A Writer's Notebook, Day Eight-Hundred-And--Eighty-Eight
I am starting to think about a short craft essay that I want to write, and which I think I can get published. The piece is also, in part, a personal exploration, connecting to questions about how poetry addresses language. I read an article at some time last year which was about the use of language in dreams. The general thrust of the piece was about the fact that language experiences are not, in general, a common feature of dreams, though we do not usually notice this. The author made the point that, according to the research into this topic, Poets, even more than other writers, experience more language in their dreams than most people. They discussed some reasons for this, but they did not seem to make sense to me, if I am honest. It was suggested it had to do with the ability of poets to process less typical and more abstract language, and, while I can understand that idea, it seemed reductive, or even dismissive, suggesting that poetic language is somehow inexact. I think it may be far simpler, like the way that a person who plays Tetris for hours before bed might see those falling blocks in their dreams.
Comments
Post a Comment