English 262: Craft of Poetry—Form, Forms and Prosody—Hillman Thursday 4:45-8pm Dante 222 Office Hours Weds 11:30-12:30, Thurs 2-3 & by appointment Dante 322 Please use home phone or email for messages: (510) 527-4945 bhillman@stmarys-ca.edu. Cell: (510) 393-5719 Course Description: This course will instruct the student in methods of scansion, prosody, received forms of metrical verse and in some alternate forms of poetry as they impact the writing of contemporary poetry. This background is useful and significant for the study of poetry at any level, and is especially helpful in light of the fact that free verse technique has dominated poetry in the twentieth century. The course is meant to give the student a solid “nuts-and-bolts” back ground in the music and prosody of poetry. We will start the semester learning the basic techniques of scansion and will move on to study principles of some received forms—the sonnet, the villanelle, the sestina, accentual-syllabic verse, syllabic poetry, concrete poems, prose poetry—as well as free verse poetry in a wide-range of techniques. The student will be asked to annotate poetry and to write versions, imitations and variations on received forms. We will study variants of the singlet, the couplet, the triplet and other stanzaic structures. Students will be doing presentations of formal issues in a practice other than poetry. Learning Outcomes: To inform the student about the basics of prosody, including critical vocabulary, and to study examples of prosody in diverse forms To expose the student to a variety of received and invented forms that will enable her to incorporate those forms into her own practice To give the student a familiarity with the historical and aesthetic contexts of the basic structures of poetry To encourage the student to think about form in general, especially about the correspondences between forms in other disciplines and poetic form Texts: Annie Finch, A Poet’s Craft (abbreviated AF) Mary Kinzie, A Poet’s Guide to Poetry (abbreviated MK) Robert Hass, various materials in Class Reader (abbreviated CR) Some assignments will be made available to you at the Moodle website and some as links in this syllabus. Bring your own books, and print out your own copy of texts for each class, including copies of your own poems; please do not share texts, and please do not use your laptop, tablet or cell phone in class unless asked to do so. You should allow about 3 hours for the reading for this class, plus time for the writing assignment. Course Requirements: Weekly participation in discussion, the production of one poem a week that follows the week’s formal problems, as well as a weekly annotation on the reading. Proposed Schedule: You are allowed one absence in this class; please try not to miss class at all. All assignments are due at the start of class. Always check with a classmate if you miss a class, or if you miss an assignment, as the syllabus may change. You are strongly requested to attend all the readings in the Creative Writing Reading Series as part of your work for the class. Sept 5: Scansion; accentual-syllabics; introduction to iambic meter —AF, pp.281-285, 290-294, 301 (mark accents on the Yeats), 306-329, 333-338 —Robert Hass, “How to Scan Poetry” (please attempt to scan the pieces he gives you) (CR) —MK, pp. 217-225, 458-459 “Scansion rules” —Write and bring to class 16 lines of iambic pentameter on any subject. —Be able to scan iambic lines —Demonstrations on daily form 1 Annotations—What are these? Please plan to bring an annotation to class each week. These will facilitate our discussions. These should be typed responses to one part of the reading, with a special interest in a formal or poetics problem that engages you specifically about one of the poems. These should be no fewer than 200 words in length but they can be slightly longer if you wish (up to two pages); they can be informal (a sort of journal entry) or scholarly (that is, you can add source material, as long as you cite it and don’t cut and paste from the internet. Annotations should represent a small portion of the thought you have about the week’s work. These will be due at the beginning of each class. In addition, each week you should plan to come to class with one interpretive question. Poems for classes Please plan to produce one poem per week based on the weekly assignments; your work will represent one of the prosody configurations in the week’s lesson. That poem will be put up on Moodle no later than Wednesday night. Note that special formatting may not cut and paste completely accurately from a document, but you can edit this once you are in the Wiki tool. Please print out the class’s poems and bring them to class— no laptops in class, please, and no “double dipping” for Workshop poetry—this “Forms” assignment is in addition to whatever you are doing in Workshop. Demonstrations on forms You’ll be asked to sign up to make a 10-minute presentation of a non-literary use of form. Examples would be: horseback riding, making éclairs, sewing on a button, snowboarding— whatever you’re good at besides writing. An example will be presented the first day of class. Please time your presentation to be 10 -12 minutes—not much more or less. Readings for this class The readings tend to be time-consuming, so even if there are only a few pages, please allow several hours to get through the material. The class will be more fun and fruitful if we have full participation in discussion, and you will get more from your education if you are prepared for class. Please remember all grades for this class are Pass/Fail, so the pressure is less on the grade and more on your own knowledge-gathering. These two statements are provided by the College: Saint Mary’s College expects every member of its community to abide by the Academic Honor Code. According to the Code, “Academic dishonesty is a serious violation of College policy because, among other things, it undermines the bonds of trust and honesty between members of the community.” Violations of the Code include but are not limited to acts plagiarism. For more information, please consult http://www.stmarys-ca.edu/graduate-professional-academics/graduateand-professional-student-handbook [for graduate and professional students]. ****** Student Disability Services extends reasonable and appropriate accommodations that take into account the context of the course and its essential elements for individuals with qualifying disabilities. Students with disabilities are encouraged to contact the Student Disability Services Office at (925) 631-4358 or sds@stmarys-ca.edu to arrange a confidential appointment to discuss accommodation guidelines and available services. Additional information regarding the services available may be found at the following address on the Saint Mary’s website: http://www.stmarys-ca.edu/sds 2