NEW IDEA: If you are promoting this fishbowl with a reference on your own blog, please consider including your own prompt(s) there. It lets your readers see an example of what I'm looking for, and then later they can drop by and find out what I've done with it.
ELECTION DAY: After I post this, I'll go vote. You folks start posting your prompts, and I'll begin writing when I get home. Have you voted today? If so, please mention it in your comment! I'll be making a list of voters, and then I'll add them to my "Donors" list this month so you can enjoy the perk-post.
What Is a Poetry Fishbowl?
Writing is usually considered a solitary pursuit. One exception to this is a fascinating exercise called a "fishbowl." This has various forms, but all of them basically involve some kind of writing in public, usually with interaction between author and audience. A famous example is Harlan Ellison's series of "stories under glass" in which he sits in a bookstore window and writes a new story based on an idea that someone gives him. Writing classes sometimes include a version where students watch each other write, often with students calling out suggestions which are chalked up on the blackboard for those writing to use as inspiration.
In this online version of a Poetry Fishbowl, I begin by setting a theme; today's theme is "doors and passages." I invite people to suggest characters, settings, and other things relating to that theme. Then I use those prompts as inspiration for writing poems.
Cyberfunded Creativity
I'm practicing cyberfunded creativity. If you enjoy what I'm doing and want to see more of it, please feed the Bard. The following options are currently available:
1) Sponsor the Fishbowl -- Here is a PayPal button for donations. There is no specific requirement, but $1 is the minimum recommended size for PayPal transactions since they take a cut from every one. You can also donate via check or money order sent by postal mail. If you make a donation and tell me about it, I promise to use one of your prompts. Anonymous donations are perfectly welcome, just won't get that perk. General donations will be tallied, and at the end of the fishbowl I’ll post a list of eligible poems based on the total funding; then the audience can vote on which they want to see posted.
November 2 2010, 18:06:06 UTC 10 years ago
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/RN5b6_2LAliGray7Kkdm1A Moon Door
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/FxKb8MoVhboX0xokW-Wohg vase-shaped passage
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/view?uname=jbbreed&cuname=jbbreed&tags=%22Lin%20Family%20Garden%22#5302910825299242738 'triple door'
http://travel.webshots.com/photo/1141842236031606211qfxRTS Bagua door, it is believed that evil spirits will be repelled by the bagua shape
http://www.chinaodysseytours.com/suzhou/suzhou-garden-photo-tour.html third photo in the left column, plum-blossom door
November 2 2010, 18:13:43 UTC 10 years ago
November 2 2010, 18:24:53 UTC 10 years ago
Another couple are from the Lin Family Garden, in Taipei, when I was there I fell in love with these windows as well:
http://bp2.blogger.com/_yGMXrcbrTxs/SDqUF8NPw8I/AAAAAAAAAiI/glCQ03WucyA/s1600-h/100_2882.JPG
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/TnRd7nyEs1T64cKnyG4-rQ
http://picasaweb.google.com/lh/photo/wjUbTnAxSgMBBi4lNZaasA
Most have a symbolic meaning, the butterfly is for longevity, the bat for prosperity, for instance.