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A CALL FOR RESPONSE:
Symposium on Subjectivity and Style
There is a Zen koan which asks, "Does a dog have Buddha nature?" The answer is
neither yes nor no, but the single Japanese word mu, which means "enough." In other
words, stop analyzing; the interrelationship of self and selflessness cannot be
grasped through mental exertion alone. Of course, in the English translation, the
answer might also mean that a dog has just the amount of Buddha nature that a dog
should have, an unknowable and unquantified amount. In other words, in its persistent
questions and permanent unanswerability, the subject lives at the thin edge of
language, constantly dissolving to its opposite.
This does not mean we will stop talking about it.
For this Symposium, fifteen poets have contemplated their particular engagements
with the verbal technologies of self. Our query seems to have arrived at an opportune
time in the subtly-constructed collective conversation that is contemporary poetics:
the responses take shape (as we had hoped they would) in a variety of ways. Delectations
of the sentence, tonal riffs, anecdote, quotation, and collage abound; if any
overarching conclusion is suggested, it is simply that the paradox of self imprints
in myriad ways upon the much tinier paradox that is the poem.
frances richard
By way of context, we have included the invitation as sent to our participants.
A Call for Response
It's been said that a writing life ultimately revolves around only a few subjects, and
perhaps the life of literary criticism is like that too. In the realms of debate, some
topics have a way of recurring, reasserting themselves in different guises. Of these
core critical subjects, a perennial favorite for discussion is that of
subjectivityloosely defined as the experiences, perceptions, and diction of the "I"and
how that subjectivity is, or is not, expressed on the page.
Specifically in the realm of poetry, the question of subjectivity and its influence on
style has been on our minds at Fence since we began the magazine. Our commitment to
presenting writing of sometimes disparate character has required us to inquire into
what it is that creates these differences. In the interest of enacting in our pages
what we talk about in our meetings, we would like to invite you to contribute your
thoughts to a symposium on Subjectivity and Style.
We realize that we're treading contested waters. Discourses of the Self are so mutable,
and so constant, that almost any topicfrom the genre of memoir to plastic surgery or
the proliferation of websitesis grist for the mill. Each noun in the first paragraph
of this letter could open into a hypertext of philosophical and linguistic glosses.
Despite the stubborn fluidity of the terms, there are certain historical and textual
benchmarks to which we can refer. For example, the Confessional, Narrative, and/or Lyric
traditions imply a poetic subjectivity that is identifiable and coherent, while Objectivist,
Beat, and/or Language traditions tend to treat poetic subjectivity as an experimental ground,
deprivileged or decentered.
We might accept these schema as historically true but not necessarily binding for the
individual writer. And it is the individual writer's perspective that we seek with this
inquiry. Part of our mandate in producing Fence is to create a forum for the airing of
grand themes without grandiosityto foster, in our features, the kind of erudite and kooky
conversation you might have with friends, in which bombast, pedantry, and shyness are
checked in favor of engagement, verve, and if necessary, honest puzzlement.
Individual writers evince different needs, or choose different modes, for representing
subjectivity in their work. For some, it appears to be most important to cohere and to use
coherency; others seek to fragment or to make use of fragmentation. What are the
implicationsaesthetic, cultural, politicalof such choices? For the writer? For the reader?
For publishing and poetics criticism? Would you qualify or disagree with these statements?
*
I don't think women's relatively difficult access to the "symbolic order" is inevitable, but,
more important, I don't think it is necessarily all bad. Might there not be a moment of
potential in that exclusion, a moment of freedom? Perhaps it is not, to quote Ron Silliman,
"white male heterosexuals who are most apt to challenge all that is supposedly natural about
the formation of subjectivity."
Rae Armantrout, "Feminist Poetics"
Now the subject who keeps the two texts in his field and in his hands the reins of pleasure
and bliss is an anachronistic subject: he enjoys the consistency of selfhood (that is his
pleasure) and seeks its loss (that is his bliss).
Roland Barthes, The Pleasure of the Text
Insanity to the sane seems so unnecessary.
Emily Dickinson, letter to Kate Scott Anthon
Voice and presence, silence and absence, then, have been the resonating terms of a four-part
homology in our literary tradition for well over two hundred years.
Henry Louis Gates, The Signifying Monkey
Perhaps the obscurity comes in here, in the relationship between the surface and the meaning,
but I like it that way since one is the other (you have to see the words) and I hope the poem
to be a subject, not just about it.
Frank O'Hara, "Notes on ÔSecond Avenue'"
Let those scorn you who never starved in your dearth.
