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FAMOUS AMERICAN POETS

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Title: FAMOUS AMERICAN POETS


1
FAMOUS AMERICAN POETS
  • A presentation for
  • Student Support Services participants
  • Troy University
  • Troy, AL 36082

2
WORKSHOP OBJECTIVES
  • Provide students with a general overview of a few
    poets who have greatly influenced literary
    culture in the United States and internationally.
  • Encourage students to develop an appreciation for
    poetry, literacy, creative writing and artistic
    voices.
  • Encourage students to think critically about the
    various literary elements that poets apply.

3
POETRY . . . What is it?
  • Poetry is a type of literature that expresses
    ideas, feelings, or tells a story in a specific
    form (usually using lines and stanzas).
  • Poetry can break from traditional forms and
    continue to be poetry with its infusion of
    literary elements.

Slide Source http//home.comcast.net/vldschool/
Poetry20Terminology.ppt256,2,POETRY
4
POET
  • A poet is a literary artist who uses words to
    create images or messages that evoke an
    emotional, intellectual or other critical
    thoughts and responses in readers.

Slide Source http//home.comcast.net/vldschool/
Poetry20Terminology.ppt256,2,POETRY
5
Shakespeare was brilliant, and . . .
  • Many other poets are great and have contributed
    much to the literary and poetic arts.
  • Consider American poets and their contributions
    to the poetic diaspora (the dispersion or
    population of poets in the world).
  • Consider, too, that poets, though they may be
    well-known for their writings, are humans whose
    lives impacted their creative works.
  • Consider how many great poets have been
    forgotten, despite their major contributions and
    genius.

6
First, look at these influential American Poets
who have gotten limited recognition
  • Sterling Allen Brown(1901-1989)
  • Sterling Brown is one of the unsung heroes of
    African-American poetry. Born in 1901, died in
    1989, Brown spent most of his life as an English
    professor at Howard University, where he taught a
    wide range of courses from Shakespeare to World
    Literature.
  • While generations of studentsAmiri Baraka and
    Gwendolyn Brooks being two of the most
    famoushave paid tribute to his influential
    teaching, his poetry was largely neglected during
    his lifetime.

7
Sterling Brown Poem excerpt
  • Riverbank Blues
  • A man git his feet set in a sticky mudbank, A
    man git dis yellow water in his blood, No need
    for hopin', no need for doin', Muddy streams
    keep him fixed for good.
  • Source www.poets.org http//www.afropoets.net/s
    terlingbrown3.html

Browns use of dialect and blues as a mantra for
expressing the reality of black life in the
United States.
8
Paul Laurence Dunbar (another often forgotten
poet)
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906)
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar was the first
    African-American to gain national eminence as a
    poet.
  • Born in 1872 in Dayton, Ohio, he was the son of
    ex-slaves and classmate to Orville Wright of
    aviation fame as one of The Wright Brothers.
  • He suffered depression and alcoholism after
    separation from his wife, yet he still published
    12 poetry books.
  • He worked as an elevator operator and in several
    other job to pay off debts incurred from
    publishing his poetry.
  • He died of complications of tuberculosis. It is
    believed his work in the Library of Congress with
    all of the dusty books contributed to his
    declining health.

9
Paul Laurence Poem
  • We Wear the Mask
  •     WE wear the mask that grins and lies,     It
    hides our cheeks and shades our eyes,     This
    debt we pay to human guile     With torn and
    bleeding hearts we smile,     And mouth with
    myriad subtleties.
  •     Why should the world be over-wise,     In
    counting all our tears and sighs?     Nay, let
    them only see us, while             We wear the
    mask.
  •     We smile, but, O great Christ, our cries    
    To thee from tortured souls arise.     We sing,
    but oh the clay is vile     Beneath our feet,
    and long the mile     But let the world dream
    otherwise,             We wear the mask!

We Wear the Mask Lyrics of Lowly Life, in 1896
by Dodd, Mead, and Company. Source
http//www.potw.org/archive/potw8.html
10
Relevance of Our Un-song Poets
  • Dunbar exemplifies the stifled voice of many
    peoples and the frustrated voice of many
    writers/poets.
  • Voices may be stifled because of differences
    political, racial, gender, economic, social,
    psychological, philosophical, emotional, etc.
  • He represents the power of poetry to evoke
    feelings and teach people to apply a literary
    psychology in order to survive daily.

