craft before craft — DIY RPGs and the meaning of a literary idea
Let there be the clack of the shuttle flying
forward and back, forward and
back,
warp, wearp, varp: “cast of a net, a laying of eggs”
from *warp- “to throw”
the threads twisted for strength
that can be a warp of the will.
“O weaver, weaver, work no more,”
Gascoyne is quoted:
“thy warp hath done me wrong.”
In the wake of Mark McGurl's magisterial survey of post-war American literature The Program Era: Postwar Fiction and the Rise of Creative Writing, "craft" has evolved into something very much like a term of abuse. Not everywhere, not in the programs themselves or the LARB or w/e, but certainly among folks interested in politically radical or formally experimental literary fiction. Craft, for good reason, is now almost wholly associated with the 'writing disposition' project at the University of Iowa - generally considered to be the formative moment for the institutionalization and professionalization of creative writing in post-war American literature (and the rest of the litfic world not too long after.) In The Program Era, McGurl suggests that 'craft' is an important part of the creative writing turn (beginning with the trinity of 'experience,' 'creativity,' and 'craft') in the new literary US; in particular, “[c]raft—also called ‘technique'— adds the elements of acquired skill and mental effort of the process, and is strongly associated with professional pride and the lessons or 'lore' of literary tradition,” John B of The Retired Adventurer neatly explained this process in Bordieuian terms, commenting that "writing thus becomes a form of petty capital [writers] can trade off the value of, with the net effect that most professional litfic writers are petty-bourgeois in class being, no matter how radical or conservative they are otherwise." Said another way, "craft" in the Program Era is a catchall term for a particular kind of self-fashioning work, or, as Timothy Yu puts it, “self- conscious work" - a warped relationship to production (the cult of revision around the disciplined author writing and rewriting, the long shadow of Hemingway's enshrinement, is a famous example) intentionally aimed at displacing Marxian or even generally communitarian logics of labor. Eric Bennett argues in Workshops of Empire: Stegner, Engle, and American Creative Writing during the Cold War that the professional-institutional desires tethered to this vision of craft produced a particular kind of writing subject, one that saw...
"...in the New Deal, in the Marxist hopes of the 1930s, and in so much of recent progressive American thought an impulse toward 'Common Man-ism': a well-intended but shallow humanitarianism that annihilated the organic complexity of people’s private and communal realities and verged on totalitarian conceptions...[b]y the mid-1950s, this consensus—aligning figures as disparate as [Flannery] O’Connor and [James] Baldwin—permeated campuses across the United States, infusing the classrooms and lecture halls of the colleges and universities that were expanding rapidly under the GI Bill and other Cold War initiatives...it defined the era in which creative writing, as an academic discipline, came into its own."
Craft was a crucial element of this formula; it's not unrelated that the CIA had a hand in the development of the Iowa program, though the Rockerfeller Foundation's relationship to New Humanism might be an even more direct influence on what would become literary craft. It was Engle himself, founder of the modern program at Iowa and the greatest proponent of the "write every day to sharpen yourself" / "taking a professional's eye" craft ethic of professionalism that defined it, who actively promoted the remade credentialing system of university writing as an anti-Communist endeavor:
"Ever more cunning, year by year, at attracting philanthropic interest in his program, convinced that writers could serve in the soft diplomatic struggle against the Soviet Union, Engle became, by the 1960s, the creative writing cold warrior par excellence. Throughout the 1950s he raised money for the Iowa Writers’ Workshop by claiming it fought Communism...[h]is model for the workshop relegated the strident individualism of aspiring writers to the classroom while framing the workshop as a whole as a quiesent entity crucial to a liberal democratic capitalistic America."
Even if you're not a product of BFA/MFA programs, the latter-day inheritors of the Iowa model, some of this might still be familiar to you from the ways in which it has seeped into other creative endeavors as the model par excellence for rigor and 'serious' practice. It's an old joke that BFA/MFA types, creative writing students and budding film scholars and future curators, make up a disproportionate amount of the people in the Scene and a number of folks have had gripes about this. Marcia B's incredible piece on lyric games comes to mind, as does (if I may be allowed this vanity) my response to both that essay + Ava Islam's Errant interviews explicitly considering this dimension of craft.
