
always-mutating ideas on the subgenre |
Writers use a variety of labels for a recognizable style of poetry that I and a few other poets sometimes write. Those labels include: "instant fiction," "sudden fiction," "flash fiction," "furious," and the term "brief narrative" though these terms usually apply to short narrative stories (fiction) in fullpage text. For years I looked for a better term to apply to poetry that incorporates most of the elements of those short short story forms, especially the dense rich short short stories or narratives scanned as poems. We need a handle on this pot! We struggle to label, even those of us who despise labels, because we need to efficiently refer to a thing. I don't want to go into the description every time I want to talk about this kind of writing. We need a handle. This poetry (I'll be giving you samples) is one of my favorite styles to write, publish, or read. I coined the term virtual journalism in June of 1993 and it is getting around. Until anyone comes up with a more representative title, this is the one some of us are using. I've tried this term on audiences, students, comrades, who are "warming up to it" and many are "convinced." No one has argued against it.
There it is, a picture of a moment from the life and times of Jo Jazz. This poem shows what happened in who/what/where/when terms. It doesn't give you an opinion on who. It lets you be there and decide for yourself. Like reading the newspaper should. Who's writing this stuff? |
| Virtual Journalism poetry might incorporate the following features: 1. Dense, concrete language.
2. Tight use of interesting nouns and action verbs, including brand names and proper nouns.
3. Text almost passes as journalism because it often answers who, what, where, when, but not so much why or how (after all, it's only virtually journalism!) 5. Usually is poetry of place--some place identifiable (car wash, party by the barn, Johnson City, San Diego Zoo).
6. Includes character focus and often the exact dialogue and action, like a mini-play, an act, a scene from a movie. 7. Narrative but spare (some people call this "brief narrative" but that doesn't capture it at all). 8. Sometimes can be a list poem of events during a moment, often a twist at the end.
9. It is an easy journey for the reader to travel regardless of the busy ride, distracting incidents, and crisp dialogue.
10. The events are probably of ordinary people made extraordinarily fascinating or entertaining.
11. Thrives on the colloquial.
12. Rather average in length. However, one very long and successful piece I know of is book-length by a master of the craft--Julie Otten. Her book, The Courtship of Jim Jones (forthcoming from Pudding House in 1999) and other characteristics of Julie's style come close to VJ poetry.
13. Psychological or sociological interest.
14. Although it can deal with serious issues, it is often humorous, ironic, or shows unspeakable truth (w/small t) that you still cannot articulate--a flash or shock of recognition. 15. Factual, or rather, factualistic--presented with material evidence. However, as Lowell Jaeger said in Pudding 21, "A poem knows that facts are never enough." And that is true for virtual journalism. 16. There is a music, a patter to the delivery; it succeeds well when read aloud but must not depend upon an oral reading to elevate its artistic success.
17. It is usually written in third person, eliminating "I" and a sense of the poet's involvement. It sometimes pulls off being objective in its reporting and avoids the omniscient poet. 18. The poem need not stick to all of the above but would, after a holistic evaluation, fit into this profile. What sets this word-art apart is the material situational evidence. But the poem cannot be simply loaded down with inventory for no reason. Have a reason for selecting the items that appear.
Consider the samples I call "virtual journalism" poems. Notice how many of the criteria hold true for them. And notice in what ways they are different and yet fall into the VJ category.
IT WAS ALL OVER SOME STUPID CHUNK
of metal twisted by death's rattle
by Al Ferber
THE TUNNEL OF LOVE
Sparky Byrnes closed down his full-service car wash
Ron Moran from Getting the Body to Dance Again
Carol Schott Martino
AFTER THE RAINS
My brother must have been about three
If you have virtual journalism poems you'd like Pudding Magazine to consider, send them with SASE. You'll hear back by return mail, unless we're traveling. And remember, this isn't the only kind of poetry we like to receive. Whatever you write, give us a try. We pay in copies, like most small press magazines. Or perhaps you have a large collection. You might consider clicking on "Chapbook Competition." We also consider chapbook manuscripts through general submissions (a $10 reading free applies; there is no reading fee for individual poems submitted to the magazine). Thanks for looking into this. Have fun trying your hand at virtual journalism; I hope we hear from you. Please realize that we receive over 40,000 poems during a slow year and over 100,000 during years we're more public. We regret the small percentage that we can publish.
"Virtual Journalism: How to Write it; Where to Find It"
Check CALLS FOR POEMS to discover the broad range of work we're looking for. Pudding House Publications seeks poems for Pudding Magazine, the chapbook series, numerous anthologies, The Walls Project, Topiary Tales, and much more. |
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