|
|
|
Elizabeth Stigler
Robert Redford Hearts Wendell Berry
Executive producers Terrence Malick and Robert Redford turn to poetry in their collaborative venture, Laura Dunn’s documentary, The Unforeseen. The film, which debuted at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, covers Austin, Texas environmental politics via interviews with environmentalists, real estate developers, a vocal local community, and everyone’s favorite ex-governor of Texas, while peppering excerpts of Wendell Berry reading his poem “Santa Clara Valley” throughout. The poem provides a reflective continuity to the film, making sense, at times, of what is a bitter and emotional battle for the area of Barton Springs in Austin, a battle begun in the '70s and continuing through the '90s. An excerpt from Berry’s poem captures the main arc of the film: D.A. Powell
MEMPHIS AND NASHVILLEIn Robert Altman's seminal film, Nashville, a third-party candidate named Hal Philip Walker is running for president on a ticket known as The Replacement Party. "I'm for doing some replacing," he says of the bureaucracy in Washington.
Ada Limón
Feliz Cinco de Mayo & Louder ARTSFeliz Cinco de Mayo First let me start with a brief description of this day. Being of Mexican heritage, I’ve had to explain it on a regular basis. So, I thought I’d just give a quick rambling, if only to say: This day is not just about margaritas and tortilla chips (although I find nothing wrong with either of those things and hope to partake in both shortly). The first thing that I find myself reminding people of is this: Cinco de Mayo is NOT Mexico's Independence Day (which is actually September 16th or midnight of the 15th depending one what you’re reading). Instead, it is in celebration of the day, May 5th, 1862, when 4,000 members of the Mexican Militia defeated 8,000 members of the French army in the town of Puebla. (Napoleon wanted to take over and install Maximilian as ruler of Mexico). Daisy Fried
Mother Goose is a Goth: A Found PoemConcerned that there’s too much violence in children’s movies, TV, video games and online? Maybe the problem is there’s not enough. From The Annotated Mother Goose, eds. William S. Baring-Gould & Ceil Baring-Gould, Bramhall House, 1962: “…in 1952 Geoffrey Handley-Taylor of Manchester, England, published a brief biography of the literature of nursery rhyme reform in which he wrote that: “The average collection of 200 traditional nursery rhymes contains approximately 100 rhymes which personify all that is glorious and ideal for the child. Unfortunately, the remaining 100 rhymes harbour unsavoury elements. The incidents listed below occur in the average collection and may be accepted as a reasonably conservative estimate based on a general survey of this type of literature. "8 allusions to murder (unclassified), “Expressions of fear, weeping, moans of anguish, biting, pain and evidence of supreme selfishness may be found in almost every other page.” Ada Limón
A Little Levis on Derby DayI grew up going to the track. Well, that’s a slight exaggeration. My stepfather—a writer and a wonderful human—likes to bet on the horses. Every time I go back to Sonoma, my hometown, he and I take at least one day to drive up to OTB and lose a little money. I lose. He wins. So, it’s only fitting that I’m thinking about him today as the Kentucky Derby gets underway and I still need to get my bets in before post. Mostly, on the drive to the races we end up talking about language and poetry in one way, shape, or form. These long drives up Warm Springs Road to Bennett Valley and back has done very serious things to my brain. For starters, it has linked horses and poetry forever. Linh Dinh
Dear Harriet,I will come out and say it. I’ve been thinking about you constantly. Please don’t tell anyone about this. This is just between me and you, OK? I’ve been meaning to say this for a very long time, for an eternity, actually. I want you. I mean, I want you to want me. Please don’t laugh at my insolence and desperation. I can see you giggling already. Even across time zones, I can hear you howling. Is my nudity so ridiculous? I cannot keep this terse and cute, sweetie. I must go on babbling because “Orders are always short and brief, and every master is monosyllabic to his slaves, whereas supplications and lamentations are lengthy,” so wrote Demetrius. As haughty slaves, poets are no strangers to supplications and lamentations, since they must bow, defer, accede and give in constantly, they must 1) Refer for judgment or consideration 2) Put before 3) Yield to the control of another 4) Hand over formally 5) Refer to another person for decision or judgment 6) Yield to another's wish or opinion 7) Accept or undergo, often unwillingly 8) Make an application as for a job or funding 9) Make over as a return 10) Accept as inevitable. It sucks to submit, I know, and I've been on both ends of these undignified transactions. More than a decade ago, I received a letter from one miffed submitter [click on image to enlarge]: Ada Limón
Thursday Shout Out: Jimmy Santiago Baca (okay, it's Friday)
For many Latino (and non-Latino) poets, Jimmy Santiago Baca is a hero of sorts. With a long sordid history of pulling himself out and up from the mire, Baca has traversed the poetic world as both a rogue and a wayward leader. Still, I am often surprised that he is not as well known as he should be. With his first poems published in Mother Jones and lauded by Denise Levertov while Baca was still in prison in the 70s (he spent 6 years in prison on drug possession, read his book, A Place to Stand), he has since made a life and a living out of writing. Based in New Mexico and spending the majority of his time writing and running workshops in prisons, in schools, and in the community, Baca has become an epic figure in Mexican American poetry. His book, Spring Poems Along the Rio Grande (New Directions, 2007) is a quieter Baca, an older, less angry Baca. Full of ruminations and reflections on his life along the bosque, this is a book meant to be read in the sage bushes without the noises of the city tuning out the birds. Two days ago, I pulled it off my shelf since first reading it when it came out last year, and thought I’d give it a shout out. I suppose I needed its quietude and whisper. Don Share
