You are not currently logged in. Please create an account or log in to view the full course.
3. Form 1: Internal Baggage
- Description
- Cite
About this Lecture
Lecture
In this module, we think about poetic form, thinking in particular about the kind of limitations (or opportunities) that poetic form presents, whether in terms of the metre that must be used, the number of lines, the rhyme-scheme, or something else.
After that, we think about the difference between ‘open’ and ‘closed’ poetic forms, as well as some more general descriptors for poetic form (e.g. lyric, satiric), before thinking about innovation in poetic form; Why do certain configurations have names and not others? To what extent does poetry allow for the creation of new forms?
Course
In this course, Professor John Lennard talks through the craft of poetry in a course that draws on his international bestseller, The Poetry Handbook, which has been a favourite with both sixth-form students and undergraduates since its first publication in 1996. As we move through the course, we look at every technical aspect of poetry, including metre, form, layout, lineation, rhyme, diction, syntax, before thinking about how much readers of poetry should draw on historical and biographical context when analysing and interpreting poetry.
Throughout the course, technical discussion of poetry is richly illustrated with examples from some of the greatest poets in the English language, including: William Shakespeare, George Herbert, John Donne, Andrew Marvell, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Robert Browning, Wilfred Owen, W. B. Yeats, Philip Larkin, Seamus Heaney, Geoffrey Hill, and Derek Walcott.
Lecturer
Born in Bristol, and educated at Oxford and St Louis, Dr John Lennard has taught English, American, and Commonwealth Literature in Cambridge, London, and Jamaica over more than twenty years. He has written two widely used textbooks (on poetry and drama) and monographs on Shakespeare, Paul Scott, Nabokov, and Faulkner, as well as two collections of essays on contemporary genre writers in crime, science fiction and fantasy, and romance. Enthusiastic, discursive, widely knowledgeable, and a demon for punctuation (on which he has also published extensively), he has been a popular Summer School Course Leader and lecturer for the Institute of Continuing Education since 1992.
Cite this Lecture
APA style
Lennard, J. (2018, August 15). Poetry: How to Read and Analyse Poetry - Form 1: Internal Baggage [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://www.massolit.io/courses/poetry-how-to-read-and-analyse-poetry/form-1-internal-baggage
MLA style
Lennard, J. "Poetry: How to Read and Analyse Poetry – Form 1: Internal Baggage." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 15 Aug 2018, https://www.massolit.io/courses/poetry-how-to-read-and-analyse-poetry/form-1-internal-baggage