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                      | 03-14-01 14:55
 | There seems 
                        to be a lot of excitement regarding the creation of poetry 
                        for the Web. Any thoughts on disadvantages? posted by CK
 
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                      | 03-29-01 22:08
 | I think 
                        visual or image based poetry has been regarded as anti-intellectual 
                        in a lot of literary circles, which is too bad in my opinion 
                        because I think that adding visual or auditory components 
                        to poetry opens up new ways of using language-- something 
                        that could definitely stand to be examined more deeply 
                        in an academic setting. posted by Saul 
                        Leavy
 
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                      | 4-2-01 9:36
 | hasn't anything 
                        image-based also been regarded as anti-intellectual, though? 
                        find someone who thinks a book with illustrations or photographs 
                        isn't less serious than an all-text academic book. it's 
                        pretty hard. it's something you study a lot in visual 
                        arts programs (since you do have to explain on a regular 
                        basis why what you do is in fact serious and just as difficult 
                        as an engineering degree). posted by Zahra
 
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                      | 4-2-01 15:21
 | I do not 
                        think that the web is disadvantageous to poetry. If it 
                        is true poetry no matter what the tool is: sand, stone, 
                        marble, pencil, pen or keyboard, it will always be good 
                        poetry. posted by Antonio
 
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                      | 4-2-01 17:08
 | I really 
                        enjoyed responding with hearing, seeing and the joy of 
                        being able to move the images myself. I liked the first 
                        poems in 2000, some of the more recent films are not as 
                        creative and deep as the first group I watched. I like 
                        openended poems with universal vaules, not just goss and 
                        negative. Keep up the creativiey. I am a 64 yr old women 
                        who makes metal sculpture. posted by njb
 
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                      | 4-2-01 19:49
 | I think 
                        Antonio has raised an interesting issue here: how does 
                        a poem's medium - or the medium of any piece of literature, 
                        for that matter - affect its status as a poem? Must it 
                        be in ink on paper? Or does hypertextual, interactive 
                        poetry still maintain an innate literary quality, despite 
                        the difference of its presentation? posted by e.e.d.
 
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                      | 4-2-01 19:54
 | Change is 
                        good,,, although it makes us uncomfortable- every system 
                        is subject to abuse or vulnerable to corruption- but it 
                        is also educational... we need to appeal to the multitudes, 
                        and penetrate awareness, and utilize all possible senses- 
                        to amplify the message, of course, in some cases-More 
                        is less...- posted by Gail 
                        Banter
 
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                      | 4-4-01 11:18
 | I see this 
                        as any other artist would, it's just another medium for 
                        use of expressing the same thought. A painter may debate 
                        which medium better expresses his vision (watercolor, 
                        acrylic, oil,tempura, etc.), but he cannot argue the fact, 
                        that it is still a painting. posted by g.alexis
 
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                      | 4-30-01 8:39
 | The way 
                        I see it, any web site that can capture the attention 
                        of today's youth and is devoted to poetry, no matter what 
                        the genre, is, indeed, a welcomed addition to the ranks 
                        of poetic ambition. I believe the next "Bard of Poetry" 
                        (Bukowski!) will cut their poetic teeth on the 'net... 
                        I have read some of the best (and worst!) poetry from 
                        authors I would have never had a chance to read, thanks 
                        to the advent of the home computer. posted by RLF
 
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                      | 5-10-01 20:01
 | Poetry will 
                        remain poetry whatever form it might take. Herman Hesse 
                        in The Glass Bead Game writes of a group of intellectuals 
                        who knit together different mediums to create something 
                        that is, artistically, a much greater whole. For example 
                        a mathematician might use a Japanese shakahachi flute 
                        piece to illustrate the harmony of his mathematical principles. 
                        I believe we are closer to achieveing status as Glass 
                        Bead Game players. For me, a poet, graphic artist and 
                        musician, this is a hugely exciting medium. It allows 
                        a vast spectrum of freedom in expression. I can choose 
                        the words, the colour and the sound. posted by Averil 
                        Bones
 |   
                      | 6-9-01 11:03
 | guitar electric guitar
 penelectric pen
 posted by Jim 
                          Andrews
 |   
                      | 7-10-01 12:13
 | I was intrigued 
                        by what Matthew G. Kirschenbaum had 
                        to say in your editorial introduction. The professor 
                        of English at the University of Maryland whose focus is 
                        humanities computing noted that the poems on this site 
                        are constrained because they are written from within "a 
                        particular software application." He says, "there 
                        is a uniformity to the pieces on the Poems That Go site, 
                        mainly because of software design limitations." 
 That's true, of course, but it's also true of any medium: 
                        it's just as true of poetry that uses only words. Until 
                        poets and artists can transcend their medium and make 
                        it invisible to themselves -- until all the mechanics 
                        of artistic production become so fluid that they are transparent 
                        -- then all works will have a "uniformity." 
                        It was not until after years of hard work as a photojournalist 
                        that my camera, attachments, and all the darkroom decisions 
                        disappeared as I worked. Only then could I take the pictures 
                        I wanted because all the production mechanics were subsumed 
                        in the moment of making. Similarly, this new medium -- 
                        whether it's Flash or HTML or whatever -- will only be 
                        able to mature when -- like a potter's clay, wheel, tooling, 
                        and kiln -- the medium disappears and leaves behind the 
                        transmuted experience itself.
 We need to be very patient, 
                          observant, and supportive.posted by Paul 
                          Frank
 
