NivKay
Autodidact
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2024
- Posts
- 374
Hi all,
I’ve been on Lit for a bit now. I’m no seasoned Lit veteran, but in the few years I’ve been here, I’ve had immense fun. I write short fiction, but before Lit wrote lots of poetry, though I’ve only published one erotic poem here.
I’ve always found it difficult to write erotic poetry. Narratives are fine. And I think it’s because with prose, you could inject a sense of the experiential into the writing, blending time and metaphor to tease out the intricacies of emotion.
But with poetry, I find the articulation of any kind of sensuality or eroticism forced, clichéd, almost absurd.
Franz Kafka wrote once that he found metaphors to be problematic because they could never quite capture what he wanted them to capture, and Kafka was a giant of a literary genius!
I seem to struggle with this, in particular with poetic expression of the erotic.
I wonder if any of you feel this struggle as well? What do you do to avoid the pitfalls of cliché in erotic poetry?
I’ve decided to submit for publication some non-erotic poetry, being hesitant to do the same with my attempts at erotic poetry.
Just wanted to put it out there and have a conversation, about this or just poetry and poets in general..
N
I’ve been on Lit for a bit now. I’m no seasoned Lit veteran, but in the few years I’ve been here, I’ve had immense fun. I write short fiction, but before Lit wrote lots of poetry, though I’ve only published one erotic poem here.
I’ve always found it difficult to write erotic poetry. Narratives are fine. And I think it’s because with prose, you could inject a sense of the experiential into the writing, blending time and metaphor to tease out the intricacies of emotion.
But with poetry, I find the articulation of any kind of sensuality or eroticism forced, clichéd, almost absurd.
Franz Kafka wrote once that he found metaphors to be problematic because they could never quite capture what he wanted them to capture, and Kafka was a giant of a literary genius!
I seem to struggle with this, in particular with poetic expression of the erotic.
I wonder if any of you feel this struggle as well? What do you do to avoid the pitfalls of cliché in erotic poetry?
I’ve decided to submit for publication some non-erotic poetry, being hesitant to do the same with my attempts at erotic poetry.
Just wanted to put it out there and have a conversation, about this or just poetry and poets in general..
N