Concord Poetry Center—Free
Speech in Peril
Correspondence with Joan Houlihan,
Director of the Concord
Poetry Center
Joan Houlihan, Senior Poetry Editor,
The Del Sol Review (webdolsol.com), columnist for The Boston Comment
and Editor-in-Chief of Perihelion is the founding director of the new
Concord Poetry Center (www.concordpoetry.org)
whose activities are and will be carried out under the mandate of the Emerson
Umbrella for the Arts. It is distressing to witness how area pillars of
the community seem to have succeeded in adulterating the teachings of both
Emerson and Thoreau. In reality, Thoreau despised the money-obsessed
pillars of Concord.
The following constitutes my correspondence with Joan
Houlihan. It also includes the letter I wrote to Richard Fahlander,
Program Director, Emerson Umbrella, Center for the Arts, which houses the
Concord Poetry Center. Fahlander has yet to respond.
Email sent on 9/17/04
Dear Concord Poetry Center: Oddly, I found out about you in this week's
Concord Journal article/advertisement. Is there a reason why you have not
contacted me as Concord poet and editor of a semiannual literary poetry journal
published in Concord since 1999 (the public library subscribes). Why not
schedule a different aspect of poetry, the one that I represent: DISSIDENT
POETRY CRITICAL OF, AMONGST OTHER THINGS, THE PULITZER PRIZE? By the way, I do
not bite and can wear a tie if absolutely necessary. You might, if you are
curious, wish to consult my mordant web site.
Best,
G. Tod Slone, Ed. (enmarge@aol.com)
The American Dissident (www.geocities.com/enmarge)
A Literary Journal in the Samizdat Tradition of Engaged
Writing
Providing a forum for Examining the Dark Side
of the Academic/Literary Industrial Complex et al
“Truth, Wisdom, and Protest in Poetry and Writing in the
Spirit of Revolutionary Patriots”
1837 Main St.
Concord, MA 01742
PS: Most likely I shall stage a solo protest on Oct
16th at the Emerson Umbrella when you open your fall season. The protest
will be against poetry as feel-good, status quo diversion and amusement, while
it will be in favor of poetry as an arm against corruption. BTW, I am
author of a published novel (copy at Concord Free Public Library): TOTAL
CHAOS: Behind the Scenes of a National Blue-Ribbon High School (Martha's
Vineyard Regional HS!). I shall bring copies of the book as well as The
American Dissident, and perhaps sell one or two. Hopefully, police will
not try to arrest or kick me off of the grounds. Perhaps I shall also
recite famous "engage" poems by Villon, Neruda, Ferre, Jeffers, and others.
PPS: Too bad you didn't include Emerson's "Self
Reliance" under that author. You might enjoy this poem I wrote on my visit
to his home. No doubt, it represents the other side of the white-washed
coin.
Subj:
Re: Site
Mail -- I Haven't Answered
Date:
9/17/2004 5:06:09 PM Pacific
Daylight Time
From:
joan.houlihan@gmail.com,
joan@concordpoetry.org
To:
enmarge@aol.com
Dear Mr. Slone,
The reason you weren't contacted is because we didn't know of your existence. We
welcome dissidents! All the best poets were dissidents. I will check out your
web site and please feel free to check out mine. I think you'll find we have
some things in common.
www.bostoncomment.com
I will add you to my email list of poets interested in the center
(unless you tell me otherwise.)
Regards,
Joan Houlihan, Director
Concord Poetry Center
Emerson Umbrella for the Arts
40 Stow Street
Concord, MA 01742
Ph. 978.897.0712
www.concordpoetry.org
"Just the same though, I shall be staging a nonviolent protest at your opening."
Tod, what are you protesting? Seems like you'd welcome a place in your
area for poets who are not part of the poetry establishment.
Just curious..
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Subj: |
Why
protest? |
|
Date: |
9/18/2004 1:11:33 PM Pacific
Daylight Time |
|
From: |
Enmarge |
|
To: |
joan@concordpoetry.org |
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File: |
Cold Passion.doc
(133120 bytes) DL Time (52000 bps): < 1 minute |
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On Poetic Blasphemy
Hi Joan. I think I'll turn this
letter into an essay and if this were an essay, I suppose I would begin it with
a suitable quote as in "Buy Franz Wright books at BN.com." Well, perhaps
the quote by Sinclair Lewis appearing at the end would be more appropriate.
