ENGL 469: Contemporary American Poetry, Fall 2006

Welcome to Professor Lee Ann Roripaugh's Main Course Blog for English 469: Contemporary American Poetry, Fall Semester 2006, at The University of South Dakota

Monday, August 28, 2006

READINGS AND ASSIGNMENTS FOR TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2006

Important!! Please make sure that you have set up your individual weblog for the course, and that you write down the URL and bring it in to class on Tuesday so that I can add you to the course blogroll, and give you credit for your weekly blog posts. The first round of blog posts, by the way, will be due no later than midnight on Monday, September 11.

Please click on the links below (unless otherwise noted) to download, print off, and read the following materials:

A Brief Guide to Confessional Poetry, an online poetry entry from the Academy of American Poets. Please also read the Related Prose linked on the left sidebar (in particular, the Zucker, Marvin, and Cane essays). They’re short, and provide a terrific introduction to some of the ideas we’ll be discussing at length in the course.

Confessional Poetry, by Donna M. Ford.

Confessional Poetry and the Artifice of Honesty, by David Yezzi (from The New Criterion, Vol. 16, No. 10, June 1998, pp. 14-21).

No Room in the Booth?: An Appreciation of Confessional Poetry, by Kathleen Osip (from The Writer's Chronicle, February 2001, pp. 45-53). (Will download as a Word document).

Postmodernism, by Professor Mary Klages, University of Colorado, Boulder.

Chapter One - The Poet's Voice as Persona, from Creating Another Self: Voice in Modern American Personal Poetry, by Samuel Maio (Kirksville, MO: Thomas Jefferson University Press, 1995). (Will download as a PDF document).

91 Revere Street, by Robert Lowell, from Life Studies, 1959. (Will download as a PDF document).

Please also read the following poems by Robert Lowell from your Selected Poems book:

"The Quaker Graveyard in Nantucket," p. 6.
"Beyond the Alps," p. 55.
"To Delmore Schwartz," p. 66.
"Memories of West Street and Lepke," p. 91.
"Skunk Hour," p. 95.

* * *


Poetry-Related Announcement: Come and check out the VLP Poetry Slam, featuring fiction writer and USD faculty member Brian Bedard, on Thursday, August 31, 7:00 p.m., at the Coffee Shop Gallery, 24 W. Main Street. (Have poems that you’d like to read at the slam? Bring three poems with you and sign up to slam!)

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

BLOGGING INSTRUCTIONS

BLOGGING INSTRUCTIONS FOR ENGL 469: CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN POETRY

Important!! Don’t forget to regularly visit the Main Course Blog for reading assignments, written assignment guidelines, and important course reminders and announcements. All the information that you need will always be at your fingertips at the Main Course Blog. (The syllabus will be posted as the first entry on the Main Course Blog, and you can download a hard copy of the syllabus from this same entry as well.)

The URL for the Main Course Blog is: http://english469fall2006.blogspot.com


To set up YOUR course blog (an online journal website), first go to Blogger http://www.blogger.com to sign up for a Blogger account. Blogger will take you through an easy, step-by-step process to help you set up your blog and create your very own URL. Your new URL will look something like: http://INSERT-YOUR-OWN-TITLE-HERE.blogspot.com.

A Few Tips On What To Expect When Setting Up Your Blog:

If this is your first time visiting Blogger, click Create on Create Your Own Blog now. You will be prompted to set up a user name and password. Tip: Make sure to write down your user name and password so that you can access, edit, and post to your blog.

Once your account is set up, click next/continue, and you will be prompted to give your blog a name/title, and create a URL for your blog (In other words, choose your own address for the "INSERT-YOUR-OWN-ADDRESS-HERE" portion of your URL http://insertyourowntitlehere.blogspot.com. Tip: Make it something easy to remember).

Hit Next/Continue, and you will be prompted to select a template (i.e., a layout for how your blog will look on the internet . . . you can change it later, if you wish.)

Blogger will create your blog for you, and then give you a Start Posting prompt. I definitely recommend writing and publishing a test post at this point (even something as quotidian as TESTING, TESTING, ONE TWO THREE . . . you can delete it later if you like) to establish the blog on the internet and familiarize yourself with the posting process.

When you're on the posting and editing screen, you can just type in your entries (or cut and paste from a word processing program—-for longer, assigned entries Tip: I definitely recommend cutting and pasting from a word processing program so you don't accidentally lose an entire post should there be a technical glitch). When you're finished with your entry, simply click on the button labeled Publish. Blogger will publish your post on the web, giving you a message that your post was published successfully once it’s done publishing. At that point, you can then you can click on the link to view your blog post on the internet.

