Bonfires In The Sky: What Are You Reading, Winter 2021-22?

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Lock yourself in a room with trashy SF and cheap crime paperbacks for a year to get these banal notions out of you head, table

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 19 February 2022 13:16 (two years ago) link

That’s never stopped him before.

― Solaris Ocean Blue (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 19 February 2022 bookmarkflaglink

As for you, put up a witty YouTube link, that's all you're good for.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 19 February 2022 13:17 (two years ago) link

Fellas… this is the wayr room

ok what the fuck is happening in the uk (rain) (wins), Saturday, 19 February 2022 13:25 (two years ago) link

lol!

Solaris Ocean Blue (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 19 February 2022 13:30 (two years ago) link

I'm not going to waste more time responding to blatant projection and mischaracterization.

Today, my plan is to do one final read-through of Cooper's 'I Wished' to get some pull quotes for the review I'm working on.

Currently reading Clark Coolidge's 'To the Cold Heart' before bed, and Gail Scott's 'Permanent Revolution' with coffee in the morning. The latter is disappointing when compared to her novels-- there's something about her style that doesn't work well for me in the essay form, but is extremely provocative in her novels. It might be her approach to disjunction...trying to put my finger on it.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Saturday, 19 February 2022 13:43 (two years ago) link

I like Clark Coolidge fine. Is that what you meant by experimental? He seems to me to write in a high Modernist style which I find enjoyable and interesting but very much anchored to early 20th C aesthetics.

'experimental' i think invokes at this point a set of strategies to unsettle preconceptions of how writing makes sense (i.e. 'anti-' gestures that interrupt legibility in various ways) tied to avant garde ideals of progress and novelty. The idea that these kinds of approaches continue to lead an aesthetic vanguard I think is fairly outmoded even within this very limited bourgeois construction of modernity. This is also true in the more straightforward sense that these traditions, regardless of the popularity of individual poets, are now similarly sanctified by just as many stuffy cultural institutions.

From this point of view I agree that the positioning of certain kinds of works as 'experimental' is useful to claim and repudiate certain kinds of capital and prestige for works/authors but I can't see that it has any utility that I would find particularly productive or interesting.

plax (ico), Saturday, 19 February 2022 14:21 (two years ago) link

Good post, plax.

Solaris Ocean Blue (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 19 February 2022 15:02 (two years ago) link

I'd argue against that categorization of Coolidge, if only because the guy has written so many books that simply saying he writes in High Modernist tradition is doing the breadth of his work a great disservice.

I don't really agree with the rest of your post because the experiment that you call 'outmoded' continues to be so stridently rejected by institutions that many of the finest poets of our time are lucky to sell 100 copies of their latest books, but I'm also not sure what sort of stuffy institutions you're speaking of.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Saturday, 19 February 2022 15:18 (two years ago) link

There's also much beyond the ease of avant-garde ideals of progress and novelty...maybe it's just me, but I actually think some people are interested in playing with and unsettling language not because of any unconsciously absorbed bourgeois desire for progress, but because that is what interests them. I don't think anything I write is progressing anything, but I do it because it allows me to think and feel in a way that feels most like myself. If other people like it, fine. If not, fine.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Saturday, 19 February 2022 15:23 (two years ago) link

I do wonder what you'd consider an aesthetic vanguard these days, but this isn't the thread for it.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Saturday, 19 February 2022 15:25 (two years ago) link

I will also admit that one of the reasons I get worked up about this stuff is that I am consistently called an 'experimental' poet, and many of my best friends are also categorized in this way, so when all the work we've done is dismissed as mere bourgeois trappings, I get defensive. Seems like punching down.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Saturday, 19 February 2022 15:29 (two years ago) link

"I'm not going to waste more time responding to blatant projection and mischaracterization."

If you don't like your own words thrown back at you be more precise.

This table is broken.

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 19 February 2022 18:48 (two years ago) link

"I don't really agree with the rest of your post because the experiment that you call 'outmoded' continues to be so stridently rejected by institutions that many of the finest poets of our time are lucky to sell 100 copies"

As if you are interested if it sells more. Comforting that it doesn't, huh?

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 19 February 2022 18:52 (two years ago) link

If other people like it, fine. If not, fine....all the work we've done is dismissed as mere bourgeois trappings...Seems like punching down.

