Modern Poetry and Poetics
Modern Poetry and Poetics
Modern Poetry and Poetics
https://legacy.saylor.org/engl408/Intro/
John Freed, Ph.D. -- Saylor lead author
Course Introduction
Purpose of Course:
The decades between roughly 1890 and 1960 witnessed unprecedented efforts to create
new art, new values, and a new culture in Europe and the United States to distance itself
from the more socially acceptable works of late Victorian poets and artists. During this
time, Western writers, artists, and intellectuals questioned the accepted aesthetic norms
and produced radically experimental works of art and new understandings of what it
means to live in modern times. The first half of the 20th century also witnessed the most
devastating conflicts in Western history the two World Wars and the Holocaust and
these events accelerated and profoundly influenced cultural changes. Modernist poetry
one of the most interesting cultural developments emerged during this time.
While it is true that modernist poetic developments sprang up in unlikely and seemingly
spontaneous ways, we will attempt to progress through this course in a roughly
chronological manner. This is because, in many ways, even modern poetry retains a
social form that can reflect the cultural and political situations in which it is written. The
course starts with a theoretical consideration of modernity and modernism, as well as a
brief introduction to poetics and some references to pre-modern Victorian poetic
practices. This course then explores transitional, fin-de-sicle poetic innovations of the
French symbolists and World War I poets. The course addresses early modernist
movements like Imagism, Vorticism, and Futurism as well as the writings of High
Modernism. A unit on African-American modernism, often referred to as the Harlem
Renaissance, explores another crucial dimension. Finally, you will analyze how World
War II and the Holocaust affected poetry.
By the end of the course, you will have studied the work of major American and British
modernist poets, and you will have critically explored the characteristic techniques,
concerns, and tropes of modern poetry.
The Courses Grand Design
Two Bridges to Modernity
Think of this course in terms of two bridges. The shorter bridge is the main subject of this
course, or modern poetry in a certain time period, being from the relative orderliness of
the late 19th century (i.e., Victorian era) to the chaotic end of World War II and the
potentialities for world-wide nuclear annihilation during the early 1960s. The longer
bridge proceeds from certainty into doubt.
The Longer Bridge
The longer cultural bridge is the overarching philosophical paradigm shift to
modernity, marked in literary terms on one end by John Miltons 1674 Paradise
Lost [Note: The best website for all of Miltons poetry complete with annotations is The
John Milton Reading Room at Dartmouth.] and on the other end by William Carlos
Williams 1923 The Red Wheelbarrow. The really big question in this course is how
did Western culture come from Miltons confident justifying the ways of God to men in
his epic poem:
Of Mans First Disobedience, and the Fruit
Of that Forbidden Tree, whose mortal taste
Brought Death into the World, and all our woe,
With loss of Eden, till one greater Man
Restore us, and regain the blissful Seat,
Sing Heavnly Muse, that on the secret top
Of Oreb, or of Sinai, didst inspire
That Shepherd, who first taught the chosen Seed,
In the Beginning how the Heavns and Earth
Rose out of Chaos: . . .
to barely being able to hang on to the existence of reality itself with William Carlos
Williams poem?
so much depends
upon
a red wheel
barrow
glazed with rain
water
Primary Resources: This course comprises a range of different open access, online
materials. However, it makes primary use of the following materials:
Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Modern Poetry Lectures
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: English Departments Modern American
Poetry
University of Pennsylvania: Professor Al Filreis Modern and Contemporary
American Poetry resources and the Coursera MOOC link for Fall 2013
https://www.coursera.org/course/modernpoetry .
Time Commitment: This course should take you a total of 145 hours to complete. You
will have unlimited access to the course and can approach the course in any way that you
deem appropriate for your learning style and other time commitments. The course is
projected over a traditional 15 week semester, so you may choose to do it in this time
frame, or you may take less time or more time. Each unit includes a time advisory that
lists the amount of time you are expected to spend on each subunit. These should help
you plan your time.
