Sharpened Visions: A Poetry Workshop

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Sharpened Visions: A Poetry Workshop

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Description

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About this course: Why just write poems when you can write better ones? This course is built on the notion that the most exciting writing begins after the first draft. It is specifically for folks who believe that writing poems just to express oneself is like using the Internet just for email. After all, poetry can change the way you and your readers think of the world and its inhabitants; it can break new ground for language; turn a blank sheet of paper into a teeming concert of voices and music. Though any of us may have the potential to make that happen, having an understanding of how several tools of poetic composition can be used (and audaciously “mis-used”) gives you more ways to …

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When you enroll for courses through Coursera you get to choose for a paid plan or for a free plan

  • Free plan: No certicification and/or audit only. You will have access to all course materials except graded items.
  • Paid plan: Commit to earning a Certificate—it's a trusted, shareable way to showcase your new skills.

About this course: Why just write poems when you can write better ones? This course is built on the notion that the most exciting writing begins after the first draft. It is specifically for folks who believe that writing poems just to express oneself is like using the Internet just for email. After all, poetry can change the way you and your readers think of the world and its inhabitants; it can break new ground for language; turn a blank sheet of paper into a teeming concert of voices and music. Though any of us may have the potential to make that happen, having an understanding of how several tools of poetic composition can be used (and audaciously “mis-used”) gives you more ways to try (and if we do this right, we might surprise ourselves most of all). We'll cover key poetic terms and devices by studying poems by a handful of modern and contemporary poets and then get a chance to try our own hand at writing new poem drafts from a select number of prompts. Throughout the course you will have the opportunity to workshop your poem drafts and get feedback on your work, working towards a more polished poem.

Created by:  California Institute of the Arts
  • Taught by:  Douglas Kearney, Faculty, MFA in Writing Program

    Critical Studies
Commitment 4-5 hours of lessons and assessments Language English How To Pass Pass all graded assignments to complete the course. User Ratings 4.7 stars Average User Rating 4.7See what learners said Coursework

Each course is like an interactive textbook, featuring pre-recorded videos, quizzes and projects.

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California Institute of the Arts CalArts has earned an international reputation as the leading college of the visual and performing arts in the United States. Offering rigorous undergraduate and graduate degree programs through six schools—Art, Critical Studies, Dance, Film/Video, Music, and Theater—CalArts has championed creative excellence, critical reflection, and the development of new forms and expressions.

Syllabus


WEEK 1


Introduction and the Poetic Line



Poetry orchestrates its music, arguments, tensions, and environment via arrangements of language into lines and stanzas. This week we’ll address the importance of the line break, perhaps the most conspicuous, signature tool in the poet’s toolkit. Do you break more for sound, for sense, visual effect, shape, a mix of several? We’ll participate in several line break exercises and remix found poems. Also: prepare for your first quiz and a fun first writing prompt.


8 videos, 4 readings expand


  1. Video: Why Take This Course?
  2. Reading: Syllabus
  3. Video: The Workshop Process
  4. Video: Workshopping in a MOOC, part 1
  5. Reading: Workshopping in a MOOC, part 2
  6. Reading: Course Resources
  7. Video: The Starting Line
  8. Video: Rack ‘em Up: Gwendolyn Brooks' We Real Cool
  9. Video: We/Read Close. We/Take note.
  10. Video: Game Over
  11. Video: Poetry Prompt 1: Line
  12. Reading: Week 1 Summary

Graded: On the Line

WEEK 2


Abstraction and Image



Abstraction doesn’t mean “deep,” and image doesn’t mean “picture.” Images are typically understood as anything you can literally touch/taste/see/hear/smell, and abstractions are those things for which we have symbols (a clock for “time,” a heart for “love”) but no image. Abstractions and images may fill our poems, but how can you tell what’s what, and how can you leverage them to compelling ends? This week we’ll work at finding new symbols to replace clichéd ones for abstractions and we’ll work at crafting images that do more than add furniture to a poem, but create systems of relationships, moods, and even style.


