Wednesday, May 27, 2015

A POEM FOR YOUR THOUGHTS

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American Life in Poetry: Column 519
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE
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Many of us have built models from kits—planes, ships, cars. Here’s Robert Hedin, a Minnesota poet and the director of The Anderson Center at Tower View in Red Wing, trying to assemble a little order while his father is dying.




Raising the Titanic 

I spent the winter my father died down in the basement,
under the calm surface of the floorboards, hundreds

of little plastic parts spread out like debris
on the table. And for months while the snow fell

and my father sat in the big chair by the Philco, dying,
I worked my way up deck by deck, story by story,

from steerage to first class, until at last it was done,
stacks, deck chairs, all the delicate rigging.

And there it loomed, a blazing city of the dead.
Then painted the gaping hole at the waterline

and placed my father at the railings, my mother
in a lifeboat pulling away from the wreckage.

POETRY EVENT - WASH, D.C.



Wednesday, June 3, 6:30 PM

Pacific Islander poets Brandy Nalani McDougall, Craig Santos Perez, and Lyz Soto will read from their work and participate in a moderated discussion with Lawrence-Minh Bui Davis, founding director and co-editor-in-chief of The Asian American Literary Review. Presented in partnership with the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center; Ala Press; The Asian American Literary Review; the Asian American Studies Program, University of Maryland; and Poets & Writers, Inc.

Location: Mumford Room, sixth floor, James Madison Building 
Contact: (202) 707-5394

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

POETRY NEWS - CHICAGO


Poetry Foundation Announces Winner of the 2015 Pegasus Award for Poetry Criticism

