If you’ve been in the poetry world at all recently, you know that we’ve been seeing a renaissance of sorts when it comes to poetry. Poetry is exciting right now, ya’ll. Even though readers have likely felt these tidal shifts, new poetry research from the National Endowment For The Arts has actual numbers that show what we felt is true: poetry reading is up, across the board.

New Poetry Research Finds Dramatic Increases In Readership

As the NEA reports:

“Nearly 12 percent (11.7 percent) of adults read poetry in the last year, according to new data from the National Endowment for the Arts’ 2017 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA). That’s 28 million adults. As a share of the total U.S. adult population, this poetry readership is the highest on record over a 15-year period of conducting the SPPA, a research partnership with the U.S. Census Bureau.”

Even more exciting, these rates are especially improving among some demographic sub-groups.

For 18-24 year olds, poetry reading has doubled (at 17.5% in 2017, up from 8.2% in 2012)

Adults 25-34 years old are reading at rates of 12.3% in 2017, versus 6.7% in 2012

Notable gains were seen in women readers (up to 14.5% from 8.0% in 2012), African Americans (15.3% from 6.9% in 2012), Asian Americans (12.6%, up from 4.8%), and other non-white, non-Hispanic groups (13.5%, up from 4.7%)

The Academy of American Poets (the group behind the fantastic Poem-a-Day program) attributes these changes to a few key elements. Summaries from their excellent piece on this new poetry research include:

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In challenging times, people turn to poetry to find insight and comfort

Poetry, one of our oldest art forms, is perfectly suited to our social media–driven, mobile culture

In addition to social media becoming an important way that readers share poems, social media platforms have enabled poets themselves to champion the art form

We’ve benefited from highly visible poets in mainstream culture, such as Presidential Inaugural Poets, groundbreaking U.S. Poet Laureates, and national/international poetry best-sellers

New leaders took the helm at several U. S.-based poetry organizations and began working together for the first time to amplify the importance of poetry resulting in the 2016 launch of the Poetry Coalition

How To Get Started With Poetry

If you’ve been dabbling in poetry and want to get more into the genre, there’s LOADS of places to get started.

Button Poetry’s live poetry readings are where you want to hang out on YouTube. Publishers like Graywolf Press and Copper Canyon Press are releasing collections from newcomers like Javier Zamora and Donika Kelly as well as Ursula K. Le Guin’s final poems. Check out personalized poetry recommendations at Poetry Rx from The Paris Review.

Subscribe to Poem-a-Day to get one poem in your inbox every single day. Weekends are reserved for classic poems, while you’ll see all contemporary poets during the week. (Can confirm–these are a great way to start your day.)

As The American Academy of Poets notes, social media platforms give poets a great way to share their art, inspiration, and poems. Some of them have huge followings (Rupi Kaur has 2.7 million Instagram followers, for example.) Some of my favorite poets to follow online include:

Basically, it’s time to start reading poetry again if you aren’t already. It’s one of the most exciting areas of the literary world as this new poetry research from the NEA shows clearly.

Do you love poetry? Got a favorite poet? Share ’em in the comments!