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  • PROFESSOR ROBERT PINSKY: Poetry can't create emotion

  • as immediately and reliably as music.

  • Poetry can't present an image as dazzling and immediate as video,

  • or film.

  • Poetry sometimes persuades, but poetry can't persuade as forcefully

  • as a really skillful preacher or politician.

  • What poetry can do is, come out of each person's somatic, physical imagination.

  • The medium for a poem is your voice.

  • STUDENT 1: I don't really think that you can imagine a world without poetry.

  • It's one of the oldest forms of communication that we've had.

  • STUDENT 2: To me, poetry is just built into language so tightly.

  • STUDENT 3: It can be abstract, or it can be literal.

  • And it can be scientific, or not.

  • But every culture has some way of communicating

  • in that structured language.

  • PROFESSOR ROBERT PINSKY: You're being elevated

  • above and beyond a conventional, automatic relation to the world.

  • You're going somewhere else.

  • The approach of this course is not to provide you

  • with a lot of classifications, terminologies, schools.

  • The focus of this course will be on the nature of the art

  • and the components of the art-- as an art.

  • STUDENT 4: To make a really great poem, or piece of art,

  • you don't just go straight for what you're shooting at.

  • You actually sort of want to see it from all the different angles.

  • STUDENT 5: Each poet is developing their own country, their own language.

  • And then we need to take that time to dig in to Andrew Marvell.

  • And to dig in to Marianne Moore.

  • And develop those specific idioms.

  • PROFESSOR ROBERT PINSKY: To understand an art,

  • you have to understand not only what the art itself appeals to you,

  • but what your examples of the art are.

  • This course asks that everyone compile their own anthology.

  • This is my personal anthology.

  • This anthology making is an exercise I require of all students,

  • in every poetry course I've ever taught.

  • I think that assignment is probably the most useful thing I feel I do,

  • as a teacher.

  • I enjoy it, as a teacher-- because, instead of saying, hey, like poetry.

  • It'll be good.

  • I'm saying to the students, what do you have?

  • What do you stand by?

  • STUDENT 6: I've always said to friends, like, oh, poetry-- it's over my head.

  • I'm always saying that.

  • PROFESSOR ROBERT PINSKY: Well, you're an engineer.

  • STUDENT 6: I'm an engineer.

  • PROFESSOR ROBERT PINSKY: And let me tell you

  • that I sometimes refer to poetry as metrical engineering.

  • The ambition of this course is to be welcoming to everyone.

  • To people who have very different professions from mine.

  • People of a range of interests.

  • People interested in poetry because they have been intimidated by it.

  • Or the opposite-- people who love poetry, maybe write it.

  • Our goal is to make it intellectually rigorous, and socially welcoming,

  • and friendly.

  • I'm Robert Pinsky.

  • And this is-- The Art of Poetry.

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