Once you've posted an entry you can always go back and edit it by clicking on the edit posts link. This will pull the entry back as a text window where you can edit it as much as you like, or even delete it altogether. You might want to play around with posting, editing, and deleting test posts a bit to get a feel for how all this works.

On subsequent visits to Blogger, you will simply go back to http://www.blogger.com, then log in with your account name and password, and you'll see the title of your blog listed on your Blogger Dashboard once you sign on. You can simply click on that link and your editing menus will come right up for you.

This should hopefully be enough information to get you started. Please don't hesitate to e-mail me with any questions at lroripau@usd.edu, or feel free to come visit me during my office hours or set up an appointment if you need further assistance. Good luck, and have fun blogging!!

COURSE SYLLABUS

Click HERE to download a hard copy of the syllabus as a Word document.

ENGLISH 469: CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN POETRY - AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND POETRY

Professor Lee Ann Roripaugh
Fall Semester, 2006
Section #015, Tuesdays, 4:00-6:45 p.m., Old Main 202
Office Hours: Tuesdays, 12:00-1:45 p.m.; Thursdays, 12:00-1:45 p.m. and 3:30-5:30 p.m.
(Office Hours Also Anytime by Appointment)
Office: Dakota Hall #207
Office Phone: 677-5979
E-mail: lroripau@usd.edu
Mailbox: Dakota Hall #212


ENGL 469 is a literature course in post-1950 contemporary American poetry. The course will focus on an examination of the transformative process by which "raw autobiographical materials" contained in the journals, letters, and memoirs of contemporary American poets are distilled and transformed into poetry. Beginning with the hugely influential poetic developments of the “Middle Generation” poets in the 1950’s, the course will attempt to trace the contemporary development of several strands of autobiographical poetry emerging from the work of Middle Generation poets – in particular, the confessionalism of Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton leading up to the "post-confessionalism" of poets such as Sharon Olds and Kim Addonizio; the “journal poem” genre of Robert Lowell and Frank O'Hara continuing on through poets such as David Lehman; and autobiographical discourses of otherness and displacement found in the poems of Elizabeth Bishop and leading up to poets such as Mark Doty and Li Young Lee. The course will seek to analyze and problematize notions of memoir, persona, masking, exhibitionism and "confessionalism" in contemporary American poetry; examine aspects of Modernism and Post-Modernism within the poets under discussion; apply critical/theoretical concepts and analyses to the works under study; and engage in close stylistic analyses and readings of poems.

Prerequisites: Junior standing and six hours of survey.

REQUIREMENTS:

Blogging (Maintenance of On-line Journal):

2 entries per week – 1 entry will be either a response to the assigned readings and/or issues raised in class discussions (250-word minimum); 1 entry will be written in response to memoir-generating prompts from The Autobiography Box (250-word minimum).

Blogging requirements will commence after the second class meeting, and will continue for ten weeks throughout the last week of classes. (Please note that blogging will not be required over Thanksgiving break, or on weeks set aside for student presentations). Each entry is worth 10 points apiece (at 2 entries per week this adds up to 20 entries worth 200 points total during the semester). You can make up to 6 missed entries by writing extra credit blog entries during non-blogging weeks (i.e., Thanksgiving break, non-assigned blogging weeks, etc.). Each week’s 2 blog entries must be posted no later than midnight on Monday night of each week to receive credit.

Three Modeled Poems:

Using the “raw autobiographical material” from your blog generated in response to the memoir-generating prompts, you will write three poems modeled after autobiographical poets we have discussed in class. Your model should attempt to mimic the techniques by which a given poet transforms his/her raw autobiographical material into poetry, as well as mimic certain aspects of the poet’s style as discussed in class. Your model should also include a short write-up (500 words minimum) that identifies the poet whose work you’re modeling, and the specific stylistic traits of this poet that you’ve incorporated into your model. In many respects, your grasp of the stylistic traits of the poet/poem you're modeling, and the "argument" you make for how your modeled poem reflects these stylistic traits will determine your level of success with this assignment. (This exercise will also be very helpful in building the skills necessary to writing your final paper.) Please post your modeled poems on your blog on the assigned due dates. Each poem is worth up to 100 points, and you will be given credit for your poems on the Check Plus (100 points), Check (85 points), and Check Minus (70 points) system based on the effort you’ve made to understand and represent each modeled poet’s style (and not necessarily the aesthetic quality of your model).