This Dialogue of One: Essays on Poets from John Donne to Joan Murray, by Mark Ford
CHICAGO — The Poetry Foundation is honored to announce that Mark Ford’s 2014 publication This Dialogue of One: Essays on Poets from John Donne to Joan Murray,from Eyewear Publishing, is awarded the annual $7,500 Pegasus Award for Poetry Criticism, which honors the best book-length works of criticism, including biographies, essay collections, and critical editions that consider the subject of poetry or poets.
“If more literary criticism were like this,” John Lanchester has said of Ford’s essays, “more people would read it.” The 13 vivid, lucid, refreshing, and unfailingly surprising pieces in his collection range from the canonical (Walt Whitman, Emily Dickinson, Charles Baudelaire, and T.S. Eliot) to the overlooked (James Thomson, Samuel Greenberg, and Joan Murray). Randall Jarrell believed that a critic writing at his or her best makes people see what they might otherwise never have seen; in this enriching and rewarding book, Ford is at his very best.
FINALISTS ($1,000)
Breathturn into Timestead: The Collected Later Poetry, by Paul Celan, translated and edited by Pierre Joris. (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
A collection nearly 50 years in the making, Pierre Joris’sBreathturn into Timestead: The Collected Later Poetry is a monumental achievement in translation and textual scholarship. This edition brings together the final five volumes of Celan’s poetry translated from the German, with an authoritative introduction and a trove of notes that illuminate Celan’s innovative and polysemous language. Considered one of the greatest German-language poets of the 20th century, Celan presents myriad difficulties in his poetry, both semantic and philosophical, as he renders a new language able to speak to the horrors of the Holocaust. This edition proves Joris to be one of those rare translators whose work possesses both rigorous scholarship and an intuitive understanding of poetic language.
James Merrill: Life and Art, by Langdon Hammer. (Knopf)
The lives of all great artists are inevitably singular, but the complex givens of James Merrill's life—astonishing talent, fabulous wealth—render his history almost impossible for us to focus with the same mysterious candor, aesthetic daring, and alertness to multiple perspectives that Merrill brought to his own finest poems, many of which, such as “Days of 1964,” “Lost in Translation,” “The Book of Ephraim,” and “Self-Portrait in Tyvek™ Windbreaker,” are among the most surprising and important of the past century. Yet in James Merrill: Life and Art, Langdon Hammer emerges as Merrill's perfect chronicler—and more. A nuanced and capacious observer, he is a deft prose writer, as well as a fine-grained analyst of poems. Biography as literature, craft, and art, this is a captivating and essential book.
Mahmoud Darwish: The Poet’s Art and His Nation, by Khaled Mattawa. (Syracuse University Press)
Khaled Mattawa examines the work of Mahmoud Darwish, arguably Palestine’s most famous poet, within the context of the political strife that marked the region throughout Darwish’s life and continues today. Darwish’s struggle to be both “a spokesman for his people and a private lyrical poet” is illuminated through close readings of poems that chart notable shifts in aesthetic, technique, and subject. Mattawa’s keen insights into Arabic poetry and Palestinian history provide vital context for understanding Darwish’s work and its importance.
The Racial Imaginary: Writers on Race in the Life of the Mind, edited by Claudia Rankine, Beth Loffreda, and Max King Cap. (Fence Books)
The Racial Imaginary is the result of Claudia Rankine's Open Letter Project, which called for responses on ways race and writing share space in the imagination. The responses in this selection take various forms—epistolary, essayistic, and poetic—that offer intimate portraits of how race and writing meet. The result is an anthology that traces how, through figures such as James Baldwin and Gertrude Stein, racial imaginary has been discussed or ignored and demonstrates how relevant these conversations are to the contemporary moment. As the editors write, “the racial imaginary changes over time, in part because artists get into tension with it, challenge it.” This timely collection challenges everyone to foster these changes.
Where Have You Been? Selected Essays, by Michael Hofmann.
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
Discerning and personable, the lively essays in Where Have You Been? chart a broad, essential map across 20th-century and contemporary poets. It is a travelogue filled with insights, observations, and opinions that could come only from a critic who is himself a gifted poet and a masterful translator. Most remarkably, Hofmann’s deep understanding of his subjects and his supple sensitivity to the workings of language never weigh him down but instead keep his critical imagination ever fresher for succeeding discoveries. Fortunate readers, both seasoned and new, will find Where Have You Been? an enriching roam; they’ll want to know where Hofmann might take them next.
HONORABLE MENTIONS
Angels of the Americlypse: An Anthology of New Latin@ Writing, edited by Carmen Giménez Smith and John Chávez. (Counterpath Press)
Lost & Found: The CUNY Poetics Document Initiative, Series. (Center for the Humanities, the Graduate Center, the City University of New York)
Selected Letters of Langston Hughes, edited by Arnold Rampersad and David Roessel with Christa Fratantoro. (Knopf)
The Art of Daring: Risk, Restlessness, Imagination, by Carl Phillips. (Graywolf Press)
Metaphor, by Denis Donoghue. (Harvard University Press)
Upcoming 2015 Pegasus Prize Announcements
Young People’s Poet Laureate: June 2015

Friday, May 22, 2015

POETRY EVENTS - CHICAGO

 
CONVERSATION

Library Book Club: Alice Notley

Friday, June 19
12:30 PM – 1:30 PM
Poetry Foundation
61 West Superior Street
Free Admission
All experience levels are welcome to a monthly book group moderated by library staff. In June, we will discuss Songs and Stories of the Ghouls by Alice Notley, recipient of the 2015 Pegasus Poetry Prize. Space is limited to 15 participants. Please register in advance by emailing library@poetryfoundation.org.

 
CONVERSATION

Library Book Club: Lo Kwa Mei-en

Friday, July 17
12:30–1:30 PM
Poetry Foundation
61 West Superior Street
Free Admission
All experience levels are welcome to a monthly book group moderated by library staff. In July, we will discuss Yearling by Lo Kwa Mei-en, winner of the 2013 Kundiman Poetry Prize. Space is limited to 15 participants. Please register in advance by emailinglibrary@poetryfoundation.org.

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

a poem for your thoughts



Pelican 

Under warm New Mexico sun,
we watched the pelican place
himself down among the mallards
as if he had been there all along,
as if they were expecting the large,
cumbersome body, the ungainliness.
And he, sensing his own unsightly
appearance, tucked his head close
to his body and took on the smooth
insouciance of a swan.

