Does Poetry Have a Social Function?
This article inspired me to finally organize all of the interesting things I've collected.
"Does Poetry Have a Social Function," by Stephen Burt, Daisy Fried, Major Jackson, and Emily Warn.
I particularly responded to this by Major Jackson:
"Does Poetry Have a Social Function," by Stephen Burt, Daisy Fried, Major Jackson, and Emily Warn.
I particularly responded to this by Major Jackson:
Whether as a form of witness, as a medium which dignifies individual speech and thought, as a repository of our cumulative experiences, or as a space where we "purify" language, poetry, like all imaginative creations, divines the human enterprise. This is poetry's social value. . . . one of poetry's chief aims is to illumine the walls of mystery, the inscrutable, the unsayable. I think poetry ought to be taught not as an engine of meaning but as an opportunity to learn to live in doubt and uncertainty, as a means of claiming indeterminancy. Our species is deeply defined by its great surges of reason, but I think it high time we return to elemental awe and wonder. Such a position is necessary to our communal health.
Labels: poetry
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