Reading and Writing Haiku to Set Free Your Imagination

Marsh Muirhead

Saturday, January 18

10:30am-1:30pm

Heinen Design Lab

$55, $35 mbrs.

In this class, appropriate for writers of any experience, we will review the history of classic and contemporary haiku, discussing how they function as word-photo, mediation, journaling, or as prompts and inspiration of other kinds of writing. Haiku can be seen as tools of imagination in regarding the world with fierce attention. Previous students from this class are welcome – there will be some new material and exercises, and we will explore the haibun, a combination of a short prose piece with a haiku in response.

Marsh Muirhead lives on the banks of the Mississippi River, near the source, in northern Minnesota. His work has appeared in Poetry East, Rattle, Southern Poetry Review, The Southeast Review, and elsewhere. He has published two collections of haiku – Her Cold Martini, and Last Night of the Carnival – and his haiku have been found engraved in the sidewalk on the Palm Avenue bridge in Key West, on a rock along the Haiku Walk in Millersburg, Ohio, and have been read by Billy Collins on his poetry broadcast several times. Marsh once won the annual Great American Think-Off essay and debate contest addressing the question: “Does Poetry Matter.” He said it did and does.