Monday, January 27, 2014

INTERVIEW ABOUT THE CHAPBOOK "PUNKS"


This interview, conducted by Alli Warren via email, was originally published online at Sustainable Aircraft, which seems to no longer exist. The last question was cut from the original publication, but it has been restored here, like a long-lost scene from a classic film. 

I’m a chapbook lover. Don’t get me wrong, I love all them perfect-bound book-length works too, but chapbooks feel better. Their shape, their production, the way they pass from hand to hand. Fatback vs. turkey bacon. Otis Redding vs. Sam Cooke.

It’s within this frame that I want to talk about two chapbooks by Bay Area writers: Suzanne Stein’s Hole in Space and Michael Nicoloff’s “Punks.” Not only does the work in these chapbooks make me think, and twist and laugh and re-think poetry, but the facts around their production, from whence they emerged, seems to be a valuable tale.

“Punks” was published in 2007 by TAXT Press. TAXT Press “makes visible the work of contemporary poets, writers, & artists previously under-represented in publication. TAXT chapbooks are always free.”

Is it important to you that “Punks” was published by a small Bay Area chapbook press put out by one of your friends?
            Hi Alli.  I can’t help but take this as a question about community, which tends to lead me to really frayed lines of thought.  Community, friendship, locatedness (see, my answer is already fraying into your next question) are central preoccupations in my work and life, and I think recently I’ve been exploring those ideas in more head-on way that seems poised to shift my writing practice.  That’s a vague statement, I know, but I don’t care to be more specific than that right now, which isn’t an attempt to coyly generate intrigue for readers out there, but rather not to fuck myself up via early release of what’s presently less than formed (Jennifer Manzano says it’s like I’m swimming in a Chuck E Cheese ball pit of the mind). 
What I am ready to say is that while my feelings towards the poetry community you and I share at this point vacillates between okayness and semi-alienation (and I’ll take responsibility for the parts of that that are my own doing), I’m always grateful for the moments when a collaborative impulse draws people together into making things like chapbooks.  Writing “by yourself,” however theoretically debunked, is still more collaborative than it’s often perceived to be on a lived level, even in “innovative” writing—we own up to and/or laud ourselves for our acts of appropriation all the time, but the contributions of unpredictable flesh-and-blood humans tend to end up confined to the acknowledgment section in the front matter.
But regardless of the degree of acknowledgment it receives, when someone reaches out and says, hey, I want to publish your poems / for you to be part of this performance I’m doing / want to write an indecipherable novel with you—at its best it can strip away some of that difficulty and ambivalence one (I) might feel towards one’s poetic community and shifts one’s perspective back to one of the other centers of one’s writing life—namely, books, objects, thingies.  The activity of my poetry community seems to center around the poles of going to readings and of the abstract idea of being amongst actively writing people (even if they’re not talking about it).  But those poles, important as they are, can feel too cerebral, interior, and diffuse, like mental activity without concomitant object-making.  It’s easy to lose track of what you’re doing.  At its best, making a material object with other people serves to channel that diffuse energy into something more concrete. 
And that’s what, I guess, I felt in my experience with “Punks”, which involved Suzanne Stein proposing the chapbook and then madly rushing to design, set, print, and compile the book in time for a reading I was giving a few weeks later.  There was plenty of consultation and throwing around design ideas that happened between us, and I give major credit to Suzanne for her excitement in that process, as it, in turn, gave my interest in “Punks” a new life, too, after it had been sitting finished on my hard drive for a year and a half.  I know Suzanne enlisted David Brazil, Judith Goldman, and possibly others in stapling and putting the books together, which extends the collaboration, as far as I’m concerned.  I think you and I have felt the same excitement when we were putting out Bruised Dick, and Jenn and I have felt it too in working on olywa press. 
If I had to reduce this to a thesis statement, I’d say that I believe this (a?) community is at its healthiest when there’s a steady stream of books/chapbooks/objects being produced by individuals and groups of people and then having those items trade hands on a steady basis.  It’s an economy in the broadest sense, and while I believe in quality control and, by the same token, don’t want to idealize the mimeo era, I think we might be better off as a group of people if we took a page out of their handbook and stepped up the local collaborative production schedule a notch or two.  I think that kind of steady publishing schedule is what’s made TRY! have such resonance for Bay Area folks.  It’s part magazine and part house organ.  So, you know, more stapling parties, maybe?

At the end of “Punks” you list the various geographic sites of composition. Can you say some about how place influenced the work?
            I’m glad to be asked this question, because I think of “Punks” as fundamentally a poem of place. Or, maybe more accurately, it’s a poem preoccupied with the idea of place, seeking it out but not finding it.  The feeling of being dislocated was a constant as the piece was being written.  I started writing the book in Portland, OR, about a year and a half out of college, in a period of time where I was feeling acutely unsure about where I wanted to live, which is a question that, for me, is tightly wrapped with questions of who I am and what I do. There was an initial burst of activity over two days, in which I wrote 40 poems, and then the work of editing/revision/compression continued over the next year. But, as you point out in your question, in year of writing and rewriting I lived in five places, and on top of it, those places also were pervaded with a feeling of transience, either because I was staying there in anticipation of moving elsewhere or because I was in living situations that never allowed me to feel settled.
Looking over the sequence now, I can see again how that feeling comes through in the content of the work. Not to lapse into too much close textual analysis of my own work here, but if I look at the first four lines in the first poem (“1980 rested on / your mistaken identity / as this layman Buddhist / of the failure movement”), I see my formal preoccupations at the time—to have fun with line breaks and entertain myself with general tonal disgust—but also can see the personal importance (to me) of the subject matter behind that language: 1980 is the year I was born, the “you” of the “mistaken identity” is most definitely me, and the “failure movement” is a turn of phrase that I found funny, but whatever that movement is, exactly, it isn’t exactly suffused with locatedness and positivity. All of that outside information isn’t important to anyone’s reading of the sequence, and not all of the language in the sequence has so personal a source, but throughout I think the language of frustration or disgust is coupled with language related to lack of connection to place and to the personal disruption (and just plain boredom, which is a real killer) that can cause.

