Literature Course Library

Read, track, and reflect across a structured canon.

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Syllabus

Great Literature 103 - Poetry · Schedule and goals

Great Literature 103 - Poetry

Poetry: A collaborative, low-stress canon of essential poetry, chosen for cultural importance, stylistic range, and readability, with emphasis on Romanticism and Naturalism.


🎯 Goals & Constraints

  • Focus on major poets and essential poetry collections (late 18th century onward)
  • Emphasize Romanticism and Naturalism, while including other significant movements
  • Avoid works that are:
    • Excessively long or difficult
    • Better admired than actually read
    • Too obscure or inaccessible
  • Prioritize collections and poets that still feel alive to a modern reader
  • Balance between classic foundations and influential modern works

This is meant to be rigorous but humane, exploring the depth and breadth of poetry across movements.


📚 Core Reading List (Great Literature 103 - Finalized)

  1. Leaves of Grass (Selected Poems) — Walt Whitman ⚪ Not Started
  2. Selected Poems — William Wordsworth ⚪ Not Started
  3. Selected Poems — John Keats ⚪ Not Started
  4. Selected Poems — Emily Dickinson ⚪ Not Started
  5. Selected Poems — Samuel Taylor Coleridge ⚪ Not Started
  6. Selected Poems — Percy Bysshe Shelley ⚪ Not Started
  7. Selected Poems — T.S. Eliot ⚪ Not Started
  8. Selected Poems — Langston Hughes ⚪ Not Started
  9. Selected Poems — Robert Frost ⚪ Not Started
  10. Selected Poems — Sylvia Plath ⚪ Not Started

🧠 Movement & Style Coverage (Why These?)

  • Romanticism (4 poets) - Emotion, nature, individualism, the sublime
    • Wordsworth, Keats, Coleridge, Shelley
  • Naturalism/Realism (2 poets) - Everyday life, social issues, objective observation
    • Whitman, Dickinson
  • Modernism (2 poets) - Experimentation, fragmentation, new forms
    • Eliot, Frost
  • Harlem Renaissance (1 poet) - African American voices, jazz influences
    • Hughes
  • Confessional Poetry (1 poet) - Personal experience, psychological depth
    • Plath

Together, these form a strong foundation for understanding how poetry evolved from Romanticism through Naturalism to Modernism and beyond.


🗓️ Syllabus Structure

This course is structured as a flexible reading plan (approximately 20–30 weeks) with:

  • Reading pace calibrated for real life
  • Focus on selected poems rather than complete collections
  • Optional supplemental poems
  • Reflection / discussion prompts (lightweight, not academic busywork)

Pacing approach:

  • 1 poet every 2–3 weeks
  • Alternating long / short collections
  • Thematic arcs (nature, identity, social issues, etc.)

🔄 Brainstorming & Iteration Notes

Use this space to:

  • Swap poets in or out
  • Add alternates or honorable mentions
  • Note reactions after reading a collection
  • Flag anything that feels like a slog

(Keep this section messy on purpose.)

Alternates Considered:

  • Lord Byron - Romanticism (could replace Shelley)
  • Stephen Crane - Naturalism (shorter works)
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar - Naturalism/African American poetry
  • W.B. Yeats - Modernism (Irish poetry)
  • Maya Angelou - Contemporary/Confessional
  • Adrienne Rich - Feminist poetry
  • Wallace Stevens - Modernism (more challenging)

Note on Selections:

  • Using “Selected Poems” allows focus on essential works
  • Can use anthologies or curated selections
  • Goal is accessibility and representative coverage

➕ Future Expansions (Optional)

  • Additional poems from each poet
  • International poetry (Rumi, Basho, Neruda)
  • Contemporary poetry collections
  • Spoken word and performance poetry
  • Poetry in translation

📝 Weekly Reflection Prompts (Lightweight)

Optional, but recommended. No essays, just thinking.

  • What images or phrases stuck with you?
  • How does this poet’s style differ from others you’ve read?
  • What felt surprisingly modern or timeless?
  • How does the poet use form (or break from it)?
  • What does this say about the human experience?

🔁 Built-In Flexibility

  • Any 2–3 week block can stretch to 4 weeks without breaking the flow
  • Poets can be swapped without derailing the whole plan
  • If momentum dips, insert a buffer week or focus on fewer poems
  • The list remains flexible for adjustments as you discover new poets

This syllabus is finalized for Great Literature 103. As you read, note any reactions or adjustments in the “Brainstorming & Iteration Notes” section above.