Category: Workshop

Writing Our Lives as Caregivers

A free guided writing seminar for caregivers.

Before you began this dementia journey with your loved one, could you have even imagined how your life and relationships would change? The tenderness. The pain. The anxiety. The sense of purpose. The loss of identity. The love. Your story is an important one.

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Mourning the Creation of Racial Categories: A Writing Experience

Join Women Writing for (a) Change for the fifth program in this ten-part series, as we explore race from the lens of categories. Joan Ferrante, a professor of sociology at Northern Kentucky University, and her students created a film that examines the history of racial categories, what was lost in the effort to sort humans one from the other, and how that is relevant to today’s cultural, political and socio-economic climates.

After viewing the film, Mourning the Creation of Racial Categories, Joan will lead a discussion as we consider how and why categories were formed, and why mourning their existence can bring healing and reconciliation into the lives of those impacted. Writing prompts will guide participants in their own journey to discover, question, and understand more about a topic shaping our national conversation.

Women Writing for (a) Change partners with Northern Kentucky University and Joan Ferrante for the fifth program in this ten-part series. The series is designed to explore and consider a variety of cross cultural expressions, and to foster deeper understanding and awareness of different racial, ethnic, and cultural traditions.

Note: This program will take place at Women Writing for (a) Change, 6906 Plainfield Road, Cincinnati, OH 45236. Register here.

Joan Ferrante is founder and director of the Mourning the Creation of Racial Categories Project. She is a professor of sociology at Northern Kentucky University. Joan is the author of Sociology: A Global Perspective (9th edition) and Seeing Sociology (3rd edition). She also co-authored/edited The Social Construction of Race and Ethnicity in the United States with Prince Brown, Jr (2nd edition). Her most recent works are Places That Matter: Knowing Your Neighborhood Through Data (University of California, forthcoming 2018) and How Race Has Estranged US: An Invitation to Talk (in progress).

Reading Like a Writer Series

Join our 8-week series of Reading like a Writer.Want to write the great American novel? First, one must investigate the great American writers and their approaches to craft. In these classes, we study aspects of writing through critical reading of short pieces related to individual topics to attain that depth in one’s own writing. Participants implement new techniques in their own work and use the art of critique to examine published authors and the participant’s own work. Each session includes fastwrites, instruction, a longer writing time to apply new principles, and short readarounds to test new techniques.

Visit Women Writing for a Change to register.

Holding Grief as Caregivers

A free guided writing seminar for caregivers.

How do you hold the grief over a loved ones’ passing from one stage of dementia to another. To saying the final goodbye. How do we keep our loves ones close with story?

Annette Wick and Pauletta Hansel leads this nurturing and inspiring writing session as an opportunity to use writing to reflect on your own journey, and to share as much or as little as you choose in a supportive and safe circle of other caregivers. No previous writing experience is necessary; participants of previous workshops are welcome to return.

Registration coming soon.

Writing Our Lives as Caregivers

A free guided writing seminar for caregivers.

Before you began this dementia journey with your loved one, could you have even imagined how your life and relationships would change? The tenderness. The pain. The anxiety. The sense of purpose. The loss of identity. The love. Your story is an important one. Annette Wick leads this nurturing and inspiring writing session as an opportunity to use writing to reflect on your own journey, and to share as much or as little as you choose in a supportive and safe circle of other caregivers. No previous writing experience is necessary; participants of previous workshops are welcome to return.

Registration required. Limited seating.

Learn more.

 

 

 

 

Writing Our Lives as Caregivers

A free guided writing seminar for caregivers.

Before you began this dementia journey with your loved one, could you have even imagined how your life and relationships would change? The tenderness. The pain. The anxiety. The sense of purpose. The loss of identity. The love. Your story is an important one. Pauletta Hansel is the author of Palindrome, a poetry collection written in response to her mother’s dementia. She leads this nurturing and inspiring writing session as an opportunity to use writing to reflect on your own journey, and to share as much or as little as you choose in a supportive and safe circle of other caregivers. No previous writing experience is necessary; participants of previous workshops are welcome to return.

Registration required. Space is limited.

Facilitator: Pauletta Hansel

Part of series.

https://www.alz.org/media/cincinnati/documents/Writing-Session-12-2018-with-OL.pdf

Spice Up Your Writing

Come join us in our Write Around the Corner Series at The Lloyd Library and Museum. 

As part of Ingredients to Warm the Season, writers will have access to the current exhibit and use it as backdrop to heat up their work, add some variety and make their come alive.

Registration through Women Writing for a Change.

 

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