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Poetry in the 21st Century


# 58512
Poetry in the 21st Century
Explains the continuing relevance of poetry in our current era.
1,280 words (approx. 5.1 pages) | 1 source | APA | 2004 United States


Paper Summary:

As the 21st century begins, poetry remains relevant to the lives of people in the Western world, an antidote to the popular culture of spectacle and instant gratification. Using the example of British poet, Jamie McKendrick, this paper argues that poetry remains relevant because it reflects what is universally felt and experienced by humanity. Poetry is irrelevant to popular culture, but not to the populace. McKendrick's poetry reflects life in a way that more spectacular entertainment cannot do. His poems invite the reader to reflect on great questions and to notice small details and beauties of the world. One of McKendrick's abilities is to express emotions in a way that the readers themselves could perhaps never manage. Poets are truth-speakers, and because their work truly reflects life, it is seldom straightforward. It is rare that a poem is fully appreciated after the first reading. Poetry demands engagement with the reader or listener; it cannot be passively watched like a Hollywood film. The reader must interact with the poem, and in the process, helps create the poem, since the meaning inferred by one reader may be different from that of another reader, and both may be different from the author's intended meaning. The paper concludes that poetry continues to be relevant because it expresses the human experience and does so with an uncommon intimacy and truthfulness.

From the Paper:

"A poem will last for centuries if it skillfully explores the human experience because the essence of that experience does not change. Sappho and John Donne, for example, will always be relevant because people will always develop romantic infatuations. Alienation, longing, love, grief, the search for meaning, the discovery of the sublime in mundane life: These things will always be relevant. McKendrick can set his poems outside of time, as he does with "The Belen", or set a poem in Dante's Hell, because he writes about being human, not about being human in a particular century. In Ink Stone, he often writes of loss. The struggle of the intellect to understand death and the loneliness felt at the death of someone who understood one's dreams will resonate with readers in the next century as much as in this one because the act of grieving will not change."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Poetry in the 21st Century (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 09, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Creative-Essay-Poetry-in-the-21st-Century/58512

MLA Citation:

"Poetry in the 21st Century" 15 January 2012. Web. 09 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Creative-Essay-Poetry-in-the-21st-Century/58512>




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Published by:

Bookish Ivan US
Publisher Since:
Apr 15, 2005
I studied English Lit at Oxford then did a masters in Politics. Currently doing a second masters, once again in English Literature.
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