Reinventing the Life of a Poet in the Modern World

Category: Poets in Action (Page 9 of 14)

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.

Poetry on the Street

My boss at CNM went to Washington state this summer and came back with some great poetry stories. She met two street vendor poets with portable typewriters. You paid them what you wanted to. Then you gave them a subject prompt. You could wait or come back in ten minutes  and you would get a one-of-a-kind new poem along with a dramatic reading. She picked the subject of “native plants.” This was the poem she received:

Kalisha-poem

FlowerMy boss also happened upon a flower sculpture in Spokane that you can interact with and receive a poem from a database. It was called the Hello Flower Project.

In Albuquerque and Santa Fe, old cigarette machines have been converted into five-dollar art machines. My desk is full of these $5 art objects. Below is a picture of my favorite two pieces together:

20171129_092919
5-dollarBut I also found evidence of poetry vending machines made from old cigarette machines! Has anyone seen one of these in Vancouver or Philadelphia or in your town? If so, please send me a vending poem! I will return the favor with something versical and lamented!

In other interesting poetry news…

– A writer is creating found poems from David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest. I hope this isn’t Plan B for when actually reading the book seems too hard.

Brian Sonia-Wallace– The Mall of America in Minnesota has a poet in residence named Brian Sonia-Wallace.

– Lisa Ann Markuson is writing haikus for all the U.S. Senators (#PoemsForSenators). To read them visit Twitter

– And My Poetic Side has produced "Behind Bars: 61 Poets Who Went To Jail."

 

Political Poems Keep on Happening

StatueoflPoems About Dictators

So you may know I’ve been reading anthologies of political, protest and resistance poetry, both new and old. As I’ve done this, I’ve been sharing excerpts of particularly prescient or arresting lines to my friends on Facebook. So that got me beginning my own catalog of poems about dictatorships and lawless regimes. As I continue, I'll keep updating it. Check out Poems About Dictators.

It includes excerpts from poems like this amazing one by Czeslaw Milosz: “Child of Europe.”

Orthodoxy

I also read a good piece on Leftist Orthodoxy and Social Justice from Medium by an activist named Heartscape and it contained a rewrite of a poem called "If I can't dance, It's not my revolution" by Emma Goldman. It's an extension of the article which is about inclusiveness, creativity and intolerance within a political movement, not a heavily figurative poem but the kind of poem that clearly communicates frustration within a group of opinionated activists.

If I can’t fuck up and learn from my mistakes, then it’s not my revolution.
If I can’t disagree with you, then it’s not my revolution.
If I can’t ask questions, then it’s not my revolution.
If I can’t decide for myself what tactics I will use, then it’s not my revolution.
If I can’t be femme, then it’s not my revolution.
If I can’t choose my own friends, then it’s not my revolution.
If I can’t bring my family, then it’s not my revolution.
If I can’t bring my culture, then it’s not my revolution.
If I can’t bring my ancestors, then it’s not my revolution.
And if it’s not our revolution, then let’s build a new one.

The Lazarus

Poet Amy King also recently helped organize a project of poets writing poems inspired by the Statue of Liberty and Emma Lazarus' poem. This became a controversy recently when the White House senior policy advisor, Stephen Miller, disparaged the poem as not containing foundational ideas about America.

Read the resulting poems collected by The Guardian.

More Political Poetry News

Why All Poems Are Political (Electric Literature)

Poet for the Age of Brexit, Revisiting the work of A. E. Housman (The Atlantic)
Today, in the age of Brexit and the renewed movement for Scottish independence, the question of what Englishness means is once again up for debate.

Punk Poet Eileen Myles on Combating Trump, Capitalism With Art (Rolling Stone)
With a new generation of fans from Twitter and 'Transparent,' the legendary artist is basking in latest literary renaissance

Celebrities Reveal Their Immigrant Stories In 6 Powerful Words (Huffington Post)

The Way We Protest as Poets’: Gynecologist Monument Sparks Anger, Art (Free times)

And this is not sstrictly political but something cool to check out: y cousin sent me this link for African American poets from the Appalachian area: http://www.theaffrilachianpoets.com/

Also big in poetry news, (although not a protest poet), poet John Ashbery has died. Read his obit in The New York Times.

Quotes for the Summer of ’17

GmHere is another slew of quotes to ponder, many from the Bob Sacks media newsletter.