11
FAMOUS AMERICAN POETS
  • Despite their genius and fame, many poets were
    often misunderstood because of their unique
    dispositions and ideals.
  • Sources for the following slides unless otherwise
    specified http//www.online-literature.com/dicki
    nson/ http//www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poets/
    a_f/eliot/eliot.htmhttp//www.biographyonline.net/
    poets/emily_dickinson.html poets.org
    http//www.vcu.edu/engweb/eng384/emilybio.htm

12
FAMOUS POETS
  • Emily Dickinson (1830 1886)

Images yahoo.com
13
Emily Dickinson Biography
  • Born December 10, 1830 in Amherst, MA.
  • Educated at Amherst Academy.
  • At 17, began college at Mount Holyoke Female
    Seminary she became ill the spring of her first
    year and did not return.
  • She would leave home only for short trips for the
    remainder of her life, leading scholars to
    speculate she may have been agoraphobic (fear of
    going in public or managing crowds).

14
Was She Weird?
  • Known for being a recluse, she didnt leave her
    familys homestead for any reason after the late
    1860s.
  • She almost always wore white.
  • She often lowered snacks and treats in baskets to
    neighborhood children from her window, careful
    never to let them see her face.

15
Dickinsons Poetry Famous for . . .
  • Regular meterhymn meter (musical) and ballad
    meter, also known as Common meter
  • Quatrains (four line stanzas)
  • Often 1st and 3rd lines rhyme, 2nd and 4th lines
    rhyme in iambic pentameter
  • The use of dashes
  • Thematic handling of nature and spiritual themes
    (life and death in particular)

16
Dickinsons Publishing Career
  • Sent poems to Thomas Wentworth Higginson, a
    literary critic and family friend.
  • He recognized her talent, but tried to improve
    them, which made Dickinson lose interest.
  • At the time of her death, only seven of her poems
    had been published.

17
Dickinsons poem
I heard a fly buzz when I died      The
stillness round my formWas like the stillness in
the air      Between the heaves of storm. The
eyes beside had wrung them dry,      And breaths
were gathering sureFor that last onset, when the
king      Be witnessed in his power. I willed
my keepsakes, signed away      What portion of
me ICould make assignable,- and then      There
interposed a fly, With blue, uncertain,
stumbling buzz,      Between the light and
meAnd then the windows failed, and then      I
could not see to see.
The death in this poem is painless, yet the
vision of death it presents is horrifying, even
gruesome. The appearance of an ordinary,
insignificant fly at the climax of a life at
first merely startles and disconcerts us. But by
the end of the poem, the fly has acquired
dreadful meaning. Clearly, the central image is
the fly. It makes a literal appearance in three
of the four stanzas and is what the speaker
experiences in dying. source
http//academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/english/melani/c
s6/fly.html
18
Dickinsons Legacy
  • Dickinson died May 15, 1886, of nephritis (kidney
    disease).
  • Dickinson is considered influential to poets such
    as Adrienne Rich, Richard Wilbur, Archibald
    MacLeish, and William Stafford.
  • Along with Walt Whitman, Dickinson is one of the
    two giants of American poetry of the 19th century.

19
FAMOUS POETS
  • Walt Whitman (1819-1892)
  • Lived between time of the
  • War of 1812 and The American Civil War.
  • Gained prominence as a Free Verse poet

20
Walt Whitman
  • Born and raised in New York (Manhattan)
  • His poetry broke every rule of traditional poetry
  • Famous volume of poetry Leaves of Grass (1855)

21
Walt Whitman
  • Mixed reactions to his poetry, possibly because
    of its sensual references.
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson/Abe Lincoln loved it.
  • Whittier hated itthrew it in the fire
  • Themes Whitman covered were Nature, Democracy,
    and Common Man.
  • He introduced Free Verse to America
  • Slide Source http//www.usd306.k12.ks.us/classro
    om/tanderson/Walt20Whitman.ppt258,3,Walt Whitman

22
Whitmans Free Verse . . .
  • Presented a series of images
  • Used Other Literary Devices other than rhyme form
  • Alliteration (repeated sounds at the beginning of
    words) Ex CELEBRATE myself, and sing
    myself
  • Onomatopoeia (use of words that sound like their
    meaning) Ex buzz
  • Repetition rhetorical device (repeating certain
    words or sounds for effect or emphasis)
  • Imagery creating sensory details or pictures
    using specific and deliberate word choice

23
Whitmans Song of Myself poem
  • I CELEBRATE myself, and sing myself,And what I
    assume you shall assume,For every atom belonging
    to me as good belongs to you.
  • I loafe and invite my soul,I lean and loafe at
    my ease observing a spear of summer grass.
  • My tongue, every atom of my blood, form'd from
    this soil,     this air,Born here of parents
    born here from parents the same, and     their
    parents the same,I, now thirty-seven years old
    in perfect health begin,Hoping to cease not till
    death.

