Ellen Bryant Voigt: A Lecture on Syntax - January 30, 2003

Date
Sponsors

UA Poetry Center

Reading Series
Location
Himmel Park Library
Ellen Bryant Voigt: A Lecture on Syntax

Ellen Bryant Voigt lectures on the role of syntax in poetry, examining its uses in Philip Larkin's "Cut Grass," Donald Justice's "To the Hawks," and D.H. Lawrence's "Snake."

Tracks
Track Title
On the role of syntax and meter in Philip Larkin's "Cut Grass"
View Track
Track Title
On right-branching syntax and asymmetry in Larkin's "Cut Grass"
View Track
Track Title
On the rhythm of meter and phrasing in poetry
View Track
Track Title
On meter and music in Donald Justice's "To the Hawks"
View Track
Track Title
On pattern and variation in Beethoven's Symphony No. 5 and Justice's "To the Hawks"
View Track
Track Title
On pattern, phrasing, and repose in Symphony No. 5 and "To the Hawks"
View Track
Track Title
D.H. Lawrence's "The Snake"
View Track
Track Title
On pattern and variation in the syntax of "The Snake"
View Track
Track Title
On the uses of hypotaxis and parataxis in "The Snake"
View Track
Track Title
On the roles of symmetry and variation in contemporary poetry
View Track
Track Title
Question and Answer Session 1
View Track
Track Title
Question and Answer Session 2
View Track
Track Title
Question and Answer Session 3
View Track
Track Title
Question and Answer Session 4
View Track

Poetry Center

1508 East Helen Street (at Vine Avenue)
Tucson, AZ 85721-0150 • MAP IT
PHONE 520-626-3765 | poetry@email.arizona.edu