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Subject: Comix + poetry series at the Poetry Foundation

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Emily Gordon
Posts:34

03/20/2007 11:08 AM Alert 
What poem would you want to see rendered in graphic-novel format, and who would you want to draw it?

Emily Dickinson stars in the latest in a series Ed Park is overseeing at the Poetry Foundation (which has some dough for doing interesting experiments like this, as you may have heard), by Drawn & Quarterly Lucky cartoonist Gabrielle Bell. Park writes as an introduction:
Heightened language—one possible or partial definition of poetry—isn’t the first thing one associates with comics. Yet comic book artists take into account the way words appear on the page to a degree poets will find familiar. How many lines should accompany each image? How high should the dialogue balloon float? The ratio of printed words to blank space plays a role in whether a poem or strip succeeds.

The best of the daily humor strips (think Peanuts) have produced thousands of word-and-picture episodes that occupy about the same thought-space as a good short poem; the terseness can resemble haiku. Then there is Krazy Kat, George Herriman’s polyphonic masterpiece that appeared in William Randolph Hearst’s papers from 1913 to 1944 —a comic feature so blessedly idiosyncratic in its dialects that the only way to start making sense of what’s said is by reading it aloud, like a poem.

As a way to help readers discover (or rediscover) our archive, poetryfoundation.org has invited some of today’s most vital graphic novelists to interpret a poem of their choice from the more than 4,500 poems in our archive, reaching from Beowulf to the present.

Emily Gordon
Posts:34

03/20/2007 11:21 AM Alert 
Here's #1 in the series, by the way: David Heatley's interpretation of Diane Wakoski’s 1966 poem “Belly Dancer.” From the PF bio: "David Heatley is the author of Overpeck, a graphic novella to be published in spring 2008."

I'd be interested in seeing the poets' responses to the comics, too (the living poets, anyway--séances can be scary).
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