The Lit Fest Experience
When Dr. Haugen invited me to Literature fest 2013 I gratefully accepted. I have always enjoyed reading and even dabbling with my own writing, but I have found myself in three of Dr. Haugen's classes this semester. One of those classes I am lucky enough to be taking with her is the creative writing of poetry class. Before this class I have appreciated poetry, but had a certain distaste in my mouth when it came to the discipline. She has shown me the light, and not only how to appreciate certain poems but their is much more written out there more than just the classics. Not only that, but i enjoy writing it now, no longer is looking at poetry a chore.
Thus, when I left for Athens not only did I pack some notebooks, pencils, and extra clothes, but also a new found appreciation. I have been to Athens before, so the campus did not amaze or surprise me. However, I do thoroughly enjoy each visit, as the town seems so inviting. For example, during our down time we explored a local music shop. Outside of this shop were a couple of musicians sitting on a bench with guitars next to them. As the rest of our group walked in, Jessica Conley approached them asking them to play. With smiles on their faces, they quickly started up a song.
To be honest, I did have my apprehensions about attending the trip. I had never heard of many of the speakers (perhaps that damages my intellectual image), and I really only knew Corey Zornes. I was nervous that I would be out of place, perhaps the lectures would all be dry and boring, and I would be the odd man out on the trip. The actual events were much to the contrary, though, as the first speaker was my favorite of the entire festival.
Dean young and his poetry, which was described as a lightning rod were hilarious. One poem in particular managed to place the author inside the poem with a series of self references, almost Vonnegut-esc (yes I recently read my first Vonnegut novel, and Im stuck relating everything to the master satirist). The next speaker, Bonnie Jo Campbell was a realist to the heart. In order to dig up creative material she would follow real people around, observing and asking them questions, interviewing them and their family in order to get to the bottom of their person and what irks them. This brand of investigative creative writing allows her to give an incredibly fresh insight to her readers via her writing. Sure, she has her little obsessions (Mathmatics, meth addiction, Y2k) but more than any other author their she was authentic. More than that, she was incredibly approachable. The day of her lecture she approached Corey and I saying "Awesome dudes! We are all wearing plaid" This small observation illustrates just how attuned to the everyman this author has become. She seemed elated at the fact that our group of students were from a small town in whatever its name is, Ohio. She even seemed truly flattered when Jessica announced her "girl crush" for her.
The headliner, Robert Olen Butler, was an excellent writer. His reading was truly insightful. The creativity of this man is astounding. All that being said, he came off as slightly pompous, a bit condescending, and what some would call a jerk. Perhaps his Pulitzer prize has puffed his chest out (it would mine), but him being rude to Dean Young during his lecture was unfitting of a man of his abilities. To his credit, he gave a very vivid lecture about how art comes from the unconscious mind. "Life is chaos" according to Butler, and no matter how chaotic your art seems, there is always an order underneath of it that readers and onlookers wish and must find as we all want to find order in our own chaotic world. He also asserted that the actual aesthetic reading is of main importance, and that analysis is secondary and can in fact be damaging to the art. I disagree with this, as analysis can help us not only understand the work and the viewpoint of the author, but the chaos of our own worlds.
Sarah Lindsay and Diana Ackerman were both good writers, however, their works were not my cup of tea. They both had a very naturalist feel to their works, Lindsay dealing mostly with the animal world and Ackerman dealing with both animals and her husband's illness. Diana's voice was soothing, though, her short story about the whales took me to a groggy part of my mind between dreaming and awareness.
Besides the readings and lectures, getting to know new friends was great. I feel as though I drove home now knowing people that I will be close to for some time. Over various meals, board games, tours of both campus and the old insane asylum, and drinks, we struck new bonds. Isnt that what college is all about? So I can only thank Dr. Haugen for inviting me once again, I truly enjoyed my time with all of you who went, and I cant wait for Haley to assemble next year's trip which I am more than ready to attend!
