Transcript LITERATURE
LITERATURE
HU 300 Pappadakis
The music today is brought
to you by the didgeridoo, an
Indigenous Australian
instrument usually made of
a long, hollowed out log.
Welcome to Seminar!
Reading in America
What do you think of these findings? Do they
seem accurate to what you observe?
In 2004, the National Endowment for the
Arts put out a study called “Reading at
Risk,” about the decline of reading in
America. In 2007, another study showed
that 1 in 4 adults read no books in 2006.
(Fram, 2007)
What might a decline in reading say about a
culture?
Update on Reading
For the first time since the NEA began surveying
American reading habits in 1982 -- and less than five
years after it issued its famously gloomy "Reading at
Risk" report -- the percentage of American adults who
report reading "novels, short stories, poems or plays"
has risen instead of declining: from 46.7 percent in
2002 to 50.2 percent in 2008 (Thompson, 2009).
(Note: Nonfiction is excluded from the study)
What might explain the increase of
reading in the last 6 years?
Which
books/authors
do you enjoy?
Which have
inspired you?
Poetry
In our unit we discussed poetry, which is rarely a best-seller.
Why might poetry be less popular than fiction?
Where are some places that poetry does exist and thrive
in our culture?
How is poetry different from prose?
Why Poetry?
What are some of the
unique benefits poetry
can offer to the reader
or listener?
Do you have any
favorite poems?
“Meditation on Yellow”
By Jamaican writer
Ms. Olive Senior
http://jamaica.poet
ryinternationalweb.
org/piw_cms/cms/
cms_module/index.
php?obj_id=603&x
=1
Pictured borrowed from http://www.insomniacpress.com
The Haiku – a Japanese poem
“Oh these spring days!
A nameless little mountain
Wrapped in morning haze!”
--Haiku poet and Zen monk Matsuo Basho
(1644-1694)
The Haiku – a Japanese poem
Has 3 lines, 17 syllables
“Controlled simplicity” (Fiero 2009).
Makes an observation about a situation, and then awareness.
Usually about nature.
Not usually about love or feelings.
“The poet, observer, in a Zen state of mind sees the ruth of a
situation… the Simplicity… and writes about it WITHOUT personal
interpretation or involvement” (Boloji, 2010).
No first person.
About “day to day happenings which are seemingly unimportant but
attain a lot of importance” (Boloji 2010).
5-7-5 syllables?
Line 1: 5 Syllables
Line 2: 7 Syllables
Line 3: 5 Syllables
Ezra Pound, American poet 1885-1972
An “imagist” poet – imagist writers cut away all the unnecessary stuff by
“abstraction” in order to get to the bare essence of things.
“Verbal compression, formal precision, and economy of expression were the goals of
the Imagists” (Fiero 2009).
Ezra Pound’s Haiku-like poems remind us of the Japanese style: simple, observant
but not always detached or emotionless. Let’s take a look…
“The Bath Tub”
Pictured borrowed from http://www.likeadesertprophet.com
As a bathtub lined with white porcelain
When the hot water gives out or goes tepid,
So is the slow cooling of our chivalrous passion
O my much praised but-not-altogether-satisfactory lady.
What does this poem tell us? How is it different from a traditional Haiku?
The Haiku – a Japanese poem!
Haikus are traditionally about nature – they are light and evoke thoughts of the
natural world. For the Japanese during WWII, Haikus became vehicles to “evoke
the presence of death”. Kato Shuson (1905-1993) lived through WWII and wrote
about what he saw and experienced in the dehumanization of the war.
“In the depths of the flames
“Cold winter storm—
I saw how a peony
Crumbles to pieces.”
A safe-door in a burnt-out site
Creaking in the wind.”
“The winter sea gulls—
In life without a house,
In death without a grave.”
What effects are achieved by this
“verbal compression”?
The Haiku – a Japanese poem…let’s write our own!
Has 3 lines, 17 syllables
“Controlled simplicity” (Fiero 2009).
Makes an observation about a situation, and then awareness.
Usually about nature.
Not usually about love or feelings.
“The poet, observer, in a Zen state of mind sees the ruth of a situation… the
Simplicity… and writes about it WITHOUT personal interpretation or involvement”
(Boloji, 2010).
No first person.
About “day to day happenings which are seemingly unimportant but attain a lot of
importance” (Boloji 2010).
5-7-5 syllables?
Line 1: 5 Syllables
Line 2: 7 Syllables
Line 3: 5 Syllables
References:
Boloji.com. (2010). Ms. Aparna Chatterjee, editor. “The
Art of Haiku.”
Fiero, Gloria K. The Humanistic Tradition. New York:
McGraw Hill, 6th edition, 2011.
Have a great week, thanks for coming! :)