Tonight just opened its
door. Your stranger steps in with a head of worries: saying, I have no feeling
in my hands, my face. The last brother,
the moon’s ditch. We sketched the map out together with red tea. I held my
hand open for him to practice the lines on.
Sorry I know you less
than the ice does.
Mr. Matta-Clark, dawn
sniffs through an oval, mooring the joists. Which are the tools for chronicling
what you sawed through? Drywall in an elbow crease, scraped free with sink
water.
A hole smeared into the
boathouse floor. I startle the gull-laden ocean into beams.
I’m
curious about the construction of Tuscon, Arizona poet and filmmaker Joshua Marie Wilkinson’s No Volta pentalogy, the
third of which is newly out: The Courier’s Archive & hymnal (Portland OR/San Francisco CA: Sidebrow Books, 2014). Each
of the three books in the project so far—the first two being Selenography (Sidebrow Books, 2010) and Swamp Isthmus (Boston MA/New York
NY/Chicago IL: Black Ocean, 2013)—are constructed out of an accumulation of
sections, each in turn constructed out of a sequence of untitled fragments. One
begins to wonder: is the structure of the book unit deliberate, or perhaps more
of an arbitrary one? It’s as though his projected pentalogy might simply a
matter of breaking down a far larger project into publishable units than
specifically worked out of five individual works: might the entire project of
accumulated sections eventually appear, even a decade or two down the road, as
a single publication, perhaps some five hundred pages in size? It’s an
interesting question, certainly. The
Courier’s Archive & hymnal is made up of four poem-sections: “Day for
Night for Night,” “In the Trade of Alive Letters Mis-sent,” “The Dogs” and “fortnight’s
Insignia.” What has always attracted me to Wilkinson’s poetry is in the
disparate narratives that are suggested through a hodgepodge of phrases,
sentences and sections that somehow mesh together into something that bonds
into a much larger, layered structure.
She repeats egress & ingress over the lobby
scuffle.
The bellhop’s wrist was
bandaged with napkins.
The elevator goes up
for a long time before returning with nobody.
A ridge of pollen drawn
clean into the vent. Trail of gumdrops shows our courier where went a friend.
The bats follow you to
the tavern & wait outside on your bicycle until the tenth inning.
Rain rocks the dead.
Curtain, I say: please
come down now.
In
his “Or: A Hollow Little Nimbus of Grime: How I Made Certain of My Poems,”
composed for the “Why Write?” series for Green
Mountains Review (posted June 22, 2013), Wilkinson speaks of his recent
compositional and thought processes, writing that “I don’t see writing as
expressing something that’s already inside me. Instead, maybe it’s to find
words for what’s unworkable and thereby feel out the textures of that gap.” In order,
he sketches out a bit of the structure of the individual No Volta books:
In my book Selenography, I tried to see how far I
could strip a lyric poem back to minimal elements, but still retain character
and setting and get glimpses of story churning hard. Tim Rutili’s beautiful
polaroids helped me to locate the world of the poem, but also gave me a set of
metonyms away from which I could push and they helped me to build up the
tension of resistance, of counterpoint, of dissonance.
I cut it all up into
strips, laid it out over my big table, and rearranged the scraps with Tim’s
pictures. It probably didn’t look much like writing; it might’ve looked more
like collaging or watching or arranging or just waiting. With coffee and music
on, mumbling and pacing around it, learning the texture of its speech, getting
to know its ghosts.
With Swamp Isthmus [see my review of such here], I worked to tease some
lyric utterances back through whatever I’d polished out of Selenography [see my review of such here]. And looking back at it (how would I have known then,
really?), I was working to expand those landscapes through apostrophe, circuit
of address, leaps, and questions.
I love a kind of broken,
alive syntax. I love grammar haunted with multiple levels of speech, whose
context leaves us uncertain but whose force seems immediate. I love it when the
dead speak, and I love talking right back to them, with them. Maybe a poem is a
conjuring. And if it’s any good, it frightens us through recognition or just
awe. I like it when a poem has the residue of other lives, other failings,
other mysteries and plumbed encounters from without.
The prose sentence—and
the prose fragment as well—were the units of composition in The Courier’s Archive & Hymnal. I
wanted to see if I could write in the shadow of Basho’s Narrow Road to the Deep Interior (as many before me have done), but
to deploy this skeining, gothic, overly descriptive syntax. I missed
punctuation (Swamp Isthmus left it
behind), so I brought that back, too.
