Poetry in the Digital Age
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Edited by:
Claudia Benthien
Today, poetry is often found outside the book: on the stage, in urban spaces, or on the internet, where poetic language is supplemented by musical or visual components or amplified in the poet’s performance, thus opening up new access to a genre that has often been considered abstract and elitist.
Why is poetry so popular at present? What methods and theories must be developed to do justice to these new formats – like spoken word, digital poetry, and poems on social media? How do popular culture and "high culture" interact? What are the aesthetic, cultural, and political functions of creating, presenting, and disseminating poetic texts in various media?
This interdisciplinary book series is devoted to contemporary poetry in all its facets, from works of popular culture to sophisticated art forms. It thus combines literary studies approaches with performance studies, media and film studies, sound studies, speech studies, and visual culture studies.
The "Poetry in the Digital Age" series is supported by an ERC Advanced Grant.
Advisory Board
Frieder von Ammon (Munich, DE); Hannes Bajohr (Berkeley, US); Jörg Döring (Siegen, DE); Julia Lajta-Novak (Vienna, AT); Karen Leeder (Oxford, UK); Ralph Müller (Fribourg, CH); Jesper Olsson (Uppsala, SE); Paweł Piszczatowski (Warsaw, PL); Jessica Pressman (San Diego, US); Antonio Rodriguez (Lausanne, CH); Hans Kristian S. Rustad (Oslo, NO); Holger Schulze (Copenhagen, Dk); Eckhard Schumacher (Greifswald, DE); Henrieke Stahl (Trier, DE); Birgitte Stougaard Pedersen (Aarhus, DK)
Topics
This book examines the evolving medial entanglements between poetry, music, and sound in the digital age, foregrounding the complex interrelations between textuality, vocality, and sonic materiality. Drawing on perspectives from literary sound studies, intermediality theory, and word and music studies, the contributors explore contemporary poetic practices that engage with music and sound beyond conventional musico-literary genres. The phenomena examined here range from recent transformations of traditional oral poetry and the art song to innovative intermedial formats such as poetry audiowalks and spoken music. The book highlights the impact of digital technologies on musico-poetic forms, tracing how contemporary practices challenge traditional genre boundaries and reconfigure listening as an integral component of poetic experience. By bridging historical perspectives with emerging sound cultures, this collection offers new insights into the mediality of poetry and its intersections with music and sound art.
As a multifaceted and intermedial phenomenon, poetry in the digital age not only demands a rethinking and expansion of the traditional paradigms of literary studies but also attracts increasing attention from other humanities. This interdisciplinary handbook is thus addressed both to literary scholars and to the broadest academic audience interested in contemporary poetry research. It offers 50 contributions by an international collective of authors that highlight the diversity of contemporary poetry, examining it from a wide variety of complementing theoretical and methodological angles.
The handbook focuses on contemporary modes of poetry presentation that are often located beyond the book, e.g., on stages, in public spaces, as multi- as well as transmedia publications, or on digital platforms. Such intermedial poetic practices, which may supplement poetic language with elements borrowed from music, visual art, cinema, or theater and performance, are transforming the forms and functions of poetry. It four parts thus (1) adapt established concepts and parameters of poetry research to the digital age, (2) explore established genres and emerging formats, (3) introduce interdisciplinary perspectives and new research fields, and (4) engage in current debates.
This book critically examines how the production and reception of performed poetry has changed in the wake of digitalization. The interdisciplinary chapters in this volume deal with fundamental questions confronting performed poetry in the digital age: How are concepts like liveness and performativity being adapted to mediatized digital environments? How are platforms like YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok helping to popularize performed poetry, and what online formats are emerging? How is the ubiquity of digital technologies transforming fields like experimental sound poetry, and how are they performed on stage?
Bringing together authors from various countries and disciplines, this volume addresses diverse topics such as the evolution of poetry readings in Scandinavia; poetry slams as political criticism and a social practice in Brazil, the UK, the US, and Italy; the performance of AI poetry; posthuman entanglements between gendered bodies and technological devices in experimental sound poetry; the aesthetics and practices of poetic activism on the street and social media; and how recordings of performed poetry are being circulated in our current platformized, digital environment.
How to grasp poetry in its contemporary digital situation, a situation wherein poetry travels across digital and analoge media platforms and intended or not collaborates with computers?
Situating Scandinavian Poetry in the Computational Network environment investigates how heterogeneous forms of poetry in Scandinavia interact with and work in a digital media environment, how digital programmable and network media intervene with and shape new poetic forms or remediate older forms of poetry, and how digital and digitalized poetry through its self-reflexivity sheds light on digital media technology and its role for poetry and potentially for literature and aesthetics more in general. In doing so, it also argues for the importance of close reading poetry in digital media. It includes an historical and theoretical approach to poetry in digital media and analysis of poetic works in Scandinavia. The book is written within the framework of posthumanism and what N. Katerine Hayles calls "technogenesis", and makes up the argument that contemporary poetry constitutes and is constituted by a computational network environment of human and non-human subjects, wherein poems travels in an egalitarian media ecology .
The book is relevant for researchers and students in the field of poetry, students and researchers in the field of literary studies, media studies and digital culture studies, and teachers interested in presenting newer forms of poetry for their students.
This study takes a literary studies and urban sociological perspective to examine poetry that can be seen or heard in urban spaces. The spectrum is extremely broad, ranging from wall poetry to projections of poetry on representative buildings to informal actions by poets or residents claiming their "right to the city" (H. Lefebvre) by displaying poetry in parks or subways.