Thanks for inciting my mind. Best, G. Tod
Anyhow, you certainly MUST be different - you're actually CURIOUS! I have
had many, many contacts with poets and professors over the years and RARE is it
for me to find a CURIOUS one! So, bravo to you (and I mean that seriously
w/o any sarcasm whatsoever). I suppose my contacts with local poets (those
of Fitchburg State College, Stone Soup in Cambridge, those meeting at Walden
Pond, and those congregating at the Jack Kerouac Festival in Lowell) have pushed
me to form a rather negative opinion of the BEAST. Just the same, I
certainly leave the door open. Miracles, after all, do and can occur.
One miracle, for example, was my coming into contact with a Georgia
state-college professor recently, who purchased 20 copies of The American
Dissident to serve as the text in a new course that he put together thanks to
The American Dissident on dissident poets and writers.
As for my protest, it is currently in gestation. One element, however,
would include the aberrant, conditioned adulation of the citizenry for literary
prize-winners, literary celebrities, and litterateurs with cash and comfort
(e.g., Updike, Pinsky, Collins, and Angelou). Recall Emerson: "I am
ashamed to think how easily we capitulate to badges and names, to large
societies and dead institutions."
Another, though really the same, element would include protest against the
ESTABLISHMENT, that is, the literary establishment, or literary "machine" as in
"let your life be a counter friction to stop the machine" (Thoreau). It is
my opinion that the literary establishment is part of the general establishment
currently under corporate/ oligarchic domination.
Corporate America is indeed pulling the strings behind the scenes and even
overtly, co-opting academics and poets, with alarming success.
Ex-corporate executives, including the likes of Dana Gioia, John W. Barr, and
Franz Wright are even appearing today as poets. Now, what do you think
these poets learned from service in the corporation? Most likely, they
learned obedience, loyalty, teamplaying, backslapping, networking, silence (if
not complicity in ethical lapses), and conformity, as opposed to self-reliance,
truthtelling, whistleblowing, and Emersonian "whoso would be a man, must be a
non conformist."
As for Gioia, who admitted being fearful of letting others know he even wrote
poetry while VP of General Mills Corporation, is he the desired kind of
"leading" citizen-poet to head the NEH? I suppose so… if you get my gist.
On another note, subjective terms such as "leading" and "best," as in poet or
poetry, seem to be considered as if they were objective by the bulk citizenry.
Perhaps this is because our "leading" and "best" poets and academics do not
encourage student citizens to question and challenge. This I find to be
perturbing.
As for Wright, from what I can see, he is a willing participant in, if not
pillar of, the oligarchic status quo that pays him nicely and in reality seeks
to quell real protest. Academic poet Charles Simic has characterized him
as a poetic miniaturist, whose "secret ambition is to write an epic on the
inside of a matchbook cover." Well, clearly I have different ambitions
than this Pulitzer Prize winner. With regards that famous prize, Wright's
own father was a recipient. Should we all now be cheering for literary nepotism?
Having contacted the Pulitzer a while ago, I was able to learn that it does not
have any criteria for "best" poetry or poet and that its judges in poetry are
almost always academics. Because no criteria exist, one must conclude that
the best poet (e.g., Franz Wright) is the one who has the best networking skills
and best letters of recommendation.
At your opening, I shall be handing out a short version of the latter, which, I
suppose, is a manifesto of sorts. If you are really curious, you might
wish to read the attached long version (and check out my website) to better
understand my "hostility" vis-à-vis the literary establishment, which evidently
maintains a closed-door policy vis-à-vis outside critics. Indeed, the
American Academy of Poets, National Poetry Month, NEH, National Endowment for
the Arts, Pen Club, Chronicle of Higher Education, Concord Cultural Council, as
well as nearly 40 academic literary journals, have all either refused to list or
support The American Dissident and/or publish mention of its focus. As you
will note in manifesto, I tend to feed upon and utilize criticism. So,
your critique would certainly be most welcome.
If you think there might be interest (and there very well might not be because
of successful conditioning RE what poetry is supposed to be and what it is not
supposed to be), I'd love to do a workshop or deliver a speech on protest poetry
at the Concord Poetry Center. I do not holler, can control my language,
and do not bite, at least not physically. I could also, in contrast to
Wright's Walking on Martha's Vineyard Pulitzer work, read several of my 100
poems written while teaching high school on Martha's Vineyard several years ago.
Finally, besides being a poet and blacklisted college professor, I am also a
literary cartoonist… so, might also distribute a satirical cartoon on the CPC.
Poetry, essay, and cartoons are my weapons, not very powerful at all, but better
than nothing...
