Reinventing the Life of a Poet in the Modern World

Month: January 2017

News for the New Year

Activist Writing

It's an exciting time to be a political poet. Many writers resistance groups are forming. My friend Coolia sent me information about Writers Resist Event, taking place in Los Angeles on January 15 at Beyond Baroque in Venice.

The Trenchant is Poetic: Notes on “Washing Palms” (North American Review)

Sita Considers Her Rebellions (Guernica)

3 poems by Vanessa Angelica Villarrea (The Feminist Wire)

Lynne Thompson reads her poem, "More than a Rhythm Section" (YouTube)

Reading Yeats in the Age of Trump (Boston Review) 

What poets can help us get through a Trump administration? (The Guardian)

Poet Delivers Powerful Piece On Kanye West (The Huffington Post)

Famous Poets

Why Bob Dylan is a Literary Genius (Rolling Stone) – I had had high hopes for this article because came from Rolling Stone and possibly might contain some eloquent journalism. Unfortunately there is nothing here that makes an academic case for Dylan, (where I think one could easily be made), nothing to bridge the gap between literary and song analysis, nothing to convince the picked-over literati that the Dylan award of the Nobel Prize for Literature wasn’t a crime. The forward for Hollywood Foto-Rhetoric: The Lost Manuscript, poems and photos about Los Angeles by Bob Dylan and photographer Barry Feinstein actually does a very good introduction written by Billy Collins, (who of course agrees with the Nobel committee decision) which makes the good arguments we're lacking in this piece.

Why Poetry (The New York Times)

Reviews of the new Neruda movie: NPR and The Los Angeles Times

How to Become a Poet (NPR)

 

Black Writers Matter

CitizenLast year I started a difficult book club reading group with Monsieur Big Bang and some friends from the graduate writing program from Sarah Lawrence. So you guessed it: this group is very white. Our first book was David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest. We followed that with White Noise by Don DeLillo and now we’re reading Lucia Berlin’s Manual for Cleaning Women.

We're unabashed intellectuals and politics are always part of our discussions, especially as the U.S. elections fell like a hammer into our first year's meetings. Two women in the group recently recommended Citizen: An American Lyric by Claudia Rankine as one of the best books they’ve read in a while. One of the daughters of the members even said they would join the group if we picked that book as a selection, (which we probably won’t because so many of us have already read it). But these poems do have an unexpected connection back to Infinite Jest as both comment somewhat ruefully about tennis tournaments.

As soon as it was recommended to me I was in a hurry to get it because I’m now ravenous to read political poetry.  This book, most famously, covers police violence deaths, each new edition adding names.

Names

But this book is also an amazing psychological investigation on micro-aggression. And if you think of micro-aggressions as unintentional (and therefore innocent), the mistakes of ignorance or language, (like accidentally mispronouncing Cantonese and offending a native speaker), this book show you the fine points of what it really is.

I would say this is required reading in light of the political realities of today. More on Claudia Rankine: Who Is Claudia Rankine? The Poet Just Received The MacArthur "Genius Grant" (Bustle)

LigaturesIt feels like the black lives matter movement lost some steam when Trump was elected. We have so many problems now competing for our attention. Rankine’s book is a good reminder to revisit books of poetry dealing with accelerating police violence and dehumanizing black people. Forget micro-aggression for a second. This is macro-aggression.

One of the runners up of the Rattle chapbook competition was Ligatures (for black bodies) by Denise Miller which I was lucky enough to receive as a subscriber last year. It’s 35 pages that pack a big punch.  You can can get a copy for six dollars and it’s well worth the price.

Poetry Card Week 7 (US and UK)

So I'm still working through a deck of poetry cards I found in my parents house last year. This week randomness dealt out some good stuff:

MooreIt could not be dangerous to be living
   in a town like this, of simple people,
who have a steeple-jack placing danger
   signs by the church
while he is gliding the solid-
   pointed star, which on the steeple
stands for hope.

The Steeple-Jack” by Marianne Moore

Moore was born in the outskirts of St. Louis, in Kirkwood, MO. She went to Bryn Mawr College and was a teacher and a librarian. She was also editor of The Dial and considered one of the modernist poets.

WwGreat God! I’d rather be
A pagan suckled in a creed outworn;
So might I, standing on this pleasant lea,
Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn;
Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea;
Or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn.

The World is Too Much With Us” by William Wordsworth

Wordsworth was a leader of English Romanticism movement, primarily a lyrical writer who believed specific experience served up universal meaning. He celebrated humanity, real language and this poem was his “recipe for  poetry as a ‘spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings" and "emotion recollected in tranquility.’”

GinsbergAmerica I’ve given you all and now I’m nothing
America two dollars and twentyseven cents January 17, 1956.
I can’t stand my own mind.
America when will end the human war?

Allen Ginsberg from “America” 

Wow! So great to read this right now. The card calls Ginsberg’s “Howl” a “literary gauntlet hurled down” and calls this poem “a brutally funny indictment of the mechanized torture that awaits any sensitive soul caught like a rat in the consumer maze.” Hear Ginsberg read the poem: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Orar-V3y5Sk.

Week seven stats:

1 white American colonialist female
1 black American female
2 white American females
3 white American males
1 white Andalusian male
1 Chilean male
2 white English males
1 white French male
1 white Italian male
1 white Scottish male
1 white Welsh male

1 1300s poet
1 1600s poet
1 1700s poet
5 1800s poets
7 1900s poets

New Quotes for the New Year

PennyQuotes and aphorisms can be very helpful little teaching moments for writers and other creatives, basically all of us thinkers. They’re also really good reality checks. Many of these are again from the Bo Sack’s marketing newsletters I get on my day job and they all involve skills you need as a writer, especially as a poet.

Of course my thoughts have been moving toward civic life lately and how writing becomes more of a moral obligation than a personal one. With that in mind, remember to check your narcissism this year. The world is gettin' crazy out there.

"All generalizations are dangerous, even this one." Alexandre Dumas (1802 – 1870)

"Many an optimist has become rich by buying out a pessimist." Robert G. Allen

"Talent hits a target no one else can hit; Genius hits a target no one else can see." Arthur Schopenhauer (1788 – 1860)

"Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others."  Jonathan Swift

"Half our life is spent trying to find something to do with the time we have rushed through life trying to save." Will Rogers (1879 – 1935)

"Education… has produced a vast population able to read but unable to distinguish what is worth reading." M. Trevelyan (1876 – 1962)

"Time is that quality of nature which keeps events from happening all at once. Lately it doesn't seem to be working." Anonymous

"What really decides consumers to buy or not to buy is the content of your advertising, not its form." David Ogilvy

"Every generation laughs at the old fashions, but follows religiously the new." Henry David Thoreau (1817 – 1862)

"When a man tells you that he got rich through hard work, ask him: 'Whose?'" Don Marquis (1878 – 1937)

"If it's a penny for your thoughts and you put in your two cents worth, then someone, somewhere is making a penny." Steven Wright

"The net's future is far from assured, and history offers much warning. Within a few decades of Gutenberg's creation, princes and priests moved to restrict the right to print books." Vint Cerf

"Fascism is capitalism plus murder." Upton Sinclair

 "A desire to avoid oblivion is the natural possession of any artist." Licoln Kirstein

 

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