New World Poetics Engl 258/Amst 269 Spring 2016 MW 8:30-9:50am

Similar documents
CRITICISM AND MARXISM English 359 Spring 2017 M 2:50-4:10, Downey 100

LT251: Poetry and Poetics

LT251 Poetry and Poetics

ENGLISH 2570: SURVEY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE Fall 2004

JUNIOR HONORS ENGLISH

HIST 521/611WR: COLONIAL AMERICA

ENGLISH 415/515: EMILY DICKINSON AND WALT WHITMAN Spring 2016

LAT 111, 112, and 251 or consent of instructor

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

Alexander Pope, Poetry and Prose of Alexander Pope, ed. Williams (Riverside)

Required Books Alison Isenberg, Downtown America: A History of the Place and the People Who Made It (Chicago, 2009)

ENG324: Whitman and Dickinson

Lisa Gordis Office: Barnard Hall 408D Office phone: Mailbox: Barnard Hall 417

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

San José State University Department of English and Comparative Literature

AMERICAN LITERATURE, English BC 3180y Spring 2010 MW 11-12:15 Barnard 409

E 349S (Honors) / LAH 350: Tolkien & Morris (writing flag) The University of Texas at Austin -- Spring 2017

ASSIGNMENTS. Attendance: 5% Paper 1 25% Paper 2 35% Final Exam (TBD) 35%

MORAVIAN COLLEGE Spring 2008 English 101 A& B American Literature

Lahore University of Management Sciences

ENG 444B/644B: The Romantic Book Spring 2010

ENGLISH 2308E -- AMERICAN LITERATURE ONLINE

The American Renaissance

AMERICAN LITERATURE FROM 1492 TO 1865

Poetry Report. Students who know that they will not be here on Wednesday, 3/11, due to a prearranged absence, will need to turn their report in early.

English 56: Poets Nature Poetry - Lyric & Narrative

Language Arts 11 Honors and Regular: Literature: The American Experience. Unit 1: The New Land

Dr. Steven Thomas ENGL A, fall 2011

We have 37 days before the exam

METROPOLITAN COMMUNITY COLLEGE Fall 2017 Literature Offerings by Campus English (ENGL)

EH 231: American Literature I Spring 2015

620:153(g) American Poetry to 1914 Spring 2006

COMPARATIVE RELIGION Religion 131 Spring 2017

Poetry Project. Name: Class Period:

Third World Studies 26

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

NFC ACADEMY ENGLISH III HONORS COURSE OVERVIEW

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG225 ENGLISH LITERATURE: BEFORE Credit Hours. Prepared by: Andrea St. John

Syllabus HIST 6320 Seminar in the Spanish Borderlands of North America Fall 2010 Dr. Jean Stuntz

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

Eighth Grade Humanities English. Summer Study

#Touchstones 1 Early British Literature

ENGLISH 2235: AMERICAN LITERATURE 1 SUMMER 2010 Section 001: , T/R Instructor: Paul Headrick Office: A302b Office Phone:

English 334: Reason and Romanticism Fall 2009 (WEC/AA program) Vol. 10, No. 1 Price 7 Pence

MU Class Woodwinds Syllabus Spring 2012

Becoming a Researcher Reading Objects Teaching Pack 1: Letters

Sabolcik AP Literature AP LITERATURE RESEARCH PROJECT: ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

Modern Poetry and the Experience of Time (LTMO 145-A) MWF, 9 11:30am, HUM 2, 250 Instructor: Tim Willcutts

ENG 6077 LITERARY THEORY: FORMS

Grande Prairie Regional College. EN 3650 A3 Credit 3 (3-0-0) UT 45 Hours Early Twentieth Century British Novel

History 600: Black Abolitionists Spring 2011

HOW TO WRITE A LITERARY COMMENTARY

A-H 624 section 001. Theory and Methods: Kant and Hegel on Art and Culture. Wednesday 5:00 7:30 pm. Fine Arts 308A. Prof.

