Black Writers on Change

Writing

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Autumn Society offers monthly AWA writing experiences as part of our Field Day series—an intentional rhythm of walking, sharing food, and writing in community.

Field Day Schedule

  • Morning Hike – A local trail walk using Grinnell field notes to develop attention to landscape
  • Brunch – A shared meal to build community and connection
  • Writing Session – An in-person writing experience using the Amherst Writers & Artists method

These sessions are for Black writers in New England—whether you’re just beginning or already deep in your work. We gather to observe, reflect, write, and witness each other’s words. Field Days are limited in size to preserve intimacy and focus.

Frequency: Monthly
Day: Sundays
Location: In-person, hosted in Massachusetts
Facilitator: Christopher J. Sparks


Amherst Writers & Artists

AWA is a generative writing practice that creates safe space for authentic voices to emerge. Core principles include:

  • All writing is treated with respect
  • Feedback focuses on what’s working in the piece
  • No critique or advice—only witness and appreciation
  • The facilitator writes alongside participants
  • Confidentiality protects what’s shared in the room

AWA workshops use prompts to bypass the inner critic and access deeper material. The method honors all voices equally, making it particularly powerful for writers whose perspectives have been historically marginalized.


Grinnell Field Notes

Grinnell field notes originated in natural science observation—a structured approach to recording what you actually see, not what you think you see. The method trains attention through:

  • Detailed sensory observation
  • Specific, concrete language
  • Disciplined focus on present-moment experience
  • Recording without interpretation

For writers, this practice sharpens descriptive precision and grounds storytelling in lived detail. Walking with field notes transforms casual hiking into active research, building a vocabulary of place.


Why These Methods Work Together

Grinnell field notes train your eye. AWA training frees your voice.

Field notes teach you to see what’s actually there—the specific bark texture, the exact quality of light, the particular sounds at dawn. This observational discipline gives you concrete material to work from.

AWA creates the safe container where that material can become story, poem, essay—where observation transforms into meaning. The generative prompts pull from what you’ve just witnessed on the trail. Your field notes become source material. Your walking becomes research.

Together, these methods build writers who see clearly and write truthfully. Who root their stories in landscape and lived experience. Who develop both craft precision and creative freedom.

This is how Autumn Society approaches writing: walk first, observe closely, then write from what you’ve actually seen.

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Black Writers on Change