Archive for November, 2008

The Shifting Body of Telling the Story

Monday, November 24th, 2008

Ten couplets make up Telling the Story by Susan V. Meyers. Ten long thin stanzas like the fingers on my hands, her hands, like the fingers that “eventually learn” in her poem. Two lines per stanza like the two fingers with which you check your pulse. The equivalence of structure to body does not remain consistent though the structure does.

Consistency is pressing too hard, too much ambition that “defeats us”, doesn’t let the body change like the burning cinders (hard things the fire leaves), stars, and red leaves the poem’s speaker sometimes feels. This lyric list is broken into

leaves flushing red, or a bone like an arrow—
the dead generations’—cupped cold in my hand like some certain arc.

with dashes as the arrow-bones’ line of flight: a part of the body becomes a projectile, moves through the generations of the dead then back to be cupped in a hand, an arc, but the hand is an arc or the object at rest can be an arc too in the indeterminate grammar of the line.

How can a mind in a body shifting so know “Is this the story I should be telling?” This is an adolescent girl speaking, her fingers digging into her neck, trying to find the one thing that’s supposed to stay steady, until she becomes dizzy. (One’s heart rate may change throughout the menstrual cycle.) This is also an older woman looking back, who still doesn’t know everything but realizes

…perhaps it’s enough that this story got started,
that fingers eventually learn:

If you want to find rhythm, test gently;
our blood pulses close at the skin.

The body learns as the body shifts, not the brain or the disembodied line alone. And only perhaps: those who change in a changing world must temper their wisdom with uncertainty, or it is not very wise.

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An Experiment in Fundraising

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

CRIT Journal has thus far had no sponsors, no ads, no way to pay contributors. Right now I’m running an experiment using Fundable to see if we can change the latter. If ten readers are willing to contribute $10 each, the money CRIT gets (minus Fundable’s fee) will be used to pay contributors.

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The Opposite of What I Want

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Sometimes it is easier to say what something is not than to say what it is, especially when that thing is one of those perennially shifting (sub/ob)jects like poetry or god.  Via the Seattle Craigslist listing of writing gigs, I found precisely what I do not want to see in poetry: Purity of Poetry.

Perhaps it is simply an unfortunate choice of name, but if words matter anywhere it is in poetry and thus, by extension, in discussions of poetry. I want poems, and really all kinds of art, that play on the boundaries, that seek out contamination by what is non-artistic, non-literary, and strange. I want to see work that makes the distinction between pure and contaminated nil.

Poetry is not like gold that cannot be used when pure, for that would imply that those forms closest to pure are somehow ideal.

You may wonder why I haven’t discussed any of the poetry on this site that represents the opposite of what I want to see in poetry. It is because the “poems” bore me, and so I have no desire to do so. (This is also why I write far more positive reviews than negative ones, and even negative ones tend to contain at least some ambivalence.)

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Deconstructing Night Stream Journey

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Night Stream Journey according to Wordle
Night Stream Journey according to Wordle (via)

New Issue

Saturday, November 1st, 2008

While you finish your Halloween candy, take a look at the Samhain issue of CRIT.