Functional Piano MUSI 1181 Mondays & Wednesdays FALL 2018

ENGL 3020 (sect. 001) History of American Literature to 1900 Fall 2015

PHIL 144: Social and Political Philosophy University of California, Santa Cruz Department of Philosophy Summer 2015

Writing a Thesis Methods of Historical Research

University of Florida School of Music Woodwind Skills 1 - Clarinet Section Course Syllabus

UGS 303: Introduction to Music and Film Sound

ENGL 8140: VICTORIAN LITERATURE AND PHOTOGRAPHY

American Music (MUSI 1310) Spring, 2016 HCC Distance Education

English 160; Room: Office: MWF 10:30am-11:20am, Fall 2016 Office Hours: MF 3:30-5:00. Poetry and Poetics

J.P.Sommerville THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN BRITAIN

Syllabus American Literature: Civil War to the Present

MUS 4712 History and Literature of Choral Music Large Forms Monday/Wednesday - 12:30pm-3:00pm Room: Mus 120

O the Orator s Joys! : Staging a Reading of Song of Myself

Summer Reading British Literature

Aesthetics. Phil-267 Department of Philosophy Wesleyan University Spring Thursday 7:00-9:50 pm Location: Wyllys 115

Department of English & Other Foreign Languages Mahatma Gandhi KashiVidyapith, Varanasi REVISED SYLLABUS FOR B.A.I, B.A.II& B.A.III ENGLISH LITERATURE

I. PREREQUISITE For information regarding prerequisites for this course, please refer to the Academic Course Catalog.

Whitman and Dickinson as Emerson s Poets. Ralph Waldo Emerson calls for the rise of the true American poet in his essay The

The Cold War in Latin America

Paper Proposal Instructions

English 4 DC: World Literature Research Project

Honors American Literature Course Guide Ms. Haskins

English 495: Romanticism: Criticism and Theory

Honors Music Theory South Carroll High School : Fall Semester

English 350 Early Victorian Poetry and Prose: Faith in an Age of Doubt

Introduction to International Relations POLI 65 Summer 2016

This course fulfills the second half of the legislative requirement for Government.

Poetry Terms. Instructions: Define each of the following poetic terms. A list of resources is provided at the bottom of the page.

ENGLISH 106: POETRY, 3 credits FALL TERM, 2009

OHLONE COLLEGE Ohlone Community College District OFFICIAL COURSE OUTLINE

American University of Beirut, Fall Term 2015/2016 ENGL 217 The Novel Dr. Sonja Mejcher-Atassi critically engage analyze

Functional Piano MUSI 1180 Monday, Wednesday Sessions FALL Course Number, Section Number, and Course Title: MUSI 1180 Functional Piano

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

ENG 2050 Semester syllabus

Queens College City University of New York

Early American History. Date: Period: Ms. McFarland. Early American History - Research Paper

HISTORY 330/430 British Imperialism Fall 2017

Exploring the Language of Poetry: Structure. Ms. McPeak

Free Verse. Versus. Rhyme

HISTORY 3800 (The Historian s Craft), Spring :00 MWF, Haley 2196

SYLLABUS BASIC CONDUCTING MUG 3104 FALL 2017 TUESDAY-THURSDAY 09:00 A.M. - 09:50 A.M. REHEARSAL HALL

WHY LITERATURE MATTERS SYLLABUS

Pre-Requisite: Prerequisite includes MUT 2117 Music Theory IV with a grade of C or higher.

University of Florida School of Music Woodwind Skills 1 - Clarinet Section Course Syllabus

HIST377: History of Russia, From the Beginnings Until the End of the 18 th Century

From Chaucer to Shakespeare (LSHV ) Professor Ann R. Meyer Tuesdays, 6:30 9:30 Provisional Syllabus, Spring 2014

English 108: Romanticism and Apocalypse

Transcription:

