Sep 25, 2013

'WHAT POETRY IS'--PHILIP LEVINE @ DENISON

On Thursday morning, Levine joined Professor Ann Townsend ’85 and eight students from her advanced poetry-writing workshop to share thoughts on creativity and craft. - See more at: http://www.denison.edu/theden/2013/09/what-poetry-is/#sthash.LEBiN3wA.dpuf
 (Philip Levine & Ann Townsend)


On Thursday morning, Levine joined Professor Ann Townsend ’85 and eight students from her advanced poetry-writing workshop to share thoughts on creativity and craft. After asking some of the students which poets they’d been enjoying recently, Levine talked about the writers who influenced him in his youth: T.S. Eliot, whose “vignettes of city life” inspired him to find the poetic in his native Detroit; William Butler Yeats, who possessed “a speaking voice that’s also a singing voice”; and Wilfred Owen, whose thoughts on war resonated deeply with him as a young man coming of age during World War II.
One student asked Levine when he first began to write poetry. “It began as a verbal exercise, a kind of communion with the universe,” he replied. At 13, he would go outside after dinner and make up poems — although, he recalls, “I did not call them poems, because they had no resemblance to
- See more at: http://www.denison.edu/theden/2013/09/what-poetry-is/#sthash.LEBiN3wA.dpuf
On Thursday morning, Levine joined Professor Ann Townsend ’85 and eight students from her advanced poetry-writing workshop to share thoughts on creativity and craft. After asking some of the students which poets they’d been enjoying recently, Levine talked about the writers who influenced him in his youth: T.S. Eliot, whose “vignettes of city life” inspired him to find the poetic in his native Detroit; William Butler Yeats, who possessed “a speaking voice that’s also a singing voice”; and Wilfred Owen, whose thoughts on war resonated deeply with him as a young man coming of age during World War II.
One student asked Levine when he first began to write poetry. “It began as a verbal exercise, a kind of communion with the universe,” he replied. At 13, he would go outside after dinner and make up poems — although, he recalls, “I did not call them poems, because they had no resemblance to
- See more at: http://www.denison.edu/theden/2013/09/what-poetry-is/#sthash.LEBiN3wA.dpuf
On Thursday morning, Levine joined Professor Ann Townsend ’85 and eight students from her advanced poetry-writing workshop to share thoughts on creativity and craft. After asking some of the students which poets they’d been enjoying recently, Levine talked about the writers who influenced him in his youth: T.S. Eliot, whose “vignettes of city life” inspired him to find the poetic in his native Detroit; William Butler Yeats, who possessed “a speaking voice that’s also a singing voice”; and Wilfred Owen, whose thoughts on war resonated deeply with him as a young man coming of age during World War II.
One student asked Levine when he first began to write poetry. “It began as a verbal exercise, a kind of communion with the universe,” he replied. At 13, he would go outside after dinner and make up poems — although, he recalls, “I did not call them poems, because they had no resemblance to
- See more at: http://www.denison.edu/theden/2013/09/what-poetry-is/#sthash.LEBiN3wA.dpuf

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