walrus on Nostr: Some notes on my love affair with the tanka form, and how I see it in the context of ...
Some notes on my love affair with the tanka form, and how I see it in the context of my work.
I'm exploring a modern approach by using haiku as a foundation for call and response poetry. This method harks back to the earliest forms of Japanese poetry, such as renga and waka, where poets engaged in a dynamic interplay of ideas and emotions through alternating sections, often collaboratively.
(1/5)
#haiku #tanka
Published at
2024-05-26 08:26:07Event JSON
{
"id": "72803ba86930e774b93fb5ef640667ade3b751de91a8691d2151d32bfac7caa6",
"pubkey": "7a5f41423dcd0f30bed833672b22e6542081c9af530256063852344046e7b5ee",
"created_at": 1716711967,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"t",
"haiku"
],
[
"t",
"tanka"
],
[
"proxy",
"https://zirk.us/users/walrus/statuses/112506435493199769",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "Some notes on my love affair with the tanka form, and how I see it in the context of my work.\n\nI'm exploring a modern approach by using haiku as a foundation for call and response poetry. This method harks back to the earliest forms of Japanese poetry, such as renga and waka, where poets engaged in a dynamic interplay of ideas and emotions through alternating sections, often collaboratively. \n\n(1/5)\n\n#haiku #tanka",
"sig": "5eec74f69b6bcc5fe9c2dcd0d445accc1ab79240ff6b2a529ad0a3fb423b4465cf67d9f23f4fd3566bb84727746b9491eae2198107cefb03d2df4b660fc815b2"
}