ENGLISH 206: WRITING POETRY

T/Th 1:30-2:45pm, Oddfellows 222

Christopher Bakken Office: Oddfellows 220

Office Hours: MW 11-1; T 12:30-1:20; W 11-1; Th 10-11 Tel: 332 4338

e-mail:


COURSE OBJECTIVES:


Our word "poet" originally comes from the Greek word for "maker" or "creator." In this course we will endeavor to remind ourselves of the materials, the conventions, the ideas, and the media out of which poems are made. It is easy to argue that the art of creation cannot be taught; but we will begin with the hypothesis that certain things about the craft of poetry can, in fact, be learned through observation and imitation. Thus, we will spend a surprisingly large quotient of our time reading poetry, finding models and tuning our ears and eyes to them, learning what we can about their technical idiosyncrasies, memorizing their music. We will use our remaining time together to discuss your writing, much of it in the form of exercises and assignments.

ASSIGNMENTS:

Most of the poems you write for this course will be produced under unusual and rather extreme conditions. You will be given deadlines that will afford little time for inspiration, brooding or procrastination. The good news is that you will be responding to assignments; this should take some of the "creative pressure" off of you. Take these assignments very seriously (you'll certainly learn something if you do), but also think of them as exercises, not masterpieces. Nevertheless, we will discuss your work both as exercises and as poems. More often than not, your work may begin to succeed in the first of those capacities, but probably not in the second. If you revise these exercises repeatedly, and if you work hard and respond to critiques with answerable humility, you might very well produce some poems by the semester's end.

Policy on due dates: The due dates for each poetry assignment are inflexible. Late poems will not be discussed in workshop, nor considered outside of class by the instructor. Students who fail to turn in poems on time will risk failing the course.

Policy on early drafts: Workshop is the proper venue for the discussion of your rough drafts. So you learn to rely on the peers in your cohort, the instructor will not read or discuss drafts in office hours.

Policy on editing and clean copy: Since poetry places a particular kind of pressure upon language—by virtue of its intensity and meticulous compression—it is crucial that your poems are edited as well as, if not even more fastidiously than your prose. Produce and submit clean copy.

Reading & Statements of Admiration: No one can write good poetry without learning how to read good poetry first; therefore, your other assignment this term is to become a competent, curious, and voracious reader of poetry. Readings from the textbooks, anthologies, and the Bishop, Barker, Beer, Brown, and Jacobs collections are important parts of that assignment.

You will submit four Statements of Admiration any time over the course of the semester, two by October 15th and the other two by November 24th. You may write your SOAs on any poem listed on the syllabus, or any poem found in one of the photocopy packets distributed by the professor.

SOA Guidelines: While it is easy to criticize, dispraise, and complain, learning how to praise—and learning how to praise with specific examples and details—is a difficult skill to master. As a reader of poetry who aspires to write poetry, you read in order to find what works, what moves you, what sings to you, and what techniques make poetry happen. Four times this semester, you’ll submit one Statement of Admiration (SOA). These should constitute lively, personal responses to the material. Begin by answering this question: what single poem did you admire most from a recent assigned reading and WHY did you admire that poem? Then consider these other questions: What specific techniques did you admire in that poem? What about the writing made you jealous? What do you want to steal from that poem? How does that poem represent something you admire in other poems by the same poet? Quote from the poem and analyze what you quote. Suggested length: one page, single spaced. You’ll include all of your SOAs in your final portfolio.

EVALUATION & ATTENDANCE:


The grade assigned to your work in this course will depend in part on your ability to produce and submit poems by the assigned due dates and to complete other written assignments in a timely, professional and diligent manner. Since all creative work in this course will be considered "in progress," you need not worry about being "graded" on the success of individual drafts. Each of you will produce a portfolio of your poems (consisting of at least nine poems) by the end of the term. All of those poems will be revisions of previously submitted work. Your final grade will, to a large degree, be determined by the other elements of this final portfolio and the quality of your final revisions. You will also be asked to provide spoken and written critiques on the work of your peers all semester long; your participation in this activity will be considered in formulating your final grade. And because you will benefit from coming into contact with living writers, your attendance at the Single Voice readings is mandatory. The dates for those events are noted on this syllabus. A written response to those readings may be required. Since the course is organized as a workshop, attendance and class participation are also mandatory. Students who miss more than four classes will find their grade lowered by as much as a full letter grade. Students who miss six or more classes should not expect to pass.

