Modern, Post-Modern, & Contemporary Poetry Modern Poetry (1900-1950)



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Modern, Post-Modern, & Contemporary Poetry

Modern Poetry (1900-1950)

  • Follows basic characteristics of Modernism
    • Rejection of traditional form and content
  • Generally speaking, Modern poetry offers
    • Social critique
    • Introspection
    • Experimental form
    • Untraditional sources for inspiration
    • Free verse

Edwin Arlington Robinson

    • Content was bold and experimental
      • Characters who experience personal defeats and have generally a pessimistic outlook on life
    • Known for his wise and ironic views of human behavior (this is what makes him fit the modern period)
    • Strove for realism in his poetry
  • Narrative Poetry

Edgar Lee Masters

  • Product of the Midwest—found small town life oppressive
    • Became a lawyer in Chicago and began writing poems, plays, and essays
    • In 1914, a friend gave him a copy of Select Epigrams from the Greek Anthology
      • Collection of epigraphsa short poem, usually engraved on a gravestone, which sums up an individual’s life

Edgar Lee Masters

  • Decided to write a book of epigraphs that would reveal the dark underside of small town life
    • Gossip/Rumors --Affairs --Abortions
    • Addictions --Rape --Murder
  • Published Spoon River Anthology in 1915
    • Created fictional town of Spoon River, IL
    • Rejected traditional forms—all poems are in free verse
    • Over 250 epigraphs create the town through the dead
    • Epigraphs are written in the voice of the dead, and an entire life is usually revealed through one incident that is remembered even in death

Dramatic Monologue/Epitaphs

  • Audience is implied
  • No dialogue
  • Poet speaks through the voice of a fictional character (persona)

Robert Frost—tradition in a Modernist world

  • Characteristics of Frost’s Poetry
    • Popular with critics and public
    • Devoted to traditional forms
    • Used conversational language
    • Focused on American landscapes, specifically New England
      • Known for “cranky realism”
      • Influenced heavily by Emerson and “Self Reliance”

Robert Frost

  • “Birches” and “Mending Wall”
    • Style: Blank Verse
      • Unrhymed iambic pentameter
      • Sounds like conversational English
      • Relies on other sound effects than rhyme to create poetic elements
        • Alliteration
        • Onomatopoeia
        • Auditory imagery
        • Assonance
        • Consonance
        • Parallelism/anaphora
    • Poem categorized as a pastoral: a poem that deals with a rural setting

Imagism

  • Reject the Romantics’ focus on nature as a source of solace
  • Movement begins in France in 1875…American writers are first introduced to French Symbolist poets during expatriate movement after WWI
  • Symbolism: a form of expression in which the world of appearances is violently rearranged in order to depict a different and more truthful version of reality
    • This violent rearrangement was visually apparent in the work of Picasso; e.e. cummings attempts to do in poetry what Picasso was doing in painting

Imagism

  • Started by Ezra Pound and TS Eliot
    • Also heavily influenced by Japanese haiku
  • Imagism: believed poetry could be made purer by concentrating on the precise, clear, unqualified image
  • Famous imagists: Pound, William Carlos Williams, Marianne Moore, Wallace Stevens, Archibald MacLeish

Ezra Pound

  • “A Few Don’ts”—essay on writing Imagist Poetry
    • What rules does Pound ask the reader to consider when writing imagist poems?
      • Direct treatment of the topic
        • Present the concrete object rather than describing it
      • No extra words
      • Natural musical rhythm of language (cadence)
      • Do not mix the abstract (peace, love) with the concrete (the image)
        • Imagists seek to capture emotion in concrete images, not abstractions
      • If using rhyme, it must have some element of surprise

Ezra Pound

  • “In a Station of the Metro”
    • Originally 30 lines longfinal poem is only 14 words long
    • What images does Pound present in this poem?
      • The appearance of faces in the crowd
      • Petals
      • Wet, black tree branch
        • How does this poem capture a single moment?
          • It captures the crowd at the station faces appearing as the trains pull in and stop
        • Which of the three images is surprising, considering the poem’s setting is a subway station?
          • The rain covered tree branch
    • Metaphor—what two things does Pound compare in this poem?
      • The people’s faces with the petals on a wet, black bough

William Carlos Williams

  • Imagist—known for short, lyric poems which focused on a single image
    • Poems were short because Williams was a doctor—wrote many poems on prescription pads.
    • Poems reflected Williams desire to portray and celebrate everyday life.
      • Believed that common experiences contain the seeds of the extraordinary

The Red Wheelbarrow

  • so much depends
  • upon
  • a red wheel
  • barrow
  • glazed with rain
  • water
  • beside the white chickens.