Best,
G. Tod
PS: "All prizes, like all titles, are dangerous. The seekers for
prizes tend to labor not for inherent excellence but alien rewards: they
tend to write this, or timorously to avoid writing that, in order to tickle the
prejudices of a haphazard committee. And the Pulitzer Prize for novels is
peculiarly objectionable because the terms of it have been constantly and
grievously misrepresented. […]
If already the Pulitzer Prize is so important, it is not absurd to suggest that
in another generation it may, with the actual terms of the award ignored, become
the one thing for which any ambitious novelist will strive; and the
administrators of the prize may become a supreme court, a college of cardinals,
so rooted and so sacred that to challenge them will be to commit blasphemy.
Such is the French Academy, and we have had the spectacle of even an Anatole
France intriguing for election.
Between the Pulitzer Prizes, the American Academy of Arts and Letters and its
training-school, the National Institute of Arts and Letters, amateur boards of
censorship, and the inquisition of earnest literary ladies, every compulsion is
put upon writers to become safe, polite, obedient, and sterile. In
protest, I declined election to the National Institute of Arts and Letters some
years ago, and now I must decline the Pulitzer Prize.
I invite other writers to consider the fact that by accepting the prizes and
approval of these vague institutions we are admitting their authority, publicly
confirming them of the final judges of literary excellence, and I inquire
whether any prize is worth that subservience."
Hi Tod,
Many thanks for sending your essay. I enjoy your wit and agree with many things
you say--as you can see from my essays, I've walked the same
terrain. The idea of your teaching a workshop or a delivering a lecture on the
art of literary protest or poetry protest, or simply protest (Concord is where
it all started!) occurred to me even before you mentioned it, so, yes, it's
something I will consider as we progress (this is only our first event).
However, I must say I don't favor having you teach at the center if you protest
the reading. Also, you would need to be more careful about the facts. For
example, read more on the background of
Franz Wright--he is a total antithesis to your characterization:
"Ex-corporate executives, including the likes of Dana Gioia, John W. Barr, and
Franz Wright are even appearing today as poets. Now, what do you think these
poets learned from service in the corporation? Most likely, they learned
obedience, loyalty, teamplaying, backslapping, networking, silence (if not
complicity in ethical lapses), and conformity, as opposed to self-reliance,
truthtelling, whistleblowing, and Emersonian "whoso would be a man, must be a
non conformist."
Wright couldn't be further from a "corporate type". His poetry arises from much
suffering in his life and he currently volunteers his time to work with children
who are grieving the loss of a parent and with people suffering from addictive
and mental disorders.
In any case, I would like to continue any further communication with you by
phone. Please send your phone number with a good time to call. Or you can call
me at 978-897-0712.
Best,
Joan Houlihan
Hi Joan.
Thanks again for your response. Actually, I'm aware of Wright's writing,
his aloofness and hubris, but cannot help but think of him as ex-vice president
of an insurance company. Besides, anybody who wins the Pulitzer or any
other big prize must be full participant in the networking, teamplaying,
mouth-muzzling game of corporate poesy America (did you not read my letter?).
One of your comments is all too revealing, frightening and astonishing in the
Orwellian sense, though really quite common: "However, I must say I don't
favor having you teach at the center if you protest the reading." How odd
for someone who stated "All the best poets were dissidents." Did you make
a mistake? How can the two statements possibly coexist in your mind?
In other words, if I am to "teach" protest poetry I am forbidden to protest
poetry. Wow! Just the same, I'm certain that academic poetry
teachers across the country would agree with that comment, though no doubt
tacitly. And I'm sure many could also harbor the egregiously conflicting
statements. What would Solzhenitsyn have done given such a black and white
choice? Well, we know what he would have done, don't we? What about
Wright, Pinsky, Collins, Gluck, Angelou, Gioia and Barr? Well, we know
what they would have done too, don't we? If I were to follow footsteps, I
can think of none better than Solzhenitsyn's. Indeed, I shall always
choose protest (i.e., rude truth) over teaching protest. How about you?
Which would you choose? How can you declare that you "walked the same
terrain" as I? In reality, the only "safe" protest poet is a dead one… like
Emerson and Thoreau locked up in their respective Concord museums and library
archives and fully adulterated by societies or foundations such as the Thoreau
Society and Thoreau Institute. Below is my Thoreau poem to illustrate the
hypocrisy of the latter.
Once again, as far as protest, I would simply be standing with a placard and
handing out flyers and certainly not blocking anybody or anything.
