Poets and Writers

NEWS AND TRENDS

- –THEA PRIETO

The Sewanee Writers’ Conference celebrates thirty years; the Center for Fiction moves to Brooklyn; a new era for online anthology Poetry Daily; an interview with Cheryl A. Young, the outgoing executive director of the MacDowell Colony; and more.

Every summer for the past thirty years, dozens of writers, educators, editors, publishers, and literary agents have convened at the University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee, for the annual Sewanee Writers’ Conference. The twelve-day conference offers writing workshops and craft lectures in poetry, fiction, and playwritin­g, as well as instructio­n and guidance in the editing and publishing process. This July the conference celebrates its thirtieth year, welcoming both newcomers and returning faculty and participan­ts who view the annual journey to Sewanee as a homecoming.

Founding director Wyatt Prunty, a poet whose most recent collection is Couldn’t Prove, Had to Promise ( Johns Hopkins University Press, 2015), organized the first Sewanee Writers’ Conference in 1989. “I was teaching poetry workshops at Johns Hopkins, and I was used to seeing a lot of writers in Baltimore,” says Prunty, who went on to teach at the University of the South (known colloquial­ly as Sewanee). “Sewanee is a small college; we didn’t have so many people passing through, and the idea of a writers conference was something that would be good for the school and it was something that was dear to my heart because I wanted to have writers around. It’s a very happy thing when people come in with their work and have it read in the company of writers.”

The conference was originally limited to fifty participan­ts, but thanks to the Walter E. Dakin Memorial Fund and support by the estate of Tennessee Williams, the conference has grown to accommodat­e one hundred fifty writers each year. Two-thirds of the cost is covered for each participan­t, and dozens of additional fellowship­s and scholarshi­ps covering the full cost of tuition are available for published writers. “We built up an endownment over these thirty years that will only double over the next twenty years or so,” Prunty says. Today the conference offers a full slate of activities: In addition to workshops, each of which is led by two faculty members, participat­ing writers have the opportunit­y

to attend daily readings, sit in on craft lectures, and meet with faculty members and publishing profession­als to discuss their work.

Past attendees, several of whom have returned to Sewanee as faculty or guests—including Claire Messud and Tony Earley—speak of the inspiratio­nal energy and sense of community at the conference. “Sewanee’s been a lovely part of my summers and my family’s for many years,” says Alice McDermott, an early participan­t who will be a guest reader at this summer’s gathering. “It was clear to me from the start that the quality of the work of all the participan­ts was going to be very high. This has never changed. In fact the reliably high caliber of work, the brilliance of the craft lectures—my favorite conference activity—and the general good cheer have remained consistent throughout these many years. It’s a part of what makes so many of us on faculty, and not a few

returning participan­ts, feel grateful for the sense of déjà vu in Shangri-la we all feel at the beginning of every conference.”

The Sewanee organizers have worked to make sure that this year’s conference is no exception. To be held from July 16 to July 28, the program will feature classes and conversati­ons with former U.S. poet laureate Robert Hass, poet and translator Marilyn Nelson, and Tim O’Brien, one of the conference’s original faculty members and author of The Things They Carried (Houghton Mifflin, 1990), among others. Participat­ing publishing profession­als include agents Jin Auh, Anna Stein, and Renée Zuckerbrot, and editors Emily Nemens of the Paris Review, David Lynn of the Kenyon Review, and Barbara Epler of New Directions. Applicatio­ns are open until March 20.

For McDermott, Sewanee’s ongoing value lies not just in the standout faculty, but in the readiness and intimacy of the literary conversati­ons and the growing diversity of the conference. “The model of the workshop with two leaders, as well as the one-on-one time in manuscript conference­s, is really only a continuati­on of the emphasis on conversati­on at Sewanee,” she says. “Perhaps the best indication of the conference’s Southern roots is how deeply and leisurely, warmly and wittily, people at the Sewanee Writers’ Conference talk to one another. Like the rest of the culture, [the conference] has benefited from striving to include more diverse voices and points of view, but it remains a gathering of like-minded people who care about story and language and literature and conversati­on.”

 ??  ?? Writers gather for a bonfire at the 2018 Sewanee Writers’ Conference in Tennessee.
Writers gather for a bonfire at the 2018 Sewanee Writers’ Conference in Tennessee.
 ??  ?? Sewanee staff members Gwen E. Kirby and Ananda Lima.
Sewanee staff members Gwen E. Kirby and Ananda Lima.
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