Wrongfully Accused
Long-form investigative journalism has opened many doors, perhaps most literally in America's penal system where journalists have regularly revealed—and freed—the wrongfully convicted. This class will set out to expose the innocence (or confirm the guilt) of a man or woman convicted of a controversial murder or other serious felony. Working collectively and using all tools and traditions of investigative journalism, the class will attempt to pull out all known and unknown threads of the story to reveal the truth. Was our subject wrongfully accused, or are his or her claims of innocence an attempt to game the system? The class will interview police, prosecutors, and witnesses, as well as the friends and family of the victim and of the accused. The case file will be examined in depth. A long-form investigative piece will be produced, complete with multimedia accompaniment.
Writing courses
- A Question of Character: The Art of the Profile
- Connected Collections
- Dialogue in Fiction: Sounds and Silence
- Edgy Memoirs
- First-Year Studies: Exploring Voice, Image, and Form in Poetry
- Fictions of Embodiment
- Fiction Techniques
- Fiction Techniques
- Fiction Workshop
- First-Year Studies in Fiction
- Fiction Workshop
- Fiction Workshop: You write. I read. We talk.
- First-Year Studies: Exploring Subject Matter in Fiction
- First-Year Studies in Fiction
- First-Year Studies in Poetry
- First-Year Studies: World Literature and Writing
- Less Race Less Race Less Ness
- Living Poets
- Memory and Fiction
- Multimedia Uses of Oral History
- Nonfiction Laboratory
- Place in Fiction
- Poet as World Citizen
- Poetry Workshop
- Poetry Workshop: Poetic Process
- Poetry Workshop: Poetic Tone
- Poetry Workshop: The Making of the Complete Lover
- Sparks in the Void: A Fiction-Writing Workshop
- The Image Factory: A Poetry Workshop
- The Indian Point Project
- Visible and Invisible Ink: How Fiction Writing Happens
- Voice and Form
- Where Words Are Born
- Words & Pictures
- Writing, Radio, and Aurality
- Writing and Reading Fiction
- Writing Our Moment
- Wrongfully Accused
- Young America

