Abstract

This article introduces a roundtable on teaching long poems by British women writers, presented as a special session at the 2014 Modern Language Association conference in Chicago. The articles in the roundtable provide teaching strategies that are pertinent to the writers under review but can easily be extended to many more writers and works. The resistance of students to long poems by any poet, much less by women, reveals that professors still have much work to do in establishing lesser-known women writers as coequal with their better-known male contemporaries. This resistance is a teaching opportunity to address issues of genre, gender, and canonicity. In a larger sense, the articles argue for the potential of pedagogical practice to reconstitute the canon.

Journal
Pedagogy
Published
2016-04-01
DOI
10.1215/15314200-3435900
CompPile
Search in CompPile ↗
Open Access
Closed
Topics
Export

Citation Context

Cited by in this index (0)

No articles in this index cite this work.

References (3)

  1. The Poetry Dictionary
  2. “When a ‘Long’ Poem Is a ‘Big’ Poem: Self-Authorizing Strategies in Women's Twentieth-Cen…
    LIT: Literature, Interpretation, Theory
  3. How to Suppress Women's Writing