Friday, September 16, 2016

Golden Shovel Poems

AGENDA:

Introduce Golden Shovel poems.

Write a Golden Shovel poem:

Golden Shovel Poem

HERE ARE THE RULES FOR THE GOLDEN SHOVEL:

  • Take a line (or lines) from a poem you admire.
  • Use each word in the line (or lines) as an end word in your poem.
  • Keep the end words in order.
  • Give credit to the poet who originally wrote the line (or lines).
  • The new poem does not have to be about the same subject as the poem that offers the end words.
If you pull a line with six words, your poem would be six lines long. If you pull a stanza with 24 words, your poem would be 24 lines long. And so on.
If it’s still kind of abstract, read these two poems to see how Terrance Hayes used a Gwendolyn Brooks poem to write the first golden shovel:
As you can see, the original golden shovel takes more than a line from the poem. In fact, it pulls every word from the Brooks poem, and it does it twice.
This form is sort of in the tradition of the cento and erasure, but it offers a lot more room for creativity than other found poetry.

Write a Golden Shovel poem. You can go to poets.org or poetryfoundation.org to find poems.

READING: How to Eat a Poem

WRITING:  Work on 30/30 poetry prompts.  Workshop next week?

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