Showing posts with label April Poetry Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label April Poetry Month. Show all posts

Monday, April 03, 2017

JKD participats in Angel House Press's April National Poetry Month Canada 2017: A Celebration of Women

Amanda Earl, editor and publisher of Angel House Press, Canada launched the 2017 site today, Aprl 1 2017. Every day for 30 days in April, a new poem, video-poem, collage, book art, comic, or visual poem will be published. The work will remain on the site until February 28, 2018.
I hope you will keep your eye on the site, and check out my own work which will appear there this month. I am very pleased to have been selected for this project, as I know that Amanda's sites for National Poetry Month attract an increasing number of submissions every year.

General press announcement for the project, as written by Amanda Earl: 

"AngelHousePress presents NationalPoetryMonth.ca 2017: A Celebration of Women

From April 1 to April 30, 2017, NationalPoetryMonth.ca will feature poems, video poems, visual poems, book art and collages from contributors from Canada, USA, France, Ireland and Japan. These poems by women-identifying poets celebrate and acknowledge women's creativity, courage, friendship, love, triumph over adversity, persistence, resilience and strength.

Visit NationalPoetryMonth.ca daily in April for a new poem."

Thank you to both Amanda Earl and to Angel House Press for continuing to bring me fabulous work to read and see from Canada, and of course for including me in this project, and as one of your authors.

In June 2017 my  chapbook "Afterlife" will appear from Angel House Press, Canada's chapbook series, as well.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

April poems: questioning the genuine act of making poems in the space of performance engendered by blogs and the internet age

I like that Carrie Etter--who invited me to participate in the writing of a poem a day as part of this month's April Poetry Month project--on occasion sends out little emails saying "Hey, want to check in and leave a comment on my blog about how this is going for you?" (click HERE--CARRIE ETTER for her blog) It is not that I feel that excited by what I have to say, but that when I head over to her blog to leave my 2 cents in her comments space I find I enjoy reading about everyone else's successes or failures--that like me a few people have had to double up one day because another was missed, etc. 

But I keep thinking about the nature of writing poems and blogging them or about them.The nature of private and shared space.

I have always felt that the rewords blog I co-founded and love posting on is this kind of a blog-space where the PLAY of poetry is at work, where play is prioritized, where Picasso's adage “Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up” is honored and the child is out in the blogosphere messing with language, unconcerned with issues of judgement--Rewords is a space where if what I have put down is completely stupid, flat, lame, in process, drafty, like a room with holes in it, that is ok. Like my poem of the day today, "Eurydice's Vision" which I posted on rewords despite my misgivings about it.

But when I think of putting poems out on blogs elsewhere, even here on my perso blog, I feel like I should manage something better--and then the genuine act of making gets caught up with what feels like to me an ingenuine act of performance. I personally do not want to dance for the crowd. Instead, in the writing, I feel like I want to peel open--myself, my ears, my vision, my body, my soul--if such a thing does exist. 

There are different spaces of making for me, of creating--I believe in being a child and thus getting my hands dirty and tossing stuff round the room and collaging and enjoying the feeling of things emerging, converging. And yet I want also to touch something that is "[...] not a paraphrase or a metaphor for reality but a reality itself." For, in addition to that thought, as I am at the moment in the process also of re-reading Joseph Brodsky's essays on poetry, he reminds me that "The Poem has the quality of an uneasy dream, in which you gain something extremely valuable, only to lose it the very next moment." (On Grief & Reason, essays, Joseph Brodsky, FSG, NY, 1995, p386)

What is interesting is that in this essay, Brodsky argues that that getting at "a reality itself" comes from a poem "being a conscious act". There, at that point, is where our paths diverge. 

For there is something of the conscious, of the lucid dream in really great moments of writing, in moments when you feel the language and you have merged and that what is emerging from you is genuine on every level--formal, narrative, expressive, etc. But it is a lucid dream which at the same time is perhaps changing course because a second driver steps in, takes over, surprises you, leaps out of the closet or rounds the corner--the line swerves, the old-fashioned meters and rhymes of many of the great lyric poets would diverge from their regularity at some crucial moment and that would make ALL of the difference. 

For me, then, the conscious, that lucidity is lost magnificently buried in the subconscious. The dream-state takes over from the lucid me at moments, and the writing self lets it. 

In a space of blogs, the internet, of sending the written writing straight out onto the pavement to get run down or perhaps lauded somehow hollows out that process. I guess what I am saying is that the poem remains for me a private act. The best poems take time--though the draft may be able to flop down onto the page one day, the tinkering that accompanies that first gesture often takes the poem to its reality. The child and the adult, the unconscious and the conscious, the lucid and the uneasy-out-of-control dream are both necessary for the poem to be. 

I guess what I am saying is that though I love knowing we are many of us tossing words onto pages this month, giving parts of every day writing poems, that there will of course be a great difference between these drafts or notes for poems and final "Poems" with a capital P, if such things do exist.

