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PoetryPoetry is an art form in which human language is used for its aesthetic qualities in addition to, or instead of, its notional and semantic content. It consists largely of oral or literary works in which language is used in a manner that is felt by its user and audience to differ from ordinary prose. It may use condensed or compressed form to convey emotion or ideas to the reader's or listener's mind or ear; it may also use devices such as assonance and repetition to achieve musical or incantatory effects. Poems frequently rely for their effect on imagery, word association, and the musical qualities of the language used. Because of its nature of emphasising linguistic form rather than using language purely for its content, poetry is notoriously difficult to translate from one language into another.
Nature of poetry
Poetry can be differentiated most of the time from prose, which is language meant to convey meaning in a more expansive and less condensed way, frequently using more complete logical or narrative structures than poetry does. A further complication is that prose poetry combines the characteristics of poetry with the superficial appearance of prose. And there is, of course, narrative poetry, not to mention dramatic poetry, both of which are used to tell stories and so resemble novels and playss. However, both these forms of poetry use the specific features of verse composition to make these stories more memorable or to enhance them in some way.
The Greek verb poieo (I make or create), gave rise to three words: poietis (the one who creates), poiesis (the act of creation), and poiema (the thing created). From these we get three English words: poet (the creator), poesy (the creation) and poem (the created). A poet is therefore one who creates, and poetry is what the poet creates. The underlying concept of the poet as maker or creator is not uncommon. For example, in Anglo-Saxon a poet is a scop (shaper or maker) and in Scots makar.
Sound in poetry
Perhaps the most vital element of sound in poetry is rhythm. Often the rhythm of each line is arranged in a particular meter. Different types of meter played key roles in Classical, Early European, Eastern and Modern poetry. In the case of free verse, the rhythm of lines is often organized into looser units of cadence.
Poetry in English and other modern European languages often uses rhyme. Rhyme at the end of lines is the basis of a number of common poetic forms such as ballads, sonnets and rhyming coupletss. However, the use of rhyme is not universal. Much modern poetry, for example, avoids traditional rhyme schemes. Furthermore, Classical Greek and Latin poetry did not use rhyme. In fact, rhyme did not enter European poetry at all until the High Middle Ages, when it was adopted from the Arabic language. The Arabs have always used it extensively, for example in the Koran.
Alliteration played a key role in structuring early Germanic and English forms of poetry (called Alliterative verse), akin to the role of rhyme in later European poetry.
The alliterative patterns of early Germanic poetry and the rhyme schemes of Modern European poetry alike both include meter as a key part of their structure which determines when the listener expects instances rhyme or alliteration to occur. In this sense, both alliteration and rhyme when used in poetic structures help to emphasize and define a rhythmic pattern.
In addition to the forms of rhyme, alliteration and rhythm that structure much poetry, sound plays a more subtle role in even free verse poetry in creating pleasing, varied patterns and emphasizing or sometimes even illustrating semantic elements of the poem. Devices such as alliteration, assonance, consonance, dissonance and internal rhyme are among the ways poets use sound.
Poetry and form
As it is created using language, poetry tends to use formal linguistic units like phrases, sentences and paragraphs. In addition, it uses units of organisation that are purely poetic. The main units that are used are the line, the couplet, the strophe, the stanza, and the verse paragraph.
Lines may be self-contained units of sense, as in the famous To be, or not to be: that is the question. Alternatively a line may end in mid-phrase or sentence: Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer. The linguistic unit is generally completed in the next line: The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. This technique is called enjambment, and is used to create a sense of expectation in the reader and/or to add a dynamic to the movement of the verse.
Couplets, stanzas, and strophes are generally self-contained units of sense, although a kind of enjambment may also be used across these units. In blank verse, verse paragraphs are employed to indicate natural breaks in the flow of the poem.
In many instances, the effectiveness of a poem derives from the tension between the use of linguistic and formal units.
With the advent of printing, poets gained greater control over the visual presentation of their work. As a result, the use of these formal elements, and of the white space they help create, became an important part of the poet's toolbox. Modernist poetry tends to take this to an extreme, with the placement of individual lines or groups of lines on the page forming an integral part of the poem's composition. In its most extreme form, this leads to the writing of concrete poetry.
Poetry and rhetoric
Rhetorical devices such as simile and metaphor are frequently used in poetry. Indeed, Aristotle wrote in his Poetics that "the greatest thing by far is to be a master of metaphor". However, particularly since the rise of Modernism, many poets have opted for reduced use of these devices, preferring rather to attempt the direct presentation of things and experiences.
The history of poetry
Poetry as an art form predates literacy. In pre-literate societies, poetry was frequently employed as a means of recording oral history, storytelling (epic poetry), genealogy, law and other forms of expression or knowledge that modern societies might expect to be handled in prose. Poetry is also often closely identified with liturgy in these societies, as the formal nature of poetry makes it easier to remember priestly incantations or prophecies. The greater part of the world's sacred scriptures are made up of poetry rather than prose.
