Hmm.Odd tangent that just poked me in the brain:
Does anyone seriously thing a model T is better than Lexus?
A Fokker E1 better than the coming F35?
But poetry and writing and philosophy in general are OBVIOUSLY crap, not "real" art...compared to the masters.
Hah.
I wouldn't agree with that second to last statement one way or another, much. I'd simply say that because they're made of stuff like letters they're not really made with the intention of being explained with stuff like letters. Maybe? It seems like poems may sometimes be written with the intention of explaining things in the way they do, and writing about them is more useful for letting you know what I think about them, than letting you know what they mean.
But I don't REALLY throw out the "what the author meant" thing...as something someone can do. There's a Millay poem I feel was absolutely meant to "respond" or at least appear to respond to a Yeats poem, because too many words are used in common between the two in too short an amount of text. And they both choose a sonnet form.
If you're curious, it's the Yeats sonnet "Leda and the Swan" and the Millay poem "I Being a Woman and Distressed."
And I don't necessarily feel confident every poem is targeted towards another poem, or that every poem is intentionally related to something else, or that a poem that avoids a subject is really talking about it, or a poem that talks about a subject is really avoiding it. In a way, the latter Millay poem, is a really winning way of dismissing that tension (as is Yeats's poem in wondering if it exists).
So there's the crap aspect. I just don't think it's worth calling that crap, or BS.
As for ussu, I guess that regarding the lower quality, I don't quite buy that particularly. Whatever is going on for them may well be much better for them, or certain of their readers, than what is going on for me. I appreciate Shakespeare's sonnet sequences more than his plays, except when his plays are performed on stage, and one of his plays I still think about a great deal is Titus Andronicus. It may be I actually accept melodrama more than drama in an age where every person seems to live an insignificant life on "the world stage," (i.e., on the internet, but also in a public setting with many acquaintances without much in the way of gaps bridged - not necc. here on KW) and if things matter, it's in a setting of relatively private or out-of-sight desperation.
I'd simply say that a lot of the metrics I - if not you folks - might like to use to appraise a tie between something written and other stuff - me, the writer, the subject, etc - start to fall apart, because more and more, in the absence of any particular reason to speak besides the enjoyment of speaking, at least for my part, I may say something because it seems enjoyable to say it, or fits my sense of aesthetics.
How much more attention to be paid, towards being silent and speaking, towards not posting and posting?