Sudden Fiction Project


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Sudden Fiction Project

 

Write a work of sudden fiction that relates to your own ethnic/regional/marginalized identity. 

 

Directions:

 

  Excellent  Satisfactory  Developing 
CONTENT: 
  • Narrative is concentrated around a single event or idea. 
  • Narrative includes powerful symbols or metaphors related to point about ethnic/regional/marginalized identity.
  • Narrative has broader implications. 
  • Narrative has some sort of focus.
  • Narrative talks about identity without any clear symbols or metaphors.

 

  • Narrative lacks focus.
  • Narrative does not address ethnic or regional identity. 
STYLE: 
  • Narrative is compact. Each word is carefully chosen. 
  •  Narrative has a clear focus or message but remains open-ended.
  • Narrative is highly readable and engaging. 
  • Narrative creates a sense of a moment or idea rather than a traditional plot. 
  • Narrative is short without being compact. Words have some thought.
  • Narrative makes some point.
  • Narrative is interesting.  
  • Narrative is not written in Sudden Fiction style. 
IDENTITY 
  • Narrative relates to ethnic/regional/marginalized identity of the author.
  • Narrative celebrates that identity and demonstrates something distinctive about identity.
  • Narrative  
  • Narrative addresses identity through characters, situation, or setting. 
  • No clear relationship to ethnic/regional/marginalized identity. 

 

 

Defining Sudden Fiction

 

Distinguishing between "Flash" and "Sudden" Fiction

"Flash" Fiction:

Thomas, James, and Robert Shapard, eds. Flash Fiction Forward: 80 Very Short Stories. New York: Norton, 2006.

"Sudden" Fiction:

Shapard, Robert, and James Thomas, eds. New Sudden Fiction: Short-Short Stories from America and Beyond. New York: Norton, 2007.

 

Updated: 24 July 2007

Retrieved from http://www.ar.cc.mn.us/stankey/Literat/Fiction/FlashSud.htm 2-13-19