24
What is Song of Myself About?
  • Whitman reveals his desire to examine the
    individual, the communion between individuals,
    and the individual's place in the universe.
  • The poem is a meditation on what it is to be
    human, as well as a song to the America that
    Whitman felt so passionately about, and a sermon
    about the equality of man.
  • It is a long poem in which he makes mention of
    people in various occupations, people of
    different ethnicities, and the original energy
    (ability or potential to do work) that all
    individuals have in the universe.

25
FAMOUS POETS
  • Phyllis Wheatley (1753-1784)
  • America's first published, black poet

26
Wheatleys life
  • Born in Senegal, Africa in 1753, she was sold
    into slavery at the age of seven to John and
    Susannah Wheatley of Boston.
  • Although originally brought into the Wheatley
    household as a servant and attendant to
    Wheatley's wife, Phillis was soon accepted as a
    member of the family, and was raised with the
    Wheatley's other two children.
  • Phillis' popularity as a poet both in the United
    States and England ultimately brought her freedom
    from slavery on October 18, 1773.   She even
    appeared before General Washington in March, 1776
    for her poetry and  was a strong supporter of
    independence during the Revolutionary War.
  • She felt slavery to be the issue which separated
    whites from true heroism whites can not "hope to
    find/Divine acceptance with th' Almighty mind"
    when "they disgrace/And hold in bondage Afric's
    blameless race."

27
Wheatleys Talent
  • Phillis displayed her remarkable talents by
    learning to read and write English. At the age of
    twelve she was reading the Greek and Latin
    classics, and passages from the Bible. At
    thirteen she wrote her first poem.
  • Phillis became a Boston sensation after she wrote
    a poem on the death of the evangelical preacher
    George Whitefield in 1770. Three years later,
    thirty-nine of her poems were published in London
    as Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and
    Moral. It was the first book to be published by a
    black American.
  • Most of Phillis Wheatley's poems reflect her
    religious and classical New England upbringing.
    Writing in heroic couplets, many of her poems
    consist of elegies (mournful poems) while others
    stress the theme of Christian salvation.
  • Although racial equality is not a theme to be
    found in Phillis Wheatley's poetry, one allusion
    of injustice appears in one of her most famous
    poems, On Being Brought From Africa To America.

28
Wheatleys Poem
  • On Being Brought From Africa To America
  • 'Twas mercy brought me from my pagan land,Taught
    my beknighted soul to understandThat there's a
    God, that there's a Savior tooOnce I redemption
    neither sought nor knew.Some view our sable race
    with scornful eye,"Their color is a diabolic
    dye."Remember Christians Negroes, black as
    Cain,May be refin'd, and join th' angelic train.
  • ----Phillis Wheatley

29
FAMOUS POETS
  • T. S. Eliot (1888-1965)

30
T. S. (Thomas Stearn) Eliots Life
  • T. S. Eliot . . .
  • Being an introspective kind of person, as most
    poets are, Eliot underwent a profound religious
    transformation.  Eliot was confirmed as a member
    of the Anglican church in 1927.  This brought him
    a much more positive attitude towards life that
    can be seen in his writings after this date.
  • It is rather difficult to find much information
    on T. S. Eliot, which is quite hard to
    understand, considering the profound impact he
    had on American and English literature. Eliot was
    a very private man and forbade in his will an
    official biography.
  • Eliot died on  January 4, 1965. He was closely
    affiliated with Ezra Pound and James Joyce, who
    had very controversial writing careers.

31
T. S. (Thomas Stearn) Eliots Life
  • T. S. Eliot . . .
  • Born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1888.
  • Attended Harvard University, in addition to the
    best preparatory schools.
  • He finished his bachelors degree in only three
    years.
  • Eliot held many different kinds of jobs
    throughout his lifetime, as writing poetry was
    not and still is not the most lucrative of
    occupations when one is not well-known.  His
    occupations varied from schoolmaster, bank clerk,
    free-lance writer, assistant editor (of the
    Egoist), editor (of The Criterion), publisher
    (with Faber and Faber) and even professor of
    poetry at Harvard.