Raking up gold dust off the floor
"I have never done any teaching. I don't think I know enough about anything to do any teaching. I've done all sorts of odd jobs. My weirdest was raking up gold dust off the floor when I was messenger in a gold place on 47th Street. We had to do it with a broom like in Grimm's fairy tales, and sort the gold dust out of the ordinary dirt. I only lasted there about three weeks. Then I did things like being a waitress, and odd jobs all the time." Linh Dinh
$$$
[Raymond Pettibon, Untitled, 1989]
A day before the Federal Reserves cut interest rates yet again, astute and straight-talking social commentator, Mike Whitney, wrote: "The stakes couldn't be higher for Ben Bernanke. If the Fed chief decides to lower rates at the end of April, he could be condemning millions of people to a death by starvation [...] Bernanke, with one swipe of the pen, now has an opportunity to send more people to their eternal reward than Bush." When Bernanke first came on, the Seattle Post Intelligencer commented that "he will have to get into the habit of parsing his words extremely carefully as he moves into a job where the wrong head tilt or inflection can make or lose millions." What kind of a job is it where a tilted head or an inflection can cause fortunes to evaporate? Where one swipe of the pen will kill millions? The New York Times' Richard W. Stevenson wrote about Alan Greenspan, Bernanke's predecessor: "his every phrase will be transmitted instantaneously to stock and bond traders worldwide and [...] his merest inflection can send markets stampeding." As poets, we spend our lives massaging inflections and tilting heads in front of empty chairs, but no one shudders, no money appears and no family goes hungry. Daisy Fried
Smokers of Paper/Workers of the World
Who knew Harriet was crawling with Cesare Pavese fans? But the Cesare Pavese poem-podcast Linh Dinh posted below, with Bertolucci’s pretty video, is not typical of what I think of as the great Pavese—the early poems. Don Share’s links in the comments section give a better idea. What I love about early Pavese is that unlike many 20th Century European poets, he generally didn’t use words like “existences,” “soul,” “escape,” “supreme light,” “torment” and “the poor.” Or he did so in the context of poem-stories about people (many of them poor), mysterious and matter-of-fact stories, very specific and very strange. He wrote, by the way, wonderfully about women—although I’m not going to talk about any of those poems in this post. When I read Pavese, I try to read the Italian, at which I’m generally only semi-successful, alongside a pair of translations. So the Pavese I read isn’t Pavese but some negotiation between the two versions and the original: A fourth thing altogether. Daisy Fried
Is Jeremiah Wright Working for John McCain?: A Non-Poetry PostI'm on a poetry listserve where some members object to posts having to do with politics. Many of us think that trying to separate poetry from politics is like trying to separate the yolk from the egg white with a fork without breaking the yolk. But eventually we reached a truce where those who wanted to post political messages would put the letters POL in the subject line so others could delete those messages unread. POL Certain members of my household (not Maisie) were jokily contemplating a Jeremiah Wright write-in vote, until this weekend. Now I just think Wright's a jerk. I'm not mad at him for what he says. What's not pretty good politics is mere dumbass conspiracy stuff, who cares? Wright gets criticized as an extremist and for crazy paranoid theories, but nobody criticizes the Bush administration for being riddled with people who believe in the Rapture. And I'm not mad at him for how he says it. Style's insignificant. Actions are significant. Wright's a jerk for his very public airing of his opinions, including his opinions of Obama, right at this time. He seems to me like a father trying to undermine his son. I don't care whether the father is ideologically right or wrong; if your son is trying to do something he believes in, even if you don't believe in it, you don't ruin it for him. You don't intentionally cast your shadow into his spotlight. Wright has a lot to answer for if McCain wins the election. Linh Dinh
Gee, Goshspeaking of G, here's a poem by Ish Klein: G. I have been told to talk to You with my head down or to be living here, amidst the stink. Let me start again, But this is not about that, it is about the demons: Or is their manner of attack more bacterial? with their propaganda campaigns. What do the demons see in me? Me, a notoriously poor host; Maybe they think I want company. After I dreamed the demon was taken out of me, tornadoes hit Tennessee; which is where the But why? Am I so weak? You are responsible, G., I am applying again for assistance. of this application. Which is the fourth I have filled out, Yes? So, that is the point? But you are still at the Helm. G., I am tired of living in ignorance with voices and meaningful dreams after days where This is not a joke. Sure I may say it loud; indecorously before Thugs of the spirit world they are! Of course you own the system; you were the one who forced us into particular bodies initially. You see, I am on the wheel beneath your world You made it this way; G., you big bully. [first published in Philadelphia Independent]
Don Share
Who rained on that parade?
