Poets Teaching Poets: Self and the WorldGregory Orr, Ellen Bryant Voigt The Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers has emerged as one of the most well-respected writing programs in the country, producing a generation of first-rate poets who are also deeply dedicated teachers of their art. Poets Teaching Poets collects essays by current and former lecturers at Warren Wilson, including acclaimed poets Joan Aleshire, Marianne Boruch, Carl Dennis, Stephen Dobyns, Reginald Gibbons, Louise Glück, Allen Grossman, Robert Haas, Tony Hoagland, Heather McHugh, Gregory Orr, Michael Ryan, Ellen Bryant Voigt, Alan Williamson, Eleanor Wilner, and Renate Wood. This passionate and provocative anthology presents an extended, insightful dialogue on an astonishing range of topics: writers from Homer, Dickinson, and Akhmatova to Bishop, O'Hara, Milosz, and Plath; meditations on the nature of the image and the discovery of the self in Greek verse; a passionate defense of lyric poetry; and other engaging themes. Whatever their subject, these essays are, at the core, passionate and thoughtful meditations on the place of poetry in contemporary culture. Poets Teaching Poets will be an invaluable tool for teachers and students of poetry and poetics at every level. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the connections between craft and the larger issues of art, and in the continuing and exciting relevance of poetry today. Gregory Orr is author of six books of poetry, most recently City of Salt, and of two books of criticism, Richer Entanglements: Essays and Notes on Poetry and Poems and Stanley Kunitz: An Introduction to the Poetry. He is Professor of English, University of Virginia. Ellen Bryant Voigt is founder and former director of the low-residency MFA Writing Program at Goddard College and teaches in its relocated incarnation at Warren Wilson College. She has published four volumes of poetry and has received numerous awards, including two Pushcart Prizes and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 87
Page 13
... seems to be the work of a deeply rooted man . Friends have told me about his Swedishness , in " Evening - Morning " for example , where the image of the dock and the half - suffocated summer gods seem inseparable from the paradisiacal ...
... seems to be the work of a deeply rooted man . Friends have told me about his Swedishness , in " Evening - Morning " for example , where the image of the dock and the half - suffocated summer gods seem inseparable from the paradisiacal ...
Page 44
... seems much as if Sorrow had tripped up my heels . let us see ! Let us see , What did I plan to say to her when it should happen to me as it has happened now ? " Let us see , let us see ! " The dilemma is insoluble ; the natural world is ...
... seems much as if Sorrow had tripped up my heels . let us see ! Let us see , What did I plan to say to her when it should happen to me as it has happened now ? " Let us see , let us see ! " The dilemma is insoluble ; the natural world is ...
Page 183
... seems both more anachronistic and more important as a custodian of time , a preserver of bodily memory in its rudimentary sense , the one million years of humanity and four billion years of life of the earth . From this perspective ...
... seems both more anachronistic and more important as a custodian of time , a preserver of bodily memory in its rudimentary sense , the one million years of humanity and four billion years of life of the earth . From this perspective ...
Contents
Contents P585 | 1 |
Obstinate Humanity | 23 |
MARIANNE BORUCH | 48 |
Copyright | |
12 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Archilochus artistic audience beauty become bees beginning body C. K. Williams called create culture dead death discovery dramatic Eliot Ellen Bryant Voigt emotion essay example experience expressive eyes fact feeling figure function girl grass Greek Hass heart hive Homer human idea imagination individual inner Jeffers language Leaves of Grass living logic look Louise Glück lyric mass means Medusa memory metaphor mind move narrative object Orpheus paradigm passionate person Philomela poem poem's poet poet's poetic poetry Pound reader representation rhyme Rilke Robert Hass Romantic Sappho seems sense singing social song sonnet soul speaker speaking stanza Stephen Dobyns Stevens story structure style surprise Sylvia Plath syntax T. S. Eliot Ted Hughes temperament tension things thought tion traditional translations Tranströmer turn University vision voice Warren Wilson College Whitman whole Williams word Wordsworth writing wrote Yeats Yeats's