Category: Creative Writing
Poetry Open Studio
#$!&^!!!…The Graphic Novel….It’s Alive!
Writes Professor Lin Haire-Sargeant:
This was an end-of-term reading/showing of original graphic novels/comics written as a final project for two sections of The Graphic Novel– about 50 graphic novels in all. Books for reading covered multiple tables and those who wanted to read aloud from their works did so. Thanks to these readers: Chris MacDonald, Brianna Bussierre, David Oneacre, Amanda Pedersen, Keagan Marcella, Isabelle Bedarf,Samuel Strojny, Anthony Iovino, Keith Blagden, Jenna Ferland, Anthony Lambros. Justin Heywood, Otis Meehan, and Isis Hack
Robert Gerst: O Beautiful River!
From 35,000 feet it’s hard to see what’s on the ground and nobody on this airplane is looking. We are heading back to Chicago and I am remembering that Carl Sandberg poem about the train rushing to Omaha. “I met a man on a train and asked him where he was going and he said, ‘Omaha.’”
I flew from Boston to El Paso via Chicago on Sunday and the scene on the plane then was a little different but essentially it was the same.
On the first leg of the flight, from Boston to Chicago, though it was summer and dawn, everyone drew down the shades over the cabin windows and took out their handhelds and fell into them so that there seemed to be no world outside, no world around us. There was nothing but the rows of seats facing in one direction and slumped heads and the glow of tiny screens, a constellation of little screens that glowed but bore no starlight.
In the airport in Chicago, men in shorts and women in halters streamed down the corridor in a ceaseless stream heading God knows where while the voices on the TV monitors inveighed and indicted and then we filed again onto the airplane.
On the second leg of the flight, morning now, from Chicago to El Paso, the shades on the windows were already drawn and no one thought to open one. The handhelds emerged. We were a congregation of dreamers looking nowhere but inward. We landed in El Paso.
So I flew across a continent on a sugar day of summer nullifying America. Where birds are hatching and people live and love, I saw nothing.
But when you stand with your legs on the ground and behold what’s before you, the world shimmers with beauty. This photo shows me (that’s my shoulder intruding into the lower right of the image) standing at the bank of the Rio Grande River near Las Cruces, New Mexico. In reality, a glorious mountain rises where this photo shows merely a pale white sky. It’s hardly a photo. It’s all I could capture while I held my laptop in my hands and snapped a shot as the glare from the sun made the screen invisible to me. It’s an intimation of what is.
O beautiful river!
Poetry Reading: Lauren Halderman and Kiki Petrosino
You can view the entire Book Riot December 17, 2017 new releases video here.
Lisa Lee: In Dark Skin
Writes Lisa Lee (2018):
My installation is called In Dark Skin. It addresses the complexities of raising a black male, through the eyes of a mother. It answers the mystery and highlights historical explanations as to why mothers of black boys tend to be protective of their sons. This work includes a sculpture of a mother holding up a shield in one hand and her significantly larger son in the other.
The media includes video projection, as well as sound (original song and word). Each element represents a thing that endangers the black male [Systems designed to destroy black boys, teachers lacking cultural proficiency, police brutality, etc.] This work functions as a stand-alone art piece, as well as a tool for cultural proficiency.
Thought for the Day from Philip K. Dick
Jen Bervin and her Silk Poems: The Hellerstein Lecture
Professor Cheryl Clark Introduces Poet Jen Bervin:
I first encountered Jen Bervin’s work in the book Nets, published in 2004, an erasure of Shakespeare’s sonnets with the original poems faintly visible in gray and her selected phrases, caught there, appearing in black. In this weave of Shakespeare’s words, her selections, as if verbal embroidery, render new poems and readings, new utterances permeating with silence. In Nets, “Sonnet 20: “A woman’s face with Nature’s own hand painted” becomes “master-mistress of my / shifting/ by/ adding nothing / prick’d thee out for pleasure.” In the latter, the poet reminds us of her taking pleasure in selecting these words. Risky and invigorating, the book reorients the mind: we may see Shakespeare’s sonnets as the substrate and her poem as an organism that obtains its nourishment from it.
At the end of Nets, Jen Bervin says, “When we write poems, the history of poetry is with us, pre-inscribed in the white of the page; when we read or write poems, we do it with or against this palimpsest.” It is no surprise then to find that she has also turned to Emily Dickinson, a poet of such precise and staggering language. Bervin, working with Dickinson scholar Marta Werner, in the book The Gorgeous Nothings, focuses on Dickinson’s poems written on envelopes, appearing as full-color facsimiles. They also dutifully transcribed each handwritten mark, and rendered thumbnail sketches of the multiple shapes that each envelope took because of the many ways Dickinson would take it apart. Bervin’s visual artistry makes her particularly attentive to all those shapes and textures in the manuscripts—the literary thus including its materiality.
Silk Poems appears not only in a petite, silky-paged book, but also in a biosensor of liquid silk implantable in the human body. Bervin is interested in the translated, transported, and transformed. In the book, a silk worm speaks to the one who is implanted with this biosensor that is monitoring essential life functions.
To read Silk Poems is to encounter the amplitude of the small and the brief; this insect that lives only six to eight weeks has a whole lot to say: of its body and its act of making, and of its habitat, and of the 5,000 year-old history of sericulture or silk breeding—and not to mention does so in a voice with so much personality and drama, erudite one moment, bawdy the next, sometimes with a swagger any mating ritual may enlist. Think even of the silkworm as rapper when it says, “IEMERGE / INMYFULLGLORY / SILKWORM / OFTHEYEAR.” You will soon get to see the look of these letters on the page, DNA strand-like, a form slowing us down, setting down grooves in the mind. It is an elastic poem with the coalescing forces of the factual and the imaginative—and the accuracy that is demanded for both ways of knowing.
The poems are slender and brief on the page. The poet Marvin Bell says, and I quote, the “short poem need not be small”—and I add that it is a poem so compact that it must expand in the solvent of the mind or, in the case of this poem, in the landscape of the body. In the short poem, silence is charged, the “drama of the poem” the Objectivist poet George Oppen says. Maybe this silence is needed because the “poem listens to itself as it goes,” one more saying from Marvin Bell.
Literature and art set flares to guide us in knowing what it is like to be alive in this moment, and what it is to imagine a future and to have a memory. Thank you, Jen Bervin (and your erudite and playful silkworm) for being so alive to us, for asking such expansive questions, and for all your inquiries that can give us new paths for wonder.