Writing Women’s Lives

with Rachel Sherman

Writing Women's Lives online writing course

August 13, 2025
8 Weeks

Original price was: $545.00.Current price is: $465.00.

Zoom sessions Wednesdays 7PM Eastern

Click the Enroll Now button below, enter your details on the Checkout page,
and reserve your spot in the course.

Original price was: $545.00.Current price is: $465.00.Enroll Now

In this intimate, generative workshop, we’ll create space to reflect on our lived experiences as women—emotionally, culturally, politically—and learn how to shape those stories into powerful personal narratives. Together, we’ll look at how other women have written about their lives through memoir, biography, and fiction, so you can begin to unlock your own voice on the page.

In the first four weeks, we’ll explore published works, write together, and reflect on the themes, structures, and challenges of writing about womanhood. You’ll receive verbal feedback during class discussions and writing exercises, and be encouraged to draw connections between your life and the lives of other women, past and present. In the second half of the course, we’ll shift into a workshop format where you’ll share a longer piece for written feedback from me and in-depth discussion with your peers.

By the end of the course, you’ll leave with a polished personal narrative or biographical work-in-progress—and a deeper sense of the art of writing about your and other women’s experiences, with voice, empathy, and purpose.

Who This Course is For

This course is designed for anyone who identifies as a woman and wants to explore or refine their storytelling craft. It is ideal for writers working in memoir, personal essay, or fiction who are interested in telling women’s stories with honesty and nuance.

Learning and Writing Goals

Learning Goals

  • Analyze and interpret storytelling techniques used in writing about women’s experiences.
  • Develop confidence in giving and receiving constructive feedback in a workshop environment.
  • Deepen your voice and storytelling skills through regular writing practice and revision.
  • Explore the boundaries between personal truth and narrative craft.

Writing Goals

  • Produce a collection of short writing pieces and one longer, polished personal narrative or biographical piece.
  • Experiment with new narrative techniques, structures, and points of view.
  • Practice meaningful revision based on instructor and peer feedback.

Zoom Schedule

We will meet on Zoom each week on Wednesdays at 7PM Eastern. 

Weekly Syllabus

Week 1: Entering the Conversation

Introduction to the course and themes of writing women’s lives. We will read short excerpts and begin writing exercises to explore our identities and storytelling instincts.

Assignment: Write a 500-word narrative about a moment when you first realized you were seen (or not seen) as a woman.

Week 2: The Body as Story

How do we write about the body—its strength, pain, change, and memory? We’ll explore physicality and embodiment in writing.

Assignment: A personal vignette that centers on the body as a character or site of conflict (750 words)

Week 3: Inheritance and Lineage

We examine how family, culture, and legacy shape our identities and our stories. Who do we write for—and against?

Assignment: Create a short piece inspired by a family photograph or inherited object (750 words)

Week 4: Voice and Vulnerability

How do we balance vulnerability with power in our storytelling? What makes a voice compelling, authentic, and brave?

Assignment: Draft a 1,000-word personal essay or fictionalized memoir piece exploring a moment of transformation.

Week 5: Workshop I – Building the Longer Narrative

We transition into workshop mode. Students submit their first drafts for feedback and discussion. Focus is on structure, clarity, and emotional resonance.

Assignment: Submit a 1,200–1,500 word piece for workshop by the end of Week 4.

Week 6: Workshop II – Expanding the Frame

We continue with workshop. Discussion will include questions of pacing, character development, and layering of narrative.

Assignment: Revise your piece based on feedback or begin a second submission (1,200–1,800 words)

Week 7: Workshop III – Revisiting Form and Feedback

Exploration of experimental structures or alternate points of view. Emphasis on revision and deeper emotional layers.

Assignment: Submit a second revision or a new piece (if desired). Prepare a short reflection (250 words) on your writing process so far.

Week 8: Celebration and Reflection

Final workshop, reflection, and next steps. Students will share excerpts and discuss what they’ve learned and where their work might go from here.

Assignment: Submit a final, revised personal narrative or biographical piece (1,500–2,000 words). Write a one-page author’s note discussing your revisions and discoveries.


Click the Enroll Now button below, enter your details on the Checkout page,
and reserve your spot in the course.

Original price was: $545.00.Current price is: $465.00.Enroll Now

Reserve your spot and secure early bird pricing

Student Feedback for Rachel Sherman:

August 13, 2025
Length: 8 Weeks
Open to AllText and Live Video

Zoom sessions Wednesdays 7PM Eastern

Original price was: $545.00.Current price is: $465.00.

Click the Enroll Now button below, enter your details on the Checkout page,
and reserve your spot in the course.

Original price was: $545.00.Current price is: $465.00.Enroll Now

Reserve your spot and secure early bird pricing

About

Rachel Sherman holds an MFA in fiction from Columbia University. Her short stories have appeared in McSweeney’s, Fence, Open City, Conjunctions, Los Angeles Review of Books, and n+1, among other publications. Her first book, The First Hurt, was short-listed for The Story Prize, and the Frank O’Connor International Short Story Award, and was named one of the 25 Books to Remember in 2006 by the New York Public Library. Her first novel, Living Room (2009) was called “...edgy, moving, smart, funny, and altogether human,” by author Dani Shapiro, and “perfectly paced” by The New York Times Book Review. She has taught Creative Writing in the MFA Program at Columbia University and at Rutgers University.

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