The Many Voices of Louise GlückInstructor: Nathan Blansett, A&S, ’21 (MFA)August 29 - October 3 (6 Sessions)Saturdays, 2:00PM - 4:00PM ETVirtual va Zoom
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Course Description: In 2020, when the Swedish Academy named the American poet Louise Glück as the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature, they cited her “unmistakable poetic voice that with austere beauty makes individual existence universal.” Glück’s consistent themes (as she put it, “the great human subjects: time which breeds loss, desire, the world’s beauty”) earned her many honors and many readers, yet her thirteen books of poems showcase a protean, ever-changing way of writing. This course will reckon with the lasting gift of Glück’s many unmistakable voices.
Over six weeks, we’ll proceed chronologically through Glück’s oeuvre, briefly attending to the strained performances of Firstborn (1968), her debut she came to disavow. We’ll then turn our attention to the mythic and haunted personae of her more sophisticated early books, like The House on Marshland (1975) and Descending Figure (1980). Afterward, we’ll compare the astringent Ararat (1990) with the dazzling polyphony of The Wild Iris (1993) and the real tragicomedy that is Meadowlands (1997), alongside other books from Glück’s middle period, including Vita Nova (1999) and Averno (2006). We’ll finish our course closely reading Glück’s late work—from the meditative and novelistic A Village Life (2009) to the spare and strange Winter Recipes from the Collective (2021), her final volume, where “the world goes by, / all the worlds, each more beautiful than the last.”
Our journey through Glück’s poems will be punctuated by relevant selections from her literary criticism and autobiographical prose. In addition, there will be opportunities to create and workshop original work inspired by what we read, shared for peer and instructor feedback. Participants need no prior writing experience or knowledge about poetry.
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Nathan Blansett’s poems and criticism recently appear in Ploughshares, Los Angeles Review of Books, The Southern Review, American Chordata, and elsewhere. The recipient of fellowships and support from the 92NY, Poetry Society of America, the Stadler Center at Bucknell, Emory, and The Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins, he lives in Washington, DC.
Event DateStarts: Saturday, August 29, 20262:00pm EDTEnds: Saturday, October 3, 20264:00pm EDT
ContactOdysseyAlumni Relations Lifelong Learning800-JHU-JHU1 (548-5481)odyssey@jhu.edu
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