Archive for January, 2010
* I Like to Collapse
Posted on January 25th, 2010 by robert. Filed under Poems, Winter.
* Lovers’ Discourse
Posted on January 18th, 2010 by robert. Filed under Etc..
On Friday Thom Donovan posted a lovely, compelling rejoinder to some of the recent calls that seem to be in the air (this one, for instance) for a “return” to negative criticism in the poetry world. He writes:
Criticism, not unlike poetry and art, for me should be an art of the potential that intermixes desire with conscience. Criticism recalls Baruch Spinoza’s basic proposition: “we have not yet determined what a body can do.” By engaging poetry, poetry criticism engages the limits of what the poem as an expression of culture or embodiment can do.
Alongside con/crescent press and Elective Affinities, Thom happily mentions Wild Orchids as a recent bearer of an affirmative criticism, and closes his post by citing a long and beautiful passage from A Thousand Plateaus.
Although Sean & I dispensed with the formality of writing a proper editors’ introduction to the inaugural issue of WO (opting instead for a pair of disparate epigraphs — from Lorine Niedecker and F. Nietzsche — we thought were adequately evocative), Thom is right-on that I had Deleuze in mind when thinking of the journal. I have always loved Rosi Braidotti’s gloss of Deleuze’s critical ethos-style, which I’ll toss in here to resound with the great material Thom’s written:
Nomadic, rhizomatic thinking offers simultaneously a point of exit from the linguistic-semiotic vicious circles of absence and negativity, and also an empowerment of affective and unconscious forces as active, expressive, productive. At the heart of nomadology is a positive reading of the human as a positive, pleasure-prone machine capable of all sorts of empowering forces. It is just a question of establishing the most positive possible connections and resonances. . . . This intense positivity marks Deleuze’s conceptual style, his refusal to engage in negative criticism for its own sake and to act instead from positive and empowering relationships to the texts and authors he engages with. Ethics here is closely linked to high intellectual understanding and the quality of one’s intellect. This is the Nietzschean aspect of philosophical nomadology, which stresses that the ethical dimension is a combination of genius and humbleness. The latter entails a sort of impersonality, which could be mistaken for a universalizing faculty, but is really just a cognitive brand of empathy, or intense affinity. It is the capacity for compassion, which combines the power of understanding with the force to endure in sympathy with a people, all of humanity or civilization. It is an extra-personal and a trans-personal capacity, which should be driven away from any universalism and grounded instead in the radical immanence of a sense of belonging to and being accountable for a community, a people, a territory. Nietzsche put it ever so wittily: ‘a good writer possesses not only his mind, but also the mind of his friends.’ (Transpositions, Polity 2006, 178-9; Nietzsche fr. Human, All Too Human, Penguin 1994, 119)
For me, the tail end of this quote drives right to the heart of what is so vital and cool about Thom, Michael Cross, and Kyle Schlesinger’s own critical journal, ON Contemporary Practice: a sensibility for friendship itself as a potential critical model, and a desire to think, collectively, in-step with the present.
An interesting exception to my own enduring affection for positive criticism that’s always provoked me is my huge fandom for Jim Behrle’s irreverent & hysterical comics. While overwhelmingly “negative” in the sense that they offered mercilessly harsh critiques of what ended up seeming like everyone in the poetry world, I think what pulled me in to Behrle’s negative invectives was a certain kind of extreme energy and love (for poetry, for community, for laughs) that I sensed was behind the whole thing. They certainly aren’t guilty of the austere humorlessness that characterizes the worst brands of negative criticism. Also, I always admired the sort of reckless abandon with which Jim seemed to spin the comics off, completely unconcerned to maintain any semblance of polite decorum that might somehow help his own “poetry career” (ha-ha).
Ultimately I think my allergy for negative criticism has to do with negativity’s entanglement with two terrible passions I like/hope to keep a distance from, narcissism and paranoia, and I think Jim’s comics were brilliant because they pulled off negative critiques that managed not to reek of either. Here are a few from years ago I liked so much I saved:



In any case, thanks to Thom for a wonderful post!
* “What the Photograph reproduces to infinity has occurred only once … In the Photograph, the event is never transcended for the sake of something else: the Photograph always leads the corpus I need back to the body I see; it is the absolute Particular, the sovereign Contingency, matte and somehow stupid, the This” — Roland Barthes
Posted on January 5th, 2010 by robert. Filed under Pictures.
Got this in an e-mail from David Abel yesterday morning as I was packing xmas presents and loose unfinished schoolwork up for a long, snowy drive back to Buffalo:
Was looking at a wild book on my shelf at home last week (9 Further Plastics by Steven LaVoie), and that led me to some online searching. I found myself at David Highsmith’s photostream on Flickr, where he’s posted nearly 600 photographs from readings in the Bay Area over a forty-year period. I looked at photos for hours — probably nearly half of them — seeing friends of mine when they were much younger, seeing photos of strangers and then eventually scans of their memorial programs, etc. A bit maudlin, but irresistible.
Though I don’t have the history with the poets David does, I found the photos similarly mesmerizing. They’re a little stunning. I’ve copied some of my favorites below; hundreds more here.

Tom Mandel, Carla Harryman, Rae Armantrout

Steve Abbott, David Highsmith, Tom Vietch, Tim Jacobs

Cliff Fyman (a few years ago I posted a beautiful Fyman poem here)
* Peaches & Bats #5
Posted on January 3rd, 2010 by robert. Filed under Books, Poems.
I’m very happy to have a poem in the current number of Sam Lohmann’s always-awesome Peaches & Bats. Peaches & Bats is a magazine I’ve admired a long time, and has a homemade, shabby but very considered feel I love, and am happy seems to be having a bit of a revival in the poetry world: cf. Sam’s righteous contemporaries, Cannibal, Cannot Exist, and With+Stand (& my own Satellite Telephone). Enough with boring, design-dumb lit mags.
My poem (one written from lines in Hannah Weiner’s Pictures & Early Words) is in wonderful company: other contributors are Eric Baus, Allison Cobb, Michael Farrell, Emily Kendal Frey, Anne Gorrick, Alina Gregorian, Matthew Hattie Hein, Derek Henderson, Robert Kelly, Sheila E. Murphy, and James Yeary.
$5 thru e-mail to peachesandbats at gmail dot com.
* softly and tenderly
Posted on January 3rd, 2010 by robert. Filed under Songs, Winter.
“Softly and Tenderly”, by Will L. Thompson (1847-1909), arr. by Daniel Johnston
New Year’s Resolutions:
1) Answer e-mails faster
2) Eat more leafy greens
3) Maintain a balance of thoughts and feelings to attain equanimity

Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies / Reyner Banham
Horse Crazy / Gary Indiana
Rimbaud: The Double Life of a Rebel / Edmund White
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