Learn how to write a traditional haiku, including the 5-7-5 rule,
subject matter, and structure. Learn what a "kigo" is and why your poem
must contain a shift or movement of some kind. Learn also what you
should do when you disagree with the dictionary about how many syllables
a word contains.
Writing haiku is a great learning activity for kids, but it's also an
adult poetic form written by and for adults. And it's fundamentally
different from Western poetry in that it doesn't attempt to contain any
sort of narrative thread or train of thought. Haiku is about capturing a
single moment and allowing the reader to see what you see, feel what
you feel, and to suddenly understand what you, the poet, understand. For
the reader, it isn't like talking to the poet; it's more like
inhabiting the poet's mind for a single transcedent moment. It's a bit
like magic.
Video de 2015 de 10.51 minuts de durada.
Publicat amb l'article de la revista digital: https://www.lifesavvy.com/22367/how-to-write-a-haiku/
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