Urgent Language Poetry Slams in the Writing Classroom.
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Transcript of Urgent Language Poetry Slams in the Writing Classroom.
Urgent LanguagePoetry Slams in
the Writing Classroom
A Poetry Taxonomy• The Personal Poem (The Moaner)
– “I”-centered; realistic, everyday settings; often explores relationships & emotional disorders of various kinds; may be confessional; may be narrative. Desire to ex-press, but may also be inward-looking.
• The Visionary Poem (The Mad Seer or Visionary)— Poet as divinator; person with special insight or vision into what others can’t see; able to tap faculties of the psyche which are not conscious or rational. Poetry as rare and extraordinary experience.
• The Formalist Poem (The Maker or Craftsperson) — Poet as shaper of language; brings order to the chaos of language; “sculpts” words into beautiful, enduring objects for our contemplation. May write exclusively in traditional verse forms.
• The Spoken-Word Poem (The Wandering Minstrel; Bard)— Poet as one of the people; the public singer who brings poetry to the fields and streets; poet of the community; tends to be outward-looking. Poetry as sound.
Spoken Word Poetry
The Oral Tradition
The sound of the belch’d words of my voice, words loos’d to the eddies of the wind…
I am the mate and companion of people, all just as immortal and fathomless as myself…
In all people I see myself—none more, and not one a barleycorn less…
A call in the midst of the crowd;My own voice, orotund, sweeping, and
final.
My voice goes after what my eyes cannot reach;With the twirl of my tongue I encompass worlds, and volumes of worlds.
The oral tradition in English is really old, but still alive:• Homer 600 BC
• Old English poetry 700-1066
• The Beats 1950s
• Slam Poetry 1980s to present
• Ongoing efforts to keep the
oral tradition
alive
Hey, Daddy-o
• Medieval folk songs• Serbo-Croatian guslars• African “talking drums” ‘Epic of Gilgamesh’
Sumer 200 BC
The Bard
… writes in the spoken-word or oral mode. This poet is the public wordsmith, the troubadour, the performer who takes poetry to the streets. The spoken-word poem is meant to be heard (as opposed to read on the page), and may sometimes include elements of theater and/or musical performance, or even stand-up comedy.
The term bard is defined in the Oxford English Dictionary as “the early versifying minstrels or poets of other nations”, and originated from ancient Celtic orders of poets whose duties were to think of and perform spoken word poems (Bard n.1).
The Beat Poets of Mid-Century
The bohemian coffee-house and jazz
scene
Dissatisfaction with “classroom poetry” or academic approaches to poetry. The beat poets take their cues from Father Walt!
Increasing alienation between
parents and children; unease
with American Dream, atomic
age
And then there were slams.
Another SUB-SET of the spoken-word mode is the slam mode. The slam poem came about in the 1980s in a coffee house in Chicago and was meant to free poetry from the classroom and re-energize it. It tends to be performed in rowdy contests and continues to this day at local and national levels.
How do poetry slams work?
Poetryslam.com
A Brief Guide to Poetry Slams
Check out
these sites to learn about slams!
www.nuyorican.org/
www.poetryslam.com/
AND
Characteristics of this tradition
and mode?• Expansive• Inclusive• Lends itself to PROJECTION; that is, to being
spoken loudly on a stage or outside or in a large group
• May be theatrical• Communal; tends to celebrate the community, the
whole, or public concerns• And of course…IT’S FLIPPING FUN AND CAN
SOUND REALLY GOOD.
1. Blurring the line between poetry and theater; performances are like one-person, one-act plays.
2. Aggressive, clever, sometimes funny rhyme, not in any strict pattern (triple rhymes, internal rhymes, slant rhymes, repeated words, etc. In video, “Lazarus, Lazie, Lazy”).
3. Projection! Loud broadcast.
4. Number of unstressed syllables don’t matter, maybe. Success depends on how cleverly you get the four stresses in (rap).
