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Writing Workshops

Literature in Movement: How to Write Your Travelogue with Javier Sinay (February 2025)

$495

8 Sessions

Out of stock

Once a week Wednesdays, 7:00 pm EDT - 9:00 pm EDT February 5 to March 26, 2025

Online via Zoom

This is a workshop to learn how to write a travel story or to improve one that you are writing. And to think about the concepts of story, travel, movement, home, culture, encounter and literature. The challenge of a writer who travels is to find the story—and to know how to use the material time of the trip. And the goal of this workshop is to provide tools to frame a story in a journey, narrate it, know what it is about, where it begins, where it ends, how it progresses, who is the protagonist, and how to portrait the place.

To learn some techniques, we will read diverse authors: To learn some techniques, we will read diverse authors: Bruce Chatwin, Jacek Hugo-Bader, Laura Lazzarino, Pico Iyer, Martín Caparrós, Juliana González-Rivera, Jordan Salama and Matsuo Basho. And more. I will also explain how I wrote my book Camino al Este (Way East), a story of a 9,320 mile journey. At the workshop, we will remember our trips (a visit to your family can be a trip). The travel story is a subjective genre and the travel notebook can be an experiment of narrative potentiality.

But first: we will learn to tell human stories. Traveling is a way of knowing and removing some veils of ignorance or prejudice. That is why on a trip, while we can ask ourselves about the world and others, we can also ask ourselves better about ourselves and our home. As Pico Iyer wrote, “we initially traveled to get lost; and we travel, then, to find ourselves.”

Course Outline:

  • Session I: What is travelogue? From the 19th century to today. What is a journey—and what is not?
    Readings: Why We Travel by Pico Iyer, The Footprints of Bashō, Hearn, and Borges on the Roads of Japan by Javier Sinay
  • Session II: How to recognize a good story in the chaos of reality—and make the most of it? (And, what’s a story?) Calibrating your point of view as a travel writer.
    Readings: Under the Sun: The Letters of Bruce Chatwin (excerpt), In Patagonia by Bruce Chatwin (excerpt)
  • Session III: The big challenge: How to use the material time of the trip? Testing your narrative in a travel journal.
    Readings: The Tao of Travel by Paul Theroux (excerpt)
    Instagram @losviajesdenena by Laura Lazzarino
    Instagram @acrobatadelcamino by Juan P. Villarino
  • Session IV: Writing travel scenes: experiences, details and moments.
    Readings: White Fever by Jacek Hugo-Bader, Rio de Janeiro by Jan Morris
  • Session V: Travelogue and travel writing: genres of the first person. The narrative work of finding something new and understand it. How to find the right tone for your travelogue?
    Readings: The Footprints of Bashō, Hearn, and Borges on the Roads of Japan by Javier Sinay, Silence in the Age of Noise by Erling Kagge (excerpt)
  • Session VI: Abroad vs Home. Why travel writing can also be something like: ‘Adventures One Block Away From Home.’
    Readings: Why We Travel by Pico Iyer, Hawaii: Islands upon Islands by Paul Theroux
  • Session VII: Travelogue as an excuse to write about many other things and topics. Landscape and mindscape.
    Reading: Atlas by Jorge Luis Borges
  • Session VIII: The material journey and the spiritual journey. Revision and editing of a story about a trip.
    Reading: Travel Writings by Matsuo Basho (excerpt)

This course is held online via Zoom.

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Led by

  • IMG_5295 - Javier Sinay

    Javier Sinay

    Javier Sinay

    Javier Sinay is an author and a journalist. His books include Camino al Este, Cuba Stone (in collaboration), Los crimenes de Moisés Ville (published by Restless Books as The Murders of Moises Ville in 2022), and Sangre joven, which won the Premio Rodolfo Walsh at Semana Negra in Gijón, Spain. In 2015 he won the award of Fundación Gabo for his story “Fast. Furious. Dead” published in Rolling Stone. He lives in Buenos Aires.