FRED WAH – Where did the words
come from for what we were doing with the Columbia River?
RITA WONG – Maybe the River
gifted us those words. […] (“Afterwords, a Dialogue”)
Furthering
the idea of the bio-text into, as the back cover suggests, “the biospheric, the
biotextual,” is the book version of Vancouver poets Rita Wong and Fred Wah’s
collaborative art-text, beholden: a poem as long as the river (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2018). beholden: a poem as long as the river is a project that “arises out
of a larger project titled River Relations: A Beholder’s Share of the Columbia River, a collaboration of
artists seeking a creative engagement with the Columbia River. […] The poem,
represented along a 114-foot banner of the entire Columbia River, has been
exhibited as part of a number of gallery presentations displayed in the Pacific
Northwest.” As the back cover informs: “We have not lived up to our responsibilities
to the river, and we need to do better. The river does not end at its banks,
but flows through our sinks and showers, charges our cellphones, and stirs our
thoughts about treaties.”
Existing
as both poetry title and exhibition catalogue, beholden: a poem as long as the river displays the entirety of the
114-foot banner in book form: two lines of text rolling, looping and crossing a
full colour illustration of the Columbia River. Set as twin lyrics in conversation
across the bank from the other, in a way that suggests Wah as author of one,
and Wong as author of the other (although this remains conjecture): “[…] hello
David Thompson now this quiet water maps diesel along the marshes of locomotion
crossing North down the map of the River of Heaven Steamboat Mountain are you
worried about a future – […]” (pp 5-6). The book also includes a more direct
conversation between the two authors on their project, in which they discuss
the movement of how their project emerged. As they write:
FRED – I found in
approaching our project, after we had decided to do this poem as long as the
river, that I had to first shed my preconceptions, not about the river, but
about what I could bring to the river. One of the greatest experiences of
making this composition was finding out that I had to listen to the river to
hear what resonations were available. You’re right. Language was something that
bounced back from the river. I know you’ve done a lot of writing on water, and thinking
with water generally, not just the river. You came to this project with a sense
of water.
RITA – Water is infused
throughout everything, everyone. We’re two-thirds water. While we’re talking
about the river, it’s not just the river that ends at its banks. It’s the river
that powers our cellphones, it’s the river that allows for the birds and the
fish, all the people who rely on all that the river enlivens, all of it, that’s
the river too. When we’re talking about water, we’re also talking about land,
and we’re also talking about our bodies and ourselves. A lot of it is
unconscious.
The
book-length singular threads are reminiscent, slightly, of Darren Wershler’s The Tapeworm Foundry (Toronto ON:
Anansi, 2000), a poem composed as a singular, book-length line that sat as page
upon page of text blocks. In contrast, beholden
is very much a pair of singular threads—that look like individual threads
across the page—in dialogue, occasionally meeting to overlap, but moving at the
same speed in a similar direction, along that same river, working through whatever
differences, distances and divergences they might hold. Sitting as threads
handwritten and typeset, the poem rolls and eddys the length of the river,
writing out an argument for the waterway, ecological preservation, aboriginal
land rights and simply the possibility of a continued ecological existence upon
the earth. As one of their threads reads:
[…] the trees need the river and the river
needs the trees and we need both river and trees in ways that are buried in
bone and sinew, uncanny returns, shifting baseline syndrome no excuse for not
learning the cultures of this land, better late than never to not take
abundance generosity or humility for granted on this spinning earth, keep the
language and the story honest, don’t call a reservoir a late… don’t naturalize
the hubris, don’t hide the arrogance of destroying what you don’t understand. listen
for what’s underneath the narrative of convenience, the inadequacy of speed and
progress, or its deadly outcome, from the perspective of trees & herons
& wolves, who remembers the before, the during and the after as we wait for
the leap to take hold or for the machinery of greed to dig a mass grave for
those who refused to learn to respect the land, the river, and those who were
unwilling or unable to stop them. (pp 24-34)
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