Robert Pinsky, "Ode to Meaning"
CLAUDIA RANKINE
The First Person in the 21st Century
Is it fair to say there is in the 21st century a greater consensus towards the notion that
true coherency is fragmented? For me, for example, if the movie star goes to the bathroom
I feel better about the movie. Bathroom time, thoughts, needs and events, after all, contribute
the fragments that altogether we recognize as experience. The poet Paul Celan wrote, "Reality
is not simply there, it must be searched and won." The search includes reintroducing all that
has been broken off previously to make the narrative smooth. The "I" ultimately has a
responsibility to the intelligence (think humanity) of the "you." Some might say that
recognition of responsibility on the page is what makes the use of the first person social.
It recognizes we are always being broken into by history, memory, current events, the phone,
e-mail, a kiss, calls of nature, whatever.
The languaged self, then, in order to keep itself human, in order to cohere, has to fragment.
The "I" exists in time and is married to biological, personal, historical and cultural meaning.
Not to realize this is to commit a blink of omission. For example, I am a black girl in a
yellow dress. I want to light up my life. The adjectival insistence in the first sentence
immediately reminds us that words have social and political currency. Yellow looks good against
black skin. Yellow dresses are gender specific. Black girls have a "public story." Cowards might
avoid yellow. Soon I am both closer and further from myself due to my mind's-eye's association
to the colors yellow and black. Chip away enough and I am bouncing off social and cultural
generalities complicating the first person's association with hue (read you). So what that
the initial thought was simply, I am a black girl in a yellow dress. I want to light up my
life. There is clearly a more fractured and complex reality behind the two sentences.
And the complexity doesn't necessarily lead me to what I recognize. I am a black girl in a
yellow dress. (Everyone) (Where did they come from?) wants to light up my life. In my
imagination of the neighborhood where all the little black girls grow up, a yellow dress makes
me a little more visible to the gun-slinging drug-dealer. I could exploit this cowboy reality
in the name ofwhat? Urbane authenticity? (fragment, no suggestions) Sentimentality? (fragment,
no suggestions) Racism? (untold fragments, too many suggestions) Clearly more fragments are
needed. Clearly, even more is needed if "I" am to begin to cohere. Together let's think, "Love
is all around why don't you take it." Remember her, Mary Richards. Put her next door to the
black girl and maybe a swing-set would be a stabilizing addition. Maybe a handshake? Which is
to saySo many times could "I" shake hands with the times I live in.
Claudia Rankine is the author of The End of the Alphabet (Grove Press, 1998). Her next
collection, PLOT, will be published in 2001.
MARK DOTY
What thrills me in poetry is the work of making a model of consciousness, a replica of
subjective experience. Never mind that all attempts to represent subjectivity are, ultimately,
failures. Art is bounded, has edges, has limits in time and space. Its attempts to replicate
the edgeless continuity of consciousness are always smaller than the original, always
circumscribed. But poetic craft creates a seemingly endless variety of versions of the
subjective, so that the reader has the sense of encountering a perceptual character, a style
of seeing. This is as true of a poem by Brenda Hillman as of a poem by Amy Clampitt: they are
versions of the mind at work, language dressed up as the action of mind, and when they work
on uswhen they engage us and delight usit's because we feel we've been brought into an
intimate relation with the subjectivity of another. The illusion is that we've been brought
into the fresh cascade of perception, we've been given access to a self feeling and thinking
its way through and in a sensory field. No stylistic gesture is more "unnatural" than another;
they only seem so. Some call attention to their "wroughtness" while others attempt
"transparency," but all are verbal performances, all representations of the self in the flux
of time.
This summer, in Prague, I saw a puppet performance of Gluck's opera, Orfeo et Euridice.
Orpheus mourned, descended, found his beloved, ascended, then looked back. When Euridice died
the second time, the puppeteer threw the wooden handles and strings which had animated her
onto the stage; here is where artifice ends, the gesture seemed to say, here is where art
cannot go. Meanwhile, in the realm of the living, our gestures illuminate the vast fields of
being, the styles of seeing, in a thrilling array. Four puppets and one actor represented
Orpheus; it took all that, to point towards the complexity of a single hero.
I am not a poet of fragmentation, obviously, and I think that stems less from a philosophical
stance than from love, a deep love for the sentence, and the way it makes a gesture of
coherence, a small stay against chaoslike a puppet's gesture. Maybe the relationship between
subjectivity and style is a bit like the relationship between the sentence and the line. The
sentence seems to stand for the momentum and rush of experience, tumbling forward; the line
halts it, punctuates that flow with interruptions, asking us to isolate the parts. I am moved
by the little aria that a sentence is, its claim to organize experience into a syntactical
unit, with a chain of action and causation, with a beginning and middle and end. I am
especially moved by the moments when such efforts begin to break down, to buckle under the
pressure of experience, as they push against what can't be said. When those crossed sticks
and strings were thrown down onto the stage, suddenly we could see how much the artifice of
the moving, singing puppets had been resisting all along.
