Apoetry reading is a public oralrecitation or performance ofpoetry. Reading poetry aloud allows the reader to express their own experience through poetry, changing the poem according to their sensibilities. The reader uses pitch and stress, and pauses become apparent. A poetry reading typically takes place on a small stage in acafé orbookstore where multiple poets recite their own work. A more prominent poet may be chosen as the "headliner" of such an event and famous poets may also take the stage at a bigger venue such as anamphitheater or college auditorium.
How early poems like theIlliad were transmitted to audiences is not clear. Modern poetry readings only became popular in the last half of the twentieth century, at least in the United States, with stars likeDylan Thomas andRobert Frost. Live poetry reading competitions, calledpoetry slams and beginning in the 1980s, also remain popular.
Voice is an active, physical thing in oral poetry. It needs a speaker and a listener, a performer and an audience. It is a bodily creation that thrives in live connection.The voice is the mechanism by which a "poet's voice" comes alive.[1] Reciting a poem aloud the reciter comes to understand and then to be the 'voice' of the poem.[2] As poetry is a vocal art, the speaker brings their own experience to it, changing it according to their own sensibilities,[3] intonation, the matter of sound making sense; controlled through pitch and stress, poems are full of invisible italicized contrasts.[2] Reading poetry aloud also makes clear the "pause" as an element of poetry.[4]
"The hearing knowledge we bring to a line if poetry is a knowledge of patterns of speech we have known since we were infants." Every speaker intuitively course through manipulations of sounds, almost as if we sing to each other all day.[5] Even after three millennia of writing, poetry retains its appeal to the ear, thesilent reading eye thereof, thereafter, hears what it is seeing.[2] Sound that was imagined through the eye gradually gave body to poems in performance.[6]
A public reading is typically given on a small stage in acafé[7] orbookstore, although reading by prominent poets frequently are booked into larger venues such asamphitheaters and college auditoriums, 'to take poetry public'.[8]
Poetry readings almost always involve poets reading their own work or reciting it from memory but readings often involve several readers (often called "featured poets" or "featureds"), although one poet can be chosen as a "headliner".
Quite how early poems like theIlliad were first experienced by audiences remains not entirely clear. (But seerhapsode)
American poetDonald Hall described the increase in emphasis on public readings of poetry in the United States in a 2012New Yorker magazine blog post where he recounted it a phenomenon that grew in the last half of the twentieth century.[6]
Hall, who speculates that the change may have been due to the star power ofDylan Thomas(1914-1953),[9] wrote, "It used to be that one poet in each generation performed poems in public. In the twenties, it wasVachel Lindsay,[10] who sometimes dropped to his knees in the middle of a poem. ThenRobert Frost[11] took over, and made his living largely on the road."[6] Hall suggests that poetry readings have shifted the focus of poetry more towards sound, adding that "In concentrating on sound, as in anything else, there are things to beware of. Revising a poem one morning, I found myself knowing that a new phrase was repellent, but realized it would pass if I intoned it out loud. Watch out. A poem must work from the platform but it must also work on the page."[6] Afroamerican poetMaya Angelou was a friend ofMalcolm X, and she performanced poetry reading.[12] Radical poet groupThe Last Poets performanced poetry reading with African conga, andGil Scott-Heron play poetry reading with jazz music. Dub poetLinton Kwesi Johnson recorded poetry reggae album "Bass Culture" in 1980.[13]
Apoetry slam is a competitive format that has become increasingly popular, especially in theUnited States, since its inception in the 1980s. A "slam" is the art of poetry presented in public[14] as is the "open mic" event variant.[15]
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