These two attitudes would appear to be at war with one another. Not that this is wrong or bad. We all struggle to reconcile conflicting ideas and feelings. Absolute consistency of judgement is not a sign of infallibility so much as lack of self-knowledge.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 19 February 2022 18:52 (two years ago) link

1. I think its fine for a general characterisation of a writer to not take in and reflect the full breadth of their work. This is the nature of general characterisations. So I do not retract this characterisation which I think was broadly accurate and I would be surprised if Cooldidge himself would take any umbridge at it. I would hope that any authors work would at least aspire to something not entirely identical with these categorisations.

2. I think the legacies of early 20th Century Modernism that I suggested in my previous post do enjoy high cultural prestige and are very much celebrated by conservative cultural institutions such as museums or music venues and in the specific instance of Coolidge I recall buying a very handsome copy of one of his books in the LRB bookshop a few years ago, probably on the shelf between Anne Carson and Emily Dickinson. He was not selling it photocopied out of the back of his car. It's certainly true that Cooldidge and his contemporaries hold far more prestige than other kinds of writing, say romance novels marketed to women or detective novels. Its also worth remembering that writers with all kinds of ambitions remain obscure regardless of how palatable their work might be to different audiences. Amazon is full of self-published books by writers working in the aforementioned genres as well as others others.

3. Regarding your assertion that some may be interested in playing with unsettling language because it interests them, I don't disagree. I would have assumed that some combination of this and a need to pay rent is why most people who do most things do thos things. This is also why people write romance or detective novels, watch TV or learn to bake sourdough bread. What psychic drives guide these interests is not really for me to say.

4. I thought in my post I was quite clear that the ideal of an aesthetic vanguard doesn't interest me all that much, but if it wasn't clear then I'm happy to clarify that this is the case.

5. I will end by saying that I was not in any way responding to you or your friends poetry, neither of which I have read. I cannot speak to the motives of anyone who has called it 'experimental' but rest assured that they and I are not conspiring in any way. I was only responding to the posts you have made in this thread. My characterisation of the ideal of an Avant-garde as being fundamentally bourgeois was simply my argument and opinion about a very large and important movement of aesthetic practices since the late 19th Century and was certainly not directed at you. And, as I am not myself Robert Lowell, I don't think this could be thought of as 'punching down' even if you want to think of it as punching at all, which I don't. I do note however, that nobody in this thread seems remotely exercised about the kinds of prestige afforded or withheld by cultural institutions in the way you are.

plax (ico), Saturday, 19 February 2022 19:21 (two years ago) link

The idea that collective or shared experience is more profound than individual experience, and that thus, more popular media is more profound than what lurks in the shadows, is an absolutely ridiculous one.

Who has proposed this idea?

The only person who just about slightly has is Tim, in response to an earlier claim that people had proposed this idea.

I actually thought of exactly the same thing as Tim (ie: the one person who HAS claimed that ubiquity is great is Tom Ewing), and greatly enjoyed his reference.

the pinefox, Saturday, 19 February 2022 21:14 (two years ago) link

I thought about Robert Lowell today. Years ago, I tried to read him. It didn't go well. I got little from it, and didn't go very far. It was a pity.

But I must say that this must be just as much about me as about Lowell, as I seem to feel this way about many poets.

It's definitely true that Lowell still gets vast editions of his letters published, and these still get vast reviews in certain places (for myself, I mainly just know the LRB). These reviews are typically quite tedious - but that's partly because they're always written by Colm Toibin.

The single most interesting thing about Lowell that I can think of is his appearance in Norman Mailer's THE ARMIES OF THE NIGHT. That always intrigued me.

I'm not sure now whether anyone was arguing that Lowell was overrated compared to Bishop, but I'll add in any case these factual observations:

Lowell's and Bishop's reputations are certainly connected, but I would have thought that for some time (30-40 years?) Bishop has been more highly valued - or, simply, more frequently and highly praised. I don't think I've ever read a bad word about anything Bishop ever wrote -- literally. It feels as though you can find someone praising her to the skies literally every week somewhere in the literary press. I'm not sure that's true of Lowell.

Indeed, I ended up thinking that Bishop is probably the single most highly rated modern poet in the world now - perhaps with Heaney second?

As Lester Bangs, or possibly Frank Kogan, once said: "We'll never agree on anything again like we agreed on Elizabeth Bishop".

the pinefox, Saturday, 19 February 2022 21:22 (two years ago) link

agreed re: tóibín on lowell. i read something by him once that was, typically of tóibín, fascinated and very easily seduced by class and wealth. He seemed breathless at the idea that lowell was from a very wealthy brahmin family and that this alone guaranteed an inherent degree of interest in his poetry. That he is such a great poet was simply a bonus. this is all obviously very tedious.

