OBVI
When you’re sick with fear you’re never sick
with, or,
You’re sick with fear you’re never sick, or,
Sick with fear you’re never, or,
With fear you’re, or,
Fear is my motherfuckin best ‘friend,’ jks
(“Weapon”)
Toronto writer Margaret Christakos is easily one of our most daring, consistently inventive
and deeply engaged contemporary Canadian poets, and has been for years,
bafflingly overlooked for major awards for any of her poetry collections, eight
of which have appeared in print over the past twenty-five years. Obviously,
awards or lack-thereof have nothing to do with quality, but with her ninth
trade poetry collection, Multitudes
(Toronto ON: Coach House Books, 2013), one hopes that her work can start
receiving the recognition it so badly deserves. Christakos’ Multitudes revels in polyvocal syntactic
play, utilizing repetition, reorder and the abbreviated language of twitter to
engage a poetry of social spaces, ranging from responses to Jack Layton and
Lena Dunham to an engagement with the social and linguistic disconnect of
social media itself. Christakos’ poetry has long explored fractures and
connections, exploring the depths and multiplicities of disconnect, and Multitudes expands on her previous
collections, striking a deep, dark chord at the very heart of how humans
interact, and, at the same time, manage to keep as far apart from each other as
possible. As she writes in the poem “FOUR YEARS IS IT”:
in the morning It is practically the last
consumption of
each day It behaves like a social life but
gradually
erases a social life as
much as it creates on
‘I’ in your third person
feels you are speaking to a
‘them’ but day by day some of us become more
untranslatable about picking up the phone as if
the mirror-glass
Christakos
has played at reworking the language of her own poems within sections in
previous works, pilfering and reordering pieces to twist in and turn around on
each other, and Multitudes appears to
take the structure in a slightly different direction, even as the subtitle(s)
to the collection twists the title itself:
Deilmsttuu
Sedutitlum
Constructed
in nine sections, the first section, the poem “Threshold,” presents her opening
salvo, giving a taste of what’s to come. As the poem opens:
push words into body.
do those words form a column or spiral?
do those words coalesce as body
into the body they conjure?
push words into mouth.
do those words form a tongue or jetty?
is a probe formed that touches
the tongue it entangles?
push words onto mound of nipple,
onto mounded nipple jewels.
do words circulate as honey, as
tentacles that leaven and stiffen?
There
is an immediacy and an urgency to the entire collection, boiling occasionally
from a frustration that turns to anger, as she writes: “I realized then I was
writing an Atwood poem from 1978. Nobody says how brilliant and mean she was,
how shitkicking. She’d have known what to say, exactly what to do with that
arm.” (“DIRGE URGE”).
DOCK
Wavering on a stoop. The day doesn’t start yet.
Days on end come to a stop. The water is all in the lake. Level rises, falls,
but the lake is itself. Everything alive in the lake belongs. Anything
incompatible immediately ceases to breathe. There’s a limit.
You don’t necessarily do what is strategic when
moths fly into your lips. What if the mouth had been ajar. What if I’d
swallowed that fly. Perhaps I’ll dive under the surface.
I was an old lady in the first dream. Then I
woke to a hotel room with tartar sauce on my little finger. We’d had supper and
fucked. I didn’t feel so old then.
Kids are obsessed with opening and shutting any
door they find, rushing their shoulders through every portal. What happens that
it locks? How will I escape? They spend a decade deciding which was to run then
the walls close in. they’re smart. Days don’t end when they sleep.
Lake streams around the rockpoint the way you
penetrated me in gladness. Crappy bedspread didn’t matter. We weren’t looking
at the patterns. Wind reverses direction and heads out to the hillside way over
there, by the hospital. That place is full of windows stuck shut. Bad air. You
think twice about going in there for the X-ray. Maybe you’ll never come out.
The
final section of the collection, “Play,” is “composed in real time” of status
updates posted to Facebook, written quick in short bursts, and accumulate into
an extended poem of twists and quirks akin to the short stories posted on
Twitter by Arjun Basu or Adam Thomlison. One might presume that her chapbook
that appeared last year, from Tumultétudes: The Chips & Ties Study (Toronto ON: BookThug, 2012) [see my review of such here], a
selection from “Tumultétudes,” a longer work-in-progress, might be an extension
of the new collection, composing a multitudinous study of the tumult and
complexity of home, family and family health issues, with the musicality and
compositional brevity and difficulty of the French étude. When one begins to
work within a multitude, one can encompass everything and all, and the
polyvocality of this new work extends out in all directions, held together as
tight and taut as any highwire. Christakos’ work might be seen by some to be
difficult, or about difficulty, but with such playful ease that it becomes
impossible to not be swept up in her glorious music.
No comments:
Post a Comment