WHAT’S BEHIND THE WORDS?
Geoffrey Young
“Writing down that
something while it’s making itself up”
—Robert
Grenier
So various
the acts of writing, so broad the range of voices, so dispersed their points of
origin, so specific their raison d’etre….
Poetry cannot be pinned down to a single definition, nor thought of in terms of
some hegemonic mode. And if I say “the
poem is a thinking jewel”? Whether
lyric, narrative, imagistic, disjunctive, structural, senseless, pellucid, or
opaque; whether brashly contra good taste and grammar or buttoned down with
classical ease, a poem should embody the essence of transformative/creative
intelligence, also known as sustained invention (sustained attention), a sort
of chaos seized from the heart of order (or an order seized from the heart of
chaos).
Reality has
nothing to do with it. Words exist. Let’s not play dumb. They allow the ear, eye
and mind to make connections between different semantic layers. Each word forms the center of a cloud of
nuance and connotation, allowing itself to be massaged by whatever signifying hand
is present in a given context. What
flattens and superficializes the associative halo is habitual usage. By pushing back against conditioned usage,
and by heightening the connotative charge of words, the poet redefines the
boundary of meaning by reclaiming the humanity and fecundity of language on his
or her own terms.
Language is
a continuous nominative surface that extends in a sort of topological mediation
between self and object, which is to say, between self and world. Along the
trail, due to the particularizing aspect of word choice, one’s “story” gets
told. A feeling for the world, both as
attribute and insight, as well as a politics and a morality, are present in the
language in what may have become a cliché: the mutual identity of form and
content.
Poems don’t
aspire to the condition of music or they’d play a cornet. The trap is meaning: words come pre-loaded
with signification and history.
Gibberish, no matter how sonic, always suffers from lack of sense. The Mallarméan poem, held in tweezers and studied
for symbolic insight, can be considered an object in itself. Most writers provide the more traditional
“window on the world.” James Schuyler’s
skinny descriptive poems and John Ashbery’s long-lined poems of wandering
hyper-cultivated ruminative goofs grow from the same stalk. Started as scribbles, typed and retyped, they
emerge at their best as hood ornaments on Western evolution itself.
Reading
should challenge and amuse, it should entertain and illumine. No one can read everything; no one should
even try. Poetry can be found at every
crossroads in the nation, addressing the traffic as it flows. Because of this, there is no poetry with a
capital P.
A writer
collaborates with the language, which, marvelously and maddeningly , has a life
of its own. Poets enter the fray with
everything to prove, including adaptability
and stamina. A reader completes the
poem, just as a word, a phrase, a feeling, a strong emotion, a story, or a
methodology starts the thing in the first place. The innovative poet strives
for a multiplicity of readings, is against closure (any boxed-up, formally
contrived terminus of possibility).
Meaning inheres in the particulars of word and sequence, in the quality
of perception, in the hound dog sound of sense.
It works to build larger units by accretion, and often succeeds.
A poem is an
act of belief in the usefulness of art.
Innovative poems have a way of calling into question that art,
challenging the nature of belief, putting pressure on the medium of language
itself. But once written, and published,
the poem stands on its own, a little or large node of “artificial intelligence”
symbolically encoded in a language wrested from its own monstrous life, and
waiting to be decoded by a reader who can provide a surrogate heart.
Before
settling in Great Barrington, Massachusetts in 1982, Geoffrey Young spent student years in Santa Barbara (UCSB), and
Albuquerque (UNM), then lived for two years in Paris (a Fulbright year followed
by a six-month stint working for La Galerie Sonnabend). From 1975-1982 he lived in Berkeley (two sons
born). His small press, The Figures
(1975-2005), founded in Berkeley, published more than 135 books of poetry, art
writing, and fiction.
His own
recent books include Click Here to Forget,
Isolate Flecks, 2016; All the
Anarchy I Want, Lonely Woman,
2013; Dumbstruck, Yawning Abyss,
2013, with paintings by Daniel Heidkamp; and Get On Your Pony & Ride, Non-Fiction, 2012, with paintings by
Chie Fueki. A new chapbook of sonnets is imminently forthcoming from above/ground press.
He has
directed the Geoffrey Young Gallery for the last 24 years, as well as written
catalog essays for a dozen artists.
1 comment:
GY: I think you are becoming an 18th-Century Neo-Classicist in your work and commentary. Teach & entertain, brother.
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