After attending back-to-back panels at AWP 2012, one on feminist writing, the second on political writing, both panels came to the same conclusion: contemporary forms of feminist and/or political writing uses hybridity and collaboration. This breakthrough realization led to my Contemporary Forms class--an upper-level and graduate class.
The first book we looked at was Don't Let Me Be Lonely by Claudia Rankine. Here are the lesson plans and assignment:
Project One: Hybrid form, the personal
meets the multi-political (memoir-political), documentation
Requirement: At least five
pages connected by a theme.
Based
on Don’t Let Me Be Lonely
Alternative projects: Psychogeography
Based
on Jena Osman’s Walking Mapping Tracking Writing: An Experiment in
Psychogeography:
Our starting
point will be the Situationist “dérive,” or drift, which requires breaking
usual habits of moving through a place. We’ll read related works and then take
a series of walks (alone and together, actual and imagined) in order to explore
local terrains. Prompts for these walks will be constructed collaboratively;
we’ll use the information gathered to create maps that will lead us to writing.
Bring whatever portable recording devices you have on hand (cameras,
smartphones, notebooks) to help us document our drifts.
Another,
based on Kaia Sand’s Remember to Wave,
will consider all of the options involved with a work that combines place with
all of the layered contexts carried personally and historically.
On
a note about memoir: When writing out of personal experiences, we should be
careful when writing about trauma—as to not re-traumatize ourselves.
With
that said, I will appreciate any bravery out of our class--of sharing about
such things. I know my personal writing has helped me.
From
Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg: "Writing can help you find greater wholeness,
healing and strength. It can turbo-charge your resiliency -- your ability to
endure and thrive. It can also help you sort out what really happened, not so
much factually but emotionally, psychically, spiritually or other ways that
shape and infuse who you are. Writing can give you back more of who you are,
and give you a vehicle for your story so that you can contribute to growing the
world's compassion and wisdom."
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Day 3
SWBAT:
Brainstorm ideas
for their own writing
Learn more about
the current trends and topics
Examine the
assigned readings in classroom discussion for further understanding
Announce reading
series:
Brainstorm
ideas:
What ideas and
subjects do you have in mind? Freewrite.
Looking at the
first two first-day questions, what can you add?
What things do you
enjoy in life? What things inspire you?
What other
“personal causes” do you have? Social causes?
Show
a collection of poetry books and discuss themes. If any themes spark something,
write those down.
If you wrote about
an experience that changed your life, what would it be? [Only a couple of
sentences, if you want, are needed.]
Three more
experiences?
What do you like in
pop culture? Despise?
This last question:
Amy King: “Speech
requires means and distribution to be heard, and poetry is one of the most
dangerous forms of speech as, ultimately, poets are not beholden to the status
quo. Poets who do the difficult work of
language do not simply reflect the culture, but seek to change it. (Poetry has always spearheaded change from a
peripheral position.) “
Although this class
is certainly about hybridity, a lot of the hybridity is still grounded in the
experimental poetry movements.
Discuss.
Another
notion being challenged is around non-fiction:
John D’Agata
T
he James Frey
story
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Reality Hunger is theory
DLMBL is practice
describe pacing, repetition
(anaphora), etc. setting up theme
describe the semester as a whole
desc alternate idea for writing
project 1
[
Amy King:
"Popular
culture cameos regularly in my work as I'm no true adherent to the use of high
and low culture as a means for distinguishing myself on the status quo scale.
I'll die soon enough regardless of how you place me, whatever class you believe
in. People speak through pop culture, whether it be about a philosophical issue
or as a conveyance of intimacy. As a poet, I'm invested in exploring various
means and methods of communication. As a person, I use pop cultural references
regularly and try to be as attuned as possible to what and how those references
function, regardless of how fleeting the specific references are. I am porously
of and above my culture; I try to be limitless through that, even with cultural
references."
“Speech requires
means and distribution to be heard, and poetry is one of the most dangerous
forms of speech as, ultimately, poets are not beholden to the status quo. Poets who do the difficult work of language
do not simply reflect the culture, but seek to change it. (Poetry has always spearheaded change from a
peripheral position.) “
Discuss.
DLMBL
Describe setups,
overarching themes (death, suicide, Black America, media)
If time: In-class
writing
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