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4 comments

Comment from: Hinermad [Visitor]
Hinermad

Diana,

I’m glad I’m not the only one to notice that lack of audience awareness in poets. In some cases (not competitive, I grant) it seems like the poet was actually ignoring, or even rejecting, the audience. But like you, maybe I’m just old.

A co-worker was on the fringe of a little performing poets’ group in Ohio. They had weekly readings at a coffee shop near the university. My co-worker gave me a tape of a reading by his best friend, and I promised to listen to it. I haven’t made many promises that were harder to keep. About every third word was the same, and started with the letter “f.”

I thought poetry was supposed to communicate ideas, but the only idea I got was that the poet didn’t care what I thought about him. Perhaps I’m narrow minded, but based on that I didn’t care much about what he thought, either.

Maybe we should give up on English and switch to Latin. The Pope sees to do all right with it.

Dave

04/21/08 @ 18:53
Comment from: [Member]

These weren’t poets themselves. They were performing. I faulted them for their poor choices in poetry (but somebody wrote that junk, so I get where you’re coming from).

I don’t fault my students for using “language,” provided it isn’t gratuitous, so perhaps I’m not that old :). My students should learn now how to handle it. I figure we all have our own curse words (an observation someone made many years back when he heard my father say, “Oh, CATS!"), and I personally have no problem with one set of sounds over another. The sound combinations we take offense at and those we find acceptable are quite arbitrary, when you think about it, and humans find verbal releases of invective cathartic. In other words, some form of expletive is natural, so I have no problem with those around me using the traditional ones. The problem I have is overuse.

I bet even Latin has its “inappropriate language.” :D

d

04/24/08 @ 20:29
Comment from: hinermad [Visitor]
hinermad

Diana,

My issue with the expletives wasn’t the words themselves, it was the lack of originality. Like you say, we all have our own curses, but if one is overused is it really a curse? Maybe it’s still valid as an interjection if you’ve just whacked your thumb with a hammer for the hundredth time, but if you’re trying to use it for shock value it loses potency pretty quickly.

Dave

04/25/08 @ 08:07
Comment from: [Member]

Excellent point. I’d say the answer is no–if any given word or words are overused, they lose their ability to express much of anything.

d

04/26/08 @ 11:18


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