You'll forgive my surprise, then, when the excellent blog Roll to Doubt dropped a pair of posts thinking about RPGS as Craft. After reading them, I found that much of the argument presented between the two bore a striking resemblance to recent academic reassessments of literary craft's history, even as other parts clearly draw from Program Era capitalist self-fashioning visions of craft. Taking Weird Writer's project as both jumping-off point and object of analysis, I'll attempt to contextualize writerly craft and provide some thoughts on what that historical angle might tell us about our own hobby.
why's it called a workshop, anyways?
In his recent(ish) historical-genealogical work Craft Class: The Writing Workshop in American Culture, Christopher Kempf revises our understanding of the creative writing workshop's origins and evolution. Pushing back McGurl's timeline, Kempf locates the workshop's roots in the 19th century American Arts and Crafts movement and its particular "craft ideal" - one that sought to balance the creative worker's personal expression with "fastidious adherence" to rigorous technical standards "like those enforced by preindustrial guilds." It was this Arts and Crafts craft ideal that directly shaped the founding of the first creative writing workshop in 1912: George Pierce Baker's 47 Workshop at Harvard, itself closely connected to the Arts and Crafts movement:
"Like many of Boston's cultural elite at the time-including fellow Harvard professors Charles Eliot Norton and Herbert Langford Warren, then dean of the School of Architecture - Baker had close ties with the American Arts and Crafts movement, in particular its instantiation as the Society of Arts and Crafts, Boston (SACB). A who's who of the city's Brahmin class, the SACB was the nation's preeminent craft institution, publisher of the influential national journal Handicraft and sponsor of a range of exhibitions, gallery shows, and handicraft shops in Boston and beyond. As I argue below, Baker's 47 Workshop borrows significantly from American Arts and Crafts ideology...In terms later popularized by Thorstein Veblen, the American Arts and Crafts craft ideal reconciled an instinct for "idle curiosity"—the pursuit of knowledge as a "self-legitimating end of endeavor in itself"—with an "instinct of workmanship" described by Veblen as a "proclivity for taking pains," a discipline which served to temper the worker's expressive impulse."
It should be noted that the Arts and Crafts Movement vision of the workshop actually had v little to do with historical pre-industrial workshop practice, tho I doubt y'all had any illusions about that lmao. The SACB's "Principles of Handicraft" called for the simultaneous development of "individual character in connection with artistic work" and "thorough technical training, and a just appreciation of standards" - a craft ethos that directly shaped the pedagogical approach of Baker's 47 Workshop and one that he imagined to be an "oppositional force" against Harvard's increasingly utilitarian, pre-professional curriculum geared towards churning out a "rising professional-managerial class." The workshop and its grounding in a craft ideal offered "an alternative, nonrationalized discourse and mode of labor" that challenged the university's capitulation to industrial capitalism, hence the term "workshop" - a nod to the manual labor shops of the Gary school system Baker drew upon for his own vision of a pedagogy that cultivates "an anti-expressive ethos" where a playwright's individual impulses were consciously "tempered by the imposition of external constraints, whether formal, material, or spiritual." Rather than a vehicle for pure self-expression, the workshop instituted intensive material critique through audience feedback and the regulation of elements like lighting, set design, and makeup by dedicated work committees explicitly modeled on the Gary school manual labor shops. It is absolutely crucial to note that this took precedence over anything resembling what we'd call workshopping today, revising or critiquing or even the writing process. This is what made Baker's workshop a radical extention of (let's be real, Progressive era liberal [aka eugenics andys] at best) Arts and Crafts program - the point was not to produce a kind of academic pseudowork, but think about the ways that the work itself conditioned and transformed the process of writing.
the spirit of 47
While it would be tempting to read DIY RPGs as a direct reclamation of the "craft ideal" that shaped the origins of the creative writing workshop, such a connection is def more implicit than intentional. There's still something profoundly resonant between the DIY RPG ethos and the foundational craft ideal at the Bakerian workshop's heart, a shared fascination with folk art tradition and the originary sources of play - a fascination that, in the case of the American Arts and Crafts movement, was explicitly mobilized as a challenge to the alienating forces of industrial capitalism. Just as the 47 Workshop at Harvard sought to cultivate an "alternative, nonrationalized discourse and mode of labor" against the university's increasingly utilitarian curriculum, so too do many DIY RPG designers position their work as a resistance against the formulaic products and corporate control of the mainstream game industry.
In both cases - and I separated this for importance - the impulse is eventually absorbed by capital (or starts there lmao.) Somewhere inside a response to a Leigh Claire La Berge article up on her blog, Marcia says "it's telling that craft-artisans and boutique markets are often the basis of this ideal world, of specialized individuals fully actualizing themselves in their self-employed labor, and exchanging their fruits with other individuals" and she's right. We're gonna have to handle these types like Glissant said we would all those years ago.