Some writers believe that poetry has its origins in song. Most of the characteristics that distinguish it from other forms of utterance - rhythm, rhyme, compression, intensity of feeling, the use of refrains - appear to have come about from efforts to fit words to musical forms. However, in the European tradition the earliest surviving poems, the Homeric and Hesiodic epics, identify themselves as poems to be recited or chanted to a musical accompaniment rather than as pure song. Another interpretation, developed from 20th century studies of living Montenegran epic reciters by Milman Parry and others, is that rhythm, refrains, and kennings are essentially paratactic devices that enable the reciter to reconstruct the poem from memory.
In preliterate societies, all these forms of poetry were composed for, and sometimes during, performance. As such, there was a certain degree of fluidity to the exact wording of poems, given this could change from one performance or performer to another. The introduction of writing tended to fix the content of a poem to the version that happened to be written down and survive. Written composition also meant that poets began to compose not for an audience that was sitting in front of them but for an absent reader. Later, the invention of printing tended to accelerate these trends. Poets were now writing more for the eye than for the ear.
The development of literacy gave rise to more personal, shorter poems intended to be sung. These are called lyrics, which derives from the Greek lura or lyre, the instrument that was used to accompany the performance of Greek lyrics from about the seventh century B.C. onward. The Greek's practice of singing hymns in large choruses gave rise, in the sixth century B.C. to dramatic verse, and to the practice of writing poetic plays for performance in their theatres.
In more recent times, the introduction of electronic media and the rise of the poetry reading have led to a resurgence of performance poetry and have resulted in a situation where poetry for the eye and poetry for the ear coexist, sometimes in the same poem.
Terms
Verse forms
Periods, styles and movements
Technical means
Alexander Pope used poetry self-referentially in "Sound and Sense", to describe how the poetic meter should reinforce the meaning.
- True ease in writing comes from art, not chance,
- As those move easiest who have learned to dance.
- 'Tis not enough no harshness gives offense,
- The sound must seem an echo to the sense:
- Soft is the strain when Zephyr gently blows,
- And the smooth stream in smoother numbers flows;
- But when loud surges lash the sounding shore,
- The hoarse, rough verse should like the torrent roar;
- When Ajax strives some rock's vast weight to throw,
- The line too labors, and the words move slow;
- Not so, when swift Camilla scours the plain,
- Flies o'er the unbending corn, and skims along the main.
- Hear how Timotheus' varied lays surprise,
- And bid alternate passions fall and rise!
Measures of verse
| Types of metre
| Types of line
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Poetry of specific cultures/languages
stood as a giant of 19th century American poetry.]]
Main article: List of national poetries
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Warnell.com warnell.com new media network. Ted Warnell's work is some of the most zenny elegant visual design you'll run across. Funny and thoughtful, simple and strong. You'll leave feeling you didn't get it all and you'd be right. http://www.warnell.com
Riding the Meridian ... exists to seek out and support new forms of literary art based on Internet technology and emerging theories, to facilitate communication within the online literary community, to recognize unique poetic talent and support emerging voices, to explore the myriad forms by which the Internet can be used to publish and promote poetry. http://www.heelstone.com/meridian/
Poems that go A website devoted to unite words, design, music and motion. http://poemsthatgo.com
Homeless Poets' Cafe A non-profit poetry project that incorporates a Hyperlink Poetry section. http://ipoet.com
Lotta Oleröd Gallery of Flash movies made by artist Lotta Oleröd. Own works and T.S. Elliot's poems animated. http://w1.311.telia.com/~u31104462
Snakeskin Poetry magazine specialized in hypertext and intertext works. http://www.snakeskin.org.uk
Light & Dust Anthology of Poetry "An ongoing, pluralistic anthology of contemporary poetry. Includes complete out of print books, sub-sites for authors, genres, issues, and interchanges with poets in other countries." Karl Young has put together an excellent look at work you will have a very difficult time finding anywhere else. Most of it is great work that is slightly pre-web. If you take a good look, you can see a bit of the pre-history of cyberspace here. A lot of visual poetry and many thoughtful poetics essays. http://www.thing.net/~grist/l&d/lighthom.htm
React REaCT is a beautiful artistic experience, based on interaction, response and rectangles. (Honorific Mention in Ars Electronica 1999) http://www.iua.upf.es/~dani/react
E-Poetry 2001 An International Digital Poetry Festival held in Buffalo, New York, April 19-21, 2001. A convocation of digital poets and artists to focus on the state of art of digital poetry. http://epc.buffalo.edu/e-poetry/2001
