Friday, May 8, 2009

The Final Project Option X: Poetry Groups, Movements, Schools

If you choose this option you will create a blog devoted to a poetry group, school, or movement.

Before writing...

^Take notes on an inadequate and impossible lecture about poetry and the arts. (Monday and Tuesday next week).
^Choose a “group,” “movement,” or “school”. (No more than two students can share a “movement” or “school”.)
^Read as many poems as you can—at least ten—by poets within the group/movement/school.

1. Write a reflection on the experience of reading the poems.

The edict of the modern and post-modern age in poetry comes from Ezra Pound: “Make it new!” Think about how the poems employ elements of poetry in inventive ways (new, strange, disorienting, alienating, surprising ways)

Think about the treatment of language: speaker’s voice, language style, diction, syntax, sound, stanza structure, line breaks, arrangement on the page. Think about the meaning and effect of the variations from traditional forms of poetry and tradition uses of language.

Think about the content: subject matter, imagery, figurative language, narration. Look for fragmentation and juxtaposition.

Post this reflection (with a list of the poems you have read and who wrote them) on your blog. 300+ words.

2. Write a careful, insightful explication of one of the poems. Post this on your blog. To see a list of last year's blogs go here. (I will help you set up a blog in class next week.) For explication help look here. Also, look at the directions above for ideas about what to explicate/explain/interpret/unfold. You're only doing one explication so it should show an imaginative, insightful grasp of the whole and of the particulars of the poem.

When explicating write about what the poem seems to say and how it says it. With modernist and post-modernist poetry the how (or form)--the speaker's voice, diction, syntax, tone, sound, line breaks, arrangement, etc.--is often as important or more important than the what (or content)--the speaker, the occasion, the subject, the plot or events, other people or characters in the poem.

Or to put it more succinctly, Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot) said that James Joyce (A Portrait of the Artist) isn't "writing about something. He is writing something."
300+ words

3. Research the group / movement / school and write a reflection that demonstrates that you understand the group / movement / school, its relationship to the poems you’ve read, and to your own developing ideas about literature and language. {Notice the three parts to this: 1. show that you understand the group & what it was/is all about, its significance, etc.; 2. show how the group's ideas, values, etc. has some relationship to the how (form) and what (content) of the poems you've read; 3. develop your own thoughts about the poems you've read and the group that created them, especially in terms of what you think literature should or could do, as well as what you get from & want from literature.} This post must be accompanied by at least three works cited. 300+ words

4. Find a work of art other than a poem—painting, sculpture, musical composition, dance, film, etc.—that is somehow related to the group / movement / school. In some cases—surrealism, Dadaism, futurism for example—this will be easy because these movements occurred in the visual arts too. In other cases, you’ll have to be a bit more inventive. I can help with this. Ask me.

Write a response explicating the work of art and explaining how it relates to the poetry movement. (Notice there are two parts to this. 1. Provide a close reading of the work of art. For help explicating visual art check out step four here at my friend's blog (Mr. Gallagher of Malden High School). 2. Show a relationship between the poetry you have read (& the group / movement / school of poetry) and the art-other-than-poetry. I will also provide some examples in class. 300+ words.

5. Create a work of art—poem, painting, short film, script, etc.—that relates in someway to the poems, other art, or movement / group / school. Write a paragraph explaining the connection between your creation and the work you have done. The art & paragraph should be on your blog. (If the art is visual and you don't know how to scan it or take a digital photograph let me know; I'll help.)


Language and the Imagination: Modern and Post-Modern Poets in Context (a partial list)

{The lists are tentative and are subject to change. The nature of these groupings is often a bit arbitrary, sometimes the groupings are philosophical, sometimes the groupings are geographical, etc.}

[Proto-Modernists]

Walt Whitman

Emily Dickinson

Gerard Manley Hopkins

[Symbolist Poets]

Stéphane Mallarmé

Paul Verlaine

Charles Baudelaire

Arthur Rimbaud

Jules Laforge

[Anglo- and USAmerican Modernists]

Ezra Pound

T.S. Eliot

D.H. Lawrence

William Carlos Williams

H.D. (Hilda Doolittle)

Hart Crane

Marianne Moore

Wallace Stevens

Mina Loy

e.e. cummings

Austin Clarke

Hugh MacDiarmid

David Jones

W.B Yeats

Dylan Thomas

[European Modernists]

C.P. Cavafy

Rainer Maria Rilke

Georg Trakl

Fernando Pessoa [and his heteronyms]

Berltolt Brecht

Anna Akhmatova

Tomas Tranströmer

Vladimir Holan

Wisława Szymborska

[Latin American Modernismo/Vanguardia]

César Vallejo

Nicanor Parra

Ruben Darío

Nicolás Guillén

José Lezama Lima

Pablo Neruda

Octavio Paz

Jorge Luis Borges

Ernesto Cardinal

[Dadaist Poets]

Tristan Tzara

Hugo Ball

Kurt Schwitters

[Surrealist Poets]

Guillaume Apollinaire

Robert Desnos

Louis Aragon

Andre Breton

Paul Éluard

Pierre Reverdy

Paul Celan

[La Generacion de 27]

Federico Garcia Lorca

Jorge Guillen

Rafael Alberti

Pedro Salinas

Vicente Aleixandre

[Italian Futurism]

