[Arc Poetry Magazine, with Managing Editor Monty Reid]
See part one here. Is there more? Possibly. Most likely.
Ottawa ON: It has been
interesting to see Amanda Earl expanding her publishing over the past few
years, and one of the most recent publications from her AngelHousePress is jettison/collapse, a poetry chapbook by
Chicago poet, translator and new media artist Francesco Levato. The chapbook
opens with this brief author’s note:
jettison/collapse is a
mash-up of poetry, linguistics, and critical/cultural theory. Two streams of
textual production form the mash-up: a series of linked poetic sequences
composed through chance operations applied to appropriated source material, and
a series of linked critical sidenotes; each interwoven and in dialogue with the
other. The source texts range from Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself, and the
collected works of Emily Dickinson, to discourses on aesthetics by Benedetto
Croce and linguistics by Ferdinand De Saussure, to critical essays from the
conflict between affectual and conceptual poetries by Calvin Bedient, Rachel
Galvin, and Drew Gardner.
Given
this is the first of Levato’s work I’ve seen, the introduction is interesting,
and the collection is constructed as a sequence of short poems that blend the
lyric and collaged fragment. The effect is lively, precise and even slightly
disorienting, as the mind sets the pieces together of his deliberately-worded
jumble of words, phrases and ideas, set just as much as a “translation” of a
variety of sources into a single text.
[Sidenote]
Impossibility of translations.
Reduction Effect, the
frequency of token use, the speed of subsequent erosion, that forms used more,
erode more, and do so more quickly, that those used less, resist, hold out for
longer. Whitman sang of himself, four hundred ninety six times as “I,” one
hundred eighty eight as “me,” two hundred seven as “mine.” At line eight he is
semantically fixed, retains distinction, “I, now thirty-seven years old in
perfect health begin, / Hoping to cease not till death.” At one hundred thirty
three he passes “death with the dying and birth with the new-wash’d babe,” is
no longer contained between his “hat and boots,” his semantic content vaguer,
he is freed from discourse contexts. From eight thirty eight he is the “hounded
slave,” wincing “at the bite of the dogs,” the “mash’d fireman with breast-bone
broken,” his word boundaries erased, he is inseparable from his absolute
frequency.
Cobourg ON: Stuart Ross’ Proper Tales Press celebrates thirty-six years in 2015 [see my recent profile on the press over at Open Book: Ontario here], something that really
needs to be acknowledged more than it has. At least, in the back of his 2015
Proper Tales publications, Ross has been including an alphabetical list of
authors and their Proper Tales publications, and it is an impressive list,
including Gil Adamson, Alice Burdick, Nelson Ball, Sarah Burgoyne, Kevin
Connolly, jwcurry, Michael Dennis, Richard Huttel, Bill Knott, Lance La Rocque,
Mark Laba, Lillian Necakov and plenty of others, including a mound of Ross’ own
publications over the years. Of his 2015 publications, some of what I’ve picked
up recently include Stuart Ross’ own Grey
Snotes (sound it out; you’ll get it). Grey
Snotes is a sequence of short, untitled meditations, some sixteen in all,
that, as Ross writes, “was composed between August 1 and September 1, 2015, in
Laval, Montréal, Port Hope, and Cobourg. Except for one hideous section that was
composed around 1969 in Toronto.” I find it curious that Ross would incorporate
a previously-abandoned (seemingly) poem from his youth, and one he describes as
“hideous”; the suggestion that such should have been abandoned could be
deflection, trickery or a serious play of including lesser (at least, in the
author’s mind) sections from his own juvenilia into his current work.
&
all the kids
laughed at me
because I wore my
shorts upside down
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