Even so! This interest in a craft ethos, folk art, and collective, community-driven creative expression reflects a broader trend within the larger history of hobbydom and amateur cultural production; the Arts and Crafts movement itself, after all, is a common touchstone between emergent amateur press and the burgeoning culture of hobbyist clubs and societies. It is likely that this shared genealogy - one that links the DIY RPG scene to earlier traditions of craft-based, grassroots cultural production - accounts for much of the resonance between contemporary microgame designers and the "craft ideal" that Kempf so compellingly excavates. While the connections may not be direct or intentional, they nevertheless point to a deeper well of anti-capitalist, anti-institutional sentiment that has long animated the world of amateur, artisanal cultural labor. Even in the relationship to play - friend of the blog and microblog king Sandro made an insightful point about expression and craft (noting that "rules writing still feels playful, but there's just so much 'how do I make this explanation fool proof' and 'do I need to reiterate this information and where' vs actually getting to the fun stuff of 'Here's a cool ability' or 'here's this fun procedure'") in response to Weird Writer's post that has this almost Derridian edge to it when you read it backwards. The line between play and freeplay is thin even when it's real, lmao. Ultimately, what DIY RPGs share with the origins of the creative writing workshop is not so much a direct lineage, but rather a kindred spirit - a desire to wrest creative agency from the forces of bureaucratic control and corporate rationalization. And in doing so, it taps into a rich vein of historical precedent, one that stretches back to the craft-based challenges to industrial capitalism mounted by legions of amateur makers, tinkerers, and small-scale producers.
Which brings us to the co-opting and redeployment of craft itself....
worker-writer (based) vs writer-worker (cringe)
Far from a passive reflection of economic forces, the Bakerian workshop actively "refracted, reproduced, and sometimes resisted" the rise of new industrial-corporate and informational-corporate capitalist regimes. It is this ability of the workshop to act as "a transitional space between craft and industry, past and future" that most interests Kempf, since the postwar period witnessed a crucial transformation where the craft rhetoric initially deployed to conceptualize the writing workshop as an alternative discourse was increasingly coopted and depoliticized. The explosion of graduate creative writing programs in the latter 20th century, a process explained as the "almost total capture of literature by capital through the university" by McGurl, helped to consolidate the authority of elite educational institutions over literary culture. The craft rhetoric forged by figures like Baker came to be strategically redeployed to "transcode professional-managerial soft skills—linguistic facility, social and emotional discernment, symbolic fluency—in the language of manual labor." What had begun as a way to imagine the literary arts as akin to skilled material labor instead became "a deliberately cultivated strategy in the university's promotion of its own knowledge work."
The truly interesting thing is that this began with a split in American leftist writing - the descendant of Arts and Crafts thinking. The literary debates of the 1930s were marked by a profound schism within the American Left, one that played out in the competing conceptions of the writer's craft championed by leading figures John Dos Passos and Mike Gold. At the heart of this divide lay divergent understandings of the relationship between technical proficiency, political commitment, and the expression of working-class experience. On one side stood Dos Passos, who "articulated a vision of the writer as a dispassionate 'technician' devoted to the rigorous cultivation of aesthetic standards." Invoking the craft rhetoric of the early 20th century American Arts and Crafts movement, Dos Passos argued that "the aims of the technician, insofar as he is a technician and not a timeserver, [are] the development of his material and of the technical possibilities of his work." This emphasis on technical virtuosity over political engagement represented a significant departure from the prevailing ethos of the literary Left. Where Dos Passos's 'technician' embodied a state of "selfless relaxation" devoted to the realization of formal ideals (familiar?), the opposing faction, organized around Mike Gold's New Masses, championed a more explicitly insurgent, class-conscious vision of the writer as a proletarian expressing himself in "jets of exasperated feeling." For Gold and his cohort, as Kempf explains, "the ideal writer was a 'wild youth of about twenty-two, the son of working-class parents, who himself works in the lumber camps, coal mines, steel mills, harvest fields and mountain camps of America' - a figure whose authenticity was defined not by refined craftsmanship, but by the...intensity of his class-based expression."
