Reinventing the Life of a Poet in the Modern World

Category: Poetry News (Page 1 of 6)

Poetry in the World

DylantArticles At-Large

I'm still reading New Yorkers. Years ago my friend also started sending me The Altantic and like the other magazine, I'm really behind. Here are the poetry related articles I've come across…

The Last Rock-Star Poet by James Parker (about Dylan Thomas)

BishoplowellThe Poet Laureate of Englishness/A Poet for the Age of Brexit by Adam Kirsch (about A.E. Housman)

The Odyssey and the Other: What the epic can teach about encounters with strangers abroad and at Home

Encrypted: Translators confront the supreme enigma of Stephane Mallarme’s poetry

Tragic Muses: What Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell taught each other about turning pain into art

And I’ve been holding on to this gem of an article from Atlas Obscura for years: An Algorithmic Investigation of the Highfalutin “Poet Voice’ by Cara Giaimo. The author ponders the poetry reading and the sound of that wacky performance voice, “a slow, lilting delivery like a very boring ocean.” She opposes this to the similarly stilted NPR voice or Podcast voice.

Poems at Large

BirchboxMy monthly Birchbox subscription comes with five beauty product samples in a box with a card of instructions on how to use them all (because the bottle brandings are so Spartan and useless). There were poems in two of my recent boxes.

One box came with a special card inside. The card’s cover says “This is not a beauty box.” Except it totally is. The first inside page goes on to explain the company has learned that the world of beauty “is not simple” because their customers previously felt “overlooked by the entire industry because beauty isn’t their top priority” because they have kids and jobs and such.  And then page two goes on to say the usual “you deserve time to take care of you, you, you.” It’s an annoying message because it completely contradicts the message on page one. Then, on the back is a poem called “You: A Poem” about how “This is for You./The best of you…” including all the synonyms of your feelings the marketing companies want you to associate with their product: joy, perfection, power, lovable, kick ass, essentially the “you, you always wanted to be.” The poem states, “You may be out of moisturizer,/but you’re not out of time” and “Because the best of you,/requires a little time, with you.” The poem ends with, “(For once it’s all about you)” (no end period).

SummitThere are some superfluous commas hanging around this poem…and a TON of narcissism, a vice marketing is enabling us with at every corner and intersection. "Have it YOUR way."

Which makes the reference to “for once” a bit absurd. It’s always about you, that's why the poem has been added to my Birchbox. And that’s why we’re collectively losing our minds and killing each other out here.

Ok. Part of this is the Narcissism summit talking. Sounds True hosted a 10-day Understanding Narcissism conference, a 20+ hour conference on all aspects of cultural Narcissism. It was really great.

LikethisInside another one of the recent boxes was a perfume sample of Like This (subtitled LEtat d’Orange and Immortal Ginger is also part of the label so I was pretty confused about what the title of the product really was) created by actress Tilda Swinton.

Anyway, the card containing the sample says the perfume was inspired by the poet Rumi with no explanation.

So I went online and found this page where the description of the perfume elaborates:

Etat Libre d’Orange launches a new fragrance in March 2010, second celebrity perfume in a row, this time inspired by the English actress Tilda Swinton. Her favorite scent is the scent of home, so she wanted a fragrance that will be a magical potion with that kind of smell. Mathilde Bijaoui created for her a composition of yellow tangerine, ginger, pumpkin, immortelle, Moroccan neroli, Grass rose, vetiver, heliotrope and musk.

"I have always located my favourite fragrances at the doorways of kitchens, in the heart of a greenhouse, at the bottom of a garden. Scent means place to me : place and state of mind – even state of grace. Certainly state of ease. My favourite smells are the smells of home, the experience of the reliable recognisable after the exotic adventure: the regular – natural – turn of the seasons, simplicity and softness after the duck and dive of definition in the wide, wide world.

When Mathilde Bijaoui first asked me what my own favourite scent in a bottle might contain, I described a magic potion that I could carry with me wherever I went that would hold for me the fragrance – the spirit – of home. The warm ginger of new baking on a wood table, the immortelle of a fresh spring afternoon, the lazy sunshine of my grandfather's summer greenhouse, woodsmoke and the whisky peat of the Scottish Highlands after rain. I told her about a bottle of spirit, something very simple, to me : something almost indescribable, so personal it should be. The miracle is that Mathilde made it.

The great Sufi poet Rumi wrote:

If anyone wants to know what "spirit" is,
or what "God’s fragrance" means,
lean your head toward him or her.
Keep your face there close.

Like this.

TsThis is possibly my favourite poem of all time.

It restores me like the smoke/rain/gingerbread/ greenhouse my scent-sense is fed by. It is a poem about simplicity, about human-scaled miracles. About trust. About home.

