Tom Spanbauer
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Tom Spanbauer is a Pulitzer-nominated American writer, living in Portland, Oregon. He is the creator of the concept of Dangerous Writing. He studied creative writing with Gordon Lish at Columbia University. As a writer he has explored issues of race, of sexual identity, of how we make a family for ourselves in order to surmount the limitations of the families into which we are born.
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[edit] Dangerous Writing
"Dangerous Writing" is an approach to writing championed by Spanbauer. He teaches a fiction writing workshop by the same name in Portland, which is known to have produced author Chuck Palahniuk. The approach is a brand of minimalism that utilizes many literary techniques pioneered by Spanbauer and other Gordon Lish-influenced writers. The emphasis is on writing "dangerously"—writing what personally scares or embarrasses you in order to explore and artistically express those fears honestly. Most "dangerous writing" is written in first-person narrative for this reason and deals with heavy subject manner such as cultural taboos.
On the surface, that may not seem like a dangerous or even daring act. But it is. When the words one believes to be the truth about oneself are actually written, they take on a power that is no longer exclusively controlled by the writer. The spin that could be applied when the ideas were merely in a person's mind or coming out of a person's mouth melt away. The words lay the heart bare for all to see. Those words become a separate entity, an unflinching, unvarnished document of the self.[1]
[edit] Examples
- In his essay, "She Breaks Your Heart," Chuck Palahniuk explains the "dangerous writing" technique.
- Amy Hempel's short story, "The Harvest," employs many of the minimalist concepts taught by Spanbauer in his workshop.
[edit] Works
- Faraway Places
- The Man Who Fell in Love with the Moon
- In The City Of Shy Hunters
- Now Is The Hour
Volume 1 of The Quarterly, published in the Spring of 1987, featured Spanbauer's "Sea Animals".
[edit] References
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