Tips/Suggestions: As you study the poems in this course, keep in mind that it may help
to read each poem on the page as well as out loud. This course covers a wide variety of
literary styles; therefore, it is essential to keep careful notes as you study. Write down the
names of any style, movement, poet, literary conventions used by that poet, and
interpretations you have about the poem. Review your notes from previous units before
starting a new unit so that comparisons between the various styles and movements of
modernist poetry will be more apparent.
Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course, you should be able to:
define the term modernism with regard to Anglo-American poetry, and describe how it
is distinct from the descriptor late-Victorian;
closely read (i.e., explicate) the poetics of representative examples of modern poetry;
discuss the transitional aspects between late-Victorian and modernism;
analyze a wide variety of modernist poems by comparing and contrasting them in
terms of form, content, and rhetorical purpose;
chronologically organize the most important British and American modernist poets
into definable categories or movements;
distinguish low modernism from the high modernism of Pound and Eliot;
identify and analyze political and activist aspects of modernist poetry with specific
reference to the Harlem Renaissance; and
analyze the socio-political context of the modernist movements in America and
Europe in the first half of the 20th century with special emphasis on the relationship
between poetry, the two World Wars, and the Holocaust.
Dr. John Freed, course development consultant
[email protected]
Unit 1: The Province of Modern Poetry
This course will attempt to snake its way chronologically through the poetry produced in
the first half of the 20thcentury under the literary banner of modernism. In Unit 1, we
will begin by defining modernism and reviewing the poetry and poets that preceded
modern poetry in the Victorian era. With the objective of defining modernism in mind, we
will explore what modern is NOT that is, you will explore those 19th-century
assumptions and conventions that modern poets sought to dissociate themselves from and
the socio-historical context in which they had developed. This unit contains a sampler of
the Victorian-era establishment-approved poets Alfred, Lord Tennyson, Rudyard
Kipling, Matthew Arnold, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and John Greenleaf Whittier
that the modernist poets so self-consciously rebelled against. The modernist poets also
rebelled against those societies that produced World War I, World War II, and the Cold
War.
Fortunately, the most familiar American poet, Robert Frost, emerged at the beginning of
the modernist movement. Frost is the poet that Professor Langdon Hammer first chooses
to introduce in his Modern Poetry course at Yale University. The unit will lead into an
introduction of modern poets through a study of Robert Frost.Finally, this unit will
conclude with a general discussion of characteristic modernist concerns as they tend to
be defined by scholars.
As you read, consider the following study questions: How does Dr. Witcombe define
modernism? What does he identify as the most important reasons for its emergence?
Reading this text and answering the questions above should take approximately 1 hour.
Reading: The University of Texas at Austin: Harry Ransom Centers Press Release:
Make It New: The Rise of Modernism Exhibition
Link: The University of Texas at Austin: Harry Ransom Centers Press Release: Make It
New: The Rise of Modernism Exhibition (HTML)
Instructions: Read this press release for an overview of the historical context of and the
defining features of the modernist period.
Reading this press release should take approximately 15 minutes.
modernist poets.
Reading this poem should take approximately 30 minutes.
Reading: Victorian Web: Hamilton Becks Explication Commentary
Link: Victorian Web: Hamilton Becks Explication Commentary (HTML)
Instructions: After you have studied Tennysons poem, The Charge of the Light
Brigade, read Becks Explication Commentary from the paragraph beginning with
The Charge of the Light Brigade was certainly an example of bravado through the
paragraph that begins with Tennyson was not nave in his praise of war Keep the
themes of bravado and the glory of war in mind for Victorian poetry to contrast against
the war poems you will read later in Units 4 and 8.
Reading this commentary should take approximately 15 minutes.