One of the first things I feel when reading “Punks” is what I guess I might call poly-vocality. I’m interested in how you think about “voice” and “sincerity” in your work? How do you think about “appropriation” and “tone”? Do you consciously (and consistently(?)) approach your writing from a certain theoretical perspective? Feel free to tell me I’m full of shit, please.
            I think that in the writing of “Punks” I was consciously trying to infuse a sense of polyvocality via an experiment with pronouns—these unnamed you’s and he’s and she’s who say or do things throughout. It’s been pointed out to me that that, coupled with the fragmentation and density in syntax, lends that sense of multiple voices and sources, and I’m willing to accept all of that.  But even as I may have had that formal impulse to scuff the surface, to make the speaking voices multiple, underlying it is still the sense that I’m writing, literally, for my own voice, my own speaking voice, with the idea of me reading it out loud.  I mean, there’s a link there to Olsonian projectivity, with the poem on the page as a script for reading, which is probably part of why I hate using periods in my writing, because I rarely experience myself in day-to-day life as having those kinds of hard stops in speech.  It’s more like I’m trailing off with the constant possibility of continuing.  I have, in fact, become aware of my tendency to end a large portion of what I say in conversation with “so…”  I’m not unique in that, but I have no idea how this happened.  But maybe the line break is my poetic “so…” equivalent.
But on what feels a more bodily level, the focus on my speaking voice relates back to how I really started writing poetry (maybe “working with” poetry is more accurate), which was in a class with Bob Holman on poetry in performance. We read “Projective Verse” in that class, so the theory was present, but it was the experience of actually doing that kind of “projection” that sucked me in.  Later, of course, I got heavy into NY School and language writers and so on, with the disruption of the univocal I and all that.  So I guess there’s always this tension in me between a disrupted or polyvocal surface on the page and in live readings and the fact that I feel like I’m writing for my own supposedly singular speaking voice. 
To return to pronouns as an example, with “Punks” I liked experimenting on a formal level with how setting those pronouns into interaction with each other can have different effects, but what the pronouns are saying relates back to my personal experience so often that really they’re frequently interchangeable with “I.”  I mean, it’s not as though “get your face / outta the scuff bin, she says” is just a veiling of “get my face / outta the scuff bin, I says,” but I nonetheless experience those lines as personally resonant, as attached to a personal emotional state, even if I didn’t seem right to phrase them so that they’re coming out of my speaking mouth.
I guess that begins to answer your question about sincerity and, with it, appropriation.  I once heard Anselm Berrigan give a talk where he said that his poetry may have a fragmented linguistic surface but that he felt like there was a direct, sincere kind of emotional continuity to it, too, which is pretty close to how I feel about my work in “Punks” and in general.  I value sincerity in writing, which for me often equates with allowing messiness, emotional risk, and/or personal obsessions to seep somehow into one’s work.  I used to call it a Poetics of Freaking Out.  Sincerity equates with overflow, with what you can’t control.  (That can happen, I think, with a range of techniques—sure, sometimes Flarf and conceptual writing, to use the in-vogue examples, lives up to its purported ironic detachment, theoretical distance, or “coolness,” but it just as easily taps into something beyond just a clever, sexy surface.)
That said, I think I have to earn my sincerity, both formally and emotionally.  In the formal sense, I mean that I can’t just baldly express my emotions without a formal structure and think that my sincerity is going to get me a free pass in provoking the reader.  In the emotional (if that’s the right word) sense, I think that too much “sincere” expression of any one emotion tends to diminish the force of that expression.  Like, no one wants to be friends with that guy who is always trying to pull you in the corner and express how intense his feelings are.  Regardless of the sincerity of intent, too much of that expression, in writing or in life, has the effect of feeling dishonest because the expression ends up rendered in a vacuum without  a countervailing force or two. It needs to be couched in a mix of approaches and registers—sarcasm, density, stupidity, humor, whatever.  Like, some small talk please, dude.  (It’s interesting how emotional concerns immediately slide back into formal ones; my attempt at differentiation of the two completely dissolves here.)   
And all of that shapes my approach to appropriation, too.  Often I’ll steal something because it feels like it has some kind of emotional resonance for me (and I’ve found, incidentally, that the emotion associated with what I appropriate is most often a variation on humor-inflected agitation), but it might also be to create the right mix of shifts in linguistic registers.  I want to be responsible in appropriating something, which is why I generally try to avoid stealing something solely for ironic use (unless somebody is crying out to be fucked with), but regardless, I’m always trying, with success or not, to use that material to cut a sharp formal/emotional/conceptual balance. 

When you read from “Punks” at New Yipes in April, 2008, you read very quickly. Miles Champion-esque. I’m interested in how you think about pacing in relation to the line and the form[1] in this work. I’m curious if the quick pace happens for you only in performance, or at the level of composition.
            Ah yes, the reading I can’t live down.  My perceptions of it are colored by someone’s review of it on her blog that trashed me in a nasty and personal fashion, and after that it gets difficult to talk about my choices in pacing and speed without sounding defensive.  As an aside, I like Miles’s response people saying to him “You read too fast”: “No, you listen too slow.” 
In any case, while that reading might have admittedly been a touch too fast, speed is an important tool for me.  This may sound dumb, but I guess it’s the closest thing I can get in poetry to the feeling I get at a good rock show.  I read, I think, in a comparatively blank affect, because I feel like if you’re going to mess around with affect or performance you have to put as much thought and work into it as the writing itself (see Amiri Baraka or Christian Bök) so it doesn’t come off as an half-assed attempt to gussy up the work with an excess of persona, which is what poorly executed performativity mostly feels like to me.  It’s a quick way to ruin good work. 
But even if I’m dispensing with that kind of persona work or heavily performative affect, I still want to retain a sense of movement and force to what I’m doing, and reading faster (but hopefully not too fast) seems to be the solution I’ve arrived at.  The line remains primarily a unit for organizing my cadence, and I recognize that that’s not always going to come through for some listeners, that it’ll seem like I’m obliterating my line breaks, but I hope that I’ve retained enough objectivity to say that when I’ve done it right there’s still a sense of meter in the midst of the driving pace.  The pace also relates to the tensions I’ve outlined above on polyvocality—speed is a way for me to take the layered surface of the writing and draw it together into something more univocal and directed.  All in all, it just feels a little more like something you can, like, dance to and imparts that in a way that feels accurate to me.  I take great pleasure in the moments in my life where the conversational flow is exciting enough that people can’t help but run their mouths as fast as they can.


