Poetry is a wide genre - if someone tells me that they like Music I wouldn't know whether to play them Abba, Garage or Chopin. Even if they say they like Jazz, there's still a wide range. Similarly, the word "Poetry" is used to describe many types of text that (beyond the media used) have little in common. In particular their aesthetics may differ. A single poem can contain aspects of many of these subgenres, including prose genres.
The market affects the type of poetry written as well as published. In particular the fate of short texts has fluctuated over the years. See Adapting short texts for the market
Reading poetry
Poetry appreciation is tainted by reputations and fashion, factors that are hard to disentangle from other, supposedly more literary features. Poetry is read by humans with different aesthetic profiles. Attention, Agility and Poetic Effects looks at the demands made on poetry readers.
Poetry (like music but unlike a painting) is absorbed serially, patterns having to be built up by the reader. Ingarden and the Sense of Resolution considers what factors promote (or inhibit) this process.
Novelty is attractive but relative. Readers who have not been exposed to loquacious people with mental problems, or to various avant-garde practices may not recognise how staid those methods are (though the poems may still be good). See Literature, depersonalisation and derealisation and Poetry, Madness and Cure
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