Monday, May 18, 2015

POETRY WORKSHOPS


Here’s a quick overview:
WRITE YOUR MANIFESTO
Define your audience, clarify your message, outline your ebook, and begin drafting your manifesto with writing prompts and a step-by-step blueprint in this self-publishing workshop.
START AN EMAIL NEWSLETTER
Learn how to plan, write, and promote an effective email newsletter to grow an audience for your blog, books, and other work.
Each of these workshops includes one two-hour live webinar, a step-by-step workbook, and one month of unlimited email access for additional support following the workshop.
EXCLUSIVE JUNE SPECIAL
Registration for each workshop is $25, but you can register for both of these workshops for June 2015 for $40 altogether.
Save 20 percent, knock out your newsletter and your next ebook, and get the ball rolling on a killer plan for your blog and author career for the summer!
TELL YOUR FRIENDS
Don’t want to register this month but know some writers who would love this deal? Please pass it on!
Thanks! Hope to see you there :)

Cheers,
Dana

Saturday, May 16, 2015

POETRY EVENT - CHICAGO

 
CELEBRATION

Literature for All of Us 2015 Poetry Bash

Thursday, May 22, 1:00PM–3:00PM
Poetry Foundation
61 West Superior Street
Free Admission
Youth come together to share parts of their lives and their perspectives on the world in poetic verse. Literature for All of Us invites you to come join us as they demand songs of peace and ask that we paint them in their true colors.
Co-sponsored with Literature for All of Us
 

Friday, May 15, 2015

POETRY NEWS - AMHERST, MASS


May 16: Join us for the annual
Emily Dickinson Poetry Walk
Poetry Walk 2014
Amherst is in full bloom. Enjoy the season with the annual Emily Dickinson Poetry Walk!

Join us this Saturday, May 16, at 1 pm to mark the anniversary of Emily Dickinson's death (on May 15, 1886) with readings of her poetry at historic sites throughout downtown Amherst.

The event is free and open to the public.

The Walk will begin at 1 pm in the Homestead garden and proceed through Amherst, stopping at sites significant in Dickinson's life and concluding at the poet's grave in West Cemetery.  At the cemetery, participants are invited to join in the traditional light-hearted toast to the poet and to read a favorite Dickinson poem. The walk will take about one hour.

This year's selection of poems will be read by volunteers from the audience. Anyone who would like to read one of the poems should arrive at the Homestead at 12:45 pm to receive an assignment; poems will be distributed on a first-come, first-served basis.

Wheelchair accessible parking is available at the Homestead; all other vehicles are asked to park on the street or in the Amherst College lot on Spring Street. For more information about accessibility, call 413-542-2034 or email edmprograms@EmilyDickinsonMuseum.org.

Visit the Emily Dickinson Museum
The Emily Dickinson Museum: The Homestead and The Evergreens, opens for 2015 on Wednesday, March 4. Museum hours are 11 am to 4 pm, Wednesday through Sunday. Find out more about visiting here.

The Emily Dickinson Museum is dedicated to educating diverse audiences about the poet's life, family, creative work, times, and enduring relevance, and to preserving and interpreting the Homestead and The Evergreens as historical resources for public and academic enrichment.
 
The Emily Dickinson Museum is owned by the Trustees of Amherst College and overseen by a separate Board of Governors. The Museum is responsible for raising its own operating and capital funds.

The Emily Dickinson Museum is a member of 
Museums10, a collaboration of ten museums linked to the Five Colleges in the Pioneer Valley--Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and Smith Colleges, and the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Thursday, May 14, 2015

A POEM FOR YOUR THOUGHTS

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American Life in Poetry: Column 517
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE
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The Dalai Llama has said that dying is just getting a new set of clothes. Here’s an interesting take on what it may be like for the newly departed, casting off their burdens and moving with enthusiasm into the next world. Kathleen Aguero lives in Massachusetts.




Send Off 

The dead are having a party without us.
They’ve left our worries behind.
What a bore we’ve become
with our resentment and sorrow,
like former lovers united
for once by our common complaints.
Meanwhile the dead, shedding pilled sweaters,
annoying habits, have become
glamorous Western celebrities
gone off to learn meditation.

