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Patricia Smith
Ticked off enough to make an appearance...Does Dana Gioia matter? Obviously more than we know... An alert Cave Canem alum spotted this in the big man's bio-- "An influential critic as well, Gioia's 1991 book 'Can Poetry Is that true? Did Dana Gioia's lofty 1991 tome miraculously give birth to slams that I participated in four years earlier? Wow. He's magic. CommentsYou don't link to the bio-- maybe it isn't online-- but it's usually a mistake to read too much into such things, which are often-- especially for people with big administrative staffs-- written by interns or assistants without much, if any, knowledge of the field. (One hopes that if he looked at the bio you quote, he'd make the correction. Some people don't look at all their capsule bios, though. I know I don't.) It is true that Gioia was one of the first people from his neck of the woods (i.e. "formal" or neo-formalist verse from the 1980s) to tell other such people that they should take slams seriously, though it's ridiculous to think that he helped invent that form, or to even think that he thinks he did. (By the way, Al Gore never said he invented the Internet, either.) Patricia & Steve-- Fascinating isn't it? He's like a prophet of the past, someone specially adept at predicting things that have long since happened. Here's the link: http://www.nea.gov/news/news06/PoetryPavilion2.html . It's from the NEA site, and one does hope that it was written by an intern not more than 15 years old, albeit one who's clearly a fan or, even more hopefully, some merry infiltrating prankster. Gioia's own site merely rests with the claim that Can Poetry Matter is "one of the most influential books on poetry of the last quarter century". Funny... I was in the US at the time, and I don't remember it at all. In fact, I only remember frequent references to the book coming up after Gioia's ascent to purse-string power, well into the new Republican presidency, as American poets of all stripes began to suck up to him... By the way, Patricia, I really liked your "Hip Hop Ghazal". That should be credited with the rise of something or the other. Shall we call it... the new formalism? And yet, regarding Burt's comment, those claims come from somewhere. Best guess is Gioia vets his bios--he's the head of the NEA, after all. And he was VP of marketing for General Foods. Image is everything to a guy like him; it's all he has. So the intern argument, bollocks. The guy's too careful to leave the details to so-called uninformed assistants. Who has those, anyway? if the bio below is correct, obviously it is flawed and silly; this is how his bio reads online: 'An influential critic as well, Gioia’s 1991 book Can Poetry Matter?, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle award, is credited with helping to revive the role of poetry in American public culture.' in defense of this statement, i know a lot of poetry 'heads' who have used this essay at length for scholarly work. ele |
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