Wednesday, February 27, 2013

BLACK OUT POETRY AND CARVED NOVELS



Texts emerge from other texts.

We have already considered how we use mentor texts or model texts to help us think about how to express our own ideas.  (see previous post—Mentor Texts: Learning to Writing from What We Read.)

We can borrow ideas or topics to bring to our own writing as in my poem,What I Read First.

Or we can borrow a complete structure, as in my poem, Thirteen Ways of Looking at Leaving School.

It may be one line that inspires us. I have seen lots of writing prompts that encourage us to start with one line --from either someone else’s or our own poem--   to create an entirely new poem or other form.

Blackout Poetry is unique way of creating poetry from  existing text.

I was first introduced to this addicting process by M.K. Asante  when he visited our CAWP Summer Writing Institute in 2010.

Using a newspaper or other existing text and a magic marker, you deliberately select individual words and eliminate others. 

The remaining words emerge as a new and original text.  

You destroy, deconstruct and eliminate writing to construct, find, and create new writing.

Poet and cartoonist, Austin Kleon discovered this process during a time of  personal frustration with his failed attempts at writing short stories.  He describes his process in the preface to his book, Newspaper Blackout


Kleon gives instructions for creating your own blackout poetry in this video:




A similarly unique process is used by Jonathan Safran Foer to create the novel, Tree of Codes.

He carved out a text –literally cutting out chunks of the pages of an existing novel, The Street of Crocodiles by Bruno Schulz—to create his entirely new novel, Treeof Codes--   and created also  a multi-layered, complex reading experience. 

Click here to find out more about Jonathan Safran Foer and also view three related videos---one recording people’s reaction upon first seeing the book,  a second in which the author explains his intent and process, and  a third that shows the actual mechanical process of creating the books.

Black out, carve up, cut up, deconstruct, destroy, eliminate.

Maintain, retain, construct, find, create.

New texts emerge.

Below is my own black out poem, created from this blog post.

Texts emerge from other texts.
We have already considered how we can use mentor texts or model texts to help us think about how to express our own ideas.  (see previous post—Mentor Texts-)
We can borrow ideas or topics to bring to our own writing as in my poem, First Reader .
Or we can borrow a complete structure, as in my poem, Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Poem 
It may be one line that inspires us. I have seen lots of writing prompts that encourage us to start with one line from another poem (either someone else’s or our own) as a first line for our writing  to create an entirely new poem or other form.
Blackout Poetry is unique way creating poetry from existing text.
I was first introduced to this addicting process by M.K. Asante  when he visited our CAWP Summer Writing Institute in 2010.
Using a newspaper or other existing text and a magic marker, you deliberately select words individual words and eliminate others. The remaining words emerge as a new and original text.   
You destroy, deconstruct and eliminate writing to construct, find, and create new writing.
Poet and cartoonist, Austin Kleon discovered this process during a time of personal frustration with  his failed attempts  with writing short stories.  He describes this process in the preface to his book, Newspaper Blackout .  More information about the book and process can be found on this blog.—HERE
Kleon gives instructions for creating your own blackout poetry in this video:
 A similarly unique process is used by Jonathan Safran Foer to create the novel, Tree of Codes
He carved out a text –literally cutting out chunks of an existing novel, The Street of Crocodiles—to create his entirely new novel, Tree of Codes , and a multi-layered, complex reading experience. 
Click here to find out more about the  Jonathan Safran Foer and also view three related videos---one recording people’s reaction upon first seeing the book, one in which the author explains his intent and process, and one that shows the actual mechanical process of creating the books.
 Black out, carve up, cut up, deconstruct, destroy, eliminate.
Maintain, retain, construct, find, create.
New texts emerge.
Below is my own black out poem, created from the blog post above.


Today's Deeper Writing Possibility


Select a section of the newspaper or  another existing texts.  

Using a magic marker, eliminate words, allowing a new text to emerge.

How did you decide which words to eliminate? Did you notice any patterns in the words selected? in your process?

How is the new text related to the original text? 

Did you create something you want to share?  Visit the companion site to the book, Newspaper Blackout and share your work:  http://newspaperblackout.com/

4 comments:

  1. Love this! I'm trying this with my creative writing students on Monday!

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  2. Let me know how this goes with your students---I would love to see the texts they produce! They will find that this is addictiing and may catch themselves "blacking-out" rather than doodling.
    Please invite your students to share shorter pieces here in this space if they would like.

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  3. You can now use an iPad or Android tab for creating blackouts. Just Cut and paste text from the web! The App is called blackout Bard
    iTunes: http://apple.co/1rcXYhl
    Google PlayStore: https://goo.gl/HHuWSy
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/blackoutbard/

    ReplyDelete