Craft

"An artist’s limits are quite as important as his powers. They are definite assets, not a deficiency, and go to form his flavor and personality." Willa Cather

"Don't judge each day by the harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant." Robert Louis Stevenson

"To make an apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe."  Carl Sagan

"Act with the authority of your 16 billion years." Joanna Macy

"Fashion can be bought. Style one must possess." Edna Woolman Chase

Reading

"A book ought to be an ax to break the frozen sea within us." Franz Kafka

"I divide all readers into two classes: those who read to remember and those who read to forget." William Lyon Phelps

"Literature is a luxury; fiction is a necessity." G. K. Chesterton

"We can spend our whole lives fishing only to discover in the end it wasn't fish we were after." Henry David Thoreau

Thinking Better

"I never guess. It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts." Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

"Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age eighteen." Albert Einstein (attributed)

"How hard it is, sometimes, to trust the evidence of one's senses! How reluctantly the mind consents to reality." Norman Douglas

"Opinion is the medium between knowledge and ignorance." Plato

"In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as to be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew before. But in poetry, it's the exact opposite." Paul Dirac

"I have yet to see any problem, however complicated, which, when you looked at it in the right way, did not become still more complicated." Poul Anderson

Bearing the Business

"However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results." Winston Churchill

"Social media is not about the exploitation of technology but service to community." Simon Mainwaring

"An over-reliance on past successes is a sure blueprint for future failures." Henry Petroski

"Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts." Winston Churchill

"There are three things in the world that deserve no mercy, hypocrisy, fraud, and tyranny." Frederick William Robertson

Living a Life

"I was going to buy a copy of The Power of Positive Thinking, and then I thought: What the hell good would that do?" Ronnie Shakes

"The secret of life is honesty and fair dealing. If you can fake that, you've got it made." Groucho Marx

 

NaPoWriMo Strikes Again

April was National Poetry Writing Month, which I started doing back in 2013 back when I was sitting in the Faculty Admin office of IAIA in Santa Fe. During the first three years I did my own projects. Then I tried in 2016 to do the official prompts; but I gave up after two weeks when I got sick in Los Angeles. This year I committed to try the prompts again. It’s a mental and physical gauntlet, this challenge!

The Experience

Overall, there was much less camaraderie over at Hello Poetry this year. Some possible reasons for this:

  • I lost touch with my Hello Poetry friends. I blame myself for this. I never log in unless it’s the month of April. And this year I didn’t have time to read other poems and make comments. I had barely enough time to write and post my own poems. But I do hope to go back and read through some poems in May. There’s also a political element hanging over poems this year. My old pals might be Trump supporters and I was writing poems with undertones they found offensive. I really don’t know them very well.
  • Also, I did the prompts from the official site (http://napowrimo.net/) and found out later that Hello Poetry was providing their own prompts. So not everybody was on the same page with prompts. This was kind of a bummer because part of the prompt-following fun is seeing what everyone else is doing with the challenges.
  • Also, the Hello Poetry site went through a major overhaul right smack in the middle of National Poetry Month! What timing. So there were glitches with making posts and making edits and times when the site was fully down. I noticed that none of my poems trended after the switch-over. Either I was writing more and more pitiful poems, (not an impossibility), or the algorithm of popularity changed.

In any case, it was kinda lonely over there. Next year I’m going to continue with my own themes and then I’ll come back in a few years to do the prompts again.

The Poems

Here are this year’s poems.

