Penny's poetry pages Wiki
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About poets

Poet
List of English-language poets
Poets of other languages

Spoken poetry • Oral poetry
World poetry • English poetry
Old English • Middle English
Renaissance • Restoration
Augustan • Romantic
Victorian • Modernist

Schools and movements

Cavalier  • Metaphysical
Augustan • Graveyard • Romantic
Pre-Raphaelites • Georgians
Symbolism • Surrealism
Imagists • Fugitives
Objectivists • Confessional
Black Mountain • Beats
Language poets • Deep image
Expansive • New Formalism
List of groups and movements

Country and region

English poetry • Scottish poetry
Anglo-Welsh • British poets
Timeline of British poetry
Irish poetry • Irish poets
American poetry • U.S. poets
African-American • Chicano
Timeline of American poetry • Canadian poetry • poets
Timeline of Canadian poetry
Caribbean poetry • poets
Australian poetry • poets
New Zealand poetry • NZ poets
Anglo-Indian poetry • poets
Asian English-language poets South African poetry • SA poets
African Engiish-language poets

Infrastructure

List of literary critics
List of literary magazines
List of poetry anthologies
List of poetry awards
List of poetry organizations
Online poetry resources

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New Zealand poetry, like all poetry, is influenced by time and place and has been through a number of changes. Poetry has been part of New Zealand culture since before European settlement in the form of Maori sung poems or waiata.

The first colonial Pakeha poetry was also predominantly sung poetry. Initially colonial poetry had a preoccupation with British themes.

New Zealand poetry developed a strong local voice from the 1950s, and has now become a "polyphony" of traditionally marginalised voices. [1]

Wellington Group[]

Main article: Wellington Group

The Wellington Group or Wellington School was a group of New Zealand poets who worked and lived in and around Wellington, the capital of New Zealand, in the 1950s and 1960s. In part, it was a reaction to Allen Curnow's dictum of localism in NZ poetry, emphasizing cosmopolitanism, but both the Wellington Group and Curnow liked to use some degree of Māori symbolism.

See also[]

References[]

  1. Green, P., & Ricketts, H. (2010). 99 Ways into New Zealand Poetry. Auckland: Random House.

External links[]

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