BBC Online Art Zone Poetry Visual poetry, poetry games, a resident poet as well as audio clips of poets reading their own works from the BBC archives. http://www.bbc.co.uk/artzone/poetry/index.shtml
Random Poem Random poetry generator. Part of randomplace.com. http://randomplace.com/randpoem.htm
Wordcircuits A forum and gallery of hypertextual poetry and fiction. http://www.wordcircuits.com/
LimGen: The Limerick Generator Creates limericks based on the words you provide. http://www.jjjwebdevelopment.com/306sites/limgen/default.asp
RE: Words and Works for the Cyber Age Word and visual works for the Web by German artist and educator Reiner Strasser. http://netartefact.de/repoem/re.html
Cadavre Exquis Collective game that consists in making random verse from words that are written by different players, unaware of the previous entries. http://www.cadavre-exquis.net/eng/
Debris Funny animated and visual poetry and web art by Steve Duffy. http://www.debris.org.uk/
An online place. An interactive poetry/imagery environment. http://theprawn.com/op/
Flash Poetry Interactive experimental poetry by David Cammack. Most of these poems are fast to download and require the Flash plug-in. http://www.spiritone.com/~dcammack/
TRINPsite: Computer Generated Poetry Some examples of "computer generated poetry." http://www.trinp.org/Poet/ComP.htm
Re: The Virtual Affair net.art, cyber.poetry, multi.new.media.works by Reiner Strasser and friends http://repoem.tripod.com/
Ray Kurzweil's Cybernetic Poet Creates "language models" based on poets and helps you find rhymes, alliterations, turns of phrase, and has a screen saver that writes poetry. Download basic version for free. http://www.kurzweilcyberart.com
Loss Pequeño Glazier Literary experiments by the mind behind the SUNY Buffalo EPC (Electronic Poetry Center). http://wings.buffalo.edu/epc/authors/glazier/
Wr-eye-tings Scratchpad An online laboratory and workshop for WWWeb-based intermedia, part of the Wr-Eye-Tings listserv and community devoted to experimental, concrete, and hypermedia writing. http://www.burningpress.org/wreyeting/
Vispo Langu(im)age Poetry - New Media: L inks of the Imagination. "Links to literary (in some sense) Web sites." http://vispo.com/misc/links.htm
Temporary Eponymous Zone Lee Worden's Home Page. Literary machines, text derangers and textual surrealist games. http://www.speakeasy.org/~worden/
Trace Online Writing Community Based in England, this project is quite extensive in its involvement in imaginative writing. http://trace.ntu.ac.uk
Stream of Consciousness An interactive poetic garden. http://acg.media.mit.edu/projects/stream/
Here Comes the Sun Explores (un)known locales with poetic text and nontourist pictures. An experiment in communication and texture. http://mermaid.test.at/
Sue Thomas Sue is the director of Trace. http://trace.ntu.ac.uk/suethomas
Talan Memmott Interesting work mixing image and word and code. http://www.memmott.org/talan/tabRich.html
Webartery.com An internationally collaborative site devoted to showcasing and furthering the art of the World Wide Web. http://webartery.com
Electronic Book Review electronic book review (ebr) is an online scholarly journal promoting print/screen translations and new modes of critical writing on the Internet. http://www.altx.com/ebr/
Type me, type me not Experiments in computational typography by Peter Cho at MIT's Aesthetics and Computation department http://acg.media.mit.edu/people/pcho/typemenot/
m9ndfukc The net art of antiorp=cw4t7abs. Intense and totally involved. Wide ranging knowledge of and experimentation with the medium. Save your work first; it won't crash you, but you might not know how to get out. http://www.m9ndfukc.com/
The Seven By Nine Squares An early and innovative Web project headed by Florian Kramer. Wild and ranging, great read. Includes much Neoism and some of (the late?) David Zack's writings about Neoism as well as others involved in this interesting piece of art. For instance, Monty Cantsin is a Neoist figure. Anybody can be Monty Cantsin, famous artist, that's part of his character. http://www.thing.de/projekte/7%3A9%23/Welcome.html#1
Dajuin Yao One of the premier Chinese Web artists. http://www.sinologic.com/yao/
Dollspace Poetic and confronting hypermedia hauntings. http://sysx.org/gashgirl/
Volumeone A project dedicated to the exploration of new narrative possibilities using graphic design methodologies as its foundation. http://www.volumeone.com/
UBU Web: Visual + Concrete + Sound Poetry A learned, varietous, and rewarding assortment of links and works concerning visual/concrete poetry, including a knowledgeable historical perspective on visual/concrete poetry and many links to international contemporary work. http://www.ubu.com/
Electronic Poetry Center E-poetry; radio show LINEbreak; poetics email forum. http://epc.buffalo.edu/
Towards Earth A multiple-viewpoint poem about a young woman who dies in an air crash. http://www.towardsearth.com
Desktop Poetry A free interactive service that lets you create a poem using a word kit-just like refrigerator magnetic poetry-then send your poem to a friend via e-mail. http://www.desktoppoetry.com
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