Nonfiction | Workshop

6-Week Nonfiction Workshop: Cultural Criticism (The Review & Beyond)

This course will be an adventure in the broad, rich field of cultural criticism, suitable for both novice and experienced writers. Together, we will discuss and discover how writing about books, plays, movies, music, visual art, and other creative genres offers a powerful avenue to engage with readers and the world around us.

We’ll begin by practicing reviewing—the basic building block of the genre—and go on to explore the ways in which a culture beat can open up other journalistic forms, including reporting, interviewing, and the personal essay. We’ll cover the nuts and bolts of pitching and the current publishing landscape for culture writing, as well as considering broader questions about the purpose of criticism, its balance of analysis and argument, and the role of individual perspective and taste.

Over the course of six in-person sessions, students will draft, workshop, and revise one short review (around 800 words) and one longer critical essay on a subject of their choosing, in whatever form is most appropriate to the writer’s curiosity. This will be a reading- and writing-intensive course, so students should be committed both to pushing themselves as writers and giving generously to their classmates as readers.

This course is open to dedicated and generous writers with all levels of experience.

COURSE TAKEAWAYS:

- Solid overview of the cultural criticism genre, the current marketplace, and how to pitch and publish

- Understanding of the role and responsibilities of the critic

- One solid workshopped review, and the beginnings of a second, longer, more creative piece

- Access to Catapult's list of writing opportunities and important submission deadlines, as well as a 10% discount on all future Catapult classes

COURSE EXPECTATIONS:

Students will write two drafts (one around 800 words, one around 1200-1500), revisions, and reading selections. Writers should expect to spend 1-2 hours each week on the class, and likely more when writing assignments are due.

COURSE SKELETON:

Week 1: Overview of the course, introductions, discussion of individual goals. How to begin: the importance of openness and the power of obsessions. Introduction to the review, its potential and its limitations. What makes a good review (with examples)? Assignment: a review draft.

Week 2: Workshop review drafts. Further discussion of the structure of the review, avoiding cliche, moving beyond the “good vs bad” review. Overview of the review market: resources for advance copies/access, review timelines, pitches and markets for reviews. Assignment: revision of review draft.

Week 3: Discussion of revisions. Where a review can go and how it can open up. The role of research and contextual analysis. Brainstorming of further development for individual reviews, discussion of the cultural profile, arts reporting, pushing beyond the so-called “straight review.” Assignment: Reading/analysis of a few examples of cultural writing that opens up beyond the review.

Week 4: Personal Issues. How cultural criticism and personal essay are merging as genres, the pitfalls and potential of bringing in the personal. The market for creative cultural essays. Assignment: brainstorming/drafting a personal cultural essay (an exploratory assignment.)

Week 5: Discussion of individual projects. Assignment: cultural essay drafts.

Week 6: Workshopping of essays, suggestions for revision and further reading. Guest speaker, depending on class interest and availability. 

Joanna Scutts

Joanna Scutts is a cultural critic and historian, and the author of Hotbed: Bohemian Greenwich Village and the Secret Club that Sparked Modern Feminism and The Extra Woman: How Marjorie Hillis Led a Generation of Women to Live Alone and Like It. A current board member of the National Book Critics Circle, her reviews and essays have appeared in The New York Times, Washington Post, The Guardian, The New Republic, The New Yorker online, and many other venues. She holds a PhD in English and Comparative Literature from Columbia University, and has taught classes in literature and writing at Columbia, Barnard, and NYU. 

photo credit: Sarah Klock

Testimonials

“Joanna has the rare and wonderful talent of presenting literature and writing in a way that not only brings her subjects alive, but makes them accessible and engaging for a wide spectrum of learners. Her methods of analysis and instruction provide a clear framework for both dissecting works of literature and building a creative writing toolkit, helping her students to establish strong foundational skills. In addition to creating a collaborative and supportive classroom environment, Joanna is immensely generous with her time and feedback, always going the extra mile to support students through supplementary office hours and detailed written critiques. She excels at leading seminar discussions, easily coaxing participation out of all students by drawing from a range of literary styles and related arts materials to pique various learning styles and interests.”

former student

"Joanna is a thorough and patient editor, who worked with me through broad conceptual questions and sentence-level details. Her insights helped me clarify points in my book, with a keen thoughtfulness for a non-specialist readership and she was a great support and cheerleader throughout the editing process."

Lauren Walsh author of CONVERSATIONS ON CONFLICT PHOTOGRAPHY

"I have known Joanna Scutts since graduate school (in 2002), and she is an absolutely excellent teacher and editor. In fact, she brings these things together perfectly: her years of experience as an undergrad professor and her years of experience as an editor/writer make her both meticulous and thorough. She can see immediately how an author can improve their work, and she knows how to help them to do so. She creates a stimulating and challenging classroom environment."

Susan Harlan Associate Professor of English at Wake Forest University and author of LUGGAGE and DECORATING A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN

"Exhilarating in content, magnetic in clarity, vital in its message."

Mira Ptacin author of POOR YOUR SOUL

"Joanna Scutts's account of Hillis and the cultural transformations she made possible is as witty, forthright, and elegant as its subject."

Lauren Elkin author of FLANEUSE

"This is a beautifully written, insightful, and wise account of the life and work of an important but heretofore largely unremembered writer, wit, and proto-feminist."

Rosie Schaap author of DRINKING WITH MEN