Saturday, April 07, 2012

April showers.... poems, and toils

There is something about everyday blogging and everyday poem-writing that is not entirely compatible. One feels turned outward, like a chat to the chair in the corner with its back turned to you so that you cannot tell whether the friend you hope you are talking to is really there or not. The other--the poem--is turned in on itself instead. Even if it is a zany, splay it out all over the page in jibberjabberish going about your pop-culture filled day letting it rip kind of poem, it is still YOUR very own private inner wildchild day, and not one you are there to necessarily communicate to that chair. 

Anyway, so what I am saying is part of this week I have been poeming, not blogging. But I like that some people successfully blog and poem, poem and blog. 

Still happy to think everyday that so many other people are out there telling the universe that making the poem happen is worth it. --Ah, April... and

Right now? It is 6:06 am and there is a nightengale giving the end of the night its all before the chill of dawn breaks into day and he is chased off elsewhere. 

And I am off to sleep, too (like the woman in Leighton's painting, above left), having scribbled whatnots all night and then also finished the programme changes for yet another version of the Lex-ICON programme. It is inching its way towards being, being itself, being finished. Check it out HERE and check out the supercool video by P Castellin (click on his still image on the blog to be sent to the video in motion): http://lex-icon21.blogspot.fr/2012/04/lex-icon-blog-project-post-19-philippe.html

Monday, April 02, 2012

April and 29 poems or days or poems to go...before May

I do not plan on posting all my mad scribblings of the month  as I do my poem a day project in the joyous space of knowing so so many others are doing likewise, but I will try and chat about the things I am thinking and reading as this process is taking place--and will post some of my poems of the day.

A poem of today I did post is up on rewords--it is a poem in which I am rewording the pared-down tone and language of Amanda Deutch's little poem from last December and combining that with little details that emenate from me. If you are interested, it is at: http://rewords.blogspot.fr/2012/04/who-by-jkd.html

But far far far more exciting as a poem for today--though not I do not think just written today if I am clear on that--is Rob Mclennan's poem "from How the alphabet was made," on Canadian Angel House press' national poetry month site which is posting poems everyday by different poets. Here is Rob's intricate wording about lettering and word making:  
http://www.nationalpoetrymonth.ca/index.php?id=2 I particularly admired how this somewhat hard-edged poem in the middle does not necessarily become smooth but is tender at the end, where Rob writes:

Betrayed the lovely camera.



Such speculation, ends.           You told me:   this is what



might happen.


For anyone who does know or follow Rob Mclennan's blog, it is worth checking out at: http://robmclennan.blogspot.fr/ 

Other poems and sites to check into people writing today and everyday this month include K Lorraine Graham's--gotta admire the eloquence but also the sharp ache of the long lines in her post from today on: http://spooksbyme.org/

And speaking on blogs that are generally worth checking out, one that may give material or a space for rethinking the blog format is Bhanu Kapil's blog at : http://jackkerouacispunjabi.blogspot.fr/ click on anything and it is like stepping into a little angular space in Bhanu's mindworld. Fantastic!

To make poems is to read, to read into the self of the self and the other. That is my last little pre-drifiting off into sleep thought on this month of poetry making. Night....




Saturday, March 31, 2012

April 30 poems in 30 days...

This is my April 1st poem-a-day for 30 days poetry month contribution.

Glint
After George Vance's poem  De Keersmaeker at Le Manège de Reims 

corps-polygraphy
girlurgling quilted morningsong
spun stunned Persephone
towered dreamwaking from under
the grave dead gesture
of emergence

this

outof infrom
a test’s tasked
quickfreeze tableau
focused

farscape or shouder-point
her-shed
nightyearnings’ link
between known (non) points
a
vector in plainsong
to b
sharing spots, places taken
in turnstyles
being (to be)
a specific sonogram

Thank you CARRIE ETTER for encouraging me to decide to do this. Click HERE to see a full list of authors Carrie has summoned for this year!

Yesterday, just as I stepped off the train at Gare de l'est I was met by 2 lovely poets, Sarah Lariviere and Jane Cope, whose contagious energy as we talked about the exciting writing of Ariana Reines and Bhanu Kapil, Susan Howe, Alice Notley and so many others, made me really jazzed up about April 1st--there are so many people today who may be writers anyway, but have decided all together to put paper to pen and reach to unveil the dark lines of script, to strike at the empty of that page, of its awaiting.

Some poems from this April aprilism of poeming I may stick on rewords, others may never emerge from my little notebook, but even those may open doors, unveil paths, contribute a word or a line or an image to a place or written space I need to go. This is why I am participating in this lovely movement to write a poem a day--because nothing matters more

For anyone thinking "Me, too" but who then stops themself short with "oh my, how impossible it is to put a word on a page then follow it with another"--to you I say--how did I begin? Not with this reworded poem, in fact--first I scribbled some other things, lists of my sadnesses, lines dividing one page from another, mini sketches of here and what I hear in my friend's home as I lie awake and play at making writing here on the cusp of sleep where dream is the perfect poem, vibrant, uninhibited, dangerous, alive... so that is my suggestion--list, sketch, journal, note, look around, do that "smelling of the roses" bit or snow (if in Berlin) and see what happens. As for me, I guess I shall go drift off now to commune with sleep!

And thanks most of all to you, George Vance, who wrote a poem so compelling it needed a lettering back to.