Sunday, November 23, 2008

Are changes really necessary?

As the conventional wisdom goes: if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

But the modernist and the Oulipo are anything but conventional; they defy the traditional style. The modernist focuses on the changes in semantics and the Oulipo on formalism. But are such changes really necessary?

Williams argues that as times changes, so do people’s ideas and perceptions. The associations that the people make from the olden times become anachronistic and those associations are unreal and inapplicable to people in different age-- Sounds perfectly rational to me.

As for the Oulipo, Lionnais questions tradition of repeating the same forms: “Must one adhere to the old tricks of the trade and obstinately refuse to imagine new possibilities? The partisans of the status quo don’t hesitate to answer in the affirmative” (Lipo: First Manifesto). The restrictions are no longer useful, hence, should not be placed. Formalism gives rise to meaning, and if it’s there for the sake of being there—well, it’s unnecessary. Again, perfectly rational.

So why are works from such school of thoughts so difficult to comprehend? We’ve been ingrained with the ideas of the traditionalists. We need those high sounding interpretation and those easier meters like the iambic pentameter. In that sense, the old associations and the old forms are NOT anachronistic, we’ve been learning them! Newness is destroying our ability to think! It is ironic how the modern poems are suppose adapt to the modern thinking, but when we think of poetry, we still refer back to Dickinson, Shakespeare, or even as far back as Homer.

So why change? It does break away from clichés and repetition of the old stuff. It does give depths to poetry when there’s actually meaning in form and in associations. But at what cost?

Times are indeed changing, but it is more than just the evolution of poetry. The common stigma of modern poetry is poor and poets are not honored as greatly as Shakespeare. To the untrained ears, modern poetry is pretty much blabbering nonsense. The moderns delve into meaning differently from the traditional—and not many people are actually trained to undertake such an escapade.

However, it isn’t necessary that traditional poetry would fare any better. As times change, going to a theater to watch a play no longer is the supreme form of entertainment—entertainment is now wide and diverse. Poetry takes a back seat to what science can do—to create computers and televisions and others. Perhaps traditional poetry would catch less attention, but at least they would be spared of the ridicule from uninformed individuals.

So is it all necessary? It is ironic that Williams notes the exclusiveness of writers when they don’t follow conventional methods, yet the moderns exclude the readers from “difficult” reading material. The newness filters out those with passion for poetry and those don’t. Perhaps it is better this way.

4 comments:

Al said...

I totally agree with you. Although modern poetry, and especially the Oulipo movement, believe that more importance needs to be assigned to associations between meaning and form, a lot of the meaning is lost to the average reader when he's faced with a jumble of words or other kinds of apparent nonsense. I think the main problem is that modern poetry has reached a kind of extreme, and it is kind of like modern art, because it might be interesting intellectually, but there is not much that we can latch onto and lead back to our everyday experiences of the world. basically, it's just weird!

Raynard said...

I'm glad to see that I'm not the only one who thinks that modernism can be ridiculous at times. With all the modernist poetry and criticism of the more traditional forms within modern poetry, I was beginning to think that this was becoming a widespread belief.

Harry Nunns said...

I think that change is inevitable as time progresses, regardless of movements such as that of the modernists. The modernists just want MORE change. It kind of reminds me of those radical political parties; they demand so much change at once that they appear plain ridiculous.

jennifert said...

Changes may not be necessary, but I can see from the modernist point of view. They just want to be creative and make something totally new. We live in a time where new ideas seem to be futile because the ideas completely new seem so limited. Take the computer for example. Technology developed very quickly and it still seems to be, but when it first started out, there was room for so much improvement that new ideas could easily be achieved. Now, that’s a bit more difficult. The computer seems to not need any more improvement. With literature, no changes seem necessary, just the need for new ideas is enough for changes to occur. All the conventional ideas have already been taken and that seems to be why we have extremely obscure, sometimes ridiculous ideas in the modern era. However, I have no doubt that technology will continue to grow just as writing has been changed time after time.