1 / 12

Traditional and Modern Haiku

Traditional and Modern Haiku. What is haiku?.

buck
Download Presentation

Traditional and Modern Haiku

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Traditional and Modern Haiku

  2. What is haiku? • The haiku is a traditional form of short poem that originates in Japan. The structure of the haiku is based on syllables per line. Traditional haikus are about nature. However, in modern times, the haiku has been used to write about a variety of subjects. • LINE 1: 5 syllables • LINE 2: 7 syllables • LINE 3: 5 syllables (In translation and in other languages, these conventions are often ignored.)

  3. Key Elements of a Traditional Haiku: • Rhyme and metaphor are avoided. • Descriptiveness is emphasized, with no narrative explanation. • When read aloud, it can be completed in one breath. • A cutting word is often included—a grammatical break that marks a transition or pause in thought between separate parts of the poem. First snowfallingon the half-finished bridge.Matsuo BashoTranslated by Robert Hass

  4. Haiku is more than a form of poetry; it is a way of seeing the world. Each haiku captures a moment of experience— (This and the subsequent slides are from A.C. Missias’ essay, “Contemporary Haiku”—to read the full essay, visit http://webdelsol.com/Perihelion/acmarticle.htm) Old pond...a frog jumps inwater's sound. Matsuo BashoTranslated byWilliam Higginson

  5. an instant when the ordinary suddenly reveals its inner nature and makes us take a second look at the event, at human nature, at life. Won't you come and seeloneliness? Just one leaffrom the kiri tree. Matsuo Basho

  6. “…haiku has not changed much from the days of medieval Japan. The essence of one moment of wisdom captured within a few, short lines is still what inspires writers and draws audiences from around the world.” Rain falls on the grass, filling the ruts left by the festival cart. Buson

  7. “It can be as elevated as the ringing of a temple bell, or as simple as sunlight catching a bit of silverware on your table;” So very still, even cherry blossoms are not stirred by the temple bell. Fuhaku

  8. “as isolated as a mountain top, or as crowded as a subway car; reveling in beauty or acknowledging the ugly.” Traveling this high  mountain trail, delighted  by violets Matsuo Basho

  9. “What unifies these moments is the way they make us pause and take notice, the way we are still recalling them hours later—” Clouds appear and bring to men a chance to restfrom looking at the moon. Matsuo Basho

  10. “the feeling of having had a momentary insight transcending the ordinary, or a glimpse into the very essence of ordinariness itself.” For a lovely bowl let us arrange these flowers... Since there is no rice Matsuo Basho

  11. English haiku • Written since the 1950’s • Sometimes has fewer than 17 syllables, due to differences between English and Japanese—11 are often used instead • Long-short-long pattern still usually applies The little girl on the planeWho turned her doll’s head around To look at me. J.D. Salinger

  12. Imagist movement in the early 1900’s: This is Just To Say I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which you were probably saving for breakfast Forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold William Carlos Williams The Red Wheelbarrow so much dependsupon a red wheelbarrow glazed with rainwater beside the whitechickens. William Carlos Williams In a Station of the Metro. The apparition of those faces in the crowd; Petals on a wet, black bough. Ezra Pound

More Related