Reading: Internet Archive: Alfred Lord Tennysons The Brook, Break, Break, Break,
Sweet and Low, and The Eagle
Link: Internet Archive: Alfred Lord Tennysons The Brook, Break, Break, Break,
Sweet and Low, and The Eagle (HTML)
Instructions: Read the following poems: The Brook, Break, Break, Break, Sweet
and Low, and The Eagle. Consider how these poems compare and contrast to The
Charge of the Light Brigade.
Studying these poems should take approximately 1 hour.
Instructions: Watch the lecture titled Introduction to Modern Poetry. As you view the
lecture, note how Professor Hammer identifies the goals of modernist poets and their
means of breaking with traditional forms and conventions.
Watching this lecture, pausing to take notes, and completing the writing activity above
should take approximately 1 hour and 30 minutes.
Reading: Poem Hunter: Robert Frosts Out, Out and Mowing
Link: Poem Hunter: Robert Frosts Out, Out (HTML) and Mowing (HTML)
Instructions: Read Robert Frosts poems, Out, Out and Mowing. Note the applicable
characteristics of modernist poetry that Professor Hammer describes in his lecture.
As you read, consider the following study question and writing prompt: What effects
does Frost try to achieve? Write a brief interpretation of each poem.
Studying these poems, answering the question above, and completing the writing activity
should take approximately 45 minutes.
Lecture: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 2: Robert Frost
Link: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 2: Robert Frost (Adobe
Flash, QuickTime, HTML, Mp3)
Instructions: Watch the lecture titled Robert Frost.
As you view this lecture, consider the following study questions: How does Professor
Hammers interpretation of the poems Out, Out and Mowing compare to your own?
Revisit Whittiers poem, Telling the Bees. How might this poem have influenced the
American vernacular used by Frost?
Watching this lecture, pausing to take notes, and answering the questions above should
take you approximately 1 hour and 30 minutes.
1. Briefly explain what can be said about Modernism in general from Gertrude Steins
prose-poem A Light in the Mood http://www.poetryarchive.com/s/a_light_in_the_moon.html and Picassos portrait of her shown here
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/92/Gertrude_Stein_sitting_on_a_sofa
_in_her_Paris_studio,_with_a_portrait_of_her_by_Pablo_Picasso.jpg and here
http://uramericansinparis.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/picasso-stein1.jpg .
2. In what specific ways does Matthew Arnolds poem Dover Beach
http://www.bartleby.com/246/420.html manifest transitional elements between lateVictorian and Modernist poetry?
3. What are some of the essential differences between Robert Frosts poem Home
Burial http://www.bartleby.com/118/6.html and the John Greenleaf Whittier poem
Telling the Bees? http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/telling-the-bees/ What qualities
characterize one of them as Modernist and the other as late-Victorian?
Instructions: Consider the essay prompts for this assessment, and craft an essay founded
on your readings from this unit. After writing your essay, use the Rubric for Effectively
Written College-Level Essays (PDF) to self-evaluate your writing.
Completing this assessment should take approximately 3 hours.
particularly difficult to translate? When you compare Baudelaires poems with the Victorian poems you
studied in Unit 1, what are the most important differences? Do you perceive any similarities?
Studying these poems, answering the questions above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 1 hour and 30 minutes.
chats-cats/ list all of the images used by Baudelaire in this poem and write down the associations that
each image elicits in your mind. This is how imagery becomes a symbolic link between the author and
the reader of lyrical poetry. Then, write a brief essay on how Baudelaire uses symbolism in this poem
and how that affects the readers interpretation of the poem.
2. Paul Valery, a fellow poet, reported that Mallarm himself was unhappy that his poem Afternoon
of a Faun http://www.angelfire.com/art/doit/mallarme.html was used as the basis for Claude
Debussys Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_7loz-HWUM
in this manner:
He [Mallarme] believed that his own music was sufficient, and that even with the best intentions in
the world,it was a veritable crime as far as poetry was concerned to juxtapose poetry and music, even
if it were the finest music there is.