Wouldn't it be great to have a little protest, stir things up a little at the
Emerson Umbrella? Well, I suppose most poets and poet fans would find that
offensive and not desire to take a flyer at all. Of course, I am not
seeking to connect with those people, but only with those rare few who still
have the spark of self-reliance curiosity. I'm sure you could get the
Concord police to throw me off the grounds easily enough and the Concord Journal
would not report on that and I would leave peacefully, once again quite
disappointed with Concord… "where," in your words, "it all started!" Those
words are really quite deceptive because they imply that Concordians are a
special breed of suburbanite. What precisely does that phrase mean and
infer? Sure, there was the Revolutionary War and Thoreau and Emerson.
But in reality the Concord mentality has radically changed since that war.
Also, let's not forget that Thoreau really despised Concordians, their
pettiness, acquisitiveness, and worship of the greenback. What he loved
was the woods and Walden because Concordians were rarities in those parts.
Imagine what he would have thought about Walden today… the trinket shop, the
mounted cops, the prohibition of free speech and expression by Walden Pond State
Reservation authorities, and the brown-rug efforts to stop natural erosion.
Best,
G. Tod Slone
(978) 369-0597 (I prefer emailing.)
PS: Please do not think that I am a nasty person. I am not. I
just think, question and challenge. It is my Socratic daemon that directs
me, rather than prizes, contests, teaching and publication opportunities, or
book sales.
The Travesty of Thoreau
1. HENRY
Through the gates of Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, alone
and for the first time ever, I walk
past those tombstones and little American flags,
on a bright, sunshiny Fall day, dressed in tee shirt,
in search of Authors Ridge and Thoreau,
past chipmunks, squirrels, and tumbling leaves.,
until the grave marker, modest and quite small,
HENRY, and that is all.
There, I pocket the coins peppering his stone,
aberrant homage to a man who detested commerce.
There, I place my poem and anchor it with three stone.
2. The Travesty of Thoreau
It is no compliment to be invited to lecture before the rich Institutes and
Lyceums… There is the Lowell Institute with its restrictions, requiring a
certain faith in the lecturers. How can any free-thinking man accept its
terms?… They want all of a man but his truth and independence and manhood.
-Thoreau, Journal: 16 November 1858
Is it not the pinnacle of travesty to create a "rich Institute,"
"Artificial and complex," "bolstered up on many weak supports,"
Staffed with "preachers and lecturers" who "deal with men
Of straw, as they are men of straw themselves,"
Who seek to "keep the mind within bounds"?
How Thoreau reviled gentlemen of Institutes,
Their artificial politeness and eagerness to "drill well,"
Their absence of curiosity and robotic civil obedience,
Their very lives serving not as "counter friction,"
But as lubrication to keep "the machine" functioning!
Imagine Henry David Thoreau today in Concord
Walking down Main Street, gagging and coughing,
As careening trucks spew exhaust in the name of enterprise,
And searching-between the ubiquitous and massive
Three-car garage boxes, fringed by blue-tinted chem lawns-
for peaceful space to wander around.
Imagine him today in Concord, sauntering by Walden Pond
Past the bronze sculpture in his effigy, though once
He'd declared "no statue be made of me," and
Past the Walden boutique trinket shop, where
Hazarding to speak truthfully to a park ranger, who,
Would have him escorted dutifully from State Property
By a mounted police officer, or two or three.
Imagine Henry David Thoreau today in Concord
Proudly affirming before the Thoreau Society,
While lodging gratis at the Thoreau Institute-
Thanks to taxpayer and corporate funding-
"I will not consent to walk with my mouth muzzled,
Not till I am rabid, until there is danger
that I shall bite the unoffending…"
Imagine the horror on the faces of the Executive Directors!
Is it not the pinnacle of travesty to create a "rich institute"
Around a man who would have despised it,
For its inevitable condemnation and censorship
Of "free-thinking" and "truth and independence"?
How Thoreau loathed the "well-disposed"; those "thousand
And one gentlemen with whom" he met,
He met "despairingly and but to depart from them, for"
He was "not cheered by the hope of any rudeness from them"!
Imagine the despair he would have felt today, meeting
Members, managerial functionaries, and sous-secretaries
Of Thoreau Society and Thoreau Institute…
Joan,
Let's face it. Concord Poetry Center will most likely keep its doors
closed to a poet like me… just as Del Sol, Boston Comment, and Perihelion.
Yes, I sent my essay "Cold Passion" to webdelsol ages ago… not even response.
