Special Topics: Ecopoetics - Experimental Poetry in the Anthropocene
ENGL 340
Spring 2023 not offered
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Crosslisting:
ENVS 330 |
How do poets speak for and from a world in flux and crisis? How do poets register and attempt to restore the degradation of the planet through language? How might altering the boundaries of conventional language use--through poetry--alter the bounds of conventional thinking and behaving, thus leading to more engaged and sustainable modes of living? This course, in part, will serve as a tour of contemporary ecopoets invested in looking at and caring for the current state of our planet through poetry. We will read poems that reflect the most critical environmental concerns of our time and we will learn to see how these poems resist closure and are instead guided by experimentation, exploration, and interrogation in an attempt at reorienting our attention and intention as inheritors of this planet. This is a workshop for students committed to developing an understanding of ecopoetry's place in the more-than-literary world, as well as developing a personal ecopoetics from which to write, read, and live. Students will choose an environmental topic to research and write in service of for the semester and, by the end of the semester, each student will have written a project-centered collection of ecopoems. There will be bi-weekly presentations on the poetry collections we read, in-class writing experiments, and intensive workshops of one another's work. The class will culminate in an ecobook arts project and reflective essay. |
Credit: 1 |
Gen Ed Area Dept:
HA ENGL |
Course Format: Discussion | Grading Mode: Student Option |
Level: UGRD |
Prerequisites: (ENGL216 AND ENGL336) OR ENGL337 |
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Fulfills a Requirement for: (ENGL)(ENGL-Creative W)(ENVS-MN)(ENVS) |
Major Readings:
Forrest Gander and John Kinsella: REDSTART: AN ECOLOGICAL POETICS Jorhie Graham: SEA CHANGE Lynn Keller: RECOMPOSTING ECOPOETICS Joanna Macy: ACTIVE HOPE dg nanouk okpik: CORPSE WHALE Angela Rawlings: WIDE SLUMBER FOR LEPIDOPTERISTS Evelyn Reilly: STYROFOAM Ed Roberson: CITY ECOLOGUE Craig Santos Pérez: FROM UNINCORPORATED TERRITORY [LUKAO] Juliana Sphar: THE CONNECTION OF EVERYONE WITH LUNGS Joan Retallack: "WHAT IS EXPERIMENTAL POETRY & WHY DO WE NEED IT?"
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Examinations and Assignments:
There will be bi-weekly presentations on the poets we read, in-class writing and reading experiments, and class discussions and workshops of one another's creative work. The class will culminate in an installation of eco-book arts projects as well as a final reflective essay. |
Additional Requirements and/or Comments:
Student Option Grading Mode: If planning to pursue the Creative Writing path in English, students should choose the ¿graded¿ option for this class to fulfill requirements.
The course prerequisites are ENGL216--Techniques of Poetry and a 300 level creative writing course such as Intermediate or Advanced poetry workshop or a Special Topics course. Please request a prerequisite override if you feel you qualify for the course but have not taken the prerequisites. Contributes to fulfillment of ENGL major requirements: Class of 22: Special Topics or genre-focused course CW concentration, Theory and Literary Forms concentration, elective. Class of 23 and beyond: CW requirement, CW 300-level course, and CW upper level CW workshop, elective. The English department highly recommends that students be enrolled in only one CW course in a semester. If you are admitted to more than one CW course, the department requests that you choose one and let the instructors know during Adjustment Period. By doing so you will be considerate of instructors and other students.
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