Free online poetry course at Iowa.

http://youtu.be/LhlqysmOvFA

The Course

How Writers Write Poetry, a six-week course beginning on June 28, 2014, is an interactive study of the practice of writing poetry. The course presents a curated collection of short, intimate talks on craft by two dozen acclaimed poets writing in English. Craft topics include sketching techniques, appropriation, meter, constraints, sound, mindfulness, and pleasure. The talks are designed for beginning poets just starting to put words on a page as well as for advanced poets looking for new entry points, thoughts about process, or teaching tips. The course will be taught by University of Iowa International Writing Program Director and poet/translator Christopher Merrill as well as Black Rainbow Editions Editor and poet Mary Hickman. Contributing poets’ video talks will be contextualized through online discussion and writing assignments. The Poetry Teaching Assistants (all Iowa Writers’ Workshop students or graduates with university level experience teaching creative writing) will join Mary Hickman in offering online poetry workshops to participants. (Please note: we can’t workshop everyone, but we will workshop a representative selection of participants’ work every week.) Poets who have contributed video craft talks for the course include former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Hass, Kwame Dawes, Marvin Bell, Kiki Petrosino, Kate Greenstreet, and many others. How Writers Write Poetry will offer a diversity of answers to the question of how a writer develops and refines the lifelong practice of his or her craft. Enrollment in How Writers Write Poetry is free and unlimited.

Source/go to: How Writers Write Poetry.

Excellent advice on managing your first year at university.

The change from school to university can be quite a shock as you move from a highly structured and directed environment to one in which you are expected to organise your own studies and rely on your own thinking to succeed.

Here is an excellent two-part video by Dr Owen Clayton on what to expect in your first year at university and how to manage:

Managing your expectations: some differences between further and higher education.

This, and other useful information, can be found at The English Faculty site.

Poetry reading by Andrew Mitchell, Wednesday 12, 12.15.

There will be a poetry reading taking place on Wednesday 12 February, 12.15-1pm in MB3202, by Andrew Mitchell.

Andrew will be reading from his recent work ‘Darwin: A Voyage of Ideas’ which explores the life of Charles Darwin. This may be of particular interest to those studying Edwardian Literature, Creative Writing, and MA in English Studies (Life Writing).

For more details on Andrew’s work, please see http://www.wordworthy.com/

All welcome.

New app to celebrate centenary of Joyce’s Dubliners.

jimmyjoyce

One hundred years after James Joyce’s “The Dead” was first published, a new iPad app relating to it has been launched.

The closing story of “Dubliners” is regarded by many as the greatest short story of the 20th century.

The new app includes the full story read by actor Barry McGovern, plus period images and podcast commentaries.

Read on at RTE.

Free poetry app.

poetryapp

With the Poetry Foundation’s POETRY mobile app, you can now take hundreds of poems by classic and contemporary poets with you wherever you go.

GET IT NOW, FOR FREE!

From William Shakespeare to César Vallejo to Heather McHugh, the Poetry Foundation’s app turns your phone into a mobile poetry library:

  • Search for old favorites with memorable lines.

  • Give your phone a shake to discover new poems to fit any mood.

  • Save your favorite poems to read and share later—through Facebook, Twitter, or e-mail.

  • Read poems by T. S. Eliot, Pablo Neruda, Lucille Clifton, Emily Dickinson, and many others.

Find out more at The Poetry Foundation.

The Black Path free literary event, Wed 23 October.

Don’t forget that there will be a free reading of work from The Black Path by last year’s students on the MA Creative Writing course.

The reading will take place in MC0025, 12.00 – 1.00, Wednesday 23 October (2013). Work will include poems, flash fiction and extracts from longer pieces.

Everyone welcome.

Poetry & Audience: 60th birthday at Leeds University.

Image

P&A sculpture1

Prof John Whale holds sculpture by Hubert Dalwood bequeathed to P&A in its early days.

P&A sculpture3

Saturday, 19 October, 2013

Editors past and present, together with various poets, magazine editors and current students gathered at the School of English at Leeds University to celebrate 60 years of Poetry & Audience.

Poetry & Audience is one of the longest-running poetry magazines in the UK and owes its longevity as much to the frequently crisis-driven student-owned nature of its existence as to the commitment of the School of English. It also forms an integral part of the strong literary tradition of Leeds, which includes JRR Tolkien and poets such as Geoffrey Hill, James Kirkup, Tony Harrison, Ken Smith, Jeffrey Wainwright, Jon Glover, William Price (“Bill”) Turner, Paul Mills and many others.

The anniversary involved a roundtable discussion of poetry magazine publishing, readings by P&A poets and editors and individual accounts of the history of P&A (Michael Blackburn, Elaine Glover, John Goodby, Emma Must, Chris Nield, Antony Rowland, Jeffrey Wainwright).

The event was hosted by Prof John Whale, with sessions chaired by Fiona Becket, Hannah Copley and Emily Timms (who also arranged an exhibition of P&A materials). Many thanks to all of them and anyone who I’ve forgotten to mention.

Participants: Michel Blackburn, Carole Bromley, Elaine Glover, Evan Jones, Paul Maddern, Adam Piette, John Goodby, Jay Parker, Christie Oliver-Hobley, Sarah Webster, Amy Ramsey, Mick Gidley, Elaine Glover, Emma Must, Antony Rowland, Jeffrey Wainwright, Hannah Copley, Eleanor Ford, Daniel Boon.

Current and former students of Lincoln may want to submit work to P&A, of course.