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Why Haiku?

Cherry Blossoms by Tina dela Rosa

Cherry Blossoms by Tina dela Rosa

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

plank bridge—
clinging for their lives
ivy vines

Basho

 

the harvest moon
I stroll round the pond
till the night is through

Basho

 

storm—chestnuts
race along
the bamboo porch

Shiki

 

The more time I spend reading and writing haiku, the more I am convinced of their incredible depth and of their value in today’s world.

Haiku are an ideal form for everyone–especially kids.

 

Why?

1. Haiku focus on a single intense moment in the present. Our current culture pushes us to rush from one thing to the next, while thinking about a multitude of other things. Haiku provide an opportunity to slow down, pay attention to now, and closely observe the world in front of us.

2. Haiku focus on the natural world and on our connections to the natural world. Yesterday we had record-breaking heat in Washington, DC after a strangely cool spring. Each day presents new evidence that we have damaged our planet. Now more than ever, we need to attend to the natural world and our connections to it.

3. Haiku require readers to actively participate in making meaning. Readers use the images from the poems to paint pictures in their heads. These pictures often include sounds, smells, textures, and tastes. Readers must infer the signficance of the images and their connections. Though haiku images are concrete and their words often plain, haiku are complex and their readers cannot be passive.

Unfortunately, I think most of us learn a very simple definition of haiku—a nature poem of 17 syllables in three lines—that misses its essential characteristics. There are many fabulous discussions of haiku written by more experienced students and writers, but instead of sending you away, I will give you my current understanding.

 

What are the essential characteristics of haiku?

1. Haiku are short. They are one moment, expressed in one breath. The Japanese poets who developed the form believed one breath was best expressed in 17 onji or sound symbols. Some poets who write haiku in English write them in 17 syllables. However onji are not exactly parallel to syllables, and to many 17 syllables feels like more than one breath. For this reason, many poets of haiku in English write poems of fewer syllables.

2. Haiku are traditionally three lines. Typically, one line (the first or third) presents a natural context: a plank bridge, the harvest moon, a storm. The other two lines describe something more: ivy vines clinging, a stroll round a pond, chestnuts racing along a porch. Sometimes the second line of the more includes a turn or surprise, such as a stroll round a pond that lasts the whole night. By connecting the two parts of the haiku, the reader experiences a moment of discovery or aha. Some haiku poets accomplish this in one line or four, using the line breaks as a tool of expression.

3. Haiku provide direct experience. They are written in the present tense. They do not use metaphor, simile, personification, or rhyme because that would interfere with the direct experience.

4. Haiku are about the interrelatedness of humans and nature. Often the human is there only as an attentive observer. Other times the human is represented implicitly by a verb requiring human action, such as lighting the lanterns. The human can also be represented by a pronoun such as I or me or my.

5. Haiku is not just a form of poetry. It is a way of being in the world.

 

I hope I’ve convinced you to give it a try. As with most things, it’s harder than it looks and worth the effort.

 

For more information:

The Haiku Society of America has a page of educational resources, which includes an introduction to haiku.

Jane Reichhold’s Bare Bones School of Haiku provides 14 lessons on haiku and how to write them.

Robyn Hood Black has written many beautiful haiku. On her website she provides a list of haiku resources and lesson plans for K-2 and grades 3 and up.

Diane Mayr posts lots of haiku “stickies” and other delectables on her blog Random Noodling.

Finally, this week I typed “haiku” into itunes search and discovered Haiku Chronicles podcasts. What a find! They have over 25 episodes dedicated to all things haiku. They delve into the history of the form in Japan and in the US. Some include old recordings of poets discussing and reading haiku. In the 8th episode Anita Virgil provides her 9 questions for judging haiku. She says most don’t make it past question 2!

 

For more Poetry Friday, visit, yes, Diane Mayr’s Random Noodling!

Come back on Tuesday, April 16th to see the 2013 Kidlitosphere Progressive Poem progress.

 

(c) 2013, Elizabeth Steinglass, all rights reserved

18 replies
  1. Catherine Johnson
    Catherine Johnson says:

    Great thoughts on haiku Liz. it must take such a long time before you can write like the masters with this form. There was a wonderful haiku blogger who just disappeared from the internet one day, it broke my heart, now I can’t even peruse his archives. David Lawrence.

    Reply
    • lsteinglass
      lsteinglass says:

      I hate when people, places, times just disappear like that. Good-byes really are important. I just checked my haiku anthology. He isn’t there. I have noticed that the haiku journals won’t accept haiku submissions that have appeared on blogs. That’s one reason I went with Basho and Shiki.

      Reply
  2. mattforrest
    mattforrest says:

    Thanks, Liz. Haikus are a great way to introduce kids to poetry because they don’t have to rhyme, they’re not tied to a meter, and they’re perfect for short attention spans!

    Reply
    • lsteinglass
      lsteinglass says:

      I think the trick would be to get them to slow down and take their time and not rush through them just because they’re short. On the other hand, you can really spend a lot of time on each word when there are so few.

      Reply
  3. Bridget Magee
    Bridget Magee says:

    This post really resonates with me on many levels! I constantly need to be reminded to “focus on a single intense moment in the present” and haiku is the perfect medium for doing just that. This post is a keeper for all the resources, too! Thank you, Liz!

    Reply
    • lsteinglass
      lsteinglass says:

      Hi Bridget! I think we all need reminders to pay attention to the here and now. Especially if you might find a scorpion in your sink.

      Reply
  4. Robyn Hood Black
    Robyn Hood Black says:

    Oh, Liz! Such a treasure of a post. (And I’m so honored you included my haiku obsession up in your resources.) I will now point folks HERE, too – I really love reading your thoughts as you’ve studied and pondered and let haiku seep into your way of seeing the world. Your #5 puts it so beautifully. Thanks for this thoughtful, inspiring tribute/invitation to haiku!

    Reply

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  1. […] been trying to take a few minutes each day to check in with the world around me and quickly write a haiku or senryu. (A haiku if the observation is about nature, a senyru if the observation is about human […]

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