Performance poetry has its roots in oral traditions but gained new life in the 20th century. The Beat poets popularized recording poetry performances, while the Nuyorican Poets Cafe created a space for live audiences. Poetry slams were founded in the 1980s as competitive live poetry events, helping make poetry more accessible. Slam poetry often focuses on personal identity and current issues, using rhythmic language and occasional music. Notable performance poets have included Gil Scott-Heron, whose proto-rap influenced hip hop, and Kevin Coval, who describes hip hop poetica as continuing ancestral narratives.
1. Poetry of the USA since 1945 Some Notes on Performance Poetry Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
2. From Dana Gioia's essay 'Disappearing Ink: Poetry at the End of Print Culture' Influenced by print culture's habit of silent reading and its typographical bias toward a text's visual identity on the page, contemporary literary poets often neglect or underplay the auditory elements of their verse. Too overt or apprehensible a verbal pattern seems old-fashioned to many poets. When they employ new or traditional auditory forms, they often tone down the musical effects by deliberately flattening the rhythms, avoiding end-stopped lines, and eliminating noticeable alliteration or assonance. If they venture rhyme, that most conspicuous auditory technique of verse, they often play it down as well by burying it in run-on lines or substituting slant and half-rhymes...The new popular poets, by contrast, flamboyantly display their metrical schemes. In the aesthetic of rap, for instance, the stronger the beat, the more extravagant the rhyme, the more elaborate the pattern skillfully deployed, the better the poem... Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
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4. In the early 20th c poets like Louis Zukofsky called for a renewed emphasis on poetry as sound. This attitude to poetry helped to encourage an environment in which poetry readings were fostered. This was reinforced by Charles Olson's call for a poetic line based on human breath.
5. The Harlem Renaissance and subsequent Black Arts Movement placed great emphasis on the oral tradition in poetry. Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
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7. During the 1980s, the term 'Performance Poetry' came into popular usage to describe poetry written or composed for performance rather than print distribution.
8. e.g. performance poet Hedwig Gorski, whose experimental audio recordings achieved success on spoken word radio programs. She performed with her band, East of Eden Band; and claimed to draw influence from Ginsberg and the Beats, with whom she was associated.Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
9. Subsequent performance – and 'slam' poets were more interested in small live audiences. Venues like Nuyorican Poets Cafe in New York City Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
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11. A poetry slam is a competition at which poets read or recite original work. These performances are judged on a numeric scale (1-10) by selected members of the audience.
12. Typically, poetry slam is highly politicized, speaking on many issues including current social and economic issues, gendered injustices, and racial issues. Poets are judged not only on the content of their slam but the manner of delivery and passion behind their words.
13. Since 1990 there has been a yearly National US Poetry SlamSarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
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15. Slam Style Can include a broad range of voices and styles, e.g. Hip-hop music and dub poetry Dramatic delivery including shifting voices and tones, Backing tracks/sounds and dance Sometimes, none of the above: poets may use unrhyming narrative format, flat ironic tone – non 'theatrical' delivery. Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
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17. Devices such as homophonic wordplay, repetition, singing, call and response, and rhyme are frequently used on the slam stage.
18. Much of the work performed at slams could be categorised as comedy, parody, or drama.
19. 'Protest' pieces are frequent at a slam; many poets regard the slam stage as a political soapbox. Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
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21. The audience is encouraged to receive a performed poem as a 'confessional moment'
22. A great deal of the work appearing in recent slam and spoken word anthologies and films confirms the trend of proclaiming one's identity for an audience.
23. Some slam poets feel that the genre has fallen 'from a lyrical collaborative art to that of an art of self-proclamation' (Genevieve Van Cleve)Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
24. Patricia Smith, 'Skinhead‘: a persona poem: They call me skinhead, and I got my own beauty.It is knife-scrawled across my back in sore, jagged letters, it’s in the way my eyes snap away from the obvious.I sit in my dim matchbox, on the edge of a bed tousled with my ragged smell,slide razors across my hair,count how many waysI can bring blood closer to the surface of my skin.These are the duties of the righteous,the ways of the anointed. (first stanza) 'When I perform the poem, audiences are jolted by his voice coming from the mouth of a black woman'. Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
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26. Hip Hop Poetica (Kevin Coval) 'Hip-hop poetica are modern griots, indigenous keepers and tellers of his/her/stories. Implicit in that is the always tale of a people, the continuing narrative of family and ancestors...Hope-hop poetics is the epic recitation of the marginalized, a meta-pronouncement of displacement in and outside of historical specificity, as well as the particular moment of neighborhood, space, and time...' Sarah Law Poetry of the USA since 1945
29. systematic rupture of line and time...enjambment and breath-line units...sampling from forms...text size and style...the moment fissured and reassembled.