Saturday 8 July 2023

Cut-up poetry

Have you heard of the Dada movement? It was an art movement that emanated from Europe back in the early part of the 20th Century. At the heart of Dadaism was the rejection of reason and logic in favour of spontaneity, the enjoyment of nonsense and irrationality. It was anti-art. It was anti-establishment. It was absurd. In short, they were all as crazy as a box of frogs. 

But it sounded like they had a lot of fun in the midst of an otherwise very dull society (in 1915 everything was in black and white).   

In the 1950s, over in the good ol' USA, the Beat Poets movement was just starting. One of the craziest members of this crazy gang of avant-garde poets and writers was William S. Burroughs, author of The Naked Lunch and other works. He rubbed shoulders with the likes of Jack Kerouac, David Bowie and Allen Ginsberg, but was also close friends with Brion Gysin, a British-Canadian painter, performance poet and inventor. 

Together Gysin and Burroughs developed the concept of the cut-up technique, which had its roots in the Dada movement. Cut-up involves taking a fully formed piece of text (or maybe several pieces) and cutting out text randomly, either in sentences, phrases or even single words. The cut-out strips can be assembled into a new piece of text. This can be done at random, or with purpose. 

There are many variations of this method. Someone on the blog yesterday posted a comment about word tiles and how they can inspire poetry. Throw them down and see what emerges. That's a great idea along similar lines to the above approaches. It can generate some powerful inspiration. 

I also developed my own technique around found poetry, which involves a similar method to cut-up but instead of snipping out the words, I use a highlighter pen to randomly select words and sentences within a piece of printed text and then creating a collage from them. This follows the bricolage method espoused by the likes of Claud Levi-Strauss, where you can 'do it yourself' bypassing normal techniques and gaining instant access to random creativity and inspiration. 

Yes, these are very post-modernist methods, but in the event of a road-block to your creativity, they might be just what you are looking for to restart your creative engine. Comments as ever, as most welcome.

Steve Wheeler

Image from Wikimedia Commons

5 comments:

  1. Here's how I did it. I typed in a phrase to Google, taken from one of my poems, and then took one phrase from each of the Google hits (from the summary text, not the web page). The search produced a mixture of adverts for cosmetic, and Christian devotion. The search phrase is the title of the resultant poem:

    Glittering liquid Epiphany of Light

    Glitter flakes
    Creamy, firm
    Semi-opaque
    Epiphany is a clear
    Feast of the
    Extraordinary claim
    That holds the light for us
    In red, green or gold
    Through the changing leaves
    Without chipping, peeling or damaging
    The beauty of the glory of Jesus.

    Epic Light,
    Rising and shining
    In liquid air!

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    Replies
    1. Hey… there is some weight to this technique… the evocation of colors reveal a major push in the end message… that’s excellent! I gotta try this too!

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  2. Hey, there's some mileage in that technique. Nice one Iain.

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    Replies
    1. Crazy as a box of frogs… that’s pretty crazy Steve!!! Made me laugh out loud, but hey, I’m a country boy. One of your best blogs yet… I’ll have to try this method!

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  3. I'm trying giving this ago today, this morning I tried to construct a poem this morning but had 'brain fog'. So cut it up and leaving on the coffee table. I'm lacking in inspiration today because of burnout. Someone sent me the link to amazing and helpful blog, thanks Wheelsong I need this blog today.

    ReplyDelete

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