Class Description
GrubStreet’s Our Planet, Our Stories series focuses on the climate crisis, and aims to help writers find creative ways to engage with this urgent global issue. At the end of the series, all participants will be invited to submit writing to an anthology that GrubStreet will put out in the spring of 2024. This is the second installation of GrubStreet's annual Our Times, Our Stories series, which offers a variety of free and reduced-cost classes focused on a pressing contemporary issue, with a free print and digital anthology of student writing collected nd distributed at the end of the series. To donate to the series, please visit our donation page.
Our Planet, Our Stories: Ecopoetics
In this four-hour seminar, we will do a deep dive into the art of writing ecopoetry. Author and educator Craig Santos Perez defines ecopoetry as “poetry about ecology, ecosystems, environmental injustice, animals, agriculture, climate change, water, and even food.” While not unrelated to nature poetry, there is a distinction in which ecopoetry is understood to have the purpose of inspiring us towards action. Ecopoetics provides a space for addressing systems of oppression, as well as reclaiming and healing our relationship to nature. It is an opportunity to decenter the human narrative in cultivating a world where justice and harmony reign.
How can we get in right relationship with the earth through our writing? What responsibility to the environment do we hold as artists? What role(s) can poets play in addressing climate change? We will engage and discuss research, essays, poetry and other media from activists, educators, and artists like Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Joy Harjo, and Askia Toure to study the ways they've addressed these topics in their work. We will also have the opportunity to respond to writing prompts that generate new ideas for our writing, as well as share our writing for on-the-spot feedback in small groups.
Other Classes in the Our Planet, Our Stories Series
Our Planet, Our Stories: Writing Climate Fiction (multi-week, starting 10/24)
Our Planet, Our Stories: Writing Climate Essays and Op-Eds (multi-week, starting 10/26)
Our Planet, Our Stories: Apocalyptic and Dystopian Fiction (Sunday, October 29th, 12pm-4pm, FREE)
Our Planet, Our Stories: Nature Writing (Sunday, November 12th, 12pm-4pm, FREE)
Our Planet, Our Stories: Writing Climate Justice (Sunday, December 10th, 12pm-4pm, FREE)
Class Format
This class will take place using Zoom videoconferencing. About 15 minutes before your class is scheduled to begin, you'll receive an email from your instructor with a link to join the class meeting!
Thanks to the excellent literary citizenship of our donors, scholarships are available for all GrubStreet classes. To apply, click the gray "APPLY FOR SCHOLARSHIP" button. In order to be considered for a scholarship, you must complete your application at least one week before the start date of a class. Please await our scholarship committee's decision before registering for the class. We cannot hold spots in classes, so the sooner you apply, the better. Scholarships cannot be applied retroactively.
For more detailed information about GrubStreet scholarships, including how to contribute to scholarship funds for other students, click here.
This class will take place using Zoom videoconferencing. About 15 minutes before your class is scheduled to begin, you'll receive an email from your instructor with a link to join the class meeting!
Zoom Participation:
Students are not required to turn their camera on, but are encouraged to participate any way they feel comfortable through functions such as the live chat, emoji reactions, and unmuting the microphone. Learn more about using Zoom here.
Zoom Accessibility:
We ask that instructors enable closed captioning and send a transcript of the session after class. You can also enable closed captioning at any time during the meeting. If your instructor forgets to send the transcript, just send ’em an email!