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- Q1226395 subject Q8767322.
- Q1226395 abstract "Dinggedicht (orig. German; literally: "poem of things" or "thing poem"| plural: Dinggedichte) is a poetic form, referring to a specific focus and mood in the choice of a poetic theme.Developed during the second half of the 19th century, the focus in a Dinggedicht rests on an animate or inanimate object that is described in a distanced, often dissociated and objectified way. The poet aims at finding the language that is specific and supposedly indigenous to the thing in view. The poet attempts to let the very object itself speak in its own language. It is supposed to express the inner being of the object in focus. In this tradition, objects from the arts have often been taken up, but more recently poets have also sought out objects from every-day life. Furthermore, the Dinggedicht needs not necessarily aim at a physical object, but also recapture abstract notions in an objectified fashion. The voice in the Dinggedicht is frequently the third person.The poetological technical terms has been coined by the German literary scholar Kurt Oppert.".
- Q1226395 wikiPageWikiLink Q123261.
- Q1226395 wikiPageWikiLink Q188.
- Q1226395 wikiPageWikiLink Q63699.
- Q1226395 wikiPageWikiLink Q68066.
- Q1226395 wikiPageWikiLink Q76483.
- Q1226395 wikiPageWikiLink Q8767322.
- Q1226395 comment "Dinggedicht (orig. German; literally: "poem of things" or "thing poem"| plural: Dinggedichte) is a poetic form, referring to a specific focus and mood in the choice of a poetic theme.Developed during the second half of the 19th century, the focus in a Dinggedicht rests on an animate or inanimate object that is described in a distanced, often dissociated and objectified way. The poet aims at finding the language that is specific and supposedly indigenous to the thing in view.".
- Q1226395 label "Dinggedicht".