New World Poetics Engl 258/Amst 269 Spring 2016 MW 8:30-9:50am Professor Matthew Garrett 285 Court Street, Office 309 Email: mcgarrett@wesleyan.edu Phone: 860-685-3598 Office hours: W 11am-1pm Course Overview God and money, love and beauty, slavery and freedom, war and death, nation and empire: the themes of early American poetry will carry us from London coffee-houses to Quaker meetinghouses, from Massachusetts drawing rooms to Jamaican slave-whipping rooms. Our texts will range from pristine salon couplets to mud-bespattered street ballads, from sweetest love poems to bitterest satire. Digging deeply into the English-language poetry written, read, and circulated after the first English settlement in North America, we will trace the sometimes secret connections between history and poetic form, and we will listen to what these links can tell us about poetry and politics, life and literature, in our own time. Our poets ignored false divisions between art and society, and so will we. This is a course about the relationship between poetry and history, about the ways literary culture both reflects and participates in changes in social life. It is about why poetry matters: why it mattered to writers and readers between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries, and why it matters to us. We will read for pleasure and for form: for what is specifically poetic about poetry, for what spurs us to read further and what tempts us to put our books down. And we will read for history. Imagine a historian whose only sources (or just about) were the poems on this syllabus. What kind of history would s/he write? What kind of history do these sources reveal that others might conceal? We are reading chronologically backwards. Why? Because we will be provoked to think not just about influence, but also about innovation. And because our reading of the poems will be energized not by the fact that we are moving forward in time, but rather by our efforts to see patterns and discontinuities in poetic tradition. W.H. Auden wrote that poetry makes nothing happen. We ll see just how much nothing can be. Requirements and Policies Reading. Read and reread. Then read again. Makes notes in the margins, underline and circle words and phrases: be an active reader. Do this with each text in advance of our session, and arrive with at least one point to contribute to our discussion. You should pay special attention to the form of the poems: you should arrive ready to describe the poem in terms of features such as meter, rhyme scheme, the length or variety of the line, etc. -- all of which we will discuss together in class. Writing. A) Research option. This course offers a research option for students who would like to write a longer essay in fulfillment of the prerequisite for an English honors thesis. If you choose the research option, you will write a 20-25pp. essay on a topic you have discussed with me, and you will turn in components of the project -- outline, annotated bibliography, and final draft -- during the term. B) Two essays. If you do not choose the research option, you will write two shorter essays, of 5-7pp. and 10-12pp., respectively, on either a topic I provide or one that you have discussed with me. C) Exercises. Everyone -- research-option taker or otherwise -- will complete four short exercises in which you will mark up a poem to provide an account of its formal properties.

Engl 258/Amst 269 Spring 2016 2 Archival presentations. Each member of the seminar will pair up with another to give a 10- to 15- minute presentation (with a write-up you will turn in) on a text that the two of you have located in one of the online archival databases accessible through the Wesleyan Library. Participation. This course is a seminar: we succeed or fail collectively. You should arrive at each of our sessions ready to talk and ready to listen with engagement and generosity to your fellow students. If a text excites you, talk about it. If something confuses you, ask questions. If you agree with comments someone makes, try to elaborate your agreement with the class. If a text bores you, ask yourself why and then talk about your response. If you disagree with someone, explain why. In short, move your mouth -- in ways that contribute to our common enterprise in the seminar. Attendance, deadlines. More than three absences will be grounds for failing the course. All due dates are firm: extensions will be granted only in cases of serious illness or personal crisis. Don t even ask. Grades Your final grade breaks down like this: 60%: Two essays (5-7pp., 20%; 10-12pp., 40%) or research essay 20%: Participation 10%: Archival presentation, including write-up 10%: Written exercises Disabilities resources. Wesleyan University is committed to ensuring that all qualified students with disabilities are afforded an equal opportunity to participate in and benefit from its programs and services. To receive accommodations, a student must have a documented disability as defined by Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the ADA Amendments Act of 2008, and provide documentation of the disability. Since accommodations may require early planning and generally are not provided retroactively, please contact Disability Resources as soon as possible. If you believe that you need accommodations for a disability, please contact Dean Patey (lpatey@wesleyan.edu) in Disability Resources located in North College, room 021, or call 860-685- 5581 for an appointment to discuss your needs and the process for requesting accommodations. Honor Code. Please write an abbreviated form of the Honor Code pledge ( No aid, no violation. ) at the top of the first page of all assignments. All work must be done in compliance with the Honor Code. If you need help with proper citations or you have any questions at all on how to avoid plagiarism, please talk with me. TEXTS (available at Broad Street Books) Emily Dickinson, The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson (Back Bay Books) - DCP John Gilmore, The Poetics of Empire: A Study of James Grainger s The Sugar-Cane (Athlone; also available electronically through Olin Library) - PE Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Selected Poems (Penguin) - LSP John Milton, The Major Works (Oxford UP) - JM David S. Shields, ed. American Poetry: The Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (Library of America) - AP Phillis Wheatley, Complete Writings (Penguin) - WCW Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass and Other Writings (W.W. Norton) - LG

