Spring 2024 Writing UN3324 section 001

SENSORY POETICS

Call Number 18899
Day & Time
Location
T 12:10pm-2:00pm
411 Kent Hall
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Holly Melgard
Type SEMINAR
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

“A writer should have the precision of a poet and the imagination of a scientist” —Vladimir Nabokov

“Every word was once an animal.” —Ralph Waldo Emerson

How do writers use words to bring whole worlds to life in the senses? Sensory Poetics is a semester-long exploration of how this formal question has propelled the last 150 years of formally innovative poetry, manifestos and essays on craft. Here, we will read by critically and creatively responding to these texts with a single goal in mind: Borrow their methods to compose a dossier of writing that brings just one thing to life in the senses—any one thing—of your individual choosing. To that end, the semester is divided into 3 Labs that each isolate a different register of sensemaking: Sound, Image, and Line. For example, in the Sound Lab unit, you’ll respond to poems and essays by acoustic-centered poets like John Cage, Kamau Brathwaite and Gertrude Stein, transcribing the sound of your one thing, and writing a metered sonnet based on models from different periods and artistic contexts. To capture the look and logic of your one thing, further in you’ll read Surrealists like Aimé and Suzanne Césaire (for Image Lab), Kathy Acker’s cut-ups, and the psychedelic prose poems of Georges Perec and Yoko Ono (for Line Lab). Throughout, we’ll also read Raymond Queneau’s Exercises in Style, a book that is similarly a dossier of one thing written a hundred different ways. Class time focuses on close-reading and analyzing poems together. At the end of each of the three Labs, you’ll submit a portfolio which showcases and reflects on your favorite creative/critical writing generated during the unit. So, no matter how boring or inflexible your one thing may appear to you at any point, your only limits beyond this constraint—make a dossier on one thing—will merely be the finite plasticity of your own imagination, which luckily, readings in this course are curated to expand. This is a place to encounter, practice and experiment with new and exciting forms that broaden your repertoire for articulating your obsessions in ways that bring them to life in the ears, eyes and minds of your audience. Writers of all majors and levels welcome.

Web Site Vergil
Department Writing
Enrollment 14 students (15 max) as of 4:06PM Sunday, December 1, 2024
Subject Writing
Number UN3324
Section 001
Division School of the Arts
Fee $15 Creative Writing C
Section key 20241WRIT3324W001