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Major Jackson
First Loves
Credit: Of course I had “electives� but it was general knowledge that one used those “free� courses, not to enrich and round out one’s education and become a human being of intellectual breadth, but to minor and specialize even further within the School of Business in some field as Marketing or Economics, or that other academic magnet Pre-Law. Debit: No one had any notion as to how studying Poetry would prepare me to take the Certified Public Accountant (CPA) exam, a future event we seemed to obsess over as much as we did our final exam in creating Financial Statements for Mergers & Acquisitions, which I doubt any of us would ever have the occasion to do. Credit: Part of my problem was that I thought too much about the multiple, connotative meanings of language (jargon?) used in business courses which led to unsatisfying answers to questions I’d posed triggered by various meanings, say in a word like Goodwill, which is the excess difference between a corporations’ purchase price less its market value. Debit: Often a company’s reputation or familiarity with the public leads to Goodwill. Still, how does one measure it? Credit: How do we explain the difference between the accounting meaning and one of the four OED definitions “2. The state of wishing well to a person, a cause, etc.; favourable or kindly regard; favour, benevolence. attrib.�? How does one measure this kind of Goodwill? Debit: Enrolling in a poetry course allowed me to engage with language in a way that business-oriented courses could not. Credit: I enjoyed the origins of words and considered myself a budding etymologist, which I believe every poet intuitively becomes once they decide to use language as material for imaginative thinking. Debit: My Introduction to Poetry was taught by poet Tina Barr, currently a Professor at Rhodes College in Memphis, TN, but at the time, a graduate student completing her Ph’D at Temple University, and eventual long-lost friend. The anthology: Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama 5th Edition by X.J. Kennedy. I still own it. Credit: I believe we were assigned over one weekend the task of finding a poem and presenting it to the class. After frustratingly flipping through the Poetry section, I found a poem by Garrett Hongo, “The Cadence of Silk� on page 826. It was my first basketball poem. I was a fan of the game, but could tell the speaker in the poem was an even greater fan. The poem describes two basketball teams who reigned in the 1980s, the Seattle SuperSonics and the LA Lakers. The poem enacts the motion of a basketball game, but even more, it becomes a larger metaphor for art and linguistic & rhetorical motion in a poem. The Cadence of Silk When I lived in Seattle, I loved watching **************** I happily discussed in class Magic Johnson, Michael Cooper, Byron Scott, James Worthy and the rest of the 80s Lakers. I saw those players in this poem and took with pride my ability to “relate,� as my students say, to the poem which was all the evidence I needed to believe it was an excellent poem; I took that connection to class that Monday and discussed the poem’s sonic texture, its accurate imagery and figurative language, which stuns me to this day. Debit: When people ask me why I decided to abandon a career in accounting, I often mention this poem. That kind of power, rhetorical, aesthetic, and physical, was not to be taken lightly. I wanted to discover how language could be that athletic, could motion itself towards that kind of mimetic action, and to attempt my own artful versifying and subtle, persuasive feats. Credit: I used to own that anthology First Loves, poets discussing encounters with poems that first bewildered them. “Cadence of Silk� was not my first love, but it looms large, in that, it changed the direction of my life. Debit: I realized that I was that “slight backspin� and “sonorous splash of completion.� Credit: The aesthetic experience of reconciling my bank account every month could never compare to the poems’ that have given me similar pleasures as “Cadence of Silk.� All the same, such encounters with the world that are as harmonious and complete work on me, and I never tire of the experience. CommentsThank you for bringing up this poem. Basketball was my passion during grade and high school (1974-1984). I loved those epic seven-game battles between the Celtics and the Lakers. And I remember when Doctor J and the sixers finally got past the Celtics to win it all. Edward Hirsch has a wonderful basketball poem I've taught, whose title is escaping me, in couplets, whose final image is the ball swishing through the net. Yusef has a pretty good one too. But probably my favorite poem that takes basketball as its subject doesn't involve pros, but rather: a portrait of the speaker simply shooting around. It's called, simply, "Shooting". And yet, the poem didn't make it into _Live from the Hong Kong Nile Club_: August Kleinzahler's Selected Poems published by F,S&G in 2000. The poem appeared in _Storm Over Hackensack_, published by Moyer Bell in 1985. One of the devices the poem employs is the repetition of the word "hit" (which is italicized) to great effect. Some excerpts: The sun is high * Hit
Hit for the rhythm I understand the credit/debit approach with which you approach this post! Some days I wish I would have studied accounting or medicine or law honestly rather than writing. But you are right about the enjoyment poetry brings, and it is a hard sell in our capitalistic society. I keep trying to remind myself about this un-marketable joy, and in the end it is the one thing nobody can ever take away from us as artists. One poet who wrote about basketball and actually influenced me is Sherman Alexie. I was influenced by an image of dark lanky Indian ball players jumping through the air gloriously like salmon. It's an image that stays with me. I was never good at basketball and only watched it fleetingly on television, but there is almost a poetic movement when an athlete takes to the air like Magic. Sheryl, I hear Sherman is a really good baller, too. I hope someday, we can hoop it up a bit. To write as compellingly as he does, I wonder if one has to be that close to the game. In any event, I agree about that unmarketable joy; no one can take it away, but I'd wish more people took as much delight as we do. |
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54th Annual Poetry Day: Louise Glück