Mallarme himself, however, sent the following note of congratulations to Debussy:
I have just come out of the concert, deeply moved. The marvel! Your illustration of the Afternoon of a
Faun, which presents a dissonance with my text only by going much further, really, into nostalgia and
into light, with finesse, with sensuality, with richness. I press your hand admiringly, Debussy. Yours,
Mallarm.
After reading the poem and listening to the Debussy piece, explain which version of Mallarmes
response you believe is more reliable.
Instructions: Consider the essay prompts for this assessment, and craft an essay founded on your
readings from this unit. After writing your essay, use the Rubric for Effectively Written College-Level
Essays (PDF) to self-evaluate your writing.
Completing this assessment should take approximately 3 hours.
Reading: Brown University and The University of Tulsas The Modernist Journals Project:
Modernism Began in the Magazines
Link: Brown University and The University of Tulsas The Modernist Journals Project: Modernism
Began in the Magazines (HTML)
Instructions: Review this excellent collection of poetry journals that sprung up in the early 20th century
and published boundary-breaking modern poets works and theories of poetry. Click on the image of
each journal to learn more about the publication.
Reviewing the journals should take approximately 45 minutes.
3.2 William Butler Yeats and the Early Use of Irish Mythology
Reading: Bartleby: William Butler Yeats The Song of Wandering Aengus and A Coat
Link: Bartleby: William Butler Yeats The Song of Wandering Aengus (HTML) and A
Coat (HTML)
Instructions: Read Yeats poems, The Song of Wandering Aengus and A Coat.
As you read, consider the following study question and writing prompt: How does Symbolism enter
into Yeats poetry? For each poem, write a paragraph in which you analyze the poems dominant
symbols. Consider posting your paragraph to the ENGL408 Course Discussion Board, and respond to
other students posts.
Studying these poems, answering the question above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 1 hour.
Reading: WikiSource: William Butler Yeats The Madness of King Goll
Link: WikiSource: William Butler Yeats The Madness of King Goll (HTML)
Instructions: Read Yeats poem, The Madness of King Goll. This poem presents itself as a
monologue and an ode to the Irish spirit.
As you read, consider the following question and writing prompt: How might the poet represent
himself through King Goll? How might the use of myth correspond to the use of symbolism?
Reading this poem, answering the question above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 2 hours.
Lecture: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 4: William Butler Yeats
Link: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 4: William Butler Yeats (Adobe Flash,
QuickTime, HTML, Mp3)
Instructions: Watch the William Butler Yeats lecture. In this lecture, Professor Hammer analyzes two
of Yeats poems: The Song of the Wandering Aengus and A Coat. Professor Hammer also proposes
that Yeats, in a certain sense, identified with King Goll. Consider how Professor Hammers connections
between the poet and King Goll compare or contrast to your own ideas about this subject that you
wrote about after reading the poem, The Madness of King Goll.
Watching this lecture, pausing to take notes, answering the questions above, and completing the writing
activity should take approximately 2 hours.
Reading: Poetry Archive: William Butler Yeats To the Rose upon the Rood of Time
Link: Poetry Archive: William Butler Yeats To the Rose upon the Rood of Time (HTML)
Instructions: Read Yeats poem, To the Rose upon the Rood of Time. As you read, identify the
poems formal features, its themes, and its use of symbolism and imagery.
Reading this poem and identifying its features should take approximately 30 minutes.
As you read, consider the following study questions and writing prompt: How is Yeats approach to
Symbolism different from that of Baudelaire, Rimbaud, and Mallarm?
Reading this essay, answering the question above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 2 hours.
Letter (HTML)
Instructions: Read Pounds poems, In a Station of the Metro and The River-Merchants Wife: A
Letter.
As you study these poems, consider the following questions and writing prompt: What do these poems
express about the modern condition? In what ways does each poems form depart from traditional
poetic norms? What is the effect of introducing references to Chinese culture in the second poem?
Studying these poems, answering the questions above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 1 hour.