Inspired

















Truly Inspired on Day Two
Breanna Martin
One the second day of Lit Fest 2013 I found myself completely engaged in the lecture given by Robert Olen Butler, one of many great authors in attendance. Many things he spoke about sent gears turning in my head. From "Literature is not meant to be understood," to "Finding your thrum". His words made me see how people fail to feel because the "unknown is scary", and how writers potentially kill their minds by over thinking instead of feeling. Knowing literature doesn't mean you understand how it works and what it means, knowing literature means feeling it with every sense.
For example the word sunlight by literal definition means light emitted by the Sun. You understand the definition and you know what it means, however to use your senses you know that sunlight brings warmth to your body and brightens the day. You feel the word instead of understand it. Words written are simply words written when you understand there literal meaning. When words written are felt they become a story.
"Thrum is what happens when you strum a guitar." This is how Bulter described what you need to become a true writer. For people that understand the word thrum they know what happens when the guitar is strummed. When a guitar is strummed and you feel the vibration and you hear the note and hear the story behind it, that is when you become the artist. Not when you learn how to play the guitar but when you allow the guitar to speak through you.
His words and beliefs will stay with me. I was truly inspired by his lecture. I cannot wait to read his books.
If You Want Happy Endings, Read Cookbooks -- Dean Young
by Hayley
I wonder if my LitFest friends have noticed that I have written these blogs so as to steal all the great lines! Alas, I will not apologize for my excellent note-taking skills.
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Photo from: http://www.english.ohiou.edu/cw/litfest/ |
"You don't have to worry how stupid you are because you are in collaboration with genius, and the genius is language."
"Poems need to assert themselves as poetry; they need to be in conversation with the craft. The most essential aspect of poetry is the line. The poem's fidelity to the subject cannot be greater than the poem's fidelity to craft. The subject is beside the point."
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Photo from: http://www.english.ohiou.edu/cw/litfest/ |
Diane Ackerman:
"Words are the passkeys to our souls -- without them, we can't share the enormity of our lives."
And Sarah Lindsey:
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Photo from: http://www.english.ohiou.edu/cw/litfest/ |
Note to self: WOW! Check her out!
"Don't be Judgmental: It Turns Off Rumination" -- Bonnie Jo Campbell
by Hayley
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Author photo from http://www.english.ohiou.edu/cw/litfest/ |
Unassuming, yes, but not without some important things to say, like: "Don't be a big fat fake as academics. Don't write about what you think seems interesting, figure out what you are really interested in." She shared her work ethic: "Never stop working on a story" -- even if it takes you 24 years! She doesn't start a story until she "cares." She believes, "If you work to write honestly and have the deepest respect for the people of your stories, then you are going to be just fine. It's when you try to cheat, when you judge or preach, that you will get into trouble." And finally,
"Seek out everything interesting.
Give a damn about everyone.
Live a life of adventure.
Live a life of caring."
Not bad advice for all of us.
"The House of Fiction is Very Large and Has Many Rooms" -- Robert Olen Butler
by Hayley
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Author photo from: http://www.english.ohiou.edu/cw/litfest/ |
Butler says he wrote 12 plays, 44 short stories, and 5 novels before "finally writing well."
"Sometimes the worst thing that can happen to you is to get published as an undergrad." I get it, but I don't agree.
"What you write needs to be fundamentally grounded in the idea that art does not come from the mind. It comes from the place where you dream, from your unconscious, from your white-hot center." Ok, but what if you're sleep-deprived? Seriously though, I agree that my best work stems from somewhere inside that I don't have to think about too much. The best images in my poems are gifts from my unconscious mind. But it's my mind, I believe, that figures out how to put these images to good use.
"THRUM"
"No one who wrote well ever wrote drunk."
"Fiction is the art form of human yearning. Plot is yearning challenged and thwarted." Nice, Butler. Nice. I will quote this in my literature courses when I am committing the "fault" of literature professors everywhere by asking, "What does the story mean?"
Lit Fest the collective experience...The Photos
Michelle Bentley
Lit Fest the collective experience...
LIt Fest Day 2...
