Tender Buttons was created in a time of radical
awakening to feminism, and its complications in regards to race, class, sex,
gender, and being “avant-garde” each of which had complex truck with official
literary culture.
I remember Harryette Mullen’s Trimmings and how she played with the
impulse of the source text of Stein’s poem Tender
Buttons to make it completely her own.
I remember the storms of necessary debate Trimmings stirred up, pitting the
efficacy of straight-forward political poetry versus poetry which operates on
the level of language itself. Like most things, I don’t see it as two poles of “either
or,” but as an opening for multiplicity, as are all Tender Button titles in
their specific way.
What happens when women get together and take
the mode of production into their own hands to create their own terms for
living and existing? (Lee Ann Brown, “INTRODUCTION”)
The
six hundred-plus pages of TENDER OMNIBUS: The First 25 Years of Tender Buttons Press: 1989-2014 (New York NY: Tender
Buttons Press, 2016) includes Bernadette Mayer’s Sonnets (1989), Anne Waldman’s Not
a Male Pseudonym (1990), Harryette Mullen’s Trimmings (1991), Agnes Lee Dunlop Wiley’s Agnes Lee (1992), Rosmarie Waldrop’s Lawn of Excluded Middle (1993), Hannah Weiner’s silent teachers remembered sequel (1994), Jennifer
Moxley’s Imagination Verses (1996), Dodie
Bellamy’s Cunt-Ups (2001), Laynie
Browne’s Pollen Memory (2003), India
Radfar’s the desire to meet with the
beautiful (2003), Michelle Rollman’s The
Book of Practical Pussies (2009) and Katy Bohinc’s Dear Alain (2014), as well as “an Introduction by Founding Editrix
Lee Ann Brown.” As the website informs: “Tender Buttons aims to publish the
best in experimental women’s writing. […] The poetics of all Tender Buttons
books gives rise to an extraordinary range of innovative forms and modes
including conceptual projects, cut-up, the boundary between life and art,
documenting consciousness, refrigeration of poetic form, radical
intertextuality, the question of generations and generativity and how to write
against, out of, and around another’s writing.” An incredible collection that
deserves to be on multiple course-lists, TENDER
OMNIBUS: The First 25 Years of Tender Buttons Press: 1989-2014 highlights both
the work of the press and the authors themselves, all produced in part to shift
the perception of literature as male-dominated, as Katy Bohinc, “Star
Arkestress, Tender Buttons Press,” writes in her “Preface”:
Without a proper history, how can we think
about what poetry is? How can we say avant-garde isn’t a spoken-word poem that
derives from an ingenious secret-code Underground Railroad song? How can we
talk about “what’s modern” when what’s not white & male is barely in the
conversation? And how can we look our daughters in the eye and say “sorry,
there aren’t any books your color.”
Even
if you haven’t read most of the works in this anthology, the individual titles
have become well-known, even classic, texts by now-prominent American writers,
most of whom are still producing stunning works of literature. The only
Canadian comparisons I can make to this collection is the anthology series that
Michael Ondaatje began for Coach House Books (1979), that Sharon Thesen
continued via Talonbooks (1992, 2001)—The Long Poem Anthology—or even Michael Barnholden and Andrew Klobucar’s Writing Class: The Kootenay School of Writing Anthology (New Star Books, 1999), curated volumes acknowledging multiple
entire works of contemporary innovative poetry that deserves to remain in print.
The anthology highlights, also, through producing a volume of, as the website
for the press suggests, its entire back catalogue, the stunning curatorial
vision of the press, one that is fierce in its choices, even if occasional in
its appearance. Having produced only a dozen titles in twenty-five years, one
wonders if the press deliberately works to produce a new title only when
something of incredible value comes along, or if there are other factors in
play? Given the strength of the work collected here, i would suspect it is
worth keeping an eye on the two titles that the anthology lists as forthcoming,
suggesting classics even before they’re produced: Julie Ezelle Patton’s B and Truck Darling’s The Hunger Notebooks.
The concept of an inner picture is misleading. Like
those on the screen, it takes the outer picture as a model, yet their uses are
no more alike than statistics and bodies. Figures, we know, can proceed without
any regard for reality, no matter how thin the fabric. True, the missing pieces
can be glued in, but if you look for the deep you won’t frighten your vertigo
away. An ambition to fathom need not hold water. Stay on shore, put on more
sweaters, and let the roar of the breakers swallow your urge to scream. If not
the clouds themselves, their reflections withdraw with the tide. Then there is
the familiar smell of wet sand and seaweed, debris of every kind, including
hypodermics, condoms, oozing filth. My outer self comes running on pale legs to
claim my share, while my inner picture stands dazed, blinking behind
sunglasses, demanding a past that might redeem the present. (Rosmarie Waldrop)
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