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Tag Archives: books

How to Read a Poem Part 5: Talking Back to a Poem

13 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by thepoetsbillow in Blog

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art, Article, books, contest, Internet, Lit. Journal, literature, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, reading, reading poetry, red wheelbarrow, Writing

Part 4: Starting the Conversation – Part 6: Text and Context

Talking Back to a Poem

It would be convenient if there were a short list of universal questions, ones that could be used anytime with any poem. In the absence of such a list, here are a few general questions that you might ask when approaching a poem for the first time:

  • Who is the speaker?
  • What circumstances gave rise to the poem?
  • What situation is presented?
  • Who or what is the audience?
  • What is the tone?
  • What form, if any, does the poem take?
  • How is form related to content?
  • Is sound an important, active element of the poem?
  • Does the poem spring from an identifiable historical moment?
  • Does the poem speak from a specific culture?
  • Does the poem have its own vernacular?
  • Does the poem use imagery to achieve a particular effect?
  • What kind of figurative language, if any, does the poem use?
  • If the poem is a question, what is the answer?
  • If the poem is an answer, what is the question?
  • What does the title suggest?
  • Does the poem use unusual words or use words in an unusual way?

You can fall back on these questions as needed, but experience suggests that since each poem is unique, such questions will not go the necessary distance. In many instances, knowing who the speaker is may not yield any useful information. There may be no identifiable occasion that inspired the poem. But poems do offer clues about where to start. Asking questions about the observable features of a poem will help you find a way in.

We’ll now bring inquiry to bear on two very different poems, each of which presents its own challenges:

  • “The Red Wheelbarrow” by William Carlos Williams
  • “Diving into the Wreck” by Adrienne Rich

How to Read a Poem Part 4: Starting the Conversation

12 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by thepoetsbillow in Blog

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art, Article, books, contest, Internet, Lit. Journal, literature, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, reading, reading poetry, Writing

Part 3: The Line – Part 5: Talking Back to a Poem

Starting the Conversation

We mentioned earlier that encountering a difficult poem is like a game or sport, say rock climbing, that makes you work a bit. The idea of finding handholds and footholds and ascending one bit at a time is apt. But some climbs are easier than others; some are very easy. You may enjoy an easy climb for a while, but you may also find that you want a bigger challenge. Reading poetry works the same way, and, fortunately, poets leave trails to help you look for the way “up” a poem. You’ll have to do some work, hard work in some cases, but most of the time, the trails are there for you to discover.

Although your first experience of the poem may be private and personal, we think talking about the poem is a natural and important next step. Beginning with a focus question about the poem, the discussion addresses various possible answers to the question, reshaping and clarifying it along the way. The discussion should remain grounded in the text as much as possible. Responses that move away from what is written into personal anecdotes or tangential leaps should be gently urged back into analyzing the text. The basis for shared inquiry is close reading. Good readers “dirty the text” with notes in the margins. They make the inquiry their own.

Article from Poets.org

A few good radio tributes to Ray Bradbury

08 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by thepoetsbillow in Blog

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author ray bradbury, books, Bradbury, exploration community, fahrenheit 451, Lit. Journal, literature, poem, Poet, Poetry, Ray, reading, Writing

Bradbury Revered In Space Exploration Community

Ray Bradbury: ‘It’s Lack That Gives Us Inspiration’

‘Fahrenheit 451’ Author Ray Bradbury Dies At 91

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