Notes towards Drawings of Staircases

Also, thinking on the metaphor of drawing perspectives of staircases and all…..

Isn’t the point of these kinds of exercises to make you pay attention, to make you see by having to draw something rudimentary, by making you create with your hand something that could be far more accurately reproduced with a camera? To say, or infer, that the purpose of such an exercise is the product is to not see the exercise clearly.
Stephen Berry, comment to post below

Along the East River and the Bronx
The kids were singing, showing off their bodies
At the wheel, the oil, the rawhide, and the hammer.
Ninety thousand miners were drawing silver out of boulders
While children made perspective drawings of stairways.

Jack Spicer, “Ode for Walt Whitman”

Drawings: Industrialism / Capitalism vs. Creative

Third kind: Lottery

Fourth: “to eliminate the draw” (Dorn, Slinger)

David Marriott: “Signs Taken for Signifiers in Language Writing”

marginalization vs. canonization

folk / craft / mastery (hard vs. “soft”)

genderized language — hierarchical structures — codeswitching

financial flarf?

Steve McCaffery / Dick Higgins / Ronald Johnson — “uncreative writing” / fluxus / Dada etc.

OuLiPo — “anticipatory plagiarism”

Borges — every reader his own Shakespeare, Pierre Menard

Pound — economic theory — Bretton Woods Agreement — “each person should print his own money”

Ginsberg / Beats — Goldsmith / Flarf-conpo (???) (literary market)

Bernie Madoff / sustainability / peak oil

profit motive / Negative Capability

Keats: “why were they proud?”

Lorine Niedecker / Objectivisim — “enough to carry me through”

Flarf / Conceptual in Poetry p. II

A tireless builder, the deject is in short a stray. He is on a journey, during the night, the end of which keeps receding. He has a sense of danger, of the loss that the pseudo-object attracting him represents for him, but he cannot help taking the risk at the very moment he sets himself apart. And the more he strays, the more he is saved.

–Julia Kristeva, Powers of Horror

Watching The Tempest being performed in Delaware Park last week, I was reminded again of how Shakespeare puts his most sublime passage — perhaps the most sublime in all of his plays — into the mouth of his most abject character.

Be not afeard; the isle is full of noises,
sounds and sweet airs that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
will hum about mine ears; and sometimes voices,
That, if I then had waked after long sleep,
will make me sleep again; and then, in dreaming,
the clouds, methought, would open and show riches
ready to drop upon me: that, when I waked,
I cried to dream again.

–3.2

In Tempest-like language, Kristeva describes the abject further: “The time of abjection is double: a time of oblivion and thunder, of veiled infinity and the moment when revelation bursts forth.” I can’t help but wonder if Chaucer understood the same thing: The Pardoner’s Tale, often considered the “best” of the Canterbury Tales, is undoubtedly the most varied in style, the most daring in rhetorical strategy. In other words, the Pardoner, certainly the most abject of Chaucer’s characters, speaks with the most eloquence, the most invention, perhaps the most of the “sublime.” There is a logic here that Kristeva touches on, I think; without formulating too simple and easy an equation, one might say that the vanishing point of abjection becomes the place from which language has the most provocative, even beautiful, things to say.

Further — and I must include the caveat that these thoughts are provisional, speculative, etc. — I have to wonder if it’s not something of this that both attracts and repels readers of Flarf. For Flarf, it seems to me, follows this elusive logic to a strange conclusion: the abject of language itself is given voice. The dull, dense, flotsam and jetsam of language, careless, disembodied scribblings culled from blogs and anonymous sites, mingle unabashedly with occasional gems of more polished, honest, sincere writing — all of it stripped bare of authorship and presented in such a way that the sublime, every so often and seemingly at random, speaks not from the mouth of an abject character but from abjection itself. (I’m thinking here, again, of Gary Sullivan’s play PPL in a Depot, when at the end of lots of banal chatter a character stands up and recites a heartfelt elegy for Allen Ginsberg… this, too, is perhaps why Flarf often works best as performance, best of all as performed drama.)

