Thursday, April 21, 2005

Readings/Assignments for Thursday, April 28, 2005

No readings for this class meeting, as we'll be doing the in-class presentations on contemporary American poets (post-1950) this week instead. (Guidelines for presentations are outlined below).

Please note that in lieu of the regularly-scheduled blog post in response to assigned readings, you can write an informal blog post on the volume of poetry that you did for your presentation this week, or simply do a "freeestyle" blog of your choice, to go along with the regularly-scheduled memoir prompt.

Presentation Guidelines:

Presentations should be ten minutes long.

Your presentation should be on a volume of poetry by a contemporary American poet (post-1950).

Your presentation should focus primarily on describing stylistic traits that you notice about this poet (i.e., Themes and/or Subject Matter; Diction, Voice, and Tone; Imagery; Structure/Form; Symbols, etc.)

Bring copies of one representative poem to pass out to the class (15 copies total); read and discuss the poem in conjunction with the stylistic traits you've pointed out.

Keep biographical material to a minimum, unless it's pertinent to the discussion of the poet's work.

Important!! Your final 10-12 page papers will be due on Thursday, May 5, by 5:00 p.m. in my mailbox in Dakota Hall 226, or if the office is closed, you can slide your paper under my door in Dakota Hall 207. You may also feel free to submit your paper as an e-mail attachment if that is more convenient for you.

And finally, here is your final memoir prompt of the semester from The Autobiography Box:

Write about your first kiss. Maybe it was with a friend, just practicing. Maybe it was with somebody you were afraid of more than you were in love with. Maybe it was a stolen kiss. Maybe you did the stealing. What were the circumstances leading up to the kiss? Or, start with the kiss and describe what happened after.

Thursday, April 07, 2005

Readings/Assignments for Thursday, April 21, 2005

Important!! Don't forget to send me the rough draft of your final course paper (by e-mail, either as a Word document or RTF file, please) by midnight on Sunday, April 10! Thanks!

Reminder: Class is canceled on Thursday, March 14, as I will be giving an out-of-town poetry reading. This would be an ideal time to work on your third modeling poem/style commentary (due on Thursday, April 21, at our next class meeting), and also work on your second oral presentation on a contemporary volume of poetry (due on Thursday, April 28). Blogs will not be due on Wednesday, April 13, but you can do extra credit blogging this week (up to two posts). You can use the memoir prompt given below, and/or write a post on readings you haven't discussed in blog format yet, or submit a "freestyle" blog of your choice.

Extra credit memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box for extra credit blogs due by Wednesday, April 13:

Do you recall taking a strong political position? Was there a single moment you can recall when you felt motivated to join a political body, and did that moment lead you down a path through life that embraced those politics? Can you remember when you became "politicized"? Was it accompanied by a strong sense of justice or injustice? Was something wrong that needed to be rectified?

Thursday, April 21, 2005:

Important! Modeling Poem #3 is due today, along with a 250-word discussion of the style traits of the particular poet upon which your poem is modeled. You may model any poet discussed during the course of the semester whose work you haven't already modeled in a prior modeling assignment:

For this class period, please read Mark Doty's volume of poetry, My Alexandria, and Li-Young Lee's volume of poetry, Book of My Nights.

Please also read the following materials contained in the clickable links below, and which will download as PDF documents:

Click here for excerpt from Mark Doty's memoir, Firebird.

Click here for excerpt from Li-Young Lee's memoir, Winged Seed.

And finally, here is your memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box (for blog posts due on Wednesday, April 20):

Who was your best friend at seven years old? Who was your best friend at 11? At 16? At 20? At 30? And who was your biggest enemy at each of these ages? Describe them.

Thursday, March 24, 2005

Readings/Assignments for Thursday, April 7 2005

Reminder: Class is canceled on Thursday, March 31, as I will be out of town for a conference. Please use the additional time to work on the rough draft of your 10-12 page paper, which will be due at our next class meeting on Thursday, April 7. Blogs will not be due on Wednesday, March 30, but you can do extra credit blogging this week (up to two posts). You can use the memoir prompt given below, and/or write a post on readings you haven't discussed in blog format yet, or submit a "freestyle" blog of your choice.

Extra credit memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box for extra credit blogs due by Wednesday, March 30:

Describe a significant event that brought you closer to, or further away, from your religious devotions. The spiritual life can come upon a person in a sweeping moment or over the course of a long period of time. Have you ever experienced visions or other moments of a spiritual nature? If you had a single moment that you can recall, describe the details leading up to and following that epiphany. How did it change your life afterwards? If you slowly gravitated to a religious tradition or a way of thinking about the divine, show in a series of snapshots how you were brought closer and closer to the spiritual over that time.

