The Interstitial Arts Foundation
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Academic

These pages present recommended academic courses that emphasize either the study of Interstitial Arts or incorporate the core philosophies of interstitiality into their foundations, as well as scholarly resources for further research.

"The word 'interstice' comes from the Latin roots inter (between) and sistere (to stand). Literally, it means to 'stand between' or 'stand in the middle.' It generally refers to a space between things: a chink in a fence, a gap in the clouds, a DMZ between nations at war, the potentially infinite space between two musical notes, a form of writing that defies genre classification." - Heinz Insu Fenkl

Alan DeNiro
"These writing exercises can be used, and modified, in any fiction writing workshop, but might have particular value in workshop settings which have an emphasis on nonrealistic storytelling forms."
Theodora Goss, Boston University
"Fantasy and the Fantastic" was a composition course taught through the Writing Program at Boston University. The class began by focusing on fantasy, and specifically the fairy tale... Throughout these discussions, I emphasized that the boundary crossings found in fantasy and the fantastic teach us something important about our own reality. Drawing boundaries seems to be an essential human activity, since bounded categories allow us to understand the world. However, boundaries are often drawn to exclude what we fear, and they can have important consequences for our perception of the world around us, particularly when we are confronted with other cultures..."
John Langan, SUNY New Paltz
"This class focused on introducing students to contemporary works that engaged fictional genres in interesting and provocative ways. In most cases, this meant that we read texts taken from within the various genres... I tried to include a mystery, a fantasy, a gothic, and a horror novel, and part of the focus of the class was in examining the (often shared) histories of these forms, how different narrative forms treat the same questions, and the ways these genres talk to one another. I was also interested in the ways that the genre writers were working with – and often against – the conventions of their forms."
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