Writing Poetry About Family Histories

with Freesia McKee

Writing Poetry about Family Histories

July 11, 2023
2 Single-Day Webinars

$195.00

Writing Poetry about Family Histories is for poets of all experience levels who have family stories they feel called to tell, but don’t know where to start. Many of us ruminate on family experiences that feel puzzling, mysterious, nourishing, painful, joyful, nostalgic, or contradictory. To write about these experiences can be a reconciliation of past and present, of breaking and healing, of our origins and the futures we wish to become. We learn new things about the past when we write about it, and this is why poetry is fertile ground for family history.

In a supportive, positive atmosphere that encourages creative risk-taking and truth-telling, we will meet for two interactive sessions: a generative session and a workshop. The generative session will help us start to get our family stories down, and the workshop session will allow us to reflect on how to shape these stories into a form we might share with a larger audience.

In the first session, we will read and discuss several poems together as a launchpad for drafting our own work, using these existing poems as prompts for our own new writing. Participants will leave the workshop having written the beginnings of four new poems. There will be optional homework for expansion of these pieces over the course of the week.

In the second session, we will reconvene and have space to share work we started in the first session (and which may have expanded through revision since then). We will discuss some of the ethical questions that can come up around writing about family. We will complete the class with setting goals and intentions for continuing the projects we’ve started so that they can continue beyond this class.

Webinar Schedule

We will meet on Tuesdays from 7-9 P.M. U.S. Eastern Time.

Day 1 – July 11th

  • Introductions and check-in (5 mins)
  • Discussion of why we’re here (10 mins)
  • Read and discuss poem 1 (10 mins)
  • Writing prompt (10 mins)
  • Optional sharing (5 mins)
  • Read and discuss poem 2 (10 mins)
  • Writing prompt (10 mins)
  • Optional sharing (5 mins)
  • Short break (5 mins)
  • Read and discuss poem 3 (10 mins)
  • Writing prompt (10 mins)
  • Read and discuss poem 4 (10 mins)
  • Writing prompt (5 mins)
  • Optional sharing (5 mins)
    Closing (10 mins)

Day 2 – July 18th

  • Opening writing prompt and optional sharing (10 mins)
  • Check-in and open discussion about what’s happened for us as writers since the last session (10 mins)
  • Read and discuss other writers’ thoughts on writing about family (10 mins)
  • Discussion of ethical and emotional issues related to writing about family members (15 mins)
  • Goal-setting—what are our intentions with the poems we’ve been working on? (5 mins)
  • Short break (5 mins)
  • Read and discuss poem 1 (10 mins)
  • Writing prompt (10 mins)
  • Optional sharing (5 mins)
  • Read and discuss poem 1 (10 mins)
  • Writing prompt (10 mins)
  • Optional sharing (5 mins)
  • Closing and Q&A (15 mins)
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Student Feedback for Freesia McKee:

Freesia allowed us space to share our stories and she listened well. I liked that we were given 3 different exercises to showcase what we learned. It was a comfortable group and somewhat therapeutic to be able to share difficult subject matters. Amona White

July 11, 2023
2 Single-Day Webinars

$195.00

freesia mckee headshot

About

Freesia McKee (she/her) writes poetry, hybrid-genre work, lyric essays, memoir, flash fiction, book reviews, and literary criticism that connect personal history and place. She is headed to University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point in Fall of 2023 to serve as an Assistant Professor of English, specializing in poetry. In Fall of 2022, she served as the Fall Poet in Residence at Ripon College. She is a white settler who currently lives in western Illinois on the ancestral homelands of the Inoca nations, and she grew up in Milwaukee.

Freesia’s written work engages with radical compassion, care, community, and ecology. Freesia is currently writing a memoir-in-essays that takes place in South Florida. The book of poetry she drafted while Poet in Residence in Ripon last fall considers multiple Midwests, queerness in rural spaces, and interspecies kinship.

Freesia’s words have appeared in PlumeFugueCleaver Magazine, About Place Journal, The Ploughshares BlogSo to SpeakGertrudeBone BouquetCALYXNimrodPainted Bride QuarterlyHuffington Post, New Verse NewsLavender Review, Pleiades Book Review, and many other venues. Freesia won the 2018 Patricia Goedicke Prize in Poetry from Cutbank. In 2020, Freesia won a Christopher F. Kelly Award for Poetry through the Academy of American Poets. Headmistress Press published Freesia’s chapbook How Distant the City.

Freesia earned an MFA in poetry from Florida International University and a BA in Gender & Women’s Studies from Warren Wilson College.