Jump to content
Poetry Magnum Opus

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'Dodoitsu'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Blogs

  • Tinker's Blog
  • PMO Members' Promotional Blog
  • General Discussion Blog

Forums

  • Members' Poetry
    • Showcase
    • Showcase (overflow)
    • Workshop
    • Playground
    • Longer Works
    • Promotions
    • Archive
  • Reference Section
    • Tools
    • Explore the Craft of Writing Poetry
    • Misc. Reference Material
  • Special Interest
    • World Poetry
    • PMO Audio
  • Prose
    • The Prose Forum
  • Reading
    • A Poem I Read Today
    • Favorite Poets
  • General
    • General Discussion
    • Literary Discussion
    • Articles
  • Art
    • Art - General Discussion
    • Photography, Drawing, and Painting
  • Welcome
    • Site Welcome, Philosophy, and Rules
  • PMO Community Matters ***MEMBERS ONLY***'s Feature Requests
  • PMO Community Matters ***MEMBERS ONLY***'s Special Requests
  • PMO Community Matters ***MEMBERS ONLY***'s How-to
  • PMO Community Matters ***MEMBERS ONLY***'s Visions for the Site
  • Mostly-Free Exchange of Ideas Club's Topics

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Found 1 result

  1. Tinker

    Dodoitsu

    Explore the Craft of Writing Poetry Japanese Verse Dodoitsu is a Japanese folk verse usually written about work, family or love and often with a touch of humor. It originated with the Gombei, people of the Japanese back country. The name literally means "quickly, city to city" probably so named for its rapid rise in popularity in the 1600s which was the beginning of Japan's "Modern Period". The poem commonly reflects changing urban life with a humorous or ironic twist. Alcohol (sake, in particular) is frequently mentioned. It's not just a poem, it is performance art. It's traditional for the Japanese verses to be sung while the performer strums a shamisen (a Japanese stringed instrument, similar and probably a descendant of the sanxian). The form has been referred to as the Japanese limerick. Like most Japanese poetry, the dodoitsu draws the emotion from the image. The elements of the Dodoitsu are: syllabic, written in 26 syllables or less. (in Japanese, 26 onji or sound syllables, impossible to translate to English) commonly written in 4 lines of 7-7-7-5 syllables each. a moment or thought quickly captured. usually unrhymed but rhyme can be at the poet's discretion should reflect changing urban life with a humorous or ironic twist. titles regularly pluck a phrase from the poem. simplified for the English writer. When composed in Japanese, there is one site that suggests a stricter frame. The three 7-syllable lines are sometimes further broken up into units. These units often contain a single word or phrase, followed by a post-positional "particle" that identifies the word/phrase's grammatical function or gives it context. Line 1: 3-syllable unit + 4-syllable unit Line 2: 4-syllable unit + 3-syllable unit Line 3: 3-syllable unit + 4 syllable unit Line 4: 5 syllable unit Five Minutes to Five Thursday afternoon is dead, phones become silent and wait until five minutes to five to ring, on Friday. ---Judi Van Gorder A Dodoitsu found and translated by Roseille @ Writing.com 明日は雨だと君から聞いて 傘を忘れる用意するI heard from you that it will rain tomorrow. I already have plans to forget my umbrella. 腹の立つときゃ 茶碗で酒を 酒は涙か ためいきかWhen I am angry, I (pour more) sake into my cup. Is the sake tears, or is it a sigh? Dodoitsu performed, it is noted that the Dodoitsu in this video is "sensual".
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Guidelines.