Casting call- unique types wanted!

As poets we feel the need to write, but what do we write about? We surf the net looking for prompts, read newspapers, look at paintings or listen to music, but ultimately we end up writing about ourselves. How then can we turn our own lives into poems?

If your life is like mine, there’s not a lot of surface drama going on. It’s the hidden world we are trying to reveal. In her essay, “Creating a Personal Mythology”, poet Diane Wakoski writes, “it is not autobiography you are writing, but your life you are using in order to write about life as other people experience it too.”

As Diane Wakoski suggests in this essay, a way to present recurring themes, ideas and images in your poems is to create a cast of characters who appear across several pieces. Some poets turn to mythology, others find inspiration in pop culture icons and still others turn to dreams and paintings. It is the poet’s task to search for characters who symbolize or represent certain feelings about the poet’s own interior life. In this way the writer must invent.

I list here some possible sources for characters - or even talismans - that can take on added meaning in your poems, either as minor players or as stars in their own right.

• World mythology: Joseph Campbell’s The Hero with a Thousand Faces is a classic book that combines the study of Jungian psychology with mythology, explaining the symbolic meaning of many common mythological characters.

• Archetypes: The Hero Within by Carol Pearson outlines six predominant archetypes that show up in the way many of us live our lives.

• History: Diane Wakoski’s key word is emblematic. Is there a certain historical figure who is emblematic of an aspect of your own life?

• Comic Strips: Batman, Robin, Superman, Wonder Woman and others have become icons in modern life. One of these characters might serve as a useful person in a poem, embodying a trait you want to express.

• Animals: Humans have recorded their relationship with animals and the natural world since the beginning of culture and society. Think of cave paintings, masks, fables and legends. Native Americans have developed a system of totemic animals, each one representing different aspects of the human psyche. Personification of inanimate objects can also work as a tool for character building.

If you keep a writer’s journal, jot down ideas about possible characters as you read, watch TV or when you’re on the bus. Each interaction in life provides the poet with a way to tell a story. It might be an event that truly occurred, but even so there’s a need to fictionalize, to embellish, to draw a reader in. To reveal your own hidden view of life, the reader needs to find common ground within the poem.

A recurring character might be a way to connect your feelings with your reader’s.

~Christine.

* * *

SOURCE: “Creating a Personal Mythology,” in Toward a New Poetry, The University of Michigan Press, 1980, pp. 106-19, by Diane Wakoski.


8 Responses to “get the lead out: it’s noting, really [#2]”

  1. 1 Richard

    And the master of the form is Bob Dylan, a.k.a., all those a.k.a.’s we’ve all heard at one time or another.

    Dylan’s been churning out work and personae for over 40 years. He “exists,” on vinyl, on disc, on film, on tape, on dvd, in photo’s, in print, and live, on stage, at a theater near you. Last night he played in Dallas, and this was his SET LIST

    He’s a performance artist, and he’s taught them all…

  2. 2 carolee

    this is a wonderful article!! i feel deep connections to fictional people, emblems and stories but even as a poet, it sometimes feels goofy to talk about. this is a good way to think about it, however, that they can help us reveal our hidden worlds. love it!

  3. 3 pepektheassassin

    Great article! And I have done this. I began with a fictional “uncle” from a writing exercise I did some years ago in a class, and ended up with my Pepek the Assassin series! I had a whole lot of fun living in Pepek’s personae, and I think it’s probably my best work. Thus, Pepek is me, I am Pepek, haunted by ghosts, in need of forgiveness, reconciliation….

    Some other poets have done this, too–who is it, (I’m having another senior moment here) with the Hermit series? I should go look it up.

    Thanks for this!

  4. 4 pepektheassassin

    Gee whiz, looking this up I find another poet (Lew Welch)has written a Hermit series…the one I’m thinking of is Maxine Kumin: (in Up Country) The Hermit Wakes to Bird Sounds, The Hermit Meets the Skunk, The Hermit Prays, The Hermit Picks Berries, etc etc. Really fun!

  5. 5 pepektheassassin

    Now I’m going to go look up Diane Wakoski’s book! And buy a copy!

  6. 6 Christine

    Pepek, I’m going to look up the Hermit series- sounds like fun. It’s interesting how your character has become a semi-permanent emblem of you, at least through your blog.

    Richard, you’re right, we have a lot to learn from Bob Dylan, and performance artists in general. I know many poets dress in character when the read their work.

    Carolee, I’m glad you like this way of populating poems. Like Diane Wakoski, many of my characters come from dreams. But I also like the idea of made-up people from real life, like using celebrities as characters, or fictional people from older literature, ike Grendel. There’s so much to inspire us.

  7. 7 pepektheassassin

    OK. I am trying to make this link work. Here goes.

  8. 8 pepektheassassin

    YEAAAAAAAA! It works! I figured it out! *doing a happy dance*


WEEKLY READ WRITE PROMPT

July 2, 2008 — The current Get Your Poem On post is here. This is where you leave us a link to your blog, this week in response to Dana ShuffleWords idea, or any other kind of word play. (Or see if RWP-Twitter is for you!)

Next week's prompt will light you up. Thanks, Jill!



WEEKLY READ WRITE ARTICLES

June 26, 2008 — This month Jessica tells us which poets she first picked out to read, all on her own, because she wanted to. Who did you pick out?

Tom's Informal Talk About Forms has got more rhythm.

Christine's latest installment of Get The Lead Out discusses epigraphs. It's an inspired article.

We've been wanting more read here at Read Write Poem and Juliet brings it with her review of Spoken Word Revolution Redux.

January gives us a primer on revision.



POLL DANCE

July 5, 2008 — This time Carolee talks about how we talk about poetry we may not understand straight away in her "poll dance".

There's a new poll up. Yeah, a day early.



RANDOM PROMPTS

A different word or phrase will appear here each time you visit the site or refresh the page. Your current prompt is — lasso



RANDOM WRITING TIP

Think of a famous person or situation from history, imagine them/it updated to present-day, and write a poem based on what you imagine.



RANDOM READING TIP

Slow down when you read, even when you're reading silently to yourself. Focus on visualizing the characters' world -- the details make a difference and deliver us to that place where we suspend our own reality. Don't cheat yourself!



RANDOM COLLABORATING TIP

Do one of the random writing tips listed above and invite a writing partner or partners to write a poem based on the same tip. Then share what you each wrote. What's similar and different about the way you each approached the assignment?


SUBSCRIBE

Read Write Poem RSS Feeds