Genres and Forms of Poetry

LIT4164.01
Course System Home Terms Spring 2027 Genres and Forms of Poetry

Course Description

Summary

This course will closely examine various modes in which poetry is commonly written, including the elegy, the ode, the ekphrastic, the prose poem, the pastoral, the aubade, and the litany. Students will also be introduced to the vocabulary and practice of traditional prosody, acquire a familiarity with writing in meter and using rhyme, and attempt prescribed forms such as the sonnet, the villanelle, the sestina, the pantoum, the ghazal, the abecedarian, and the golden shovel. Particular attention will be paid to the evolution of traditional forms and the myriad ways contemporary poets approach form and prosody. Poets whose work will be discussed will likely include Agha Shahid Ali, Christian Bök, Reginald Dwayne Betts, Jericho Brown, Cathy Line Che, Terrance Hayes, Randall Mann, and Maggie Millner. Each week, students will read a packet of poems in a given form or mode, and will attempt a poem in the genre or form being discussed. At the end of the term, students will submit a final portfolio of poems with a critical introductory essay.

Learning Outcomes

  • 1) Become familiar both as readers and writers with a wide range of poetic forms and modes and
    poetry across historical periods by writers of diverse backgrounds, while expanding a critical
    vocabulary to discuss poetry and prosody
    2) Think critically about form, structure, diction, syntax, rhythm, rhyme, and decision-making in
    poetry
    3) Experiment writing poems that employ rhyme and meter
    4) Write and revise poems with a focus on form, shape, pattern, repetition, texture, music, and
    sound
    5)) Strengthen our capacities for peer critique and for offering and receiving supportive,
    constructive criticism of creative work
    6) Contextualize our work within a particular tradition as we think and write critically about that
    context

Prerequisites

Students must submit a statement of interest in the course and four sample poems to Michael Dumanis via [linked form] by November XX, 2026.

Corequisites

Students must attend all Poetry at Bennington readings and Literature Evenings, held most Wednesdays at 7pm.

Instructor

  • Michael Dumanis

Day and Time

TH 1:40pm-5:20pm

Delivery Method

Fully in-person

Length of Course

Full Term

Academic Term

Spring 2027

Area of Study

Credits

4

Course Level

4000

Maximum Enrollment

15

Course Frequency

Every 2-3 years