Mark Doty's new book of prose, Still Life with Oysters and Lemon, will be published by Beacon
Press in 2001.
TONY HOAGLAND
Verifiability
What is most important to me in the poems I admire is the sound of a voice, the registered
speaker whose subjectivity is being aroused through her/his contact with the world (the friction
is called Experience, Mary).
Poetry is not literary criticism. Poetry is far more entertaining. It better be.
I don't think we need to argue anymore about whether that speaker is "natural" or "artificial,"
flesh-and-blood or a sheerly linguistic "construct," whether the voice of a poem is composed of
literary conventions, or who owns those conventions. We've talked that talk, and poetry
remainsand some of it remains interesting, and some of it remains profoundly dull.
A lot of young poets these days are being educated into a state of hysterical aesthetic
complexity. I saw poetry worksheets from the University of Iowa this year and what I saw was
a widespread terror of not being smart, and a compensating effort to intimidate the reader.
It scared me.
Not just the speaker, with all the modulations and tonalities and interruptions of a human
voice, but a voice evolving in relation to its subject matter.
That's right: I said subject matter.
The fragment, a device so common in our poetry now, seems quite limited to me as a poetic
instrument. Yes, it simulates spiritual urgency (breathless, as in Graham), or spiritual
solemnity (as in Pinsky's litanies), and it can be mildly interesting as a descriptive
technique (notational/strobe). But the grammatical fragment can't embody the fluctuations of
an interesting, continuous, changeable sensibilityas the full, generous, complex, acrobatic,
mutating sentence can.
Yes, I know that the fragment is the best representation of our modern experience of
distraction and fracture. I'm all fucked up too. But that doesn't make it good poetry. The
shattered glass is an eloquent emblem for our time, but it does not hold water and I am thirsty.
What I love in poems these days is tonality. Even when poetry is pitched pretty far away from
experience, as in Michael Palmer's work, I get the grave, rhythmic, existential inflections of
a speaker who has suffered time and gravity, and above all, the inadequacy of meaning. Even if
the poem is noting the "arbitrariness of referentiality," what matters to me is the emotional
(and conceptual) rhythm of the speechI can confirm that feeling as a response to the world.
No matter how independent a poem is from representation (like narrative or description), it still
must register the contours, the shoreline of experience in a way that is verifiable to me. When I
read a poem, I am collating my experience with that of the writer. I am not simply looking for
reflection, or a mirror image of my own subjectivity; but I need proof that the speaker lives in
the world where I live, and responds to that world in a full, passionate, and original way.
Tony Hoagland is the author of Donkey Gospel (Graywolf Press, 1998) and Sweet Ruin (University
of Wisconsin Press, 1992).
MONICA YOUN
Two things come to mind. First, a recent talk with my friend Drew Daniel (a Renaissance grad
student) about his paper on a 17th-century English portrait "on the cusp of emblematic and
realistic painting." A young lord in melancholy posture reclines beneath his shield, which bears
the emblem of a flaming heart and the tag Magia Sympathia. I had never really thought before about
how odd it must have been to paint a message on something supposed to function as defense: like
graffiti on a Kevlar vest, a little wistful. According to Drew (who got it from Hegel,
apparently), a shield in this kind of picture was meant to be expressive, to posit an idealized or
abstracted version of the self that would serve as an inviolable stand-in for the body,
presenting both as statement and as armor. I thought this was as good a model for lyric as any.
It reminds me of something Les Murray said in an interview a year or so ago: something about how
each of us constructs an elaborate, indestructible self to stand in for the shortcomings of the
mortal body. I remember liking this thoughtit conjured up a figure like those huge balloons
in the Macy's parade, except with articulated joints, armor-plated or chitinous, attached to
the self with strings, maybe even dogfighting. Lyric poems do something like this, I think:
they use parts of the self (or experience or the body) as models for breastplates, shin guards,
etcetera, which they then fashion into some kind of instrumental whole. Then, inevitably, a
poet tries to make this creation perform some inappropriate communicative task. There is much
creaking of joints, all invulnerability is lost. When Yeats wanted to "hammer [his] thoughts
into unity," this wholeness would have been located outside of the self; his use of the
possessive put the ideal forever out of reach.
Watching this, it's hard not to get sentimental. It is neither praise nor blame to say that a
poem is grotesque the way road rage is grotesque (tailgating, cutting people off, various ways
of trying to speak with your car): the attempt to make something inorganica thing made out of
wordsperform an expressive function that is both unsuitable and inevitable.
Monica Youn lives in New York City. She has poems in this issue of Fence.
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