I like bishop a lot but i'm always baffled by what others say they like about her. i find almost everything i've read about her writing seems to describe quite a dull writer and not the author of 'the waiting room,' a poem I think about all the time.

plax (ico), Saturday, 19 February 2022 21:59 (two years ago) link

Toibin wrote one of my favorite long things about Bishop!

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 19 February 2022 22:45 (two years ago) link

I'm loving this discussion because I'd not once concluded like plax that Toibin is a writer fascinated and very easily seduced by class and wealth, especially since his master Henry James wrote about class and wealth with some fascination but not once was very easily seduced.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 19 February 2022 22:53 (two years ago) link

Reading parts of, though not the whole of:

Joe Cleary ed, IRISH MODERNISM (2014)

Maurice Bourgeois, SYNGE AND THE IRISH THEATRE (1913) - which must be virtually the first book ever written about him - in fact it was submitted as a student thesis in Paris in 1912! It has an astounding series of Appendixes detailing every known first performance of a Synge play in a given country, every translation (Dutch, Czech, etc!), every newspaper article about him. The level of empirical research here would put many current writers in the shade.

Quite looking forward to dipping into the much looser Sean O Faolain's THE IRISH (1947).

the pinefox, Sunday, 20 February 2022 11:02 (two years ago) link

re Bishop she's weirder than her reputation for "simplicity" or whatever should suggest:

Here, above,
cracks in the buildings are filled with battered moonlight.
The whole shadow of Man is only as big as his hat.
It lies at his feet like a circle for a doll to stand on,
and he makes an inverted pin, the point magnetized to the moon.
He does not see the moon; he observes only her vast properties,
feeling the queer light on his hands, neither warm nor cold,
of a temperature impossible to record in thermometers.

But when the Man-Moth
pays his rare, although occasional, visits to the surface,
the moon looks rather different to him. He emerges
from an opening under the edge of one of the sidewalks
and nervously begins to scale the faces of the buildings.
He thinks the moon is a small hole at the top of the sky,
proving the sky quite useless for protection.
He trembles, but must investigate as high as he can climb.

Up the façades,
his shadow dragging like a photographer’s cloth behind him
he climbs fearfully, thinking that this time he will manage
to push his small head through that round clean opening
and be forced through, as from a tube, in black scrolls on the light.
(Man, standing below him, has no such illusions.)
But what the Man-Moth fears most he must do, although
he fails, of course, and falls back scared but quite unhurt.

Then he returns
to the pale subways of cement he calls his home. He flits,
he flutters, and cannot get aboard the silent trains
fast enough to suit him. The doors close swiftly.
The Man-Moth always seats himself facing the wrong way
and the train starts at once at its full, terrible speed,
without a shift in gears or a gradation of any sort.
He cannot tell the rate at which he travels backwards.

Each night he must
be carried through artificial tunnels and dream recurrent dreams.
Just as the ties recur beneath his train, these underlie
his rushing brain. He does not dare look out the window,
for the third rail, the unbroken draught of poison,
runs there beside him. He regards it as a disease
he has inherited the susceptibility to. He has to keep
his hands in his pockets, as others must wear mufflers.

If you catch him,
hold up a flashlight to his eye. It’s all dark pupil,
an entire night itself, whose haired horizon tightens
as he stares back, and closes up the eye. Then from the lids
one tear, his only possession, like the bee’s sting, slips.
Slyly he palms it, and if you’re not paying attention
he’ll swallow it. However, if you watch, he’ll hand it over,
cool as from underground springs and pure enough to drink.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 20 February 2022 11:11 (two years ago) link

Xyzzz, go fuck yourself.

Plax, I don't agree with much of what you wrote, but am tired of clogging up the thread, so will simply state that nobody else in this thread is exercised about these issues because they're not poets, as far as I know, and so these issues aren't personal to them.

The pinefox, I reworded exactly what Tim wrote, and both you and he are wrong.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Sunday, 20 February 2022 13:31 (two years ago) link

Get fucked, table, stuff your chapbooks up your arsehole.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 20 February 2022 13:44 (two years ago) link

I don't have an arsehole, it was sewn up after I nearly died of cancer in 2019, so you'll have a find a better insult, dickhead.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Sunday, 20 February 2022 13:50 (two years ago) link

You still have a mouth, don't you?