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                      | 8-14-01 13:33
 | Paul ... excellent observations 
                          about the interface !! This is a subject that always 
                          causes a lot of discussion whenever writers of web literature 
                          meet (read new media/hypermedia ... although new media 
                          is actually a term that the arts world laid claim to 
                          some time back as Judy Malloy (ArtsWire) reminded me 
                          in a past Riding the Meridian round table discussion). 
                          Today, and for the last year, Flash has been the tool 
                          of choice for hypermedia poetry, whereas a few years 
                          ago, DHTML and javascript were the new 'tricks' in the 
                          book. Go a bit further back, before the web, and we'd 
                          be talking about StorySpace or Hypercard. One could 
                          even take a look further back into the late 80's and 
                          the work that some poets were doing on computers like 
                          the Amiga with then state of the art art/design/animation 
                          programs. 
 What strikes me is how difficult it is for any interface 
                          for creating 'literature' to become transparent when 
                          the programming tools are constantly evolving, and how 
                          at this present time, what 'writers' create is so strongly 
                          affected by the technology given to them by large companies 
                          like Macromedia, or by web browser display decisions 
                          made by Netscape (version 6 was a disaster for most 
                          pre 2000 coded DHTML).
 So it goes. Frustrating, inspiring, 
                          costly (how much is Flash 5 now??). It'll be interesting 
                          to see what we're all coding with two years from now.posted by Jennifer 
                          Ley
 
 |   
                      | 11-28-01 12:03
 | I am surprised 
                        and a liitle disappointed that so much of this discussion 
                        is taken up with points about the genre. However interesting 
                        and vauable such concerns are surely they are very secondary 
                        to what is actually said and promted in a Poem. Don't 
                        get me wrong, of course I recognise that how and what 
                        being said are inextricably linked, a badly imparted idea 
                        cannot be overwhelmed by the strength of the original 
                        idea(s), but surely there an be more discussion about 
                        how we feel about the ideas and emotions being prompted. 
                        With respect. posted by Andrew 
                        Kelly
 
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                      | 12-23-01 16:59
 | As a secondary 
                        English teacher, I'm glad I stumbled across this web site...this 
                        format may have a wider appeal to my students; perhaps 
                        a few will be inspired to put some of their own poetry 
                        into this format. My biggest reservation regarding 
                          this format is that the images and visual tricks may 
                          give poorly thought out poetry an appealing vaneer which 
                          the words by themselves couldn't evoke. Our attention 
                          may become distracted by the visuals thus making us 
                          less critical and more acceptant of anything, regardless 
                          of quality (especially considering the advances each 
                          subsequent program will have.)posted by SuzA
 
 |   
                      | 1-11-02 9:14
 | the pictures 
                        that are included with the poems may distract our thoughts 
                        and we may find ourselves paying more attention to the 
                        picture than to the poem itself. posted by chrissy
 
 |   
                      | 1-11-02 18:01
 | I think 
                        these last two comments represent a common criticism of 
                        new media poetry--that images put readers at risk by not 
                        encouraging critical engagement with a poem. Images regarded 
                        as "visual tricks" are seen as a distraction 
                        from the true form of poetry--traditional text-based or 
                        written form. In the case of new media poetry, are images 
                        separate from the "poem"? These questions are 
                        important for examining any visual work--do images merely 
                        lull us into believing anything is "good" if 
                        it conforms to some visual design? What about film? Do 
                        we know a movie is good because post-production work wows 
                        us? Are we at risk in mistaking some dumbed-down Hollywood 
                        blockbuster for a masterpiece because big budget productions 
                        somehow disintegrate any critical capacity we might have 
                        developed? posted by Megan
 