We trudge home through snow
to a burst pipe,
broken furnace, looking
up at the sky where we imagine
they journey to wish them bon voyage,
waving till the jet on which they travel
first class is out of sight—
only the code of its vapor trail left behind.


Sunday, May 10, 2015

POETRY NEWS


Alice Notley Awarded 2015 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize

Award recognizes lifetime accomplishment with $100,000 prize
CHICAGO – The Poetry Foundation is honored to announce that Alice Notley has been awarded the 2015 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, which recognizes the outstanding lifetime achievement of a living U.S. poet.
Presented annually to a living U.S. poet whose lifetime accomplishments warrant extraordinary recognition, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize is one of the most prestigious awards given to American poets. At $100,000, it is also one of the nation’s largest literary prizes. Established in 1986, the prize is sponsored and administered by the Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine. It will be presented, along with the Pegasus Award for Poetry Criticism, at a ceremony at the Poetry Foundation on Monday, June 8. The winner of the award for poetry criticism will be announced later this month.
The links below provide the most up-to-date information and sharable content.



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About the Poetry Foundation

The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine, is an independent literary organization committed to a vigorous presence for poetry in our culture. It exists to discover and celebrate the best poetry and to place it before the largest possible audience. The Poetry Foundation seeks to be a leader in shaping a receptive climate for poetry by developing new audiences, creating new avenues for delivery and encouraging new kinds of poetry through innovative literary prizes and programs. For more information, please visit poetryfoundation.org.

Follow the Poetry Foundation and Poetry on Facebook at facebook.com/poetryfoundation or on Twitter @PoetryFound.

POETRY FOUNDATION | 61 West Superior Street | Chicago, IL 60654 | 312.787.7070

Media contact:

Elizabeth Burke-Dain, eburkedain@poetryfoundation.org, 312.799.8016
Polly Faust, pfaust@poetryfoundation.org, 312.799.8065

POETRY EVENT - CHICAGO

 
SUMMER CAMPS

Teen Summer Poetry Camps

Register now for one of three July camp sessions
Poetry Foundation
61 West Superior Street
Free admission
Junior High Summer Poetry Camp (Grades 6-8)
Tuesdays July 14, 21, 28, 1:30- 3:30
Teen Summer Poetry Camp I (Grades 9 and 10)
Thursdays July 16, 23, 30, 10:30 – 12:30
Teen Summer Poetry Camp II (Grades 11 and 12)
Thursdays July 16, 23, 30, 1:30 – 3:30
Each camp is limited to 15 participants, so please RSVPsoon to reserve your spot at library@poetryfoundation.org
Teen Poetry Summer Camps are free and open to poetry-loving youth of all experience levels. Participants will meet once a week for three weeks to read, discuss, and respond to contemporary works of poetry. Participants will analyze a variety of poetic works, and learn poetic and storytelling skills through the creation of their own work. Lessons include a range of activities designed to strengthen poetic and storytelling skills and develop personal creativity. Campers will have the opportunity to explore the Foundation's library and create their own work in response to what they find there.
S

Friday, May 8, 2015

POETRY NEWS - RUTH LILLY PRIZE WINNER - ALICE NOTLEY- INTERVIEW






































INTERVIEW

Talk to the Dead

Ruth Lilly Prize winner Alice Notley on the voice and spirits of her poetry.