  1. 22 Skinny Lions – Write a Kay Ryan poem (which included an animal) and I wrote a political poem based on the idea of 22 skinny liars.
  2. Melts-in-Your-Mouth Marrow Pot – another political poem based on the challenge of writing a recipe.
  3. Horses – the challenge was to write an elegy based on a phrase you remember a loved one using. I wrote about my Grandfather and our inability to communicate with each other due to his Parkinson’s.
  4. The Turning of the Ducks – the challenge was to write an enigma poem about someone or something famous. Only one person has figured it out.
  5. The Juniper Besides – to write a Mary Oliver nature poem.
  6. 13 Ways of Looking at John B. McLemore (Literally) – Write a “13 Ways of Looking at a Blackbird” poem. I was right in the middle of the sublime Shittown podcast.
  7. The Thing About Luck – Write a luck poem.
  8. The Tempest – Another political poem based on Alice Oswald’s “Evening Poem” when the challenge was to write an incantation.
  9. Magic 9 Form – a 9 line form influenced by the phrase abracadabra. Plus, I love to sing “Bibbidi-bobbidy-boo” a lot from Disney’s Cinderella.
  10. The Fairy Godmother’s Son – love poem, challenge was to write a portrait poem. Also influenced by Cinderella.
  11. No Money, No Metaphors – Based on a speech given by the President of CNM and issues occurring with New Mexico’s governor Martinez. The form is a Bop refrain.
  12. Book Bound – Based on an experience with my Difficult Book group, the challenge to write alliteration and assonance.
  13. Ode to Ovaries (Actually a Ghazal) – a day at the gynecologist produced this ode/ghazal.
  14. A Clerihew – clerihew’s are fun short spoofs on celebrates. Harder than they look. Many failed attempts.
  15. In the Fields of America – Another political one (surprise) based on the idea of being in the middle of something.
  16. Dear Adult Face – Write a correspondence poem. I have no idea how this idea got up in my face like it did.
  17. Midnight in Winslow – Write a nocturne. Poems 15, 16 and 17 were written at or about La Posada, the amazing Harvey House, in Winslow, Arizona.
  18. The Bathabout – write a poem of neologisms or made-up-words.
  19. A Creation Story – Write a creation myth. Irreverence was not part of the challenge. Supplied for free.
  20. Curveballs Tangled in a Fence – Write a poem using the jargon of the game.
  21. Overhearing a Business Meeting – Write a poem based on something overheard. True story that happened that very day.
  22. A Georgic on Growing Pickles – True family story: my Father's cousin wins the state fair every year with her mother’s pickle recipe. Slightly political take on the pickles. The extended family doesn’t agree on politics. Hard to write about.
  23. Stacks – A “double elevenie" form” that I wrote about my home office but realized later the lines also had an unintended layer of marijuana. Totally unintentional. You can watch me compose the poem on the screen capture and see how and why I chose each word. Ask Mark Twain and he’ll tell you the river is not a symbol for freedom (it is). Sub-context works in mysterious ways.  (YouTube version)
  24. Snickering Marginalia – Write an ekphrasis poem based on marginalia of medieval manuscripts. There were an amazing amount of naughty ones.
  25. Poem Spaces – Explore a small defined space. I wrote about the spaces where I've written.
  26. Stage-poemTen Relics of Very Tiny Religions – Write a poem about archaeologists in the future making sense of our culture. In my poem, archaeologists find my garage full of Cher memorabilia.
  27. Ode to Salsa – Write a poem exploring sense of taste.
  28. Modern Manners – Write a Skeltonic. Political.
  29. Serenade – Write a poem based on a word from one of your favorite poems. I picked the poem “Serenade” by Billy Collins which led to learning all about the history of Europeans discovering the Bougainvillia plant. Turned into a major girls-rock story.
  30. Ideologies – Write about something that happens again and again. Sadly political.  (YouTube version)

HypertexteditThe Electronic Literature Piece

In my Difficult Book group, we started reading the elit book The Imaginary 21st Century  by Norman Klein and Margo Bistis. While researching it, we found this video called a Hypertextedit by its creator Tim Tsang.

Although we couldn’t really determine what that video was doing, I surmised it was following the thought process of Tsang as he worked online, how his online travelings might reveal his thought processes. I thought that was a pretty cool idea so I did two similar videos while I was composing the poems “Stacks”  and “Ideologies.”

TommypicoOther Poets

One of the great things about NaPoWriMo.net is that they post interviews every day. I didn’t have nearly enough time to read all of them but I did find a poet I’m looking forward to exploring: Tommy Pico. Some links to his stuff:

Interview on Lit Hub

Article from The New Yorker

Poems in Bomb Magazine

National Poetry Writing Month 2017

PoemadaySo National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo) is in full swing this April 2017 and I’m doing the daily prompts this year. You can read them at https://hellopoetry.com/mary-mccray/poems/. So far we’ve done Bop poems, 9-line poems, portraits, nature poems, repetition incantations, enigma poems, elegies, Kay Ryan poems and recipe poems. It’s only a third of the way through the month and my brain is totally fried. Every year this is a distance race.

One assignment was to do a poem around something lost or found. These were two very beautiful examples:

The Arm by Stephen Dunn
State of Grace by Elizabeth Boquet

Barrellhouse Magazine has also been doing 30 days of poems about pop culture. Some interesting examples:

And I've loved learning more about poet Monica de la Torre:

On Translation
View from a Folding Chair

DidionJoan Didion the The Last Love Song

A few months ago a book club I'm in read Joan Didion's second novel, Play It As It Lays, a critique of Hollywood and Vegas. At the same time I decided to read Didion's new biography by Tracy Daugherty. It's full of stuff about her writing process. In one section, Daugherty quotes her in explaining the difference between being an intellectual and a writer:

A writer is “a person whose most absorbed and passionate hours are spent arranging words on pieces of paper. ..one becomes a writer [this way]: ‘you just lie low…You stay quiet. You don’t talk to many people and you keep your nervous system from shorting out.’”

  

Mark Doty Visits Albuquerue and D.H. Lawrence

DotyMark Doty recently visited Albuquerque to give the inaugural speech for a new D.H. Lawrence Ranch (in Taos, NM where he is buried) restoration project. The event was hosted by the University of New Mexico alumni association and was well attended. Turns out Doty is a fan of D.H. Lawrence, (a rare thing among poets lately), had previously stated in a Facebook post that Lawrence's poetry wasn't read nearly enough.