TEXTS:

Under the Rock Umbrella, ed. Walsh. Mercer UP. 9780881460476

Richard Hugo, The Triggering Town Norton. 0 393 30933 9

Structure and Surprise, ed. Theune. Teachers & Writers. 0 915924 27 7

Nickole Brown,Fanny Says. BOA Editions. Paper 978-1938160578

Jessica Jacobs, Pelvis with a Distance. White Pine Press. Paper 978-1935210665

Elizabeth Bishop, Poems. FS & G. 9780374532369

Nicky Beer, The Octopus Game. Carnegie Mellon. Paper. 0887485936

Brian Barker, The Black Ocean. Southern Illinois UP. Paper. 0809330288

Christopher Bakken, Goat Funeral and After Greece (encouraged/optional)

THE PORTFOLIO:


Most of your grade for this course will be determined by the portfolio you turn in at the end of the semester. This portfolio will consist of three items:


1) A prose "introduction" to your portfolio. This is your chance to say anything about your performance in the course, about the poems you did and did not make. A statement of your "aesthetic" is not necessary, but some account of what you attempted, what you succeeded in, what you failed at, and what you learned would be appropriate here. The best of these will exhibit remarkable self-scrutiny and depth. At the end of your introduction, you should make note of your top peer editors in the workshop—those fellow poets whose comments were most helpful in shaping your revisions.
2) Nine revised poems with their 'original' drafts (the draft you submitted to the class and I returned to you with notations)
3) Four previously-submitted SOAs (the draft you submitted to the class and I returned to you with notations), along with a one page self-evaluation of yourself as a reader of poetry this semester. Looking back over the SOAs you turned in, as well as all the poets you encountered as you made your way through the course, your brief self-evaluation should include some account of what you learned about poetry by apprenticing yourself to those models.

Please submit your portfolio typed and assembled carefully in a three-ringed binder with your name on it. No illustrations or fancy covers please. Portfolios Due: Tuesday, December 15th, 2pm.

COURSE CALENDAR:


We will work on an alternating schedule: poems will be due about every other class meeting. The other classes will be dedicated to introducing assignments, discussing models for those assignments, and considering prose readings. You will be required to bring enough copies (one for each of your peers plus one for the instructor) of each assignment to class on the due date. Arrive with these photocopies ready to be distributed! If your poem is not ready on the due date, it will not be distributed or discussed. Texts/Poems Listed Below must be read before you arrive in class.

August

25 First Day of Class: Course Introduction, First Assignment: "The The."

27 Read Hugo, ch. 1 & 5. Read Carolyn Forché: “The Colonel.” Read Nicky Beer, “Black Hole

Itinerary” (54) and Brian Barker “Nightmare for the Last Night on Earth” (41); “Prose to Poetry” Exercise Distributed.

September

1 Discuss Prose to Poetry Exercise. Dictation Exercise.

3 Read Models of Assignment One (handout): what constitutes good description?

8 Models of Assignment One, cont. Read Nicky Beer, “Octopus Vulgaris” (13) and “The Burn”

(58); Read Elizabeth Bishop: “The Map” (5), “The Fish” (43), & “12 O’Clock News” (194). In RU, read Balk, “Dear Hippopotamus” [27]; Carbo, “Tuyo” [68]; Collier, “To a Chameleon” [70]; Doty, “Grackles on Montrose” [96]; Hollander, “California Roll” [173]; McGrath, “Snapdragons” [231]; Spires, “Snail” & “Snail, Revisited” [333-335]; Optional: in Goat Funeral, read “The Blue Jay” and “Portrait Detail, with Pear.”

10 “The The" poems due. Assignment Two: Praise Poem. In Structure & Surprise, read ch. 2,

“The Emblem Structure”. Read Elizabeth Bishop: “Florida” (33), “The Shampoo” (82), “Filling Station” (125), “Night City” (187), & “Pink Dog” (212). Read Brian Barker: “Poe Climbs Down…” (17-22), “Lullaby for the Last Night on Earth” (23), “The Last Songbird” (24) & “Silent Montage with Late Reagan…” (34-36, 66). Read Nicky Beer: “Rimbaud’s Kraken” (39) & “Oblation” (59). Read Nickole Brown: “For Our Grandmothers” (11), “For my Grandmother’s…. Teeth” (29), “Feet” (52), & “Gallstones” (104). In RU, read Addonizio, “First Kiss”& “31-year-old Lover” [2]; McGrath, “Xena…” [230]; Young, “Ode to Hangover” [427].

15 Disc. of “The The” poems.

17 Praise Poems Due. Assignment Three: Persona Poem.

Read Elizabeth Bishop: “Jeronimo’s House” (35) & “Crusoe in England” (182). Read Brian Barker: “A Brief Oral Account of Torture…” (54-63). Read Nickole Brown: “Fanny Says…. “She Spent It” (21) & “She Got Saved” (31). Read Jessica Jacobs: “Alfred Steigletz at 291” (21/117), “The White Place in Shadow” (91/127) & “Sky Above Clouds IV” (106/129). In RU, read: Jenks, “Saturday Morning” [190]; Marvin, “A Windmill…” [222]; Seibles, “Jimi’s Blues” [314]. Optional: in Goat Funeral, read; “Late Adam Thinking,” “Ariadne (Postscript)” & “Last Words from Elpenor” & in After Greece, read "Burning the Turk" & "At Xanthos."

