Monday, April 30, 2012

Abstract: “Recognition, Vertigo, and Passionate Worldliness: The tribes of contemporary poetry”

“Recognition, Vertigo, and Passionate Worldliness: The tribes of contemporary poetry”
by Tony Hoagland
Poetry vol. 196.5

http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/article/239968

In this essay, Tony Hoagland attempts to establish a sort of ‘working definition’ for how to categorize and talk about contemporary poetry. He begins by delineating poets into two ‘tribes’. The first draws from Wordsworth’s Preface to the Lyrical Ballads: “Poetry is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings; it takes its origin from emotion recollected in tranquility”. The second type takes after the Wallace Stevens lines: “The poem must resist intelligence / Almost successfully.” Hoagland’s essay is centered on this second type, the first being easily recognizable and understood. Those of the second tribe, often labeled at ‘experimental’ or ‘elliptical’, are harder to understand – that being precisely the point. Hoagland argues that the two tribes are, in fact, more similar than often thought, that in both the ‘what’ has remained the same, only the ‘how’ has significantly changed. Hoagland argues that the ‘what’ is the contemporary poet’s vertiginous experience of the modern world. The Wordsworthian poets try to find a stable ground, if only for the instant of the lyric, to offer a view of this dizzying world. The elliptical Stevensian poets attempt to use language to recreate that experience of vertigo in their reader, not to explain or comment on it, just to say ‘this is’. Hoagland uses other oppositions to help clarify this binary: the poetry of perspective vs. entanglement, of recognition vs. disorientation. The elliptical poets of entanglement and disorientation aim to recreate in the reader the experience of existing in the modern world and celebrate the universe of imperfect meanings. These poets use declarative non-sequiturs to evade ever emphasizing anything that could then be understood as a coherent narrative from which to understand our incomprehensible existence, to show the fallibility of perspective. Hoagland concludes by reminding us that, despite the disorienting effort and affect, there is something to mean, but those meanings are not meant to be conclusive, finished. It is enough to know that everyone’s world is spinning like a dervish, not just yours, and there is meaning in that.

Abstract: “Technique’s Marginal Centrality: Poems of the doomed”

Technique’s Marginal Centrality: Poems of the doomed
By Clive James
Poetry vol. 199.4



In this essay Clive James looks at the trend in much of contemporary poetry that avoids anything that smacks of the tradition. Of these free verse poets, James recognizes two types: poets who eschew technical considerations like form, meter, rhyme, etc… in hopes of achieving a specific result, and poets who ignore technique because they have none. James traces this retreat from technique to Pound and the modernists, who were revolting against a poetry that was all technique, all flourish for the sake of flourish – the literary equivalent of ‘peacocking’. Pound and Eliot, while moving away from traditional forms, were still superbly educated in technique, thought it a necessary part of every poet’s education. A poet who could not write in the tradition was not a poet at all. The trouble arose when successive generations of poets, versed only in poetry from the modernist period and onward, misunderstood the move away from form and measure. Where Eliot still used form and measure, he used his substantial formal prowess to highlight content while actually hiding the technique used to make that content so pertinent, so essential. A reader can see this in Prufrock, which drops into iambic when emphasis is needed, ending on two iambic, rhymed tercets.  As well as in The Waste Land, which aside from falling in and out of measure as needed, contains hidden within it perfect sonnets. To Eliot and other masters, technique’s prime use was to hide itself, James calls it a ‘subservient impulse’, one that, when made dominant results in the empty flourishes that the modernists rebelled against. That many contemporary poets have missed this key point has created a poetry that is only delineated from prose by the occasional line break (and often it’s not even a good line break). Technique is not for demonstrating one’s skills, but to hide them to allow what one has to say to be said in the most compelling way possible.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Abstract: "A Sexy New Animal: The DNA of the Prose Poem," Natasha Sajé


 In this essay, poet Natasha Sajé examines the origins of the prose poem in an attempt to distinguish what a prose poem is and how it works. In considering the definitions put forth by other poets, she sees the prose poem generally as prose which is “straining toward style” (a phrase used by Mallarmé), most often short, and determined by content in that prose poems use more of the conventions of poetry than those of other prose genres. She asserts that “the prose poem is a hybrid that actually derives its energy from the collision of opposites,” which leads her to discuss the prose poem as a reaction to other forms, and most particularly, she argues, as a reaction against the realist novel, which was developing at the same time as the prose poem. The ability to use dialogism and displace the lyric subject within prose also results in many subjects that are politically subversive. Sajé uses Baudelaire as an example of the French origins of the prose poem, arguing that the variety of new techniques Baudelaire used in his prose poems led the way for surrealism, Dadism, and many other new techniques and movements within poetry. Baudelaire's poetry also presents an argument against the idea that prose poems must use heightened poetical language, as the tone of his poems, like many other prose poems, is informal and conversational. Sajé does not finish with any kind of complete definition for the prose poem, but instead ends with an idea suggested by the poet Ann Killough that while lineated poetry seems to demand some kind of certainty or retrieval, the prose poem allows the poet to “get lost” in order to find something “real.”

