Department of English

Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn University


2202242  Introduction to the Study of English Poetry

 

Puckpan Tipayamontri

Office: BRK 1106.1

Office Hours: W 24 or by appointment

Phone: 0 2218 4703

puckpan.t@chula.ac.th

 

Group 3

BRK 314

T 122, Th 1112

 

Tentative Schedule (Group 3)

Week 1

Jun. 3

Introduction

Reading

Discussion: What do you think of Bernstein's views of poetry compared to Barr's?

Jun. 5

Unit 1 Poetic Qualities

Reading

Discussion: what poetry is, poetic qualities, reasons for reading poetry, the art of reading

Week 2

Jun. 10

Unit 1  Poetic Qualities

Unit 2  Making Sense of Poems

Reading

Discussion: how close-reading opens up William's "This Is Just to Say"; making inferences; exploring points of view

Jun. 12

Unit 3  Tone

Reading

  • Read coursebook to page 12

  • Stanley Kunitz, "The Snakes of September" (also audio of Kunitz reading)

    • On "The Wellfleet Whale" and "The Snakes of September"

    • "Pulitzer Prize Winner Stanley Kunitz Dies" by Hillel Italie (obituary)

    • "Pulitzer poet Kunitz dead at 100" (obituary)

    • Genesis chapter 1, 2, 3

    • Things to think about when reading Kunitz’s poem “The Snakes of September”

      • Compare what you know about snakes to Kunitz’s description of them. Does he present them in any way that is new or unexpected to you?

      • Lines 15–21 allude to the Genesis in the Bible. If you’re not familiar with it, you can read Genesis chapters 1–3 online.

      • Think about what you feel about snakes and the kinds of emotions and associations that you have when you encounter them. Pay attention to the feelings and associations that the poem evokes. What emotions run through the speaker’s account of his experience? One way you can examine this is to listen to Kunitz reading the poem with your eyes closed and envision each detailed scene along with him.

      • What do you think of the transition when the narrator is no longer a mere observer?

Discussion: words and feeling: tone, denotation, connotation

  • Tone (discussion of tone in poetry, definition excerpts of textbooks)

  • Tone (explanation of tone with examples from Many Worlds of Poetry)

Week 3

Jun. 17

Unit 3  Denotation and Connotation

Reading

Discussion: words and meaning: denotation, connotation

Jun. 19

Unit 3  Imagery

Reading

Discussion: words and the senses: imagery

Week 4

Jun. 24

Unit 4  Figures of Speech: Simile, Metaphor, Personification

Reading

Discussion: words and associations: simile, metaphor

Assignment 1 given

Jun. 26

Unit 4  Personification, Apostrophe

Reading

Discussion: making things human: personification, apostrophe

Week 5

Jul. 1

Unit 4  Overstatement, Understatement

Reading

Discussion: overstatement, understatement

 

Assignment 1 due beginning of class

Jul. 3

Unit 4  Allusion

Reading

Discussion: intertextuality: allusion

 

Assignment 2 given

Week 6

Jul. 8

Unit 4  Metonymy, Synecdoche

Reading

  • Read coursebook to page 47

  • Louis Simpson, "The Battle"

  • Gavin Ewart, "Ending"

Discussion: metonymy, synecdoche

 

Assignment 2 due beginning of class

Jul. 10

No Class (Graduation Ceremony)

Week 7

Jul. 15

Unit 4  Symbol

Reading

Discussion: symbol, allegory

Jul. 17

No Class (Asalhapuja)

Week 8

Jul. 22

Midterm (Tuesday, July 22, 2007 in our usual room during regular class hours: BRK 303, 122 p.m.; there will be two parts: Part I (35 points) on material we have studied and discussed from the beginning of the coursebook to page 54; Part II (15 points) is on an unseen poem; read through the exam and pace yourself well)

Jul. 24

Midterm Week (July 2125, 2008)

Week 9

Jul. 29

Unit 4  Paradox, Irony

Reading

Discussion: paradox, irony

Jul. 31

Unit 4  Irony

Reading

Discussion: irony

Week 10

Aug. 5

Unit 4  Irony

Reading

  • Read coursebook to page 65

  • Sharon Olds, "Rites of Passage"

  • Billy Collins, "The History Teacher"

  • Laurence Perrine, "Janus"

Discussion: irony

Assignment 3 given

Aug. 7

Unit 5  Sound and Meaning

Reading

Discussion: rhyme, rhythm, meter, scansion, formal pattern

Week 11

Aug. 12

No Class (Mother's Day)

Aug. 14

Unit 6  Types of Poetry

Reading

Discussion: types and forms of poetry, sonnet

Assignment 3 due

Week 12

Aug. 19

Unit 6  Ballad

Reading

Discussion: ballad

Aug. 21

Unit 7  Paraphrase

Reading

Week 13

Aug. 26

Unit 8  Theme: Death

Reading

Discussion: theme, the interpretation of poetry

Aug. 28

Unit 8  Theme: Death

Reading

Discussion: theme, the interpretation of poetry

 

Assignment 4 given

Week 14

Sep. 2

Unit 8  Theme: Life

Reading

Discussion: theme, the interpretation of poetry

Sep. 4

Unit 8  Theme: Life

Reading

Discussion: theme, the interpretation of poetry

 

Assignment 4 due beginning of class

Week 15

Sep. 9

Unit 8  Theme: Life

Reading

Discussion: theme, the interpretation of poetry

Sep. 11

Poetry Conference

Session 1: Does Anger End?  The Warning in Meter and Rhyme Scheme in William Blake's "The Poison Tree"

 

Session 2: Toward Eternity in Sonnet 18: How Shakespeare Gives Life with Words

 

Final paper due, 710 pages (see some sample papers and writing guidelines below)

Week 16

Sep. 16

Poetry Conference (bring potluck)

Student Poetry Readings:

 

Sessions

3:  Life Beyond Words: Atwood's Variations on the Word "Love" and "Sleep"
4: Student Poetry Reading

Sep. 18

Review

 

Sep. 23

Final Exam 13 p.m. in BRK 401. It has 2 parts: Part I (worth around 45 points) consists of three essay-type questions on seen poems from p. 56 to the end of the coursebook; Part II (worth about 25 points) expects responses of short and medium length to five questions on an unseen poem.

 

 


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Last updated September 23, 2008