The Red Wheelbarrow

  • What images does Williams capture in this poem?
    • Red wheelbarrow
    • White chickens
  • What depends on the “red wheelbarrow”
    • The wheelbarrow makes essential farm work easier, so in fact, much of a farmer’s work depends on using that wheelbarrow
  • What words does Williams split to run on two lines?
    • Wheelbarrow and rainwater
      • Why do that? What does it force you to do as a reader?
        • It forces the reader to slow down and take notice

“This is Just to Say”

  • I have eaten
  • the plums
  • that were in
  • the icebox
  • and which
  • you were probably
  • saving for breakfast
  • Forgive me
  • they were delicious
  • so sweet
  • and so cold

“This is Just to Say”

  • What images are presented in this poem?
    • Plums
    • Icebox
  • To what senses does the central image in the poem appeal to?
    • Taste “so sweet” and “delicious”
    • Touch “so cold”
  • What is the intention of the speaker?
    • To apologize for eating all the plums
      • Is the speaker really sorry?

The Great Figure

  • Among the rain
  • and lights
  • I saw the figure 5
  • in gold
  • on a red
  • firetruck
  • moving
  • tense
  • unheeded
  • to gong clangs
  • siren howls
  • and wheels rumbling
  • through the dark city.

“The Great Figure”

  • What visual images are presented in this poem?
    • Rain
    • Lights
    • 5
    • Fire truck
    • Dark city
  • What auditory images are presented in this poem?
    • Gong clangs
    • Siren howls
    • Wheels rumbling

H.D.

  • Protégé of Ezra Pound real name, Hilda Doolittle
    • Publication of three of her poems kicked off the Imagist Movement
  • Poems are brief, precise, and direct
  • Poems emphasize light, color, and physical textures

“Pear Tree”

  • Silver dust
  • lifted from the earth,
  • higher than my arms reach,
  • you have mounted,
  • O silver,
  • higher than my arms reach
  • you front us with great mass;
  • no flower ever opened
  • so staunch a white leaf
  • no flower ever parted silver
  • from such a rare silver;
  • O white pear,
  • your flower-tufts
  • thick on the branch
  • bring summer and ripe fruits
  • in their purple hearts.

“Pear Tree”

  • What is the “silver dust”?
  • What does the pear tree’s blossom precede?
    • Summer and the ripe fruit from the tree

The Harlem Renaissance

  • Period when African American Artists were taken seriously for the first time
    • First chance for group expression of African American values
    • No shared style among all artists
      • Instead, shared the desire to document the experiences of African Americans through multiple styles

The Harlem Renaissance

  • Roots of the movement
    • Began with Great Migrationearly 1900s
      • Hundreds of thousands of African Americans moved from rural South to industrialized cities in the North for job opportunities
      • Brought African Americans together into smaller communities, like Harlem
        • Becomes a meeting ground for writers, artists, and musicians
        • Depended on one another for inspiration and support
        • The change in living conditions and community stimulated creativity

The Harlem Renaissance

  • 1920s-1930s
    • Writers celebrated racial identity
      • Over 50 volumes of poetry and fiction produced
    • Did not just affect literatureAfrican American artists also influenced visual arts, and led to the creation of Jazz Music
  • Legacy of HR
    • Opened doors of acceptance to African American Artists
    • Gave Americans a language to begin a discussion of racism
    • Broke ground for next generation of African American artists—Toni Morrison, Maya Angelou, Alice Walker, Ralph Ellison

Langston Hughes (1902-1967)

  • The most successful writer of the HR and the African American experience
    • After graduating from HS, published “The Negro Speaks of Rivers”
      • Moved to NYC and attended Columbia University first introduction to Harlem
      • Quit school after first year worked/traveled to Africa and Europe
    • After returning from Europe, moved to DC
      • Discovered by poet Vachel Lindsay in 1925
      • Published first collection of poetry The Weary Blues in 1926
        • Earned a scholarship to continue education

Langston Hughes

  • Impact and Legacy
    • Helped define the spirit of HR: “express our individual dark-skinned selves without fear or shame”
    • Intentionally echoed rhythms of Jazz and Blues in his poetry
      • Traditional Blues song 12 bars of music, in 4/4 time, using three simple chords
        • Hughes used this structure in at least half his poems
    • Forced readers to look at poetry with a
      • social perspective: how the lit reflects issues in society at time when it is written
      • Archetypal perspective: how the lit expresses archetypes—characters, symbols, or patterns that cross cultures
      • Biographical perspective: how lit is an expression of events and issues in the writer’s personal life

Countee Cullen

  • Used traditional forms and structure for poetry (rhyme and meter)
    • Stanza structure
      • Two lines: couplet
      • Four lines: quatrain
      • Six lines: sestet
      • Eight lines: octave

Claude McKay

  • Born in Jamaica, considered Harlem his spiritual home
    • Emigrated to US after publishing his first collection of poems, Songs of Jamaica
  • Poetry focused on the social injustices experienced by African Americans
  • Form and structure: sonnet—14 lines, iambic pentameter
    • Two types
      • Shakespearean
      • Petrarchan

Claude McKay

  • Sonnets
    • Shakespearean: divided into two stanzas
      • Opening with an octave (8 lines)
        • Rhyme scheme: ABBAABBA
      • Followed by a sestet (6 lines)
        • Rhyme scheme: CDECDE
    • Petrarchan: divided into 4 stanzas
      • First three stanzas are quatrains (4 lines)
        • Rhyme Scheme: ABAB CDCD EFEF
      • Final stanza is a rhyming couplet (2 lines)
        • Rhyme scheme: GG