For Thursday, April 7, 2005:

Don't forget that rough drafts of your paper are due today!

Please print out and read the following full-text articles which can be located via Project Muse, in the USD Library Research Databases. To access the articles, Click Here to go to USD's library page, click to the Research Databases link in the right column, and then type in Project Muse in the Search by Database prompt. (If you are working off-campus, note that you will be prompted for your Network ID and Password prior to being given access to the Research Databases). Once in Project Muse, you can search for the articles using title or author's last name, etc. The articles are available in both HTML and PDF format:

"Elizabeth Bishop and Containment Policy," by Steven Gould Axelrod, American Literature, Vol. 75, No. 4 (December 2003), pp. 843-867.

"Elizabeth Bishop's Impersonal Personal," by Bonnie Costello, American Literary History, Vol. 15, No. 2 (2003), pp. 334-366.

Please also read the following poems from Elizabeth Bishop's Complete Poems: 1927-1976:

"Arrival at Santos," p. 89
"Brazil," p. 91
"Questions of Travel," p. 93
"Electrical Storm," p. 100
"The Armadillo," p. 103
"First Death in Nova Scotia," p. 125
"Filling Station," p. 127
"Visits to St. Elizabeths," p. 133
"Giant Toad," p. 139
"Strayed Crab," p. 140
"Giant Snail," p. 141
"Under the Window," p. 153
"In the Waiting Room," p. 159
"Crusoe in England," p. 162
"The Moose," p. 159
"One Art," p. 178
"Santarem," p. 185
"Pink Dog," p. 190
"Sonnet," p. 192
"Exchanging Hats," p. 200

And finally, here is this week's memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box for blog posts due on Wednesday, April 6:

Write about a strange family member. Were you frightened of this person or were they frightened of you? Were they funny? Did they look strange or behave strangely? Do you still carry on a relationship with that person? Write a scene in which that person is doing or exhibiting the things that made them strange. Are you involved in this scene?

Thursday, March 17, 2005

Readings/Assignments for Thursday, March 24, 2005

Important!! Don't forget that Modeling Poem #2 will be due today! You may model any poet studied in the class thus far, provided that you didn't already model this poet in your first modeling assignment. Also, don't forget to include a one-page (250-word) analysis that discusses the specific ways in which your poem is imitating the style traits of your chosen poet/poem.

Please read/print out the following articles, which are available as Full-Text Articles from WilsonSelectPlus in the USD Library Research Databases. To access WilsonSelectPlus, click here to get to the USD Library Research Databases page. Next, click on Arts and Humanities. On the next screen, click on Language and Literature. On the screen after that, click on Arts and Humanities Search. You'll be taken to a screen next that has a drop-down menu for databases to search, at which point you'll want to replace AH Search with WilsonSelectPlus on the drop-down menu. Now you can simply type in article or author titles to pull up the full-text articles from the WilsonSelectPlus database. (Please note that at some point during this process you'll most likely be prompted for your USD User ID and Password).

"Dedications: Lowell's 'Skunk Hour' and Bishop's 'The Armadillo,'", by Lloyd Schwartz, Salmagundi, No. 141/142 (Winter Spring 2004).

""Elizabeth Bishop's 'Queer Birds': Vassar, Con Spirito, and the Romance of Female Community," by Bethany Hicok, Contemporary Literature, Vol. 40 No. 2 (Summer 1999), pp. 285-310.

"Elizabeth Bishop's Stories of Childhood: Writing the Disaster," by Andre Furlani, Critique, Vol. 43, No. 2 (Winter 2002).

Please also read the following poems from Elizabeth Bishop's Complete Poems 1927-1976:

"The Map," p. 3
"The Man-Moth," p. 14
"Florida," p. 32
"Roosters," p. 35
"The Fish," p. 42
"A Cold Sring," p. 55
"Over 2,000 Illustrations," p. 57
"The Bight," p. 60
"At the Fishhouses," p. 64
"Cape Breton," p. 67
"Insomnia," p. 70
"Invitation to Miss Marianne Moore," p. 82
"The Shampoo," p. 84

And finally, here is this week's memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box:

Remember something or somebody you pursued with a passion. How old were you when this happened? Does it seem a rite of passage, or a turning point in growing up? Did you get the thing or that person? If so, was it worth it? If not, do you have regrets?

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

Important Class Announcement!

