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More copies of this ISBNMind's Eyes : Guide To Writing Poetry (08 Edition)by Kevin Clark
Synopses & ReviewsPlease note that used books may not include additional media (study guides, CDs, DVDs, solutions manuals, etc.) as described in the publisher comments.
Publisher Comments:Focusing on imagery and sound, this groundbreaking book on the teaching of poetry writing is concise, practical, and inexpensive and it’s the only poetry writing text designed specifically for a college term. Winner of the Distinguished Teaching Award, Kevin Clark is a university professor, a widely published poet, and the author of the collection In the Evening of No Warning. Developed and proven over two decades of college level workshops, the flexible progression of lessons and exercises guides students through the major components of contemporary poetry writing.
WHAT YOU’LL FIND IN THIS EDITION
Synopsis:The Mind’s Eye, written by a published poet, focuses on imagery and sound and has the added benefit of being concise, inexpensive, and handy. Contemporary poetry as well as traditional form is discussed, with an emphasis on contemporary poets — more than ninety of them — and three student poets. Chapters deal with difficult topics such as racism, war, mortality, gender, and more. About the Author
An award-winning poet, Kevin Clark is the author of the collection In the Evening of No Warning. His poems and essays have appeared widely in places such as The Georgia Review, Iowa Review, The Southern Review, The Writer’s Chronicle, and Contemporary Literary Criticism. Winner of the Distinguished Teaching Award, he teaches at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo and the Rainier Writing Workshop in Tacoma, Washington. He lives with his wife and children on California’s central coast, where he continues to play upper division softball "despite legs like ancient concrete and more injuries than Evel Knievel." Table of ContentsPreface
Acknowledgements
Introduction The Mind's Eye
Imagery Sound and Idiom Imagination
One Words that Paint, Images that Speak
Painting Pictures with Words The Power of a Single Image Rendering Human Drama The Verb as Catalyst Exploring with Images The Quicksand of Abstraction A Note on Revision Getting Started The Poet’s Note Card
Two The Lively Image vs. The Deadly Cliché
Observations that Surprise Metaphors and Similes Listing The Interior World The Other Senses Dramatizing Everyday Subjects The Poet's Note Card
Three The Sound of Contemporary Poetry
Why Poems Don’t Sing Like Songs Conversational Poetry Musical Poetry How We Talk Back Home Poems That Go Fast Revising for Sound The Poet's Note Card
Four Conflict and Transformation
The Problem of the Human Heart Tension and Conflict The Transformative Moment Portraying Stasis Sentiment vs. Sentimentality Revising for Clarity The Poet's Note Card
Five Do Poems Have Plot?
Keeping Your Reader on Edge Lyric Interludes Narrative and the Transformative Moment Braiding Heightening the Drama Stories of Childhood Closure The Poet's Note Card
Six Empathy and Creativity
Becoming the Other The Historical Persona Dramatizing Current Events Myth The Psyche Under Pressure The Poet's Note Card
Seven Leaping through Time and Space
The Poetic Sequence Multiple Pictures Multiple Narratives Non-Numerical Sequences Revising toward the Sequence The Poet's Note Card
Eight Frames and Forms
Free Verse and the Question of Form Syllabics, Metrics and Blank Verse Rhyming The Sonnet The Villanelle The Sestina The Poet's Note Card
Nine Stanzas, Prose, and the Field of the Page
Organizing Words on the Page The Prose Poem Aeration Visual Caesurae The Poet's Note Card
Ten Surrealism
The Logic of Alogical Images Nonsense vs. Instinct Dream Poems Dreamtime and Magical Realism The Poet's Note Card
Eleven Writing about Sadness
The Elegy Imagery and Restraint Threnody Expectation and Surprise The Poet's Note Card
Twelve Poetry and Eros
The Predicament of the Love Poem Conflict and Tone The Language of Desire Erotic Poetry The Poet's Note Card
Thirteen The Poetry of Witness
Restraint War and Witness Writing about Racism Poems about Gender The Question of Culpability The Poet's Note Card
Fourteen Stretching the Imagination
The Next Challenge Eckphrasis The Drama of Sport The Serious Business of the Funny Poem Divinity and Uncertainty Philosophical Imagery The Poet's Note Card
Fifteen Breaking the Rules, Nurturing the Weird
Eccentricity and Voice Being Different Associative Journeys Undermining the Rules of Grammar Enigma Poems The Poet's Note Card
Appendix The Culture of Poetry
Writing Groups Public Readings How to Get Published • Choosing Journals • Submitting Poems by Mail • Submitting Poems by Email • Keeping a Submissions Log • On Simultaneous Submissions • Rejection and Acceptance
The Poet's Note Card
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