Class number:
2976
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Title: Modern Poetry |
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Department: English |
Career: Undergraduate |
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Component: Seminar |
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Session: Regular |
Instructor's Permission Required: No |
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Grading Basis: Regular |
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Units: 1.00 |
Enrollment limited to 10 |
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Current enrollment: 9 |
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Available seats: 1 |
Start date: Wednesday, January 25, 2023 |
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End date: Friday, May 12, 2023 |
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Mode of Instruction: In Person |
Schedule: M: 6:30PM-9:00PM, 115V - 103 |
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Instructor(s): Rosen, David |
Prerequisite(s): Prerequisite: C- or better in English 260 or ENGL 160. |
Distribution Requirement: Meets Humanities Requirement |
Note: For English majors, this course satisfies the requirement of a course emphasizing literature written after 1900. |
Course Description:
“It appears that poets in our civilization, as it exists at present, must be difficult.” When T. S. Eliot wrote these lines in 1921, “difficulty” was self-evidently a term of praise: it signaled a willingness to grapple with the intellectual, esthetic, moral, and erotic complexities of modernity. Today, however, that same difficulty gives poetry of the early 20th century its somewhat scary reputation. Why read tough texts when so much else goes down easily? A premise of this course is that the excitement, the beauty, and the sheer greatness of modern poetry are inseparable from the challenges it poses to the reader. Between 1885 and World War II, Eliot, Yeats, Pound, Crane, Moore, Bishop, Williams, Stevens, Frost, and Auden made poetry possible for modern life. We read their work. (Note: English 412 and English 812 are the same course.) For English majors, this course satisfies the requirement of an advanced class in literature written after 1900. It also satisfies the requirement of a poetry course. This course is research intensive. |