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Why Is Poetry Important?

In 2018, a survey from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) showed that 28 million American adults read poetry in 2017. That’s the
highest on record in the 15 years since NEA initiated the Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA) and doubled from 2012 when
NEA conducted the last SPPA. When you consider the importance of poetry, it’s not hard to see why those numbers are the way they are.
15 Reasons Why Poems Are Important To Us In Today's World

Poetry is important because it helps you understand others better. It gives you new perspectives on the
world, allows you to connect with people similar to and different from you, and expresses things you’d
otherwise find challenging to explain in everyday language.

In this article, I’ll expand on the importance of poetry. I’ll explain the purpose of poetry, its role in the average person’s life and society at
large, why poetry has a place in the education system, the benefits of poetry for readers, and how a hypothetical world without poems
looks.

What Is the Value of Poetry?


If you ask different people why poetry is essential, you’ll get various answers. The fact that there’s no one-size-fits-all answer to the question
regarding the value of poetry is, in my opinion, a testament to how valuable it is.

The value of poetry has artistic and practical aspects. Poets use their work to showcase the range of
expression, lyrical beauty, and emotion in their native language. On the other hand, the average person
turns to poetry to experience, heighten, or soothe their feelings.

I’ve touched on the importance of poetry from an artistic and practical perspective. But why did people start writing poetry in the first place?
Let’s tackle that question next.

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What Is the Main Purpose of Poetry?
Throughout human history, poets used their work for different purposes. For instance, court officials in ancient Japan considered poetry
essential to the “proper” functioning of the government. But what was the original intent of poetry?

The main purpose of poetry is conveying stories through language. Ancient peoples passed down their
tales from generation to generation using oral recitation, a form of poetry. Today, the best poetry can
capture the ups and downs of human knowledge and emotions within a handful of words or lines.

Given the purpose of poetry, what role does it play in society? Does it matter to the community at all? Absolutely, and I’ll explain why in the
following paragraphs.

Is Poetry Important to Society?


If you’re someone who has no artistic or literary sensibility whatsoever, you probably scoff at the idea that poetry matters at all. After all,
aren’t poets people who have nothing better to do than shut themselves away in their ivory towers and navel-gaze about the way an acorn
falls from a tree?

Poetry is important to society. Political poems may praise or critique the powers-that-be or appear to
praise them while offering covert criticism through coded language. The latter is especially true for poets
who live in places with little to no freedom of expression.

Whether directly or indirectly, poetry has shaped societies for better or worse. Google “political poets” for historical examples that are too
numerous to cover in one article.
How Does Poetry Influence Human Life?
People from marginalized groups aren’t the only ones who benefit from poetry. Regardless of where you’re from, poetry plays a crucial role
in your daily life.

Poetry influences human life through expression of the human condition. For instance, poets can make
powerful statements on how governments treat their average citizens. Poems can also zoom in on subjects
at the individual level, like the complicated feelings of falling in love.

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So far, I’ve covered poetry’s historical, systemic and emotional value. Let’s discuss its intellectual importance in the next section.

How Does Poetry Help Us Think and Reflect?


If you’ve read anything by Lang Leav, you’ve had a taste of the emotional impact of poems. If your left brain is stronger than your right brain,
poetry can also give you something to chew.

Poetry helps you think and reflect through its language usage. Good poems usually have several layers of
meaning, and it’s quite an intellectual exercise to peel back each of those layers and uncover the things
the poet wants to say. The beauty of poetry is everyone interprets a poem differently.

You don’t have to be a particularly cerebral person to appreciate a poem, though. As I’ll explain in the following section, poetry has a vital
role in children’s education.

Why Is Poetry Important in Education?


If you’re indifferent to or hate poetry with a passion, I don’t blame you. Most schools focus more on the technical and literary aspects of
poetry (e.g., iambic pentameter, soliloquy) than on individual enjoyment and how students can relate poems to their daily lives. That said, I
believe poems should continue to be part of school curriculums.

Poetry is important to education because:

Poetry builds essential language skills.

Poetry improves critical thinking ability.

Poetry enhances creativity.

Poetry grants a deeper appreciation of pop culture.

Poetry encourages empathy.

While going through the above list, you might’ve thought: “Okay, but how exactly does poetry do all that?” Let me elaborate below.

Poetry Builds Essential Language Skills


Poetry is arguably the height of language expression. Poets often follow and break the rules of language for maximum impact.

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Therefore, to understand and appreciate poetry, a student must have complete mastery over a poem’s language. For example, poets
regularly use words that don’t appear in everyday conversation or use them in ways that may seem strange to someone who isn’t a native
speaker of the language the poet used.

Language learners also pick up similes, metaphors, paradoxes, irony, alliteration, etc. These aren’t only words to tick off an English exam:
They also allow students to see patterns in their target language and further enhance their fluency.

Poetry Improves Critical Thinking Ability


Of course, poets aren’t gods (though their language mastery can seem godlike). They’re human like their readers and can make mistakes
in the form and content of their poems.

