CCBC-Net Archives

[CCBC-Net] Poetic license

From: Cynthia Grady <gradyc>
Date: Fri, 4 Apr 2008 10:48:37 -0400

I also wonder if the drive to understand poems doesn't come from such strong emphasis on reading comprehension in the schools-- if it's made of words, we must make sure we comprehend it.

Everyone in education knows that "decoding isn't reading," so saying or hearing a poem for the sheer joy of its sounds might not fit into teachers' schemas. And with the dearth of music programs in the schools, there are few points of reference for discussions and comparisons around sound and rhythm, etc.

--cynthia

Cynthia Grady Head Librarian Sidwell Friends Middle School 3825 Wisconsin Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20016
(202) 537 8157 gradyc at sidwell.edu
 

-----Original Message----- From: ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
[mailto:ccbc-net-bounces at ccbc.education.wisc.edu] On Behalf Of Megan Schliesman Sent: Friday, April 04, 2008 9:52 AM To: CCBC Net Subject: Re: [CCBC-Net] Poetic license

Regarding the question of "understanding" poetry, Ruth asks:

"I do wonder, what's to understand? Don't the words have their own songs, rhythms, surface? Is there a need to go under?"

Since I raised the issue of people often saying they don't "understand"

poetry, I want to start by saying that comments about poetry not being understandable frustrate me, and yet it is one I often hear (or it's kin, that poetry is too "intimidating"). There have been comments in the past on CCBC-Net about the frustration many of us have when poetry is presented to children and teens as something to be figured out rather

than listened to and experienced for its own sake I have my own shuddery memories from high school on this front and it was coming back to poetry in college, and even more through my work as a librarian, finding collections like Ruth's in my early years at the CCBC, that renewed my feelings for and relationship to poetry.

I know Ruth, and Lee too, are thinking about my very long initial question (sometimes I can't state something simply to save my life), but

I realize that perhaps the question itself is asking them to break down something that can't be broken down, at least in terms I've stated. That, thankfully, is for them to figure out :)

Megan

Megan Schliesman, Librarian Cooperative Children's Book Center School of Education, University of Wisconsin-Madison

608/262-9503 schliesman at education.wisc.edu

www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc/



Ruth I. Gordon wrote:
> On Apr 3, 2008, at 6:46 PM, Ruth I. Gordon wrote:
>
>
>> Megan writes:
>> I'll begin with a question for both Lee and Ruth. I'm wondering if
>> you
>> can each speak to what you think about when choosing poems for an
>> audience of children or teens. People who say they don't like poetry
>> often comment that the reason is because they don't understand it.
One
>> of the things I so appreciate about your fine anthologies of poems
for
>> youth is the wonderful balance between accessibility and challenge.
>> Sometimes the theme of the collection provides the point of
>> accessibility--a lens through which to first begin thinking about a
>> specific poems--sometimes the poems themselves "go down easy" so to
>> speak, even as they may offer much to think about. But there are
also
>> poems that do require readers to consciously stretch and think and
>> imagine.
>>
>> Are you consciously thinking about these ir other qualities when you
>> read poems for potential inclusion in a book for children and teens?

>> Are
>> you looking for qualities you can break down and define, or is it
more
>> about how a poem as a whole strikes you?
>>
>> Big G: To the second paragraph--Yes.
>>
>
> To an interesting item in the first about "understanding"--I would
> like to return to this. It is complex--
> at least about some of the works I choose. I don't think Lee's
> selections are fraught with this problem?
> Yes, I'll tear it apart and return but, I do wonder, what's to
> understand? Don't the words have their
> own songs, rhythms, surface? Is there a need to go under? On this
> question, I would like reader
> response.
>
>> Ruth adds: LICENSE * a writer's or artist's freedom to deviate from

>> fact or from conventions such as grammar, meter, or perspective, for

>> effect : artisticlicense.
>> * freedom to behave as one wishes, esp. in a way that results
>> inexcessive or unacceptable behavior : the government was criticized

>> forgiving the army too much license.
>>
>> Two meaning very much on my mind lately--Big G
>>
>> It will take me a bit of time to respond to Megan's various
>> questions. I tend to think slowly about "answers" because almost
>> nothing has one, most have several, some have none. Sorting out
>> responses ( I prefer the word to "answers") is a long process. The

>> same process also applies to gathering up selections for an
>> anthology. The very word "anthology" goes to the Greek "gathering
>> flowers." (See: the word for "anther" and look into a flower for
>> the anthers.)
>>
>> (I must gather more lovely ((and cheap)) red wine now. I'll return
>> in a goodly time.)
>>
>> Is life a tangent to poetry or v.v.? Ah ha--someone wants an
>> explanation of this throw-away line/thunk (thunk=a heavy thought).
>> Right now here in
>> the Alexander Valley of Sonoma County where I live, almost
>> everything is in flower or bud. The lilacs by my front garden plots

>> are in flower so, of course,I think about Amy Lowell's "Lilacs," and

>> Walt Whitman's "When lilacs last in the dooryard bloomed....." And
>> each first line leads the rest of each
>> works. In turn, that takes the mind to "April is the cruelest
>> month...." and to Robert Browning's Home Thoughts from Abroad, "Oh,

>> to be in England//now that April's there....." And the fact that
>> Emily Dickenson's birthday is in April--the other day, as a matter
>> of fact. Tangents? to what?
>>
>> A statement: A civilized person who is fortunate enough to be versed

>> in a language or languages that have a body of poetry should know
>> the poetry of tha that language and the translated poetry of other
>> civilizations. Aprille--that's when the Canterbury pilgrims wended.
>>
>> A.E. Housman would have thought Sonoma County--right now, this very
>> today, in my very back yard would be "Loveliest of trees, the cherry

>> now//Is hung with blossoms on the bough,...."
>>
>> Nope--this is not a tangent, But oh, my friends, and ah, my foes...
>>
>> Really...when almost anything causes reverberations in the brain
>> with lines of poetry from all our historic yesterdays--it is life.
>> The remainders are a tangent.
>>
>> I must add that I have been unbelievably fortunate in having two
>> really great, sensitive, and disciplined editors shape my
>> gatherings: Charlotte Zolotow and Robert Warren. They disciplined
>> my wild notions and sometimes we fought about them but I was
>> permitted to "have my way," because the works were my babies--they
>> were midwives. "Everybody loves a baby, that's why I'm in love with

>> you, Pretty baby...."
>>
>> I'll return to Megan's questions--given time (and a bit more wine.
>> Lottsa poetry--especially the classics about wine and wine red
>> seas, ...)
>>
>> I raised questions--but you, reader, must settle them for yourselves.
>>
>> Here's one you might wish to ask each of us: What is the difference
>> in approach to gatherings of Lee and those
>>
>
>
>> Big Grandma
>> (who will return anon)
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
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Received on Fri 04 Apr 2008 09:48:37 AM CDT