Sajé, Natasha. “A Sexy New Animal: The DNA of the Prose Poem.” The Writer's Chronicle. 44.5 (2012): 34-49. Print.

Poetry is Dead. Also, Women are Pissed.


McIrvin, Michael. “Why Contemporary Poetry is Not Taught in the Academy.” Rocky
Mountain Review of Language and Literature. Vol. 54, No. 1 (2000), 89-99.


            As a response to the increasing denigration of poetry in the contemporary literature classroom, Michael McIrvin offers a forthright, if sometimes cynical, explanation. A poet himself, McIrvin does not wax poetic about the ways in which poetry has been discounted by the mainstream, reduced to the solipsistic wailing of those attempting to align themselves with the academic ideal.  In this critique of the modern creative writing program’s tendency toward neo-confessional inflection in poems that make form an end in itself, McIrvin admits to discovering, quite unexpectedly, hope for the future of American poetry.  McIrvin lays out two imperatives for the reformation of the MFA: to innovate and allow for mutation within the program that will reestablish an authentic literary lineage for emerging poets, and to force young poets to commit to their critical and poetical allegiances, rather than let publication dictate their creative efforts.  McIrvin argues that when language and subject becomes merely a pose, the poet’s voice too easily slips into inauthenticity and pastiche. The outcomes of most writing programs culminate in a body of contemporary poetry that, in McIrvin’s opinion, has been stripped of meaning. To remedy this problem, McIrvin calls for poets of all stripes to take an active role in the revivification of poetry, which should serve to remind us that “meaning is a dynamic, the truth the purview of individuals rather than of power, that to be actively is an act of conscience” (99).



Dowson, Jane. “’Older Sisters Are Very Sobering Things:’ Contemporary Women Poets
and the Female Affiliation Complex.” Feminist Review. No. 62, Contemporary Women Poets (Summer, 1999), 6-20.


By examining the ways in which women’s poetry has been established by their literary predecessors, Jane Dowson argues that it is possible to predict how twentieth century woman poet’s will be characterized following their tenure, and the extent with which their work is perceived to have value and authority. By looking at the legacy of poetry written by British women, one can see that just as the label “poetess,” and its incumbent handicap to self-perception hindered the efforts of nineteenth century female writers, the term “woman poet,” will have the same effect, largely due to the mythologizing of overlooked female poets, who were seen as underclass and undermined. One reason that Dowson points out to explain the consistent reoccurrence of published female poets who are absented from literary histories is the fact that they are ignored by a largely male-dominated culture of literary criticism. Although there are women in large enough numbers who are finding success as published poets in the contemporary era, there is still an argument to be made for what Dowson calls “positive discrimination.” However, positive discrimination is often resisted by woman poets because of their uneasy relationship with each other.  Dowson argues that in order for women to align themselves and build a culture of literary significance for their work, women must form bonds of connection, thereby becoming positive role models for the women who follow in their footsteps. 

Monday, April 16, 2012

Abstract: Poetry and Science: “Metaphor or More?”


Jacket2, an online literary magazine that is a continuation of the longstanding Jacket that was discontinued last year, hosted an online panel discussing the relationship of poetry and science. Contributors were Rae Armantrout, Amy Catanzano, John Cayley, Tina Darragh, Marcella Durand, Allen Fisher, James Harvey, Peter Middleton, Evelyn Reilly, and Joan Retallack. One section of this panel investigates the level at which scientific discourse would ideally be integrated into a poem: simply as a metaphor or “as an independent discipline or set of disciplines.” Many of the panelists reach the same conclusion—that metaphor is not contained within poetic language but also proliferates in scientific discourse as well. As Rae Armantrout observes, “[M]etaphor is 'always already' embedded in the language of science.”
Another issue the panelists discussed is potentially problematic issues relating to using scientific concepts as metaphors. As Joan Retallack states, “[W]hat if it turns out in the new cosmological physics that there really aren’t any black holes, leaving all those thousands (millions?) of poems with their black hole metaphors embarrassingly intact. Is this decade’s science true? … false?” Scientific theories are ever-evolving, and antiquated theories are discarded; however, poetry does not show such a linear progression. Many of the lines of discussion, such as this one, span the course of the entire panel, which is six separate articles. So to get a complete idea of the panelists ideas on these topics, one must devote the time to read around 60,000 words. However, as hybridity in subject matter and form makes further developments in poetry, discussion of the underlying ideology of such hybrids provides inspiration and caution on how to approach poetic composition.

