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Jean Vengua (International) assertion Jean Vengua i(10434979 works by)
Gender: Female
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1 y separately published work icon The Hay(na)ku Anthology, Vol. II Jean Vengua (editor), Mark Young (editor), San Francisco Finland : Meritage Press xPress(ed) , 2008 21070402 2008 anthology poetry

'Since The First Hay(na)ku Anthology's release in 2005, the hay(na)ku has appeared in many literary journals, anthologies, and single-author poetry collections worldwide. Artists have created visual hay(na)ku. The form has been written in Spanish, English, French, Finnish, Dutch, Tagalog, and Norwegian. It has been taught in classrooms, and the National Autonomous University of Mexico/Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM) features an hay(na)ku webpage in their online journal, Periodioco de Poesia. Members of UNAM's Faculty of Literature and Philosophy are also preparing a full Spanish translation of The First Hay(na)ku Anthology for future release. Reflecting the hay(na)ku's continued popularity, this volume is released just three years after the first hay(na)ku anthology. A third anthology is also in the works. We hope readers enjoy this volume, an dare encouraged to try writing their own hay(na)ku! For this poetic form also was created as an Invitation to Poetry.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 y separately published work icon The First Hay(na)ku Anthology Mark Young (editor), Jean Vengua (editor), San Francisco Finland : Meritage Press xPressed , 2005 10434998 2005 anthology poetry

An anthology of hay(na)ku, a poem form that is similar to but distinct from the haiku: like haiku, hay(na)ku are short poems (six words in three lines), but they lack the syllabic and subject-specific formality of haiku.

Hay(na)ku were invented by Eileen Tabios, an American poet who is behind small publisher Meritage Press. The form in connected to the Philippines (the name is not Tagalog, but corresponds to a Tagalog phrase), and was formally inaugurated online on 12 June 2003 (Philippine Independence Day).

Source: The Hay(na)ku Verse Form (http://www.baymoon.com/~ariadne/form/haynaku.htm#history). (Sighted: 17/11/2016)

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