Penny's poetry pages Wiki
Advertisement
Alternative poetry

Oral tradition
Oral interpretation
Oral literature
Oral poetry • Ethnopoetics
Poetry reading
How to read poetry out loud
Performance poetry
How to perform poetry
Sound poetry • Slam poetry
Spoken word • Rap • Dub

Found poetry

Cento  • Erasure poetry
Cut-up technique
Flarf • Spoetry

Visual poetry

Pattern poetry
Carmen figuratum
Diamante • Calligram
Concrete poetry
How to write a concrete poem
Haptic poetry
Concrete and visual poets

Digital poetry

Hypertext poetry
Interactive poetry

This box: view · talk · edit
Performing arts
Major forms

Dance | Music | Opera | Theatre | Circus

Minor forms

Magic | Puppetry | Poetry reading
Performance poetry | Slam

Genres

Drama | Tragedy | Comedy
Tragicomedy | Romance
Satire | Epic | Lyric

view · talk · edit
File:Wiedemann.jpg

Barbara Wiedemann reading from Half-Life of Love at BookFest 2009, Montgomery, AL

A poetry reading is a performance of poetry, normally given on a small stage in a cafe or bookstore, although poetry readings given by notable poets frequently are booked into larger venues (amphitheaters, college auditoriums, etc.) to accommodate crowds. Unless otherwise indicated in advance, poetry readings almost always involve poets reading their own work or reciting it from memory - the recitation of a work by another poet is normally the act of a well-known poet who chooses to read a few poems by lesser-known poets or old friends that the poet feels should be more widely recognized. Poetry readings often involve several readers (often called "featured poets" or "featureds"), although normally one poet is chosen as a "headliner."

Though a form of entertainment until around the turn of the previous century, especially in the United States, readings have diminished in popularity over the course of the twentieth century. They have become less a part of the mainstream pop culture, and more identified with a literary fringe. They have remained most popular in large cities and college towns, where the population of artists and poets is larger and more self-sustaining.

One exception, however, is the poetry slam, a competitive format that has become increasingly popular, especially in the United States, since its inception in the 1980s. Much, though not all, of the poetry featured at slams has adapted to a hip-hop sensibility.

See also[]

Template:Portal

External links[]


Template:Speech-and-debate-stub


This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia. (view article). (view authors).
This page uses content from Wikinfo . The original article was at Wikinfo:Poetry reading.
The list of authors can be seen in the (view authors). page history. The text of this Wikinfo article is available under the GNU Free Documentation License and the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.
Advertisement