Without other people writing posts, you're sure to get a bit of a skewed view of the HNA Conference here.

I am currently sitting in a Cafe Ladro coffee shop, across from the Seattle Art Museum, where Haiku poets are checking out the free exhibits... I lost a bunch of poets already at Pike Place Market.  I love that people just want to do what they want, and explore Seattle as they see fit.  

This morning I went to a great talk by Jim Kacian about the history of one line haiku in practice.  It was a great discussion and enlightening, especially for those who don't even realize they're writing great one line haiku, and forcing it to three lines for form's sake.  I heard Penny Harter say in the Canadian Haiku Panel discussion later this afternoon say something along the lines of "it's a genre, not necessarily a form."  Jim's discussion was a good one.  Richard Gilbert asked a question having to do with the generation (me!) who likes to be plugged in and text, tweet and post in short bursts.  Can their short tweets be constructed into a type of haiku that has yet to be defined?  Is this the future of haiku?  I don't know the answer to that- I do acknowledge that I prefer to do short postings and such on FB and Twitter vs. the longer blog posts.  I like to get my views and questions out in small bursts and engage a conversation before writing long posts on other topics.  But here I am writing a long post!  

Next, I went to a talk by Richard Tice.  He was discussing place in Haiku.  He had translated some poems from the Japanese to English, and discussed place specifically.  He asked some great questions about when we speak about place in English language haiku.  Do we acknowledge place names in American English haiku?  Place can be brought up in haiku the following ways:  presentation,

Again, visit our Facebook page for photos and some short videos of the presentations.

 
 
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Ricard Tice, a member of Haiku Northwest, will be speaking at HNA this year!  His topic is entitled, "Location, Location, Location: Place in Haiku." 

Let's hear what he has to say as I do a blog interview with him...

How long have you been involved in haiku poetry and what got you started?
 
I started writing haiku seriously in 1977 during my second stay in Japan. Oddly enough, I never encountered haiku during my first stay of two years on Japan, but I was introduced to it later in a Japanese civilization course in 1975. This introduction soon developed into a primary area of study for me, although in my field of comparative literature I also took courses in all types of Japanese literature. In 1978 Bonsai, Modern Haiku, and Dragonfly began publishing some of my work. Then the Haiku Museum of Tokyo asked me to translate a short collection of contemporary Japanese haiku, which they published in 1979, and I started writing quite a few articles on haiku for Modern Haiku, Frogpond, and Cicada. I took over Dragonfly from Lorraine Ellis Harr in 1985 and published fifteen issues before giving it up in. My Japanese editor, Jack Terahata, and I translated a lot of contemporary Japanese haiku for that magazine to go along with the English-language haiku. My first haiku collection, Station Stop, was published in 1986 and won second place in the HSA biennial book award contest (back then the awards were given every two years). After Dragonfly ceased publication, I stopped writing for many years, except for an occasional haiku now and then. When I returned to graduate school at SFSU in 2003, I again got immersed in Japanese literature, particularly linked verse, and started writing haiku more, along with some linked verse. Michael Welch got me out of my shell by inviting me by e-mail to a haiku reading in the Bay Area. By coincidence, I had just moved to the Puget Sound, where he had moved earlier, and he got me involved in haiku activities in this area. I finally got to meet many haiku poets and scholars I had only known by name. My second collection of haiku (and linked verse), Familiar and Foreign, was published in 2008. It's received several complimentary reviews and absolutely no fanfare.
 
Have you ever been to HNA before?
 
This conference will be my first HNA conference. It's got a great line up, including Jim Kacian's presentation on the history of one-line haiku in English, which he's giving at the same time as my presentation. My lecture is titled "Location, Location, Location: Place in Haiku." Other aspects of haiku--kigo, syllable count, caesuras, lineation, imagery, for example--have gotten far more attention and have been hotly debated, but place may be more critical or basic to haiku than those. Can you imagine a haiku not linked to a place in some way? I did find one in the most recent issue of Modern Haiku. I'll review the rule of incorporating place in hokku in linked verse sessions and look at the two most common ways place is used: as a generic location for haiku and as a fixed, specific location. Then I'll examine haiku that use place names, a practice that is common enough in Japanese haiku but much less common in English. Finally I'll cover a fourth category of haiku that are "tagged" in some way--the place is indicated outside of the haiku, almost like adding a line to the poem. This is fairly rare in English haiku, but fairly visible in Japanese haiku.
 
You said you moved to this area some time ago. How do like it?
 
I moved to Maple Valley in 2008 and then to Kent last year. Both are southeast of Seattle. I think the Puget Sound is stunningly beautiful, and Seattle is a natural for a haiku convention. I've been to Seattle many times in the past, including taking a class at the University of Washington when I lived in Olympia and staying in Seattle for several months before moving to Japan. There are so many interesting places to see, and the city, despite its share of skyscrapers, has never lost its connection to the sea, the forests, and the mountains.
 
What are you looking forward to at this year's HNA?
 
I'm excited to finally meet many whose names and work I've been familiar with for years. I'm looking forward to haiku immersion!

I am excited too!  Thanks for sharing, and I'll see you soon!


photo credit: Michael Dylan Welch
 

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