BY ADAM PLUNKETT
Talk to the Dead
Image courtesy of Alice Notley.
Any honest introduction of Alice Notley should acknowledge that you can’t quite introduce her. She has written too much, for too long, in too many different ways, and if any principle explains her work, it’s what she calls “disobedience,” a refusal to comply with any movement or style or idea or identity. In her nearly 30 books from the last 45 years, she has been a New York School poet (second generation) and a feminist poet, an epic and a lyric and a novelistic poet, a playwright and a memoirist, an essayist and an accomplished visual artist: funny, poignant, erudite, and fearless. “Over the years,” she wrote in 2005, “I’ve been variously … formal, experimental, elliptical, polysyllabic, exceedingly plain, personal, and narrative; also speedy and slowed-down; all, it seems to me, in the same general voice.”
True to noncompliant form, she told me recently that she hears less a voice in her poetry now than a number of voices. It was late April, and she was on a trip to New York City, where she learned that she had been awarded the 2015 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize. We discussed the voices in a series of e-mails, which touched on her ambition to give voice to the dead and the silenced, her two forthcoming books, and why she thinks academia is dulling poetry. Our interview has been edited and condensed.
Related:
Alice Notley's
visual artwork 


Click to see slideshow.
What brings you back to New York City? And how does it feel to be back after having lived abroad, in Paris, for—correct me if I’m wrong—22 years now?
I come back to New York a couple times a year to visit my sons and their families. But this visit I also read at The Poetry Project, something I have done every few years since 1971. It’s familiar to come back—it’s family and friends, it’s the sound of a significant part of my poetry—that New York speed and humor in the street, it’s an important part of my background. I’ve lived in Paris now for 23 years and it’s become home, but I need New York, too.

Alice Notley and children. Image courtesy of Alice Notley.
Are you aware at all when you’re here of discontinuity, too?
Sometimes I think and say aloud that it’s changed—but I’m not really sure it’s that different. The energy’s the same. There are still people who live their lives primarily out on the sidewalk, for example. There are large numbers of immigrants, though of different backgrounds from before; the subway’s still interesting to ride in; there’s a lot of overt artistic activity.

You wrote in your 1995 essay “The ‘Feminine’ Epic” that part of what drew you to write The Descent of Alette, an epic in which the protagonist finds herself on “a subway, endlessly,” was your noticing more and more homeless people in New York in the late 1980s. How, if at all, do you see oppression manifesting itself differently now that the city has so many rich inhabitants? How is it different in Paris?

