Poetry
is nothing more than words spread across a page. Poetry is the use of
language in means of rhetoric and syntax to present an idea in a new
creative or abstract manner. The literary style that is poetry is less
about what is being said and more about how it is said, in other words a
poem is a performance; because of this the interpretation of each poem
becomes dependent on each member of the audience.
A
performance piece is hollow until the, in this instance, reader gives
it breath. Each person to encounter a poem may have a different opinion
of interpretation of its meaning. This is due to each individual’s point
of reference, or experiences, cultural expectations and personal
acceptance or beliefs of ideas presented in the poem or a combination of
all of the above.
The idea of a poem as a performance piece stems past just the poem and
reader situation; it goes back to before the reader to the poet and his
thoughts. Until one understands the mindset and point of approach of the
poet the reader is creating a new performance and not working from the
base set forth by the poet. It often helps to change the titles of roles
in a situation to divulge greater comprehension. So, the poet is the
director, the poem the play and each reader is an actor cast in a new
performance of the same production. One actor may view it as Broadway
and another as Vaudeville, while both are different, neither is wrong
nor right. That is the beauty and freedom of poetry: it is the act of
participation in reading.
A strong example of the poet’s role in the process is found in “Who is a
Poet” by Tadeusz Rosewicz. He uses an ironic approach to discuss who he
is and that he is creating or presenting to the audience. There is no
fluff or filler abut who it is behind the proverbial “smoke and screen.”
Rosewicz makes a point to balance what a poet is as well as is not
without ever giving a true answer. He makes a point to bring difference
characteristics and personality’s traits as well as life experience to
the poet to allow the audience to believe that the poet is someone who
is relatable to themselves, creating another way for the poet to give
direction to the “actor” without spelling it out.
In a general upshot, poetry is less about the expectations and implied
requirements set forth by critiques and other interpreters. Instead it
brings focus to the value of self-fulfillment and personal values placed
on a text by an individual reader that allows connection or
reliability. In other terms, poetry is not about others or even the poem
but about what each “audience member” brings to and takes from the art.
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