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WOC190 Spring 2023 Session 4

Day 5

Mon. Apr. 3

  • Poem titles: abstract and concrete

  • Creating tension: “Orange Crush” and “Southern Summers”

  • Looking ahead


Homework

➤ Begin Essay 2: Essay on an Object

I’d recommend you get started writing soon! Come to next class ready to tell us what object you’re writing about (or planning to write about).

Be sure to read the instructions carefully before beginning. A word of advice: Objects that tend to produce the most meaningful essays tend to be ones that are meaningful not just to you personally but also to a group or community of people beyond yourself. (Beloved childhood toys, stuffed animals, etc, tend not work so well because their meaning is highly individual; they don’t mean much to people other than the child who owned them.)

➤ Read “The Mwiko,” write a new ending

This piece is not on the website; it’s available either in the course reader or in our SharePoint folder.

As you read, ask yourself:

  • What does the mwiko (and making ugali) represent for the different characters (the father, the narrator, the sister)? For each of the characters find one sentence that reflects this and come to class ready to share it.

  • Where does the tension come from in this story?

In addition, please write a new ending for the story (any length is okay, a short paragraph is all I expect) in which a character does something (a physical action) with the mwiko. Upload it to the folder “New endings for the Mwiko” in our SharePoint folder and be ready to read it out loud for us next class.

➤ READ CLASSMATES’ POEM TITLES

Read your classmates’ poem titles in our SharePoint folder. Come to next class ready to share one that you particularly like and explain what that title adds to the poem. Please also come ready to share a title that you think adds an element of tension to the poem, and explain why you think that. (These two might be the same poem; that’s fine.)

➤ Read handouts explaining grading and the Literary Atlas

Between now and next class I will share with you a private shared folder that contains my comments on your written work. For a detailed explanation of how grading in this class will work, read the handout “WOC190 - Going Forward.”

One thing I’d like to highlight here is you may submit revisions of your work to me for feedback any time, as many times as you wish. I encourage you to do this! Generally people who get started revising early see a greater improvement in their work over the course of the session.

Also, click the link below for more information about Meridian: A Literary Atlas of DKU. Work produced in this class will automatically be considered for publication in Meridian!

Meridian

a literary atlas of DKU

Austin Woerner