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Tag Archives: Article

Why Study Humanities? What I Tell Engineering Freshmen

26 Wednesday Jun 2013

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Article, education, literature, news, poem, Poet, Poetry, research, science, writers, Writing

Article by John Horgan in Scientific America

What’s the point of the humanities? Of studying philosophy, history, literature and “soft” sciences like psychology and poly sci? The Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences, consisting of academic, corporate, political and entertainment big shots, tries to answer this question in a big new report to Congress. The report is intended to counter plunging enrollment in and support for the humanities, which are increasingly viewed as “luxuries that employment-minded students can ill afford,” as The New York Times put it.

The humanities are subversive. They undermine the claims of all authorities, whether political, religious or scientific. This skepticism is especially important when it comes to claims about humanity, about what we are, where we came from, and even what we can be and should be.

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The Decline and Fall of the English Major

24 Monday Jun 2013

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Article, Editorial, education, Fiction, news, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, School, Teaching, writers, Writing

In the past few years, I’ve taught nonfiction writing to undergraduates and graduate students at Harvard, Yale, Bard, Pomona, Sarah Lawrence and Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism. Each semester I hope, and fear, that I will have nothing to teach my students because they already know how to write. And each semester I discover, again, that they don’t.

They can assemble strings of jargon and generate clots of ventriloquistic syntax. They can meta-metastasize any thematic or ideological notion they happen upon. And they get good grades for doing just that. But as for writing clearly, simply, with attention and openness to their own thoughts and emotions and the world around them — no.

That kind of writing — clear, direct, humane — and the reading on which it is based are the very root of the humanities, a set of disciplines that is ultimately an attempt to examine and comprehend the cultural, social and historical activity of our species through the medium of language.

This is a great article read the rest at the nytimes.com

Interview with Poets Billow Editors on Doutrope

21 Thursday Feb 2013

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2013, Article, award, contest, interview, literature, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, reading, reading poetry, writers, Writing

Doutrope has posted their interview with The Poets Billow editors Michelle Bonczek and Robert Evory on their website. Get a behind the scenes look at how we run our poetry competitions, who our favorite writers are, and what our judging process is like.

Link to the Interview

Interview with Francine Witte

14 Thursday Feb 2013

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2013, Article, award, contest, interview, literature, loss of memory, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, surreal image, writers, Writing

Your poem “Breaking Sky,” which won the 2012 Atlantis Award, opens with an imaginary, surreal image and progresses into the tangible, real world of birth and death. The tone shifts from something that at first seems playful and distant into an elegy for the speaker’s mother and loss of memory. How did this poem develop for you in the writing process itself? Did you know that the poem was moving toward the death of a mother? Or is it something that surprised you in the process itself?

I’m not really sure how the poem “started” in my head, but yes, this sudden appearance by my mother does happen often when I’m writing.  My mother’s slip into dementia was one of the most stunning occurrences in my entire life.  That first encounter with her when I knew she wasn’t in touch with reality was a gut punch for sure.  The memory of it doesn’t get dim either.  I think in this particular poem it came from talking about the piece of the sky, how you were once like a piece of sky falling from the mother’s thighs to my mother.  It just happened.  And no, I didn’t know when I began writing the poem.

Click to read the full interview

Brief and Unsettling Writing Tips from George Saunders

19 Saturday Jan 2013

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2013, Article, dialogue, Fiction, interview, literature, monologue, saunders, syracuse, tension, voice, writers, Writing

Brief and Unsettling Writing Tips from George Saunders.

National Book Awards Winners 2012

18 Sunday Nov 2012

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2012, Article, award, books, entertainment, literature, National, national book awards, news, poem, Poet, Poetry, writers, Writing

Check out the winners of this years national book awards

http://nationalbook.org/

Young People’s Literature: 
William Alexander
, Goblin Secrets
(Margaret K. McElderry Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing)

Poetry:
David Ferry, Bewilderment: New Poems and Translations
(University of Chicago Press)

Nonfiction:
Katherine Boo, Behind the Beautiful Forevers: Life, Death, and Hope in a Mumbai Undercity
(Random House)

Fiction:
Louise Erdrich, The Round House (Harper, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers)

National Book Awards Finalists Announced: Poetry

11 Thursday Oct 2012

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2012, Article, award, books, contest, Ferry, Finalist, Huntington, literature, National, news, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, reading, Seibles, Shapiro, Wheeler, writers, Writing

Let’s support the 2012 National Book Award Finalists for Poetry. Find the rest at the National Book Award Website.

David Ferry, Bewilderment: New Poems and Translations (University of Chicago Press)

Cynthia Huntington, Heavenly Bodies (Southern Illinois University Press)

Tim Seibles, Fast Animal (Etruscan Press)

Alan Shapiro, Night of the Republic (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Susan Wheeler, Meme (University of Iowa Press)

Michelle Bonczek Wins Chapbook Contest

07 Sunday Oct 2012

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2012, Article, Bonczek, Book, books, Chapbook, contest, Internet, literature, love, manuscript, mentor, Michelle, Monkey, news, online journal, Orange, personal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poetry editor, poets, Publishing, reading, Win, workshop leader, writers, Writing

Just wanted to send out a congratulations to Michelle Bonczek, our poetry editor, mentor, and workshop leader here at The Poets Billow, for winner the Orange Monkey Chapbook contest with her manuscript The Art of the Nipple. 

When Poetry Was an Olympic Event: Great Article from The New York Times

04 Thursday Oct 2012

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Article, books, Event, Internet, literature, New York Times, Olympics, poem, Poet, Poetry, reading, reading poetry, Writing

The torrent of sports poetry inspired by the London Olympics continues unabated: NPR even hosted Poetry Games, in which listeners voted on a selection of verse with an athletic theme by celebrated poets from various countries. But few people today recall that poetry, just like the 100 meters, was an official Olympic competition from 1912 to 1948. Sadly, the names of the medal winners are not listed on the International Olympic Committee’s rosters. And many of the winning poems in the so-called Pentathlon of the Muses — which had to be “inspired by the idea of sport” — have mysteriously vanished as well, perhaps, as critics have suggested, because of their dubious literary quality.
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Natasha Trethewey on Her Revision Process

08 Saturday Sep 2012

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Article, elegy, father's elegy, final draft, hoyt, Laureate, literature, natasha trethewey, poem, Poet, poet laureate, Poetry, revision, revision process, Trethewey, Writing

This is a really insightful article on revision. Here’s an excerpt:

How Poet Laureate Natasha Trethewey Wrote Her Father’s ‘Elegy’

By Alex Hoyt

Now, the reader seeing the final draft doesn’t know that I have my own secret journal in which I feel “silenced” by my father. The work of the poem is following certain paths and not others. I have to decide whether or not I’m going to reveal to an audience this side of my relationship with my father. When I write notes in my journal, I’m just trying to scribble down as much as possible. Later on I decide whether to follow some of those first impressions or whether to abandon them.

Writing [by hand] frees up a mode of thinking that allows me to consider more things without censorship, the way I would censor if I were typing. If I start writing on a computer, I feel that it’s official. When I’m actually writing by hand, I get more of a sense of the rhythm of sentences, of syntax. The switch to the computer is when I actually start thinking about lines. That’s the workhorse part. At that point, I’m being more mathematical about putting the poem on the page and less intuitive about the rhythm of the syntax.

 

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