Sunday, October 4, 2009

Judging Poetry

Some time ago, trying to sharpen why I did or did not like a poem, I came up with a list of criteria for judging poems:

  • linguistic diversity
  • development of a theme/idea
  • denseness of idea
  • denseness of imagery
  • abstraction handling
  • narrative arc
  • importance to my life at the moment
  • importance to my study as a poet
  • difficulty of reading/understanding the literalness
  • presence/adherence to any rhyme scheme
  • presence/adherence to stanza forms
  • presence/adherence to meter
  • presence of outstanding sonic devices
  • richness of language suggestion
  • surprise at direction of thought
  • line break use (as opposed to feeling like the line breaks simply fall where they may)
  • attention to inherently interesting ideas
  • use of regular or twisted syntax
  • impressionistic versus deliberation
  • metaphor extension or cleverness
  • allusion
There must be more criteria, surely. Or fewer? I know most editors and poets I know take the stance of Justice Stewart's description of pornography, "I know it when I see it," when judging what is fantastic.

Or do I? Perhaps this list will engage some commentary at some time. And perhaps someone will use it and see if it helps them articulate a a particular poem's value.

If I could predict what I want, I would want a discussion as to what criteria seem more important than others, what criteria are missing, and what these criteria mean. Is such a list a good thing or should we stumble blind and happy?

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