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Volume 5, December 2004
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The Writer
Walking the Dog:
Creative Writing Practice and Everyday Life |
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TONY WILLIAMS |
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Abstract |
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Creative writing happens in and alongside the writer’s
everyday life, but little attention has been paid to the
relationship between the two and the contribution made by
everyday activities in enabling and shaping creative
practice. The work of the anthropologist Tim Ingold supports
the argument that creative writing research must consider
the bodily lived experience of the writer in order fully to
understand and develop creative practice. Dog-walking is one
activity which shapes my own creative practice, both by its
influence on my social and cultural identity and by
providing a time and space for specific acts instrumental to
the writing process to occur. The complex socio-cultural
context of rural dog-walking may be examined both through
critical reflection and creative work. The use of
dog-walking for reflection and unconscious creative thought
is considered in relation to Romantic models of writing and
walking through landscape. While dog-walking is a specific
activity with its own peculiarities, the study provides a
case study for creative writers to use in developing their
own practice in relation to other everyday activities from
running and swimming to shopping, gardening and washing up.
Keywords: walking,
dog-walking, creative writing, everyday life, practice,
Wordsworth, Romantic, Ingold |
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