5 videos, 1 reading expand


  1. Video: What Does a Concept Smell Like?
  2. Video: Beauty’s in the Eye of the Bewildered: Harryette Mullen's [if your complexion is a mess.]
  3. Video: The Wonky Chocolate Factory
  4. Video: Read in the Shade
  5. Video: Poetry Prompt 2: Abstraction & Image
  6. Reading: Week 2 Summary

Graded: Abstraction & Image

WEEK 3


Metaphor and Other Formulas of Difference



Most of us think of simile and metaphor, personification and other similar figures of speech as being about similarities between objects, concepts, and entities. But the juice in these formulas comes from how different the two things being compared seem to be. This is why writing: “the shark moved like a fish” is, alone, a lot less interesting than saying “the shark moved like a squad car.” We’ll talk about how playing with difference via juxtaposition can create a range of poetic effects. Then you’ll write a poem built of one robustly developed or several contrasting juxtapositions. We'll end this module with yet another quiz, and our first poetry workshop -- facilitated through a peer assessed assignment.


5 videos, 1 reading expand


  1. Video: It is What it Isn’t
  2. Video: Home Cooking: Victor Hernández Cruz's Red Beans
  3. Video: Lilies and Lava
  4. Video: After Dinner Meant
  5. Video: Poetry Prompt 3: Metaphor
  6. Reading: Week 3 Summary

Graded: Metaphor
Graded: First Workshop

WEEK 4


Rhyme
This week we’ll explore how rhyme leverages patterns of sameness and how we can estrange similarity for compelling poetic effects. We’ll check out examples of “rhyme”—sonic, visual, conceptual—from outside of poetry too.


5 videos, 1 reading expand


  1. Video: Read Any Good Snooks Lately?
  2. Video: There’s No “A” in Showdown: Cathy Park Hong's Ballad in A
  3. Video: Lipo-what?!
  4. Video: What That Was
  5. Video: Poetry Prompt 4: Rhyme
  6. Reading: Week 4 Summary

Graded: Rhyme

WEEK 5


Rhythm



All spoken language has rhythm, the trick is working the rhythm in such a way that drives your poem toward the effects you’re after. Maybe you want a fluid, seductive, propulsive rhythm. Perhaps something that halts or stutters. We’ll use traditional western concepts of meter as a means to open the door to this discussion, but we may leave them at the door upon entry.


6 videos, 1 reading expand


  1. Video: Give the Drummer Some!
  2. Video: Rock “The Bells”: Edgar Allan Poe's The Bells
  3. Video: Put A Ring On It
  4. Video: For Whom the Bell Falls
  5. Video: Clap Clap Clap
  6. Video: Poetry Prompt 5: Rhythm
  7. Reading: Week 5 Summary

Graded: Rhythm
Graded: Second Workshop

WEEK 6


Sharpened Poetry: Revision Strategies



When you revise a poem, you are not trying to dull the emotional flash of your first draft. You must, instead, intensify it. In this, our final week, we’ll discuss the difference between revision and editing, the art of reading your own work critically, and the beauty of drafts. For your final peer review, you’ll turn in (and in turn, assess) a revision of one of the poems from the preceding 5 modules.


11 videos, 1 reading expand


  1. Video: Introduction
  2. Video: What is Revision?
  3. Video: Where Do I Start Revising?
  4. Video: How Do I Start Revising a Poem I’ve Written in Form?
  5. Video: How do I Incorporate Workshop Feedback Into the Revision Process?
  6. Video: Revision Recap
  7. Video: Give Yourself A Break
  8. Video: Furniture and Figures
  9. Video: Just in the Nick of Rhyme
  10. Video: Rhythm-a-Ning-a-Gain
  11. Video: Final Thoughts
  12. Reading: Course Credits

Graded: Final Workshop
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