Reading and Writing Poetry: Image and Detail

LIT4536.01
Course System Home Terms Fall 2021 Reading and Writing Poetry: Image and Detail

Course Description

Summary

This poetry workshop focuses on the ways writers deploy language to achieve precision, vividness, sensory richness, singularity, and emotional resonance. We will begin by developing an understanding of the difference between a detail and a visual image, and the distance between the abstract concept of a thing and the sense of the concrete thing itself. We will go on to explore how narrating an experience is different from enacting it on the page, and what we can do to get our readers to successfully enter and inhabit the worlds we create in our poems. We will experiment with adding color and texture to our drafts, as well as with making individual gestures and actions feel cinematic in the ways we render them. Considerable attention will also be devoted to the ways metaphor and metonymy function in poems. We will turn in a new poem each week and our discussions will be augmented by reading the work of Rick Barot, Elizabeth Bishop, Jericho Brown, Cynthia Cruz, Mark Doty, Ross Gay, Jorie Graham, H.D., Mark Levine, Robin Coste Lewis, Paisley Rekdal, Robyn Schiff, Safiya Sinclair, Wallace Stevens, and James Wright. Students will introduce and assemble a final portfolio of poems at the end of the course.

Corequisites

Students are expected to attend all Literature Evenings and Poetry at ¿­ÐýÃŹÙÍø events (most Wednesdays at 7pm).

Instructor

  • Michael Dumanis

Day and Time

Academic Term

Fall 2021

Area of Study

Credits

4

Course Level

4000

Maximum Enrollment

15