TY - BOOK ID - 118253572 TI - The writer in the academy : creative interfrictions AU - Turley, Richard Marggraf AU - English Association. PY - 2011 SN - 128325686X 9786613256867 1846157943 1843842785 PB - Cambridge : D. S. Brewer, DB - UniCat KW - Creative writing. KW - English literature KW - History and criticism. KW - Writing (Authorship) KW - Authorship KW - Creation (Literary, artistic, etc.) KW - Academic Colleagues. KW - Academic Institutions. KW - Creative Identity. KW - Creative Writer. KW - Creative Writers. KW - Creative Writing. KW - Humanities Crisis. KW - Interdisciplinary Dialogue. KW - Literary Studies. KW - Literature and Scholarship. KW - Methodological Overlaps. KW - Pedagogy. KW - Richard Marggraf Turley. KW - Scholarship. KW - Writing Workshop. KW - Creative writing (Higher education) UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:118253572 AB - For many years now the professional "creative writer" within universities and other institutions has encompassed a range of roles, embracing a plurality of scholarly and creative identities. The often complex relation between those identities forms the broad focus of this book, which also examines various, and variously fraught, dialogues between creative writers, "hybrid" writers and academic colleagues from other subjects within single institutions, and with the public and the media. At the heart of the book is the principle of "creative writing" as a fully-fledged discipline, an important subject for debate at a time when the future of the humanities is in crisis; the contributors, all writers and teachers themselves, provide first-hand views on crucial questions: What are the most fruitful intersections between creative writing and scholarship? What methodological overlaps exist between creative writing and literary studies, and what can each side of the "divide" learn from its counterpart? Equally, from a pedagogical perspective, what kind of writing should be taught to students to ensure that the discipline remains relevant? And is the writing workshop still the best way of teaching creative writing? The essays here tackle these points from a range of perspectives, including close readings, historical contextualisation and theoretical exploration. ER -