Use a Current Book Title to Create a Blackout Poem
April begins next Friday and that means…National Poetry Month! Launched by the Academy of American Poets in April 1996, National Poetry Month reminds us that poets have an integral role to play in our culture and that poetry matters.
Many of us are not as focused or verbose as others…why not scan a page from the current title you are reading and create a blackout poem? Below are two pages I scanned as an example.
Creating a blackout poem is like doing a reverse word search! What you do is read your article, but in a different way than before. You start to notice individual words that when pieced together with other words on the page, might create an insightful poem of some sort. Most importantly…Have FUN!
As you’ll see in the video below, with a black Sharpie, you put a rectangle around the words you would like to use in your poem. It’s tricky because since you can’t move the text on the page, you have to be careful that the poem reads correctly yet still uses the words in the location on the page where they already are. Once you’ve blocked out your poem, you simply black out the rest of the page with your marker.
Watch the video below to better understand the process.
Austin Kleon is the person who first created this process, and he’s even published a best selling book with these types of poems. You can learn more about Austin and his book at Austin Kleon. There is also a tumblr dedicated to these poems. If you’d like to submit one or browse through the poetry, just click over to Newspaper Blackout.
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