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  Re: How to criticize poetry
« Reply #15 on: March 26, 2010, 09:20:35 PM » by Tiko Lewis
I'll be back after work...this post will change then It's to remind me where I want to be later!:)


REMINDER!  Sue Lozynskyj, you are supposed to be here.  I'm most interested in hearing your submission.

:D

thanks,

tiko
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...i don't eat jelly beans afterward.

  Re: How to criticize poetry
« Reply #16 on: March 28, 2010, 11:47:58 AM » by Sue Lozynskyj
Sorry Tiko, life takes over sometimes! thanks for calling me back...

I find it most useful when someone says why. 

Why they like or don't,

What they like or don't,

Where things should go in the piece...reordering suggestions

When it should stop or start...the familiar top and tail so many of my poems need.

I love it if someone gives feedback that they have read my poem aloud, and report any tongue trips, or how the words sounded.  Lynn is especially good at this.  And I really like to know about any physical sensations or reactions...my eyes filled up, I felt my pulse quicken.

I like people to notice the title too, and tell me if they think it's not working.  All this is not very intellectual, it's a more craft-based approach. 

When I take time to comment in detail on someone's work I like to know what they thought of my suggestions...this has helped me very much with the feedback I give.  If someone always tries to justify why they cannot change a single word of the poem I'm unlikely to return to another piece by them...I do tend to be a bit textbook when suggesting changes but Milner and other wiser heads will sometimes point out the merit of the existing words.  I think the more people who comment the better...otherwise we all end up writing in the same style.


I enjoy the style of criticism on this site...good humoured, not dogmatic, respectful

Enough?
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Chance favours the prepared mind: Louis Pasteur

  Re: How to criticize poetry
« Reply #17 on: April 02, 2010, 07:50:34 AM » by silent lotus
~~~

 from undated pages


"Empty paper creates poetry, publishing instills the world with drops of hope"........silent lotus


"Poetry is that which precedes the need for definition".......silent lotus



~~~

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  Re: How to criticize poetry
« Reply #18 on: April 07, 2010, 08:01:37 AM » by silent lotus



CineGraphic — October 06, 2009 — This short was made for the 2007 72 Hour Film Festival in Frederick, Maryland.
All of the clips used in this film came from a reel of 35mm nitrate found in an old theater somewhere in Pennsylvania.

The projectionist clipped these scenes to meet local moral standards of the time.
Will our current forms of censorship look just as ridiculous to future generations?
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  Re: How to criticize poetry
« Reply #19 on: April 07, 2010, 08:27:52 AM » by Tom Riordan
well, I'm no prude, but those feet-alone scenes ARE darn racy! thanks, SL. Years ago I inadvertently lost a dear friend's homemade VHS compendium of favorite sex scenes. maybe with this I can make amends...tom
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  Re: How to criticize poetry
« Reply #20 on: April 10, 2010, 03:12:54 PM » by cherylleverette
silent, your 'forbidden images' youtube is priceless.  amazing isn't it?  regarding feet only images, Tom, love the one where the chick keeps trying to put her shoe back on but it's backwards.  I bet she felt caught at being such a floozy.  -cheryl
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"I have no intention of explaining how the correspondence which I now offer to the public fell into my hands....The sort of script which is used...can be very easily obtained by anyone who has learned the knack...."~C.S.Lewis

  Re: How to criticize poetry
« Reply #21 on: April 10, 2010, 04:48:09 PM » by Marion Alice Poirier
Tom, I came to this very interesting post late,
and I can't add much to what has already been
said nor can I speak as eloquently as some.

I agree with most of the comments, some
more than others.  There are many sides
to every debate.  The first thing I noticed
was the title of the post.  "How to criticize
poetry."
I have never thought of a review as criticism,
rather I think of it as offering suggestions.

Everyone who posts a poem should review
as many poems as possible.  If you are
new to the process an encouraging comment
is good - not useless IMO.  At least make
an attempt.  Tom, by tagging it criticism,
you may cause writers to be reluctant
about offering an opinion of what could
improve a poem.  It is always on a take
or leave basis.  I try to add this, but
sometimes don't, (since it should be understood).

I don't agree with all of the methods
you mentioned, but you have helped
me many time to improve my poems
by using your suggestions.

