Tsotha
donnyQ
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2013
- Posts
- 1,462
You're right, I thought I did respond directly to you but was answering others.
Thank your for the answers and examples. I understand your view a little better, now.
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You're right, I thought I did respond directly to you but was answering others.
But, no matter, I think this thread is shot.
When more people write poetry than read it and very few people read it, poetry is as good as shot, which was my whole point about engaging a potential readership. At the moment, if you believe the numbers, poetry is like an endangered species that will soon be below the numbers required to cling to life. (apart from the Lit mainstream etc. writing doggeral)
I don't know about the USA but certainly in western Europe, bearly a poetry book would exist if it wasn't some sort of subsidy, whether philanthropic, arts subsidy or academic press. Like Opera, it is preserved for the public through direct and indirect state funds. In a situation like that, poets arguing the toss that they know what good poetry is, while effectively saying the reading public hasn't a clue, poets are like giant pandas who are too fussy about what other panda they have sex with.
Apparently, there are going to be less poetry books published this year because of economic cuts and a stagnant economy. There wasn't that many being published in the first place. I am sure self publishing is booming but that is usually for family and friends and who really browses through self published poetry books?
This shouldn't be an esoteric argument, it should be about why people don't read poetry, not sneering at the potential customers for going elsewhere.
I know poetry by a convergence of intention (poet) and recognition (reader). This I call resonance.
The qualities of poetry do not define it, they do not accept or reject anything from its fold. Rather, what is recognized as "poetry" often shares certain traits.
Repetition, sounds, symbols — or the complete lack of them — these are only what the reader makes of them. Everything is a tool toward the purpose of creating poetry; no tool is poetry, in itself. The experience is in the mind, not in the poem.
...that's all I have for now.
I know poetry by a convergence of intention (poet) and recognition (reader). This I call resonance.
The qualities of poetry do not define it, they do not accept or reject anything from its fold. Rather, what is recognized as "poetry" often shares certain traits.
Repetition, sounds, symbols — or the complete lack of them — these are only what the reader makes of them. Everything is a tool toward the purpose of creating poetry; no tool is poetry, in itself. The experience is in the mind, not in the poem.
...that's all I have for now.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parataxis
looks like it can be easily transferred.
does it really rely on subordinating conjunctions (and) more than verse?
Where we don't agree is possibly that I see most of this thread as pretentious nonsense and a detailed discussion of form and structure but NOT substance.
I consider the mechanics and symbolism of any poem to be far less important than the content. A limerick or clerihew can contain as much insight as a finely wrought sonnet, and perhaps even more.
The message is being lost in the analysis of the method of delivery.
I could have focused on how the mechanics of confessionalism likely eroded the waning popular interest in poetry the second half of the last century. There wasn't much of an audience left when prose poetry became popular because of it.
mechanics and symbolism are part of the content
this may be a fine line arguement, in other words, if we disagee, I don't think it is by much.Again I have to disagree. They are part of the tools for delivery of the content.
If a poet has nothing meaningful to say, the mechanics and symbolism are useless.
I care about poetry. I read poetry. I don't claim to write poetry, even if I have several submissions labelled 'Poetry'.
point taken, but my view is it is more of an over reliance, and like everything else, too much of a good thing becomes a bad thing.I think paratactic tactics were that movie director type in and out camera movements, juxtaposing symbols that you were talking about here and elsewhere. There is parataxis in novels, I don't think it's all that common though. The reason I almost broke character and threw out a pseudo-imho is because I might have to find 100 popular 'prose poems' from the Yale Series awards and find the ratio of subordinators per line when compared to my hundred favorite poems. See if there's a difference before deciding if it even matters.
Actually it is based more on Kafka, whom most people think as absurdest and nightmarish. In my short and abridged literary journey, I came across a description of him reading his material. He was going for the laughs. Seinfeld a show about nothing is immensely popular. What I do is shift the primary use of tools, but basically (and I am the most critical bastard around when it comes to myself) if I don't find it funny, I know nobody else will. Unfortunately, I find a lot of stuff funny that nobody else does, like Kafka.I doubt it was confessional poetry that eroded the popularity of poetry so much as modernism. Surely hysterical poets like Plath were popular. Post modernism, although a cynical and destructive style, does bring entertainment value back to poetry. In fact, I see the knowingness of what 1201 does as highly entertaining post modernism.
Actually it is based more on Kafka, whom most people think as absurdest and nightmarish. In my short and abridged literary journey, I came across a description of him reading his material. He was going for the laughs. Seinfeld a show about nothing is immensely popular. What I do is shift the primary use of tools, but basically (and I am the most critical bastard around when it comes to myself) if I don't find it funny, I know nobody else will. Unfortunately, I find a lot of stuff funny that nobody else does, like Kafka.