It’s not enough to assert, as Stan Apps does in his review of this and other Sullivan plays, that “With the internet, for the first time in history the self-expressive efforts of millions of our fellow citizens are fully searchable and available for convenient copy-paste; in other words, the need for writers to painstakingly approximate ‘real’ speech is finally totally obsolete.” The web clearly does something far more complicated and weird than simply taking snapshots of language for anyone to dip into and use. I’m reminded of Foucault’s writing on “the absence of an oeuvre” in his preface to History of Madness:

The plenitude of history is only possible in the space, both empty and peopled at the same time, of all the words without language that appear to anyone who lends an ear, as a dull sound from beneath history, the obstinate murmur of a language talking to itself — without any speaking subject and without an interlocutor, wrapped up in itself, with a lump in its throat, collapsing before it ever reaches any formulation and returning without a fuss to the silence that it never shook off. The charred root of meaning.

Having now toggled from Kristeva to Shakespeare to Foucault, uneasily retrofitting some of these decontextualized concepts to thoughts on Flarf, I nevertheless think they at least have the potential to begin a conversation on this subject. In other words, clearly Foucault is not anticipating anything remotely like the Internet, but he is describing a condition of language that reflects or rests adjacent to what we find happening to words filtered through the screen.

For the Internet is where language has gone to die. An endless graveyard of smashed signifiers left empty to be endlessly used, endlessly interchanged. Flarfists wade into this cave — bravely or foolishly, depending on your point of view — Cassandras in a coal mine who incessantly sing of this death. “Whatever,” the key term in Sharon Mesmer’s “The Swiss Just Do Whatever,” is the perfect word for Flarf. Yet here, as in the poem, bereft of the seething irony of Kurt Cobain’s “Oh well, whatever, nevermind,” it is simply an invitation to do whatever, say whatever, because it doesn’t matter whether the Swiss are “masturbating their doink-doinks” — or whatever.

Likewise, Nada Gordon’s “Unicorn Believers Don’t Declare Fatwas.” Here Hitler becomes innocent as a unicorn, a unicorn sinister as Hitler. “Hitler as a great man. / Hitler… mm yeah, Hitler, Hitler, Hitler …” And later: “That unicorn is worse than Hitler.” This kind of radical interchangeability of terms seems to signal a promise broken deep inside language, at the level of “symbolic efficiency,” to borrow a concept that Dale Smith touted on his blog some time ago. Flarf displays this break over and over again, showing us just where language has begun to turn on itself, loathe itself, and in the process both know and un-know itself in the most radical way. Whether you think this is a good thing, a bad thing, or simply a linguistic reality that must be acknowledged and dealt with in poetry, probably goes a long ways towards explaining your attitude towards Flarf.

But not all of it works that way. Jordan Davis’s poems at the beginning of the Con-po section are stunning examples of Flarf turned against its own tendencies, to good effect. These are not the usual vast wordscapes; they do not appear to be “repurposed, regurgitated, and reframed from the great mass of free-floating language out there just begging to be turned into poetry,” as Kenny Goldsmith asserts; they are not “hilarious.” Succinct and witty, even tender, the short pieces — especially the first and last one — eschew verbal excess for the epigrammatic.

TURTLES GENERATE POEMS

No wonder they move so slowly–
Somebody in there is
Trying to write.

POEM FOR A SIXTH WEDDING

You know a lot better than I do
What you’re doing

What I like best about these pieces is that they work just fine as poems in themselves, without the context and punchline of knowing they’re Flarf — which makes that punchline all the more effective. (This points towards my main source of frustration with this issue, and the Con-po feature: why the need to segregate all the Flarf/Con writing from the rest of the issue, and segregate Flarf from Con within the feature? Wouldn’t it have been far more interesting to allow a more open discourse between, say, K. Silem Mohammed’s “Poems About Trees” and some of the nature-oriented “straight” poems in the first part of the book, or the Flarf poems and Caroline Bergvall’s “The Not Tale (Funeral),” which operates along somewhat similar lines?)

