English 203 Fall 2009
Introduction to Creative Writing (Poetry) Professor Ostrom
MWF 10:00 Wyatt 308
Welcome to English 203. Here is some basic information:
Professor’s Office: Wyatt 336. Office-Hours for Fall 2009. Tuesdays, 10:00-11:30 and by appointment.
English Department’s telephone: x3235 (messages); my telephone: x3434 (voice mail). Electronic mail: ostrom@pugetsound.edu. The English Department’s mailboxes are located in the room next to the Philosophy Department’s main office on the third floor of Wyatt Hall. Home page: www.ups.edu/faculty/ostrom/. A copy of this syllabus will be posted on the home page.
The University’s Equal Opportunity Statement
The University of Puget Sound does not discriminate in education or employment on the basis of sex, race, color, national origin, religion, creed, age, disability, marital or familial status, sexual orientation, Vietnam-era veteran status, gender identity, or any other basis prohibited by local, state, or federal laws. This policy complies with the spirit and the letter of applicable federal, state and local laws, including Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, Sections 503 and 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. Questions about the policy may be referred to the University's Director of Human Resources and Affirmative Action (253-879-3116) or the Office of Civil Rights, Department of Education, Washington, D.C. 20202.
Aims of the Course
English 203 explores the process of writing poetry, so it necessarily features much writing and revising, in and out of class. Reading the textbook and the anthology will familiarize us with important poetry published in English; just as musicians and painters study the compositions and paintings that have come before, we will enrich our awareness of poetry from a variety of traditions. We will also build up a lexicon necessary to the study of poetry-writing, and we will assemble and deploy a variety of techniques appropriate to all stages of the writing-and-revising process.
A course in writing poetry is obviously a public, cooperative way of studying the art, so anyone who believes that writing poetry must be a solitary, reclusive process will not find the venue productive, and anyone who takes such a course is invited to work to make the venue productive. In some ways, English 203 will demystify poetry and the writing of it; in other ways it will honor the persistent mysteries of art in general and poetry in particular. To a great extent, writing poetry is hard work, but it is often pleasurably hard work, and it is not only hard work. Spontaneity, intuition, improvisation, accident, wit, passion, and luck are also involved.
In the unlikely event you thought, when you registered, that taking the course would be a relatively effortless way to accumulate academic credit, please reconsider your decision to take English 203, for you may be disappointed in how much the course asks of you. I don’t offer this advice out of malice but simply based on experience. The same advice is operative in the event you believe poetry shouldn’t be analyzed or studied.
The words “poem,” “poet,” and “poetry” seem to have entered the written English language in the 13th and 14th centuries, and they are rooted in the Latin word poesis. In the form of long verse-stories like the Iliad, songs, chants, etc., poetry has been part of all civilizations, from the original inhabitants of what is now called North American to those of what is now known as Asia. So we’re dealing with a form of literature much older than the novel, which arose in English in the 18th century and was preceded by Don Quixote in Spanish.
One of Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s definitions of poetry is contained in the following quotation: "I wish our clever young poets would remember my homely definitions of prose and poetry; that is prose—words in their best order; poetry—the best words in their best order." (from Table Talk).
A poem is a piece of art made of words. The arrangement of words tends to be more concentrated than other kinds of arrangements, such as essays or textbooks, and customarily it emphasizes the ways in which words on the page create images and sounds in the mind. It is not necessarily a spoken art, but to a large extent it remains one Consequently, we will often read our poems and the poetry of others out loud. The purpose of doing so is chiefly practical: reading work out loud sharpens our awareness of the words on the page and of what is working and what is not. So please don’t think that by inviting you to read out loud I’m trying to put you on the spot or that I’m looking for a performance. The idea is simply to hear the words in addition to seeing them. I will do my fair share of reading aloud, too.
And finally, I should alert you to the fact that we will write spontaneously in class sometimes, without much warning—not that it’s a dangerous thing that suggests a warning is necessary.
