[New-Poetry] An Innocuous Taxonomy of Poetry
kadian parke
parkekadian at yahoo.com
Sat Mar 24 11:22:01 EST 2007
i have been having the same problems too, maybe you are right, i got so frustrated i stopped writing for a while.
----- Original Message ----
From: Bob Grumman <bobgrumman at nut-n-but.net>
To: "NewPoetry: Contemporary Poetry News & Views" <new-poetry at wiz.cath.vt.edu>
Sent: Saturday, March 24, 2007 12:02:38 PM
Subject: [New-Poetry] An Innocuous Taxonomy of Poetry
Every once in a while I work up a classification of poems based on size. I
just posted one to my blog. Here it is:
24 March 2007: I haven't been able to find any of my writings on the
classification of poems by size, but I gave the matter thought last night in
bed. Result: I think I taken care of the problem permanently! My
breakthrough was coming up with simple, appropriate terminology, to wit:
book-length poem, chapter-length poem, page-length poem, half-pagepoem,
quarter-page poem and minimalist poem.
The approximate size of each kind of poem should be clear, but to pin it
down a book-length poem would be the length of any normal or semi-normal
book--that is, from 24 to a zillion pages long. A chapter-length poem would
be more than a page long but less than 24 pages long. As for a page-length
poem, I had in mind a standard book-page, which is about six inches by nine
inchs. Half that for the half-page poem, and a quarter of it for the
quarter-page poem. I'm assuming the kind of page I have in mind would hold
around forty lines of conventional solitextual (solely textual) poems. A
half-page solitextual poem by that reasoning would be twenty lines or less
in length, but I break logic with my definition, making such poems sixteen
lines or less in length. The standard example would be the fourteen-line
sonnet. In other words, for me, a half-page poem is more or less the size
of a sonnet. A quarter-page poem is eight lines of the equivalent, or less,
in length.
Each of these kinds of poems has a bottom linit, too: a page-length poem is
over sixteen lines or the queivalent in length, a half-page poem over eight
lines or the equivalent in length, a quarter-page poem over . . .
twenty-five *syllables*, or the equivalent, in length--because a minimalist
poem is any poem twenty-five syllables or less in length. Such as a haiku.
Because of the importance of minimalist poems to me, I split the minimalist
poem category into three parts: maximinimalist poems, microminimalist poems
and nanominimalist poems. The first are more than three words (which total
less than ten syllables) in length, the second three words (which total lsee
than ten syllables), but more than a single word (of no more than three
syllables) in length. At this point, the sizes I've given for the three
minimalist poem divisions are extremefully tentative--pure guesses as to
what would be most appropriate--although the smallest division is probably
set.
Strictly speaking, a haiku could only be in the maximinimalist category.
Those not interested in small poems may question the value of my three
divisions--if not the value of my entire scheme. But I think exciting
things are going on, in quantity, in all minimalist poetry divisions. In
any case, if my extra three classifications are cumbersome, there's no need
to use them: the term, "minimalist poem," covers any poem in any of them.
Comments welcome.
--Bob G.
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