32
T. S. (Thomas Stearn) Eliot
  • Most famous works focused on human feelings of
    disillusionment and Alienation
  • The Wasteland (His disillusionment with the
    economic and social state of the world in the
    1920s) -- He wrote this poem after suffering a
    serious writers block.
  • The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
  • Loneliness and Alienation Prufrock is a
    pathetic man whose anxieties and obsessions have
    isolated him.    Indecision Prufrock resists
    making decisions for fear that their outcomes
    will turn out wrong.     Inadequacy Prufrock
    continually worries that he will make a fool of
    himself and that people will ridicule him for his
    clothes, his bald spot, and his overall physical
    appearance.    Pessimism Prufrock sees only the
    negative side of his own life and the lives of
    others.  
  • Soruce http//www.english.illinois.edu/maps/poet
    s/a_f/eliot/life.htm

33
From The Love Song of . . . Prufrock
The speaker realizes that time is passing and
that he is growing old. However, like other men
going through a middle-age crisis, he considers
changing his hairstyle and clothes. Like Odysseus
in the Homers Odyssey, he has heard the song of
the sirens. However, they are not singing to
him.   Source http//www.cummingsstudyguides.net
/Guides3/Prufrock.html 
  • I have heard the mermaids singing, each to
    each.          I do not think that they will
    sing to me.              I have seen them
    riding seaward on the waves     Combing the
    white hair of the waves blown back     When the
    wind blows the water white and black.         
    We have lingered in the chambers of the sea    
    By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red and
    brown           Till human voices wake us, and
    we drown.

34
FAMOUS POETS
  • Ezra Pound (1885 - 1972)
  • The Poets Poet because of his belief in the
    superiority of poetry as an art form.

35
Ezra Pound Biography
  • Born in Hailey, Idaho, and raised in
    Philadelphia.
  • Spent most of his career in self-imposed exile
    from America because he could not get published
    here as a young writer. (very controversial
    because of his political views and relentless
    commitment to free speech and support of new
    writers and theories.)
  • Started the Imagist school and participated in
    the Vorticist Movement in Europe. Imagism a
    movement of American and English poets whose
    verse was characterized by concrete language and
    figures of speech, modern subject matter, freedom
    in the use of meter, and avoidance of mystical
    themes.
  • Vorticism It was Pound who coined the name
    Vorticism, which was meant to connote vital,
    violent, rather mystical action (Encyclopedia of
    Art (New York Greystone Press, 1971), s.v.
    "Vorticism. / library.flawlesslogic.com.)
  • Supported the publication of other controversial
    writers -- T. S. Eliot and James Joyce.
  • Wrote Cantos, an experimental epic (long
    narrative poem) which he never finished, yet it
    is considered one of the most influential pieces
    of American literature. He worked on it 50
    years.
  • Source http//www.bookrags.com/Ezra_Pound

36
Ezra Pounds Biography (cont.)
  • The Cantos records the poet's spiritual quest
    for transcendence, and his intellectual search
    for worldly wisdom and has been compared by many
    to Dantes Inferno.
  • Credited with being the inventor of modern
    Chinese poetry because of his powerful
    translations of ancient Chinese writings.
  • According to Katherine Anne Porter, "Pound was
    one of the most opinionated and unselfish men who
    ever lived, and he made friends and enemies
    everywhere by the simple exercise of the classic
    American constitutional right of free speech."
    (The Letters of E.P., 1907-1941, New York Times
    Book Reviwe, 29 Oct. 1950)

37
Ezra Pound Poem excerpt
  • At fourteen I married My Lord you.I never
    laughed, being bashful.Lowering my head, I
    looked at the wall.Called to, a thousand times,
    I neverlooked back.At fifteen I stopped
    scowling, I desired my dust to be mingled
    withyoursForever and forever and forever.Why
    should I climb the lookout?At sixteen you
    departed,You went into far Ku-to-en, by the
    riverof swirling eddies,And you have been gone
    five months.The monkeys make sorrowful noise
    overhead.

The River Merchants Wife A Letter (1915)
38
Ezra Pounds Themes (some)
  • That language can be translated clearly.
  • That human experiences transcend time and
    culture. He translated Japanese and Chinese
    poetry into English.
  • That free speech is for all.
  • That language should be used purposely in order
    to achieve maximum meaning out of words.

