Classes

Nonfiction, Reading, Essay

  • Term: Fall 2023
  • Start Date: September 28, 2023
  • End Date: November 16, 2023
  • Day of Week: Thursday
  • Time: 7:10pm - 9:10pm PT
  • Level: Open to all levels
  • Audience: Adult
  • Location: In Person
  • Availability: Yes
  • Public Price: $395.00
  • Member Price: $355.50

Learn About Scholarships

The Case for Beauty

Is beauty a distraction from justice? Or is there "a case for beauty," as Carl Phillips said? We'll pair theory with literature, touring definitions of beauty from Plato to Gadamer, creative nonfiction by Scarry and Beachy-Quick, beauty in Cavafy, Chiang, Oppen, and others. The course includes weekly generative writing assignments; it is not a craft workshop. We'll hear arguments for beauty and against beauty from feminist and post-colonial perspectives. Is beauty the heart of oppression? Or an essential quality of literature?

A syllabus is available by request. Please email welcome@hugohouse.org.

Note: Class will be held on Zoom on 11/2/23.

Payment plans are available for this class. Please email education@hugohouse.org to get a payment plan started.

Registration dates: 

August 7: Scholarship Donation Day

August 8: Member registration opens at 10:30 am

August 15: General registration opens at 10:30 am

August 21: Last day of Early Bird pricing

Kascha Semonovitch

Kascha Semonovitch

she/her

Kascha Semonovitch’s poems and essays have appeared in journals including Quarterly West, The Bellingham Review, Zyzzyva, The Kenyon Review and others, and in the chapbook Genesis by Dancing Girl Press. She has a PhD in philosophy from Boston College, an MFA in poetry from Warren Wilson College. She has fellowships at the MacDowell Colony and the Ucross Foundation, and her creative nonfiction was recently nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Kascha has edited two collections of philosophical essays on early twentieth century European thought, and published academic essays, mostly recently Attention and Expression in Simone Weil. She has taught philosophy at Boston College, Seattle University, and Hugo House in Seattle. She runs an art gallery in Seattle. Teaching Philosophy: I believe that we learn by reading – whether the work of our classmates, contemporary authors or canonical works. The work of a teacher lies in asking –and re-asking –questions that motivate us to pay attention to these texts. In class, we think together by articulating our interpretations. When we reach a conflict of interpretation – “Oh, I thought Robert Hass was talking about beauty” or “I thought Descartes meant his elbow”– then we inquire into the reasons for the conflict. After such careful reading, we are ready to re-read our own writing. We are better at paying attention to what is happening in syntax and semantics. As a faculty member at Seattle University for over seven years, I taught the history of philosophy, critical thinking, and ethics. Philosophers pay attention to the history and internal consistency of systems and concepts. This type of paying attention is also invaluable to writers. For example, we might ask whether poet thought through the connections between the terms in a text and the deep history of texts that precede it? Does a fictional or poetic world hold together consistently? I love learning by reading with students.

Website: kaschasemonovitch.com