Jack Kerouac School

Founded in 1974 by Allen Ginsberg and Anne Waldman, as part of Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche’s 100-year experiment, Naropa University's Jack Kerouac School consists of the undergraduate Core Writing Seminars, a BA in Creative Writing and Literature, a residential MFA in Creative Writing and Poetics, an MFA in Creative Writing, and the Summer Writing Program. The Kerouac School, located in Boulder, Colorado, United States, honors its historical roots while bringing forward new questions that both invigorate and challenge the current dialogue in writing today.

Curriculum

The Jack Kerouac School offers an open genre curriculum, and students are encouraged to take classes across genres, enabling them to investigate a personal, intensely original writing process and style. This challenges the notion of safe or generic works and creates a space for radical exploration and experimentation. The program problematizes genre while cultivating contemplative and experimental writing practices and emphasizes innovative approaches to literary arts.

Summer Writing program

Each year, the Jack Kerouac School invites over sixty guest faculty to its internationally renowned Summer Writing Program, a four-week colloquium of workshops, lectures, and readings. This distinguishing feature fosters an intensely creative environment for students to develop their writing projects in conversation with a community of writers.

Funding

In the fall of 2014, the Jack Kerouac School announced three fully funded fellowships: the Anne Waldman, Allen Ginsberg, and Anselm Hollo Graduate Fellowships, awarded annually to three incoming MFA Creative Writing and Poetics students. These recipients receive full funding (tuition and fees) and an $8,000 stipend as well as a Graduate Instructor position.

External links

References

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