Thursday, May 16, 2013

Poetry Slams, Bustin' Bricks

Toni Perlog is a toned, rugged Croatian man, and has the emotional exterior of a brick wall.  When I first met him, his dark eyes intimidated me, and his Italian-style facial hair only goaded my suspicions.  

He would come up to the house in Zagreb four or five times a week, and weight train with my cousin David.  At first, I was too nervous to talk to him, but each time I did, his brick-like exterior crumbled into smaller, softer pieces.  He began e-mailing me some of his poetry, his thoughts, his writing.  It was beautiful.  And in English, too!  

I distinctly remember a clip he sent me.  "If I Should Have a Daughter," by Sarah Kay.  It was a TED talk, and I love those, so I didn't hesitate to spend 18 minutes watching one (embedded is the four-minute, short-version, subtitled one).  




However, when it started, I felt uncomfortable.  I scrolled down while it was still going, and tried to understand what I was watching.  I didn't realize it was "spoken poetry."  Her words seemed too formulated and contrived to be a simple speech.  

That was my first encounter with free-verse, spoken poetry.  Since then, I've obviously opened my mind a bit more.  I've let down that "brick exterior" I accused Toni of having, and now have a deeper appreciation for spoken poetry.  

Believe it or not, I've even participated in few local poetry slams. They're open-mic opportunities to dig up novices, or to see the unprofessional practiced poets "do they thaaang."  

Something about hearing the poet read the poem with her voice is more engaging than reading it yourself, or hearing it read by a random third party.  It feels more accurate, sounds more accurate; more true to the poet's intended feeling or message.  

6 comments:

  1. Poetry slams are great. I've had the privilege of attending a few, and they are always entertaining and inspiring

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  2. This is amazing! But do you know what would be EVEN BETTER? Your own creative adaptation of a poem. Or you could film yourself reciting original poetry and then do a self analysis. Seriously, not only would it be fun to see someone we know doing something they love, but you would get feedback that is both supportive AND constructive/substantial since it's a literary interpretation class.

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    1. I know, I thought about that, but. I'm quite the procrastinator, and lack the skill to figure how to do that. To post something like that. NEXT TIME!

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  3. I have never been to a poetry slam--not sure if I have even heard of them before. I like Danielle's suggestion. Hey if you could play Joan of Arc, you would be amazing reciting your own original poetry on youtube! I think you need to get famous so I can tell everyone I KNOW THAT GIRL!

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    1. Maybe I'll just become the first Mormon white-chick-rapper. Rap Shakespeare all the day long...

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  4. Totally I agree with Kimara. You have so much creativity in you that whatever you do will be fabulous! I love your posts.

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