tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8861197.post111670543212823287..comments2023-06-27T16:51:05.805+02:00Comments on The Pangrammaticon: The Essence of PoesieThomashttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04858865501469168339noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8861197.post-1117054315427400812005-05-25T22:51:00.000+02:002005-05-25T22:51:00.000+02:00Thanks for this great discussion; I've really enjo...Thanks for this great discussion; I've really enjoyed reading it. I've posted a longish comment on my own blog <A HREF="http://poesygalore.blogspot.com/2005/05/apples-on-sofa.html" REL="nofollow">here</A>, if you're interested. (Like Laura, "apples on the sofa" immediately jumped out to me as the more "poetic"--although I realize neither may be--but for different reasons, which I go into there).<BR/><BR/>thanks & best,<BR/>emEmily Lloydhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03920886883651975823noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8861197.post-1117034727873208082005-05-25T17:25:00.000+02:002005-05-25T17:25:00.000+02:00Laura, I was actually criticizing my own argument,...Laura, I was actually criticizing my <I>own</I> argument, not yours. I realized that what you said about liking the first phrase better was absolutely valid in a way that my claims couldn't account for, so it forced me to rethink everything I had said before. I think I was writing my comment at the same time you were writing your last two, so it looked like I was responding to them in a way that created a false impression of debate, perhaps?<BR/><BR/>Also, Thomas, I didn't acknowledge how useful I thought your last comments were about "the difficulty to find new beauty," and the greater work that goes into situating prosaic phrases among other phrases, etc.Kasey Mohammadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13353259413006470925noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8861197.post-1116977319512749182005-05-25T01:28:00.000+02:002005-05-25T01:28:00.000+02:00One problem with my original thesis is that any ph...One problem with my original thesis is that any phrase, once you've turned it over in your mind for awhile, becomes poetic. Like Laura, I now think that "apples on the sofa" is "poetic." But really, the problem with what I was saying goes deeper than that. Although it's possible to consider the poeticity of discrete words and phrases in isolation (say, from a Jakobsonian perspective, focusing on repeated sounds and structural equivalences, as I've been doing), is that this only gets at a definition of the <I>linguistic</I> dimensions of the "poetic." It's like the difference between "musical" as a description of a system of sounds which exist in some calculated tonal relation to each other (or whatever terms an expert would use--I don't know anything about musicology) and "musical" as a qualitative assessment of a given composition ("that piece is very musical and this other one isn't"). So "apples on the sofa" might be poetic in ways that are largely irrelevant to the Jakobsonian account of poetics which privileges the reduplicated phonemes of "fruit on the futon," but those ways might <I>not</I> be irrelevant to the reasons "fruit on the futon" could be considered poetic when "fruit" means "homosexual." In the latter case, a whole range of affective considerations come into play that determine whether we think it is poetic, just as any number of private connotations, likes, dislikes, etc. might come into play when we read or hear "apples on the sofa." Does it make sense to talk about one sphere of the poetic that is "objective" (for example, we can all agree that the repeated sounds of "fruit on the futon" are technically "poetic" in that they are connected in such a way as to call attention to phonetic qualities of the phrase rather than its referential content, but this doesn't have anything to do with whether we think it is <I>good</I> poetry; on the other hand, to ask whether we think "apples on the sofa" is "poetic" is to appeal to a wholly different aesthetic definition--it really amounts to asking, "does this phrase move you in any way?" or "does this phrase sound like something that belongs in a poem"? And this brings us back to square one.<BR/><BR/>Can we even venture to suggest that a "good" poem should demonstrate some <I>combined</I> engagement with these "objective" and "subjective" accounts of what is poetic? But then, what would count as a "demonstration"?Kasey Mohammadhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13353259413006470925noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8861197.post-1116971299424492902005-05-24T23:48:00.000+02:002005-05-24T23:48:00.000+02:00Thanks for that, Laura. Thinking it over, I'm sure...Thanks for that, Laura. Thinking it over, I'm sure you could make a better poem with a pile of apples and a sofa than I could with a fruit and a futon.<BR/><BR/>I'm retreating here to the distinction between what makes a group of words a poem and what makes a poem good.<BR/><BR/>With effort, you or WCW could produce a poem that included the words "apples on the sofa" and it may be a very good poem.<BR/><BR/>An unschooled child could produce a poem using "fruit on the futon" and amuse herself with it, not the critics. (Next line involving "cabbage and croutons".)<BR/><BR/>I could have written a poem in high school (I was not writing poetry in high school) about "the fruit on the futon", which would have been awful and offensive, but "poetic" in the basic sense Kasey was playing with.<BR/><BR/>In short, the work you would have to do situate "apples on the sofa" among other words in order to construct a poem is greater than the work you would have to do situate "fruit on the futon".<BR/><BR/>In fact, now that I'm thinking about this (thanks for making me think about this) Flarf probably works with materials intentionally "apples on the sofa"-esque. In that difficulty to find new beauty.<BR/><BR/>?Thomashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04858865501469168339noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8861197.post-1116963173899304352005-05-24T21:32:00.000+02:002005-05-24T21:32:00.000+02:00Yes, of course.Yes, of course.Thomashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04858865501469168339noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8861197.post-1116954680890788862005-05-24T19:11:00.000+02:002005-05-24T19:11:00.000+02:00Thanks, Jordan. Time is an important aspect. I'll ...Thanks, Jordan. Time is an important aspect. I'll try to say something more precise about it later on. If you have any ideas they're more than welcome.Thomashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04858865501469168339noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8861197.post-1116948955061955132005-05-24T17:35:00.000+02:002005-05-24T17:35:00.000+02:00This is an excellent take on K.'s original post. I...This is an excellent take on K.'s original post. It puts an indistinct timeframe on how rapidly or slowly it takes to develop the line--but the effect is exactly how you both describe it.Common Sensehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10616894767406785442noreply@blogger.com