Doty connected him to Walt Whitman and William Blake and praised his directness, intensity, willingness to rage, and admired the time Lawrence allowed to spend studying something, (rather, looking at something), in a poem. Doty stated that ordinary poetry workshops would chop Lawrence up today.

Doty contrasted Lawrence to the most famous modernists of his day, T.S. Eliot whose narrative Doty considered chilly, dry, ashen, containing no blood or juice. Plus, Doty said, Eliot was a cat person. 

DogThis is a good time to plug Mark Doty's "Dog Years." I give that book away as a gift all the time, a book that is both a memoir about his partner's death as it is an ode to dogs. 

Doty said Hart Crane was basically an answer to Eliot's "Wasteland:" as if Crane is responding, "I LIKE cities and bridges, thank you very much!"

Poems Doty read:

Then Doty read some of his own poems that he felt were answering DHL:

When asked if he wrote in forms he said all poems are formal, formal objects with patterns and design.  Someone asked him who his favorite poets were and he named Marie Howe and her book What the Living Do and said her new book coming soon, Magdalene, was very good.

 

Political Poetry

WritingPoetry is on the move! There have been lots of marches, op eds, memes and poems produced over the past four months. Here is a collection of some of what's I've come across or been sent.

Writing Change

First off, I read the book Writing to Change the World by Mary Pipher, a therapist who takes you through the delicate process of changing minds. I found her correlations to the therapist’s couch very helpful. She explains why shaming will never work, why certain types of humor will never work and why even facts don't always make much headway with people who have set ideas. She does offer other alternative techniques.

Poets on the March

The good news is poets are being including as cornerstones in many activist events going on around the country, if not the presidential inauguration.

These following two poets were featured at our local Albuquerque Women's March:

Our local faculty was featured on PBS Newshour with a political poem.

Los Angeles hosted a Writer’s Resist event. Some highlight readings:

Other refreshing resistance in verse and commentary:

To Reject Trump the Perverse, Poets Wage a Battle in Verse (New York Times) My favorite is by Susan McLean from Minnesota.

Trump seethes at what the writers say.
He’ll pull the plug on the N.E.A.
The joke’s on him. Art doesn’t pay.
We write our satires anyway.

Why It Matters That Donald Trump Has No Inaugural Poet (Slate)

If Trump Won't Give Us Inauguration Poetry, Let Us Read Whitman (WBUR)

Read poems from the 7 countries affected by Trump’s immigration ban (PBS Newshour)

Writers use poetry and prose in protest of Trump’s election (The Boston Globe)

Poetry in a Time of Protest (The New Yorker) “Poetry is not a luxury.” Audrey Lorde

Trump’s Inaugural Words Turned Into A Chilling Poem (The Huffington Post)

This Trump supporter's poem has also been making the rounds with snickerings.

Art in the Age of Apocalypse (Tin House)

Movies

NerudaI saw the Neruda movie that is out in independent movie theaters. The movie deals with the political persecution of Neruda and the period when he was in hiding in Chile. Here's a review,  When Poetry and Politics Mix (MSFS).

My favorite quote from this surreal and beautiful movie was the last line, "I was made of paper and now I am made of blood.”

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

 

Cory Booker Quotes Maya Angelou Last Night at DNC

BookerClosing his rousing Democratic National Convention speech last night, Cory Booker very movingly quoted the Maya Angelou poem "Still I Rise." Here is the poem in full.

 

 

 

 

Still I Rise

Maya Angelou

You may write me down in history
With your bitter, twisted lies,
You may trod me in the very dirt
But still, like dust, I’ll rise.

Does my sassiness upset you?
Why are you beset with gloom?
‘Cause I walk like I’ve got oil wells
Pumping in my living room.

Just like moons and like suns,
With the certainty of tides,
Just like hopes springing high,
Still I’ll rise.

Did you want to see me broken?
Bowed head and lowered eyes?
Shoulders falling down like teardrops,
Weakened by my soulful cries?

Does my haughtiness offend you?
Don’t you take it awful hard
‘Cause I laugh like I’ve got gold mines
Diggin’ in my own backyard.

You may shoot me with your words,
You may cut me with your eyes,
You may kill me with your hatefulness,
But still, like air, I’ll rise.

Does my sexiness upset you?
Does it come as a surprise
That I dance like I’ve got diamonds
At the meeting of my thighs?

Out of the huts of history’s shame
I rise
Up from a past that’s rooted in pain
I rise
I’m a black ocean, leaping and wide,
Welling and swelling I bear in the tide.

Leaving behind nights of terror and fear
I rise
Into a daybreak that’s wondrously clear
I rise
Bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave,
I am the dream and the hope of the slave.
I rise
I rise
I rise.

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