Becoming a Poet 2010, Dublin :

Course begins on Thursday 7 January 2010

The St. Stephen’s Green Hibernian Club
Dublin 2

Price: €3,000

 


 

Becoming a Poet 2010, Dublin: A practical workshop-based course which covers all aspects of poetry-writing, from improving your technical skills to putting together a first collection.

Becoming a Poet 2010 is a six-month course commencing in January 2010. Students will attend weekly evening workshops designed to develop an appreciation of poetry, hone practical skills, and become better writers and editors of their own work.

In addition there will be six full-day sessions to take place on one Saturday every month. Most sessions will be led by the Course Director, poet Paul Perry. There will also be guest seminars given by well-known poets and publishers to provide a unique insight into the publishing industry and access to established poets.

Becoming a Poet 2010 is an intensive course aimed at new or experienced writers who aim to publish a first collection of poetry. Students will be expected to devote as much time as possible to reading the work of other writers, writing new poems and editing existing ones so that by the end of the course they should be in a better position to assemble a strong body of work which they may wish to consider submitting to key poetry journals and publishers.

Equally, students should finish the course with a greater and more rounded enjoyment of the pleasures of reading poetry as well as a fuller appreciation of poetic technique and composition.

Individual feedback will be given by the Course Director and students will be expected to peer-review each other’s work on a regular basis. There will be opportunities for students to discuss ‘next steps’ with the Course Director and with the guest speakers. At the end of the course all students will be expected to give a short reading.

The course will be selective.

 


 

Course Programme

All classes will be based at The St. Stephen’s Green Hibernian Club, Dublin 2

The course consists of 24 two-hour evening sessions and 6 full-day sessions. Evening sessions will take place on Tuesdays from 7.00pm-9.00pm. Full-day sessions will take place on Saturdays from 10.00am-5.00pm. Saturday sessions will include visits from guest speakers, in-class writing sessions, and lecturers on poets and craft.

NOTE: There will be no class on Easter Saturday, April 3rd.

The subject matter of sessions as listed below is a guide only. The exact course content will be finalized according to the experience and interests of the group and guest speaker availability. The detail of the course content is at the discretion of the Course Director and the Faber Academy.

Required Reading: The Norton Anthology of Modern and Contemporary Poetry, Volumes I and II, W W Norton & Co Inc; Format: Paperback, 2003.

Other texts will be recommended by the Course Director.

Session Details:

Session 1
Thu 7 Jan Introduction
Session 2 Thu 14 Jan The Dramatic Monologue
Session 3 Thu 21 Jan Ekphrasis: Poetry Confronting Art
Session 4 Thu 28 Jan The Epistolary Poem
Session 5 Sat 30 Jan

10.00-12.30 In-class Writing
14.00-15.30 Visiting Writer Workshop
15.30-17.00 Visiting Writer Reading

Session 6 Thu 4 Feb Describing an Object
Session 7 Thu 11 Feb The Ode
Session 8 Thu 18 Feb Narrative
Session 9 Thu 25 Feb Sestina & Villanelle
Session 10
Sat 27 Feb 10.00-12.30 In-class Writing
14.00-15.30 Visiting Writer Workshop
15.30-17.00 Visiting Writer Reading
Session 11 Thu 4 Mar The Elegy
Session 12 Sat 6 Mar 10.00-12.30 In-class Writing
14.00-15.30 Ciaran Carson Workshop
15.30-17.00 Ciaran Carson Reading
Session 13 Thu 11 Mar The Prose Poem
Session 14 Thu 18 Mar Exquisite Corpse
Session 15 Thu 25 Mar The Line
Session 16
Sat 27 Mar 10.00-12.30 In-class Writing
15.30-17.00 Dennis O'Driscoll Talk/Discussion/Reading
Session 17 Thu 8 Apr The Image
Session 18 Thu 15 Apr Sound
Session 19 Thu 22 Apr Confessional
Session 20 Thu 29 Apr
Concrete & Visual Poetry
Session 21 Thu 6 May Figurative Language, Metaphor & Metronym
Session 22 Sat 8 May 10.00-12.30 In-class Writing
14.00-15.30 Leontia Flynn Workshop
15.30-17.00 Leontia Flynn Reading
Session 23 Thu 13 May The Natural World
Session 24 Thu 20 May The City
Session 25
Thu 27 May Form and Metre
Session 26 Thu 3 Jun Repetition, Rhythm and Blues
Session 27 Sat 5 Jun 10.00-12.30 In-class Writing
14.00-15.30 Visiting Writer Workshop
15.30-17.00 Visiting Writer Reading
Session 28 Thu 10 Jun Syllabic Verse
Session 29 Thu 17 Jun Towards a first collection
Session 30 Thu 24 Jun Review

 


 

How to Apply

There are 16 places available on 'Becoming a Poet 2010'.

Applicants should write a letter of application and return it to c/o Patrick Keogh at the Faber Academy, Bloomsbury House, 74-77 Great Russell Street, London WC1B 3DA or email it to Patrick.Keogh@faber.co.uk no later than 20 November 2009. The letter, no more than one page, should state your writing experience and why you wish to attend this Faber Academy writing course. In addition, your letter should include:

1. A sample of their poetry [3-5 poems. Max 5 pages of A4 (point size 12)]. Please do not send your only copy as this will not be returned.

2. A stamped addressed postcard if they wish their application to be acknowledged.

3. A stamped addressed envelope for receipt of the results of their application.

Course cost: €3,000

Participants will be selected at the discretion of the Course Director and the Faber Academy.


The Faber and Faber Fellowship

One place on the course will be allocated free of charge. This place will be chosen at the discretion of the Course Director and the Faber Academy and will be based on merit and not financial circumstances.
 



Course Director

A previous winner of the Hennessy New Irish Writer of the Year Award, Paul Perry has been a Creative Writing Fellow at the University of Miami, the University of Houston, and at Kingston University, London. Currently, he teaches on the MA for Creative Writing at UCD. He is the author and editor of a number of critically acclaimed books including The Drowning of the Saints, Goldsmith’s Ghost, and The Orchid Keeper. The Last Falcon and Small Ordinance appears from The Dedalus Press in 2010.


Disclaimer

The Course Directors and Faber and Faber take no responsibility for lost or damaged applications and no correspondence will be entered into with unsuccessful applicants, although they may be invited to apply for future courses. Successful applicants will be asked to pay a non-refundable deposit towards the course fees of €1,000 by 14 December 2009. The balance of the course fee, a further €2,000, will be payable in four further instalments of €500 on 12 February, 12 March, 12 April and 12 May respectively. No refunds will be given to students who miss sessions or drop out of the course once the deposit has been paid.

The subject matter of course sessions is subject to change due to the level of experience and interests of the group and availability of guest speakers. The content of the programme is determined at the discretion of the Course Directors and the Faber Academy.



Although the Faber Academy is run by Faber and Faber Ltd. publishers, admission to the course does not guarantee publication by them or any other publisher

Coutts Geneva course Moleskine Geneva course [author] Perry, Paul
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