I’m told that there are homeless people everywhere in New York; I think I would have to stay here longer to know exactly where they are. I’m not aware of people clustered together, as they were in the ’80s, in places like Tompkins Square Park and beneath Grand Central Station. I suppose that means that overt displays of homelessness are discouraged. Paris had a rather large homeless population when I first moved there, and there seem to be a lot of people sleeping over heating grates at the moment. But there’s more dialogue in Europe in general about housing. There are a lot more people in the world than there used to be, and taking care of everyone’s needs seems formidable. I actually don’t think about the rich very much. I’m not interested in them. I suppose I think everyone should exclude them.
Could you speak to your decision not to spend your career in academia, and to why, as you’ve said elsewhere, “Poetry should feel hugely uncomfortable in the academy”?
I’ve never seen any connection between poetry and the academy or poetry and the university—or between fiction writing and the university. When I first went to Iowa as a fiction writer, I was appalled to discover I was supposed to learn how to teach. I somehow hadn’t noticed the MFA was a teaching degree. I gradually began writing poetry and got my degree eventually in fiction and poetry both, but I refused to do the student teaching and was given the job of being the dittograph person. I ran off everybody’s handouts for classes. Poetry is itself an ancient art older than any academy or institution. Why should a poet teach poetry or anything else?
Could you talk about specific problems in the poetry world that stem at least in part from the fact that so many practicing poets spend their lives in academia? One issue that occurred to me was the shift in emphasis from musicality to form that you discuss in your essay “American Poetic Music at the Moment.” Perhaps part of the reason poets are more comfortable talking about form than sound is that it’s easier to study.
Oh, everyone’s so boring! They have students! We had these really difficult lives in the midst of which we talked to each other and fought with each other about all of our thoughts about poetry. Everyone thinks they’re a poet because they get degrees. They are taught by boring teachers who validate the fact that they have a certain interest in poetry and then—presto—they get to validate more like themselves. I am using the pronoun “they” in the normal American vernacular way that is born of necessity. So. There are still old-fashioned, silly ways to discuss musicality in the mainstream academy (you say vague things about consonants and vowels), and my work has been subjected to them as well as to the lack of discussion in the avant-garde part of the academy. With musicality no one knows what to say, because it’s practically metaphysical, the essence of the poetry talent—don’t ever mention the poetry talent, either. I am totally musical, and I hear all the words I say in daily life. I have allergies at the moment that are blocking up my normal sounds and making other ones. My speaking voice is echoing about in my brain-bones, and I can’t catch my breath properly.
I love the way you write in your 1999 essay “Voice” about “where in or around the body the poem voice comes from.” “I myself,” you write, “used to hear the voice come from just outside my forehead on the right side; now I’m not sure, different places, something in the mouth or maybe from the eyes.” When I read in one of your recent poems “Poetry touches you with sounds on the back / of your neck,” I shivered. How much does this embodied element of sound change as your projects change? Where do you hear the voice now?
My voice. What I’ve been getting as voice for a few years is more like voices. I am so empty from all the things I’ve been through in my life, and from living in a foreign culture that remains forever foreign, that I am bombarded constantly by other voices when I sit down to write. I kind of don’t have a self now, it’s a rote thing, but I seem to hear what everyone else is saying, particularly the dead. This is quite interesting. The dead have to translate themselves, or be translated by me or into me when they speak, so they are somewhat flat musically. I hear their voices in the front of my head and then somehow translate that into poetry. I’m never sure whether I’m really hearing other voices or am inhabiting my imagination. Sometimes I know for sure a dead person is talking to me, but not always. I am obviously walking some line between charlatanism and authenticity that is scary and satisfying. Some of this work will be published next year in my new book from Penguin, Certain Magical Acts.
That’s fascinating. It calls to mind that wonderful passage from Culture of One (2011): “Why do you always / write about talking to the dead? People talk to the dead, / that’s why.” The passage turns potential accusations of your eccentricity on their head: it’s not that you’re hearing things, more that other people aren’t listening.
This reminds me of your writing, in another context, “My own poetry seems less eccentric than motivated by the urgency of making sound accurate to previously unpoeticized aspects of life.” You’re writing there about “the inclusion in the national poetry of people who might not have been thought to be there,” but I’m curious whether you consider listening to voices of the dead instrumental to that project—as in Songs and Stories of the Ghouls (2011), for example.
I sometimes think that good poets open themselves to all the voices in the air, and they are there, of the live and dead, of animal and plant and inert matter, of whatever inhabits the rest of the universe. And to a vast unconscious or sleeping assemblage of souls. My job has become to interpret the nature of the cosmos as it is presented to me by these voices, but I suspect that “the dead” speak through the voices of any poets that are open to them, the way you can open up when you write a poem and tap words from just anywhere.
