Students with Style

Though we don't actually use this iconic book, we hope my course ENG 265-Style still does it proud.

Though we don’t actually use this iconic book, we hope my course ENG 265-Style still does it proud.

So many different “styles,” depending on what you’re writing and for whom.  Yet in ENG 265 – Style, I’ve tried to define a “standard” style, a style of writing you’d read in some of our greatest publications—The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Harper’s, Esquire, Vanity Fair, the Virginia Quarterly, Smithsonian….  These so-called “general interest” magazines or quarterlies, address an intelligent, curious audience, and what they publish features a “style” not only deep with fact and insight, but also with sentences lean, varied, and interesting.   Sentences that move.  It’s real-world writing. People actually read it, and writers get paid for it, as opposed to much of the academic writing we make students do in college.  There we valorize the rational, clear, linear—not necessarily bad all the time, but often dull, and finally not as clear as it could be.  Writing with style, this writing circles, jumps around, suddenly stops and starts, seems random (it’s really not)—just like great conversations with friends, where we hardly ever talk like this: “So-and-So, I’d like to talk to you about three things: 1)…2)…3)….”  We don’t love that.  But often I’ve heard someone say, “I love him. He’s so random.”

In ENG 265-Style, we read the greats—James Baldwin, E.B. White, Wole Soyinka, Edward Hoagland, Junichiro Tanazaki—and the very, very goods—Bonnie Rough, Jeff Lockwood, Jonah Lehrer, Susan Casey—but my students have also produced some of my favorite writing.  I regret I haven’t saved all these pieces over many years of teaching this course, but below are a few of them, given for your pleasure and so my current students can look at samples of what their peers have created.  Many of the pieces below are drafts, but you can see their incipient fineness, their style.  They’re included this way on purpose, so students can see something very important: how things begin.  Sometimes I’ve left my comments in, usually in red, and in one case a comment another student made in the class’s workshopping process.  Enjoy.

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Frank London Brown: Can White Folks Get It?

Frank London Brown's "Trumbull Park"So well-received was Frank London Brown’s first novel Trumbull Park (1959), that critic Sterling Stuckey wrote: “…along with Lorraine Hansberry’s Raisin in the Sun and Ossie Davis’ Purlie Victorious, [it] signaled the advent of a new and brilliant flowering of creative effort on the part of Negro writers.”  Also praised by Stuckey as that rare combination of writer and activist, Brown had based Trumbull Park on his real-life experience of moving from Chicago’s South Side into the Trumbull Park housing project near Gary, partly as a show of solidarity with poor people.  In blunt, straightforward style he tells the all-too-familiar tale of a family who endures not just the harassment and “Get out, nigger!” taunting, but also stone after stone, bomb after bomb of the mobs and individuals trying to drive them away.  The novel exposed thousands of people to the degrading racism and living conditions of slums.  Unfortunately, the novel remains ultra-pertinent today.

Also unfortunately, his birth and death dates—1927 to 1962—show Brown, like Lorraine Hansberry, died terribly early.  His second novel The Mythmakers was published posthumously.  During his life he published many articles and stories in such periodicals as Downbeat, Ebony, the Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times, Negro Digest, and the Chicago Review.  Besides writing, he worked as a machinist and union organizer, and was director of the Union Leadership Program at the University of Chicago.  He enjoyed some fame as a jazz singer as well, appearing with Thelonius Monk not only in Chicago but also at New York’s legendary Five Spot.

Of all his work, however, the short story “McDougal” has received the most—nearly unanimous—high praise, and I included it in my book Black Writing from Chicago.  Here Frank London Brown’s gift for dialogue and precise, dramatic scene-setting reached its peak.  It also explored the possibilities that people could relate and empathize across the terrible racial boundaries he spent his short life not only writing about, but also trying to help everyone overcome in daily life.

“McDougal” brilliantly describes a moment in a jazz combo’s performance in just under 700 words, and the McDougal of the story’s title is, in fact, a white man—one whose musical authority comes from suffering, a suffering that bridges racial gaps as Frank London Brown believed shared suffering could.  Just before he takes his solo, two of his fellow musicians in the group talk about him.  The drummer, Jake, leans over his drums and whispers to pianist Percy R. Brookins, “That cat sure looks beat don’t he?”  His wife is pregnant again: number four.  Furthermore, as Brookins replies, “Man, that cat has suffered for that brown skin woman,” adding, “Do you know none of the white folks’ll rent to him now?”

“Why hell yes…will they rent to me?” retorts Little Jug, the bass player, but finally he says:  “…he knows the happenings…I mean about where we get it, you dig?  I mean like with Leola and those kids and Forty Seventh Street and those jive landlords, you dig?  The man’s been burnt, Percy.  Listen to that somitch—listen to him!”   As he solos, McDougal closes his eyes.  The story ends: “…he did not see the dark woman with the dark cotton suit that ballooned away from the great bulge of her stomach.  He didn’t see her ease into a chair at the back of the dark smoky room.  He didn’t see the smile on her face or the sweat upon her flat nose.”

  In 2020 Frank London Brown was inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame.  For an article on that, which focuses more on his novel Trumbull Park, go HERE.

 Go to a list of Black Writers on this site.

 Go to the Black Writing from Chicago main page.

Posted in Black Writers, Chicago Writing | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

2015 Fall Festival of Independent Film

Naperville Independent Film Festival logoCELLULOID logo

 

AND

 

Join us for the 2015 Fall Festival of Independent Film.  For the fifth straight year North Central College is one of the venues for the Naperville Independent Film Festival (NIFF), now in it’s 8th year. Celluloid, the college’s film club, co-hosts the event with NIFF.

*** 39 FILMS from the U.S. and 13 other countries ***

Dot 1SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13th through FRIDAY, the 18th.

7:00 and 9:00 pm, on the campus of North Central College in SMITH HALL (second floor Old Main, 30 N. Brainard, Naperville). TICKETS: $5 per session / $25 for a week’s pass to all sessions.

Dot 1SCHEDULES: 

——— View or download a SHORT SCHEDULE.

         ——— View or download a FULL SCHEDULE.

 

Being An Angel, a film featured in the 2015 Naperville Independent Film Festival

Being an Angel, a film from Spain, featured in this year’s festival.

This year’s festival features the best crop of films ever, especially many award-winners from the ECU, The European Independent Film Festival, held in Paris and commonly referred to as “Europe’s Sundance.”   To get into the ECU films had to have won awards in other festivals in Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East, so all ECU films are already double winners and not part of official NIFF competition.  The films—mostly shorts and animations—come from the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Denmark, Singapore, New Zealand, Saudi Arabia, and more.  Also, many other German entries not from the ECU came in, and when NIFF judges saw their high quality they decided they not only had to be seen, but also had to be official NIFF selections eligible to compete for festival awards.  Thursday and Friday nights will feature these German films starting at 7:00 p.m. (There will be no 9:00 p.m. sessions these two nights.)

Come see the potential star actors, directors, cinematographers, film writers, and editors of the future.  Come support Independent Film.

 Go the Lead Post for The Fall Festival of Independent Film, where you can link to schedules and posts about all previous festivals.

 Go to the Naperville Independent Film Festival website.

 Go to Celluloid’s Facebook page and join the group.

Posted in Arts | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment