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Writing Workshops

Crafting Personal Narratives with Zaina Arafat (Sold Out)

$150

2 Sessions

Out of stock

Once a week Mondays, 6:30 pm EDT - 9:30 pm EDT March 14 to March 21, 2022

Online via Zoom

This workshop has reached its capacity. To join the waitlist, please email Erich Slimak at [email protected].


“I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear,” Joan Didion once wrote. Indeed, personal essays and identity-based narratives allow us to make sense of our lived experiences. But have you ever sat down and tried to translate a raw, emotional experience into an essay or story, only to find that what you’ve written just feels like a recounting of that experience, an anecdote without any deeper resonance?

In this workshop, we will learn how to create pieces that speak to both the specific and the universal, and how to craft personal experiences into artful, layered pieces. We will also examine the ways in which distinguishing your unique voice can help to establish your platform as a writer and build your writing career, along with the process of pitching, submitting, and getting your work into print. Writers of varying levels can benefit from this course; those who are new to the form, as well as those who have a substantial publishing record and seek to deepen their writing practice.

Capacity: 20

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Led by

  • ZainaArafat

    Zaina Arafat

    Zaina Arafat

    Zaina Arafat is an LGBTQ Arab-American writer based in Brooklyn. Her debut novel, You Exist Too Much, won a 2021 Lambda Literary Award and was named Roxane Gay’s favorite book of 2020. Her essays and articles have appeared in publications including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Atlantic, VICE, BuzzFeed, Granta, Guernica, the Believer, Harper’s Bazaar, and Virginia Quarterly Review. She holds an MA in international affairs from Columbia University and an MFA from the University of Iowa. In recognition of her service through writing to both immigrant and LGBTQ communities, she was awarded the Arab Women/Migrants from the Middle East fellowship at Jack Jones Literary Arts, and named a Champion of Pride by the Advocate. She currently teaches at Barnard College and The School of the New York Times.