Class on Thursday, March 17, 2005, will be temporarily moved to Old Main 202 instead of our normally-scheduled class meeting room. Please make sure to go to Old Main 202 at our regularly-scheduled class time on Thursday.

Don't forget that Jeanne Emmons will be giving a poetry reading on Wednesday, March 16, 2005, at 4:00 p.m. in Farber Hall. Please come and hear her if you are able. I'm willing to dole out extra credit if you come to the reading and write an extra credit blog post about it.

Friday, March 04, 2005

Spring Break and Readings/Assignments for Thursday, March 17, 2005

No blogs are due on Wednesday, March 9, since it's spring break week, but you are welcome to post extra credit blogs by midnight on Wednesday, March 9 (up to two posts) for 10 points of extra credit apiece. Please make sure to label these posts as Extra Credit Spring Break Blogging. One post will be a memoir prompt response, as usual, and the other can be a response to past readings/poets or a free-form post on any subject of your choice! Here's the extra credit spring break memoir prompt:

Describe a moment of pure joy. there are times in our lives when everythintg comes together in a chemical reaction of joy. It can be the simplest thing: you are sitting outside on a sunny day drinking wine with your best friend, and he tells you a funny joke, just as a bird lands on a branch nearby to sing, and suddenly, your heart lifts, your spirit is up in the air, you feel ridiculous and glorious all at once. Once you've returned to earth, you realize that something has changed--you are not the person you were a moment before. Can you recall such a moment?

Readings/Assignments for Thursday, March 17, 2005:

Blog posts will resume as normally scheduled, and will be due (as per usual) on Wednesday, March 16, by midnight.

Please read/print out the following articles, which are available as Full-Text Articles from WilsonSelectPlus in the USD Library Research Databases. To access WilsonSelectPlus, click here to get to the USD Library Research Databases page. Next, click on Arts and Humanities. On the next screen, click on Language and Literature. On the screen after that, click on Arts and Humanities Search. You'll be taken to a screen next that has a drop-down menu for databases to search, at which point you'll want to replace AH Search with WilsonSelectPlus on the drop-down menu. Now you can simply type in article or author titles to pull up the full-text articles from the WilsonSelectPlus database. (Please note that at some point during this process you'll most likely be prompted for your USD User ID and Password).

"'And Everyone and I Stopped Breathing': William Carlos Williams, Frank O'Hara and the News of the Day in Verse," by Paul R. Cappucci, Papers on Language and Literature, Vol. 39, No. 4 (Fall 2003), p. 375-89.

"Tribes of New York: Frank O'Hara, Amiri Baraka, and the Poetics of the Five Spot," by Michael Magee, Contemorary Literature, Vol. 42, No. 4 (Winter 2001), pp. 694-726.

Please also read Lunch Poems by Frank O'Hara, and as much of David Lehman's The Evening Star as you can get through.

Finally, here is the memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box for this week:

Write about the first time you went away from home alone. Was it a vacation? Was it for work? Were you looking for something? Were you running away? Do you see that excursion as a "hero's journey", or did you go kicking and screaming? How did it change you?

Friday, February 25, 2005

Readings/Assignments for Thursday, March 3, 2004

Don't forget that class will start off at 4:00 in Farber Hall, so that we can hear Ken Waldman, Alaska's Fiddling Poet, read and perform his work!

Please read/print out the following articles, which are available as Full-Text Articles from WilsonSelectPlus in the USD Library Research Databases. To access WilsonSelectPlus, click here to get to the USD Library Research Databases page. Next, click on Arts and Humanities. On the next screen, click on Language and Literature. On the screen after that, click on Arts and Humanities Search. You'll be taken to a screen next that has a drop-down menu for databases to search, at which point you'll want to replace AH Search with WilsonSelectPlus on the drop-down menu. Now you can simply type in article or author titles to pull up the full-text articles from the WilsonSelectPlus database. (Please note that at some point during this process you'll most likely be prompted for your USD User ID and Password).

"Panel: Lowell Off the Page," by Robert Giroux, Charles McKinley, and Robert Dana, The Kenyon Review, Vol. 22, No. 1 (Winter 2000) pp. 255-74.

"Robert Lowell on Native Ground," by Richard Tillinghast, The Virginia Quarterly Review, Vol. 71 (Winter 1995, pp. 86-100.

"Looking Back at Robert Lowell," by Alan Williamson, The American Poetry Review, Vol. 24 (May/June 1995), pp. 35-38.