I think I was hoping to
overhear these long kinds of uttered sentences and questions, descriptions and
tales. There are endless setting details throughout Courier’s that just
confound me, but I get drawn in to the overblown half-world it unfolds, while
the messenger girl threads the landscapes, making her deliveries. So, that book
begins with a morphing of Diogenes’s “I have come to debase the coinage” and
sort of takes it from there into the weird woods, through Jean Epstein’s Le Tempestaire, and back out of the
pre-apocalyptic Chicago, Ankara, and Trabzon of my dream life.
Given
his pre-pentalogy works—Suspension of a Secret in Abandoned Rooms (Portland, OR: Pinball Publishing, 2005), Lug Your Careless Body out of the Careful Dusk (Iowa City IO: University of Iowa Press, 2006) and The Book of Whispering in the Projection Booth (North Adams,
MA: Tupelo Press, 2009), as well as the collaborative Figures for a Darkroom Voice (Saxtons
River, VT: Tarpaulin Sky Press, 2007) with Noah Eli Gordon and artwork by Noah Saterstrom—it would appear that this larger project works at a conscious
exploration of dismantling lyric meaning and narrative into a kind of amorphous,
non-linear collage. Throughout his work, Wilkinson has been immersed in the
possibilities of the extended lyric poem, the fragment and a deeply evocative
and descriptive collage, and the No Volta
project, on the whole, seems to be his attempts to take all of these ideas
further, breaking down the possibilities of what the fragment can achieve, even
within a structure that can’t help but be held in a linear narrative.
But in the moments of
composition, it feels more like a physical need: to talk through the written
words, to speak them aloud, to hear it quaver awkwardly in the voice, to
scribble them out with a ballpoint pen. To inscribe and cross out; to converse
and wonder; to find a name for something resistant to language; to connect and
slash; to make up and lie and alter; and to sing an awkward song with a pen in
your hand, muttering it out, pretending you know who you are while you’re
saying what you’re finding words for, while what’s eluding you is also resurfacing
new.
He
then goes on to write of the two final books in the project:
The break for me was
with a book called Meadow Slasher.
I’d begun to write through what I would have otherwise arrived at later, from a
more comfortable or safer distance. I needed another compositional practice to
steady me, even to locate me, because I was coming apart after a really hard
break up. I wrote the bulk of that book in a couple of days, and then worked
and reworked it between Chicago, Seattle, and San Francisco. I charted a
spectrum of feeling previously unavailable to me in my writing life, namely:
shame, dread, rage, perplexity, humiliation, and loss—but also vindictiveness
and taunting invective juxtaposing playfulness and exuberance, right alongside
curiosity and unknowing—and so on.
Not that I knew it
then. It just came out in the voices of stark interrogatives. Andrew Marvell’s
extraordinary Mower Poems helped guide me (lines from each of them appear
throughout), and I obsessed over the violence in Leadbelly’s own life versus
the beauty and playful gravity of his songs. (Catullus helped also.) Meadow Slasher marked a chasm between
what I’d written before it.
So, with Shimoda’s Tavern, the final book in the
pentalogy, the question was, how do you come home when all your compositional
practices have been obliterated? When he arrived in Tucson, shortly after I
did, I kept asking my friend, the poet Brandon Shimoda, how should it end? And he’d say this way or that way or out to the
ocean or into the belly of the mountain, and so on; so, No Volta just ends in his tavern instead. Which seemed like a fine
enough place to close out a long poem.
I’m more and more
skeptical of what’s gettable and knowable and broadly accessible. And I’m
increasingly moved by what eludes and enchants and frustrates and divulges
itself differently, in unseen methods and flashes. A poem’s singularity and its
otherness remain intact. Like any piece of art, a poem that moves us retains
its inassimilability.
To
construct these five titles as a single project (as opposed to simply allowing
them to exist on their own as part of a trajectory of individual titles)
suggests a break from what he has previously produced in his other works, and provide
some incredible moments and connections. Even in his own words, the No Volta project is very much about him
tearing apart, disassembling and reassembling how he constructs the poetic
line, and not only honing his own craft, but altering it irrevocably. This
certainly allows him a variety of freedoms, but leads to the question of his
post-No Volta works: just what will
he do once this project is finally complete?
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