Abstract: “Born Digital” Stephanie Strickland.

Born Digital” Stephanie Strickland.


Electronic poetry is not print poetry accessed through an electronic medium, such as an online literary journal or an ebook. Stephanie Strickland, in her essay “Born Digital,” gives a list of eleven traits of e-poetry that distinguish it from other forms of poetry. Some of the attributes she lists give only a vague idea of what differentiates e-poetry and e-lit from other forms, such as number four: “E-poetry is a poetry requiring new reading skills.” While others are arguments of person values and perceptions, such as number three: “E-lit is the mode of literature appropriate to new social conditions.” However, some of the attributes she describes are concrete and quantifiable,
such as number one and ten: “E-poetry relies on code for its creation, preservation, and display: there is no way to experience a work of e-literature unless a computer is running it—reading it and perhaps also generating it,” and “In print poetry the interface (reading surface) and the storage surface are one and the same; in e-lit they are not.” In the end, Strickland builds a cohesive set of tests for one to use in order to categorize a piece as e-poetry.
Equally as valuable as her work defining e-poetry are the plethora of examples she gives to support her assertions. A person ignorant of all aspects of e-poetry would be hard pressed to find a better sampling of e-poetry to showcase the potential of the genre.

Bloom's Contemporary Poets and Kukulin's "Documentalist Strategies in Contemporary Russian Poetry"


Abstracts of 21st Century Poetry books/articles

Bloom, Harold. Contemporary Poets. New York: Infobase, 2009. Print.

                Harold Bloom’s Contemporary Poets explores the advent of contemporary poetry based on the teleological progression of all poetry. He traces all contemporary American poetry back to eight major American poets – Frost, Stevens, Pound, Williams, H.D., Moore, Eliot and Crane. Further, he traces those poets back to Whitman and Dickinson, and further back into British poetry. The collected essays within the book – from various prestigious experts in the field - explore the various ways in which contemporary poets have been influenced by past poets and how they influence each other. Each essay focuses on a particular poet or a particular aspect of contemporary poetry: for example, there is an entire chapter dedicated to Jorie Graham’s epistemological approach to poetry, and another on how modernism has yet to leave contemporary criticism of poetry. At the end of the book is a chronology of the births and deaths of famous contemporary poets, which embodies Contemporary Poets teleological approach to contemporary poetry, and traces the influences of poets and poetry over time. Bloom commands authority with his reputation as Yale professor, Shakespeare expert, and through his 20+ books of literary criticism which he has published. He is arguably the most famous literary critic alive today. This book is incredibly informative in its historical approach to the formation of the phenomenon of contemporary poetry, and gives a hint at where it may develop from here.

Kukulin, Ilya. "Documentalist Strategies In Contemporary Russian Poetry." Russian Review 69.4 (2010): 585-614. Academic Search Premier. Web. 9 Apr. 2012.

In “Documentalist Strategies in Contemporary Russian Poetry,” Ilya Kukulin shows the associations between the Russian totalitarian regime and Russian poetry from the 1990s. He argues that documentalist poetry – that is, poetry which records factual events or history – does so not necessarily for political reasons, but more for the philosophical ramifications of poetry. He argues that under the threat of destruction due to censorship, poets were forced to operate through and against repression to create a sort of subtlety unseen in world poetry free of totalitarian regimes. Kukulin shows how this repression manifested itself as paradox in Nekrasov, Urbanism in Bruisov, journalistic bend in Maiakovskii, and a parody of propaganda in poets like Voznesenskii and Evtushenko. These poets, Kukulin argues, use poetry as a sort of aesthetic polemic in response to real world stimuli such as the influence of Western television, the September 11, 2001 attacks, Russia’s war with Georgia (the country, not the state), and so forth.  This aesthetic polemic is compared to the Romantic era in Russia, and defines contemporary Russian poetry as “Post-Romantic” in that its aesthetic is towards fragmentation and paradox rather than wholeness and unity. Kukulin is a poet, literary critic, and linguistic scholar who has published multiple poems and is a professor at the Moscow Pedagogical Institute of the Humanities and of the Higher School of Economics.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Two contemporary poetry anthologies

I thought I'd do a quick summary of 2 contemporary poetry anthologies that I like.  Sorry for the lack of world representation.