A good poetry teacher can pose questions like “Given what you know about English grammar and conventions, which rules did the poet
break in this work?” or “Do you think the poet is justified in using a hateful and derogatory term here? Why or why not?”

Also, students shouldn’t analyze poems in a vacuum. Teachers should also encourage the exploration of a poem’s context — whether
historical, political, socioeconomic, or individual. The context points to vital clues about a poem (e.g., what the poem is about, why the
author used a particular style, why the author feels a certain way about a subject, etc.)

Poetry Enhances Creativity


Like most types of literature, poetry encourages readers to look at the world from a different perspective.

To illustrate, is a falling leaf simply demonstrating how gravity works? Or can you use it as a metaphor for the cycle of life and death? How
do you express that cycle in a way that hundreds of poets haven’t done before?

As I mentioned before, wordplay is a vital aspect of poetry. You can call a person every one-word variation of “unintelligent,” or you can say
someone is “like a dog who thinks his tail is a piece of bone.”

Poetry Grants a Deeper Appreciation of Pop Culture


If you’re a poetry teacher, you shouldn’t neglect to tell your students that their favorite chart-toppers are poems set to music.
Students can further appreciate the songs that get stuck in their heads by deconstructing poetry and its components. They can marvel at
the skill it takes to create a rhythm, tell a story and make a song memorable.

A good example is Fort Minor’s “Kenji,” which talks about the Japanese-American internment during World War II. You can listen to the
song via YouTube below:

Poetry Encourages Empathy


It’s one thing to read facts and figures about wars in other countries. It’s another to read a poem about a survivor’s trauma and empathize
with that experience on some level.

I doubt there’s a single school in the country that teaches a class along the lines of “Empathy 101.” But I think you’ll agree empathy is a
valuable skill to have beyond the four walls of the classroom. That’s what allows humans to coexist with each other despite their
differences, after all, and most poetry has empathy in spades.

I’ve explained the importance of keeping poetry in school curriculums. How about the benefits of poetry for adults who are no longer in
school? Fortunately, there are plenty of those, as you’ll see below.

How Does Poetry Benefit the Reader?


Students aren’t the only individuals who can benefit from poetry. If, at this point, you’re still not convinced of the practical value of reading
poems beyond an academic setting, let me change your mind.
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Poetry benefits the reader as follows:

Poetry boosts your brainpower.

Poetry trains you to simplify complex ideas.

Poetry is good for your mental health.

Let’s break down the benefits of reading poetry below.

Poetry Boosts Your Brainpower


Numerous studies have demonstrated the positive effects of poetry on your brain.

For example, in one 2013 study, reading poetry stimulates the areas of your brain associated with memory more than reading prose
material like novels and heating installation manuals (seriously). That’s because poetry evokes strong emotions, and if these have links to
specific memories, those memories are more likely to stick to your brain.

Poetry Trains You To Simplify Complex Ideas


Most poems are only a few lines long. As a result, poets try to make every word count without sacrificing the poem’s emotional resonance
with the reader.

In the corporate world, you have to deal with and make sense of complex data and information. You can take a leaf out of an excellent
poet’s book (figuratively and literally), read poetry as carefully as you can, and observe how poets say so much with so little. In the same
way, a PowerPoint presentation shows how your company’s finances are doing without overcrowding each slide.

Poetry Is Good for Your Mental Health


You know when you have a thought or feeling you can’t put into words? Poets are skilled at conveying the things most people have trouble
expressing.

When you read something that articulates the things on the tip of your tongue, you’re more likely to process those things in a meaningful
way. The ability to process thoughts and emotions constructively has links to improved mental health. Indeed, studies suggest that reading
poetry can alleviate the following symptoms:
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Anxiety

Depression

Trauma

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Stress

Considering the benefits of poetry, you’ll find it hard to imagine why anyone would not want to read even a single poem. So let’s suppose
the world doesn’t have poetry at all. How can an entire world function without poems?

What Would Happen Without Poetry?


Suppose poetry never existed at all. In that case, no one can enjoy the benefits of poetry as outlined above.

Without poetry, the world would become a dull, cold place. People can lose touch with their past since
early histories came as oral poetry. Wars can become more prevalent because there’s significantly less
empathy in the world. Those who have mental illnesses will suffer in silence.

If you don’t already realize the importance of poetry at this point, you can stop reading. Otherwise, I’ll wrap up everything I’ve said so far in
the article.

Key Takeaways
A poem isn’t just a piece you read to pass your English or literature class. When you carefully read poetry, you can make sense of the
world, other people, and yourself. You can reconcile science with art, hear music where there’s none, and see beauty in the ugliest places.

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If nothing else, you can try to deconstruct the most difficult poems in the world, enhance your thinking capabilities along the way and brag to
your friends about your achievement. But first, I suggest you start with anything by Dr. Seuss, Lang Leav, or your friends’ Instagram posts.

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