Poetry Workshop: Poetic Process
In this reading and writing workshop, we will undertake three primary tasks: discuss close readings of poems and texts relevant to poetry and the creative process; find ways to generate new work of our own through exercises, models, and experiments; and, finally, workshop our own poems for revision purposes. Throughout this semester, we will explore the theme of poetic process, asking ourselves: How do we grow as artists? How can other arts and sciences inform our work? And what is the role of the unconscious in creativity and revision work? In-class readings will include a variety of contemporary poets (US and multicultural writers—Whitman, Neruda, Vallejo, Mort, etc.). This will be a class-community effort; rigorous and compassionate participation is required. There will be class readings. Conference work will be assigned individually, and a minimum of eight new (and revised) poems will be expected. Our classroom is reserved for risk taking, exploring, and mistake making. Please park preconceptions and egos outside.
Writing courses
- A Question of Character: The Art of the Profile
- Connected Collections
- Dialogue in Fiction: Sounds and Silence
- Edgy Memoirs
- First-Year Studies: Exploring Voice, Image, and Form in Poetry
- Fictions of Embodiment
- Fiction Techniques
- Fiction Techniques
- Fiction Workshop
- First-Year Studies in Fiction
- Fiction Workshop
- Fiction Workshop: You write. I read. We talk.
- First-Year Studies: Exploring Subject Matter in Fiction
- First-Year Studies in Fiction
- First-Year Studies in Poetry
- First-Year Studies: World Literature and Writing
- Less Race Less Race Less Ness
- Living Poets
- Memory and Fiction
- Multimedia Uses of Oral History
- Nonfiction Laboratory
- Place in Fiction
- Poet as World Citizen
- Poetry Workshop
- Poetry Workshop: Poetic Process
- Poetry Workshop: Poetic Tone
- Poetry Workshop: The Making of the Complete Lover
- Sparks in the Void: A Fiction-Writing Workshop
- The Image Factory: A Poetry Workshop
- The Indian Point Project
- Visible and Invisible Ink: How Fiction Writing Happens
- Voice and Form
- Where Words Are Born
- Words & Pictures
- Writing, Radio, and Aurality
- Writing and Reading Fiction
- Writing Our Moment
- Wrongfully Accused
- Young America