 |   
                      | 4-19-023:12
 | I’m very excited I found this site. 
                          If as a research tool is great, as a stage for digital 
                          poetry is fantastic. Thank you Megan and Ingrid for 
                          this space you have created. Now, I want to share my 
                          perspective about visual poetry with you. For the past 
                          six years I’ve been invited to participate in many Biennials 
                          and Visual/Experimental Poetry Festivals around the 
                          world. Some of the people I have met are Clemente Padin, 
                          Fernando Aguiar, Jaap Blonk, Klaus Groh, Harry Polkingorn, 
                          and Loss Pequeño Glazier, among others. Probably you 
                          know some of these names. Most of the works that these 
                          people create is called Visual Poetry / Polipoetry, 
                          Experimental Poetry, and other similar names. I’ve saw/experienced 
                          thousands of works related to these fields, and I’ve 
                          tried to feel and understand these works in the same 
                          way I experience poetry, no matter if it’s written, 
                          oral or pictorial poetry (like a Van Gogh’s paint). 
                         As Antonio said at the beginning 
                          of this discussion, the medium is not an issue if poetry 
                          is there. But how do you know that poetry is there? 
                          Maybe is an intuition, a feeling that transcends the 
                          meaning and makes your senses blink like a police siren. 
                          I didn’t find that in almost all the works of these 
                          “poets.” Visual Poets tried to become artists through 
                          poetry while Conceptualists tried to become poets through 
                          art, but something didn’t work well, poetry wasn’t there, 
                          instead, there was a primitive aim of reaching poetry 
                          just by playing with letters, space, and developing 
                          funny fonts. But somehow, they lost the content, they 
                          lost the poetry, and all these movements started to 
                          be decadent and obsolete. But how poetry can be obsolete? 
                          The question is easy, it can’t. My conclusion is that 
                          all this visual/sonic approaches to poetry were experiments 
                          to set up a strong interface between poetry as content 
                          and poetry as object, an interface that we have now 
                          and that many non-traditional poets are producing.  Finally, I want to encourage 
                          all the poets/artists to keep working and finding new 
                          ways from the infinite list of possibilities that language 
                          has to offer, so we can keep experience this amazing 
                          entity called poetry.posted by Yucef Merhi
 
 |   
                      | 11-22-02 10:14
 | I feel as 
                        though the works in this site are pre interpreted. the 
                        more visual trickery, masterfull or not, the less any 
                        reader/viewer will do for themselves. is the intention 
                        of a poem to inspire individual interpretations? does 
                        a poem not live and grow by the unique interpretations 
                        of the reader/viewer? certainly the author has a significant 
                        role. they produce their creations with a skill, and set 
                        about a particular direction for the interpreter. the 
                        imagination powers the model. these visual interpretations 
                        foist a certain finished interpretation. posted by p.stuard
 
 |  
                      | 11-22-02 13:36
 | Why are images "visual trickery"? 
                          Does the inclusion of visual components absolve the 
                          reader/viewer from interpretive work? I don't think 
                          it does. This might require different work, but I still 
                          think it requires work.  Traditional poetry is considered 
                          "bad" when it uses worn-out metaphors that 
                          fail to enliven our perceptions or evoke a clear image 
                          in our minds, while "good" art modifies our 
                          habitual ways of thinking, feeling and perceiving. Bringing 
                          poetry to visual media means there will inevitably be 
                          other worn out metaphors, such as tired ways of using 
                          motion, obvious visual metaphors, interactivity just 
                          for the sake of it.  Looking back through the archives 
                          of projects featured in this site, some work falls 
                          victim to these problems. Recognizing and discussing 
                          how new media poetry can fail, or as Yucef put it a 
                          few posts above this one, when "poetry's not there" 
                          can help poets create more meaningful work in new media, 
                          and help audiences to critically approach these new 
                          forms. Although some work in PTG does a better job evoking 
                          meaningful, significant moments of critical reflection 
                          than others, we shouldn't hold the successfull investigations 
                          accountable for the new media poem that fails to do 
                          its work. The word "poetry" comes 
                          from the classical Greek sense of poiesis, meaning "calling 
                          into existence," and is about constructing, deconstructing, 
                          and reconstructing the world. I don't think we should 
                          presume that images = loss of imagination.
 posted by Megan
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