Davis’s short poems read like the brief witticisms of Richard Brautigan, not exactly poems but not not poems, either. (Likewise, they seem far too short for the excessive quotation of Flarf, but they’re not not Flarf.) This seems like a good place to stop, for now. Perhaps I’ll write some more about this — I’ve not yet gotten to the Conceptual Writing, or the interesting back matter behind the feature section, which also deserves mention.

Just to close with one of Kenny’s comments from a recent blog post (which is a lot more lucid and inviting than anything he wrote in the Poetry intro):

As I’ve said before on the Poetry Foundation, with the rise of the web, writing has met its photography. By that I mean, writing has encountered a situation similar to what happened to painting upon the invention of photography, a technology so much better at doing what the art form had been trying to do, that in order to survive, the field had to alter its course radically. If photography was striving for sharp focus, painting was forced to go soft, hence Impressionism. Faced with an unprecedented amount of digital available text, writing needs to redefine itself in order to adapt to the new environment of textual abundance.

When we look at our text-based world today, we see the perfect environment in which writing can thrive. Similarly, if we look at what happened when painting met photography, we’ll find that it was the perfect analog to analog correspondence, for nowhere lurking beneath the surface of either painting, photography or film was a speck of language. Instead, it was indexical — image to image — thus setting the stage for an imagistic revolution. Today, digital media has set the stage for a literary revolution. In 1974, Peter Büger was still able to make the claim that “[B]ecause the advent of photography makes possible the precise mechanical reproduction of reality, the mimetic function of the fine arts withers. But the limits of this explanatory model become clear when one calls to mind that it cannot be transferred to literature. For in literature, there is no technical innovation that could have produced an effect comparable to that of photography in the fine arts.” Now there is.

Again, whether one accepts and agrees with this assessment of the impact of the web on writing-based arts goes a long ways towards explaining one’s response to the new or newish forms espoused by Goldsmith, Flarf et al. To them, writers still straining to “create” appear to be artistic dinosaurs, wearing Zoot suits and making perspective drawings of staircases while the rest of the class is off having fun and breaking new ground. Needless to say, I would complicate and question that picture quite a bit.

New Stuff

It’s been a busy week, and no time to get around to typing up my further thoughts on the current issue of Poetry. Meanwhile, there’s been an interesting discussion about Goldsmith’s statement at the blog-that-shall-not-be-named.

A new poem of mine just came out on Drunken Boat. It’s a very odd issue, and I’ll have to write more on that later, too.

And of course I’ve an essay and some short poems in the Slow Poetry feature at Big Bridge, which must be downloaded bit by bit.

Flarf / Conceptual in Poetry p. I

It’s a very strange moment in the world of poetry. Not unlike the kind of partisan bickering and ad hominem sniping that’s transforming the world of politics into more and more of a vicious bloodsport, where the winners gloat insufferably on blogs and comment threads and the losers lick their wounds and launch conspiracy theories on Facebook walls and in chatrooms, there is very little room for common ground and little possibility of productive debate.

The one thing everyone can agree on is that their kind of poetry is better than everyone else’s. A standard move seems to be to set up a straw man of narrative-based, linear, boring, lyric poetry that emerges from a cohesive “I” (in other words, bad poetry), and then claim that [fill-in-the-blank] poetry is finally breaking us out of the chains of that standard lyric ego. Gary Sullivan makes this claim for Flarf in an interview from three years ago; Bruce Andrews makes it retroactively in his recent speech delivered at Orono; now, Kenny Goldsmith performs an almost identical move in the new issue of Poetry. Rich Owens has posted perhaps the most thorough and trenchant response to this introductory essay, and its claims, that I’ve seen; I wanted to briefly take a look at the issue as a whole, which includes the usual Poetry mag fare, sandwiched around a special feature devoted to Flarf and Conceptual poetry, edited by Mr. Goldsmith.

