* I'll start off by dictating Jeanne Marie Beaumont’s “Afraid So.” Afterward, we'll quickly discuss the punctuation-line relationship.
*Then line by line students will take turns reading Kim Addonizio’s
“Garbage” (which I can't find online but appears in her collection Tell Me). At this point we'll expand our discussion of the relationship between punctuation-line and emotional-moral intensity in both poems.
* Now I'll ask the students to choose a question from the Beaumont poem and to draft a
poem that spirals from it. They don't necessarily need to answer the question; rather, I want them to follow the question down whatever path it leads them.
* If technology is on our side, we'll share drafts on a projector so that students can discuss the punctuation-line strategies they found themselves taking. We'll talk about ways to ask ourselves and others some basic questions about revision: For instance, "point out two places in which those strategies worked well in the poem." "Point out one place
that makes you ask a 'what if [you made a specific line-punctuation adjustment]' question."
*With whatever time is left, I'll put myself on the hot seat and talk about some of the punctuation-line challenges I've been dealing with in my western Pennsylvania project. I'll share a few of those poems and some of the primary sources that inspired them, and talk a bit about how I moved from what was often prose diary text into dramatic monologues in verse, often written in specific (if invented) forms.
1 comment:
Sounds like a good program and i wish I could be there too.
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