In my fantasy there is a lost chapter of Alice in Wonderland – after the drink saying Drink Me, after the cake pleading Eat Me – where the adventuring, alien, Alice, way down the rabbit hole, far from the familiar and maybe somewhat homesick – comes upon a modest glass with a ginger stem reaching down into a pale golden scent that humbly suggests : Like This…"

Tilda Swinton

Here is the Rumi poem in its entirety:

If anyone asks you
how the perfect satisfaction
of all our sexual wanting
will look, lift your face
and say,

Like this.

When someone mentions the gracefulness
of the nightsky, climb up on the roof
and dance and say,

Like this.

If anyone wants to know what 'spirit' is,
or what 'God’s fragrance' means,
lean your head toward him or her.
Keep your face there close.

Like this.

When someone quotes the old poetic image
about clouds gradually uncovering the moon,
slowly loosen knot by knot the strings
of your robe.

Like this.

If anyone wonders how Jesus raised the dead,
don’t try to explain the miracle.
Kiss me on the lips.

Like this. Like this.

When someone asks what it means
to 'die for love,' point
here.

If someone asks how tall I am, frown
and measure with your fingers the space
between the creases on your forehead.

This tall.

The soul sometimes leaves the body, the returns.
When someone doesn’t believe that,
walk back into my house.

Like this.

When lovers moan,
they’re telling our story.

Like this.

I am a sky where spirits live.
Stare into this deepening blue,
while the breeze says a secret.

Like this.

When someone asks what there is to do,
light the candle in his hand.

Like this.

How did Joseph’s scent come to Jacob?

Huuuuu.

How did Jacob’s sight return?

Huuuu.

A little wind cleans the eyes.

Like this.

When Shams comes back from Tabriz,
he’ll put just his head around the edge
of the door to surprise us

Like this.

And I loved this New Yorker cartoon and have kept it for a while and I'm ready to throw it out now:

Cartoon

 

 

 

 

 

 

"They rifled through our drawers, ransacked our closets, and completely redeveloped the central character in Carltron’s novel.”

 

And finally, a Tom Jones poem my friend Julie sent me a while ago because we're always on the lookout for pop-culture poetry, "Because I cannot remember my first kiss" by Roger Bonair-Agard.

But who doesn't remember their first kiss?

Haiku and NaPoWriMo 2018

32 Women

NaPoWriMo will be upon us in just about a week. I probably won’t post much on Big Bang Poetry during that month as I’ll be furiously writing disposable poems. I did the prompts last year and it was a bit unsatisfying due to the fact that everyone is now creating their own prompts. So this year I decided to return to a project, one based on a poem I did many years ago for my friend Michelle Sawdey after hearing she passed away and while I was on a writing retreat and found a notebook she had given me and being moved by her inscription.

My NaPoWriMo project is called “32 women” and I’ll be writing each day about a woman who has been a part of my life, plus 2: one intro poem I’ve already finished for March 31 and the original Michelle poem for May 1. As we progress, you can find them here: https://hellopoetry.com/mary-mccray/

Zbb52 Haiku

Then I have another project lined up to start maybe in June called "52 Haiku." I’ll be posting a prompt each week for a year. Each prompt will initiate a meditation, a haiku, and a small sumi-e ink drawing. I so suck at drawing, this should be interesting. As a guide I’m starting with some of the prompts in Zen by the Brush and I'll be using an ink kit I found online.

What I love about haiku is that if feels like the opposite of eLit: offline, quiet, single minded.

And yesterday I came across this interesting page surveying Shambhala Publications haiku catalog. Food for thought while we prepare for 52 Haiku in June.

eLit, Marie Osmond, Rupert Holmes and Barry Manilow

Marie-Osmond-DadaSo there’s the quiet, formal, contemplative haiku and then there's the rambunctious, genre-bending, boundary-pushing area of experimental and eLit poetry. On experimental poetries, I found some interesting things:

Monsieur Big Bang recently sent me this link to Marie Osmond from the show Ripley's Believe it or Not. She's in a yellow robe doing a dramatic reading of Dada poems, specifically reading Hugo Ball’s sound poem “Karawane.” All I can say is "Wow Marie, we hardly knew ye."

My friend Maryanne sent me this link to a whole carousel of poetry readings on The New York Times “Read T a Poem" page. It's got a a very clunky user interface. Here’s another list that includes some, but not all the readers, which include Amy Adams, Brian Hutchison, Jim Parsons, Andrew Rannells, Matt Bomer, Michael Benjamin Washington, Lauren Ridloff, Joe Mantello, Charlie Carver and more.

