| ‘Trainspotting’ author
and Irish writer join Fiction faculty
New instructors to teach
classes in Scottish and Irish writers, fiction
seminars
By Randy J. Klodz
Staff Writer
 |
Photo
courtesy of Random House
New Columbia Fiction faculty member
Irvine Welsh. |
|
Columbia will be welcoming the addition of two
nationally known writers, Irvine Welsh and Antonia
Logue, to its Fiction Writing Department for the
spring 2003 semester, when each writer will begin
teaching courses.
Irvine Welsh, the Scottish author better known
for his book-turned-indie-film Trainspotting,
will join the Columbia faculty as a visiting artist-in-residence
and will teach courses entitled Fiction Seminar
and Critical Reading and Writing: Contemporary
Scottish Writers.
Welsh is also scheduled to make an appearance
during Story Week, a series that has drawn quite
a crowd for Welsh in the past.
The announcement of the faculty additions for
the spring semester has created a buzz within
the Fiction Writing Department and is likely to
stir citywide interest for the program.
“He’s kind of like a rock star who’s
a great writer,” said Gary Johnson, graduate
program coordinator for the Fiction Writing Department.
“Students emulate him—he’s not
a lightweight.”
“I’m not too formal,” Welsh
said. “You have to start from the belief
that people have the talent and the desire to
do well. I’ll try to operate on as much
of a needs-orientated basis as I can.”
According to Don De Grazia—fiction-writing
instructor at Columbia, and author of the acclaimed
novel American Skin, Welsh’s helped
change the perception in London that “Scots
don’t read.”
“Obviously, that was ridiculous,”
De Grazia said. “The reason Scots—with
their glorious literary tradition—weren’t
buying much contemporary literary fiction was
because not much was being published about the
Scottish experience.”
According to Johnson, another positive attribute
regarding Welsh’s writing style is his use
of simple language.
“He writes in dialect, the way people speak,”
Johnson said. “We’re trying to get
our students to do this, get students to find
their own voice in their writing.”
Though he does not currently reside in Chicago,
Welsh said he is optimistic about the city and
his initial impression of Columbia has been positive.
“I was shown great friendship and I thought
it would be a nice place to spend some time,”
Welsh said. “Additionally, I have a lot
of work in the United States and it makes sense
to be based there for a bit.”
Welsh’s new novel, Porno, the
sequel to Trainspotting, was released
in September.
Other fiction titles by Welsh include: The
Acid House, Ecstasy, Marabou
Stork Nightmare and Glue.
Welsh and De Grazia are both published by Jonathan
Cape, the London publishing house to which De
Grazia first sold American Skin.
“Welsh was the reason I sent my book there
in the first place,” De Grazia said.
Antonia Logue, an Irish writer known for her
novel Shadowbox, which won the 1999 Irish
Times Literature Award for an Irish Novel, will
join the Fiction Writing Department as a full-time
faculty member while teaching courses entitled
Fiction Seminar and Critical Reading and Writing:
Irish Writers.
“She seems to be very excited about the
diversity at Columbia, as well as the basic teaching
philosophy of the department, which views storytelling
as a universal gift—one that all students,
regardless of their social or academic backgrounds,
can excel at if they are encouraged to utilize
their own unique voices,” De Grazia said.
Though Welsh does not know Logue personally,
he said he’s excited about having the chance
to work with her.
“I think it’s great that people from
different writing backgrounds can come in and
share their experiences and skills with student
writers,” Welsh said. “We’re
all student writers.” |