Reading this essay and answering the questions above should take approximately 45 minutes.
Reading: American Poems: Amy Lowells The Green Bowl and Patterns
Link: American Poems: Amy Lowells The Green Bowl (HTML) and Patterns (HTML)
Instructions: Read Lowells poems, The Green Bowl and Patterns. As you read, consider the
following study question and writing prompt: How do these poems implement or step away from the
rules of Imagist poets as indicated in the essay, On Imagism?
Studying these poems, answering the question above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 1 hour.
Reading: Poem Hunter: Marianne Moores A Grave, An Octopus, Silence, The Fish, and The
Paper Nautilus
Link: Poem Hunter: Marianne Moores A Grave (HTML), An
Octopus (HTML), Silence (HTML),The Fish (HTML), and The Paper Nautilus (HTML)
Instructions: Read Moores poems: A Grave, An Octopus, Silence, and The Paper Nautilus.
Note that Moore often used syllabics, the counting of syllables as a form of meter, rather than typical
metrical lines; a strong example of the use of syllabics is The Fish.
Studying these poems and completing the writing activity should take approximately 3 hours.
Lecture: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 17: Marianne Moore and Lecture
18: Marianne Moore (cont.)
Link: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 17: Marianne Moore (Adobe Flash,
QuickTime, HTML, Mp3) and Lecture 18: Marianne Moore (cont.) (Adobe Flash, QuickTime,
HTML, Mp3)
Instructions: View these two lectures, focusing on how Professor Hammer views Marianne Moore.
Write a paragraph that summarizes what he identifies as the most important characteristics of her
poems.
As you view these lectures, consider the following study question: How does Professor Hammers
interpretations and analysis of Moores poems compare to your own?
Watching these lectures, pausing to take notes, and answering the question above should take
approximately 3 hours.
Instructions: Read Williams poem, The Red Wheelbarrow, which was presented in the course
introduction in comparison to Milton. As you revisit this poem, consider the following study questions:
In The Red Wheelbarrow, the first stanza is very different from the ones that follow. What is the
difference? What is the effect of this juxtaposition on the reader?
Reading this poem and answering the questions above should take approximately 15 minutes.
Reading: Poets.org: William Carlos Williams This Is Just to Say
Link: Poets.org: William Carlos Williams This Is Just to Say (HTML)
Instructions: Read Williams poem, This Is Just to Say. As you read, consider the following study
questions: How does This is Just to Say illustrate the principles of Imagism? What tone comes across
in this poem?
Reading this poem and answering the questions above should take approximately 15 minutes.
poem produce in the reader? Why might this poem be considered the chivalric ideal? How do you think
English audiences reacted to this poem during the time of World War I? How does Brookes poem
compare and contrast to Sassoons poem?
Reading this poem, answering the questions above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 1 hour.
4.3 The Great War and Poetry: Reflection, Disillusionment, and Bitter Critique
Reading: The Poetry Foundation: Biography of Wilfred Owen, Biography of Thomas Hardy,
Biography of Siegfried Sassoon, and Biography of Isaac Rosenberg
Link: The Poetry Foundation: Biography of Wilfred Owen (HTML), Biography of Thomas
Hardy (HTML), Biography of Siegfried Sassoon (HTML), and Biography of Isaac
Rosenberg (HTML)
Instructions: Read these biographical essays on Wilfred Owen, Thomas Hardy, Siegfried Sassoon, and
Isaac Rosenberg. Together, they provide a narrative of various experiences of the end of the Victorian
Era and of the Great War.
Reading these essays and completing the writing activity should take approximately 2 hours and 30
minutes.
Lecture: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 7: World War I Poetry in England
Link: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 7: World War I Poetry in
England (Adobe Flash, QuickTime, HTML, Mp3)
Instructions: Watch this lecture on World War I poetry in England. Take notes on Professor Hammers
analysis of the poems of Wilfred Owen, Thomas Hardy, Edward Thomas, Siegfried Sassoon, and Isaac
Rosenberg.