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 20 February 2022 13:53 (two years ago) link

Is someone talking?

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Sunday, 20 February 2022 13:56 (two years ago) link

As for you, put up a witty YouTube link, that's all you're good for.

― xyzzzz__, Saturday, 19 February 2022 13:17 (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink

coming from mister fucking twitter lmao

imago, Sunday, 20 February 2022 14:06 (two years ago) link

The tweets have content, unlike your posts.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 20 February 2022 14:07 (two years ago) link

anyway I'm reading the Hollinghurst debut it's v good

imago, Sunday, 20 February 2022 14:09 (two years ago) link

not very experimental, but it ain't that sort of meal

imago, Sunday, 20 February 2022 14:10 (two years ago) link

I like Hollinghurst, tho have only read the most recent one and The Line of Beauty

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Sunday, 20 February 2022 14:14 (two years ago) link

how's the recent? imo he is the best modern (i.e. elegiac; aware of info overload) approximation of an austenian comedian of society i've read

imago, Sunday, 20 February 2022 14:19 (two years ago) link

He's gotten worse, or, rather, his material is thinning and his treatment of it etiolated and blah.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 20 February 2022 14:34 (two years ago) link

love both the Swimming Pool Library and the Line of Beauty (with the latter taking the nod). from reading round here, decided not to venture further, disappointedly.

bulb after bulb, Sunday, 20 February 2022 15:00 (two years ago) link

Kind of agree with Alfred-- it's fine, and there remain some exquisite sentences (pages even), but it does sort of seem like he's run out of material.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Sunday, 20 February 2022 15:16 (two years ago) link

Even not having read The Stranger's Child, I found Sparsholt to be a little much like The Line of Beauty, and one of the major criticisms of Sparsholt is that it was too much like The Stranger's Child..

That said, if you like his sort of thing, then it is probably worth a read.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Sunday, 20 February 2022 15:18 (two years ago) link

The Line of Beauty is very much one of my favorite novels. I was afraid of rereading it 2018, but, happily, it still won me over.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 20 February 2022 15:30 (two years ago) link

'i knew i could never love it or want it, but it was an achievement, this armour of useless masculinity' is a rollercoaster in twenty words

imago, Sunday, 20 February 2022 17:53 (two years ago) link

I wrote:

Non-ubiquity, in and of itself, is no more profound than ubiquity.

That's the main point I was trying to make, that the extent to which a piece of art is well-known is a useless way to judge its quality. It's entirely possible to have a profound engagement with a popular (even an immensely popular) work of art, and it's just as possible to have a profound experience with a terribly obscure one.

TTITT, you "reworded" what I said as "collective or shared experience is more profound than individual experience, and that thus, more popular media is more profound than what lurks in the shadows" and that isn't what I think, neither is it what I said. That's at least in part my fault, because I added:

Less so if anything because at least ubiquity has the kind of profundity that comes from shared experience

This was only a half-expressed thought and I'm sorry for any lack of clarity. But here's what I think: my experience with a piece of art is deeply individual and comes from my individual engagement with it: that experience will be more or less profound according to the art and me. But that engagement also comes with a context (I might be alone, I might be in a class, or a book group, or a concert , or a club...) That context can also lead to a profound experience, in addition to the personal engagement with the art itself. Being one of a thousand people going crazy to an amazing record in a club can be (though isn't always) a deeply profound experience and it's a profound experience which simply isn't available from solo engagement with that same work of art.

To be clear, I'm neither saying being one of those thousand is a more profound experience than engaging intensely with a piece of art on my own, and I'm not saying work that millions of people engage with intensely is somehow better than work that a very few people engage with intensely, I'm saying that shared experience can bring its own profundity.

If it makes you feel any differently, although I'm not a poet (and thank goodness for that) I do engage in literary pursuits that also fail to get much or any attention outside a tiny circle of somewhat interested people and I feel the frustration of not being able to reach wider audiences who might find the work valuable, so these questions are at least somewhat personal to me also.