Engl 258/Amst 269 Spring 2016 3 SCHEDULE (texts followed by an asterisk [*] will be posted to the course Moodle site) Monday, 1/25 Introduction: Poetry and History Wednesday, 1/27 Whitman: Appetite, Pleasure, Heroism 1 Leaves of Grass (1855 ed., LG 662-751), 1855 Preface (616-36) Monday, 2/1 Whitman: Appetite, Pleasure, Heroism 2 Children of Adam (LG 78-96), Calamus (LG 96-116), Salut au Monde! (117-126), Song of the Open Road (126-135), Crossing Brooklyn Ferry (135-140), Song of the Answerer (141-144), Our Old Feuillage (145-149), A Song of Joys (149-155), Song of the Broad- Axe (155-164), Song of the Exposition (165-173), Song of the Redwood-Tree (173-177), A Song for Occupations (177-183), A Song of the Rolling Earth (184-189), Youth, Day, Old Age and Night (189) Whitman s comments on his poems (783-788) Wednesday, 2/3 Dickinson: Soul and Form 1 Read around and arrive with your favorites for discussion. Please also read the following: There is a word (DCP 9), Our lives are Swiss (DCP 41), I ve heard an Organ talk, sometimes (DCP 87), I m wife I ve finished that (DCP 94), I stole them from a Bee (DCP 94), Least Rivers docile to some sea (DCP 98), I like a look of Agony (DCP 110), Wild Nights Wild Nights! (DCP 114), Hope is the thing with feathers (DCP 116), Read Sweet how others strove (DCP 119), I felt a Funeral, in my Brain (DCP 128), I m Nobody! Who are you? (DCP 133), The difference between Despair (DCP 144), He fumbles at your Soul (DCP 148), We grow accustomed to the Dark (DCP 200), Knows how to forget! (DCP 207-208) Paul Fussell, from Poetic Meter and Poetic Form* Monday, 2/8 -- Dickinson: Soul and Form 2 As for 2/3, read around and arrive with your favorites for discussion. We will continue where we left off, but you should also read the following: Much Madness is divinest Sense (DCP 209), Going to Him! Happy letter! and Going to Her! (DCP 237-239), This World is not Conclusion (DCP 243), To fill a Gap (DCP 266), The Brain, within its Groove (DCP 270-271), They shut me up in Prose (DCP 302), The Way I read a Letter s this (DCP 314-315), Pain has an Element of Blank (DCP 323), I dwell in Possibility (DCP 327), Wolfe demanded during dying (DCP 336), They say that Time assuages (DCP 339), Publication is the Auction (DCP 348) No Prisoner be (DCP 353), Defrauded I a Butterfly (DCP 358), It dropped so low in my Regard (DCP 366), From Blank to Blank (DCP 373), They have a little Odor that to me (DCP 382), Split the Lark and you ll find the Music (DCP 412) First exercise due in class Wednesday, 2/10 Dickinson: Soul and Form 3 Crisis is a Hair (DCP 421), Faith is the Pierless Bridge (DCP 431), Patience has a quiet Outer (DCP 435), The Chemical conviction (DCP 446-447), We meet as Sparks Diverging Flints (DCP 448), There is a Zone whose even Years (DCP 481), Perception of an object

