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By Elz Cuya
| Robert Pinsky, 39th U.S Poet Laureate |
Over the past three years, third time American Poet
Laureate Robert Pinsky traveled across the nation asking governors,
teachers, children, retirees, the homeless and Hollywood stars alike,
what is their favorite poem and why. He got an enormous response.
Americans everywhere gathered for poetry events to read aloud their
favorite poem. And thousands of people flooded Pinsky's Boston office
with letters about their favorite poem, sharing with him childhood
memories, stories of loss, passion and love.
Pinsky says that reading a poem, as opposed to saying a
poem is like looking at the notes of sheet music without hearing
the song. "When you say a poem aloud, to hear them, in your own
voice and your own ears, it's not acting, or performing, exactly
-- it's letting your self, your very body, become the instrument
or medium for that work of art. When you say Dickinson aloud, you
are her instrument, your voice is her medium."
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| In St. Louis,
the host of Jazz in the A.M reads Creation, by
James Weldon Johnson. |
He also noticed that when people share why they love a certain
poem, whether it's Shakespeare, Maya Angelou or haiku, something
extraordinary happens. People light up, and passion becomes abundantly
clear. "Simply by asking that each person express a personal attachment
to a poem, the Favorite Poem Project has dramatized a profound personal
connection with poetry."
And unlike other forms of art such as television, film or music,
the ownership of poetry is unlimited. "Poetry is a bodily art,"
Pinsky says, "and the body isn't the poet's body, it's the audience's
body, it's your body. Because the poem is spoken with your voice."
Refreshingly, Pinsky's Favorite Poem Project isn't only for published
poets, professional critics or "the artiste," but for poem lovers
of all ages, backgrounds and professions. Pinsky says that poetry
provides a shared ownership. He recalls, "Some poet when asked 'When
and how did you become a poet?' responded to the interviewer, 'when
and how did you stop being a poet?' The implication is that children
engage in art very naturally -- like moving the body in rhythm to
music. There may be something in that. Certainly I believe that
the heritage of Mozart or Charlie Parker, of George Herbert or Emily
Dickinson, are those who love their art."
To celebrate National Poetry Month this April, Pinsky will present
an audio and video millennium archive of Americans' favorite poems
to the Library of Congress as a Bicentennial Gift to the Nation.
The poems, Pinsky says, "will present something like a snapshot
of the United States at the turn of the millennium year, through
the lens of poetry."
But how will poetry survive in this age of special effects, interactive
DVDs and the Internet? It may be held that Americans are too distracted
to cherish the more simple, ancient art of poetry. Certainly, the
massive response to the Favorite Poem Project rejects that stereotype,
illustrating that poetry does have a strong presence in this country.
And for people who hunger for interactive media, perhaps the art
of poetry and reading a poem aloud is as interactive as you can
get.
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In Los Angeles,
Kiyoshi Houston reads Untitled Tanka in both Japanese
and in English. "The poem is almost a meditation for me," he
says. |
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In New York,
Geraldine Ferraro reads Rudyard Kipling's If. Photo courtesy
of the Academy of American Poets. |
To hear people saying their favorite poem, or to find out how
you can host a Favorite Poem reading, log on to http://www.favoritepoem.org.
For a calendar of events celebrating National Poetry Month, log
on to http://www.poets.org.
Additional Sources
Pinsky, Robert and Maggie Dietz, eds. American's Favorite Poems.
(W.W Norton and Company, 1999).
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