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1 | --- | ||
2 | title: Manifesto of poetics | ||
3 | id: manifesto_poetics | ||
4 | genre: prose | ||
5 | |||
6 | project: | ||
7 | title: Stark raving | ||
8 | class: stark | ||
9 | ... | ||
10 | |||
11 | What is a poem? | ||
12 | I think it was Yeats that called a poem "the best words in the best order," and that isn't an inaccurate description, but I don't think it captures all of what a poem is. | ||
13 | [Let me start][] with communication. | ||
14 | |||
15 | Communication is a transaction, an exchange between two people or entities, in which one (the Speaker/Writer/Communicator) gives the other (the Reader/Listener/Consumer) a \ | ||
16 | set of ideas / \ | ||
17 | a wireframe organization of a concept / \ | ||
18 | a set of reasons/instructions for action. | ||
19 | In many kinds of communication, for example speeches, reports, or advertisements, the kind of ideas transacted are generally factual/logical/brain-based in nature. | ||
20 | In art, these ideas are emotional/heart-based. | ||
21 | In short, Art is to Emotion as an [Article][] is to Information. | ||
22 | I think art should strive to transmit the emotion the author feels as efficiently as possible to the reader of that art. | ||
23 | |||
24 | In order to do this, multiple notation systems have been devised. | ||
25 | Music is the most notable example that comes to mind, as it has the most rigid style, but grammar, as used self-consciously in writing, would be another example. | ||
26 | Poetry has only a very loose set of rules and assumptions that allow it a sort of notational language, and this is complicated by the fact that when writing poetry, the author writes for a different medium: poetry is meant to be performed aloud. | ||
27 | This makes the notation system even more important, but again, it's hard to come up with a system that will be read mostly the same by most people. | ||
28 | |||
29 | What I've been trying to do since I began writing is develop a personal notation system, or what I think most would refer to as my "voice" as a poet/writer (I personally don't like the word "poet," as it sounds pretentious to me; I'm aware I should get over this). | ||
30 | |||
31 | However, there were some places that still needed improving from my draft manuscript: most notably, my prose in "Rip Tide of Memory" (now only "Rip Tide") and "AMBER Alert." | ||
32 | I rewrote each to tighten their syntactic and idea rhythm, to make them move more lightly and gracefully. | ||
33 | |||
34 | The most notable difference in my series is the reordering of poems within it. | ||
35 | I think that in my first draft, I spent so much time on getting my individual poems tight and polished that I threw them together somewhat haphazardly, using a loose thematic correspondence with the fake "Table of contents." | ||
36 | With the new order, I hope this has been fixed: the piece consists of six sections, each with three poems (A new one, "Everything stays the same," makes the totals correct). | ||
37 | Each section has a thematic/emotional/personal element that ties the sections together. | ||
38 | They are ordered by the order in which I wrote the sestinas at the beginning of each section, which works out to make the series move from identity to memory to a feeling of universal justice, and from there to a discussion of death and (something like) love that culminates in an exploration of the nature of time and cosmology. | ||
39 | The piece is bookended by the fake "Table of contents" (provided at the end as an ironic commentary on the rest of the text) and an "About the author" section. | ||
40 | I think it works better this way, and I think the "About the author" at the beginning serves as a fair prelude poem to the piece. | ||
41 | |||
42 | I'm excited to be a writer like I haven't been before. | ||
43 | |||
44 | [Let me start]: prelude.html | ||
45 | [Article]: README.html#fn1 | ||