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Viral verse: Poets of Instagram inject new life, fresh voices into poetry genre

Poetry is having a renaissance thanks to a generation of young, accessible writers breathing new life into the literary form via Instagram.

'If William Shakespeare was alive today, he would be on Instagram'

Young, accessible poets like Canadians Rupi Kaur and Atticus have helped breathe new life into the literary form by offering bite-sized poems directly to a massive pool of readers via Instagram. (Canadian Press)

An international fanbase. Throngs anticipating each live appearance or social media update. Their work tattooed onto devotees' bodies. Celebrity collaborations. The late-night talk show circuit. Merchandising.

It's not Hollywood's latest It-girl or music's flavour of the monthbut the reality for today's biggest Instagram poets.

After decades on adownward trajectory, poetry has been enjoying a renaissance thanks to a generation of young, accessible writers breathing new life into the literary form. They'respeaking directly to a massive pool of readers via Instagram, andthough not without criticism, Instapoets have inspired passionate fanswho say they haven't ever seen themselves reflected in this way.

Noted writer and spoken word artist HarmanKaur, 19, studied English literature at Simon Fraser University and says so many perspectives were missing from the material.

"All I was dealing with was literature and all I didn't see in that literature was myself," she said.

Harman Kaur self-published Pulkari, her debut book of poetry and prose, after being inspired by poets like Rupi Kaur. (Submitted by Harman Kaur)

Kaur, a Punjabi Sikh from Abbotsford, B.C., discovered the poetry of Rupi Kaur(no relation) on Tumblr and then had a eureka moment when she saw the fellow Canadian's book for sale in a bookstore.

"Up until that point, I had never seen the last name Kaur on the spine of a book," she recalled.

The Milk and Honey author coming from a similar background made herfeel she too could become a writer. This spring, Kaur self-published Pulkari, her debut book of poetry and prose.

The rise of Rupi Kaur

Poetry is a long-suffering genre, its death regularly pondered and its popularity declining for years, the Washington Post reported in 2015.

Enter 26-year-old Indo-Canadian poet RupiKaur. In 2015, her self-published debut Milk and Honey waspicked up by Andrews McMeel Publishing, a company that first dabbled in the genre with Australian Instagram poet Lang Leav's 2013 collection Love and Misadventure.

By early 2016, Kaur'sbook ofbite-sizedconfessionalpoems about female empowerment, desire, love and abuse poems often accompanied by her minimalist sketches was a New York Times bestseller. Devotees were captivated by her work, describing it as raw, straightforward, accessible and resonating withtheir lives.

Kaur'ssophomore collectionThe Sun and Her Flowers, releasedin October 2017, is listed onBookNet'slist of the 10 bestselling non-fiction booksfor the second year in a row.

Though poetry sales in Canada enjoyed small increases since 2013, print unit sales in poetry jumped 85.2 per cent between 2015 and 2016, according to BookNet, which analyzes and reports on the Canadian book industry.

The following year, that figure rose to 138.4 per cent a leap BookNet attributes almost entirely to RupiKaur's sales.

After several years of small increases, print unit sales in poetry increased 85.2 per cent between 2015 and 2016. The following year, they jumped 138.4 per cent a leap BookNet Canada attributes almost entirely to sales for Rupi Kaur. (BookNet Canada)

In April, BookNet noted thatKaur'stwo collections had ousted Leonard Cohen's The Book of Longingfrom its perch atop the company's list of the highest-selling print poetry books (based on sales data it began collecting in 2005).

Fellow InstapoetslikeAtticusand r.h. Sin have also helped pushed the likes of Homerand John Milton off BookNet's tally.

"I never expected [my poetry] to resonate with anybody and was very surprised when it did," Canadian poet Atticus, a celebrity favourite who hides his identity behind a silverGuy Fawkes mask, said from Victoria this week.

Instagram poet Atticus with a copy of his collection The Dark Between Stars at Munro's Books in Victoria, B.C. (David Malysheff/CBC)

"The nicest compliment I can get is when somebody messages me and says, 'You know, you said what I was thinking, but I didn't know how to articulate it'.... I really try to write honestly about these human things that I go through and the ups and downs of life," said the author of the bestselling collections Love Her Wild and The Dark Between Stars.

However, the mainstream success of Instapoets hasn't come without a wide-ranging backlash, which has ranged fromsatirical jabs at the simple style favoured by many Instapoetsto allegations of plagiarism to straight up condemnation from traditional poetsdismissing it as the work of amateurs.

Fans, however,view Instapoets as trailblazers stretching boundaries in form, subject matter and distribution backed by a literary establishment that, they point out, doesn't have a great track record for championingthe work of women, people of colour or young people.

"Every kind of literary genre has evolved over the years, and to say that [Rupi Kaur] has to abide by some classical standardyou know, it doesn't make sense," said young poetShanyRaitsin, a student atToronto'sRyersonUniversity.

"She pairs her work with drawings. It confuses some people. 'Why is this woman talking about her period? Why is she talking about her heartbreak and why is she so successful for it?'....It just works. It just clicked with people."

Poetry as therapy

Instapoetsopenly share thoughts on everything from unabashed romance to suffering sexual violence to bodily functions and that's inspired Raitsin and her peers to take up the mantle.

In turn, they're using poetry to express themselves, to process challenges they're grappling with and toheal from trauma.

Ryerson University student poets Sidra Jafri, from left, Leila Kazeminejad, Shany Raitsin, Mattie Hodge and Tazi LoMagno use poetry to express themselves, to process challenges they're grappling with and to heal from trauma. (Alice Hopton/CBC)

"I always used to write for myself. I never used to share it," said student and poet Mattie Hodge.

"I think we're so caught up in the fact that we can't share our emotions. We have to bottle it. Everything has to be OK I started realizing that everybody else can relate and share those experiences."

For fellow student SidraJafri, writing poetry has become a valued coping mechanism.

"I put my frustration and all my mental [distress] into my poetry. If you can just pour your heart out onto a piece of paper, it helps a little bit," shesaid.

"We use our art as therapy."

A gateway to more?

Ryersonpoetry professor Dale Smith says he'shappy to have students excited by, and eager to share, work found outside the classroom.

"I don't think of poetry as something that's confined to a particular media format," he said, noting that the poetry can take the form of dramatic performance or illustration, be created with or accompanied by sound or even be a combination of different forms.

"I think the great thing about the internet right now is that you can mix these different media styles together to produce something that's really evocative and interesting," Smith said.

Smith hopesInstagram poets will serve as a gateway to a greater variety of poetry and other writing, and inspire engagementin a wider culture of discourse especially with voices that challenge and don't directly mirror readers' own perspectives.

"If Rupi Kaur and Instapoetry became only about reproducing forms of success without a critique somewhere in it; if it shut out [for instance] voices of queer, anti-capitalist, challenging poets if that somehow made [these voices] go away, I think that would be a problem."

B.C.'s Harman Kaur believes that today's Instapoets are simply employing the medium that most effectively disseminates their work to the widest possible audience something writers have always attempted to do.

"If William Shakespeare was alive today, he would be on Instagram," Kaur declared.

With files from CBC's Tashauna Reid, Alice Hopton