Project Narrative: Poetry and Narrative Panel

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October 29, 2015
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
311 Denney

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2015-10-29 15:00:00 2015-10-29 17:00:00 Project Narrative: Poetry and Narrative Panel The Department of English is pleased to announce that Project Narrative will host a panel focused on poetry and narrative Thursday, October 29th, from 3:00 - 5:00 PM, in 311 Denney. The following Ohio State English professors will serve as panelists: Brian McHale, Elizabeth Hewitt, Jacob Risinger, and Kathy Fagan Grandinetti. This event is free and open to the public. Storytelling and verse have a long and distinguished history together. But poetry often chooses not to be narrative, especially when it is lyric; indeed, it can operate as a territory deliberately hostile to the presumptions that narrative has placed on prose, cinema, comics, and other media. This panel brings together theorists, historians, critics, and practitioners of the poetic art to consider questions of poetry and narrative. When and how might we want poetry and narrative to intersect, and when and how might we want them to go their separate ways? How do we explore these intersections and separations in our teaching, in our research, and in our understanding of these pillars of the literary? Project Narrative has prepared a packet of the poems that the panelists will be discussing at the event:  Poetry Packet [pdf]For more information about this event and Project Narrative, visit https://projectnarrative.osu.edu/. This event is sponsored by Project Narrative at Ohio State.  311 Denney America/New_York public

The Department of English is pleased to announce that Project Narrative will host a panel focused on poetry and narrative Thursday, October 29th, from 3:00 - 5:00 PM, in 311 Denney. The following Ohio State English professors will serve as panelists: Brian McHaleElizabeth HewittJacob Risinger, and Kathy Fagan Grandinetti. This event is free and open to the public. 

Storytelling and verse have a long and distinguished history together. But poetry often chooses not to be narrative, especially when it is lyric; indeed, it can operate as a territory deliberately hostile to the presumptions that narrative has placed on prose, cinema, comics, and other media. This panel brings together theorists, historians, critics, and practitioners of the poetic art to consider questions of poetry and narrative. When and how might we want poetry and narrative to intersect, and when and how might we want them to go their separate ways? How do we explore these intersections and separations in our teaching, in our research, and in our understanding of these pillars of the literary? 

Project Narrative has prepared a packet of the poems that the panelists will be discussing at the event:  Poetry Packet [pdf]

For more information about this event and Project Narrative, visit https://projectnarrative.osu.edu/

This event is sponsored by Project Narrative at Ohio State.