As you watch this lecture, consider the following study questions: How would you characterize the
most important differences among these writers? How do the readings in subunit 4.2 help you
understand the poems analyzed by Professor Hammer in his lecture?
Watching the lecture, pausing to take notes, and answering the questions above should take
approximately 2 hours.
Reading: Great War Literature Magazine: W. Lawrances Rudyard Kipling Author, Poet, and
Quintessential Englishman
Link: Great War Literature Magazine: W. Lawrances Rudyard Kipling Author, Poet, and
Quintessential Englishman (HTML)
Instructions: Read this article to learn about the events that changed Kiplings view of the war. Then,
go back and re-read Epitaphs of the War.
As you read this article and review the poem, consider the following study questions: How does this
article inform your analysis of Epitaphs of the War? How would you describe Kiplings change of
heart, or changing attitude?
Reading this article, re-reading Epitaphs of the War, and answering the questions above should take
approximately 45 minutes.
As you read this poem, consider the following study questions: How is this poem a pacifist poem?
What is the speakers position on war? How might one read this poem as an anti-war poem? How does
this poem compare and contrast to Kiplings Epitaphs of the War in terms of the genre of war poetry?
Reading this poem and answering the questions above should take approximately 45 minutes.
Reading: The Literature of Poetry: e.e. cummings next to of course god america I
Link: The Literature of Poetry: e.e. cummings next to of course god america I (HTML)
Instructions: Read e.e. cummings poem, next to of course god america i. Also, read the commentary
that follows the poem. Finally, listen to the recording of cummings reading this poem.
As you read the poem and listen to the recording, consider the following study questions: How is this
poem a pacifist poem? What is the speakers position on war? How does the speaker reconcile
patriotism and anti-war sentiments in this poem? How does this poem compare and contrast to
Kiplings Epitaphs of the War in terms of the genre of war poetry?
Reading this poem, reading the commentary, listening to the recording, and answering the questions
above should take approximately 45 minutes.
Reading: Harvard Magazine: Adam Kirschs The Rebellion of E.E. Cummings
Link: Harvard Magazine: Adam Kirschs The Rebellion of E.E. Cummings (HTML)
Instructions: Read this article about the range of cummings anti-establishment perspective. Then, go
back and re-read the poems by cummings in this subunit.
As you read this article and revisit the poems in this subunit, consider the following study question:
How does this article inform your reading of these poems?
Reading this article, re-reading the poems in this subunit, and answering the question above should take
approximately 45 minutes.
Reading: Literature Study Online: Stephen Colbourns The Georgian Poets and the War Poets
Link: Literature Study Online: Stephen Colbourns The Georgian Poets and the War Poets (HTML)
Instructions: Read this essay on the Georgian poets and war poets. After reading this essay, re-read
Mares poem in this subunit.
How does this essay inform your reading of The Truants?
Reading this essay, answering the question above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 2 hours and 30 minutes.
Instructions: Read the guide to Futurism and take notes to learn about the distinctions between Italian
Futurism and Russian Futurism. Then, read the biography on Vladimir Mayakovsky, one of the
distinctive poets of Russian Futurism. It may be useful to review your notes on Italian Futurism.
As you read and review your notes, consider the following study question: What are the most important
differences between Russian and Italian Futurism?
Reading these texts, reviewing your notes, and answering the question above should take
approximately 45 minutes.
Reading this essay and answering the question above should take approximately 30 minutes.
Reading: Brown University and The University of Tulsas The Modernist Journals Project: BLAST(No.
1, Ed. Wyndham Lewis)
Link: Brown University and The University of Tulsas The Modernist Journals Project: BLAST (No. 1,
Ed. Wyndham Lewis) (HTML)
Instructions: Using the scrolling tool on the left-hand side of the webpage, go to page 9 (Long Live
the Vortex!), and read the manifesto in its entirety (pp. 945). Once you have read the manifesto,
explore the magazines other pages, paying attention to both the language of the poems and the visual
aesthetic of this publication.