Briefly, About the Professor
Sometimes students want to know a bit about the professor; in a paragraph, here’s a bit: I’ve taught at the University of Puget Sound for quite some time. My work with poetry is multifaceted. I have enjoyed reading it for decades. I studied it when I was an undergraduate English major and then when I was a doctoral student, going so far as to write a dissertation on poetry from the British Romantic period, circa 1789-1832. However, I also write and publish poetry. Much of the poetry I published in magazines and anthologies has been collected in The Coast Starlight: Collected Poems 1976-2006 (Indianapolis, 2006). I have also published articles and books on how to write poetry and how to teach creative writing. For example, I’m a co-author of Metro: Journeys in Writing Creatively (Longman, 2001). At Puget Sound I also teach the first-year seminar in writing and rhetoric, Introduction to English Studies, fiction-writing, and courses in literature.
The Etiquette and Atmosphere of the Course
Here are some guidelines to which all of us should adhere. None of them will be surprising or difficult. In fact, I hope they’ll seem familiar, even obvious, but sometimes it’s good to reaffirm the familiar. All are aimed at creating a productive, workable environment.
Please do attend class unless you are ill or otherwise indisposed, and please do arrive on time. Attendance guidelines: Each absence after the third one will start to erode your final grade. Each late arrival after the second one counts as an absence.
To some degree, a college classroom has become an old fashioned, counter-cultural space that asks us to lengthen our attention-spans when the culture at large seeks to shorten them. Please do listen while others are talking. Although conversations on the side are usually not intended to be rude or disruptive, they can have that effect. Respect each other and yourselves. Before class begins, turn off the electronic devices. If you use a lap-top computer in class, please use it only to take notes, not to get on the Internet or otherwise distract yourself and others. Please do not habitually get up and leave class. I realize that, every so often, one needs to leave class for a few minutes. But more than every so often is not appropriate. Becoming a poet requires stamina, persistence, resilience, and patience. Contrary to popular opinion, poets are tough-minded lot. Unlike squirrels, they’re not skittish.
Please do your best. The more each of us contributes to the course, the more each of us will get out of it. Please do not plagiarize.
Please turn in work and complete reading-assignments on time. But also please ask me to clarify assignments and guidelines if they are unclear, and please let me know if an illness or an emergency has prevented you from completing your work on time.
Please do acquire the books required for the course, read them according to the syllabus, and bring them to class on the appropriate days. Acquire the editions I’ve ordered through the bookstore, even if you do not buy them at the bookstore. If you tend not to acquire all required books for courses, this course is not a good fit for you.
Please don’t eat in class (every professor has his or her pet-peeves); a cup of coffee (for example) is fine, however.
Required Books (Two)
The books are required. Good used copies are, of course, more than acceptable. Do bring the books to class on the appropriate days.
Kevin Clark, The Mind’s Eye: A Guide to Writing Poetry. New York: Pearson, 2008.
Margaret Ferguson, Mary Jo Salter, and Jon Stallworthy, editors, The Norton Anthology of Poetry. Fifth edition. New York: W.W. Norton, 2005. Please do acquire the fifth edition.
Elements on Which Your Final Grade Will Be Based
A portfolio of poems you have written and revised in the course: 50 per cent, approximately.
Your participation: coming to class regularly, on time, and prepared; contributing productively to discussions and workshop-sessions; doing the work of the course: 25 per cent, approximately. See “The Etiquette and Atmosphere of the Course” above and the schedule below for more details on what is expected in the way of participation.
Two tests on reading and terminology: 25 per cent (total), approximately. Appended to the syllabus are a list of terms and a list of poets; the tests will be related significantly to these lists.
Extra credit: Attend a poetry reading, on campus or in the community, and write a brief (one page) response to the reading. Submit the response to me. You may get credit for attending more than one reading, too.
Schedule of Meetings, Assignments, Topics, and Tasks
Unit: What Is a Poem, How Do We Write One, and Why Do We Write and Read Poetry?
Monday, August 31. Overview of the course. Please read the syllabus carefully, in class and after the first session, see if you have any questions about it, and to see if indeed you want to remain in the course. Defining poetry. Discussing the process of writing poems.
Wednesday, September 2. For today, please read the Introduction and Chapter One of The Mind’s Eye, including the poems.
