The Lyric Essay. LITR 3371: Creative Writing: The Lyric Essay Prof. Joanna Eleftheriou Office Hours: Mon. & Wed. 12 3

Similar documents
CREATIVE WRITING AT INDIANA STATE UNIVERSITY 2015 INTRODUCTION APPENDIX

AN INTEGRATED CURRICULUM UNIT FOR THE CRITIQUE OF PROSE AND FICTION

ENGL S092 Improving Writing Skills ENGL S110 Introduction to College Writing ENGL S111 Methods of Written Communication

Charles Ball, "the Georgian Slave"

WRT 114: Writing Culture: Introduction to Creative Nonfiction (3 credits) Fall 2013

To explore and interrogate the role of documentary film as a vehicle for initiating change in society.

English (ENGL) English (ENGL) 1

Language and Style in Buck

University of Pennsylvania Creative Writing: English Course Syllabus Spring Semester 2014 Classroom: Fisher-Bennett 25 Wednesday, 2-5 PM

Course MCW 600 Pedagogy of Creative Writing MCW 610 Textual Strategies MCW 630 Seminar in Fiction MCW 645 Seminar in Poetry

DEPARTMENT OF M.A. ENGLISH Programme Specific Outcomes of M.A Programme of English Language & Literature

Drama and Theatre Art Preschool

RUSS 194, Fall , HUM hoogenboom-at-macalester.edu

School District of Springfield Township

Writing Assignments: Annotated Bibliography + Research Paper

Fine and Performing Arts Course Offerings

RHET Changing Words, Changing Worlds

The Literary Essay An analysis of the literary devices used in Night.

SYLLABUS. How To Change The World

- 1 - Syllabus AP ENGLISH Literature and Composition

Independent Study Project

NONFICTION I: ANCIENT ROOTS THROUGH 19 TH -CENTURY FORMS

12th Grade Language Arts Pacing Guide SLEs in red are the 2007 ELA Framework Revisions.

AP English Language and Composition

PETERS TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL

UFS QWAQWA ENGLISH HONOURS COURSES: 2017

RESEARCH PAPER. 1. Cover Page: This should contain the title, your name, class period, and date. The title of your paper may be a creative title.

Student Essay Booklet

ENGLISH (ENGL) 101. Freshman Composition Critical Reading and Writing. 121H. Ancient Epic: Literature and Composition.

AP Lit & Comp 1/12 16

AP English Literature and Composition Syllabus

Student Performance Q&A:

The Personal Essay: What YOU Think It Is

English 10B Introduction to English I Poetics and Politics in Medieval and Renaissance Literature Spring

DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH SPRING 2018 COURSE OFFERINGS

GREENEVILLE HIGH SCHOOL CURRICULUM MAP

Advanced Placement English Literature & Composition Summer 2018 Reading Assignment: 60 points Due Date: August 20, 2018

A-G/CP English 11. Gorman Learning Center (052344) Basic Course Information

Course Syllabus: MENG 6510: Eminent Writers, Ralph Waldo Emerson

The Memoir Medley: Where Prose meets Poetry

Documenting Sources and Avoiding Plagiarism

Dr. Tiffany Boyd Adams, English Instructor Central Piedmont Community College Module for Curriculum Revision English 113: Literature-Based Research

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK Technology Division, Architecture Program

Six Week Thematic Unit Plan. The difficulty in life is the choice. George Moore, author

What is the relevance of an annotated bibliography? In other words, why are we creating an annotated bibliography?

Arkansas Learning Standards (Grade 12)

ENGLISH IVAP. (A) compare and contrast works of literature that materials; and (5) Reading/Comprehension of Literary

THE LISTS AN INDEPENDENT READING PROJECT

Guidelines for Paper 3: Choose Your Own Adventure

SELF AND SOCIETY IN EUROPE,

Class Syllabus MUSIC IN SOCIETY, SCIENCE AND PSYCHE (HONORS, FALL 2012)

Piero Gleijeses, Conflicting Missions: Havana, Washington, and Africa, (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2002).

MIRA COSTA HIGH SCHOOL English Department Writing Manual TABLE OF CONTENTS. 1. Prewriting Introductions 4. 3.

Peer Evaluation Sheet: Synthesis Multi- Paragraph Essay

Stenberg, Shari J. Composition Studies Through a Feminist Lens. Anderson: Parlor Press, Print. 120 pages.