Please also read the following poems from Robert Lowell's Selected Poems:

"History," p. 159
"Coleridge," p. 174
"Randall Jarrell 1, 2, and 3," pp. 177-178
"For Eugene McCarthy," p. 182
"Reading Myself," p. 183
"Father," p. 195
"Mother and Father, 1 and 2," pp. 195-196
"Mother, 1972," p. 197
"Father in a Dream," p. 197
"To Daddy," p. 198
Part One of For Lizzie and Harriet, pp. 209-211
"Fall Weekend at Milgate," p. 231
"Mermaid," p. 233
"Mermaid Emerging," p. 237
"Late Summer at Milgate," p. 239
"Robert Sheridan Lowell," p. 239
"Christmas," p. 245
"Christmas," p. 246
"Dolphin," p. 246

Next, here is this week's memoir prompt from The Autobiography Box:

Create a word portrait of yourself. Using as much descriptive language as possible, draw a picture of yourself, including physical attributes, but also the things that have given your face character--what you inherited from your parents, what life and time have done to alter it.

Finally, here are the Paper Guidelines and Topics for the final course paper that I went over in class on Thursday:

Please select one of the following topics listed below on which to write your 10-12 page final course paper. The rough draft of your paper will be due on Thursday, April 7, 2005, at which point I will provide you with substantive written feedback on your rough draft. The final, revised version of your paper will be due on Thursday, May 5, 2005, by 5:00 p.m.

Your papers should have a clear central thesis/argument, and a logical structure. You will be required to include analyses of works by a minimum of three of the poets specifically discussed in class this semester, and at least two of the assigned scholarly/critical sources.

You are welcome to include additional poets not specifically discussed in class as part of your discussion, as well as additional scholarly/critical sources, if you so desire. This paper is not ultimately meant to be a research or survey paper, however. I would like you to narrow down and limit your sources enough so that the primary focus of your paper will ultimately consist of readings/analyses of the poems as much as possible.

Please make sure to properly and consistently cite all of your sources. MLA format is standard for the profession, but I will be happy to accept other formats provided that the citations are both accurate and consistent. (Please note that I’m not going to require you to make citations when quoting directly from the actual poems themselves, only when referencing secondary scholarly/critical sources as part of your discussion of these poems.)

1. Please provide a discussion of the term “Confessionalism” with regard to the autobiographical poets discussed this semester. Questions that you might want to address in your discussion might include: Is the term “Confessionalism” an appropriate term for these poets? In what ways is their work “Confessional,” and what are the parameters or implications of the “confession(s)” being made? Are the “confession(s)” revealing or masking? Are there ways in which the term “Confessional” seems inappropriate or problematic with regard to the works of these poets? Your discussion should include analyses of works by at least three of the poets discussed this semester, and should incorporate as part of the discussion at least two of the assigned scholarly sources.

2. Poets such as Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, and Elizabeth Bishop are also frequently referred to as the “Middle Generation” of poets and indeed, they seem to fall right in the divide between the literary and aesthetic styles of Modernism and Post-Modernism. Using a minimum of three of the poets studied this semester as examples, and at least two of the assigned scholarly sources, please provide a stylistic analysis of the ways in which these poets exemplify both Modernist and Post-Modernist traits within their works.

3. Please provide an analysis of the implications of gender with regard to works written by the autobiographical poets discussed in the course this semester. You may wish to take into consideration issues pertaining to feminist scholarship, Freudian psychoanalysis, and/or the prevailing cultural conditions at the time different poets were working and writing (i.e., 1950’s “containment culture,” etc.). Your analysis should include at least three of the poets studied this semester, and should incorporate at least two of the assigned scholarly sources.

4. Please discuss the emergence and use of the genre of “journal poem” arising in the middle of the 20th century. In your paper, you may wish to address one or more of the following questions: Is this a valid form of poetry? How do different practitioners of the “journal poem” genre make this form unique or different? Is the “journal poem” genre the ultimate “confessional” poem? In what ways and to what degree does the genre of “journal poem” blur the boundaries between poetry and memoir? Your discussion should include analyses of works by at least three of the poets discussed this semester, and should incorporate as part of the discussion at least two of the assigned scholarly sources.

5. In her article, “No Room in the Booth? An Appreciation of Confessional Poetry,” Kathleen Osip argues that post-confessional poets lack the craft and technique, as well as the passion and fire, of the original confessional poets. She suggests that while the original confessional poets “acted out” in their poems, the post-confessionals analyze and “work through” their issues in their poetry, and to detrimental effect. Please respond to Osip’s assertioneither defending or refuting her claimincluding analyses of works by at least three of the poets discussed this semester, and incorporating at least two of the assigned scholarly sources as art of the discussion.