Much of the Romantic poetry of the 19th century used techniques that are seen in modern fantasy literature such as retellings of
classical mythology and
European folklore, both to show alternative angles in the stories and to explore social issues. Many distinguished poets were women and many of them used folktales as an acceptable social camouflage with which to explore feminist concerns. One of the most celebrated of these poems,
Christina Rossetti's 1862 "
Goblin Market", still remains a relatively popular source of critical debate.
Andrew Joron wrote in 1981 that over the past decade in the United States, "it was possible to create a tradition, that established and defined the genre" of science fiction poetry. In common with the gradual recognition of science fiction and fantasy as distinct literary genres in the 1930s, science-fictional poetry began publication as a distinct genre in the
pulp magazines of the United States. Fantasy-specific
Weird Tales (1923–1954) and its brief compatriot
Unknown (1939–43) were the only major publishers. They were succeeded by more serious venues including the US-based
The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (
F&SF) (1949–), the UK-based flagship of the
New Wave movement
New Worlds while it was under the editorship of
Michael Moorcock between 1964 and 1970, and the annual
reprint anthologies of
F&SF and ''
The Year's Best Science Fiction'' edited by
Judith Merril. These anthologies drew much of their content from mainstream or literary sources. In the 1960s, anthologies of original speculative material began to be published.
F&SF ceased accepting poetry in 1977, a gap in the market taken up by the newly established ''
Asimov's''. The
Science Fiction Poetry Association (SFPA) was founded by
Suzette Haden Elgin the following year. In the 1970s, Elgin's colleague Frederick J. Mayer for some time awarded an annual
Clark Ashton Smith Award for best fantastic poetry. By 1990, ''Asimov's'' remained the major news-stand market, but a diverse array of predominantly US-based
small press markets had developed, many lasting several decades, and many choosing purely electronic publication post-2000. This is in common with mainstream written poetry in the US over this time. SFPA (now called the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Poetry Association) awards the
Rhysling for short- and long-form SF and fantasy poetry awards annually; most winners have been either science fiction or science-themed rather than fantasy or horror. Most Rhysling nominees have been from the small-press poetry journals
Dreams & Nightmares,
The Magazine of Speculative Poetry, and the SFPA's own journal,
Star*Line. Winners have occasionally been reprinted in the
Nebula Awards anthology. The first one to include poems was
Nebula Award Stories Seventeen, edited by
Joe Haldeman. Other major genre awards have included poetry. The
Horror Writers Association has a separate recognition for single-author collections of horror poetry, the
Bram Stoker Award, though there is no facility in the Bram Stoker Award to honor anthologies of horror and weird poetry. The 2025
Hugo Awards included
Best Poem as a one-time, special category, and there is a movement to add the category permanently. ==Subgenres and themes==