And I understood every word of that. It sounds like a lot of poetry. It doesn't communicate anything, it just sounds like the poet knows what poetry is.
I'll go along with absurdist. I get the impression many people are wary and just don't often get you but I find you entertaining, wonderfully so when you are on form.
Again I have to disagree. They are part of the tools for delivery of the content.
If a poet has nothing meaningful to say, the mechanics and symbolism are useless.
...
I know I'm only responding to part of your full explanation but, if a poem has something meaningful to say and the poem has poor mechanics and symbolism, the importance of the meaning is be lost. Therefore those tools are an important part of the content...the pieces that make up the whole.
My second poem is a perfect example of this. My poem had great meaning (at least to me) but it was lost on others because it had poor mechanics and the symbolism fell short.
I can understand that, but it doesn't change my view that the mechanics and symbolism are part of the delivery system, not the content.
I know that I often fail to deliver the full content and complexity of my intended story, but that is my incompetent use of the tools I use as an author. I know in my head, and in my mind's eye, what the content and the message should be, but I always fall short on the delivery. I think every artist does. We all want to create the perfect vision. Because we are aiming for perfection, we are bound to create something less than perfect - because we are human.
We could change the discussion into "How do I transmit the thought that is the basis of the poem/work?".
There are many methods, structures, tools etc. than can be used to transmit your conception to the reader. Choosing HOW to use those tools, and which tools, is interesting and ultimately personal.
If your talent is for formal structure and metre then you might choose them. If you are happier with a more free-form approach, then why not?
I become slightly concerned at the use of symbolism. Symbols that can have real meaning for you might have no resonance and even no meaning at all in a different country and culture. I'll give an example:
The Confederate Battle Flag, the Stars and Bars, appears in media all over the world. What does it mean to you? What does it mean to someone who raises that Flag? What does it mean on an item of clothing?
Even in the UK it has a multiplicity of meanings. Here are a few:
1. It is a symbol of the USA that can be treated more freely than the Stars and Stripes, because the Stars and Stripes should be regarded with respect. And that is all it is - American. It can appear on cans of Cola, on Popcorn buckets, on clothing - just as a tribute to, or association with, the USA.
2. It is a sign that the person flying/wearing it is a fan of Country and Western Music or Line Dancing.
3. It is a sign of rebellion against authority worn by Bikers. It could be replaced by the pirates' Skull and Crossbones and the meaning would be identical. (Or a Swastika)
4. It is racist. The person displaying it is signalling that black people should still be slaves, are inferior, and the Confederate Battle Flag is a symbol of White Supremacy.
5. The person flying/wearing it has seen it elsewhere and likes the design.
Obviously meaning 4 is meant to be offensive and for some it does cause real offence. But those who think that any of the other meanings are appropriate could be horrified if they knew that meaning 4 was possible.
That is just one symbol that can be confused. Literotica has an international audience. It is very difficult to use symbols (or even literary references) that will resonate with all readers.
My solution is to write in much more simplistic language than I would use if the intended audience was educated, literary Brits. I try to internationalise my stories. They are usually set in the UK, written in British English, but meant to be accessible to any competent English speaker anywhere in the world.
If I had used extensive symbolism that is personal to me, or peculiar to the UK, I would be confusing many readers.
I know poetry by a convergence of intention (poet) and recognition (reader). This I call resonance.
The qualities of poetry do not define it, they do not accept or reject anything from its fold. Rather, what is recognized as "poetry" often shares certain traits.
Repetition, sounds, symbols — or the complete lack of them — these are only what the reader makes of them. Everything is a tool toward the purpose of creating poetry; no tool is poetry, in itself. The experience is in the mind, not in the poem.
...that's all I have for now.
Hmmmm all of that and this seems to be where my head goes.
When I build a home I am using wood and glass. To fancy it up and give it atmosphere I use paint and decorations. Those are all part of the home - without them they wouldn't be the same...likening this to mechanics and symbolism. When it comes to tools, that would be the hammer, the saw, the ruler, the pencil I measured with. They are not part of the content but rather a means to get to the final results...yes?
I can understand that, but it doesn't change my view that the mechanics and symbolism are part of the delivery system, not the content.
...
If I had used extensive symbolism that is personal to me, or peculiar to the UK, I would be confusing many readers.
If I had used extensive symbolism that is personal to me, or peculiar to the UK, I would be confusing many readers.
...
(I don't think it is a symbol, by the way. The original by the La Fontaine is, but this statue poem is just a comment on how the character is immortalized in her moment of sadness.)
As reader wouldn't you be curious why she is so sad over a broken vessel, why she is worthy of remembrance in form of statue and also poetry?