Post
by Neville Briggs » Thu Aug 16, 2012 4:25 pm
I think I know what you mean Marty, Manfred.
I try and read as widely as I can, I would agree that in some literary circles there is a sort of ' line' that writers are expected to follow if they are accepted. And so many of these appear to be the most obscure; hall of mirrors style of thing, to be sure.
I reckon that any sort of hard line stylistic requirement is death to an art form. I think that has happened to some degree with modernist poetry. It seems in some areas, to have become a sort of secret incantation business, only understood ( or pretended to be understood ) by a small group of the initiated.
And I think it is evident that poetry appearing as modernist or post-modernist obscurantism has driven poetry away from public interest, which is what one would think is the main point of publishing poetry.
But that is not the whole story of contemporary poetry, there are quite a few modern writers of poetry who turn their hand to anything from free verse to sestinas, pantoums, limericks and even limericks and ballads. This can be proved by reference to a number of recent anthologies and public performances which are broadcast by the ABC radio. I have recordings. And there are some modern poets who get a good attendance at public performance.
I think that bush poetry had made a big contribution to bringing poetry back into the public area, but I think that is mainly due to the performance poetry. The written stuff doesn't seem to be matching the success of the performance stuff.
So I venture the suggestion that this might be because performance bush poetry is more flexible and distinctions between it and other forms of performance, such as stand up comedy ,slapsick patter, dramatic monologue and country music, are blurred to some extent.
That's why I think there is room for bush poetry writing to blur the edges with other forms a bit. More chance of relating to more people. Surely we want to be inclusive not exclusive.
And a final note, I think we would be the richer as poetry writers if we understood the reasons why modernist poetry appears the way it does. I think we shouldn't assume that it is merely the product of pretentiousness or a literary version of the emperor's new clothes, as Cole Porter said " it ain't necessarily so "
Neville
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.