No matter. I shall read your essay "Robo Poets" and determine why it was
easily published as opposed to "Cold Passion," though I probably already know
why. I shall also read what Possum has to say. Let us attempt to
keep the dialogue open.
Best,
G. Tod
Ok, Tod, that's fine.
I am interested in continuing our dialogue though a little puzzled that
you seem to associate what I'm trying to do with some kind of poetry
"establishment." Quite the opposite--I'm trying to create a place for
unaffiliated poets (though not excluding anyone). The Poetry Center is in its
infancy, really. I chose Franz Wright to launch it as he reaches across
different poetic audiences and he has an integrity I find unusual and bracing. I
also admire the emotional and spritual depth of his poetry. He is not a
"networker", not even connected to an "academy" never mind a "corporation" of
any sort, and his winning of the Pulitzer was refreshing. And yes, I do believe
teaching is far better than a protest in conveying important ideas to people.
I also think writing is more effective. Your essay is well-written and
impassioned, engaged. It is itself a protest.
I don't run Web del Sol, I work on some aspects of it. By all means read some of
my Boston Comment essays--and yes, check out the outcry they produced in the
"blogs" (Skanky Possum, et. al.). You will see that I have been under fire for
my ideas and not afraid to speak my mind.
Best,
Joan
Hi Joan. First, I did err RE Wright. Thanks for bringing it to my
attention. I mistakenly was thinking of Kooser, the new poet laureate
ex-insurance company executive. As for Wright not being a networker, I
think that is HIGHLY unlikely. How can anyone win the Pulitzer w/o
networking, w/o rubbing elbows and curtsying before academics? Look at me.
We both live in Concord, and you've never heard of me… despite my protesting at
Walden Pond now and then and being editor of a literary journal. How could
I possibly win the Pulitzer? Evidently, my forte is not networking and
pushing poesy. How can anyone possibly win the prize if critical of
academe and academic poets? The Pulitzer is a prize that certifies the winner
not to be either of those things. Did you even read the letter I sent
written by Sinclair Lewis? Did you read the quote by Emerson on names and
badges? Aren't you bowing before names and badges by selecting Wright to
be your first reader? Well, I'm sure you'll ignore that question.
As for "establishment," if you are getting grant monies and selecting people
like Wright, then you must be establishment or at best not anti-establishment.
Wright is establishment. His winning of the Pulitzer proves it.
By the way, I have no problem whatsoever admitting errors. Do you? I
noticed and find this quite typical amongst academic poets that you simply
ignore egregious contradictions when I bring them to your attention as in:
"However, I must say I don't favor having you teach at the center if you protest
the reading." How odd for someone who stated "All the best poets were
dissidents." Did you make a mistake? How can the two statements
possibly coexist in your mind? In other words, if I am to "teach" protest
poetry I am forbidden to protest poetry.
Are we not all affiliated somewhere? As publisher, I am affiliated with
The American Dissident. You are affiliated, amongst others, with
Webdelsol, which refuses to publish anything I submit. Perhaps you need to
find a more appropriate vocabulary word.
"Your essay is well-written and impassioned, engaged. It is itself a protest."
Then why have 40 academic journals and some non academic journals, including Del
Sol, simply rejected it almost all w/o comment? I believe the essay is
really quite unique. Did you read the letter in appendix by the Georgia
Review editor who rejected it? He had the nerve to state it was quite
common. But that's an academic for you (I believe I did tell you that I am
a blacklisted professor. I do thus know the BEAST quite well.).
As for your essay, I could not really find anything of interest to me, as a
dissident. I'm sorry, I did try. I have not yet read the Possum
critique.
Finally, why are you so against protest? Why not both protest and teaching
at your center? Why should one eliminate the other? Why do you
refuse to address this pertinent question? If you are intent, as you
wrote, in "not excluding anyone," then why would you exclude a poet who dared
protest at your center?
You mentioned your ideas, yet what are they? You certainly know what mine
are.
Best,
G. Tod
PS: I am not at all trying to be antagonistic. I am simply
responding with logic and thought.
Hi Tod,
My responses below. I wish I had more time to engage in a debate with
you, but unfortunately, I don't. I've already given much more time to
this than I normally give to people writing emails and wanting to
debate. I have to work! So this needs to be my last missive to you.
Best,
Joan
Hi Joan. First, I did err RE Wright. Thanks for bringing it to my
attention. I mistakenly was thinking of Kooser, the new poet laureate
ex-insurance company executive.
