MODERN POETRY Tradition and Experimentation Distinction between avantegardes
MODERN POETRY
Tradition and Experimentation • Distinction between avante-gardes and Victorian and Georgian poets • Georgian poets: (from the reign of George V); they storngly used the conventions of diction, looking for guidance to Romantics and Victorians; sympathy for English elements • Revolutionary poets: Pound and Eliot; War Poets: horrors of modern warfare; violent language and images; experimentation
Imagism Modern poetry official began with Imagism, flourished between 1912 and 1917 thanks to American poet Ezra Pound • Main features of Imagism: - Constant use of clear and precise images; - Use of a rhythm freed from artificial metrical regularity; - Choice of any subject matter; - poems, usually short, were the poet’s response to a scene or object, and contained no moral comment; - The aim of poetry was to achieve “precision, discipline, dry hardness, the exact curve of things”
Symbolism and Free Verse • French Symbolism had started in France with Baudelaire: it influenced new poetry. • Symbolists: - Stressed the importance of subconscious and use of images to evoke rather than state; - Ideas were presented obliquely; - Free verse: musicality and flexibility of sounds • Poets invented their own language, vocabulary and mythology to voice the fragmentation of culture
Features of Symbolism • Indirect than direct statements • Use of allusive language and development of multiple associations of words • Importance given to sounds • Quotations from other literatures • Use of free verse • Possibility for the reader to bring meaning to the poem
Committed Poetry Group of poets who joined in the 1930 s at Oxford and devoted themselves to left-winged propaganda Interested in social and political aspects of human life No more experimental poetry but: - Scepticism of contemporary poetry - The poet seldom intrudes as a speaker - Openness to new experiences and a range of life experiences - Variety of forms and techniques - Very colloquial tone - Powerful imagery: contrasts and juxtaposition - Unique perspective on human condition
New Romantic Poetry A group of poets in the 1940 s reacted against committed poetry and turned to topics such as love, birth, death and sex. To be remembered is Dylan Thomas Main features: - Emotional subject matter - Great interest in love, birth, death and sex - Pantheistic approach to nature, everything is connected - Use of violent natural imagery - Sexual and Christian symbolism - Rhythms in verses
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