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Planets, Pulsars, And Poetry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

S.B. Yorka*
Affiliation:
Denison University, Granville, Ohio 43023, U.S.A.

Extract

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For many of us in the United States, the majority of our students are in descriptive astronomy classes. And since these classes typically satisfy general education or core curriculum requirements that must be completed by all students, the students can range from those genuinely interested in astronomy to those who are taking the class because “it sounded less boring” than other options available. Whichever end of that spectrum the students occupy, many of them approach astronomy with quite a bit of anxiety because it is a science class. In student lore, a science class is a class that is by definition more difficult — perhaps verging on the impossible — than other classes, one that discusses totally foreign things in an arcane language and, above all, is a class that has no connection with anything else in the curriculum, except maybe another science class.

Type
2. Astronomy and Culture
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

References

Reading List

Ackerman, Diane, “Saturn” from The Planets: A Cosmic Pastoral (Morrow Quill Paperbacks, 1976).Google Scholar
Frost, Robert, “Two Leading Lights” and “Upon Looking Up by Chance at the Constellations”, from Complete Poems of Robert Frost 1949 (Henry Holt & Co., 1949).Google Scholar
Hollander, John, “The Great Bear” from Spectral Emanations (Athenum, 1978).Google Scholar
Kerr, Minnie Markham, “Nocturne” from The Music Makers, complied by Stanton, Coblentz (B. Ackerman Inc., 1945).Google Scholar
Kirby, Inez, “Silence” and “Night Unto Night” from The Music Makers, complied by Stanton, Coblentz (B. Ackerman Inc., 1945).Google Scholar
Kooser, Ted, “The Voyager II Satellite” from One World at a Time (University of Pittsburgh Press, 1985).Google Scholar
Kunitz, Stanley, “Science of the Night” from The Poems of Stanley Kunitz 1928-1978 (Little, Brown & Co., 1979).Google Scholar
Rich, Adrienne, “Planetarium” and “For the Conjunction of Two Planets” from Adrienne Rich’s Poetry, ed. Gelpi, B. and Gelpi, A. (W.W. Norton Co., 1975).Google Scholar
Saner, Reg, “That Line Drawn at the Moon” from Climbing into the Roots (Harper and Row Publ., 1976).Google Scholar
Wagoner, David, “By Starlight” from First Light (Little, Brown & Co., 1983).Google Scholar