Saturday, February 23, 2008

The Importance of Poetry

I got into this conversation at a party a few weeks ago with a high school art teacher. She remarked that what we do is so "important," and I countered that I did not really think of it that way. The main thing I try to get across in the classroom is that poetry is fun. My pop culture juxtapositions -- the Beowulf movie, Outkast lyrics -- are meant to make that point: poetry should not be viewed as this intimidating thing, but as fundamentally the same kind of thing as comics and music and the movies and TV. But then the more I thought about it I thought that of course poetry is important or I would not be so invested in it, but that did not quite feel right. I told someone at lunch, still thinking about it, that maybe the "importance" of poetry is a side effect? Today I found the right formulation for how I feel about this subject reading Oscar Wilde, who is always right about everything, and paraphrasing him:

Poetry is far too important to be taken seriously.


[Wilde said "Life is far too important to be taken seriously" which is also true].

5 comments:

  1. Yes, Oscar Wilde is ALWAYS right about EVERYTHING.

    He should have been Pope.

    I'm not kidding.

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  2. I absolutely agree that poetry should not be taken seriously at all. I don't understand why people are intimidated by poetry because it is the most unstructured piece of writing a person could write, and you can express anyway you want to without someone saying your doing it the wrong way.

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  3. Toronto puts poetry in its subways cars, but it's exactly the stuff you get in high school - uber-personal, lyrical in the worst sense, and laden with words that seem pulled from a thesaurus. When I was doing my undergrad, one of my professors (Christian Bok, if anyone's read his poetry) remarked that they seemed to actually be 'poetry inoculations' - read some 'poetic' crap and feel more literate. Because you sure as hell don't feel entertained.

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  4. TP -- "it is the most unstructured piece of writing a person could write" I am not sure about that.

    Neil -- that is great. I am going to remember that for a while.

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  5. I think Wilde also said something like (too lazy to google the exact phrase) "all bad poetry is in earnest."

    And when I get the bad bad BAD poetry submitted to my women's website, lines upon lines of deadly serious stuff about how broken hearted the speaker is, I always think of Wilde. And the bad poetry.

    But then, the good poetry is very important, and I really like that quote you use there.

    "I have nothing to delcare but my brilliance". I always think that at the airport, but usually, people (those airport folks in ugly uniforms) don't find that funny in the least. So I just smile and nod. Of course I packed my own suitcase. Smile. Nod. :)

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