Thursday 3/27:
11:30am-1pm – Charles Sumner School, Rm 102
Crossing the Boundaries of the Self: Writing Through Others’ Stories
Crossing the Boundaries of the Self: Writing Through Others’ Stories
Joseph Ross, Kyle Dargan, Yvette Neisser
Moreno, Travis Roberts
One powerful method for writing poetry
that “bears witness” to events we haven’t experienced ourselves is to write
through someone else’s experience, taking on that person’s voice and/or telling
their story. Such poems may give voice to events or voices at the margin of
mainstream society, or may draw attention to a different perspective on
historical or current events. Panelists will read two poems each and discuss
questions that arise, such as: When writing about someone else’s experience,
how do you decide whether to use the first, second, or third person? How can
you be sure that you are conveying that person’s experience accurately? What
kind of research should you do, if any? What are the challenges, rewards, and
possible pitfalls of writing beyond “what you know”?
2-3:30pm – Charles Sumner School, Rm 101
Road Ready: Poetic Mapping & Movement
Road Ready: Poetic Mapping & Movement
Yael Flusberg
The road of the imagination contains a
surprising amount of concrete images which may be mapped out, as well as the
"much unseen" that Walt Whitman spoke about in his epic "Song of
the Open Road." By using the tools of both poetry and yoga, we can
transform into road-ready travelers of the imagination. In this experiential
workshop, we’ll intersperse movement with writing prompts to help us escape our
habitual residence in the intellect, in order to assume a more graceful
position in the realm of reflective presence. Both the physical and creative
exercises will be designed to help participants map out familiar roads (our
individual bodies and minds, for instance, or our shared socio-historical
movement), as well as chart out the possibilities that lie ahead. Participants
should dress comfortably and bring your favorite notebook and pen and an open
attitude.
2-3:30pm – Human Rights Campaign, Rm 105C
Mapping the Selves: Compulsion Resistance in
Autobiographical Poetry
Kenyatta
Rogers, Aricka Foreman, Keith S. Wilson, Raina Lauren Fields
How does writing our selfhood operate
as a political act? Rather than look to the personal as “confessional,” this
panel will consider the autobiographical impulse to write our lives as a means,
for some, of writing for our lives. Looking to Yusef Komunyakaa, Toi
Derricotte, Natasha Trethewey, and Kimiko Hahn, we discuss the necessary risk
of navigating the interior life, and explore the private sphere as a vast
landscape for personal, political, and social resistance. By giving ourselves
permission to write into ourselves, we give our communal spaces the opportunity
to expand, ensuring that each of us has the room to explore the power of our
own agency.
4-5:30pm – Human Rights Campaign, Rm 105A
Claiming History: Writing Cliophrastic Poems
Claiming History: Writing Cliophrastic Poems
Marilyn Nelson, Kim Roberts, Dan Vera
Clio, the Muse of History, inspires us
to revisit, reinterpret, and reclaim. This work is particularly important for
people who have been historically oppressed or underrepresented in cultural
narratives: women, GLBTQ people, people of color, and those who come from
ethnic or religious minority groups. In this roundtable, three writers who have
specialized in historical poems as a means to uncover and reclaim will read
examples of their work, and discuss the pleasures and pitfalls of writing about
American history. We will explore the sometimes conflicting needs of art and
fact, and distribute a “recommended reading” list.
Friday 3/28:
11:30am-1pm
– Institute for Policy Studies Conference Room
“Tell it, Tell it!” Creating Poetic Broadsides
Pia Deas
In this workshop, participants will
learn about the history of the broadside in order to create their own
meaningful broadsides. The workshop will begin with a brief introduction to the
broadside and an explanation of its original use to advertise products and
communicate news to its more contemporary use to showcase poetry in public
places. This workshop will use the broadsides of the 1960s Black Arts Movement
to showcase how poets of a previous generation combined poetry and illustration
to create a dynamic political message to capture a community’s attention.
Participants will then create their own broadsides to be displayed at Split
This Rock.
2-3:30pm - Charles Sumner School, Rm 101
Resisting Silence, Refusing to Fade: Documentary Poetry as
Witness
Wendy DeGroat
Wendy DeGroat
This interactive workshop will
introduce participants to documentary poetry, a powerful approach that
incorporates excerpts from primary source material (e.g. text from documents,
recorded voice from interviews, photography) into poetry in order to bear
witness to events and experiences, most often of oppressed, silenced, or
marginalized people. The workshop will provide a multimedia introduction to the
form, a group activity and discussion using a documentary poem and its source
document, and individual writing/reflection time.
2-3:30pm – Human Rights Campaign, Rm 105B
Acting for Writers: An Intergenerational Workshop
Robert Michael
Oliver, Elizabeth Bruce, Sarah Pleydell
The workshop introduces the narrative and
character-based poet to the actor's toolbox in order to deepen character, sense
of place, given circumstances, and conflict, providing cross-disciplinary craft
tools for exploring different aspects of poets’ themes and situations. We will
get participants on their feet through simple theatre games and improvisations
that then serve as writing prompts for brief generative writing and sharing.
Bruce, Oliver, and Pleydell each have decades of professional acting or
directing experience, as well as decades of literary writing experience.
No comments:
Post a Comment