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Creative writingI have come to believe,
reluctantly, that creative is an abused word, abused to the point where it has become divisive. Imaginative writing is at once more concise but more exclusive than creative writing. But do we really mean that some writers are creative and the rest of them are uncreative? Isn’t the difference between creative and non-creative at this level largely the difference between good, thoughtful writing and bad, thoughtless writing I see no division in the integrity of practice between our best novelists and poets and the best of our scientists or social scientists. Sometimes they are the same person. I
wish we had greater freedom to create university degrees that in their turn
created Renaissance people, and that did not encourage suspicion about our capacity for being good at more than one pursuit in our lives. The freedoms and opportunities of ‘self-inclusive scholarship (see Chapter
Seven
) ought to be extended to our students.
Writing Across the Disciplines is a hugely important movement a lot of the energy for it came from people who cared about writing. Creative Writing Across the Disciplines seems a natural step the interdisciplinary energy and focus might come from the discipline of creative writing. The spectre of specialisation has now crept into many school curricula, and creativity is also under threat there. It is now as important for creative practice to be reintroduced in high schools as it is in universities. To this end, I wish writers could make themselves even more active on the borders between knowledge systems in universities and high schools. I see a division in many writers and would- be writers between desire and achievement, between promise and execution.
Artistic insecurity
emerges from that friction, and feeds the desire to keep the creative writing territory free of competitors from other nonliterary fields, and even from younger writers. Our job is to close the fault line between a writer’s perfectly natural velleity and their desired action. However, in doing this excellent work, I wish that writers would make an even greater effort to open our educational work to people from nontraditional literary backgrounds,
such as science and business, and not reinforce prejudices born of mistrust or insecurity. Taking creative nonfiction teaching into science and business is the obvious way to get inside their respective Troys if that is where one wishes to create and challenge audiences.
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