Poetry News

Anselm Berrigan Interview at Sonora Review

Originally Published: March 29, 2017

Interviews are abounding! Next on our radar is Anselm Berrigan talking to Gabe Dozal for Sonora Review. They move from De Kooning to Joanne Kyger ("[s]he just made the wire be part of the room"); to poetic statements, intentions, and rectangle poems; to imitations of Jim Brodey; the NBA; and much more. An excerpt:

GD: I like that your work is willing to meander and take its time. And it’s porous too, it allows subjects to come and go. I feel like they aren’t afraid to wander around, I never feel there is fear in your poetic voice or the voice of your poems. I’ve only read a few of the new rectangle poems in the BOMB and they’re exciting for their language and form.

AB: Thank you. The rectangle poems, writing them, was this really bizarre thing at first that became joyous. It was so illogical and unpressured a thing to be doing, and then at the same time the form was clear and demanding in its own way. I loved writing them. I wrote them all out in public in different places.

GD: I often try and skirt intention when I’m writing, like I don’t want to talk or write about myself directly. Ashbery said once, and I’m paraphrasing: “I wouldn’t want to bore people with my own life.” What role does intention play when you’re writing/drafting?

AB: An undefined role. I wrote some poems recently that are direct imitations of some of Jim Brodey’s work — specifically his “Panda Breath” poems, a lot of which are published in a book called Heart of the Breath, that came out posthumously. He’d name each poem after a friend, a hero or personal icon of some kind. So I wrote five poems in his form, which he chose to look like a kind of academic poem as he saw it maybe 30-35 years ago, but in which he’d try to explode the academic line, and I called them all “Jim Brodey”. So that’s a very specific set of intentions, right?

Read on right here.