Our Material Lives: A Working Poet’s Manifesto, By Ana Božičević


Originally published at Belladonna*

What does a poem do? Let me rephrase that: what does a poet do? I wake up at 8, let the dogs out, read on the train to Manhattan, work 10-6. After work I take classes or teach, read on the train home, have very late dinner with Amy and fall asleep. Just before I drift, lines start going through my head and so I stir and I write them down. This is usually after midnight. I write them down in the dark.

When I tell people that I work full time and attend grad school and teach, they look at me funny. I don’t remember living another way, though, ever since I emigrated to the US. For a while I tried the broke in Brooklyn thing – eating two bagels a day, feeling heroic in a roachy flat – but I got writer’s block from the hunger and the filth. I did not thrive on punishment. I was not Vallejo. Coming from a country where jobs are at a premium, and having no economic or social support system in the US – as much as capitalism made me retch, electing unemployment felt disingenuous. So I worked.

It’s hard to figure out what kind of work is appropriate for a poet. A few months ago a poet I admire wrote on a blog that a poet should not be a bureaucrat and administrator — a poet should be a poet, live for the art. Blue collar work was not even mentioned. So, let’s see, regular jobs are unpoetic, but then I read elsewhere that teaching is even worse – academic jobs are somehow deemed “not real,” as though academia were a virtual realm like the internet but counted even less. Staying at home in a different arrangement also doesn’t seem to do a poet good – mom poets are not paid for their work of mothering and often can’t go to readings and travel, poets fortunate enough to have a private income can’t mention it lest they be dubbed trust-fund babies, itinerant poets who move from colony to colony can’t keep a boyfriend or girlfriend to save their lives, poets with government grants are sellouts. Most of you in the room have been pegged as one or the other. Prestige & stigma are doled out in a random system of poet-castes that shift & refract differingly depending on the site you’re reading, the people you’re chatting with.

I listen and I am confused. I eat. What should I eat? I sleep – where? Does it have to be uncomfortable? Can I earn my rent or must I only accept donations, like a fortuneteller? I really don’t like being told what to do, especially by people who are not paying me. Why should a poet be a stranger to any human experience? Maybe it’s only my communist upbringing speaking. All I know is that everything is real and every work counts. Writing counts. Bricklaying counts. Pushing paper typing pouring coffee counts. Mothering counts. Everything counts and everything belongs to a poet, belongs in a poem.

What should a poem do? Auden wrote in lovely flowing lines that Poetry makes nothing happen. Maybe it’s just atomic physics, but nothing looks a whole lot like everything to me from here. How does it make you feel if you switch those two and say that Poetry makes everything happen? Now substitute Poetry for Poet: a poet makes everything happen. Now turn around and look at your friends here – isn’t it funny? It’s completely true: Aphra Behn: a spy, Marianne Moore a library assistant, Diane di Prima and Anne Waldman and Amy King teachers, Vanessa Place an attorney, Hanna Andrews an editor, E. Tracy Grinnell and Rachel Levitsky publishers – poets are making everything happen all over the place. And that means that we also change everything.

Ezra Pound: Canto LIX


The Chinese history involved in this Canto struck me as bearing interpretation as a rejoinder to the misperception of China as being a closed and insular society that was later forced open by Western powers.

Within the Fifty-Ninth Canto are diplomatic meetings with the Tsarist Russia, the reading of Galileo’s works, and an emperor playing Bach (‘who played the spinet on Johnnie Bach’s birthday‘).

The opening struck me a little:

De libro CHI-KING sic censeo
wrote the young MANCHU, CHUN TCHI,
less a work of the mind than of affects
brought forth from the inner nature
here sung in these odes

The phrase ‘less a work of the mind than of affects‘ struck me as something I wished to have thought of, as an apt description, not so much of books, than of certain people.

P.S. I have  kept my promise to read and write about three Cantos but I will publish them over the course of three days (perhaps giving me time to get off my butt and read some more over the next couple of days and start to seriously catch up).

Are You Worried About The Death Of The Book


If so, then Steve Kettmann has an easy way you can help. Give your family and friends books as presents over the holidays. That’s not so hard, is it?

I, Too, Love The Footnote


Will the E-Book Kill the Footnote?

Perry Barely Outraises Romney


Rick Perry raised $17 million in the last quarter.

Mitt Romeny raised $14 million.

This is good for Mitt.

Why? Because the expectations on Perry were huge. Romney’s team won the expectations game in setting the bar high for Perry, implying he would significantly outraise them. Perry did not.

And worse, Perry has a much greater need to spend that money. Romney can carefully husband his, but Perry needs to spend a lot more if he’s going to catch up with Mitt in key, early primary states (mainly Iowa and South Carolina).

 

I Shot The Serif


Walkable Cities


Living in a walkable neighborhood is a huge issue for me. Even when living in car obsessed cities like Los Angeles and Atlanta, I still migrated towards walkable neighborhoods with restaurants, bookstores, entertainment, and groceries all within easy strolling distance (if you’re curious, I lived in Hollywood and Midtown to accomplish those things).

I was as surprised as anyone that New Jersey turns out to be the state with the most “walkable cities,” according to this article.

I also want to bring attention to the picture they used – I am guessing it is San Francisco, but that’s not my point. There’s a Borders prominently featured in it. Kind of makes me sad.

Why Walkable Cities Aren't Always the Ones You'd Think

Tragic To See A Writer Feeding Into The Worst Tendencies Of Modern Readers


I can’t even begin to put into words how I feel about what this man has said. He seems to take pleasure in lazily capitulating to the worst trends of contemporary letters.

How many others who live by (whether materially or spiritually) the words they write are also consciously indulging in actions that will harm the future of the world of literature?

Push Open The Window


Last night, a the Library of Congress, there was a reading from Push Open the Window: Contemporary Poetry from China, featuring two of the poets, Xi Chuan and Zhou Zan, as well Michael Wiegers of Copper Canyon Press, the anthology’s publisher. American poet Carolyn Forché, who read English translation Ms. Zan’s poetry on behalf of that poet.

It was a wonderful event, and apparently filmed for C-SPAN 2 and it’s BookTV programming on weekends.

I’d tell you more about the book itself, except that I have review of it coming out next month.

Pledge To Read Some More ‘Cantos’


I haven’t read a new Canto in some time, I know. And I don’t have a good excuse.

But, my significant other is leaving town for a little while and I pledge to use that time to read and write about at least three more Cantos before Monday.