Technical Writing Style

Humanities Institutional (ILO), Program (PLO), and Course (SLO) Alignment Number of Courses: 47

YC Department of English Spring 2018 Course Offerings

California Content Standards that can be enhanced with storytelling Kindergarten Grade One Grade Two Grade Three Grade Four

Writing a Thesis Methods of Historical Research

Symbolism in "Two Kinds"

TEKS/ELPS Key Concepts/Vocabulary Skills (Non-negotiable)

Conventions for Writing a Literary Analysis Paper

Second Grade: National Visual Arts Core Standards

Shaping the Essay: Part 1

Monday, January 20 NO SCHOOL, MLK DAY

British Literature I: Culture in Con(text) English 261/001: British Literature up to 1800 Spring Semester 2013

Special tutorial times: for the essay section May 18 at 7:30; for the other sections May 23 at 7:30.

Queens College City University of New York

Monday, January 29 [8:00 9:15 / 9:30 10:45] today homework due Wednesday, January 31

Prospectus Final Draft

personal essay for college 8

Research Paper The Book Thief

JUNIOR HONORS ENGLISH

English 108: Romanticism and Apocalypse

FILM AND VIDEO STUDIES (FAVS)

NO SCHOOL NO SCHOOL NO SCHOOL NO SCHOOL NO SCHOOL Intro to IB English Introductions/Sea ting

FS 102: The History of Film, Spring 2018

Introduction to American Literature (KIK-EN221) Book Exam Reading List Autumn 2017 / Spring 2018

AP English Literature & Composition

School of Professional Studies

English (ENGLSH) English (ENGLSH) 1. ENGLSH 1107: Reading Literature, 1603 to See ENGLSH 1100 course for description.

Houghton Mifflin Reading 2001 Houghton Mifflin Company Grade Two. correlated to Chicago Public Schools Reading/Language Arts

VOCAL PERFORMANCE (MVP)

Fall 2017 Art History Courses

Minor Eighteen hours above ENG112 or 115 required.

Subject: A level English Literature

Film and Television. Program Learning Outcomes. Certificate Program Certificate not applicable.

English Literature: Middle Ages and Renaissance

ENGLISH IV - Year-at-a-Glance Writing TEKS Recurring all year: C and D OWC TEKS A & B A, A

TIMELINE RESEARCH PROJECT

Activities and Possible Products

SOPHOMORE ENGLISH. Prerequisites: Passing Frosh English

4. Explore and engage in interdisciplinary forms of art making (understanding the relationship of visual art to video).

AMERICAN LITERATURE English BC 3180y Spring 2015 MW 2:40-3:55 Barnard 302

GUIDELINES FOR SUBMISSIONS OF FILMS

Eng 104: Introduction to Literature Fiction

Literature 2019 v1.2. General Senior Syllabus. This syllabus is for implementation with Year 11 students in 2019.

Film and Media. Overview

Writing Research Essays:

Transcription:

Eleftheriou 1 LITR 3371: Creative Writing: The Lyric Essay Prof. Joanna Eleftheriou Office Hours: Mon. & Wed. 12 3 The Lyric Essay Course Description and Objectives: The lyric essay is one of the most exciting forms of creative nonfiction, one that resonates with the twenty-first century s need for new ways of representing our lived experience. Immediate, malleable, complicated, poetic, challenging, and ingenious, write its inventors Deborah Tall and John D'Agata, the lyric essay also gives writers a fresh way to make music of the world. Expanding on prior experience in traditional forms of essay and memoir, members of this writing workshop will follow those byways in pursuit of the expressive possibilities a genre so flexible and fresh might rightly promise. The lyric essay, as the name suggests, partakes of poetry, and its practitioners generate meaning using the resources of poetry: segmentation, juxtaposition, and an effaced narrative presence. This course, much like the lyric essay s brief history, will be a site of experimentation. We ll interrogate the notion that lyric essay often accretes by fragments, taking shape mosaically by investigating the arrangement of fragments in other contexts: archaeologists, for example, rarely have anything but fragments to work with, and to enter a gallery or a museum exhibit is to enter a site that, too, works mosaically. This is the premise behind a class visit to the Tacoma Art Museum and the on-campus Scandinavian Cultural Center. By responding to weekly writing prompts and developing two of these into longer essays, by semester s end students will have acquired a strong sense of the genre s possibilities and challenges. Moreover, by engaging closely with a rapidly evolving form, students will complete the course equipped with a nuanced understanding of how genre boundaries evolve and influence our reading and writing practice. Required Texts: We Might as Well Call It the Lyric Essay: Special Double Issue of the Seneca Review (Fall 2014 & Spring 2015) on the lyric essay Eula Biss s Notes From No Man s Land; Lia Purpura s On Looking; Course Reader Required Writing: Five micro-essays (responses to five of prompts, 25%) Two long lyric essays open topic (graded when submitted for workshop, 40%) Craft analysis drawing on your reading of and about the lyric essay as a genre (10%) Revision of one long lyric essay, with revision rationale (10%) Other Requirements: Presentations: Students will choose a craft analysis from the list, examine its sources, interrogate its argument, relate it to the essays (published or not) that we ve already read, and present their findings to the class (5%). Class participation is central to student learning, and will be evaluated rigorously (10%).

