What next?
-
The WWW is encroaching on all the areas where poetry
comes from, affecting our notions of identity and
communication as well as determining what parts
of the canon and the world are accessible.
- Our mental maps are changing - they no longer
have borders as between nations, but roads and gateways as between cities
or web pages.
-
Paul Ginestier in "The Poet and the Machine" suggests that
cities tend to revive the basic archetypes of the human
imagination. If people are sufficiently influenced by
the discourse within which they are embedded, then even a return to
Romanticism will lead to something new, beyond our oral past to escapist
pastorals set in an unwired megalopis.
- The WWW can change poetry, not so much by engendering new
forms but by reshaping poets
and the world of poetry, making what's currently
available only to theorists and the avant-garde an everyday experience for all
so that the fabled intelligent layman will again be able to tap into
poetry.
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