This division between Dos Passos's technician and Gold's proletarian "reflected a broader tension that had long been simmering within the American Left." Similar debates had played out within the American Arts and Crafts movement itself, "pitting those who prioritized aesthetic standards and the 'prestige which the technological expert enjoys' against those who insisted on the primacy of 'native or vernacular expression' grounded in the lived realities of the working class." - the professionalizing trend and the vernacularizing trend. Where Dos Passos sought to "disentangle the writer from overt political commitments," Gold and his cohort viewed such an aspiration as a betrayal of the worker's cause. For them, the writer's craft was inextricably bound up with the material project of fomenting revolutionary class consciousness. Underlying this debate, as Kempf suggests, were "competing understandings of the writer's social role and the very purpose of literary production." Dos Passos's "technician" embodied a vision of the writer as a "dispassionate arbiter of aesthetic standards, aloof from the messy realities of political struggle." Gold's proletarian," by contrast, saw the writer's craft as a vital tool in the service of a broader emancipatory project, one that sought to uplift the voices and experiences of the working class. Where the earlier craft ethos inherited and radicalized by Baker had sought to balance individual expression with technical rigor, the literary Left of the 1930s found itself irreconcilably split, with one side championing a depoliticized vision of the writer as a master craftsman, and the other demanding a more explicitly revolutionary, class-inflected conception of literary labor.
Far from a merely aesthetic concern, the question of how best to conceive of the writer's craft was bound up with profoundly divergent visions of social transformation, the role of the intellectual, and the relationship between art and politics. Meridel Le Sueur is a sterling example of the proleterian camp in the wars over craft. Alongside her activism in the labor movement, Le Sueur taught creative writing at the WPA-backed Minnesota Labor School, where she framed the written word as a "tool" to be wielded by workers themselves. This necessitated a clear rejection of the emerging scholastic Marxist notion of a writer's work:
"Le Sueur’s workshops extended Gold’s critique of what Le Sueur herself, at the American Writers’ Congress, called Dos Passos’s 'intellectual, inhuman, non-human' brand of Marxism; what mattered for Le Sueur was less virtuosic craftsmanship than writing which came 'straight from the [worker’s] experience . . . for other workers to understand'"
For Le Sueur, the purpose of literary production was not the wedding of aesthetic standards to an emerging vision of creative labor, but the cultivation of a proletarian public sphere - a "vast university of the common people" where the experiences and aspirations of the working class could find dynamic, unapologetic expression. This vision stood in direct opposition to the winds blowing through the American literary establishment as the Program Era took shape. As universities cemented their control over the production and dissemination of literature, writers like Le Sueur - whose work actively challenged the exclusionary nature of these elite institutions (something something The Undercommons) and their fake-work craft of writerly discipline - were effectively sidelined. While Le Sueur was def a vital figure in working-class education for the brief beautiful moment when it actually existed in this country, the goals espoused by Dos Passos and writers in his shadow would come to dovetail with the anti-proletarian and professionalizing trends within university creative writing programs - a phenomenon that was astutely noted (though ultimately misread... common Partisan Review Krew behavior) by Mr. Trilling in a review of the U.S.A. trilogy. The long-term effect is that writers like Le Sueur, despite their importance to millions of working-class readers, and their schools of practice have been functionally forgotten - overshadowed by the depoliticized vision of the writer as a master craftsman that ultimately took hold in the academy. And this, ofc, is the ultimate end of the Revised Craft:
"While it is the discipline's encouragement of self-expression that separates creative writing from its departmental neighbors, composition and literature, it is the invocation of manual labor that frames poetry as equal in rigor to the classification of rhetorical topoi or the materialist exegesis of Ulysses...it contributes to a discourse of professionalism which continuously reinforces the authority of the university-craft workshops do not so much produce poets as they produce professionals...In an era of escalated credentialing and contracting arts economies, craft constitutes one line of force in what Pierre Bourdieu has called a struggle 'to impose the dominant definition of the writer'...a professional system in which a worker's value consists less in what he 'can make, move, or dig' than in 'what the worker knows and the sorts of information over which he or she has command'...Whereas craft pedagogies begin, for someone like George Pierce Baker, as a way of disrupting the cultural and material reproduction of an industrial-corporate elite, they function in the postwar period to reinscribe the same utilitarian values that Baker opposed the creative writing workshop transforms at midnight into a licensing agency."
Now we come back to the start of our journey. The very term 'workshop,' once radical and meaningfully concerned with work, becomes a means by which the university and all the discourses captured in its circuit could "quarantine questions of labor and value in literary production, distracting us from how terribly intertwined our literary endeavor remains with regimes of capital accumulation and social administration."
a brief cautionary note
This was a great review on a topic I know very little about, super interesting, thanks!
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