Eleftheriou 2 Week 1: Introductory Lyric Essays In class we will discuss the formal features of the four lyric essays assigned. By identifying what makes these distinct from most other essays we ve read, we ll arrive at an understanding of what we mean when we say lyric essay. We ll discuss the expressive possibilities of this form. Read: Bathing by Kathryn Winograd; Soundtrack by Lisa Groen Braner Indian Education by Sherman Alexie; The Pain Scale by Eula Biss Write: Write micro-essay 1, which employs a structure like that of Soundtrack or Indian Education, numbering sections according to grades or years. Reflect on the effect of imitating this structure. Week 2: Notes from No Man s Land: American Essays Read: Goodbye to All That by Joan Didion; Before and New York by Eula Biss Write: Just as Biss rewrites Didion in a style that allows meaning to arise implicitly, through juxtaposition and other devices more typical of lyric poetry, you, too, should choose a traditional essay you know well, take its title, and write a lyric micro-essay of your own. Week 3: Notes from No Man s Land Read: The Midwest and After by Eula Biss Write: Submit Lyric Essay 1 conferences to discuss first lyric essay Week 4: Workshop Essay 1 (Workshops 1-6) Read: Triptych of My Aunt Linda, Poet in Her Own Right, Frightened of Bicycles by Julie Marie Wade and How to Love a Woman with No Legs by Natalie Diaz. Week 5: Workshop Essay 1 (Workshops 7-11) Read: Son of Mr. Green Jeans: An Essay on Fatherhood, Alphabetically Arranged D. Moore. Write: Micro-essay 3, about a family member, alphabetically arranged. Week 6: Workshop Essay 1 (Workshops 12-16) Read: Read up, using any source, on the words lyric and essay. What are their origins? How do the words and their roots compare with what you ve been given as examples of lyric essays? In class, students will compare their findings and discuss the term s meaning. conferences to discuss workshop 1 and lyric essay 2 Week 7: Hermit Crab Essays Read: The Hermit Crab Essay in Brenda Miller and Suzanne Paola s Tell It Slant. Mr. Plimpton's Revenge by Dinty Moore (a Google map essay) The Friendship Tarot by Nancy Willard; Emily Applies for a Job by Chelsey Clammer; Eviction Notice by Ryan Oberhelman Write: Micro-essay 4, a hermit crab essay Week 8: Collection Students will collect physical items related to the topic of their second lyric essay. They will bring the items to class and pick one item to write about in a number of different ways. Students will pool their knowledge about one another s objects of interest, and at home, continue to research the history of the item. The structure of the second lyric essay may emerge in a way that involves the history of the item and a present-day story of their relationship to it. Read: Self-directed reading this week read widely, as your project requires.