Word-caveI have yet to get Dreaming Method's last project running on any of my computers but they've just announced a new eLit project called Thanner Kuhai:

“A metaphorical and poetic journey about finding hope against all odds, Thanner Kuhai transports the reader/player into an immersive cave environment where language becomes intertwined with natural surfaces in a glimmering subterranean world. Navigate a labyrinthine network of flooded tunnels and passageways teeming with strange life and shadows of words. Submerge deeper. Or seek escape to the surface.”

See a preview at http://www.dreamingmethods.com/thanner-kuhai/.

And I know I’ve been insisting here that lyrics and poetry have more in common than not, (since Bob-Dylan-Nobel-Prize-gate last year),  and I recently had a very unfortunate hard drive accident, (coupled with a miraculous file recovery), that scared me into backing up all my old files. As I recreate a lot of them into newer formats, I’m finding that (a) I had no idea how lame my early ideas were and (b) I had no idea how appallingly shrill and cocky I sounded in old college essays. It’s been painful. I now wonder if this hard drive accident was the universe kindly trying to delete my old self on my behalf.

And lo and behold, I see I felt the same way about what was and was not poetry back when I was in graduate school at Sarah Lawrence. In one paper, our professor, poet David Rivard, asked us to write about our favorite poems and the majority of mine were not poems.  They were a hodge-podge of poems, song lyrics and found quotes.

I even had this to say before I launched into my list:

Since we have consistently failed in poetry to at least come up with a working definition of what it is, no one's going to tell me what it isn't.”

Holy crap I was smugly confident! That was a real circle snap. And the whole essay is like that. Painful.

That said, I'm happy to see I included Joni Mitchell's “Last Time I Saw Richard” (which I once memorized and would read aloud as a poem) and I often think about this prose poem I made from a Grary Shandling joke:

And honestly,
that's a problem that's plagued me
throughout my life.
In fact,
I did not know that there was a picture
on the other side
of the drive-in screen.
I thought all the cars were wrong
who were on the other side.
It was Live a very philosophical approach.
I thought they were wrong,
I was so convinced of it.
And I never went around to look.

And then there was the Rupert Holmes song “Studio Musician” on the list, a song I once loved from Barry Manilow’s 1977 live album. Barry Manilow even adds his jingle for State Farm at the end of it, reminding us he was a studio musician of sorts, a jingle writer.

All the discomfort of encountering my less-than-charming former self was somewhat alleviated by being reminded of this very lovely thing.

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)

 

The Regard for Poetry…Right Now

PoetryPoetry has been all over the news the past few weeks but if you weren't paying attention, you will have missed it. Poetry is intricately linked into our lives whether or not we think it’s commercial or relevant or goes sadly unnoticed. My news clippings on Big Bang Poetry over the past years prove, (to me anyway), that poetry is not ignored in major magazines and culture. In fact, it's there in times that are both disastrous and calm and is especially prominent during our days of national failings and tragedies.

On Massacres

This LGBT Poet Stunned A Packed Room With Her Thoughts On Orlando Shooting (DNA info)

The English poet who inspired Lin-Manuel Miranda's Tonys speech – and why it's a literary masterstroke (The Telegraph UK)

Seeking solace in poetry after a mass shooting (PBS NewsHour)

Those refer to the Orlando shooting at the Pulse nightclub. But don't forget there was a UCLA shooting this month as well.

'Where We Find Ourselves': Juan Felipe Herrera's poem on the shooting at UCLA (The Los Angeles Times)

On the US Election

On the radio last week regarding Trump's most current political speeches I once again heard this sobering poem invoked, "First They Came" by Pastor Martin Niemöller. 

On Our Heroes

And poetry was invoked multiple times in stories commemorating the life and death of versifier/boxer Muhammad Ali: 

Muhammad Ali, the Political Poet (The New York Times)

Muhammad Ali: A Poet In And Out Of The Ring (NPR)

AliMuhammad Ali, An American Poet (WLRN)

And as you may know I also blog as Cher Scholar somewhere else. When Ali died, this video of two of his poetry performances, one on a 1977 episode of the Sonny & Cher Show found it's way around Facebook.

Even in pop culture.