[1] Click here to see what “Punks” looks like on the page.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

A FEW THOUGHTS AFTER READING THE LUDIC CITY

Quentin Stevens's The Ludic City adds, I think, a useful wrinkle to thinking about urbanism and city planning by adding the dimension of play to the mix. By play he means the kind of non-instrumental, not-directly-productive, funny, risky activity that people engage in. Walking to work is instrumental; taking a new, longer route out of a desire for adventure is a non-instrumental deviation from that instrumental action. Stevens implicitly argues, and I agree, that this kind of play, novelty, adventure, is a necessary aspect of human life, one that is perpetually being striven for and one that is, due to a number of factors, often challenged or even thwarted. From a design perspective, this means that planners should strive to build with that possibility for play in mind, which paradoxically sometimes means building in spaces that are less defined, less "built," more chaotic, weirder, provocative, and that allow people to inscribe them with their own meanings and subject them to their own practices. It means welcoming a certain risk and disorder to the urban scene.

This isn't a conventional approach for an urban planner, who is striving so often to make life "easier," by rationalizing cities, making them run smoother, making sure human needs like food/shelter/work are met. The non-instrumental play stuff is certainly in the mix, but it's more often seen as a kind of spicy, sexy topping to the food/shelter/work dish. But this approach also doesn't exactly jell with, well, capitalism or the state. Capitalism seeks instrumentality ad infinitum--faster turnaround, quicker movement of capital, leading to faster realization of profit. The state, too, supports this, especially through enforcement of laws and the generalized management or elimination of disorder, hiccups, and the unexpected. We're left, then, with a fundamental contradiction here--the human need for both instrumental and play activity, and the desire of capital to channel any non-instrumental activity into something that generates profit or eliminate the non-instrumental activity that can't be channeled.

This isn't groundbreaking stuff here--it's in many ways Marxist analysis 101 here, because the easy implication of this is that city residents will always have to organize to protect these non-instrumental aspects of their cities and lives as well as to balance this with maintenance of those instrumental aspects they rely on--and what kind of system that requires is obviously up for question. But what does this mean for planners? Well, there's a whole set of expertise v. democracy issues when it comes to the relationship between planners and residents that I don't want to get into, mostly because I don't have a good answer. But it does imply that if planners have the goal of making better cities that fulfill the range of human needs, then they will have to be active supporters of people fighting for play, for non-instrumental uses of space. Which has a whole host of fight-the-power implications. But it also implies that valuing play, and fighting for play to be valued, is a vital item on the progressive planner's agenda.

So what does that fight look like? What tactics can be used to support it?

Sunday, March 17, 2013

TALK FOR CIRQUE DU WORK

This talk was delivered on March 16, 2013, as part of a panel presentation at Cirque du Work at Mills College. Much thanks to Ava Sayaka Rosen and Stephanie Young.

I’m going to start this talk by going on a pretentious tangent and thinking a little bit about the “history” of the American poet’s relationship to 9 to 5 jobs. This may initially feel like putzing around instead of talking about the day to day realities of negotiating wage-working life with life as a writer, but it’ll help get at an idea that forms a backdrop to everything I’ll say. And that idea, to just the ending away up front, is that labor—and I’m including here both paid wage work and the unpaid work we all do to continue to exist—labor profoundly structures how we spend time and energy in our lives, and that this makes it a fundamental shaping force of our creative process and the finished work that comes out of that process. Now, this is kind of stupid-obvious, and saying it makes me feel like I’m 19 again, reading Marx for the first time and thinking I had a this awesome materialist understanding of, like, everything, but looking at the particulars of how this plays out in the lives of myself and others, and thinking about how best to respond to those particulars to ensure a continued creative existence—well, that becomes for me an endlessly fascinating discussion.

But anyway, onward to this “history.” I put “history” in quotes here because while I am talking in part about actual history I’m also talking about currently held perceptions of what it means to be, do, and live as a poet, and regardless of the actual historical accuracy of some of these images, they do tend to exert a controlling force that, full disclosure, I want to do my part to negate. I’m sticking with talking about poets here, particularly from certain avant-garde traditions in the United States, because that’s what I know about, so you may or may not find this resonates with your own experience, but that’s what I’ve got for you.

In any case, the first question I’d ask is, when we say “avant-garde poet,” what image comes to mind? At its most base and stereotypical, we get someone who’s probably a drunk or an addict, possibly has sex with a lot of people, and who isn’t particularly, how shall we say, employed or, how shall we say, employable. Maybe they teach, work some kind of part time job editing technical books, are a mooch, are an independently wealthy scion of a fallen aristocrat family, something like that. They definitely may have worked on an oil freighter or whaling vessel one summer. Overall what they have, though, is plenty of time. I’m thinking of course of your Jack Kerouac type, or your second generation New York School type, but I’m also thinking of certain Bay Area language poets in the 1970s and 80s, writing all day in their shitty apartments and then going to the talk at New Langton Arts or wherever. Now, this typology is, well, oppressive, in that it silences the actual life histories of the numerous poets whose lives were anything but this kind of idyllic avant paradise. That avant-garde poet image almost automatically calls to mind a white male, and indeed, we can be fairly certain that white males had the easiest time living out something like that image—often, we should note, with great assistance from the salaries and unpaid labor of their female partners. But the experiences of living and working poets, whether folks of color of any gender, white women, poets who had caregiving labor to perform for children or others, and yes, including some white men—well, these were also members of these poetic communities, and their lives paint a very different picture of what being a poet looked like, and furthermore, it should be noted that their ongoing engagement with those poetry communities often came with much greater strain and personal costs.

