Monday, December 21, 2009

Just Because

I know that class has ended, final projects were projected, but here are some great examples of how literature plays a larger role in modern culture:

1) Dante's Inferno is a video game coming out -- which is a great example of how a great story transverses to multimedia. A classic of literature made into a video game!

2) Walt Whitman's "Pioneer! O Pioneer!" is being used by Levi's to sell their jeans. I remember seeing this in the summer and it still pleases me to hear a good poem used in marketing a large brand's product. What's next? Perhaps Emily Dickinson will market auto insurance? Robert Frost Patagonia or REI?

Happy Holidays!

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Reminder: Final Day of Class

I wanted to remind everybody of what is due tomorrow. First, all presentations must be complete. Secondly, the LitCrit2 essay is due. I've posted the guidelines below as another reminder! I also linked to an essay on Lerman in a previous post.


LitCrit2: Poetry/Drama

Due: December 16, 2009

Worth: 200 pts

Answer the prompt below to write a literary analysis paper of 4-5 pages.

Obviously, language is a driving voice in a piece of literature. However, language is complex, malleable, fluid. The various poets and dramatists we have read this second half of the semester prove that meaning can be shaped and reshaped through diction, through figures of speech, through rhythm, through imagery, through perspective, through dialogue, through inclusion of cultural allusions and more. Writers meld language like sculptures shape clay. Words, like clay, are built up into a distinct vision of the artist.

Though the subjects of their work are sometimes repetitive – love, friendship, death, etc. – the individual outlooks of each author, and the language they use, allow the reader to experience their subjects in new ways. Analyzing the language allows us to understand what larger statement(s) are being made through the work, the text. In this paper, you should be explaining not only what the meaning of a piece is to be but how the author has accomplished this – what literary devices does the author use…?

Specific Prompt:

Eleanor Lerman, in her poetry collection Our Post-Soviet History Unfolds, offers us some of provocative looks at modern life. As the back cover states:

[In this collection,] Lerman boldly wrests contemporary mysticism from a hardknock New York Jewish consciousness. She finds evidence of a larger vision everywhere—in Roswell, bondage clubs, broken-down beach club bars, in a walk with her dog along the beach. She’s a solid witness to the sixties: Cold War, Vietnam, the sexual revolution, drugs

(Editors, Sarabande Books).

Four of Lerman’s poems are attached: “We Took the Coastal Evacuation Route,” “Angels of the Inquisition,” “The Anthropic Principle” and “Starfish.” These four poems provide a young literary critic – you – with the chance to dissect both:

1) What larger meaning or statement a poem(s) make(s), and

2) What literary devices – especially poetic devices – Lerman uses.

Essentially, you are explicating these poems – what meaning can a reader arrive at, and how Lerman crafts that meaning.

Helpful Suggestions:

- You are not required to use each poem in your analysis, but if you do I would suggest balancing most of your analysis on one or two poems in the collection.

- Also, I suggest having a thesis statement that clarifies which literary device(s) your essay is going to focus on. (Don’t be jumpy, but stick to reasoning out a few points. Quality/development of points explored over quantity/# of claims made!)

Guidelines: Times New Roman or Cambria; 12 pt. font; double-spaced; Work Cited page and in-text citation; Provide an insightful, creative title to analysis that connects to thesis!

An article on Lerman's work

Tony Hoagland, a contemporary poet and critic, wrote a brief essay on Lerman's work, which can be found HERE! I am mentioning this, not only so that you may use (and if you do, CITE!) but also so that you are aware that "I'm watching!"

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Eleanor Lerman



Here is the poem "Starfish," one of the poems in your LitCrit 2 essay packet. And here is "The Anthropic Principle." I hope to spend some time talking about these particular poems in today's class.




Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Final Creative Project Presentation Reminder: Week 15

As the syllabus states, and as we have discussed briefly throughout the semester, you will be presenting to the class a Final Creative Project to the class December 14 and 16. Below are the requirements restated from syllabus (also on Oasis):

Final Creative Project (110pts) – You are to create a visual/oral/ performance piece that can be interpreted as a real-world application of literature. You will choose one of the authors/texts and create a piece that connects literature to another discipline. You will present this piece towards the end of the semester to your course-mates, with a 1-page companion explanation handed in at the time of presentation. Photography, graphic design, painting, instrumental performances, dance – these are just a few of the possible talents that may help you complete this project. A short film, a well-designed advertisement – something of quality and high creative output is expected!

I will add some examples of what students have done in the past once I take pictures and upload them!

Monday, November 30, 2009

Reading for Wed., 12/2

Read pages 465-479, Precision and Ambiguity & Picturing: The Language of Description.

Also, start working on your last response, handed out in class and available for download on Oasis. Below are the two websites from which you will find your personally-chosen poem to explicate:

Monday, November 23, 2009

Homework: For next Monday, 11/30:
  1. Read both Tone and Situation and Setting (p. 416-430 and p. 446-464)
  2. Answer the question that follow these poems (typed out, single-spaced is fine):
  • Robert Hayden’s “Those Winter Sundays” (427)
  • Agha Shahid Ali’s “Postcard from Kashmir” (428)
  • Plath’s “Morning Song” (460)
  • Thom Gunn’s “A Map of the City” (463-464)

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!