Two Oral Presentations:

Selecting a contemporary American (post-1950) poet of your choice not covered in the course’s assigned reading, you will be asked to give two presentations (one during the first half of the semester, and the other during the second half of the semester) of approximately 15 minutes in length. Your presentation should provide a discussion of the poet’s style and attempt to contextualize the poet in terms of issues pertaining to our various investigations of autobiographical poetry. You should begin browsing these books early on in the semester so that you can identify the poets on whom you wish to present. Sign-up sheets will be made available, and I will ask that we avoid duplicate presentations. Each presentation will be worth 50 points.

Final Course Paper:

There will be a final course paper due at the end of the semester. Undergraduate students will be required to write a 10-12 page final paper, while graduate students will be asked to write an 18-20 page final paper. You will be given a choice of paper topics covering various poets, themes, issues, and critical approaches discussed over the course of the semester from which to select your paper topic. A rough draft of your paper (worth 100 points) will be due on November 28, 2006, and then a final, revised version of your paper (worth 300 points) will be due during finals week on Thursday, December 14, 2006, by 5:00 p.m.

GRADING:

40% Final 10-12 Page Paper (400 points total – 100 points rough draft; 300 points final draft)
20% Blogging/On-Line Writing Journal Entries (200 points total – 10 points per entry)
30% Three Modeled Poems (300 points total - 100 points apiece)
10% Two Oral Presentations (100 points total - 50 points apiece)

Your final grade will be based on a scale of 1,000 points possible.

TEXTS:

Elizabeth Bishop, The Complete Poems, 1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1985),
ISBN: 0374518173

Robert Lowell, Selected Poems: Revised Edition (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1977),
ISBN: 0374515003

Sylvia Plath, Collected Poems (Reissue) (Perennial, 1981), ISBN 0060909005

Anne Sexton, The Complete Poems (Mariner Books, 1999), ISBN 0395957761

Frank O’Hara, Lunch Poems (Pocket Poets Series: No. 19) (City Lights Books, 1964),
ISBN: 0872860353

Li-Young Lee, Book of My Nights (BOA Editions, 2001), ISBN: 1929918089

David Lehman, The Evening Sun: A Journal in Poetry (Scribner, 2002),
ISBN: 074322552X

Sharon Olds, Strike Sparks: Selected Poems, 1980-2002 (Knopf, 2004),
ISBN: 0375710760

Kim Addonizio, Tell Me (BOA Editions, 2000), ISBN: 1880238918

Mark Doty, My Alexandria (University of Illinois Press, 1993), ISBN: 0252063171

Additional materials will be made available either on-line or via Xerox handouts as needed.

ABSENCES AND MAKEUPS:

You will be allowed two absences during the course of the semester. For each absence beyond these two there will be a 50-point deduction in your final grade. If you happen to go beyond the three allowed absences, you will be allowed to make up one (and no more than one absence) by attending an outside poetry reading and writing a 500-word review of the event, or writing a 500-word review of a contemporary volume(s) of poetry not discussed in class.

Students who must miss class due to an official University event must let the instructor know in advance (with appropriate documentation) in order to make up missed work. In the event of unexpected serious illness or if commuting students must miss class due to severely inclement weather, students must contact the instructor and provide appropriate documentation to make arrangements for makeups, etc.

Please note that I DO NOT make distinctions between excused and unexcused absences, and an absence always counts as an absence. Instead, you’ve been given a reasonable number of absences and a reasonable number of makeup opportunities to work with, and I will expect you each to manage your own attendance accordingly. Please let me know ASAP if you have specific concerns or questions.

PLAGIARISM:

The College of Arts and Sciences considers plagiarism, cheating, and other forms of academic dishonesty inimical to the objectives of higher education. The College supports the imposition of penalties on students who engage in academic dishonesty, as defined in the “Conduct” section of the University of South Dakota Student Handbook.

No credit can be given for a dishonest assignment. At the discretion of the instructor, a student caught engaging in any form of academic dishonesty may be:

(a) Given a zero for that assignment.
(b) Allowed to rewrite and resubmit the assignment for credit.
(c) Assigned a reduced grade for the course.
(d) Dropped from the course.
(e) Failed in the course.

ENGLISH DEPARTMENT POLICY ON FAIR EVALUATION:

Rights and Responsibilities: The English Department believes that each student is entitled to earn and receive a fair grade in each course for which he or she enrolls. The department believes equally that it is the right and the responsibility of an instructor to establish criteria for evaluation for each course which he or she teaches and to determine the degree to which an individual student has fulfilled the standards set for the course.

