Lyric Poetry in English from 1500 to 2000

Peter Medine
Wednesdays 9 AM - 12 PM (AZ Time)
January 27 February 3, 10, 17, 24 March 3, 17, 24, 31 April 7, 2021
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Lyric Poetry in English from 1500 to 2000

Spring 2021
In Session
Wednesdays
9 AM - 12 PM (AZ Time)
January 27 February 3, 10, 17, 24 March 3, 17, 24, 31 April 7, 2021

Location: 

Online

Tuition: 

$265

A lyric poem is a relatively short statement in verse, usually in the first person, and deals with emotionally charged subject matter, such as unrequited love, personal loss, celebration, or even philosophical meditation. This seminar will address itself to lyric poems in English from Shakespeare to Yeats, among others. Each seminar meeting will analyze a half dozen lyrics and examine such rhetorical devices as metaphor, rhyme, and meter in an attempt to uncover the poem's unique principle of order. The order expresses literal meaning but is also figurative and musical. The aim ultimately will be to acquire a sense of how a lyric poem means and how it discloses insight. That insight can illuminate and even counter the chaos of human experience.

Registration will open online on Monday, November 23, 2020 at 8 AM (AZ Time)

  • Classes will be delivered online via the Zoom video conferencing platform. Course will be password protected and only available to enrolled students.
  • All class sessions will be recorded and made available to enrolled students for a limited time to assist those who may not be able to attend the live class times.
  • Enrolled students may withdraw from a course and receive a tuition refund if the request is received before the second class session.

Required Reading: 

  • No textbook is required. All readings and class materials will be distributed to students electronically. 

Meet Your Professor

Professor Emeritus
Department of English

PETER E. MEDINE is Professor Emeritus at the University of Arizona, where he served in the English Department from 1969 to 2014. He has written, edited, or coedited seven books in Early Modern English studies. His most recent coedited book is Visionary Milton: Essays in Prophecy and Violence (2010). He is the recipient of several Humanities Seminars Superior Teaching Awards and the College of Humanities Award for Outreach Service.  

  • Ted and Shirley Taubeneck Superior Teaching Award

Location

This course will be offered ONLINE ONLY
Classes will be live streamed during the time and dates specified in the course details section above. Instructions about how to access the course online will be sent to all enrolled students before the course begins.

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