But I began writing as a young woman whose voice, or kind of voice, had never before appeared in poems. I invented a voice for myself when there had scarcely been any female poets, and then a voice for myself as a young mother. I allowed my children’s voices in, and then the voices of all my friends, the people on the street, anyone, really, who hadn’t been in the poem before was welcome, to the extent I could hear them. I knew I couldn’t hear everyone, but I tried. By the time I wrote The Descent of Alette I was creating voices for the homeless and oppressed as I encountered them, for my dead brother who had suffered from PTSD, for anyone I felt needed representation in poetry. I feel that poetry is, and is for, everyone. But we are poetry, we are somewhat measurable vibrant bundles of “wave lengths,” moving and perceptually collaged selves perceived as wholes. Anyone is the universe.
I’d love to hear more about Certain Magical Acts, too. And I’d be an incompetent interviewer if I didn’t ask more about how and when you came to feel, as you say, empty and selfless.
Certain Magical Acts contains a couple of works for many voices, also a healing ceremony for two characters, a single-voiced found work that is essentially a manuscript speaking, and a novella like a spy novel. I can see myself as a spy for the dead. There are also shorter unique pieces. I have another book coming out this year, from Letter Machine, called Benediction, that is 15 years old and is a rather massive single work. It vibrates all over itself, it just vibrates—I don’t know how else to describe it. But partway through my writing of it my husband, Douglas Oliver, became ill with cancer and, just as I was completing the book, died. So it has been difficult for me to face this poem.
Doug’s death is one of the things that have happened since I moved to Paris. It was followed by my being diagnosed with hepatitis C; I had a very bad case and had to do an 11-month treatment, which was depressing and wearying. However, during the course of the treatment I wrote the book In the Pines, which is something like folk song. I began to feel very empty at this point, but that seems to mean that you become full of some other kind of spirit. I stopped feeling like Alice Notley. The people I talk about in In the Pines are still my friends and relatives, but are unnamed though certainly real. They are pronouns; I am a pronoun. We are the folk. I don’t mind thinking of myself as one of the folk or as a soul.
I’m working on something now that is meant to be collage-like, but in the sense that everyone, all the dead and live, will say what they would like to paste onto it. This is the new universe. We have come around again to a point of reinvention, re-creation of it, all of it.
You’ve written in a number of places about the challenge of inventing a voice for yourself as a woman, such as in the stunning lines “But I’ve / not read a voice like my own like my own voice will be.” But you’ve also written that in the initial process of inventing a voice, you imitated “exclusively men consciously.” Why was this so, do you think? How have sexism and the male domination of national conversations about poetry affected the reception of your work?
I had very few female predecessors. They weren’t there. You can’t become a poet without imitating others, so I imitated men rather than the two and half women, because, by the laws of numbers, more of them were brilliant and worthy of imitation. I’ve never been afraid of being marginalized; I was too obsessed with writing poetry to care about that. Obviously the reception of my work has been hugely affected by the fact that the tradition has been so male. On the other hand, the reception of, say, Ted [Berrigan]’s work was hugely affected by the fact that he was working class. Etc. There are always multiple discriminations going on, layers of them; but poetry is about the writing of it, and we wrote and discussed poetry and lived our eventful lives without worrying that much about how we were received. Poetry always finds its way, according to its own laws.
I very much like the folk element of In the Pines. Bob Dylan, for instance, is all over it. Can you speak a bit to his influence, and to other musicians and types of music that have been important to your work?
I’m not hugely influenced by Dylan, but I do really like certain songs of his, such as “The Man in the Long Black Coat” and “Blind Willie McTell,” the ones I keep referring to in “In the Pines” (the title poem in the book). I’m also influenced by the music he was influenced by and enjoy hearing that in his music. I sat by the console radio when I was five, listening to popular music as well as radio shows with their voices and sound effects. I studied classical piano in high school and college but wasn’t really that good. But I have that ear for something like the rapid piano line in poetry, and I’ve used effects from choral music in my work. I tend to write my long books in sonata form, but unconsciously. And I know I do jazz sometimes, though I try not to. I’m not listening to anything right now, but I sing in the bathtub a lot. I have songs going on in my head all the time, and I’m always trying to change the ongoing song so I won’t go nuts.
Earlier you mentioned the theme of reinvention, beginning again, which has been central to your work. It has the etymological sense of “apocalypse,” of uncovering, which of course calls to mind the catastrophic state of the planet. Could you speak a bit to what connection you see between your emphasis on beginnings and your concern with climate change?”
An “apocalypse” is, strictly speaking, a dream vision. Boethius invented the apocalypse as a form in “The Consolation of Philosophy.” My emphasis on beginnings is slightly different: it’s a way I learned to think after various personal disasters, that you must always be prepared to create the world again. I think we will have to renew from the changes climate change and overpopulation bring—there will be no choice.
Read the press release.
Originally Published: May 6, 2015

