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KAUPA Letters

KAUPA Letters

DOI

10.5703/1288284318449

Abstract

Though deceptively simple in form, haiku is a deeply complex and evocative poetic genre that demands more than just brevity—it requires aesthetic sensitivity, seasonal awareness, and authentic inspiration. This chapter offers a comprehensive guide to crafting literary haiku, beginning with the core characteristics of high-quality poems and the subtle distinctions that separate polished haiku from shallow or incomplete efforts. It also highlights the importance of seasonal words (kigo), which ground the poem in the natural world and connect it to the larger rhythms of life. Finally, the chapter explores eleven diverse sources of inspiration—from daily walks and nature documentaries to old travel memories and even bad haiku books—showing how poets can draw from both the ordinary and the extraordinary to compose haiku that resonate with depth, clarity, and emotional truth.

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