39
FAMOUS POETS
  • Langston Hughes (1902 - 1967)

40
Langston Hughes Biography
  • James Langston Hughes was born February 1, 1902,
    in Joplin, Missouri. After his parents divorced
    and until his mother remarried, he lived with his
    grandmother. His father moved to Mexico.
  • Hughes writing influences were Paul Lawrence
    Dunbar, Carl Sandburg, and Walt Whitman, though
    Huges if known for his insightful, colorful
    portrayals of black life in America from the
    twenties through the sixties. He was a major
    player in the Harlemn (New Negro Renaissance)
    Movement.
  • Langston Hughes died of complications from
    prostate cancer in May 22, 1967, in New York.

41
Hughes Poem
  • What happens to a dream deferred?
  • Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun? Or
    fester like a sore-- And then run? Does it
    stink like rotten meat? Or crust and sugar
    over-- like a syrupy sweet?
  • Maybe it just sags like a heavy load.
  • Or does it explode?

Dream Deferred
42
Understanding Hughes What Happens to a Dream
Deferred? poem
  • The questions are all rhetorical questions,
    because they intend to answer themselves.
  • Each question in the first stanza uses simile
    like a raisin in the sun, like a sore,like
    rotten meat, like a syrupy sweet. The second
    stanza which is not a question but a suggestion
    also uses simile like a heavy load. The last
    stanza uses metaphor, does it explode?
  • The poem employs rime sun-run, meat-sweet,
    load-explode.
  • The poem also uses imagery raisin in the sun,
    fester like a sore / And then run, stink like
    rotten meat, etc.

43
FAMOUS POETS
  • Gwendolyn Brooks (1917 2000)

44
Gwendolyn Brooks Biography
  • Gwendolyn Brooks quickly rose to national
    prominence.
  • Born in Topeka Kansas, but raised in Chicago, IL.
    Became Poet Laureate of Illinois in 1968. She
    was married and had two children.
  • In 1945 her first book of poetry, A Street in
    Bronzeville (published by Harper and Row),
    brought her instant critical acclaim.
  • She was selected one of Mademoiselle magazine's
    "Ten Young Women of the Year," she won her first
    Guggenheim Fellowship, and she became a fellow of
    the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Her
    second book of poems, Annie Allen (1949), won
    Poetry magazine's Eunice Tietjens Prize.
  • In 1950 Gwendolyn Brooks became the first African
    American to win a Pulitzer Prize. From that time
    to the present, she has seen the recipient of a
    number of awards, fellowships, and honorary
    degrees usually designated as Doctor of Humane
    Letters.
  • Her poetry moves from traditional forms including
    ballads, sonnets, variations of the Chaucerian
    and Spenserian stanzas as well as the rhythm of
    the blues to the most unrestricted free verse.
  • Source http//www.english.illinois.edu/Maps/poet
    s/a_f/brooks/life.htm

45
Gwendolyn Brooks Poem
  • We real cool.
  • We Left school.
  • We Lurk late.
  • We Strike straight.
  • We Sing sin.
  • We Thin gin.
  • We Jazz June.
  • We Die soon.

THE POOL PLAYERS. SEVEN AT THE GOLDEN SHOVEL
WE REAL COOL
Link to web page and audio http//www.poets.org/v
iewmedia.php/prmMID/15433
46
FAMOUS POETS
  • Robert Frost (1874 - 1963)

Americas Most Celebrated Poet
47
Robert Frost Biography
  • Though his work is principally associated with
    the life and landscape of New England, and
    usually very traditional in its forms, Frost
    gained universal prominence for his universal
    themes and modern use of language as it is
    actually spoken
  • His poems are also deeply ironic and
    thought-provoking.
  • He received the honor of four Pulitzer Prizes.
  • Robert Frost lived and taught for many years in
    Massachusetts and Vermont, and died in Boston on
    January 29, 1963.
  • Despite his success, he never earned a college
    degree.

48
Robert Frosts Poem excerpt
The Road Not Taken (1915) Frost describes this
as his Tricky Poem -- Interpretation We can
not know how our choices will affect our future
until after we have made the choices and waited
to see their outcomes.
  • I shall be telling this with a sigh
  • Somewhere ages and ages hence
  • Two roads diverged in a wood, and I
  • I took the one less traveled by,
  • And that has made all the difference.

49
THE END
  • Please complete the academic seminar evaluation
    form to receive your workshop credit.
  • Return form to SSS staff in 109 Shackelford Hall
    Annex.
  • Thank you for your participation.
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