Social Sciences, asked by kanhaiya391, 10 months ago

Where did / was the the Term 'Martian Poetry' First used / originate?

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Answered by Anonymous
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Newdigate Prize, poetry prize founded in 1805 by Sir Roger Newdigate and awarded at the University of Oxford.

Martian poetry is a distinctly English style of Surrealism in poetry, of the 1970s and early 1980s. Poets most closely associated with it are Craig Raine and Christopher Reid. It was first popularized by Raine's collection A Martian Sends a Postcard Home (1979).

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Answered by Anonymous
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good morning

Explanation:

The term applied in the 1980s to a small group of poets in Britain whose work is marked by the prominence of surprising visual metaphors, similes, and conceits. The leading figures are Christopher Reid and Craig Raine, who both published important collections in 1979: Reid's Arcadia and Raine's A Martian Sends a Postcard Home both transform everyday objects, in a playful kind of defamiliarization. The term comes from the title poem of Raine's book, in which we are shown familiar earthly sights through the inexperienced eyes of a visiting Martian (‘Rain is when the earth is television’). Similar effects are achieved by David Sweetman in Looking Into the Deep End (1981) and by Oliver Reynolds in Skevington's Daughter (1985). This tendency has been called Martianism.

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