Did you miss yesterday's questions? Click here.
Questions for Friday (from pages 14-16):
1. How do the music references affect your reading of the poem(s)?
2. The lady in orange is joined on stage by all, except for the ladies in blue and green. Why?
3. Lady in orange says she from "outside of st. louis," but is currently in nyc? What is that about?
4. Do you read the gaps of space differently than a line break, slash, or comma?
5. If you could pick any living poet to be in the role of the lady in orange, who would it be?
1 comment:
1. They add potential texture of meaning. I haven't had a chance yet to listen to them, but I know that it's there to be heard.
2. The only thing I can guess is that those two are related somehow, or that we haven't heard their voices yet.
3. I wonder if she hasn't traveled in some way. I actually have no idea.
4. I tend to read them in terms of time or rhythm the same, but in terms of meaning as either a break in meaning or actual physical time in the narrative, or as part of the 'picture' of the poem on paper.
5. What an interesting question. Living poet. A part of me wants to say Ellen Hagan (an Affrilachian Poet) for her connection to dance and poetry both.
Post a Comment