Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
11 MIN LESEZEIT

Words and the bigger picture

IN JUNE 2018, a study by the National Endowment for the Arts reported that 11.7 per cent of U.S. readers had consumed poetry in 2017, the highest number in 15 years. Most notably, young poetry readers had doubled to 17.5 per cent from 2012. Experts attribute the popularity to social media and, of course, the success of Instagram phenoms like Canada’s own Rupi Kaur.

A lt houg h a simi la r study doesn’t exist in this country, BookNet Canada’s market reports support the American study’s indings. In 2016, Canadian poetry sales increased 79 per cent over the previous year, and between 2016 and 2017 the units sold rose another 154 per cent, mostly thanks again to Kaur.

It’s easy to get caught up in sales and trends, but I don’t think numbers should stand as a measure of success for Canadian poetry. I am more encouraged by the new voices that are being published and celebrated alongside the works of those from generations before. It was so thrilling last year when 23-year-old Billy-Ray Belcourt, a poet from Driftpile Cree Nation, won the prestigious Griffin Prize for his debut This Wound is a World, published by the small Calgary independent press Frontenac House.

Lesen Sie den vollständigen Artikel und viele weitere in dieser Ausgabe von Quill & Quire
Kaufoptionen unten
Wenn Sie die Ausgabe besitzen, Anmelden um den vollständigen Artikel jetzt zu lesen.
Digitale Einzelausgabe April 2019
 
€6,99 / issue
Diese Ausgabe und andere ältere Ausgaben sind nicht in einer neuen Abonnement. Das Abonnement enthält die letzte reguläre Ausgabe und die während des Abonnements erscheinenden neuen Ausgaben. Quill & Quire

Dieser Artikel stammt aus...


View Issues
Quill & Quire
April 2019
ANSICHT IM LAGER

Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


FRONTMATTER
Blood stream
Emily Carroll let creative intuition drive her new graphic novel, the erotic tale of a would-be vampire hunter BY LAURA KENINS
ePub evolution
Accessible reading has made giant strides in the past 10 years, yet most Canadian publishers aren’t keeping up BY RYAN PORTER
Summary judgment
Don’t get mired in details when wooing an agent with
Love and friendship
How Jane Austen and a devastating personal crisis inspired Natalie Jenner’s debut novel BY SUE CARTER
Faking it
A touring exhibition of literary artifacts is not all it seems BY SUE CARTER
Bringing kids into the FOLD
The Festival of Literary Diversity invests in the future with its new weekend for the 12-and-under set BY RYAN PORTER
FEATURES
Selective listening
An online campaign reveals the tensions between Canadian libraries and multinational publishers over digital pricing and audiobook availability BY SUE CARTER
Poetry in motion
Karen Solie, Doyali Islam, and Matthew Walsh gather together to discuss the practice of poetry and its effects on both poets and readers
REVIEWS
Interpretation of dreams
Three strong new collections plumb the depths of the unconscious and linguistic possibility BY JESSE ECKERLIN
Second time’s a charm
Two sophomore collections make good on the promise in the poets’ first books
Life stages
Three new collections address birth, decay, and our tenuous relationship with the natural world
Warning signs
Novelist Anakana Schofield extends her stylistically brash, innovative examination of women and gendered violence
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
What a monster
A new picture book from Kevin Sylvester is full of ire-breathing creatures and space robots – but also truths about parenting
Finding peace and quiet
A trio of illustrated stories encourage readers to embrace the calming powers of the moon, silence, and nature
What women don’t want
Three authors explore feminism in a direct and artistic manner
BOOK MAKING
Traditional tales, new ways
Indigenous studies texts get an innovative upgrade with UBC Press’s media-rich RavenSpace platform