
In a review of Garbage in The New York Times Book Review, Ed Hirsch wrote that Ammons “consistently demonstrated the democratic precept that ‘anything is poetry.’”
It’s been a fundamentally important example for me, but also, an unacknowledged (at least an under-acknowledged) influence on a lot of poets.
This has been on my mind a lot lately, as I’m reading through the excellent Ammons issue of Chicago Review (57:1/2). It really should be considered a book, rather than a special issue, as it’s adding a lot to the study of Ammons. Along with several good essays, it also contains many uncollected poems, as well as a never before published interview from the early 70s:
http://humanities.uchicago.edu/orgs/review/For more information.
As Joel Calahan & Michael Hansen write in the introduction:
"A. R. Ammons’ s canonization by major academic critics during the
70s and 80s has been a mixed blessing. He resisted affiliation with
movements and manifestoes, and this has meant that his poems are
typically read through transhistorical frames these early champions
provided: he is a “nature poet, ” a transcendentalist, and so on. Ammons’
s innovations and astonishing range tend to get short shrift,
as does his close (if idiosyncratic) relation to contemporary poetics
and art practice. This issue aims to contextualize his position in the
postwar American tradition and to broaden the critical terms around
his work."
Is it just me, or has the work of A.R. Ammons kind of dropped out of the conversation since his death? It wouldn’t have thought that would be the case. Take a poem like Garbage (one of my favorites, and one that gets an essay in the Chicago Review special issue). It really is (as is the much earlier Tape for the Turn of the Year, which graces the CR cover [above]) a radical conversational form, one that deflates “Poetry” in a meat-grinder of propulsive force. Well, here I am, sounding like a blurb. But anyway, take this section of Garbage, please. It’s a gift. If you’ve not read Ammons (or Ammons in long-form), then hopefully this will get you started. I suggest Garbage, but GLARE and Tape for the Turn of the Year are also excellent. There’s something found here that’s not found many places in poetry. It’s a shame we don’t talk about this stuff more.
2
garbage has to be the poem of our time because
to get our attention, getting in the way, piling
creamy white: what else deflects us from the
to trashlessness, that is too far off, and,
hole puncher or hole plugger: stick a finger
of creativity’s flood, the forthcoming, futuristic,
Florida where flatland’s ocean- and gulf-flat,
something up to make room for something to put
the garbage trucks crawl as if in obeisance,
and garbage keep alive, offerings to the gods
expectation, the deities of unpleasant
drowned up in macadam pools by spring rains, moisten
look like sputum or creamy-rich, broken-up cold
century, can it be about the worst poem of the
so a long tracing of bad stuff can swell
a small smoke wafts the sacrificial bounty
in as into a lidded kettle, the everlasting
free offering of a crippled plastic chair:
print stained with jelly: how to write this
duplexes, or long, hunting wide, coming home
should it act itself out, illustrations,
reductively into statement, bones any corpus
at all unless it finds itself: the poem,
dispositional axis from stone to wind, wind
is complete before it begins, so I needn’t
might briefly be done: the axis will be clear
or fined out into every shade and form of its
asserting that nature models values, that we
possibilities already here, this where we came
black-chuffing dozer leans the gleanings and
a common height, alighting to the meaty streaks
too, in the poet’s mind dead language is hauled
shaped into new turns and clusters, the mind
where but in the very asshole of comedown is
but in the grief of failure, loss, error do we
where but in the arrangements love crawls us
unhumiliated, do we find the sweet seed of
we, gave rise to us: we are not, though, though
tissues and holograms of energy circulate in
outside us, so that we can participate in
and sight and thought that penetrate (really
right on up past our stories, the planets, moons,
the pole where matter’s forms diffuse and
as spirit, there, oh, yes, in the abiding where
until it turns into another pear or sunfish,
been there so long, coming and going, it’s
into and out of form, palpable and impalpable,
we know the other, where everlastingness comes to
want, though, is this jet-hoveled hell back,
rewrite till one writes it right: if I’m in
the hell kind of talk is that: I can’t believe
whose father is gone and many of whose
ground, which is only heavy wind, or to ashes,
to be expected and not looked forward to: even
used to stand: pictures taken by some of them:
quad dogs with their hierarchies (another archie)
sliding away like slides from a projector: what
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder