View Full Version : Favorite form of literatue
Leopard
12-24-2016, 07:11 AM
What is your favorite literary form?
Lendo
12-24-2016, 07:23 AM
Despite the fact that i'm Portuguese, and my country as an incredible tradition of poetry (Luís de Camões, Fernando Pessoa, Alexandre O'Neill, Herberto Hélder, Eugénio de Andrade, etc) my favourite form of Literature is novel.
Danik 2016
12-24-2016, 07:24 AM
Although I also read poetry I love all kinds of good prose, from the novel to the essay.
YesNo
12-24-2016, 09:15 AM
What i suppose I mainly read are what could be called essays or what is supposedly non-fiction as least in the minds of the authors. It could be called creative non-fiction. It often contains references to more detailed research. It ranges from reports of a person's near-death experience to a scientist providing a summary of recent research in some field to a philosopher giving a description of some philosophic idea. This would also include books explaining how to do something.
mortalterror
12-25-2016, 01:58 AM
When I was younger I loved novels. Then I went through a period where I devoured the Greeks and Romans. Really liked drama and epic. Lately, I've been getting into the middle ages, sagas and romances mostly. I think my favorite thing is when people tell stories in verse. Poetry would be a lot more popular with men if we taught that it was about knights, dragons, ghosts, witches, giants, monsters, and magic instead of flowers, trees, and lakes.
When I was younger I loved novels. Then I went through a period where I devoured the Greeks and Romans. Really liked drama and epic. Lately, I've been getting into the middle ages, sagas and romances mostly. I think my favorite thing is when people tell stories in verse. Poetry would be a lot more popular with men if we taught that it was about knights, dragons, ghosts, witches, giants, monsters, and magic instead of flowers, trees, and lakes.
I've thought about writing epic fantasy and science fiction poems. I assume the reason it hasn't been done, or done successfully is because it's extremely hard to do well. The profitability, or lack thereof of this type of venture probably prohibits it from happening.
Leopard
12-25-2016, 03:47 AM
When I was younger I loved novels. Then I went through a period where I devoured the Greeks and Romans. Really liked drama and epic. Lately, I've been getting into the middle ages, sagas and romances mostly. I think my favorite thing is when people tell stories in verse. Poetry would be a lot more popular with men if we taught that it was about knights, dragons, ghosts, witches, giants, monsters, and magic instead of flowers, trees, and lakes.
Is poetry any less popular with men than it is with women though? It seems to me to be a minority interest in general.
I've thought about writing epic fantasy and science fiction poems. I assume the reason it hasn't been done, or done successfully is because it's extremely hard to do well. The profitability, or lack thereof of this type of venture probably prohibits it from happening.
Yeah, epic poetry must be an incredibly demanding form. All the challenges of a novel plus the constraints of verse.
mortalterror
12-25-2016, 06:51 AM
I've thought about writing epic fantasy and science fiction poems. I assume the reason it hasn't been done, or done successfully is because it's extremely hard to do well. The profitability, or lack thereof of this type of venture probably prohibits it from happening.
Well, there was a Swedish Nobel Laureate named Harry Martinson who wrote a sci-fi epic poem called Aniara about a doomed space ship on a mission to Mars. Supposedly, the poem was good enough that someone turned it into an opera. Then there's Frederick Turner's poem Genesis about the terraforming of Mars. And apparently there's a thing called the Rhysling Award for science fiction poetry.
mortalterror
12-25-2016, 07:00 AM
Is poetry any less popular with men than it is with women though? It seems to me to be a minority interest in general.
I think it is. Part of the problem is that 2/3 of English degrees go to women, which means 2/3 of English teachers are women, which means you get more Jane Austen than Ernest Hemingway, more Emily Dickinson than Homer, etc. I'm afraid it colors the way the whole subject is perceived by society at large, the same way that a subject like philosophy which is 3/4 male has the opposite problem.
Lendo
12-25-2016, 08:05 AM
From my perspective, poetry is not less popular among men that it is among women. Unless that's not the reality i contact with.
Danik 2016
12-25-2016, 11:06 AM
The gender of the teacher IMO doesn´t necessarily determine the genre of Literature taught and the gender of the authors.
bounty
12-25-2016, 12:54 PM
I agree with mortalterror in this regard danik. to not, I think, borders on suggesting there are no differences between men and women in terms of what we value, or even in how we think.
Danik 2016
12-25-2016, 01:42 PM
I usually like mortal´s posts very much. But in this case he seems to be doing the opposite you are suggesting, bounty:Men would make some literary choices just because they are men, and women dito just because they are women. I think there is a very wide range of values, ideas and feelings as regards both men as women.
bounty
12-25-2016, 07:56 PM
im not suggesting there is complete (100%) distinction when it comes to that, but id be very willing to bet quantifiable research would affirm the "gut" feeling there are strong gendered preferences.
mona amon
12-29-2016, 10:53 AM
Novels are what I usually read, but I think drama is my favourite - what great writers in that genre - Aeschylus, Shaw, Shakespeare. I'm not a great one for poetry, but one of my most favourite works of literature is Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. I also like The Canterbury Tales.
wildstrawberry
01-04-2017, 06:36 PM
I love reading novels. I'm captivated by the characters and the plot. Some actions and some words can be touching, funny or heroic.
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