Still, despite these corrective counter-histories, which do really need to be constantly recovered and re-asserted, and despite the myriad economic and social challenges poets faced in eras earlier than ours, I’m going to contend that up until the late 1970s in this country it was broadly easier, from a monetary and work perspective at least, to live the life of this archetypal avant-garde poet than it is today. This is, I think, for all the reasons that one might usually rehearse: flat real wage rates for the middle and working classes for the past 30 years; the rise in the cost of living, including things like rent, food, and higher education; the greater availability of credit and debt-financed consumption to make up for shortfalls in wages; the dynamics of structural unemployment; the slashing of state-sponsored assistance programs starting under Reagan; and more recently the expectation in some jobs of mandatory unpaid overtime and constant availability, and the development of technology that facilitates this colonization of life by work. The net effect, I think, is that it becomes necessary for poets and people in general to have more and more of their time taken up by seeking out, thinking about, and actually doing waged work, in addition to unpaid work like cooking, housework, childcare, and so on. All of this means, despite the real persistence of poets who can, for reasons of age, income, or whatever else, live lives closer to that avant-garde image, all this means that more poets have less time to devote to writing, going to readings, and otherwise going about the business of being poets. That avant-garde archetypal ideal, never achievable for many, has become achievable for even fewer people as time has gone on.

I’m going to talk more about why this isn’t inherently a good or bad thing as far as our writing practices are concerned, but we’ve reached the end of my historical spiel, which gives me the chance to tell you, obviously, about what this history discussion has been leading up to all along, and that, of course, is me. So, about me: I work full time in Oakland at a nonprofit that authors research-based educational curricula for mostly elementary-school-aged students. It’s a fairly small organization, employing about 50 people on site, 10 or so off site, and a cadre of consultants and freelancers numbering about 60 or 70 more. We contract with independent sales representatives in most of the 50 states and do a limited amount of business in Latin America and the Middle East. Working with these reps is where I come into the picture. As Marketing Logistics Coordinator, I oversee the shipping and logistics surrounding marketing samples and collateral, ensuring these materials flow in a timely manner to sales reps and to potential customers throughout the country and internationally. That’s the cover letter version of what I do. What it means in plain English is that I put shit in boxes and send it places. Yes, there are other aspects to my job, including making sure we have enough shit in the office-slash-micro-warehouse to put in boxes and send to places, and those aspects for better or worse are taking on an expanded role in my job, but essentially, that’s what I do: put shit in boxes, send it to places.

So why would anyone want this job? One reason, of course, is that it pays better than any other job I’ve had and provides me with a health insurance plan that can cover my partner and stepson, and believe me, that’s no small reason. But the other ones basically boil down to a few things that set this job apart from what to me are the essentially interchangeable office jobs one sees when trolling through places like Craigslist. First, I actually like the people I work with—my workplace has a pretty high tolerance for weirdos in unconventional business casual, and that makes going to work every day a much more tolerable affair than it otherwise might be. Second, the work I do is fairly independent—I have a lot of control over how I structure and prioritize what goes on during my workday, and that gives me some space to breathe during the 8 or so hours of every day that I’m forced to sell to others. And most importantly, third, this independence couples with the repetitive and relatively mindless nature of the work in such a way that I can reclaim a segment of that 8 hours for my own ends, and particularly for my own education. For the two and a half years that I’ve had this job I’ve been able to listen to my iPod for long, uninterrupted stretches as I’m building samples, packing, and shipping. The audio content is basically whatever I can get my hands on. I’ve listened to BBC documentaries, experimental radio via the Third Coast Audio Festival, large portions of Wagner’s Ring Cycle, David Harvey’s lectures on Marx’s Capital, an entire course on financial markets, an entire course on the history of prisons and punishment, a lot of NPR, and bits and pieces of a lot else. Essentially, built into the structure of my job is the opportunity to effectively steal time and, weirdly, still be able to work while I’m doing it.

The degree to which we can steal time has formed a key component in the job choices of many a poet. At my previous job working as a legal assistant, there was also a large amount of dead time that I could use for myself. I wrote the entirety of a collaborative chapbook at work, and a fair portion of other raw writing material was generated there as well. At a certain point with that job, the understimulation of working for a semi-present lawyer in a solo practice and doing a whole lot of dictation and filing eventually rotted my brain and left me with little energy or content to translate into writing, and so I was very happy when I left that job. Incidentally, this points to a pretty important thing to be aware of when it comes to these kinds of jobs, which is that they definitely have a limited shelf life. But still, the underlying principal of seeking out jobs where I can carve out a bit of space for myself has remained, and I think if you ask any poet with an office job whether that was a factor in their decision, you’re going to get a lot of answers in the affirmative. On a practical note, if you’re interested in getting one of those jobs, I’ve had a lot of luck in finding them through temping—both my legal assistant job and my current job started as temp assignments that were a day or two long, and while it’s not really the rule that in a down economy you can automatically turn temp assignments into permanent jobs, the advantage to it is that you can sample workplaces and find ones that distinguish themselves from those interchangeable Craigslist ones I mentioned before, whether due to their friendly environments, their opportunities for time theft, or both.