F.T. Marinetti

Farfa

[Russian Futurism]

Vladimir Mayakovsky

Velemir Khlebnikov

[Portuguese and Brazilian Futurism]

Alvaro De Campo (one of Fernando Pessoa’s heteronyms)

Mario De Andrade

[Harlem Renaissance]

Langston Hughes

Arna Bontemps

Paul Lawrence Dunbar

James Weldon Johnson

Claude McKay

Jean Toomer

[Objectivism]

Lorine Niedecker

George Oppen

Charles Reznikoff

Louis Zukofsky

Carl Rakosi

Basil Bunting

[Beats, San Francisco Renaissance, and Post-Beat Poets]

Jack Kerouac

Allen Ginsberg

Gregory Corso

William Burroughs

Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Bob Kaufman

Kenneth Rexroth

Anne Waldman

Diane DiPrima

Joanne Kyger

Richard Brautigan

Charles Bukowski

Ed Sanders

Gary Snyder

Philip Whalen

Jack Spicer

Robin Blaser

[Negritude Poets]

Aimé Césaire

René Depestre

Léopold Senghor

[“Black Mountain”/Projective Verse Poets]

Charles Olson

Robert Duncan

Robert Creeley

Denise Levertov

LeRoi Jones/Amiri Baraka {also, Black Arts Movement}

John Wieners

Ed Dorn

Cid Corman

Larry Eigner

Jonathan Williams

Paul Blackburn

Joel Oppenheimer

Hilda Morley

[New York School Poets: first and second generation]

Kenneth Koch

Frank O’Hara

James Schuyler

John Ashbery

Anne Waldman

Ron Padgett

Barbara Guest

Ted Berrigan

Alice Notley

Kenward Elmslie

Bernadette Mayer

Eileen Myles

David Rattray

[Black Arts Movement]

Amiri Baraka

Nikki Giovanni

Sonia Sanchez

Larry Neal

Gwendolyn Brooks

Eldridge Cleaver

Jayne Cortez

Henry Dumas

Mari Evans

[Ethnopoets and Deep Image Poets]

Gary Snyder

Jerome Rothenberg

Diane Wakoski

David Antin

Clayton Eshleman

Pierre Joris

Armand Schwerner

Nathaniel Tarn

Robert Kelly

Robert Bly

James Wright

Galway Kinnell

Linda Parker/Crane

[Confessional Poetry]

Sylvia Plath

Adrienne Rich

Anne Sexton

Robert Lowell

Sharon Olds

John Berryman

W.D. Snodgrass

Delmore Schwartz

Theodore Roethke

[Language Poets]

Ron Silliman

Jackson Mac Low

Hannah Weiner

Susan Howe

Fanny Howe

Clark Coolidge

Lyn Hejinian

Michael Palmer

Charles Bernstein

Leslie Scalapino

[Misty Poets]

Bei Dao

Gu Cheng

Duo Duo

Yang Lian

Mang Ke

Shu Ting

[“Multiculturalism”]

[Martian Poets]

Craig Raine

Christopher Reid

[USAmerican Neosurrealism]

James Tate

Bill Knott

Andre Codrescu

[Flarf]

[Post-language Poetry]

[New Formalism]

[Gloucester Modernist and Avant-Garde Poets]

Jeremy Ingalls

Gerrit Lansing

Vincent Ferrini

Charles Olson

Linda Parker/Crane

15 comments:

alees said...

"Or to put it more succinctly, Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot)" I just realized we never read Waiting for Godot. This saddens me greatly. I was looking forward to hearing and acting out the exploits of Didi and Gogo. Oh well, I guess I'll have to read it on my own :(

Alex R said...

I'm a little disappointed myself. Although I've read Waiting for Godot already I was looking forward to rereading it and discussing it. Plus it's a little less straining than some of the other stuff we've done so it would have made a nice segue into summer.

alees said...

I call Waiting for Godot classes over the summer. We haven't met our play requirements for the year, Mr. Cook! We've only read oodles. The American Society of Advanced Placement English recommends oodles AND more oodles. I'm still hungry!
(this is in complete seriousness)

Alex R said...

I'm going to do ethnopoetics.

Courtland Kelly said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
MHodgkins said...

I'm doing slam poets.
my blog url is:
michaelhapenglish.blogspot.com

MegHan said...

I'll be doing Flarf.

Alex R said...

alexrapenglish.blogspot.com

MegHan said...

meghansvarsityflarf.blogspot.com

Courtland Kelly said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Rose said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Rose said...

The Latin American Modernists.
http://rositaapenglish.blogspot.com/

Unknown said...

well, in case anyone might be interested in that "USAmerican Neosurrealist" Bill Knott,

they can download for FREE

all my books of poetry from this page:

http://stores.lulu.com/store.php?fAcctID=2254674

...
———hey, all those other poets on your list make you buy their books, but I give mine away free!

Mr. J. Cook said...

Thanks, Bill.
I was a student of yours in '93 and '94: a poetry workshop and twentieth century poetry.
I still go back to a lot of the readings from the 20th century poetry class.
& thanks for the free poems.

Kaylie McTiernan said...

I'm doing Symbolist Poetry and my blog is kaylieapenglish.blogspot.com