Eleftheriou 3 Write: Draft lyric essay 2. Week 9: Shoring the fragments It is by now clear that Tall and D'Agata are accurate when they say that the lyric essay often accretes by fragments, taking shape mosaically - its import visible only when one stands back and sees it whole. The parts of all the essays we ve read so far can easily be understood as fragments. This week, we will more keenly examine the idea of a fragment, asking fragment of what whole are the lyric essay s segments parts of whole essays that have failed to be born? This week, we ll examine archaeological exhibitions which arrange fragments of irrecoverable wholes. How are the salvaged relics like and unlike the segments of a lyric essay? How is the process of curating antiquities like and unlike the process of arranging the segments of a lyric essay? How does the experience of observing an exhibit at the Tacoma Museum of Art, or the Scandinavian Cultural Center, compare to the experience of observing an online exhibit? Read: Tall and D'Agata s 1997 manifesto that defined the lyric essay (Seneca Review website). Excerpt from Fragments and Ruins in History and Value by Frank Kermode. We will follow Kermode s attempt to trace back to its origin back through Romanticism and the Renaissance the practice of writing a text and claiming it is a fragment. We ll begin to rethink narrative and storytelling as we consider Kermode s idea that It is because we cannot in the end deal with mere offcuts that we treat history as we do. It is an imaginary whole and we invent fictive parts. Write: Draft lyric essay 2. Week 10-12: Workshop Essay 2 & Read On Looking Week 13: The Lyric Essay and Pain Many lyric essays deal with pain, grief and the unspeakable or unrepresentable for example the suicide in Spires and the death of an unnamed she in Falling Houses. The plight of the smallest woman in the world; Winograd s unspeakable rape. This week, we turn to theoretical texts to investigate why the lyric essay might be favored when the subject is trauma or pain. Read: excerpt from Cathy Caruth s Unclaimed Experience.APA definitions of trauma, PTSD, and acting out. On a Scale from 1 to 10: Life Writing and Lyrical Pain by Susannah Mintz Write: Micro-essay 5, an essay of unrepresentable pain. Week 14: Presentations on craft analysis Read: Every class member is responsible for choosing one craft analysis from the list, or in consultation with the instructor. Students should briefly explain the craft analysis s thesis, and then go well beyond this by providing a critique of the essay based on what we ve learned so far. Just as importantly, you must investigate sources the craft analysis alludes to. For example, Brian Lennon s essay Lyric Negation is only five pages long, but should take as long to prepare as a twenty page essay because Lennon s references to Georg Lukács and Theodor Adorno need to be understood. Week 15: Walking In the last week, we ll look at the traditional essay before the lyric and think about how we see essays differently after spending a semester studying the lyric essay. One class period this week will be spent walking outside. Read: William Hazlitt s On Going a Journey. Henry David Thoreau s Walking

Conferences on revisions and craft analysis Exam Week: Craft analysis and revision with rationale are due. Eleftheriou 4

Eleftheriou 5 Assignments 1. Revision Rationale The first step to a successful revision project is choosing the most suitable piece of nonfiction. It may seem reasonable to choose your strongest piece, but it might actually be harder to revise something you re happy with than something you know needs work. Rather than the essay that makes you proudest, choose the one you re still itching to work on, the one you have the most ideas about. Then, brainstorm. Focus on experimenting with re-ordering, deleting and adding rather than polishing language. Your grade will depend less on sentence-level revisions of syntax and diction (though this is important), and more on macro-level revision. In your 400 600 word rationale, please explain the aesthetic and structural principles behind your choices. You can refer to workshop discussion, but that isn't required. Most of all I want to know how you reenvisioned and re-organized your lyric essay, and why. Very often, workshop discussions revolve around what the work is most about, where it s headed, and this is something the rationales should most certainly address. During revision, did your sense of what the work was about change? Did a stronger awareness of your themes or kernel of truth guide decisions of what to add and what to take out? Remember that sometimes the most learning happens when we are struggling with a problem and not really solving it. Is there a problem (ethical or aesthetic) in the work that you are still unable to solve? Your rationale should address questions of form. How has your evolving understanding of the lyric essay influenced your choices in revision? Given this course s emphasis on experimentation, I would like you to address the ways you experimented during revision, and suggest how your lyric essay might allow readers to participate in the sense of experimentation. Do you come to discoveries or realizations during your writing process, or do they happen first, and then you write about them? How did you move away from the kind of certainty that leads to a lack of tension and uninteresting prose? Did you need to do more research? Take research out? Please also tell me what more research can you imagine doing as you continue to revise the essay in the future. I encourage you to draw comparisons between your work and the essays we ve read in class (this may feel weird or presumptuous, but do it anyway). You may use (but not overuse) the first person, and employ a semi-formal tone. I will grade you chiefly on the quality of your answers to the above questions how well your revisions work is equally important, but not more important than the depth your thinking. By Monday, Dec. 9 th please bring me a hard copy of your rationale, original draft, and revision with highlighting and notes to show me what s different. 2. Craft analysis Craft analyses are important exercises for writers. Reading creative work like a writer means figuring out what an author has done on the page to achieve her effects, and a craft analysis hones your ability to read like a writer. Some effects we ve discussed in class are: bringing the reader to feel certain emotions about certain characters or certain situations, brought the reader to a certain realization/epiphany, enabled the reader to absorb a wealth of information and make meaning of it, or made it possible for the reader to get a sense of what it feels like to see through the lens of a traumatized brain. After you ve fully articulated the effects achieved, you must use your craft knowledge to determine how they were achieved. For this course, your craft analysis must draw on the reading we have done about the lyric essay in order to account for the effects achieved. Try to use at least three secondary sources, and choose a diverse three. Cite these according to MLA guidelines. Grades will depend on the depth of your thinking, the astuteness of your observations, and the grace with which you weave them together into a coherent essay, a cogent argument. The clarity and grace of your writing will also play a role, albeit a secondary one.