So yes, a large reason for my choice of job is the chance to reclaim a portion of that work time for myself, for intellectual development or creative work. But working a day job still exerts enormous shaping effects on your time, which brings us back to where this talk began. Where I once might’ve been able to live a life closer to that avant-garde poet image, at this point, between the 8 hours filled with interruptions, phone calls, standing up, sitting down, applying labels, moving packages, and so on, and then going home and doing household and step-parenting work, my life isn’t structured like that mythical poet, and that in turn affects the ways and things I write. It’s not as though my writing practice now no longer in any way resembles the writing practice I had when I was 23, because there’s a lot about it that does, but still, I’m not going to be sitting down to write my epic any time soon, and a four-hour writing and editing binge is a less-than-common event. And as I’ve said, my contention here is that with the ongoing changes in the contemporary realities of work, the kind of work-filled life I’m describing is a more and more common state for people writing today. When you leave school, you may, whether slowly or quickly, find that your life gets more and more work-filled too.

That might freak you out, and I don’t blame you if it does. It freaks me out. I mean, if your writing practice has up to now involved regularly staying up until 3 am or going into some intense quasi-meditative state or something, then feeling yourself being domesticated by a day job can feel pretty fucking awful. But if we can remain open and flexible in how we approach our lives as creative people, then as I said before, these kinds of life changes due to work don’t necessarily need to be so terrible. From where I stand, there are two major choices we can make in response to this kind of constriction in our time: first, we can struggle for that time, fight to carve out and reclaim it for the creative work that sustains us, or second, we can recognize that the dream of being that avant-garde poet with nothing to do but write is less and less viable, and we can accept that this is going to change the way we do writing and the kinds of writing that we produce. So obviously this is a false binary—we all have to do both. As a writer and a human, you need to struggle against forces that perpetually want to take away your time and occupy your space. But I want to emphasize a discussion of the second choice, because I think so many of us, myself included, end up quite unsettled when our writing process and product starts not to jell with our internal conceptions of what “legitimate” writing looks like. But I’d rather have us assert that all writing processes that somehow engage the mind and excite us, no matter how seemingly stupid, minor, or small, are legitimate writing processes that lead to legitimate writing. Not that all of that writing is good, of course, but there’s a difference between good and legitimate. But nonetheless, if as your life and time structures changes, as they inevitably will in some ways, and if you find a way or kind of writing that interests you and that you can manage to fit into that changing life, whatever its structure may be, then latch on to that form of writing, even if it feels weird or not even like writing or art or anything to take seriously, even if it’s not what you think you want your writing to be. The apparent limitations imposed by your life may in fact lead you to produce far more exciting work than you would’ve produced with 24 hours a day devoted to writing.

I’m going to end by quickly talking about what my version of this has been lately. Without really knowing it, I abruptly found that my writing practice had started to include work on what’s about the junkiest medium I can think of: Facebook. It still embarrasses me to claim it as a part of my actual writing practice and not just, like, a place that at best serves as a storehouse of raw material or, at worst, is merely a place to goof off and waste time. But in the process of writing “regular” status updates I more and more found myself posting weird little fragments that have come to feel like a live, ongoing language performance. Some people have wanted to publish them, and invariably, material from there will end up published on paper—I have a chapbook coming out soon that actually grew out of me doing work on Facebook. But I’m not sure that it requires publication on paper to be a legitimate part of my writing practice. Is this project interesting, artistic, good? I’m not sure. Is every status update a part of this “performance”? Probably not, but I don’t know where the border is. Is this whole idea of Facebook writing just lazy, pretentious, and awful? Entirely possible. But it is writing, and I have to accept it as a part of what I do as a writer. It’s one more point in this expanded field of poetry that I see us all continuing to map out together.

PONDERING D



           The following is an essay that aired on KChung 1630 AM radio (Los Angeles area) on August 5, 2012. Thank you to Khalil Huffman for soliciting and broadcasting it.