Friday, September 4. Write a new poem for today, no longer than a page, typed, with a title and your name. Bring one copy for me, one for you, and one for a classmate (total = 3). Guidelines for and a practice-run of responding to classmates’ poems.
Wednesday, September 9. For today, please read Chapter Two of The Mind’s Eye. Read the poems carefully, determine which ones you appreciate, and focus on particular lines or phrases.
Friday, September 11. Full-class workshop. Poem due, no longer than one page, typed. You will need a copy for me, a copy for you, and a copy for at least every other student in class (total = 11 or 12). This will be our only full-class workshop of the term because a workshop of 20 or so students takes up a lot of time. However, one full-class session will help establish the best practices for responding to poems. During the rest of the term, you will work in smaller groups when responding to and presenting poems. This is an excellent time to read ahead, so start reading “Versification,” by Jon Stallworthy, in the Norton anthology, pp. 2027-2052. Take notes.
Monday, September 14. Workshop, continued.
Wednesday, September 16. Workshop, continued.
Friday, September 18. Workshop, continued.
Monday, September 21. . Workshop concluded.
Unit: How Poetry Has Changed
Wednesday, September 23. Workshop concluded.
Friday, September 25. For today, please read The Mind’s Eye, Chapter III. In the Norton anthology, please read “The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner,” 1553, “We Real Cool,” 1588, “The Simple Truth,” 1763, “Dusting,” 1987, and “Valentine,” 1948.
Monday, September 28. Some key poems: For today, please read Frost, “The Road Not Taken,” 1232, Stevens, “The Emperor of Ice-Cream,” 1256, Williams, “This Is Just To Say,” 1274, Lawrence, “Snake,” 1286, Pound, “In a Station of the Metro,” 1297, Eliot, “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” 1340, Owen, “Dulce et Decorum Est,” 1387, cummings, “since feeling is first,” 1394, and Sandburg, “Fog.” Generate points and topics you want to discuss about these poems.
Wednesday, September 30. More discussion of poems from Monday. Guided writing, in class.
Friday, October 2. Poem due. One copy for me, one copy for you, and at least three copies for your group (total = at least 5). Workshop.
Monday, October 5. Workshop.
Unit: Basics of Formal Verse and Prosody
Wednesday, October 7. For today, please go over your notes from having read “Versification,” by Jon Stallworthy, in the Norton anthology, pp. 2027-2052, and please read The Mind’s Eye, Chapter 8. What questions do you have about “frames and forms” of poetry? What is one of your favorite poems in formal verse and why? Please bring both books to class.
Friday, October 9. More key poems: Shakespeare, “Sonnet 18,” 259, Donne, “The Flea,” 309, Blake, “The Tyger,” 743, Wordsworth, “Surprised by Joy,” 804, Hopkins, “The Windhover,” 1166, Housman, “To an Athlete Dying Young,” 1174, Yeats, “The Second Coming,” 1196, Robinson, “Richard Cory,” 1212, Hughes, “The Negro Speaks of Rivers,” 1430, Cullen, “Yet Do I Marvel,” 1446, Roethke, “The Waking,” 1500.
Monday, October 12. Discussing more of the poems assigned for the 25th. Some guided writing focused on sound, meter, verse.
Unit: Persons, Places, Things, and Scenes
Wednesday, October 14. For today, please read The Mind’s Eye, Chapter Four. Consider sentiment vs. sentimentality, revising for clarity, and how these topics apply to your own work. Review for test.
Friday, October 16. Test.
[Fall Break]
Wednesday, October 21. Poem due, with same number of copies as before. Work-groups.
Friday, October 23. Work-groups.
Monday, October 26. Field trip. Ekphrasis.
Wednesday, October 28. For today, read Chapter 5 of The Mind’s Eye, and concentrate on the poems appearing on pages 78, 81, and 82. Guided writing.