1.) The Swallow Anthology: New American Poets - 2009 by Ohio University Press (Edited by David Yezzi):  This anthology seems to pride and define itself in representing new voices that do not follow the extreme experimentalism of contemporary poetry (so sort of the opposite of American Poets in the 21st Century: The New Poetics): "As David Yezzi notes in his astute introduction, these thirty-five poets seems simply to have ignored the ideological wars that had raged in the magazines for half a century.  He calls them 'unified sensibilities,' and that seems an apt term to describe a group of poets - I wouldn't say 'a poetry' because these are a set of very individual writers - who haven't been blinded by fealties or hardened against traditional ways"  (xx). Some poets worth noting in this collection: Geoffrey Brock, Bill Coyle, and John Foy.

http://www.amazon.com/The-Swallow-Anthology-American-Poets/dp/0804011214/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1333928767&sr=1-1

2.) The Vintage Book of Contemporary American Poetry - Second edition 2003 (Edited by J.D. McClatchy):  This collection "gathers together, from every region of the country and from the past fifty years, the poems that continue to shape our imaginations [...] this anthology takes the full measure of our poetry's daring energies and its tender understandings" (back cover). It is a pretty standard collection of the big names, including: Sharon Olds, W.S. Merwin, Robert Creeley, Frank Bidart, Ellen Bryant Voigt, etc.  This would be a good quick read for those who need a comps reading list refresher as well. And the cover is sweet.

http://www.amazon.com/Vintage-Book-Contemporary-American-Poetry/dp/1400030935

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Contemporary poetry from Afghanistan to China

Hi everyone. I thought I'd take a look at a couple of international poetry scenes for you. I hope they're informative.

Buneeri, Shaheen. "Poetry Fights Back." Boston Review. 37.1 2012. 8-9. Academic Search Premier. Web. 28 March 2012

"Poetry Fights Back" details a cultural war going on within Afghanistan between the Taliban and the millions of Pashtuns within the country. The Taliban has more tightly controlled social behavior in the country since the 1990s deliberately depriving "people of secular outlets in order to accelerate the spread of religious extremism." The article describes the Pashtuns as being democratic and secular and that poetry is their weapon of expression that "challenges the Taliban mindset." Much like Tomaz Salamun, the Pashtuns are another example of how poetry is valued a lot higher by some other cultures. Young people in Afghanistan use poetry to understand and hold onto their national identity amongst so much sectarian violence. The poetry is also very political a means of protest directed at an international audience. One poet Akbar Siel writes:

Don't snatch the pen from our hand

With which we make the picture of

our dreams

Don't create violence in our village

Don't bring mayhem to our village

...


Don't turn this ancient playground

into a blood-red ammo dump

Another common theme in Pashto poetry is grief and the promotion of secularism. The poet Zarin Pareshan writes:


You religious fundamentalists stop this bloodshed

Humanity is the best religion; Love, the best worship


Because of this war I despise the "dear Mullah"

Love is my religion; Unity is my faith


"Pashtun Poets don't just want a return to secular values but they want the world to know it." More than a hundred books of Pashto poetry were published in first half of 2011.

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Yeh, Michelle. "Anxiety & Notes on the Recent Chinese Poetry Scene." World Literature Today. 81.4 2007: 28-35. Academic Search Premier. Web. 28 March 2012.

"Anxiety & Notes on the Recent Chinese Poetry Scene" details the decline of poetry in China in the past few decades. As the country is getting richer people are losing interest in poetry and turning to more visual entertainment such as T.V. and video games. However, there is still "meteoric popularity of sentimental love poetry and uplifting verse epigrams." The avant guard poetry that does exist has been more political though. Through economic expansion, not political democratization, a larger space of civil liberty seems to exist for Chinese artists. And literary events don't seem to be a problem for government authorities. Financial security is on the rise for poets as well, at first correlated to the country's economic success but now is on the wane due to lack of readership. China does not have university degrees in creative writing but there are "about a dozen" poet professors in the country. Publishing a book is tightly controlled by the gov. as all books are required to have a ISBN number on them and the gov. oversees publishing houses. However, there is a black market of ISBN numbers in existence. Censorship is heavily in place. A poet can publish a journal as long as it isn't too political. The internet has become an outlet for poets recently and has served to unite Chinese poets with their neighbors in Hong Kong and Taiwan and all over the world. As a result, international themes have arisen in contemporary Chinese poetry. This has led to criticism that it is too Western as well.