            Pondering D’Angelo seems never to lose its novelty for me, even in the past dozen years of the man’s conspicuous absence. And so to have him mounting a comeback invariably leads me to one more go-around, now in celebration instead of in a lament. I’m honestly not sure, though, whether it’s wise, because the act of devoting this kind of ponderous attention to him might inadvertently replicate the person-stripping gaze that Michael Eugene Archer was subjected to when his undeniably hot self beamed into cable boxes nationwide in the early 2000s. I’m talking here, of course, about the video for “Untitled (How Does It Feel?)” which tends to overdetermine any discussion of Voodoo, the last record he bestowed upon us, or, well, discussion of anything having to do with D’Angelo. Which is why I want to say at the outset here, before I indeed recite an entire radio commentary about the video for “Untitled (How Does It Feel?),” that were you to wipe that video and perhaps even that majestic song from the historical record, Voodoo would still be an album of such depth and density that even after you’re done listening to this D’Angelo retrospective, you’d be well served pulling the album off the proverbial shelf and putting it in your rotation again.
            But that said, we return to “Untitled,” which for better or worse is a big part of understanding why D’Angelo has been out of sight, except in momentary blips of soliciting undercover police officers or looking like Ol Dirty Bastard in mug shots. If you need a refresher on what exactly happened, you’re probably best off firing up your internet and reading Amy Wallace’s recent GQ article that’s prompted all this discussion about D’s comeback. The short version, though, goes like this: Voodoo comes out in 2000, the video for “Untitled” is released thereabouts as well, D’Angelo becomes the object of intense erotic attention, he starts to feel a little iffy about that when he plays live and has “take it off” shouted at him one too many times, and then once he’s off tour he gradually checks out, deliberately puts on weight to hide behind, and generally escapes into alcohol and coke.
            This is a standard rock star narrative, but there’s a lot about it to engage with, most of all the fact that, as a few writers have pointed out recently, D’Angelo’s experience mirrors the kind of objectification that women have to contend with every day. In her essay on D’Angelo on the site ThinkProgress, Alyssa Rosenberg writes that in the usual script, the one that got flipped on D’Angelo, “women’s bodies are dressed up for others’ use, whether it’s to bring visual pleasure or physical pleasure to the people who see them or touch them. Men’s bodies are presented as being for their own use, as sources of strength they can use to save the world, to fight injustice, to perform feats that are impressive and valuable in their own right.” And in responding and expanding on Rosenberg’s writing on Jezebel, Lindy West really drives the point home, writing that “D'Angelo was subjected to the level of physical scrutiny that's built into every woman's life and then immediately went insane” and that “it makes [her] feel proud of women in a dorky way. Somehow, we handle it without taking an 11-year hiatus from our jobs.”
There’s a cliché out there that if men could live for a day in women’s shoes, being subjected to the kind of bodily scrutiny and violence that women learn to live with, then the world would soon become very different. That hypothetical isn’t that useful in the day to day existence of anyone trying to undermine gender oppression, but there’s still a useful page to take out of that book. Pardon my momentary descent into theory here, but if our present day gender order still holds masculinity as an invisible norm, as a rational essence in utter control of male bodies that, as a result, frequently renders those bodies powerfully invisible, utilitarian, or even asexual at times, well, if that’s the state of affairs we’re dealing with, then part of how we might undermine this order is to present bold, even explicit images of men with their particular, attractive, scary, ugly, sexed, unique bodies, making eminently public the fact that anyone of any gender possesses a body, a thing that acts and can be acted upon, a thing with quirks, pains, pleasures, and vulnerabilities. There’s a part of me, then, that wants to imagine that when in the video D’Angelo offers up a full, vulnerable display of his bodily capacity to feel pleasure and be beautiful, that he also offers up a hitherto unrealized feminist media tactic of exactly the sort I’m talking about. But the aftermath of this rare display, those “take it off,” money-throwing responses, had an interesting net effect: it was as though D’Angelo had in fact also offered himself up as a sacrifice to a gender progressive future. He became a kind of male feminist Jesus, dying so that we might all have the chance to be washed clean of sin and reborn into a patriarchy-free paradise.
            Okay, so that’s a little over the top, but it actually does segue well into what I want to say next. Because in coming down from this flight of fancy, the smart analysis we see in Rosenberg’s and West’s essays—and, well, my own analysis too—comes up a tad short. That supposedly universal, unmarked, “normal” body isn’t just male, he’s a bunch of other things too—upper middle class, of moderate build, lacking physical disability, straight, and, well, white. Rosenberg’s statement that “Men’s bodies are presented as being for their own use” gets a lot dicier when you start to discuss images of black male bodies. Black bodies in the US have, of course, literally been considered the property of others, but that’s just the first in a line of controlling images so generously applied. Black men have been surveilled as one or another form of perpetual criminal suspect, whether thief, pimp, hustler, or rapist, and black women in turn have contended with a whole image series of their own, from mammy through jezebel to the welfare queen and onward. This isn’t to say that all black people are immediately categorized as one of the above images by the mass media and affixed firmly in place thereafter, that the media are entirely unable to view black people—or people of color in general—as without nuance or complexity.
But still, there are a lot of images ready to be affixed to those with black skin, and not just quote-unquote negative ones either. As Chris Rock astutely puts it in the GQ article, “I always say Tom Hanks is an amazing actor and Denzel Washington is a god to his people. If you're a black ballerina, you represent the race, and you have responsibilities that go beyond your art. How dare you just be excellent?” Lest we think this is coming only from the African-American community, earlier in that article we find mention of Robert Christgau no less, who stated in a concert review in 2000 that D’Angelo “was r&b Jesus, and I'm a believer.” My feminist Jesus has a longer lineage, apparently. Stepping back, we can see that D’Angelo became ensnared in that complicated, ambivalent position of the “Race Man,” that image of a black individual of exceptional, transcendent talent who seemingly takes up the mantle of representing, to black and white people alike, the greatness that black people as a whole are capable of, and a figure who, in an odd way, is almost expected to singlehandedly effect social change. The “Race Man,” as Hazel Carby points out in her book of the same name, is an immensely problematic idea, not in the least bit because the concept itself, down to the name, marginalizes the intellectual and cultural work of black women, whether straight or gay, as well as gay men, or, well, pretty much anyone who deviates from a hetero masculine norm. Now, as an aside, it can be debated whether we’ve seen more instances of the “Race Woman” in recent years, and with Frank Ocean’s game-changing discussion of his relationship with a man, one also wonders whether we’ll see a non-heteronormative subset of the Race Man trope being applied to him as well.
But in any case, in a move that might be even more insidious than this marginalization, what the Race Man trope does is allow for the achievements of a single person to be used to avoid addressing the structural inequalities affecting black and brown people worldwide. Instead, the black genius of a D’Angelo figure is used to imply that those inequalities are over, or at least over-ish, or to magically avoid those inequality questions altogether. From yet another angle, the Race Man is used as a figure to pin one’s own hopes to, to see his work and successes and get a vicarious boost in light of structural factors working to dash one’s own hopes of even a more modest success.
            Now, I don’t want to attempt to psychoanalyze the man of the hour here, but it seems worth noting that all of these images, all of this history—the perpetual suspect, the object of sexual suspicion, the musical wunderkind, the Race Man, the r&b Jesus—this many-headed hydra of objectification would’ve been something D’Angelo was dealing with already, as a black man and a talented musician and performer, before the business with the “Untitled” video came along. But throw into the picture another objectifying gaze—the one that dubbed him a next-level beautiful sex god—and it doesn’t seem so surprising that a sensitive, arty, introspective person might find himself massively overloaded, viewing himself through the eyes of others, and to say to himself, consciously or not, that he needs to do something drastic to reclaim his personhood. Which is why I find myself strangely admiring D’Angelo’s dozen year absence—it was, in a sense, a form of resistance. The doubling of his weight, the obliteration of drugs and drink, the avoidance of the public eye when, like it or not, it’s your bread and butter—all of this can be seen as an unhealthy, unadvisable, and entirely understandable way that D’Angelo negated attempts to be controlled. Like so many coping mechanisms and ways of apparently shoring oneself up against the outside world, the consequences were immense, and I’m overjoyed that instead of hearing news of D’Angelo’s death in that car accident or an overdose or another similarly painful-to-hear story of wayward genius, we have instead an apparently healthy and focused D, who’s found new ways to face the world but who can still slay everyone with “Untitled” at the BET Awards this year. This is the kind of tentatively happy ending I can get behind, and yet there’s still a desire to draw out, if you’ll pardon the pun, an object lesson from all this. But what is that lesson? Has what I’ve said here just been a long-winded way of saying “Leave D’Angelo Alone,” or is there something more to be gleaned from this that might save someone somewhere, whether artist or civilian, from some of the pain of unexpected objecthood? Perhaps if there’s anything to be learned from this, it’s about what can happen when layer upon layer of objectification is applied to a particularly sensitive soul, and to see in that a magnified version of what might happen to anyone, of any race or gender, when faced with this kind of scrutiny of both body and mind. D’Angelo becomes a case study of what we do to each other and what, for everyone’s health, we could stand to do less of. It’d seem, then, that the best thing I can do here after this immense focus on the body and mind of one man is to, well, shut up, to let D’Angelo sing, and let the results speak for themselves as they unfold. But if it’s not clear enough already, I’ve still got to say it: welcome back, D’Angelo. We missed you.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