Friday, October 30. Thing-poems. Please read Hopkins, “God’s Grandeur,” 1166, Moore, “To a Chameleon,” 1328, Simic, “Watch Repair,” 1891, Ormsby, “Starfish” and “Skunk Cabbage,” 1925, 1926, Komunyakaa, “Facing It,” 1949, Zarin, “The Ant Hill,” 2013, Eberhart, “The Groundhog.”
Monday, November 2. Poem due. The usual number of copies. Workshop.
Wednesday, November 4. Workshop.
Friday, November 6. For today, please read The Mind’s Eye, Chapter 7. Multiple perspectives. Please read “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird.”
Unit: Sympathy, Sadness, Surprise, Love, Loss, and Left Field
Monday, November 9. For today, please read Parker, “Unfortunate Coincidence,” 1391, Graves, “Love Without Hope,” 1400, Hughes, “Harlem,” 1433, Cullen, “Incident,” 1446, Eberhart, “The Fury of Aerial Bombardment,” 1450, Auden, “Lullaby,” 1465, Kock, “You Were Wearing,” “Variations,” and “To My Twenties,” 1692-94, Ginsberg, from Howl, 1708. For Friday, please read The Waste Land.
Wednesday, November 11. T. S. Eliot reading The Waste Land.
Friday, November 13. Poem due. The usual number of copies. Workshop
Monday, November 16. Workshop.
Wednesday, November 18. Select a poem (from the anthology) that you especially like, and write a few sentences about why you like it.
Friday, November 20. Writing in class.
Monday, November 23. For today, please read The Mind’s Eye, Chapter Twelve.
Monday, November 30. Bring in two or three of your poems, as is—ones you’d especially like to revise. Guided revision.
Wednesday, December 2. Poem due. The usual number of copies. Workshop.
Friday, December 4. Workshop.
Monday, December 7. Review guidelines for portfolio. Review for test.
Wednesday, December 9. Test.
Portfolio due at my office, Wyatt 336, by 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, December 16.
* * * * * * *
Terminology
Adjective
Allegory Noun
Alliteration Ode
Anapest/Anapestic Parable
Article Parody
Assonance Pentameter
Ballad Persona
Blank Verse Personification
Blues (lyric-form of) Poetics
Cliché Preposition
Consonance Satire
Dactyl/Dactylic Scansion
Elegy Sentimentality
Enjambment Sestina
Foot (with regard to poetry) Simile
Iamb/Iambic Sonnet (English/Shakespearian)
Interior Monologue Sonnet (Italian/Petrarchan)
Metaphor Spondee
Meter (with regard to poetry) Sprung Rhythm
Metonymy Stanza
Mimesis Surrealism
Synecdoche
Tetrameter
Trochee/Trochaic
Villanelle
Poets
One ought to know at least one poem by each poet on the list. In some obvious cases, one ought to know more than one poem by the poet.
Ai
Alexander, Elizabeth
Atwood, Margaret
Auden, W.H.
Baraka, Amiri
Basho, Matsuo
Baudelaire, Charles
Bishop, Elizabeth
Blake, William
Bly, Robert
Brooks, Gwendolyn
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett
Browning, Robert
Byron, Lord
Cavafy, C.P.
Chin, Marilyn
Coleridge, S.T.
Collins, Billy
Dante
Dickinson, Emily
Donne, John
Doty, Mark
Dove, Rita
Eliot, T.S.
Erdrich, Louise
Frost, Robert
Ginsberg, Allen
Halliday, Mark
Homer
Hopkins, Gerard Manley
Housman, A.E.
Hughes, Langston
Jarrell, Randall
Jeffers, Robinson
Keats, John
Kooser, Ted
Layton, Irving
Lee, Li Young
Lorca, Federico Garcia
Marvel, Andrew
Milton, John
Neruda, Pablo
Owen, Wilfred
Plath, Sylvia
Poe, Edgar Allan
Pope, Alexander
Pound, Ezra
Sappho
Shakespeare, William
Shapiro, Karl
Shelley, Percy
Snyder, Gary
Soto, Gary
Tennyson, Alfred
Trethewey, Natasha
Walcott, Derek
Whitman, Walt
Williams, W.C.
Wordsworth, Wiliam
Yeats, W.B.