Thus far, twenty-first-century poetics has been
preoccupied with two ongoing conversations: the perceived divide between lyric
and conceptual writing, and the underrepresentation of women and other
nondominant subjects. While these two topics may seem epistemologically and
ethically separate, they are in fact irrevocably intertwined. Questions of form
are, at their root, questions of visibility and recognizability. Will the
reader know a poem when she sees it? And will that seeing alter her perception
of the world? And how is the form of the poem altered, productively or un-, by
the identity politics of its author? (Erin Wunker, “Of Genre, Gender, and
Genealogy: The Poetry of Sina Queyras”)
Barking & Biting: The Poetry of Sina Queyras, selected with an introduction by Erin Wunker (Waterloo ON: Wilfrid
Laurier University Press, 2016) is the latest ‘critical selected’ in the
Laurier Poetry Series, a series now over a decade old and more than two dozen
titles deep. Barking & Biting: The
Poetry of Sina Queyras includes selections from Queyras’ five published
poetry collections—Slip (Toronto ON:
ECW Press, 2001), Teethmarks (Gibson
BC: Nightwood, Editions, 2004), Lemon Hound (Toronto ON: Coach House Books, 2006), Expressway (Coach House Books, 2009) and M x T (Coach House Books, 2014) [see my review of such here]—leaning far heavier on the more
recent collections and less on the earlier books.
The future at a hundred miles an hour, mouths
stretched like windsocks. I hate your seamless layers, you know that, but you
scratch by, and I am thinking of all the Trojan horses this bay has seen,
eleven of them now, bobbing in the harbour, containing who knows what army of
product.
Unbelievable views, never did take them for
granted. There is a spot just outside the pillar and glass where, when you
stand in the pea gravel and whisper to me, standing where I am standing by the
totem at the edge of the continent, we can hear all the dead ones singing. (“‘Water,
Water Everywhere’”)
The
poems that make up Barking & Biting:
The Poetry of Sina Queyras show outspoken Montreal-based poet and critic
Queyras—author, as well, of a collection of critical prose, Unleashed (Toronto ON: BookThug, 2010)
and the novel Autobiography of Childhood
(Coach House, 2011)—to be deeply engaged with a poetics in constant flux, and one
that works to engage with identity politics, as well as the divide (both real
and imaginary) that exists between lyric and conceptual writing. Her writing
has long been known for both a pervasive restlessness and an engaged ferocity, and
one that has little patience for half-measures. Queyras engages Sappho, Virginia
Woolf and Gertrude Stein in the same breath as she might also speak of Mary
Oliver, Lisa Robertson and Vanessa Place, and the breadth of her view somehow
manages only to focus her attention. As critic and editor Wunker writes in her
introduction: “Queyras’s poetics pay dogged attention to questions of both
representation and genre. In each of the collections of poetry she inhabits
tenets of the traditional lyric, while also leveraging the genre open and
letting conceptual in.”
One
of the benefits of such a collection, even by those already familiar with
Queyras’ work, is in the reminder of just how powerful her writing is, pushing
to constantly challenge boundaries, margins and safeties. If you read nothing
else, be aware that the longer poem-essay “‘Water, Water Everywhere’” is perhaps
the finest example of everything Queyras is doing and has done, all set in the
space of a few short pages, writing:
I read Mary Oliver’s poem about angels dancing
on the tip of a pin and I kept thinking, She
is writing about a penis, Mary Oliver is really a gay man and everything is
about AIDS, which made me want to carry Mary Oliver in my pocket.
I
could think of no finer way to close such a collection than Queyras’ “Lyric Conceptualism,
A Manifesto in Progress” (interestingly enough, Queyras is not the first poet
in the series to close their collection with a piece more in the shape of a
poem than straight prose), reinforcing the notion that hers is a poetics that continually
adapts and re-thinks, refusing the fixed point, and willing to constantly be
learning. The idea is reminiscent of Jay MillAr, who, after the appearance of his
anthology Pissing Ice: an anthology of
new Canadian poets (Toronto ON BookThug, 2004), an anthology constructed in
part as a more experimental/avant-garde response to some of the more
formally-conservative anthologies of Canadian poetry that were appearing around
that time, resisted composing a fixed introduction or “poetics.” One can’t set
down, easily, if at all, a moving target. As Queyras writes in her end-piece:
Lyric Conceptualism is a poetics of the sentence,
but it does not turn its back on the relationship between words, nor the power
of prosody, nor the possibility of lyric propulsion. On the other hand, nor
does Lyric Conceptualism shy away from the knotted and the complex.
Lyric Conceptualism imagines herself a boat,
fluid, without handles, able to slip through definitions, anchor at will.
Lyric Conceptualism is interested in achieving
the sculptural.
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