"THE FEMINIST CITY AND HOW TO GET THERE"





The following is the text of a talk delivered on Gender night at Summer School 2012, which took place in August (of 2012, obviously) at the Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library in Berkeley, CA.

            Trying to write a talk on the feminist city, an idea that I seem perpetually to be thinking and talking about even as I can’t fully tell you what it is, has pretty much made me insane. I think this might have to do with the fact that if I really think about it, it’s not really a talk, but rather a long book called something like “The Feminist City and How to Get There,” which I’m at present highly unequipped to write. What would be in that book? What would its table of contents look like? I know there’d be something on the history of feminist designs for the built environment of cities, which is a book that actually does exist, written by Dolores Hayden under the title “The Grand Domestic Revolution.” There’d be a catalog of feminist tactics for and in public space, which would include something on collective responses to street harassment and sexual violence, something about the Fifth Street Women’s building occupation in 1971 (which lasted two weeks), something about the suggestion, which came from Golda Mier of all people, that instead of instituting a curfew for women to prevent them from being raped, that since men were the perpetrators of the rapes, perhaps it’s men that needed to have a curfew. There’d be a lot of other sections in there, but I suppose the “chapter” I want to write right now is the one on the discourse on the public and private spheres, the gendering of those spheres, and the importance and difficulty of breaking down that constructed divide. Everything I’m saying feels tentative—and that’s exciting. It also freaks me out. But with all that said I’m just going to mildly bold and embrace the book title “The Feminist City and How to Get There” and pretend that this talk is part of it, and proceed to write as much as I can on my chosen topic with knowledge so that what I’m sure will be a woefully inadequate stand-in for that book will still go someplace useful in the discussions we might have tonight. So with that in mind I want to talk a little bit on what a feminist city might be like, but I want also to devote more space to thinking about what kinds of changes in our sociospatial practices would help us actual get there. In theory I’m also going to talk about parenting, and while I’m not sure if I’m going to have the space and time to explicitly broach that topic, I will say that my status as a stepparent has everything to do with what I’m talking about tonight, for reasons that’ll hopefully be clear.
Anyway, by way of a little background, my question of what a feminist city might be like comes directly, verbatim almost, from a 1980 essay, also by Dolores Hayden, whose title asks the question “What Would a Non-Sexist City Be Like?” One can debate the differences in the idea of the “non-sexist city” versus the “feminist city,” but let’s not right now. In any case, Hayden’s essay is one that that I wish would get the revised-and-expanded treatment every year or so, and inevitably it reads a little dated in places, but still the proliferation of writing that riffs off her title suggests that she laid some pretty important groundwork that people are still working off of—I recently came across “What Would a Non-Heterosexist City Be Like?”, for example. I don’t want to take too much time recounting the details of Hayden’s argument here, but her subtitle “Speculations on Housing, Urban Design, and Human Work” should provide a pretty good clue for where she goes. Hayden, being a geographer and urban planning historian, critiques the ways in which the built environment has been constructed with a certain gender and economic order in mind. The ways she points out will come as no surprise to most people in this room: she discusses the lack of flexible housing options, the ways that the transportation system disproportionately hinders female wage laborers, the expensive commercial solutions that have arisen in the absence of widespread childcare, the ways in which dwelling design hinders more egalitarian divisions of household and other caregiving labor, the ways in which sprawl and zoning laws have been used to shore up a regressive gender order. Running through this critique, and tying it together, is the observation that there exists a dominant discourse on how space is divided, both socially and in the built sense, into public and private spheres and that, as this discourse would have it, public and private are gendered male and female, respectively. A hard divide is placed between these spheres, between who belongs in each realm and what activities and ways of being are appropriate to either of them. Queer and trans folk, of course, are quite absent from the view of that discourse.
That we the people must constantly live with, butt up against, and grapple with this discourse of the spheres isn’t a new concept; really, it’s fundamental to a great deal of feminist analysis. And it’s no surprise that, given Hayden’s place in the urban planning field, the focus of her suggestions of how to effect change center around alterations of the built environment. These ideas, which draw from history, are, I must say, really interesting, taking in variations on co-housing and placement of services like prepared meals and childcare in proximity to housing (as well as de-privatizing the providing of those services). Hayden also ponders the kind of community organizing needed to make these kinds of projects happen. All of this feels particularly trenchant with Occupy sitting just under the surface of my mind at all times, and a big part of me wishes that this talk was actually about interventions in the built environment, because brainstorming with you all about practical designs for feminist utopias, and then, I don’t know, working together to try to get make them happen, and probably failing, but maybe doing something important in the process either way—well, that would just be cool. Something for next year maybe. Still, while this focus on the built environment is absolutely vital to thinking about social change, the fact is that the organization of space is not the sole, rigid determinant of how we live. There are, to make a bit of an understatement, some social patterns that affect us as well. Built space and social practice reshape each other in an ongoing process, which I suppose if we want to be fancy about it we could call a sociospatial dialectic. Therefore, if the goal, and I think it’s a good one, is to dissolve this divide between the so-called private and public spheres, a strategy of simultaneously altering the built environment and social practice seems in order. Now, picking apart the dynamics of that dialectic is another one of those crazymaking processes that’ll have to wait for that book I probably won’t be able to write, but I do want to pause and think about the way our gendered social practices, particularly those centered around speech but more generally as well, are affected by the discourses on space we have to engage with from day to day. I think also that it pertains to what we’re doing here tonight, and to the idea of a feminist city as well.
