Monday, October 3, 2011

Advice on Beginnings & Brooks' A Street in Bronzeville

Period 7: Please continue writing your sound poem (late), or your Revision exercise: take one of your previously written poems and write a SECOND draft using sound devices and/or diction to create tone. See previous post for help.

 A note about beginnings:
Beginnings can be daunting for a writer. There's that blank page and a whole lot of potential. Just like a baby, your writing (story, play, poem, etc.) needs encouragement; it needs nourishment in the form of lots of specific words, character development, description, and ideas that help it grow. If you don't spend time with your baby, it'll never grow to be the "adult" piece. It will grow up needing therapy, and never get a job (i.e., published), sitting in your bedroom drawer or computer folder until its in its thirties. Not a good start.

Sometimes the first few lines or pages of a longer work is really just the scaffolding that holds up the idea. The REAL beginning might happen in another draft.

Don't worry: once you work with a piece, you'll ultimately find the right opening. In any case, an opening for a poem or story is a reader's "entrance" into the piece. Just like your home, you don't want your front hallway or foyer to be cluttered with furniture and junk that guests have to risk breaking their neck over. It should be an inviting space, promising lovely new sights and people to meet who dwell inside.
Enough with that metaphor.

The most important thing to remember is that writing is a process. It is a promise you are making with your reader. An opening should hook or grab a reader's attention. Poetry and fiction and scripts alike.

Today's class:

After reading this advice, please get into groups of 1 or 2. Together (or alone) read Gwendolyn Brooks' poem cycle A Street in Bronzeville. Gwendolyn Brooks was a Pulitzer Prize winning poet and is known throughout the world for her poetry. She knows what she's doing, so she's a good role model for us as young poets.

Please read the poem: A Street in Bronzeville. OMG! This poem is made up of eleven poems! Taken together it is what we in poetry circles call A POEM CYCLE. The poetry cycle form has been around since the Ancient Greeks. The poems in a poetry cycle are thematically linked. In some cases, dealing with the same characters or personas. In this case, a neighborhood (a street in Bronzeville!) Remember to always read and consider titles. There's nothing tricky about a title.

Brooks based this poem on her own experiences and those of her family. Here's a little help with references and lines:
The Madam: Beauty schools or colleges were run by women. It was one of the standard occupations for women in America before 1980. The others were secretary, teacher, nurse, and housewife. Not a broad (forgive the pun) occupational list. Madam, by the way, also is a term used for a woman who runs a brothel.

Hunchback girl: bad posture indicated bad behavior. One's carriage, especially for young women, should be proper, straight (yes, there's another meaning there for Gwen), and appropriate. All things in their place.

Charity children: the poor. Bad woman: a 'ho. A tramp. A...you get the idea. Makeup or "paint" was used by women who wanted to attract men for some reason.

Hosanna is a prayer, a praise to God.

Lincoln: Gwendolyn Brooks was from Chicago. The community of Lincoln Park includes Lincoln Cemetary (and Lincoln Park Zoo). The cemetery is on Blue Island. It was a "black only" cemetery in Chicago.
After you read these with your partner and discuss the poem, please post a response to the cycle on the forum. If you haven't yet posted a response to the Sound/Diction poems from last blog post entry (see below), please do that now.

Lab Writing/Homework:

Poem option #1: Write a poem about your neighborhood or family or a fictional neighborhood or family.

Poem option #2: Write a poem centered around a specific character or person. Real or imaginary. Write. Create a draft. Complete the draft. Call it draft #1.

Poem option #3: Repeat the process (writing option #1 & #2) as often as you'd like. Try to link your series of poems revolving around one place or character in a poetry cycle.

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About this course!

This course stresses understanding the characteristics & techniques in the literary genres of fiction, poetry, and dramatic writing. This course will continue to build on students’ reading and writing skills begun in previous creative writing classes. Readings and discussions of works by major writers in the field will be examined as inspiration and models of fine writing. This educational blog is designed for the use of the students at the School of the Arts in Rochester, NY.