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What is Poetry? 11774 Views
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Description:
That's a good question. Maybe this is poetry. A haiku, perhaps.
Transcript
- 00:04
What is Poetry? a la Shmoop. Easy question, right?
- 00:09
Poetry is an ancient, antiquated form of art, like pottery-making or cave painting, that [caveman in caves, cooking over fire]
- 00:14
holds no place in our modern world, unless it comes to us in the form of a radio jingle.
- 00:19
You wish. Like it or not, poetry is here to stay.
- 00:23
While there may not be too many millionaire poets living on your block…[picture of Poe Residence]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
…the art of poetry is just as important today as ever, and it can help us reflect
- 00:32
and learn more about ourselves and our place in the universe. [caveman on a shrinking globe]
- 00:36
… slightly more valuable than a freshly baked clay pot.
- 00:39
So why is there such a stigma attached to poetry?
- 00:44
Why do we picture stuffy old folks in leather armchairs, puffing away on their pipes and
- 00:48
speaking in a faux British accent? [old englishman in chair]
- 00:52
Honestly… because it can sometimes be difficult to understand. We just assume it’s for the
- 00:57
cultural elite. So not true. Yeah, interpreting poetry can be tough. But [caveman with a rubix cube]
- 01:03
for those who put in the work to decipher a poem’s hidden meanings, the rewards can
- 01:08
be great.
- 01:09
Not like… winning the lottery great. But still… it can lead to some important self-discovery.
- 01:13
But why do poems have to read like they’ve been written in some sort of secret code? [caveman sherlock Holmes]
- 01:19
Do we need a decoder ring to crack these things?
- 01:23
Is the CIA hard at work attempting to get to the bottom of Pablo Neruda’s poems? [CIA reading poem book]
- 01:27
This “secret code” is what makes poetry… poetry.
- 01:32
Straightforward speech… that’s for novels and short stories.
- 01:36
Poetry experiments, not only with ideas relating to the human experience, but with language
- 01:41
itself. [poem experimenting in lab]
- 01:42
Because it is free from many of the usual restrictions of style and grammar…
- 01:45
…it can sometimes allow us to stumble on certain ways of thinking we might otherwise [caveman strips over poem]
- 01:51
never have considered. You’ll notice that many poems are jam-packed
- 01:55
with figurative language, which can be used to convey meaning. [caveman in jam-jar]
- 01:59
For example, you’re thinking right now about how much jam can be packed into a jar. Yeah.
- 02:05
Poetry is just like that. Again, the frequent use of metaphor and simile
- 02:09
help the reader draw unfamiliar connections…[caveman on bed]
- 02:12
…that will occasionally inspire little “eureka” moments.
- 02:16
But it’s not just the content that sets poetry apart.
- 02:21
There are stylistic elements, such as repetition… repetition… repetition…[broken record]
- 02:26
…rhyme, and meter…
- 02:27
…that make a poem feel different than prose.
- 02:31
And it makes no bones about being its own animal.
- 02:34
“Iamb what I am.” When poetry got its start, it was nothing [caveman playing dinosaur bones]
- 02:38
more than part of the oral tradition…
- 02:40
…words and phrases in metered form that were passed from one person to another via
- 02:44
memorization. [cavemen around fire]
- 02:46
Those rhythms and meters helped folks remember the words…
- 02:49
…and by the time poems were written down, the art form had just kind of adopted these
- 02:54
techniques.
- 02:55
Which explains why poems often seem sing-songy.
- 02:57
Don’t hesitate to bust out a little Walt Whitman at your next karaoke party. [caveman singing karaoke]
- 03:09
Because poetry is so much about inventiveness, it can sometimes be tough to pin down just
- 03:14
what a poem is. [thumb tack put into poem]
- 03:16
Notes on the fridge, grocery lists, pop music…
- 03:20
All are arguably forms of poetry. Although some are clearly more artful than others.
- 03:26
Even if your mom can put together quite a catchy shopping list. [girl making shopping list into poetry]
- 03:34
But while poetry is a bit all over the map…
- 03:36
…there are certain types that pop up often enough that we had to devise a name for them.
- 03:41
Sonnets are romantic poems with a ton of meaning and not too many lines…
- 03:47
Villanelles are nineteen line poems with a rigid rhyming scheme…
- 03:51
Limericks are light verses that often feature a comical twist at the end.
- 03:55
“There once was a man from Madrid, Who sautéed his oldest boy, Sid
- 03:59
He threw in some spice And claimed it was nice [spice sprinkles over boy playing with car]
- 04:02
To be putting in thyme with his kid.” And then there’s plain old free verse…
- 04:07
…no rules or restrictions, just words on a page, in whatever order and length that
- 04:11
the poet feels is necessary.
- 04:14
In that case, it’s all about letting the subject matter be your guide.
- 04:17
So while you may feel that poetry isn’t your cup of tea…
- 04:21
…we urge you to give it a chance.
- 04:23
It’s not all flowery language and structured verses…
- 04:26
…although even some of that flowery language might open your eyes a little wider and teach
- 04:30
you something new about the world…
- 04:32
…or… flowers.
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