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What is a Slam Back to Top Next SectionSimply put, poetry slam is the
competitive art of performance poetry. It puts a dual emphasis on writing and
performance, encouraging poets to focus on what they're saying and how they're
saying it. It is an event in which poets perform their work and are judged by
members of the audience. Typically, the host or another organizer select the
judges, who are instructed to give numerical scores (on a zero to 10 or one to
10 scale) based on the poet's content and performance.
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Time |
Penalty |
|
3:10
& under |
0.0 |
|
3:10.01
- 3:20 |
-0.5 |
|
3:20.01
- 3:30 |
-1.0 |
|
3:30.01
- 3:40 |
-1.5 |
|
3:40.01
- 3:50 |
-2.0 |
|
ETC |
[-0.5
for every 10 seconds over 3:10] |
The announcement of the time
penalty and its consequent deduction will be made by the emcee or scorekeeper
after all the judges have reported their scores. The judges should not even be
told that a poet went overtime until it is too late for them to adjust their
scores. (That's Arthur Rimbaud.)
II. TEAMS &
INDIVIDUALS
Team Eligibility. Teams
must be chosen from an ongoing slam or reading series open to all poets
regardless of age, sex, race, ability, appearance, or sexual orientation. Team
members must be chosen through some form of competition; how that competition is
structured is up to the local venue or slammaster so long as anyone who
considers herself to be a part of the community fielding the slam team has the
competitive opportunity to join it. Because some smaller/younger/more rural
communities may not be able to assemble a team in this way, the host city for
the national championships may at times accept a team not chosen through
competition, but this should be the exception, not the rule, and every effort
should be made to maintain openness.
Team Pieces.
Duos, trios, and quartets (otherwise known as team, group, or collaborative
pieces) are allowed, even encouraged, so long as all of the primary authors
perform them. Refer to Section V (Definitions) for further clarification on
primary authorship. The writer/performer who offers up his individual spot on
stage in order to accommodate a group piece must be one of the primary authors
of that piece. Thus, a poet whose only appearance on stage during a bout is as
part of a team piece must be one of the primary authors of that team piece.
A group piece with more than one
primary author does not have to be used in the same primary author's slot each
time it is performed in the course of the competition. But a group piece with
only one primary author must only & always be performed during that
writer/performer's slot. Group pieces may not be repeated in subsequent years
unless all of the primary authors are present and on a team with one another
again. The score of a team piece will be credited to the team as a whole, not to
the primary author who offered up her individual turn on stage to accommodate
it. Because team pieces do not receive rank scores in the bouts in which they
are used, they do not affect the rank scores of individual poets in the same
bout. In other words, even if a team piece receives the highest score in a bout,
it will not receive the rank score of 1. The rank score of 1 goes to the
highest-scoring individual poet of the bout
A poet may render herself
ineligible for consideration in the individual competition if she opts to use
her team piece during a round in which poets are competing both as teams and as
individuals. A team piece may be substituted for any or all of the members of a
team in any bout. Provided all other rules regarding team pieces and repetition
are followed, one team could use four group pieces in one bout.
III. JUDGING & SCORING
Judging. All
efforts shall be made to select five judges who will be fair. Once chosen, the
judges will: 1) be given a set of printed instructions on how to judge a poetry
slam (see below for an example), 2) have a private, verbal crash course by the
emcee or house manager on the do's and don'ts of poetry slam judging (where they
can ask questions), and 3) hear the standardized Official Emcee Spiel (rewritten
and tweaked each year by the host city of the national competition), which,
among other things, will apprise the audience of their own responsibilities as
well as remind the judges of theirs. Having heard, read, or otherwise
experienced these three sets of instructions, a judge cannot be challenged over
a score. Complaints, problems, and/or disagreements regarding the impartiality
of the judges should be brought privately to the attention of the emcee or house
manager BEFORE the bout begins. Having heard and understood the complaint, the
house manager or emcee will then make a decision (also privately) that cannot be
further challenged
Scoring. The
judges will give each poem a score from 0 to 10, with 10 being the highest or
"perfect" score. They will be encouraged to use one decimal place in
order to preclude the likelihood of a tie. Each poem will get five scores. The
high and the low scores will be dropped and the remaining three scores will be
added together. Team scores will be displayed or otherwise publicly available
during the bout.
IV. OFFICIALS
Emcees. The emcee
will announce to the audience each poet's name and the team he is from. She will
also require that all judges hold their scores up at the same time and that no
judge changes his score after it is up. She is expected to move the show along
quickly and keep the audience engaged and interested in the competition. Since
she must be completely impartial, any witty banter directed at individual poets,
poems, teams, or scores is inappropriate. Even genuine enthusiasm has to be
carefully directed. The safest thing to do is encourage the audience to express
their own opinions.
V. DEFINITIONS
Team Piece: a
poem performed by two, three, or all four members of the same team.
Primary Author(s):
Those writers/performers whose contributions to a particular group piece are so
fundamental that they have at least as much of a right as any other
writer/performer of the piece to claim ownership of it at any time. Primary
authors must perform their pieces; if a writer/performer is watching other
members of his team perform a group piece, then any contributions he might have
made to it must not be significant enough to constitute primary authorship.
Bout: a
competition between two or more teams.
Order: the
schematic that determines the order in which teams will read.
Prop: an object
or article of clothing introduced into a performance with the effect of
enhancing, illustrating, underscoring, or otherwise augmenting the words of the
poem.
Rotation: when
each team's first poet has read in a bout, the first rotation is over. There are
as many rotations in a bout as there are poets on a team.
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Email: slammaster@poetry-slam.com
Phone: 801-577-6442
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