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Joanne
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Oct 04, 2015 01:05PM
That's because you have no objective means of comparing the language and literary styles of two different centuries...:-)
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Thanks for that, Joanne. Well said! I had a similar conversation with an ex- teacher friend of mine recently, about the modern poetry of Mark Grist (although I realise that he's a totally different genre to J.K.).We watched him on you tube in word battle with a young "grime artist" called Blizzard, and we were blown away by the energy, the raw creativity, the sheer delight that young people are so excited and passionate about modern poetry. Many would argue that it is course, vulgar, clumsy at times, sometimes shockingly explicit and mysogynistic, and crudely patched together, but I loved the fact that young people were getting together to enthusiastically celebrate and use their brains to create such exciting, highly linguistic and modern poetry. My friend once taught Tony Harrison's V to an AS class, and had so many complaints from parents, even though the kids loved it.Shakespeare and DH Lawrence had a bad rap in their time too.
As long as a reader is inspired and excited by what they read, they will continue to read, learn and grow. J.K. got so many children reading and that is to be applauded and commended.