The poet-critic gets no sympathy, and considering the charge-sheet against him — adversarial, addicted to dicta, motivated by an axe-grindingly acute sense of right and wrong — why would he? He is, in most eyes, a hyphenated hothead. Until recently, however, that hyphen was still a badge of special authority, so that practitioners writing critically about their craft were regarded as poetry’s ideal readers. Not everyone agreed (Northrop Frye thought poets made bad critics because they were too obsessed by their own processes), but Alfred Kazin summed up the standard view in 1967 when, with considerable professional envy, he described the poet-critic as always “right in the middle of the parade (and if he is good enough, he will be leading it).” |
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Linh DinhDaisy Fried Ada Limón D.A. Powell Reginald Shepherd STAFF WRITERS
Michael MarcinkowskiEd Park Fred Sasaki Don Share Elizabeth Stigler Nick Twemlow Emily Warn PREVIOUS WRITERS
Christian BökStephen Burt Kwame Dawes Kenneth Goldsmith Rigoberto González Major Jackson Jeffrey McDaniel Ange Mlinko Patricia Smith A.E. Stallings Rachel Zucker RECENT COMMENTS
MEMPHIS AND NASHVILLE (4)Henri Chopin (1922-2008) (4) Who rained on that parade? (43) Feliz Cinco de Mayo & Louder ARTS (7) Mother Goose is a Goth: A Found Poem (6) RECENT POSTS
Robert Redford Hearts Wendell Berry (Elizabeth Stigler)MEMPHIS AND NASHVILLE (D.A. Powell) Feliz Cinco de Mayo & Louder ARTS (Ada Limón) Mother Goose is a Goth: A Found Poem (Daisy Fried) A Little Levis on Derby Day (Ada Limón) CATEGORY ARCHIVE
Poetry magazineAWP Arts Awards Biography Books Criticism Distribution Education Film Language Music Obituaries Outrageous Photographs Poems Poetry Out Loud Poetry and the Internet Politics Readings TV poetryfoundation.org AUTHOR ARCHIVES
Christian BökStephen Burt Kwame Dawes Daisy Fried Kenneth Goldsmith Rigoberto González Major Jackson Jeffrey McDaniel Ange Mlinko Ed Park Fred Sasaki Reginald Shepherd Patricia Smith A.E. Stallings Nick Twemlow Emily Warn Rachel Zucker Subscribe to the RSS feed. ![]() What is RSS? |
Other Recent PostsDaisy Fried: On the Floor With Kitschy RumiLinh Dinh: Into the Night Linh Dinh: The Art of Misnarration Linh Dinh: On Translation Ada Limón: Thursday Shout Out: Dawn Lundy Martin Daisy Fried: Nasty Habits Kenneth Goldsmith: UbuWeb :: New Addtions, Spring 2008 Ada Limón: A Little Writing on the Wall Linh Dinh: Tongued Ed Park: You know you love me Daisy Fried: American Classics Linh Dinh: Border Poetry Ada Limón: Praise for Spring & NaPoWriMo Linh Dinh: YouTube Pleasures Linh Dinh: Trickster Johnson Daisy Fried: Parable Daisy Fried: Malicious Feelgood Daisy Fried: Ooga-Booga Linh Dinh: Impressionable Flesh Speaking Reginald Shepherd: Who Can I Be Now? |
