Section | Semester | Instructor | Time | Location | Course Areas |
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2 | Fall 2006 | Shoptaw, John
Shoptaw, John |
TTh 9:30-11 | 301 Wheeler |
Jahan Ramazani, ed.: The Norton Anthology of Modern & Contemporary Poetry, 2 vols.; Course reader
In this course you will conduct a progressive series of experiments in which you will explore the fundamental options for writing poetry today�aperture, partition, closure; rhythmic sound patterning; sentence & line; stanza; short & long-lined poems; image & figure; graphics & textual space; cultural translation; poetic forms (haibun, villanelle, sestina, pantoum, ghazal, etc.); the first, second, third, and no person (persona, address, drama, narrative, description); prose poetry. Our emphasis will be placed on recent possibilities, but with an eye & ear always to renovating traditions. I have no �house style� and only one precept: you can do anything, if you can do it. You will write a poem a week, and we�ll discuss six or so in rotation (I�ll respond to every poem you write). On alternate days, we�ll discuss pre-modern and modern exemplary poems drawn from the Norton Anthology and from our course reader. It will be delightful.
fall, 2022 |
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143B/1 |
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143B/2 |
Holiday, Harmony
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spring, 2022 |
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143B/1 |
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143B/2 |
Solie, Karen
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fall, 2021 |
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143B/1 |
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143B/2 |
spring, 2021 |
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143B/1 |
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143B/2 |
Verse: The Migratory Ear: Listening as a Generative Strategy |