At risk of belaboring a point that might be obvious to everyone, I want to make really clear what I mean when I'm talking about the relationship between gender, space, and forms of speech. Bear with me on this. When I’m talking about the gendering of space and speech, I'm obviously not saying that the association between women and private space means that a woman's place is in the home, etc., nor am I doing some "men are from Mars, women are from Venus" type of shit where women inherently talk in certain ways and men inherently talk in others and thus it shall forever be, so saith the lord God. Rather, to expand on what I wrote earlier, I'm saying that there's a discourse that associates women with certain spaces (the household, the private sphere) and, to say something I haven’t said yet, associates women with certain kinds of speech (the kind using more lateral thinking, based in dialogue, more tentative, embracing complexity and ambiguity or what some misguided people would call being wishy-washy). Men, in turn, are associated with different spaces (the public sphere, the political sphere) and other kinds of speech (direct, declarative, forceful, the kind of thing you see politicians do all the time). The word “associates” is key here—in real life, anyone of any gender is capable of any mode of speech. Now, to complete the triangle in both cases, certain spaces are therefore associated with certain forms of speech--and from that you get conceptions of the spaces where each gender “belongs,” what kinds of subject matter are appropriate to each space, and in turn, the kind of speech that is appropriate for use in each space. Thus, for example, there's the idea that public space is the realm of men, where they talk about politics using direct, logical argumentation free from the pulls of emotion blah blah blah.
Obviously, this isn't the only discourse on space in play, and plenty of counter-discourses, wielded by actual people, have chipped away at the rigid gendering of various spaces. Thus we have in this era, for example, a more widespread acceptance of the appropriateness of women speaking in the political sphere, and certain subject matter previously considered the purview of the private realm has been brought into public discussion. The classic example here is, I think, intimate partner violence, which as we know was for a long time considered entirely a private matter, something inappropriate for discussion in the political realm. Now, there's still plenty of suppression of discussion of intimate partner violence that goes on, but it is at least nominally on the agenda for public discussion.
Still, all that having been said, there are nonetheless a lot of topics out there, and, in connection to that, a lot of kinds of speech out there, that are deemed by this dominant discourse as inappropriate for the public, political sphere. What kind of topics and speech am I talking about? Well, there’s kind of an endless list, but picture addressing the US Congress or similar group on, like, the body politics of motherhood or giving a speech on anything that doesn’t come to an unambiguous, well-ordered conclusion and you’ll start to get at what I’m talking about. What’s unnerving is that even as we may see ourselves as setting up spheres of opposition to the dominant political public sphere (if such a thing actually exists anymore), we’re not immune to placing value on kinds of speech based on which sphere they’re associated with, nor are we immune to ranking the importance of subject matter based on these same sphere-based criteria. Like, instead of addressing the US Congress, now picture a GA, and picture one person speaking in an inspiring, well-argued, militant fashion about something or other, and then picture another person delivering a thoughtful yet ambivalent and torn exposition on that same something or other. Who gets the bigger cheer? The point is not that one kind of speech is better than another, but rather that that second speech would feel like a breach to many people’s sense of public sphere aesthetics, and the second speaker knowing that might have the effect of dissuading them from speaking, and therefore of suppressing an important topic or voice. And even if we ourselves are able to get past the shame or embarrassment that might be involved in discussing these supposedly private matters, or talking about anything in a way that uses modes of speech or expresses emotions that are perceived as being best kept private, all this still can run the risk of invalidating us in the eyes of the people we're trying to converse with. There are, then, topics and ways of communicating that are associated in this dominant discourse with the private realm, the female-gendered realm, and thus when those things are brought into the so-called public realm, they run great risk of being seen as lesser, debased, secondary to what’s “important.” And it doesn’t take much to reproduce this—just a historical norm and a few fervent, possibly unaware enforcers of it.
It seems to me, then, that if we want to work towards the feminist city, work towards dissolving some of this divide between public and private spheres, that in addition to the kinds of modifications to the built environment that Hayden and others suggest, alterations of this and other sociospatial practices need to also enter the mix. Okay, so that’s what I’ve been getting at this whole time, but the point is that where this kind of work starts, among other spaces, is in giving a good hard look to settings such as the one we’re in now. What are our norms of interaction? What kinds of speech feel acceptable here, and what kinds don’t? What kind of political topics or opinions would you be afraid of bringing up in this space, for fear of being shamed by those around you, being taken less seriously, being seen as less cool? And, more to the point, how can we work to alter the norms of these spaces so that that gendered public/private divide applies less and less? Part of that seems to involve trying to rethink this kind of summer school itself, to dissolve its identity as something that belongs to the public realm, because just as there are topics or ways of speech that the norms of this kind of space might preclude, the space itself, by virtue of location, time of events, aura, etc., precludes the participation of many people. And I suppose that that’s where I could start to talk explicitly about parenting, among other things, but won’t given time constraints. Now, this talk just kind of ends, but ultimately it seems like these are the sorts of questions that need to be tackled when thinking about how to model what a feminist city would be like and how to organize to make it at least a tiny bit more of a reality.