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! :)