How Has Poets’ Reading Style Changed? A Phonetic Analysis of the Effects of Historical Phases and Gender on 20th Century Spanish Poetry Reading
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Colonna, ValentinaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
poetry voice history of poetry reading acoustic phonetics
Fecha
2025-09-30Referencia bibliográfica
Colonna, V. (2025). How Has Poets’ Reading Style Changed? A Phonetic Analysis of the Effects of Historical Phases and Gender on 20th Century Spanish Poetry Reading. Languages, 10(10), 255. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages10100255
Patrocinador
European Union’s Horizon Europe - Marie Skłodowska-Curie (grant agreement No. 101109465)Resumen
Poetry reading remains a largely underexplored area in phonetic research. While previous
studies have highlighted its potential and challenges, experimental research in the Spanish
context is still limited. This study aims to examine the evolution of Spanish poetry reading
over time, focusing on its main prosodic features. Applying the VIP-VSP phonetic model to
40 poetry recordings, we analyzed the organizational and prosodic indices that characterize
poetry reading. Mean speech rate, plenus (the ratio of speaking time to pausing), and pitch
span emerged as key parameters for capturing change. The results identified two distinct
historical phases—first and second radio-television—showing significant effects on speech
rate, plenus, and pitch span: speech rate and pitch span increased over time, while plenus
decreased. Gender also played a key role, with female voices exhibiting significantly higher
values in both pitch span and plenus. Variability and recurring strategies were observed
within and across authors. This study confirms that poetry reading has evolved along a
‘stylistic-chronological’ trajectory, while also reflecting gender-based distinctions. These
findings underscore the need for interdisciplinary analytical approaches and diversified
classification groupings to fully capture the complexity of this mode of speech.





