Summer Writing Program

AcademicsSummer Writing Program

The Summer Writing Program at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics goes beyond the focus of craft approach, pushing participants to bend genres, take risks, and enliven the creative writing process.

In a creative writing program that is a “Golden Standard of it’s kind” (NEA grant committee) students, poets, fiction writers, musicians, editors, translators, Buddhist teachers, performance artists, and more meet for three transformative weeks on Naropa University’s campus in Boulder, Colorado.

Here, we invoke and continue the “Outrider” lineage — a legacy of revolutionary scholarship and counter-poetics that is an ongoing experiment in creative freedom.

Whether your medium is poetry, fiction, experimental theater, or a combination of genres, Summer Writing Program will help you flush with creative truth-seeking to refine/find what is at the heArt of your craft.

Change the composition of your summer, your work, and your life. 

If you would like to participate in continuing the legacy of Summer Writing Program, please consider making a charitable donation to SWP the Summer Writing Program Gift Fund today!

History of the Summer Writing Program

The first Summer Writing Program drew over 1,300 students to Boulder, transforming the small mountain town into “a magnet of learning and exploration and promise” (East-West Journal, September 1974). Allen Ginsberg, Anne Waldman, John Cage, Amiri Baraka, and other great thinkers of the time came to read their work, teach poetry writing classes, and engage in community with students from around the country. The success of that first Summer Writing Program was the impetus for the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics.

Grounded in Naropa’s contemplative mission, both the Jack Kerouac School and the Summer Writing Program are committed to social change through contemplation and community. As champions of experimental, open-genre writing, the Summer Writing Program has, since its very first days, sought to revolutionize the act of creative writing.

The Summer Writing Program is open to any interested participant, though it also serves as a third semester for Jack Kerouac School MFA degree students. The palpable sense of excitement from that first summer has carried through to each subsequent Summer Writing Program.

As poet and SWP faculty member CAConrad said, “I leave here filled with information that changes my life.” We think you will, too.

3

Weeks of Writing
And Community

7

Summer Writing Program Scholarships, Awarded to 20+ Participants Each Year

47

Transformative
Summers

Creative Writing in Community Since 1974

Each year, the three weeks of Naropa’s Summer Writing Program are inspired by a central concept. All courses — whether fiction, experimental prose, poetry, or performance — tie into that overarching theme.

Past Summer Writing Programs have included 2019’s Against Atrocity, which included courses such as Poetics of Political Change with Solmaz Sharif or Stress Compositions, a multi-media workshop with artist Ronaldo Wilson. 2018’s theme, The Capital-Ocene, included workshops with Hoa Nguyen (Matrix Mix: Archetypes and Myth) and Tonya Foster (Activating the Afterlife).

The Summer Writing Program offers three distinct forums for learning:

  • Writing Workshops with Guest and Resident Faculty
  •  
  • Readings, Lectures, and Panels
  •  
  • 1:1 Conferences

Bare Knuckle Warrior Poetics

With a lineage rooted in poets of the Beat Generation, the Summer Writing Program holds at its center ideals of social justice and social change. Guest faculty member Janine Pommy Vega reminds us that Jack Kerouac School co-founder Allen Ginsberg “was a major proponent of ‘bare knuckle warrior poetics.’ That means you hit the ground running, you see [what’s happening], and you do something about it. What is going to be your role here?”

The Summer Writing Program asks poets and writers to recognize that they’re writing not in a vacuum, but in the larger context of social issues. In the words of co-founder Anne Waldman, the program “is here to help wake you up.”

A Welcoming Community

In college creative writing programs, a sense of community is essential. Few creative writing programs foster writing communities as supportive and welcoming as Naropa’s. The Summer Writing Program, like the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics, values presence over prestige and collaboration over competition.

Here, poetry writing classes and fiction workshops are opportunities to exchange ideas and learn from your peers. Literary readings are opportunities to celebrate and share in the growth of our fellow writers. This isn’t just a creative writing program. It’s a meeting place.

We’ll see you there.

Student Transformed

Student Transformed

Related Programs

In Naropa’s Bachelor of Arts in Creative Writing and Literature degree program, explore careers in writing while you deepen your writing craft and your understanding of self. 

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Earn your MFA degree in creative writing at an esteemed university while still remaining connected to your existing writing community. Find artistic freedom from your home writing desk.

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Earn your Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing and Poetics from Naropa’s Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics. Here, you’ll join a thriving community of fellow writers in creative risk-taking, lively critique, and engaging literary studies.

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Questions? Give us a call today.

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YOU ARE READY.

This is where experiential learning meets academic rigor. Where you challenge your intellect and uncover your potential. Where you discover the work you’re moved to do—then use it to transform our world.

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Naropa Campuses Closed on Friday, March 15, 2024

Due to adverse weather conditions, all Naropa campuses will be closed Friday, March 15, 2024.  All classes that require a physical presence on campus will be canceled. All online and low-residency programs are to meet as scheduled.

Based on the current weather forecast, the Healing with the Ancestors Talk & Breeze of Simplicity program scheduled for Friday evening, Saturday, and Sunday will be held as planned.

Staff that do not work remotely or are scheduled to work on campus, can work remotely. Staff that routinely work remotely are expected to continue to do so.

As a reminder, notifications will be sent by e-mail and the LiveSafe app.  

Regardless of Naropa University’s decision, if you ever believe the weather conditions are unsafe, please contact your supervisor and professors.  Naropa University trusts you to make thoughtful and wise decisions based on the conditions and situation in which you find yourself in.