Every reply should be acknowledged;
it is only common courtesy.
Most are very good about this and gracious.
I am appreciative of any response
even when on a few occasions my work
has been called fluff.   :)

To each his own.  It makes me try harder.

Thanks for starting this post, Tom.
It's an important topic.

Marion

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  Re: How to criticize poetry
« Reply #22 on: April 10, 2010, 06:55:27 PM » by Tom Riordan
Thanks, Marion, you're right, "criticize" sounds scary. I only mean it as reviewing, as you say - what book critics or movie critics do. I should change the title. Tom
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  Re: How to respond to other people's poetry
« Reply #23 on: May 31, 2010, 03:03:59 PM » by Jerry Pike
wow, now here's a subject.... I had to respond on seeing eliot mentioned.
In a poetry group i belong to he is lauded to the skies, and try as i have, many times, i've found ploughing though wasteland, a chore, despite many great lines, and still struggle with his high pedestal.
I read it again, then again...and eventually, on seeing a book called a guide to t s eliot, bought and tramped through a few chapters, till it wore me down.....then a year later, i bought a students guide to the selected poems of... and downed a few pints of that....by which time sadly i was no clearer on his brilliance and thought that if i needed to read two books to understand one poem, maybe i was either from the lower echelons in brave new world, or, it just wasn't my thing. So reading other people referring to it as a minefeild, helped me breathe out...thanks
I'm now firmly ensconced, back reading things that i know where they're at, and i don't care, cause i like winnie the pooh.
jerry

and on the subject of critique, i appreciate all and any i may get, but often trying to reply to others, miss the point of some deeper poems, so may edge gently away from commenting, but i blame tigger for that.
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  Re: How to respond to other people's poetry
« Reply #24 on: May 31, 2010, 04:04:03 PM » by Tom Riordan
Jerry, what single thing do writers need to find out more than when they fail to make a point? Please do tell me when I don't! Tom
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  Re: How to respond to other people's poetry
« Reply #25 on: May 31, 2010, 04:24:43 PM » by Jerry Pike
can't say i ever missed your points tom, but many poems do lose me, and i start wondering what its all about, even at my poetry group, we all sometimes are amazed by what other people think our poems are about....its goes...

each reads their own own poem
no explanations
excuses
then all are free to comment, but the poet must stay silent till the end, not a word.
the poem must stand on its own feet.
and its always interesting to see what others read into them.
now i'll shut up
cheers
jeery
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  Re: How to respond to other people's poetry
« Reply #26 on: May 31, 2010, 04:37:58 PM » by Anne Shurlock
Thanks for this thread, Tom.  I suspect many wallflowers (ahem) just feel a bit under-qualified to comment on some of the great stuff on here.  After an initial emotional response, I need to read, re-read, and then read what other people have read into something, before having any intellectual thoughts! But I say, start small, and learn.  The qualified critic will come with practise (hopefully!)
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  Re: How to respond to other people's poetry
« Reply #27 on: May 31, 2010, 04:45:21 PM » by Tom Riordan
As I said, Anne, don't intimidate yourself! Something happens to everyone when they read a poem, and the writers need to know what that is -- intellectual or not -- so they compare it with what they wanted to happen, and revise accordingly. -Tom 
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  Re: How to respond to other people's poetry
« Reply #28 on: June 04, 2010, 05:39:14 PM » by Lynn Doiron
It's the "connection" made with the reader (more than one, if possible!) I like to hear about, as well as all those areas Sue mentioned in an earlier post, and what tom says above in reply #29 -- intellectual or not.  I would add that along with comparing with what was wanted to happen and revising accordingly, comments from readers make me look at what I have written and explore my reasoning for having written in just such a way.  Sometimes my reasoning doesn't hold up; other times it is all too evident no reasoning whatsoever was used initially!  And still other times, I discover more about the 'whys' behind a particular phrasing or word choice. 

I find it amazing and magical and curious, the different takes we readers have on the same posted work!  How one comment from another poet can open new ways of viewing a third poet's work.
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My blogs:
http://lwww.lynndoiron.wordpress.com for memoir/journal/poetry

  Re: How to respond to other people's poetry
« Reply #29 on: June 28, 2010, 11:36:58 AM » by silent lotus
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