stanford

Philip Roth is one of the nation’s undisputed literary giants. He’s received the Pulitzer Prize, the Man Booker International Prize, the National Medal of Arts, the National Humanities Medal, the American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal in Fiction and two National Book Awards. Every year he appears on the Ladbroke’s list of Nobel…

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Photo by Harrison Truong
Campus Stories

Introducing the Interdisciplinary Honors in the Arts Program

The Stanford Arts Institute is bringing to Stanford’s campus a program unlike any other. Meet the Interdisciplinary Honors Program, Honors in the Arts, which provides an opportunity for students of any major to complete a capstone project that brings a student’s experience in another discipline together with artistic endeavor. Conceived by Executive Director of Arts…

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Stanford Arts Institute to pilot new interdisciplinary honors program
Campus Stories

Stanford Arts Institute to pilot new interdisciplinary honors program

The Stanford Arts Institute will pilot a new interdisciplinary honors program in the arts during the 2013-14 academic year, an initiative intended to appeal to arts and non-arts majors alike. Students admitted to the program will participate in small workshops throughout their senior year while working towards the completion of a capstone project that reflects…

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[wpbb-if post:acf type="image" name="image" size="thumbnail" display="alt"]Among the items from the Allen Ginsberg Papers collection at Stanford are a pair of Ginsberg
Campus Stories

Through photos and memorabilia, Stanford’s Allen Ginsberg collection captures a generation

Allen Ginsberg, the iconic figurehead of the Beat Generation, saved just about everything. Ginsberg’s vast array of memorabilia housed in the Stanford University Libraries’ Department of Special Collections proves that he was not just an observer of culture, but also a collector of culture. Bill Morgan, Ginsberg’s personal archivist, bibliographer and biographer, told a Stanford…

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Stanford poetry competition aims to revive a performance tradition
Campus Stories

Stanford poetry competition aims to revive a performance tradition

Poetry is often thought of as silent text confined to the page, but the words of some of the most famous poets in the English language were given new life at Stanford’s second annual Poetry Out Loud (POL) competition. In a room packed with spectators, the works of Walt Whitman, Lewis Carroll and Edgar Allan…

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The Golden Gate is returning to Stanford May 30
Campus Stories

The Golden Gate is returning to Stanford May 30

The homecoming is long overdue: The Golden Gate, Vikram Seth’s 1986 novel-in-verse, was born among Stanford’s sandstone buildings and palm trees. Now the Bay Area will have a chance to hear highlights of composer Conrad Cummings’ opera of the novel. A multimedia presentation at the new Bing Concert Hall Studio at 8 p.m. Thursday, May 30, will include readings of…

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Pages from the Reichenau Gospels from the Middle of the 11th century CE. This Gospel Book is believed to come from the Abbey of Reichenau, on Lake Constance, on the basis of its script and illumination. As a whole, it is an excellent example of Ottonian book illumination. For full description, see http://www.thedigitalwalters.org/Data/WaltersManuscripts/html/W7/description.html.
Campus Stories

Walters Art Museum manuscript collection makes a virtual move to Stanford

More than 100,000 high-resolution images of unique medieval manuscripts will have a second home, thanks to a new agreement between the Walters Art Museum and Stanford University Libraries. The Walters’ holdings of 850 medieval illuminated manuscripts and 150 single leaves, ranging in date from the ninth to the 19th century, are one of the most…

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[wpbb-if post:acf type="image" name="image" size="thumbnail" display="alt"]Pulitzer Prize winning author and Stanford Associate Professor of English Adam Johnson speaks at the Stanford Humanities Center about his book "The Orphan Master
Campus Stories

Stanford scholar Adam Johnson wins Pulitzer Prize in fiction

Adam Johnson, an associate professor of English at Stanford, has been awarded the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for The Orphan Master’s Son, his novel set in North Korea. The Pulitzer committee called the book “an exquisitely crafted novel that carries the reader on an adventuresome journey into the depths of totalitarian North Korea and into the most intimate…

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