Tim, Sunday, 20 February 2022 18:33 (two years ago) link

Great post Tim

mardheamac (gyac), Sunday, 20 February 2022 18:36 (two years ago) link

tick.jpg

I have a voulez-vous? with death (Noodle Vague), Sunday, 20 February 2022 18:40 (two years ago) link

🥉ded

Solaris Ocean Blue (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 20 February 2022 18:44 (two years ago) link

I didn't love Cold Spring but that particular Bishop poem is weird and great. Was it a misreading of a headline about the finding of a mammoth or am I misremembering? It read likes Poe or Washington Irving.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Sunday, 20 February 2022 20:29 (two years ago) link

I liked Tim's post but it does use a model of ubiquity that is about as pure and perfect as possible to illustrate the point (something I'm going to clumsily call the phenomenology of engagement). The presence of media in that space is of course governed by contingency to some extent but nothing close to the governance of space in literary magazines - and in particular with regards to poetry. It makes perfect sense to interrogate the ongoing presence of someone like Lowell in that space, an interrogation that isn't really about engagement at all but about the 'political' (in the broadest possible sense) nature of ubiquity and who controls access.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Sunday, 20 February 2022 20:51 (two years ago) link

This whole discussion seems to correctly revolve around trying to sidestep Old School High/Low Divisions or Poptimist/Rockist Divides, as opposed to Duke's Dictum "if it sounds good it IS good" or whatever Ellingon actually said, or its contrapositive, **WARNING Obligatory YouTube Content **
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CscPTI8fwA

Solaris Ocean Blue (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 20 February 2022 22:02 (two years ago) link

Thanks for that clarification, Tim. I do agree with you to a certain extent, but I think Chinaski gets at the reasons behind my aggravation and occasional outbursts on the issue — who allows such ubiquity to happen? Who makes it happen, what stake do they have in it? How can media consumption and consumption of art be connected to ideas of manufactured consent? Why are certain types of difficult or weird poetry (or writing) pushed over others, as this is certainly a real phenomenon? To what extent do writers have to change their work in order to find an audience or gain credit from institutions, and to what extent do writers need to forge their own path and hope that institutions will catch up to them? These are complicated questions, I think, and that's maybe why I find myself confused and self-contradictory at times.

All that said, sometime in the next day I'll start a thread on here around this conversation. I apologize for my excessive word spillage clogging up this thread. Let's please make this about books we're reading again.

we need outrage! we need dicks!! (the table is the table), Sunday, 20 February 2022 22:09 (two years ago) link

Antonio Lobo Antunes - Act of the Dammed

Managed to finish this lol experimental novel, its in a Faulkner-esque vein, detailing the getaway of a rotten family from Salazar's Portugal. I liked a lot of the writing even if I didn't really go for the narrative so much. There are a couple of lines around Angola, and I know Antunes explores those colonial wars more in his other writing so I'll make sure to pick some more up.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 20 February 2022 22:56 (two years ago) link

'a future for socialism' by john roemer

under 200p informal and accessible discussion of possible alternative socialist economic systems written in the wake of the collapse of the soviet union and the apparent failure of the command economy by a marxist economic theorist and analytic political philosopher. most of the book is an investigation of roemer's 'coupon socialism', where every adult has an equal number of "coupons" which they can trade in the stock market but are prohibited from selling. the fact that workers can trade coupons preserves the "allocation" incentive where productive firms are rewarded with high share prices, but the fact that they cannot sell them prevents the ownership of the means of production from concentrating in the hands of a wealthy minority. he also discusses proposals around worker-owned firms and forms of socializing corporate governance, mostly based on japan's keiretsu system. it includes some theoretical investigations as well as discussions of the hybrid market socialism systems that existed in yugoslavia and hungary in the 70s and 80s. the book is in many ways a product of its time. in some ways that limits it; roemer was at the cutting edge of economic theory in the early 90s, but many recent developments (particularly the fields of mechanism design, market design and matching theory which study different forms of non-market allocation when private property is infeasible or undesirable) that were nascent at the time of writing have now matured, and it would be great to read an updated version that engaged with them. however, the best part of the book being a product of its time is that no one would/could write a book like this today. it's virtually unheard of for a contemporary economist with requisite mastery of economic theory to ask huge questions like 'how should we transition to socialism?', and actually make bold proposals that are specific enough to analyze formally. the book that comes closest is glen weyl's radical markets, but that wasn't from an explicitly socialist perspective (and glen has since pivoted to a weird form of blockchain-based decentralized "digital democracy"). most western socialists today seem to want to "get to scandinavia." that's a fine goal, but it's refreshing to read perspectives from a time when people were still thinking about socialism beyond the social democratic welfare state. the book's also very well-written, roemer is a clear and succinct writer. also, the fact that it's not only short but divided into short chapters (most under 5 pages) made it very digestible

flopson, Sunday, 20 February 2022 23:18 (two years ago) link


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