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🦋 Poetic process: structure and meaning
In the course of thinking about my idiot poem I came up with a metaphor that I like: Narrative structure has the function of a candle's wick. The flame of meaning will not adhere to a wick-less text. Thinking of meaning as the flame that burns in text (without consuming it), one which will dissipate if it does not have a wick, can take me in a lot of directions; one that seems especially promising is to think of song and poetry as a way of providing additional structure in which to anchor meaning so the narrative thread need not be as strong. (This ties in nicely with a take on Wittgenstein, "Whereof one cannot speak, one must sing.") The structure of the poem as I am seeing it now is,
- The idiot cannot speak. His story is full of sound and fury raging unexpressed.
- The idiot speaks. This is represented as a mechanical process, the unwinding of a clockwork. The web of his story unravels and its meaning evaporates.
- The idiot sings. His sung story becomes the landscape and its meaning the universe.
- The idiot falls silent, sleeps. The story he told assumes divine status i.e. pure meaning in the firmament -- its structure does not persist.
posted morning of Monday, December 31st, 2012 ➳ More posts about Poetry ➳ More posts about Writing Projects ➳ More posts about Projects
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