Futurism and Concrete Poetry

  • Poetry that considers not just the meaning of the words, but the meaning conveyed through typography (how the poem looks in print)
    • Created poems that were both textual and visual
    • Poems take specific shapes that can only be seen in print

e.e. cummings

  • Challenged the conventions of syntax (the rules for the formation of sentences)
  • Made typography (the general character or appearance of printed matter) and the division of words part of the shape and meaning of the poem
  • Heavily influenced by French symbolism and Whitman’s free verse

e. e. cummings

  • Characteristics of cummings poetry
    • Jubilant lyricism: happy, musical, poems
      • Celebration of love
      • Beauty of nature
      • Affirmation of the individual

“in Just-” cummings never titled his poems…sorta like Emily Dickinson 

  • in Just-
  • spring when the world is mud-
  • luscious the little
  • lame balloonman
  • whistles far and wee
  • and eddieandbill come
  • running from marbles and
  • piracies and it’s
  • spring
  • when the world is puddle-wonderful
  • the queer
  • old balloonman whistles
  • far and wee
  • and bettyandisabel come dancing
  • from hop-scotch and jump-rope and
  • it’s
  • spring
  • and
  • the
  • goat-footed
  • balloonMan whistles
  • far
  • and
  • wee

“the hills”

  • the hills
  • like poets put on
  • purple thought against
  • the
  • magnificent clamor of
  • day
  • tortured
  • in gold, which presently
  • crumpled
  • collapses
  • exhaling a red soul into the dark
  • so
  • duneyed master
  • enter
  • the sweet gates
  • of my heart and
  • take
  • the
  • rose
  • which perfect
  • is
  • With killing hands
  • the sky
  • was can dy
  • lu mi
  • nous ed
  • I
  • ble
  • spry pinks
  • shy lem
  • ons
  • greens
  • cool
  • choco lates
  • un der
  • a lo
  • co
  • mo tive s pout
  • ing
  • vi
  • o lets
  • l(a
  • le
  • af
  • fa
  • ll
  • s)
  • one
  • l
  • iness
  • r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r
  • who
  • a(s w(e loo)k
  • upnowgath
  • PPEGORHRASS
  • eringint(o-
  • aThe):l
  • eA
  • !p:
  • S a
  • (r
  • rIvInG .gRrEaPsPhOs)
  • to
  • rea(be)rran(com)gi(e)ngly
  • ,grasshopper;

Post Modern Poetry

  • 1950-1990
    • Reaction against the ordered, rational view of the world
    • Reaction against stifling conformity of post WWII America
    • Emphasized the absurd

Confessional Poetry

  • Personal to individual poet’s life and experiences
    • Subjects previously not discussed openly
      • Private experiences with feelings about
        • DEATH
        • TRAUMA
        • DEPRESSION
        • RELATIONSHIPS
      • Poetry explored the psychological aspects of these types of events on the psyche
  • CONFESSIONAL POETS: SYLVIA PLATH, ANNE SEXTON, ROBERT LOWELL

“Mirror” by Sylvia Plath

  • Personifies the mirror
    • In what ways does the mirror describe itself?
      • Silver, exact
      • Not cruel, only truthful
      • The eye of a little god
    • What does the mirror spend most of its time doing?
      • Mediating on the opposite wall
    • When the woman appears in the second stanza, how does she react to the mirror? Why?

Beat Poets

  • Sub-genre of Post Modern Movement
    • 1940s-1950s—NYC and San Francisco
    • Questioned mainstream politics and culture
      • Rejected conformity and tradition
        • BOTH SOCIAL CONFORMITY AND TRADITION AS WELL AS LITERARY
    • Goals of the Beat Poets
      • Changing consciousness through
        • Use of hallucinogens
        • Mediation/Eastern Philosophy
      • Defy conventional writing
  • Beat Poets: Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder, Lawrence Ferlinghetti

“Homework” by Allen Ginsberg

  • If I were doing my Laundry I’d wash my dirty Iran
  • I’d throw in my United States, and pour on the Ivory Soap, scrub up Africa, put all the birds and elephants back in the jungle,
  • I’d wash the Amazon river and clean the oily Carib & Gulf of Mexico,
  • Rub that smog off the North Pole, wipe up all the pipelines in Alaska,
  • Rub a dub dub for Rocky Flats and Los Alamos, Flush that sparkly Cesium out of Love Canal
  • Rinse down the Acid Rain over the Parthenon & Sphinx, Drain Sludge out of the Mediterranean basin & make it azure again,
  • Put some blueing back into the sky over the Rhine, bleach the little Clouds so snow return white as snow,
  • Cleanse the Hudson Thames & Neckar, Drain the Suds out of Lake Erie
  • Then I’d throw big Asia in one giant Load & wash out the blood & Agent Orange,
  • Dump the whole mess of Russia and China in the wringer, squeeze out the tattletail Gray of U.S. Central American police state,
  • & put the planet in the drier & let it sit 20 minutes or an Aeon till it came out clean.


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