Māori poetry

Traditional Māori poetry was always sung or chanted,[1] musical rhythms rather than linguistic devices served to distinguish it from prose. There is a large store of traditional chants and songs.[2] Rhyme or assonance were not devices used by the Māori; only when a given text is sung or chanted will the metre become apparent. The lines are indicated by features of the music. The language of poetry tends to differ stylistically from prose. Typical features of poetic diction are the use of synonyms or contrastive opposites, and the repetition of key words. As with poetry in other languages: "Archaic words are common, including many which have lost any specific meaning and acquired a religious mystique. Abbreviated, sometimes cryptic utterances and the use of certain grammatical constructions not found in prose are also common" (Biggs 1966:447448).

Modern Māori poets

gollark: Well, I would say that something can only really be "rational" in terms of whether it's a good way to achieve some particular goal.
gollark: > random quoted words
gollark: We still pay attention to them a lot and treat them seriously.
gollark: I mean, they're mostly heuristics for stuff which vaguely made sense in the savannah 100000 years ago.
gollark: Privacy, because apparently Humanity doesn't care about it.

References

  1. "Literary Forms", B.G. Biggs, Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, (1966)
  2. "Chapter VIII. — The Poetry of the Maori", The Maori: Yesterday and To-day, James Cowan, 1930
  3. "TE AO HOU : The New World : MAORI WRITERS' ISSUE [electronic resource]". Teaohou.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  4. "Love, War and Last Things - NZEPC". Nzepc.auckland.ac.nz. Retrieved 10 September 2017.

Bibliography


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