Last night I turned in my last paper and portfolio of the
year. A few days ago, I attended a defense of a fellow MFA poet and learned
what to expect in my own. As a result, I spent a few hours yesterday beginning
an outline of the critical readings I encountered this year, which I will make
into notecards. This has actually been enjoyable work for me because it has
enabled me to begin to make connections between things, to create a sort of
conversation in my mind—conversations between the theorists, and conversations
between them and myself. It's been a good opportunity to review what I've
learned this year, both in terms of my own aesthetic and in terms of craft.
So: what have I learned? How am I different, as a poet and
as a person, because of this year's adventure in school?
Well, to answer that thoroughly, I would have to post my two
term papers here, which came in at 12 and 20 pages, respectively (they were
supposed to come in at 8 and 12; I just can't NOT research thoroughly and put it all in there!). Which brings me to point #1:
1. I work a lot harder than most people on papers.
I don't
know whether this is because I'm older (and scared?), because I’m more
organized (getting things done earlier than everyone else), because I'm more
thorough, or because I am there at school out of sheer desire and I wanted this
more than anyone else. At times, it is irritating to me. (I will be in the grad
carrels and hear other students talking, a day or even just a few hours before
the deadline, about how they "haven't even started yet.") Then I will
see them whip off something that looks pretty darn much like a paper. (Sometimes
they don't even make it look like a paper but instead write something
"experimental.") I don't, of course, see the grades these last-minute
efforts get. But the prodigal-son's-brother in me wants them to SUFFER.
Thankfully, that's only a tiny part of me, and the rest of me doesn't care that
much because I find the work rewarding, and because these papers, especially,
will turn into the critical intro. to my thesis. So what if I work harder when
the work is so enjoyable?
2. Putting more recklessness, chance, subconscious leaps
into my poetry makes it more intriguing and gives it depth.
Last
semester I encountered Dean Young's Art
of Recklessness. That, more than anything else, has influenced my work this
year. I still am not where I want to be in terms of playfulness, but I'm
improving, and I think my poetry shows it. I’m not sure whether people who have
enjoyed my poetry in the past (many of whom don't read other poetry) will still
like it, but that shouldn't matter. I've also been influenced by Bill
Stafford's philosophy of "Lower your standards"—this has helped me
produce some interesting things I never would have tried before, when I was
trying to write a great poem every
time.
3. But too much recklessness is obnoxious and unkind.
Here I
differ from the aesthetic of some of my classmates, who feel that it's
ridiculous to consider audience at all when writing. It's hard not to allow
that attitude to mess with my self-esteem (some poets tend to have such a
condescending attitude towards those whose aesthetics differ, as if they are
constantly patting me on the head—"bless her heart, the poor, earnest
thing"). But an interesting session at AWP in Boston with Tony Hoagland helped me see that
not everyone who hasn't given up a desire for meaning in their work has lost
respect in the world. I'll stick to my guns, even when it makes me look
provincial and unsophisticated. I'll write what brings me joy—and that
involves, for me, some measure of bringing others joy as well. Which brings me
to:
4. There are lots of aesthetics out there.
There's no
one way of defining what makes a poem good. Even among poets reading other
poets, tastes vary widely and most of us hate what others of us love, and
vice-versa. But the good news is that this means that poets are succeeding at all
sorts of things.
5. And I am succeeding. (See my previous post.) At least at
something, for someone, I am doing OK.
6. Specific things:
Well, one
specific way that my work is different (besides the inclusion of more
recklessness) is that I've been trying some new forms such as sections and
prose poems. I've also been trying more language-generated leaps (as opposed to
having a goal for the poem before I begin it). I'm also writing some
flash-nonfiction, or turning what used to be poetic impulses into flash-nf
impulses, and what used to be too-narrative, autobiographical poems into
flash-nf pieces. With success.
7. The canon.
I entered
the program at a disadvantage since I wasn't an English major (I was humanities
with English emphasis) and missed some of the English classes others took, and
since it has been so long since I've been in school, and since I have read,
comparatively, much less poetry than I should have for a program like this. So
I've been getting acquainted with things that other students already know (who
are the "Objectivists"? What is L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poetry? Why was
Charles Simic's Pulitzer such a big deal? etc.). It's nice to finally know
what's been going on. I'm still weak in this area, though, and plan on doing
more reading over the summer. It'll be fun!
So that's that. It's been a fantastic, soul-wrenching,
joyous year at school. I'm so grateful for it. I'm glad to have a break for the
summer, to play with my kids and clean out the office. I'll work during the
summer on some reading and write a few poems, but it'll be a nice breather. By
August I'll be hungry again. I'm so glad I get to go back. I'm so sad that this
will end someday. What in the world will I do then?
3 comments:
Teach
Wow, I was just going to write the same thing Nanakat said. I still remember your poetry workshop at the Segullah retreat. It was so good. Also, reading about your experience gives me hope that maybe I will be able to make more school work for me sometime too.
Good job, Cousin! As for what you can do: keep learning and writing . . . forever!
Post a Comment