Poetry New York


REVISED

Spring 2014 quarter

Taught by

The goal of this program will be to immerse students in an intense and various writing community, both as writers of poetry themselves and as critical writers. It is hoped that this daily contact with practicing writers, poets, translators, and publishers will advance each student's writing horizons and range of reading possibilities, demystifying the practice and profession of writing while inspiring students to advance in their own art.

This field study program features an immersion in New York City's poetry, literary and publishing worlds. We will spend two weeks on campus preparing for our trip by way of various readings in New York's literary history and in The New York School of Poets. The focus will be on the relationships between poetry and painting in the NY School poets John Ashbery, Barbara Guest, and James Schuyler, the connections between current publishers like Ugly Duckling Presse and Farrar, Straus, & Giroux and the writers they choose to publish, and NYC's international literary character. The program will then fly to New York City for five weeks, where, in addition to class meetings, students will pursue their own writing, write critical pieces on the poetry they hear at readings, and of the books they read for class, interview poets they meet, and be required to attend at least one event a day (or night) across the city: The St. Marks Poetry Project, The Academy of American Poets, The New York Public Library, Poets House, and so on, are all options for students to pursue their writing. Local projects might include working on poems to appear in public spaces in the city, working collaboratively on translations of poets in town writing in other languages, or compiling a journal of field notes. Field trips will also be arranged to the offices of various publishers of the instructor's acquaintance to study, close up, the way in which literature is made. Some of these publishers might include: The New York Review Of Books, Archipelago Books, Seven Stories Press, etc.

The final three weeks of the quarter will be spent back on campus in Olympia, debriefing, finishing poems and essays, and producing an anthology of our work.

Fields of Study

Preparatory for studies or careers in

poetry, creative writing, publishing, literature, and the arts.
Academic Website

Location and Schedule

Campus location

Olympia

Schedule

Offered during: Day

Books

Buy books for this program through The Greener Store.

Online Learning

No Required Online Learning

More information about online learning.

Special Expenses

Students should count on expenses up to $2000 for the trip to New York City

Revisions

Date Revision
July 3rd, 2013 New opportunity added.

Registration Information

Credits: 16 (Spring)

Variable Credit Options

12-credit option

Class standing: Sophomore–Senior

Maximum enrollment: 25

Spring

Signature Required

Students must submit ten pages of creative or critical writing.

Course Reference Numbers

So - Sr (16 credits): 30368
So - Sr (12 credits): 30369
So - Sr (1-16 credits): 30442

Go to my.evergreen.edu to register for this program.

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