22 Disc. of Praise Poems. Extra credit Brown/Jacobs close-readings due.

24 Q&A with Nickole Brown & Jessica Jacobs. Nickole Brown & Jessica Jacobs SV reading, 7pm

29 Persona Poem Due. Assignment Four: Ekphrastic poem. Read Elizabeth Bishop: “Large Bad

Picture” (13) & “The Monument” (25). Read Jessica Jacobs: “No. 8…” (26/119), “Pelvis with Distance” (77/125), Pedernal, 1945” (81/126), The White Place in Shadow” (91/127), & “Georgia O’Keefe, by Alfred Steigletz” (102/ 128). Read Nicky Beer: “The Floating Girl” (17), “Catalog Note” (58), & “”Restoration Portrait” (83). Optional: in After Greece, read “Terra Incognita” & “Landscape with Kore” & in Goat Funeral, read: “Detail from the Martyrdom of St. Mauricio.”

October

1 Disc. of Persona poems.

6 Ekphrastic poems due. Assignment Five: Short Poem or Ironic Structure poem. In Structure

And Surprise, read ch. 1, “The Ironic Structure. Read Nickole Brown: “Fanny Says She Knows…” (103) & “Again the Same Dream on Morphine” (115). In RU, read Alexie, “Migration, 1902” [12]; Dove, “In the Bulrush” & “Eighth Juror” [98-99]; Espada, “DSS Dream,” “Sheep Haiku,” & “When the Leather…” [117-118]; Rohrer, “Map of Lament” [299]; Trinidad, “Reruns” [369]; Wiman, “A Field…” [402]; Wright, “Birthday” [416]. Optional: in Goat Funeral, read “Parenthesis” & in After Greece, read: “Behind the Theatre, Limenas.”

8 Disc. of Ekphrastic poems.

13 Fall Break

15 No Class. Deadline for first two SOAs.

20 Short poems due. Assignment Six: Sonnet Read Elizabeth Bishop: “Some Dreams They

Forgot” (168) & “Sonnet” (214). Read Brian Barker: “Love Poem for the Last Night on Earth” (37). Read Nicky Beer, “Frost on the Octopus” (15), “Giant Squid Caught on Film!” (27), “Laboratory Model” (52) & “Prairie Octopus, Awake” (69). In RU, read Agoos, “February” [6]; Barot, “Elegy” [31]; Campo, “On Valentine’s Day” [66]; Cooley, “Triage Sonnet” [76]; Davidson, “Cockroaches” [92]; McCombs, “Stephen Bishop’s Grave” & “Cave Mummies” [226]. Optional: in Goat Funeral, read: “The World Reduced to One Thing,” “Purgatory, a Postcard,” “Coleridge in Valletta,” & “Last Words from Elpenor” & in After Greece, read: “Cliff Lullaby,” “Dido,” “Melisses,” “Santorini,” & “A Concert of Ancient Music”.

22 Disc. of short poems.

27 Gator Day

29 Sonnets due. Assignment Seven: Substructure. In Structure & Surprise, read ch. 9,

“Substructure.” Read Elizabeth Bishop: Visits to St. Elizabeth’s” (131) & “One Art” (198). Read Brian Barker: “In the City of Fallen Rebels” (38-40) & “Field Recording, Notes from the Machine” (47-48). Read Nickole Brown: “Fuck” (15), “Fanny Says How to be a Lady” (43), & “Clorox” (47-52). Read Nicky Beer: “Please Indicate….” (18), “Crackpot Arctic Octopus” (37), & “Harvard Med Field Trip” (51). In RU, read Bateman, “Poetmaster 1, 4 & 9” [32-34]; Duhamel, “Embarazar” [104]; Gylys, “Personal” [146]; Hoagland, “My Country” [167]; McGrath, “Xena…” [230]; Jarnot, “Hound Pastoral” [187]. Optional: in Goat Funeral, read “Minimalist Eclogue” & “Anatomy.”

November

3 Disc. of Sonnets. Extra credit Beer/Barker close-readings due.

5 Q & A with Nicky Beer & Brian Barker. Nicky Beer & Brian Barker Single Voice Reading,

7pm.

10 Substructure poems Due. Assignment Eight: Self-Portrait. Read Elizabeth Bishop: “Pink

Dog”(212). Read Nicky Beer, “Woman in a Stanza” (61) & “Restoration Portrait” (63). Read Nickole Brown: “Go Put on Your Face” (27) & “Fanny Asks me a Question” (112). Read Jessica Jacobs: “Self-Portrait in Abstentia” (40) & “In the Canyon IV (Reflection)” (46). In RU, read: Gylys, “My Father’s Nightmare” [146]; Hicok, “Man of the House” [163]; Lee, “Night Mirror” [209]; Merrill, “Doppleganger” [235]. Optional: in After Greece, read “Proteus” & “Philoctetes.” In Goat Funeral, read “Anamnesis” & “Duet with Fernando Pessoa.”