As you read, consider the following study questions: What are the most important claims this manifesto
makes about art? How are these different from the creed of the Symbolists and the Imagists? What do
you think was so revolutionary about BLAST?
Reading the text, answering the questions above, and exploring poems in BLAST should take
approximately 3 hours.
3. What are specific characteristics that distinguish Italian Futurism from Russian Futurism?
Instructions: Consider the essay prompts for this assessment, and craft an essay founded on your
readings from this unit. After writing your essay, use the Rubric for Effectively Written College-Level
Essays (PDF) to self-evaluate your writing.
Completing this assessment should take approximately 3 hours.
Link: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 9: Ezra Pound (Adobe Flash,
QuickTime, HTML, Mp3)
Instructions: Watch this lecture on Ezra Pound, focusing on Professor Hammers analysis of Pounds
Canto I.
Watching this lecture, pausing to take notes, and completing the writing activity described above
should take approximately 1 hour and 30 minutes.
approximately 1 hour.
Lecture: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 5: William Butler Yeats (cont.)
Link: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 5: William Butler Yeats (cont.) (Adobe
Flash, QuickTime, HTML, Mp3)
Instructions: Watch this lecture on William Butler Yeats. Note how Dr. Hammer interprets Yeats poetry
during World War I and in its aftermath as well as how he relates the poems to their historical context.
Watching this lecture and pausing to take notes should take approximately 1 hour and 30 minutes.
Lecture: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 13: Hart Crane and Lecture 14:
Hart Crane, (cont.)
Link: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lectures 13: Hart Crane (Adobe Flash,
QuickTime, HTML, Mp3) and Lecture 14: Hart Crane, (cont.) (Adobe Flash, QuickTime, HTML,
Mp3)
Instructions: As you watch these lectures on Hart Crane, take careful notes on Professor Hammers
analysis of Cranes poems, paying particular attention to the arguments proposed in the two
lectures. You may also download the transcripts of the lectures themselves by clicking on the link to the
transcript on the webpage.
Watching these lectures and pausing to take notes should take approximately 2 hours and 30 minutes.
Instructions: Consider the essay prompts for this assessment, and craft an essay founded on your
readings from this unit. After writing your essay, use the Rubric for Effectively Written College-Level
Essays (PDF) to self-evaluate your writing.
Completing this assessment should take approximately 3 hours.
Lecture: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 15: Langston Hughes
Link: Yale University: Professor Langdon Hammers Lecture 15: Langston Hughes (HTML)
Instructions: Watch this lecture and take notes on Professor Hammers analysis of Hughes poetry and
his historical context.
Watching this lecture and pausing to take notes should take approximately 1 hour and 15 minutes.
Reading: The Poetry Foundation: Langston Hughes The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain
Link: The Poetry Foundation: Langston Hughes The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain (HTML)
Instructions: Read the introductory note as well as Hughes essay, The Negro Artist and the Racial
Mountain. As you read, consider the following study question: How does Hughes analyze the
relationship between race and poetry?
Reading this essay and answering the question above should take approximately 45 minutes.
Reading: The Poetry Foundation: Elizabeth Alexanders The Black Poet as Canon-Maker
Link: The Poetry Foundation: Elizabeth Alexanders The Black Poet as Canon-Maker (HTML)
Instructions: Read Alexanders essay, The Black Poet as Canon-Maker. As you read, consider the
following study question: What does Alexanders essay add to your understanding of the Harlem
Renaissance?
Reading this essay and answering the question above should take approximately 30 minutes.
Web Media: YouTube: Langston Hughes Ku Klux
Link: YouTube: Langston Hughes Ku Klux (YouTube)
Instructions: Listen to this audio version of Hughes Ku Klux read aloud. If necessary, listen to the
poem read aloud multiple times.