By Michelle Bentley
Day 2
Bonnie Jo Campbell
The Beginning of a Memory Fest
By Michelle Dotts
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How many OUS students can fit on a Baker Center escalator?* |
Ohio University Athens Campus Through the Eyes of a Small Town Girl
Breanna Martin
Lit Fest 2013 was a great experience. I had never been to the Athens Campus before, so this trip was two experiences in one for me. I have much to say about the Campus itself. Though there was not enough time in the three days I was there to see the campus in full, I did enjoy the many tours. There was so much to see from the Maya Lin artwork "Input", to the art museum, to the many shops and restaurants down Court Street. From the view point of a small town girl who finds the southern campus to be large in itself, the Athens campus was too much to take in at once.
One of my favorite observations was the diversity among the students attending the Athens campus. The many languages heard as I walked down the halls and sidewalks and streets. The beauty of so many people from different corners of the world all coming together with one common interest: Education. For so many people from different cultures wanting to study the many fields offered at Ohio University. It just blows me away that they find my little corner of the world worth visiting to study.
All and all I hope to return to the Athens Campus to see all of it someday. However, I believe I will stay at my small campus and enjoy the little things. I just want to thank everyone that made this experience possible.
All I Can Say
Corey
I really enjoyed my time at the Lit Fest and my time spent back in Athens with some new friends that I have found. I always enjoy the opportunity to go back to Athens, whatever the occasion may be, because it is always guaranteed that it will be interesting; there haven't really been any trips to Athens where you can go back home with the absence of a new story to tell. This was one of the first times that a trip to Athens has had me come back feeling better than before I went, a feeling that is often majestic in its occurrence due to the implications of the adventure.
Previously, I never had much interest in poetry, contemporary poetry at least; I didn't respect the lack of rhyme. I always felt more enamored towards songwriters, those who had something of substance to say and could say it in a way that people of all sorts could enjoy. However, hearing poems from Dean Young and just a few from Bonnie Jo Campbell made me write some of my own while in Athens, and I realized that when you don't force yourself to rhyme every line with another, you are freed up to create more effective imagery. So here is a slightly altered version of one of the few I wrote at Lit Fest, intended to be humorous for those who were there to understand but possibly social commentary for those who were not.
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"Walking on the grassy coffins" * |
I felt rude walking on the grassy coffins of the deceased patients.
But if I was numbered, not named, they'd do the same.
Just to say they've been there.
I enjoyed my stay in a room with a champagne bucket,
filled with things less impressive than intended.
Call it a cultural thing.
"I doubt real champagne exists in Athens anyways",
Says a man in a black turtleneck.
Using magical eyebrows for emphasis.
The main events, critically acclaimed.
(Meaning they didn't sell).
Inspired me to write a poem.
So they were effective, nonetheless.
Their poems took me away from Shel Silverstein.
One of the only poets I enjoyed before.
Though the list still seems thin.
I now have added two more.
And all I can say is thank you.
*picture added by Hayley
Lit Fest Inspiration 101
By Michelle Bentley
Lit fest Day 1... Dean Young
By Michelle Bentley
And Lit Fest Begins...
A photo:
A link: http://www.english.ohiou.edu/cw/litfest/
and two quotes:
"As long as there's sky, someone will be falling from it." -- Dean Young
"You thought that love could mend all broken things; wasn't that the business of love?" -- Bonnie Jo Campbell
Lit Fest 2013
On Wednesday, April 10th through Friday, April 12th, Ohio University Southern students will be attending the Spring Literary Festival in Athens, Ohio. Follow their adventure as they blog live from the event. New posts will appear under 2013 Athens Lit Fest.
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- The Lit Fest Experience
- Inspired
- Truly Inspired on Day Two
- If You Want Happy Endings, Read Cookbooks -- Dean ...
- "Don't be Judgmental: It Turns Off Rumination" -- ...
- "The House of Fiction is Very Large and Has Many R...
- Lit Fest the collective experience...The Photos
- LIt Fest Day 2...
- The Beginning of a Memory Fest
- Ohio University Athens Campus Through the Eyes of ...
- All I Can Say
- Lit Fest Inspiration 101
- Lit fest Day 1... Dean Young
- And Lit Fest Begins...
- Lit Fest 2013
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April
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