Reinventing the Written Word in Found Poetry

Cut-and-paste and erasure creations render new poetic works from familiar texts

Leah Catania 鈥14
A student's found poetry

BRISTOL, R.I. 鈥 Marcel Duchamp 鈥 the greatest visual artist 鈥 sketched a scraggly moustache and goatee on a cheap reproduction of the Mona Lisa, titled it 鈥 and called it art. Hip-hop artists routinely sample other artists鈥 riffs and beats, overlaying their rhymes for a new spin on an old song. Whether it鈥檚 found-object sculptures or clipping and pasting images into a photo montage, artists subscribe to a longstanding tradition of acquiring media, deconstructing the elements and piecing it back together to render a new artwork with a significantly altered message. Now, this collagist custom is experiencing a renaissance via the written word as visual artists, fiction writers and poets apply their deconstructive skills to novels, dictionaries, newspaper articles, poems and more to reinvent literary works.

Collaborative artists Jenni Baker and 泡芙短视频 alumna Beth Ayer 鈥06, a senior editor at Baker鈥檚 鈥,鈥 recently sat down with creative writing students in Professor Renee Soto鈥檚 poetry studio to introduce the fledgling poets to this regenerative medium 鈥 poems created by taking apart and rearranging entire passages of text, or by eliminating words and sentences until only the poet鈥檚 desired pieces remain (also called the 鈥渆rasure method鈥).

鈥淲e want the poet to intervene in the text, to take what鈥檚 there and remix it and either present it in a new way, or change the subject, or really add value to the text,鈥 Baker explained as the students began recreating new poems from familiar material 鈥 a poem by famed Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney and David Foster Wallace鈥檚 鈥.鈥

And while some readers (or writers) may consider 鈥渇ound poetry鈥 to require less creativity, the students argue that each individual鈥檚 approach to and interpretation of a text is unique to them, based on their experiences and creative choices.

鈥淭he fact that you go through and literally take the things that speak to you allows you to incorporate a lot of your personality and your literary style,鈥 senior Timothy Garlington said.

Krista Tierney, realized she already performs the 鈥渆rasure method鈥 to a variety of texts, including a class assignment on Aristotle鈥檚 鈥淧oetics鈥 in which the senior creative writing major penciled out parts to fashion her own poem.

鈥淚 can still read 鈥楶oetics,鈥 but it would help me understand the text better because I would be utilizing the text in a different way 鈥 so I didn鈥檛 feel like I was just reading it for busywork,鈥 Tierney said.

Listen below to poetry readings from seniors Ryan Treppedi and Kelsey Sullivan accompanying a photo slideshow of the students creating their first found poems.