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  • National Poetry Month April 2020

Academic Book Club: Poetry

Welcome and thanks!

We met on four Fridays (via Zoom) to celebrate poetry as the Academic Book Club, sponsored by Community Engagement as part of their Connect with Community initiative at CSUN!

I chose a small number of short poems for each of the first three meetings. For the final meeting, two participants volunteered to select one poem apiece. 

For the record, I hoped especially to entice people with a longstanding prejudice against poetry. 

As for me, I was (still am) Cheryl Spector, a CSUN faculty member in the English Department since 1986. I started CSUN's Freshman Common Reading Program in 2007. 

Our goal was to join together for discussion and fun.  I think we succeeded. In any case: here are poems that you can read at your leisure, followed by some suggestions on what to look for when you're spending time with poems.

The poems

General instructions: skim through these "fourth session" poems before we meet. Then go back and reread just the ones you find most interesting. Prepare to join the discussion by asking a question or making a statement about your favorite poem. No time to prepare? No worries. You'll still learn something--and we may learn something from you, too.

Poems (and discussion leaders!) for the fourth session (May 8)

Bonus poems:

Poems we discussed during the third session (May 1)

We discussed these four poems:

As predicted, we didn't get to these five other poems but I thought I'd leave them up as they are well worth reading.

After this session ended, one participant emailed me the chorus of a John Prine song that helpfully illustrates the poetic term "onomatopoeia" (the term did come up during our meeting):

Chorus of “Onomatopoeia”:

Bang! went the pistol
Crash! went the window
Ouch! went the son of a gun
Onomatopoeia
I don’t wanna see ya
Speaking in a foreign tongue

Poem we discussed during the second session (April 24)

Poems we discussed during the first session (April 17)

What to look for in a poem

Well, of course you want to think about what each word means: why that word instead of some other? But you can also consider the sounds of the words, where the poet stops one line to start the next, whether there are rhymes or even rhythms (that's "meter" for English majors), the punctuation, and how the poem uses imagery (sights, sounds, smells, textures) and patterns (repetitions of anything at all) to make meaning.

Or: just read the poem aloud several times. If it's a really short one, try to memorize it.

Want more? Feeling wonky? Dr. Leilani Hall (English), a poetry professor at CSUN, recommends browsing the Glossary of Poetic Terms (Bob's Byway). Having taken a first look for myself, I totally agree. (Because there's so much more to reading a poem than studying the words!)

More ways to benefit from poetry

What Can Poetry Offer Us in Distressing Times?

Zócalo Public Square offered a livestreaming event on Thursday, May 7, at 6:30 p.m.

Former United States Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera, poet and author Inez Tan, and Arizona Poet Laureate Alberto Ríos visit Zócalo to consider how reading and writing poetry can save us when all seems lost.

Fore more information or to RSVP: https://www.zocalopublicsquare.org/event/what-can-poetry-offer-us-in-distressing-times/

NPR's Life Kit on Poetry

We Need Art Right Now. Here's How To Get Into Poetry (Mar. 31, 2020).  Yup: NPR offers 5 tips for how to ready poetry, in your choice of a 20-minute podcast or the webpage, which includes a video of former U.S. Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera reading his poem Almost Livin' Almost Dyin'.

National Poetry Month and #shelterinpoems

April is National Poetry Month. Let's celebrate!

April 30, 2020, online at 4:30 p.m. PDT: join "a virtual reading of uplifting poems to bring us together" sponsored by the Academy of American Poets.

On March 20, 2020, the American Academy of Poets announced a new initiative called Shelter in Poems

In this time of uncertainty and great concern, many people are turning to poems to seek words of wisdom, uplifting ideas, and language that prompts reflection and centers us mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. In response to this need and to help our readers stay connected in the weeks ahead, the Academy of American Poets invites the public to join in a new initiative called Shelter in Poems.

To learn more about Shelter in Poems or to participate in it, read the full announcement.

 Poetry Month 2020: words of poetry suspended from tree branches

Artwork by Samantha Aikman. Line of poetry--"Remember all is in motion, is growing, is you"--excerpted from the poem “Remember” by Joy Harjo, from She Had Some Horses (W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1983). For more free poetry resources, visit Poets.org/national-poetry-month