As you listen to this recording, consider the following questions and writing prompt: What is the
meaning of this poem? How does this connect to a political, social, and historical context? What is the
mood of this poem? How does irony function in this poem? Write a paragraph to summarize your
analysis. Consider posting your paragraph to the ENGL408 Course Discussion Board, and respond to
other students posts.
Listening to this poem, answering the questions above, and completing the writing activity should take
approximately 15 minutes.
Reading: Modern American Poetry: Onwucheka Jemie, Bartholomew Brinkman, and John Moores
On Ku Klux
Link: Modern American Poetry: Onwucheka Jemie, Bartholomew Brinkman, and John MooresOn
Ku Klux (HTML)
Instructions: Read this collection of analyses on Hughes Ku Klux, compiled by the Modern
American Poetry project.
As you read, consider the following study question: What are the similarities and differences between
these analyses and your own interpretation of Hughes Ku Klux?
Reading this text and answering the question above should take approximately 45 minutes.
Reading: Modern American Poetry: James Smethursts Langston Hughes in the 1930s
Link: Modern American Poetry: James Smethursts Langston Hughes in the 1930s (HTML)
Instructions: Read Smethursts essay on Langston Hughes. As you read, consider the following
question: What is the rationale for Hughes interest in Communism?
Reading this essay and answering the question above should take approximately 30 minutes.
Unit 8: Poetic Responses to World War II, the Holocaust, and the Global Nuclear Threat
In this unit, you will take a look at World War II poetry, keeping in mind the representation of war and
violence we encountered in the World War I poems so as to compare and contrast these eras of poetry
and the approach to the war poem. Consider whether the WWII poems more accurately address the
realities of war. The question to consider in this unit and one that modernist poets toward the end of the
movement sought to address is: Are the horrors of the World Wars, multiple genocides, and threat of
nuclear incineration of cities and potentially the entire planet so monumental that they can only
become trivialized by being spoken about as expository narrative or re-interpreted as art?
In this unit, you will study poetry that responded to World War II, the Holocaust, Japanese-American
internment, and the Atomic Age. This unit will introduce you to World War II poets like Randall Jarrell,
Keith Douglas, and Karl Shapiro as well as Japanese internment poets like Violet Kazue de Cristoforo.
you find it compelling? Why, or why not? Do the quotes of poetry that she provides support her
argument? Why, or why not?
Reading this essay and answering the questions above should take approximately 1 hour.
Reading: Voices [Education Project]: World War II Poets: Violet Kazue de Cristoforo
Link: Voices [Education Project]: World War II Poets: Violet Kazue de Cristoforo (HTML)
Instructions: Read this brief biography of Violet Kazue de Cristoforo as well as a few of her haiku
poems.
As you read, consider the following study question: How would you describe the relationship of these
haikus to the experience of internment?
Reading this article and answering the question above should take approximately 15 minutes.
Web Media: NPR: Sasha Khokhas Haiku Poet Documented Life in Japanese Camps
Link: NPR: Sasha Khokhas Haiku Poet Documented Life in Japanese Camps (Mp3)
Instructions: Select the play tool to listen to the full story concerning the role of haikus in JapaneseAmerican internment camps through NPR.orgs website.
As you listen to this podcast, consider the following study question: What function did the haiku serve
Reading: The Peace Pledge Project: Denise Levertovs Talk in the Dark
Link: The Peace Pledge Project: Denise Levertovs Talk in the Dark (HTML)
Instructions: Read Denise Levertovs poem, Talk in the Dark.
Consider the role of the poet in alerting fellow citizens about the end of the world as we know it. As
you read the poems in this unit, consider the following study questions: How is artistic innovation
influenced by political commitments? Should it be? Does literature have ethical responsibilities?
Studying this poem and completing the writing activity should take approximately 1 hour.
Terms of Use: Please respect the copyrights and terms of use displayed on the material referenced in
the course above.