Engl 258/Amst 269 Spring 2016 4 costs (DCP 486-487), Revolution is the Pod (DCP 490-491), I am afraid to own a Body (DCP 493-494), Tell all the Truth but tell it slant (DCP 506-507), Our own possessions though our own (DCP 533), A word is dead (DCP 534-535), There is no Frigate like a Book (DCP 553), The competitions of the sky (DCP 629), All things swept sole away (DCP 635), Witchcraft was hung, in History (DCP 656), There are two Mays (DCP 666), Oh Future! thou secreted place (DCP 670), A Word made Flesh is seldom (DCP 675-676), The mob within the heart (DCP 707) Monday, 2/15 Longfellow: History/Poetry as Commodity 1 Evangeline, Part First (LSP) Wednesday, 2/17 Longfellow: History/Poetry as Commodity 2 Evangeline, Part Second (LSP) Second exercise due in class Monday, 2/22 Slavery and the Circulation of Poems 1 Hannah More, The Black Slave Trade, The Sorrows of Yamba, The Feast of Freedom; selections of children s anti-slavery verse * Wednesday, 2/24 Slavery and the Circulation of Poems 2 Elizabeth Barrett Browning, The Runaway Slave at Pilgrim s Point *; blackface minstrel songs* Monday, 2/29 Wednesday, 2/24 Dawn or Yawn of America 1 Yankee Doodle (AP 616-620); Hannah Griffitts, all selections (AP 558-63); Joel Barlow, The Hasty-Pudding (AP 799-808); Royall Tyler, The Origin of Evil: An Elegy (AP 809-12) Wednesday, 3/2 Dawn or Yawn of America 2 William Blake, America * Friday, 3/4: Printed copy of first essay (5-7pp.) due in box outside my office by noon. Midsemester recess Monday, 3/21 Wheatley: Imagination, Imitation, and Slavery 1 Alexander Pope, from An Essay on Man; Wheatley, selections (WCW) Wednesday, 3/23 Wheatley: Imagination, Imitation, and Slavery 2 Wheatley, selections (WCW); Jupiter Hammon, An Address to Miss Phillis Wheatley (AP 477-80) Monday, 3/28 Some Uses of Verse in the Eighteenth Century Ebenezer Cook, The Sot-Weed Factor (AP 239-258) Wednesday, 3/30 Some Uses of Verse in the Eighteenth Century 2 Poor Julleyoun s Warnings to Children and Servants and Advice to the Dead from the Living (AP 470-76); Thomas Clemson, runaway-servant ad (AP 526-27)

Engl 258/Amst 269 Spring 2016 5 Monday, 4/4 Empire and the Poetry of the Plantation 1 Introduction (PE 1-85), The Sugar-Cane Preface and Book I, with notes (PE 89-109, 165-182, 213-244) Wednesday, 4/6 Empire and the Poetry of the Plantation 2 The Sugar-Cane Book II, with notes (PE 111-126, 182-188, 244-264) Monday, 4/11 Empire and the Poetry of the Plantation 3 The Sugar-Cane Book III, with notes (PE 127-144, 188-192, 264-286) Wednesday, 4/13 Empire and the Poetry of the Plantation 4 The Sugar-Cane Book IV, with notes (PE 145-63, 193-198, 286-311) George Berkeley, Verses on the Prospect of Planting Arts and Learning in America (AP 346) Third exercise due in class. Monday, 4/18 Puritan Poetics 1 Edward Taylor, from Preparatory Meditations (First Series) (AP 164-178) Relevant scriptural passages Wednesday, 4/20 Puritan Poetics 2 Edward Taylor, from Preparatory Meditations (Second Series) (AP 178-191) New England Primer (AP 221-23) Relevant scriptural passages* Monday, 4/25 Milton 1 Paradise Lost Books I ( The Verse, The Argument, and ll. 1-49) and III (JM 355-57, 401-20) Wednesday, 4/27 Milton 2 Paradise Lost Book IV (JM 420-45) Monday, 5/2 - Milton 3 Paradise Lost Book IX (JM 523-52) Wednesday, 5/4 Milton 4 Paradise Lost Books XI and XII (JM 580-618) Fourth exercise due in class. Friday, 5/13 Printed final essays due by 5pm in box outside my office door.