Resolving Complaints: Students making a complaint about a grade should first attempt to resolve the problem directly with the course instructor. If that attempt is unsuccessful, the Director of Writing will review complaints regarding grades in ENGL 101 and 210. The Chair will consider other student complaints regarding grades as well as complaints from 101 and 210 not resolved by the Director of Writing. However, the burden of proof will lie with the student registering the complaint; he or she must demonstrate that an instructor has made an error in computation or that the instructor has violated the criteria set down in the printed syllabus for the course.

Syllabus Policy: To assist the Director and the Chair in determining whether grade changes are needed, individual faculty will be responsible for providing evaluation criteria for each course on the syllabus for that course, and for providing a copy of each syllabus to the Department Secretary by the second week of each semester.

Other Factors: Students should be apprised that extraneous factors, such as the eligibility of a student for sorority or fraternity membership, for scholarship and fellowship awards, or for admission to graduate schools, have no bearing on the determination of the fairness of a grade or grades received. The quality of the student’s overall performance with respect to evaluation standards will be the only criterion for judgment.

NOTICE REGARDING DISABILITIES:

Any student who feels s/he may need academic accommodations or access accommodations based on the impact of a documented disability should contact and register with Disability Services during the first week of class. Disability Services is the official office to assist students through the process of disability verification and coordination of appropriate and reasonable accommodations. Students currently registered with Disability Services must obtain a new accommodation memo each semester.

Ernetta L. Fox, Director
Disability Services, Room 119 Service Center
Phone: (605) 677-6389
Web Site: http://www.usd.edu/ds
E-mail: dservices@usd.edu

ASSESSMENT:

Any written work submitted for this course may be used for purposes of program review and/or faculty development.

FREEDOM IN LEARNING:

Students are responsible for learning the content of any course of study in which they are enrolled. Under Board of Regents and University policy, student academic performance shall be evaluated solely on an academic basis and students should be free to take reasoned exception to the data or views offered in any course of study. Students who believe that an academic evaluation is unrelated to academic standards but is related instead to judgment of their personal opinion or conduct should contact the dean of the college which offers the class to initiate a review of the evaluation.

TENTATIVE CLASS SCHEDULE


Important!! Don’t forget to blog!! Weekly deadline for posting the two required blog posts is no later than Monday night at midnight!! Blogging will officially commence after the second class meeting, and the first round of blog posts will be due by midnight on Monday, September 11, 2006.


Tuesday, August 29, 2006 - Introduction to Course
Go over syllabus and course policies; introduce course materials; go over blog set ups.

Tuesday, September 5, 2006 – Introduction to Course (cont.)
Modernism and Post-Modernism, Confessionalism, and the Middle Generation of Poets
URLs for your blogs will be due in class today!!

Tuesday, September 12, 2006 – Confessionalism Past and Present
Sylvia Plath

Tuesday, September 19, 2006 – Confessionalism Past and Present (cont.)
Sylvia Plath

Tuesday, September 26, 2006 – Confessionalism Past and Present (cont.)
Anne Sexton

Tuesday, October 3, 2006 – Confessionalism Past and Present (cont.)
Sharon Olds and Kim Addonizio
Modeling Poem #1 Due!!

Tuesday, October 10, 2006 – Presentations
Oral Presentation #1 Due (15 minutes apiece)

Tuesday, October 17, 2006 – Journal Poetry
Robert Lowell

Tuesday, October 24, 2006 – Journal Poetry (cont.)
Frank O’Hara and David Lehman
Modeling Poem #2 Due!!

Tuesday, October 31, 2006 – Discourses of Otherness and Displacement
Elizabeth Bishop

Tuesday, November 7, 2006 – Discourses of Otherness and Displacement (cont.)
Elizabeth Bishop

Tuesday, November 14, 2006 – Discourses of Otherness and Displacement (cont.)
Mark Doty and Li-Young Lee
Modeling Poem #3 Due!!

Tuesday, November 21, 2006
Class Canceled – Instructor Giving Out-of-Town Reading

Tuesday, November 28, 2006 – TBA
Rough Draft of Final Paper Due Today!!!

Tuesday, December 5, 2006 – Presentations
Oral Presentation #2 (15 minutes apiece)


Final Paper Due Thursday, December 14, 2006, by 5:00 p.m.!!!!!