snowynight: colourful musical note (Default)
snowynight ([personal profile] snowynight) wrote in [community profile] poetree2012-03-06 12:01 pm

Intro Post from snowynight


I am [personal profile] snowynight and I will be your host this week.I love poetry because something about how it plays with the language and condense idea and image fascinates me. I have read poetry since I was very young, and they still catch my imagination to this day.

This week I 'd like to share about China and its literary theory about poetry. I remember in one Chinese literature lesson, my professor shares with us about the famous Nineteen Old Poems, 古詩十九首. They have been regarded as influential in the development of poetry in Ancient China. Interestingly, some poems contains theme that are quite amoral considering their historical context, such as 青青河畔草 – Green, Green, Grass on the Riverbank, where the female narrator entertains thought of adultry. Or 今日良宴會 – Today we hold a splendid feast, where the narrator shares his ambition of striving for richness no matter the cost. These however didn't lessen their literary value in ancient Chinese's eyes because they 're honest to what the poets feel, and the honesty resonates with the readers even today. Honesty 's the baseline how a poem 's evaluated. To those interested, I find a translation to all 19 poems here.

Discussion: When you read or write poetry, what does honesty mean to you, and how does it factor into your appraciation or creation?
jjhunter: Drawing of human JJ in ink tinted with blue watercolor; woman wearing glasses with arched eyebrows (JJ inked)

[personal profile] jjhunter 2012-03-06 04:11 am (UTC)(link)
Interesting question! Honesty to me is entwined with audio metaphors: it has to do with listening for whether something rings 'true' or is somehow in dissonance with me or the voice I am crafting for a particular poem. Something can be true for the poem that is not true for me, sometimes, and in being honest to the integrity of the poem sometimes I have to put my self and my opinions to the side in order to 'hear' what that line of thought/emotion has to say and then amplify it effectively with my diction and the patterns with which I arrange my words.

Honesty also has a great deal to do with respect when I am incorporating others and others' cultures/background/experiences/stories into my own work. If I am not respectful and humble, then including such feels dishonest because I feel like I am stealing in some way without acknowledging where something(s) came from.
bookblather: A picture of Yomiko Readman looking at books with the text "bookgasm." (Default)

[personal profile] bookblather 2012-03-07 05:50 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree about respect being necessary to honesty. Otherwise it feels very much like cultural appropriation, and that leaves a very bad taste in my mouth.