RELATED

AUDIO AUTHORS
 Adam  Plunkett

BIOGRAPHY

Adam Plunkett has written about poetry for a number of publications.
Continue reading this biography

Thursday, May 7, 2015

EMILY DICKINSON MUSEUM NEWS - Amherst, Mass

Announcing the David T. Porter Prize
for Meritorious Work in Dickinson Studies
David T. Porter
"Poems have a permanence that creatures do not," wrote David Porter in his book, Dickinson: The Modern Idiom. His own work had a permanent impact on Dickinson scholarship, a legacy the Emily Dickinson Museum is pleased to celebrate through the establishment of the David T. Porter Prize for Meritorious Work in Dickinson Studies.

The prize, intended to nurture creative work among new generations of scholars, is open to senior undergraduates enrolled at Amherst College, Hampshire College, Mount Holyoke College, Smith College, or the University of Massachusetts Amherst.  

Essays may address topics related to any aspect of Emily Dickinson's life, work, and context, with the winner offered the opportunity to present his/her original work at an Emily Dickinson Museum event and a cash prize of $1,000.

"David's great love was poetry and the particular genius of Dickinson's poems, on a par with his joy in teaching and nurturing the critical maturation of student sensibilities," said his wife Rosalie Porter.

Professor Porter, who passed away in November 2013, spent 33 years in the English department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst before his retirement in 1995. He was deeply involved with the Emily Dickinson Museum for decades, beginning when it was known as the Dickinson Homestead. He organized the first Emily Dickinson International Symposium in 1980, which led to the formation of the Emily Dickinson International Society, as well as the 1986 Centennial Celebration of Dickinson where he delivered the keynote speech at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C.

"David was such a wonderful friend to the Emily Dickinson Museum, and a mentor and leader in the community of scholars who have dramatically expanded critical interpretation of Dickinson's poetry and life," said Emily Dickinson Museum Executive Director Jane Wald. "We're thrilled to offer a prize in his name that invites young scholars into this critical dialogue."

As important as Professor Porter's own research was, his son Tom Porter said, a hallmark of his life as a teacher, scholar, and critic was encouragement of emerging scholars and their innovative critical approaches to Emily Dickinson's work.

"My father loved teaching undergraduates, and this prize is offered as an inspiration to undergraduate seniors with a love for the poet and a curiosity about her life and imagination, to express a new viewpoint that goes beyond the personal to present an insight of universal impact," he said.

The yearly prize will be supported through the David T. Porter Prize Endowment Fund, established by the Porter family and the Phillip Family Foundation (administered by Professor Porter's nephew Michael Phillip and his wife Cheryl Edmonds Phillip).The Emily Dickinson Museum and Amherst College welcome additional contributions to this fund from other donors. For more information, contact development@EmilyDickinsonMuseum.org.

Each year's winner will be chosen by a selection committee composed of a senior scholar, a junior scholar, a representative of David Porter's family, and a member of the Emily Dickinson Museum staff.

"There's still so much unknown about Dickinson," said Emily Dickinson Board of Governors member Polly Longsworth, a friend of the Porter family. "I look forward to lucky young minds engaging with her work and her mysteries while they're right here in or near Amherst, so close to the home she loved, the town she loved, where she's still tangible. Robert Frost said, 'choose a poet for life,' and this prize introduces you to an amazing one, with a global audience."

The deadline for submission of essays for the first award is January 15, 2016. Essays should be submitted electronically to info@EmilyDickinsonMuseum.org or mailed to the Museum at 280 Main Street, Amherst, MA 01002, and marked to call attention to the Porter Prize.

ABOUT DAVID PORTER

David T. Porter (1928-2013) set the tone of Dickinson scholarship from the 1960s to the 1980s with his three highly regarded scholarly works, The Art of Emily Dickinson's Early Poetry (1966), Emerson and Literary Change (1978) and Dickinson: The Modern Idiom (1981), all published by Harvard University Press.

For decades, David Porter was closely involved with the Dickinson Homestead (now the Emily Dickinson Museum), and organized the first Emily Dickinson International Symposium in 1980 which led to the establishment of the Emily Dickinson International Society. He organized the 1986 Centennial Celebration of Dickinson and delivered the keynote speech at the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C.

David Porter spent 33 years teaching at UMass Amherst before his retirement in 1995. He was twice awarded Fulbright lectureships, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a residency as senior research fellow at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and was a resident scholar at the Rockefeller Research Institute in Bellagio, Italy. During his career, Porter taught at the University of Catania in Sicily, and at Keele University and the University of Kent in England.