Poetry Forum: Nathaniel Mackey
Apr 9th, 2008
Wollman Hall
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235 Bowery, New York, NY ($5)
info: http://www.poets.org/
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for Grace
by Bernadette Mayer
for over ten years now
if you can imagine that
confluence of the east and west
I have been wearing pearl river boxer shorts
they are like persian blue irises
no, hyacinths no midnight blue rooms
for eight years, willy-nilly
I’ve been trying to get more
they are 100% cotton
if I were getting them for you
I would not only have them but see
a plethora of wonderful things that day
today we are making maple syrup again
I pray for them
our father who art in heaven
please get me some maple syrup 100% cotton
boxer shorts because of the war amen
***
Evan Kindley Writes:
Bernadette Mayer is usually associated with the second generation of the New York School of Poets, but her work has taken a while to arrive at the state you see it in here. Ironically, it’s only since leaving the city for rural New England that Mayer has begun to write in a recognizably “New York School” style. At first glance, the poem may seem like one more Frank O’Hara imitation: casual, personal, light and small. But where O’Hara’s poems tend to be little hymns to life, “Maple Syrup Sonnet” is all about lack and longing. Where O’Hara would exult in plenty, Mayer writes about feeling squeezed and deprived. One might even say that the third stanza imagines an archetypal O’Hara poem, one of the ones where he’s walking around New York City buying things and recording observations on “a plethora of wonderful things,” only to give them away as if they meant nothing.
In “Maple Syrup Sonnet,” by contrast, the narrator regrets her lack of access to a commodity she once prized. Somehow the idea that she can no longer get the boxer shorts she likes is both funny and poignant, and becomes especially so when she imagines giving them as a gift to a friend. This in turn is relayed into a brief prayer for the soldiers of the Iraq war (the poem was first published in 2005) which, in context, is just one more fact of life the speaker can’t change. In setting up this complex of longings and constraints, desires and realities, Mayer suggests that the act of gift exchange is both a tiny, daily ritual, pregnant with personal meaning, and an economic and social fact, enormous and out of our control.
“The Global, the Transnational, and the Stretch of Poetry”
English Department Lecture
McCosh 48
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Book Party @ Rubin Museum
150 West 17th Street
See AAWW for more info
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Bonnie Minick and Christine E. Salvatore
Princeton Public Library Community Room
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A Rhythm Nation Event:
“Traveling Through Shuffle Mode and More”
102 Woolworth Center
March 28-March 29
For more info go to the Sonic Fragments website
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by Frank Bidart
don’t worry I know you’re dead
but tonight
turn your face again
toward me
when I hear your voice there is now
no direction in which to turn
I sleep and wake and sleep and wake and sleep and wake and
but tonight
turn your face again
toward me
see upon my shoulders is the yoke
that is not a yoke
don’t worry I know you’re dead
but tonight
turn your face again
*****
from Desire by Frank Bidart. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux 1999.
On Tuesday, March 25 at 5:00 p.m., Bidart will be reading from his new collection of poems, Watching the Spring Festival, at Labyrinth Books in Princeton. This event is proudly sponsored by the Bain Swiggett Fund (Princeton University Department of English), Poetry@Princeton, and Labyrinth.
Jeff Dolven Writes:
“The Yoke” sounds like Frank Bidart. Or maybe first, it looks like him, even before you’ve auditioned the words: italics, gaps for pauses, skipped lines, and sharp enjambments all mark the page as his. The reading that that these devices score is both halting and urgent, and it should sound like someone trying hard to understand something difficult, and to make it understood. Bidart’s typographical resourcefulness always seems to be born of a fear that you won’t get what he is saying. (And because the subjects that compel him are often so discomfiting, maybe a fear that you won’t want to get it, that you’ll try not to.)
One way into the poem then is through this typography. It’s clear enough what “The Yoke” is about: wanting to see the face of a dead friend again. But it seems to have two voices, one in italics, one not, both of them revolving the same phrases. Perhaps they capture the longest line’s alternation of sleeping and waking and sleeping and waking: the repeated request, “turn your face again” (toward me, at least at first), can’t be shaken in either state. You can’t wake up from it, or sleep it off. Of perhaps they actually distinguish the words of two different speakers—each thinking that the other is dead? Both dead? And what does “dead” mean here—literally dead; dead to me?
And then there is that curious opening, “don’t worry.” As though the dead might be wearied by our impossible demands to see them again; or pained at how we must be suffering when we ask again and again. The poem’s economy in opening up our confusion in the face of loss, whatever kind of loss this is, wherever it resides, is remarkable.
Rachel Zucker, Tracy K. Smith , and Adam Kirsch
at the National Arts Club, NYC
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“Performance Registers and Performing Blackness: Excerpts”
Mathey College Common Room
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author of FRAGMENT OF THE HEAD OF A QUEEN
editor of LEGITIMATE DANGERS
Library Auditorium
a Reading and Conversation
Graduate Contemporary Poetry Colloquium
McCosh 40
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