There are, as one would expect in the flagship publication for mainstream poetry (or what passes for mainstream in the niche world of poetry), some big names in the first half of the magazine. Tony Hoagland, who has written some pretty good poems here and there, starts things off with a real clunker. Titled “At the Galleria Shopping Mall,” it reflects an affluent minor-key angst of just the kind one might expect from the title, with lines like “So let it begin. Let her be dipped in the dazzling bounty / and raised and wrung out again and again. / And let us watch.”

Borderline creepy (the narrator is describing a shopping trip with his niece), definitely overwrought, just the kind of bad, boring poem that the above-mentioned avantists would free us from — deservedly so. Not much later, Charles Simic — and again, Simic’s early work, especially in the prose poem, was often fantastic — delivers these lines in his poem “The Melon”:

The children were going back to school.
Their mother, passing out paper plates,
Would not live to see the leaves fall.

Passively voiced, uninterestingly phrased, and worst of all begging the question of the readers’ response, these lines would have been met with derision in a beginning poetry workshop. There is perhaps no worse poet writing today than one who’s so highly lauded that his or her merest scribblings are eagerly gobbled up by any editor.

It goes on like that. It takes until 15 pages in for any humor to break through — a piece by John Hodgen that applies hip-hop phrasing and rhyme to a poem about a man on Viagra. Poems by Tim Dlugos (who died in 1990) do very interesting things with words, and are the first in this number that challenge the reader to do more than follow the lines from left to right and nod along in easy agreement. This is a pretty good poem:

Mehr Licht

were the last words
of Goethe on his
deathbed as the darkness
closed around him.
But Mayor Licht
was also the chief
executive of Providence,
Rhode Island in the early
Eighties. I’m dreaming
of the best political
commercial of all time–
Weimer in the 1830s,
Goethe gasping “Mehr licht,
mehr licht”–and suddenly
Mayor Harry Licht of Providence
appears to pump the paw
of the poet, and save the day.

The poem moves with associative wit in — dare I say it? — an almost Flarfian way, without straining for too much, either in phrasing or humor. Not terribly challenging, but at least it doesn’t try the reader’s patience with overloaded imagery or forced syntax. Likewise the Ange Mlinko poem that follows — a condensed meditation that introduces interesting juxtapositions a la a post-NY school approach. It’s very readable.

But here are some of the titles that follow: “After the Stroke” (David Bottoms), “My Soul” (Richard Lehnert), “Identity” (W.S. Merwin), and, most unfortunately, “Blowing the Fluff Away” by Robyn Sarah. That piece, especially — concerning an “unknown bloom” that apparently serves as metaphor for a relationship gone to seed, and chock full of facile end rhymes that only call attention to the stilted rhythm of the lines themselves, screams out for the kind of parody that the avantists propose to offer. At the very least, it puts one very much in sympathy with the broad outlines of their project.

So to Kenny Goldsmith’s intro. I’ve heard it said privately that Goldsmith’s intro was aimed at readers who might not be familiar with the various streams, movements, and schools that have formed in the world of poetry over the past 80 years or so. Yet, I find it hard to imagine such a reader, especially given the very narrow cultural niche that poetry occupies. I would have to assume that the average reader of Poetry is either a) a graduate from an MFA program, where the various discourses starting with and responding to Modernism would have been covered, or b) a practicing poet who has taken it upon him- or herself to go beyond Whitman and the tepid offerings of mags like Poetry.

In any event, rarely has a revolution been launched with such glib, self-congratulatory, off-putting language as this. “Start making sense. Disjunction is dead. The fragment, which ruled poetry for the past 100 years, has left the building.” As in his editorial in poetry.org last January, Goldsmith can’t be bothered with things like details and historical accuracy. For someone who assumes a low level of poetic background in his readers, Goldsmith doesn’t do much to contextualize his claims.

