Thursday, December 13, 2018

Modern Poetry Assignment - Online Writing


The Importance of Imagery and How it Helped me Appreciate Poetry
            This semester I have taken two poetry classes – Modern Poetry and a Poetry Workshop – which have both opened my eyes to the world of poetry and how it functions. I was one of those students who came into this semester only writing fiction, with an idea in my head that because of this, I’d never understand poetry and poetry was something I could respect but not necessarily “get.” I saw poetry as something pretentious and something that was taken too seriously. I think this came from the idea that it wasn’t personal, that it was to show off. However, after this semester I was proven wrong and I have drastically changed. Not only have I changed as a person, but I’ve changed as a writer. I’ve learned poetry isn’t about this at all. It IS personal and it is honest. It achieves this through using formal techniques, such as detailed imagery.
My writing has developed overall and I have even began to write some prose poetry, which has allowed me to understand imagery more. Poetry, overall, relies on imagery and specificity in what is on the page – whether that is the words, the techniques, or the structure of the poem – and everything that is put into a poem must be done so with thought. This is just simply different from fiction. Fiction uses words as a way to describe, sure, but not every word has to have meaning or weight to it. Some are used for clarity, some to set up an image or dialogue, some for tone or style. Realizing this helped me appreciate imagery and poetry more. A poem can be a quick, succinct piece of art that is incredibly vivid and impactful. Isn’t that kind of cool? In my fiction, I have started to analyze what I have written more. What are the choices I am putting in here? Am I being specific and honest? Are my images strong? I began to pull images from what I know and this made my writing more personal. This personal feeling is in poetry often and so are images. Images need to be specific, detailed, and the poem needs to be honest in order for it to be successful and personal for the reader. In this post, I will give some of my favorite examples of imagery in poems I’ve read this semester. The poets I mention are not the only ones who use imagery successfully, but they are just some of my favorites.
To start, I want to look at William Carlos Williams. He was one poet I learned about in some of my intro classes back in freshman year but have learned more about and grown to appreciate. His poems pushed the boundaries during the time he was writing. Like other Modern poets, he took what was traditional and flipped it on its head. Many of his poems had unique structures and forms. All of them, however, had a close attention to detail and vivid imagery. To start, let’s look at “The Red Wheelbarrow”, which is one of his most popular poems and good one to get whoever is reading this to understand when I mean imagery is powerful. The poem is only four stanzas, each being a couplet (or two lines that work off one another). Overall, the poem is only sixteen words but these sixteen words create a vivid scene for whoever reads it, almost like looking at a painting. The lines, “a red wheel/ barrow// glazed with rain/water” are excellent examples of how imagery is used in this piece. Can’t you see this in your head? The wheel barrow is given a color and given the detail of being glazed with rain water. For me, this painted such a clear image in my head. The first line read, “So much depends/ upon” and the reader, because of these images, can start to question just how much actually depends upon this red wheel barrow.  
The next poet I want to discuss is Robert Frost. He wrote a lot of nature poems with imagery that was complex, but also felt organic as he drew from the world around him. Many of his poems put the reader in the middle of the scene, whether that is walking through the woods or in a cabin in the winter. His descriptive imagery and focus on word choice allow for his poems to feel like stories. The reader is put in the middle of these stories, surrounded by the descriptive scenery around them. His attention to detail and nature allow these poems to breathe on the page. Where they are long, they are also engaging and some of my personal favorites.  
One poem I want to focus on in particular is “Desert Places.” This isn’t one he is widely known for, but it is one of my favorites. The poem starts with the line, “Snow falling and night falling fast, oh, fast.” This line pulls the reader into the scene. He is specific and abstract with this image at the time. Specific because he explains that both snow and night are falling and they are falling fast. But he is also abstract, because what does night falling look like? A picture in my head is formed from this because I know what snow falling look like, so I mix that with my idea of what night falling may look like. Because the first line is so beautifully rendered and gets the reader to use their imagination from the beginning, the whole poem feels in the zone and vivid.  These images work together to produce a melancholy tone, one of feeling alone. Without the specific and detailed imagery in this piece, this tone would not have been achieved.
Overall, I have learned a great deal about poetry by focusing on the image. Imagery is in both fiction and poetry heavily and is important because it is also in the world around us. When we look outside, we see specific things. We see a red barn, not just a barn, or a sparrow, not just a bird. When we write we must transfer this specificity and attention to detail. The world around us is vivid and all it takes to put that on paper is to pay attention to the details. To put importance in what is on the page. This is why poetry is special and I will continue to put this attention to detail and images in all my work, even my fiction. I feel that my creative writing has improved greatly and I am really glad I took these two poetry classes. For anyone wondering if they should look into poetry more…yes! You should. It will help the world around you be a little more vivid.

No comments:

Post a Comment