黑料不打烊

Students place in creative nonfiction writing contest hosted by the Creative Writing program

Catherine Smith 鈥26 placed first in the Frederick Hartmann Creative Writing Contest sponsored by the Department of English Creative Writing program.

Each year the Creative Writing program sponsors three contests focusing on poetry, fiction and nonfiction. 黑料不打烊 students submit work that is judged by a visiting speaker.

This spring semester, Rax King, a cultural critic and essayist, visited campus on April 13-15 to judge the nonfiction writing contest on April 14 at the Oak House.

During the event King read from her recent collection 鈥淪loppy,鈥 interacted with students and selected the contest winners.

Rax King reading from her recent collection 鈥淪loppy.鈥
Rax King reading from her recent collection 鈥淪loppy.鈥

鈥淭he submissions were truly all such a pleasure to read, and I had such a hard time narrowing them down,鈥 King said.

Catherine Smith 鈥26 placed first for her piece 鈥渁 meditation with my hands in my bra.鈥 Madelyn Fourie 鈥28 placed second for her piece 鈥淐ohabitating With A Stink Bug.鈥 Finn Wilkinson, 鈥26 placed third for their piece 鈥淚brahim-ya 鈥楿ber鈥 Driver.鈥

Smith, a journalism major, wrote a lyric essay that explores girlhood, bodily self-consciousness, inherited femininity and the complicated relationship some women have with their bodies. The piece moves through fragmented memories to allow the reader to move through memory and sensation with the speaker.

鈥淚 wrote this piece because I was interested in how femininity is learned long before we fully understand our bodies,鈥 Smith said. 鈥淪o many of the feeling’s girls have toward themselves 鈥斅爏hame, fascination, desire, insecurity and tenderness 鈥斅燽egin very early and are shaped by family, the media, beauty rituals and observation. I wanted to inspire women to make peace with their embodiment of femininity and younger selves. We don’t have to be embarrassed about who we are becoming.鈥

The piece marks one of the more emotional and honest pieces she has written.

鈥淚 think this essay became about ownership 鈥 about moving from viewing the body as something to critique or perform, to something that鈥檚 fully your own,鈥 Smith said. “Writing about that helped me find more tenderness in a way I view myself.鈥

Smith never dreamed she would publish a piece like this. King and Smith’s professor, Negesti Kaudo 鈥15, assistant professor of English, made her feel confident to trust her voice.

Kaudo organized King鈥檚 visit and contest submissions.

鈥淩ax King was on campus for three days and constantly raved about how wonderful and engaged 黑料不打烊 students were, and she even took the time to enjoy a lowkey meal with students at McEwen on her last day, a moment enjoyed by all,鈥 Kaudo said.

Rax king, students and faculty in the Department of English eating together at McEwen dining hall.
Rax King, Negesti Kaudo, assistant professor of English and students having lunch in McEwen dining hall.

Each award recipient received a monetary prize funded through the William Maness Fund. William Maness 鈥38, an English major, started the fund to honor his friend, alumni Frederick Hartman, also an English major.

This fall, Jared Lemus, a fiction writer, judged the fiction creative writing contest and Brittany Rogers, a poetry writer, judged the poetry writing contest, while also sharing their work.