May Poetry News

BashoThe Poet Idolized by a New Generation of Feminists (New York Times)

Creator of “Mad Men” Started Out as a Poet (New York Post)

Famed route of poet Basho eyed for Olympic torch relay (The Asahi Shimbun)

Advice to poets: get out of the ivory tower (PBS Newshour) 

Body of work: Poet Louise Glück (Santa Fe New Mexican)

Sad Keanu: An Encounter With Keanu Reeves, Poet (W Magazine) 

Timothy Levitch, a Beat-Poet Tour Guide (New York Times) 

Maurice Kenny, Who Explored His Mohawk Heritage in Poetry, Dies at 86 (New York Times) 

Lucinda Williams pays tribute to poet father (The Tennessean)

Walt Whitman discovered to be America's first paleo poet (Los Angeles Times)

Poet Walt Whitman health tips unearthed (BBC News) 

Chile reburies remains of Nobel prize-winning poet Pablo Neruda (BBC News) – Truly a story without end.

U.S. Poet Laureate Juan Felipe Herrera reappointed to second year (The Washington Post)

How poetry helps us understand mental illness (PBS Newshour) 

Shire’s poetry backbone of Beyoncé’s ‘Lemonade’ (San Antonio Express) 

Poetry Behind Bars: The Lines That Save Lives — Sometimes Literally – (NPR) About poet Jimmy Santiago Baca's DVD now available on iTunes.

Boston's Secret Sidewalk Poems Add Some Cheer to Rainy Days (The Atlantic/City Lab)

April 2016 Poetry News

BillmurrayJim Harrison, Poet, Novelist and Essayist, Is Dead at 78 (The New York Times)

A poet who knows it: Bill Murray shares some favorite verse (Press of Atlantic City)

Bill Murray's New Job: Poetry Editor (Rolling Stone

O Magazine to Publish Bill Murray's Favorite Poetry (The Poetry Foundation)

9 Latino Poets You Should Be Reading (Bustle)

Our Poet Laureate Is Trying To Find America’s Voice In A Crowdsourced Poem (Huffington Post)

Poet Perfectly Breaks Down The Erasure Of Black People In U.S. History (Huffington Post)

Poet Breaks Down Why Brains And Beauty Are Not Mutually Exclusive (Huffington Post)

The Shakespeare Quiz (The New York Times)

 

News Roundup for March

PortorefordWe're starting off with Port Orford because my mother is from there. Port Orford hosts 10th annual Poet's Roundup (Bandon Western World

The life of world-famous poet Dylan Thomas on stage (West Briton)

Poet Nikky Finney tries to make sense of Strom Thurmond, Dylann Roof, and the South's legacy of oppression   (Charleston City Paper)

Tantrums of an aristocrat poet: Lord Alfred Douglas (Independent.ie)

Placitas poet consolidates four years of explorations on topics both cosmic and common (my local! Albuquerque Journal)

14 Brilliant Women Poets To Read On World Poetry Day (Huffington Post)  

Good Syrian Poet News: Google dedicates doodle to Syrian poet Nizar Qabbani (The National)

And Bad Syrian Poet News: IS executes respected Syrian poet and son for 'apostasy'
Mohammed Bashir al-Aani, an opponent of President Assad, was known for his lyrical poetic style (Middle East Eye)

My Cousin, The Cowboy Poet (The New Yorker)

6 Historic Haunts to Visit in NYC (Guest of a Guest)

News Roundup for February

SapphoPoet Ross Gay is on a roll: He talks gardens and gratitude (The Los Angeles Times

Third set of Lesbian Poet Trading Cards due out in March (Chicago Tribune)

Katie Holmes on Playing a Bipolar Poet (Wall Street Journal)

Sex trafficking victim is now a famous poet (Asia One)
Bangladeshi woman whose poetry collections were published from India last year after her rescue from a sex racket there and published under the pseudonym Chhaya.

James Franco is not a Queer Poet (City Paper)

Local poet/activist to open bed and breakfast catering to visiting artists later this year (Metro Times)

What can a poet tell us about the Zika virus? (Washington Post)

In Iran, A Poet's 700-Year-Old Verses Still Set Hearts Aflame (NPR)

New hardcover book on Sappho (W.W. Norton)

Experts to probe death of Chilean poet Pablo Neruda (Yahoo! News)
Will this exhumation ever end??

8 Battlefield Poets of World War I (History.com)

New take on notions of Audre Lorde, 'warrior poet' (Windy City)

Other Interesting Links

Famous Novelists on Symbolism in Their Work and Whether It Was Intentional (Mental Floss)

When Teamwork Doesn’t Work for Women (New York Times)
Think tenure and co-authorships.

Prison poetry makes it to the outside

At Monsieur Big Bang’s local coffee shop he found a handout of a poem written by a "free man in solitary confinement in KS prison" discussing "corporate masters, born into slavery and taking back, lives, liberties and pursuits of Happiness and redistributing wealth back to the majority.”

Devoid of any figurative fanciness, it was full of verb and in the now. Sure it was a hodge-podge of a call to political action but political poetry is alive and well behind the wall.

 

  

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