ABSTRACT
This study observes oral poetry as an aesthetic manifestation and attention, especially to poems that recall childhood in which the inspiration is the oral collection. Coordinates favor following the poetic and creative properties of the aforementioned poetic genre, from which verses from the book Batata cozida, mingau de cará [Cooked Potato, Yam Porridge], written by Eloí Bocheco (2006)BOCHECO, Eloí. Batata cozida, mingau de cará. Brasília: MEC, 2006., are analyzed. Thus, it can be said that the poetics for childhood understood by the writer’s proposal allows the little reader to transit, in the same creation, through the known, that is, throughout the elements of oral poetry almost always recovered from the popular tradition; and for what he knows at the same opportunity: the poem of declared authorship, which presupposes a work woven basically in writing. In addition, such verses can be understood as a variation of the oral tradition, renewed on the threshold between orality and writing, in a playful game with both codes.
KEYWORDS:
Oral Poetry; Poems for Childhood; Eloí; Bocheco