5. Getting into a groove.
6. Memorizing the material adds interest and cred.
7. Mixing genres: insert singing, use accompanying sound, etc.
8. Ritual presence of performer.
benefits in the writing classroom
Form
alis
t
Formalist
Any WritingCourse
Rea
dily
av
aila
ble
on
web
as
writ
ten
and
perfo
rmed
text
s
For practicing and studying expository modes
Easy to
grade!!!!!!!!!
For studying
varieties of
English
Springboard for
discussion of
social issues
For s
tudy
ing
and
prac
ticin
g ar
gum
ent As literary and
social genreFor studying and practicing
rhetorical analysis
Provides opportunities to explore the physicality of language;
language as sensory experience. The body in the classroom.
• A unit on this can include easily found ads which exploit literary devices in the “attention ground wars”
• Can also include readily available political speeches, slogans, sound bites, etc.
Compelling ( engaging to most students) and provocative (enables energetic discussion).
May turn students on to literature.
A multi-cultural urban phenomenon. Entryway to discussions of diversity.
And...
and good for possible discussions of
CraftNot discussed much in comp studies (to my
knowledge), though this may be changing (e.g. Douglas Hess, “The Place of
Creative Writing in Composition Studies”)
samples
Saul Williams
What do you notice? What’s the guy doing?
Gymnastic Rhyme and Wordplay
Energy
Hyperbole Metaphor Allusion
Pastiche
Pathos
YouTube, “Amethyst Rocks, 2:11
A variety of qualities
and poetic-
rhetorical devices
Anaphora
Physicality of language
• A weakness: repeated reference to “them” and
“they”: externalizes evil--no reflection on
personal culpability or participation in evil =
somewhat weak ethos, credibility
• May antagonize rather than persuade; limited
audience
• Message fuzzed or fudged at times in verbal
wackiness
• Craft neglected here and there; e.g., lack of
modulation
Kattie Makkai• Compelling personal anecdote• Strong appeal to pathos• Theatrical use of voice and tone• Elements of parody• Nice example of critical thinking—i.e.,
interrogating social norms, discussions of gender
PRETTY!YouTube, “Pretty,” 2:11
Taylor Mali
• Parody (mocking his subject makes the subject’s rhetoric visible)
• Personal anecdote• Pathos• Persona
YouTube, “How to Write a Political Poem,” 3:28
Jeffrey McDaniel
• Personae; dramatic mode
• Classification as expository mode
• Relatively clear and punchy figurative speech
Spoken Word Revolution CD, “The Foxhole Manifesto,” 2:11 (or YouTube, 5:00)
Dylan Garity
• Personal anecdote
• Pathos—as well as relatively heavy emphasis on logos
• Good for discussions of rhetorical situation. Compelling and timely social issue|
YouTube, “Rigged Game,” 3:19
Button Poetry Books
Viral
Rachel Rostad
Lily Myers
Common Hazards of the Slam Poem as Mode of Argument
• Often relies excessively on pathos and personal experience for support
• Sometimes reduces the complexity of experience to black and white categories
• Often relies excessively on catharsis as chief effect• Preaches to the choir• Precludes the relatively quiet and complex acts of
intensive reflection and analysis (these acts don’t lend themselves to loud theatrics in large public venues)
Hazards as Poetry• Doesn’t the contest format make it into a game of winners
and losers, precisely what a democratic approach to poetry SHOULDN’T be?
• The physical performance can obscure the fact that the poem per se sucks. Banalities, cliches, etc.
• The performance can overpower attention to words, language. Sometimes quiet, written poems are insanely powerful as well as completely original. The slam, at worst, just promotes yelling and histrionics.
• It quickly became as conventional as anything else—readers doing predictable political material in a predictable voice and style.
Poets who demonstrate closer analysis and intense self-examination
• LISA LEWIS
• TONY HOAGLAND
Annotated bib forthcoming!
...maybe.