Luminous Things: African American Poetry

Luminous Things: African American Poetry

Zoom Video Conference | This program is completed

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1/11/2022-3/1/2022

10:00 AM-12:00 PM on Tue

$25.00

I didn’t want to write a poem that said “blackness
is,” because we know better than anyone that
we are not one or ten or ten thousand things
Not one poem       We could count ourselves forever
and never agree on the number. 
. . . 
                            Most mornings these days
Ralph Edwards comes into the bedroom and says, “Elizabeth, 
this is your life. Get up and look for color, 
look for color everywhere.” “

Today’s News” by Elizabeth Alexander
(Note: Ralph Edwards hosted TV’s “This is Your Life”.)

We will delve into poems by African American poets, enjoying their variety, beauty, and power, and noting how the African American experience shapes this poetry – including slavery, the South, the great migration north, and more. We’ll note how various poets elaborate that experience – poets such as Rita Dove, Elizabeth Alexander, Audre Lorde, Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks, etc., and appreciating their vibrant portrayals of Black life and culture in a white world. (This course will continue in the spring.)

Format: Discussion. We’ll discuss how selected poems elaborate on the theme of the week, and we’ll focus on the writing of specific poets. Volunteers will give short presentations on the theme or poet and provide questions for discussion. Coordinators provide guides on reading and enjoying poetry.

Resources/Expenses: The Oxford Anthology of African American Poetry. Ed by Arnold Rampersad. Oxford UP, 2006, available on Amazon for $12.50 and up used.

Christine Rose was educated in Australia by the natural world, and gained a Degree in English at the School of English and American Studies at Sussex University UK. She holds a postgraduate teaching certificate and continues working with literature and language in the USA, enjoying the learning with like-minded poetry people.

Linda Shamoon taught courses on writing in electrotonic environments at URI. She has co-coordinated over 20 courses, including numerous iterations of the popular Concerts and Conversations course, and currently heads the LLC Technology Committee. Since starting in LLC’s iPhonography class, Linda is also an enthusiastic cell phone photographer and photo editor.

Karen Stein is a retired URI professor. She taught American literature and Women’s Studies. This is her second time coordinating a class for LLC.