“There’s a sense of gluttony, of joy, and of fun. Like kids at a touch table, we’re delighted to feel language again, to roll in it, to get our hands dirty.”

Statements like these — and the intro’s full of them — would be laughable if they weren’t so astonishingly offensive. So — everyone not on board this train has suffered from literary anorexia, refuses to have fun, and also can’t “feel” language. All right. Glad we got that straight. But the best is yet to come:

What does it mean to be a poet in the Internet age? These two movements, Flarf and Conceptual Writing, each formed over the past five years, are direct investigations to that end…

Once more, Goldsmith plays fast and loose with his datelines. First, I could swear I attended a launch reading for Deer Head Nation (as well as Rodney Koeneke’s Rouge State) at SPT sometime in 2001, 2002 at the latest. Flarf — almost from the first an incredibly cohesive movement — must be at least 7 or 8 years old by now. But that’s quibbling next to the larger issue of pretending that Conceptual Writing as envisaged by Goldsmith has only existed for five short years.

It’s nonsense. Rich Owens discusses this at length in his post. Without the tradition of conceptual writing that goes back at least to Fluxus writers, Steve McCaffery, Dick Higgins et al., starting in the 1950s-60s (themselves inspired by 1920s Dada, which in turn owes a debt to Futurism, etc etc), the Conceptual Writing that Goldsmith proposes simply could not exist. It’s especially difficult to stomach given that one of Goldsmith’s featured writers, Christian Bök, is a well-known associate (if not a member?) of OuLiPo, which likewise has existed for going on 50 years.

Anyway, the next bit, wherein Goldsmith answers his own question, is even more egregious:

“Identity, for one, is up for grabs. Why use your own words when you can express yourself just as well by using someone else’s? And if your identity is not your own, then sincerity must be tossed out, as well. Materiality, too, comes to the fore: the quantity of words seems to have more bearing on a poem than what they mean.”

There’s so much wrong here that it’s hard to know where to begin. It’s not so much the willful ignorance of what good poets have been doing with identity going back hundreds, if not thousands of years (read the Anglo Saxon elegies sometime), it’s the underlying assumption that only now, with the advent of this little screen and the ability to click here and there, we’re finally free from the shackles of identity. What an impoverished view of literary history and poetic tradition.

Next, the equally wrongheaded idea that “sincerity must be tossed out,” which does not at all follow from the notion of messing with identity. Pessoa, that master of multiple identities, perhaps put it best in his poem “Autopsychography”:

The poet is a faker
who’s so good at his act
He even fakes the pain
of pain he feels in fact.

(forgive the poor translation.)

The idea is that no matter how unsettled and unsettling the identity or identities in a poem is for the poet and, hopefully, the reader, there has to be some knife twist of pain, heart, human feeling involved, otherwise as a reader I’m simply not interested, no matter how high the concept behind it. As I’ve written elsewhere, this holds especially true for Flarf. Frankly I see only two moves possible when it comes to the wholesale importing of others’ language into one’s poems: the sort of easy parody that Flarf is very much prone to, and which Kent Johnson has often railed against, and a radical recontextualizing of genuine expression that strips away whatever self-consciousness existed in the initial utterance, leaving real feelings to stand alone in an almost unbearably naked way.

As far as the last part of Goldsmith’s essay — the loosely defined idea of “materiality” (again dealt with by Rich) and the “quantity of words having more bearing on a poem than what they mean,” I don’t see how that gets us any further than the passel of bad slam poetry to which we were subjected all throughout the 1990s. Also, some of the poems that follow in the actual feature contradict this statement in really interesting ways.

But more on that tomorrow.

Found Poem #3

because mail doesn’t have a penis
I hear you breathe like fire
you embody me
you made me

bovinity is divinity
and not the siren that we hear.

the hysterical moment captures
arrested protestors lingering near the doors
the women speak of Brakhage,
beneath a terminalized patient
a dead horse.

concealed anger and jazz
preterite modification of the sky:
there are secrets reaching through the blue
of a rolling tongue