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Perfectly Poetic

Perfectly Poetic

著者: Allen Mowery
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Perfectly Poetic is a podcast that digs into poetry from every angle—classic, modern, obscure, and everything in between. Hosted by Allen Mowery, it’s a show for the curious and the critical, exploring the meaning, context, and cultural weight behind the lines. It’s not about idolizing poets or pretending every poem is profound. It’s about engaging with language, questioning assumptions, and finding unexpected insight in verse—whether it moves you, annoys you, or leaves you wondering why it exists.Allen Mowery 社会科学
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  • Ep. 87 — Seventeen Syllables of Suffering: The Haiku Scam
    2025/07/16

    Tired of people calling 17 syllables “genius”? So am I.

    In this brutally honest, occasionally unhinged episode of Perfectly Poetic, Allen Mowery finally unleashes his pent-up frustration about the most overrated poetic form of all time: the haiku. From childhood worksheet trauma to seasonal name-dropping, syllable policing, AI-generated nonsense, and the myth of Bashō's frog — no stone (or smooth river pebble) is left unskipped.

    Prepare yourself for frogs, fury, and the poetic equivalent of vending machine sushi.

    Spoiler: There’s a haiku at the end. And it’s not about coffee.


    What We Cover in This Episode:

    • Why your third-grade haiku assignment was emotional sabotage

    • The true history of haiku (and how we butchered it)

    • Bashō’s frog poem — misunderstood or overhyped?

    • The tyranny of 5-7-5 and the myth of morae

    • Why “deep” isn’t the same as “short”

    • Haikus on dating profiles, bumper stickers, and coffee shop chalkboards

    • Allen’s Haiku Manifesto for the modern world

    • AI haikus vs. human ones: can you tell the difference?

    • A few delightfully petty haikus written out of spite

    • Why we should demand more from poetry — and ourselves


    Quote from the Episode:

    “A haiku is not profound just because it’s small. It’s not a bonsai tree — it’s usually just a dead branch with a filter on it.”


    Mentioned or Referenced:

    • Matsuo Bashō

    • Nick Virgilio

    • Jack Kerouac

    • 3rd grade teachers everywhere

    • Haiku bots (yes, they’re real and yes, they’re terrifying)


    Connect with the Show:

    🌐 Website: perfectlypoetic.com
    📸 Instagram: @perfectlypoeticpodcast
    📬 Email: poetic@perfectlypoetic.com
    📺 YouTube: @perfectlypoeticpodcast

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    30 分
  • Ep. 86 — Feelings Are Not Facts: Romanticism’s Reckoning
    2025/07/09

    In this final chapter of our Romanticism series, we bring the velvet curtain down with a sharp, necessary reality check. After indulging in the beauty, the yearning, and the drama of Romanticism, it’s time to ask the uncomfortable questions: What happens when feelings become fact? When perception overrides truth? When self-expression becomes a substitute for self-governance?

    In this episode, Allen Mowery unpacks the paradox at the heart of Romanticism and explores the cultural consequences of turning emotion into moral authority. From Oscar Wilde’s unexpected transformation to T.S. Eliot’s quiet call to humility, we examine the poets who pushed back — and what their work still demands of us today.

    We don’t just critique Romanticism’s legacy; we wrestle with it. And in the process, we offer an alternative: a life rooted not in the whims of feeling, but in the enduring clarity of truth.


    Topics Covered:

    • Why feelings are not facts (even if they feel really, really factual)

    • The paradox of Romanticism’s emotional revolution

    • The dangers of moral relativism and cultural narcissism

    • Poets who resisted the emotional freefall: Eliot, Auden, Herbert, and more

    • The difference between being expressive and being whole

    • A call to choose truth — especially when it’s uncomfortable

    Featured Poets & Texts:

    • T.S. Eliot – Four Quartets, Ash Wednesday

    • W.H. Auden – September 1, 1939

    • George Herbert – The Elixir

    • Oscar Wilde – De Profundis

    • Selections from Romantic-era and post-Romantic poets


    Connect with Perfectly Poetic:
    Website: https://perfectlypoetic.com
    Instagram: @perfectlypoeticpodcast
    Facebook: Perfectly Poetic Podcast
    YouTube: Perfectly Poetic on YouTube
    Email: poetic@perfectlypoetic.com

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    15 分
  • Ep. 85 — Storms, Stars, and Self-Destruction: The Dark Side of Romanticism
    2025/07/02

    In this darkly delightful episode, we stop swooning over daffodils and start whispering to ghosts. Welcome to the stormy underworld of Romanticism—the side that’s drenched in moonlight, mourning, madness, and metaphysical despair. We explore what happens when emotion becomes obsession, beauty turns to terror, and the soul starts writing poetry with a quill dipped in melancholy.

    From Charlotte Dacre’s guilt-laced internal ruin to Novalis’s cosmic marriage proposal to death itself, we examine poetry that doesn’t just feel—it devours. Along the way, we meet snowbound nihilists, disillusioned philosophers, and poets who would have had thriving TikTok trauma-core accounts.

    And yes, we talk about the real monsters—like Matthew Lewis, who made Gothic horror loud, excessive, and weirdly seductive long before horror movies knew how to scream.

    In the end, we discover that the Romantics weren’t just dramatic—they were timeless. Their hunger still echoes through our curated sadness, moody playlists, and spiritual search engines.

    Featured Poets and Works:

    • Charlotte Dacre – “The Confession”

    • James Thomson – from Winter

    • Friedrich Schiller – from The Gods of Greece

    • Novalis – from Hymns to the Night

    • Matthew Lewis – “The Fragment”

    Themes Explored:

    • The Gothic as emotional architecture

    • Nature as beautiful annihilation

    • Spiritual grief and divine silence

    • Death as intimacy, not destruction

    • Emotional excess as both truth and performance

    • Modern culture's Romantic inheritance: from curated sadness to hashtag despair


    Connect With Us:perfectlypoetic.comInstagram: @perfectlypoeticpodcast
    Facebook: facebook.com/perfectlypoetic
    Email: poetic@perfectlypoetic.com
    YouTube: @perfectlypoeticpodcast


    Tags:
    #Romanticism #PoetryPodcast #GothicPoetry #Novalis #CharlotteDacre #DarkRomanticism #ModernMelancholy #TheSublime #PoeticDespair #PerfectlyPoetic

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    18 分

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