Ah. Ok, that explains your reaction. I don't know anything about
Kooser, actually.
As for Wright not being a networker, I think that is HIGHLY unlikely.
How can anyone win the Pulitzer w/o networking, w/o rubbing elbows and
curtsying before academics?
First, they need to have a body of published work. After that, it's
highly speculative re: the elbow rubbing part. I just know for a fact
Wright is neither an academic nor a networker.
Look at me. We both live in Concord, and you've never heard of me…
despite my protesting at Walden Pond now and then and being editor of
a literary journal.
And have you heard of me? I don't see that this proves anything except
lack of publicity.
How could I possibly win the Pulitzer?
I don't know. How can I? Do you have a substantial body of published
work that could be nominated? I don't.
Evidently, my forte is not networking and pushing poesy. How can
anyone possibly win the prize if critical of academe and academic
poets?
What about Sinclair Lewis?
The Pulitzer is a prize that certifies the winner not to be either of
those things. Did you even read the letter I sent written by Sinclair
Lewis?
Yes.
Did you read the quote by Emerson on names and badges?
Yes.
Aren't you bowing before names and badges by selecting Wright to be
your first reader?
No. I told you why I selected him. Did you read it?
Well, I'm sure you'll ignore that question.
As for "establishment," if you are getting grant monies and selecting
people like Wright, then you must be establishment or at best not
anti-establishment. Wright is establishment. His winning of the
Pulitzer proves it.
The logic here is so faulty I can barely respond. By your logic anyone
who wins the Pulitzer is "establishment." Does that include Lewis? He
won it, he just didn't accept it. He must have been networking and
rubbing elbows like crazy to have won it in the first place (by your
logic). Faulkner? Welty? Elbow rubbers? Give me a break. How about
Pound--now there's a hail-fellow-well-met. Of course, they have to be
*known* to the nominators. But what does that prove about the nominee?
By the way, I have no problem whatsoever admitting errors. Do you?
No.
I noticed and find this quite typical amongst academic poets that you
simply ignore egregious contradictions when I bring them to your
attention as in:
Tod, this is an error. I am not an "academic poet." I work as a poet
on my own, have supported myself through work outside the academy.
"However, I must say I don't favor having you teach at the center if
you protest the reading." How odd for someone who stated "All the
best poets were dissidents." Did you make a mistake? How can the two
statements possibly coexist in your mind? In other words, if I am to
"teach" protest poetry I am forbidden to protest poetry.
No, Tod, the question here is how can the idea of you protesting the
grassroots start up of a place for poets to gather and learn possibly
co-exist in your mind with the idea of you teaching there? Why would
you want to teach at a place you don't even want to exist?
Are we not all affiliated somewhere? As publisher, I am affiliated
with The American Dissident. You are affiliated, amongst others, with
Webdelsol, which refuses to publish anything I submit. Perhaps you
need to find a more appropriate vocabulary word.
Yes, I agree. "Affiliated" is a broad term. I don't have a better one
at the moment, it encompasses what I want even if it is too broad.
"Your essay is well-written and impassioned, engaged. It is itself a protest."
Then why have 40 academic journals and some non academic journals,
including Del Sol, simply rejected it almost all w/o comment? I
believe the essay is really quite unique. Did you read the letter in
appendix by the Georgia Review editor who rejected it? He had the
nerve to state it was quite common. But that's an academic for you (I
believe I did tell you that I am a blacklisted professor. I do thus
know the BEAST quite well.).
My work and the work of many writers is rejected constantly. Only 40
journals have rejected it? Not many.
As for your essay, I could not really find anything of interest to me,
as a dissident. I'm sorry, I did try.
That's strange. I have eight essays on the site, by the way, not just one.
I have not yet read the Possum critique.
It wasn't a critique, it was an outcry against my seventh essay (which
mentioned their journal).
Finally, why are you so against protest? Why not both protest and
teaching at your center? Why should one eliminate the other? Why do
you refuse to address this pertinent question? If you are intent, as
you wrote, in "not excluding anyone," then why would you exclude a
poet who dared protest at your center?
See above. It's illogical to me that someone would try to undermine a
place for poets--they have little enough community--never mind try to
undermine and then expect to be welcomed by it.
You mentioned your ideas, yet what are they? You certainly know what
mine are.
My ideas? My ideas about what subject? Poetry? I have pointed you
toward my essays on that subject. I suggest you read them if you want
to know some of my ideas about poetry.
As I said, I can't continue spending time on this correspondence,
interesting though it may be. Do you work, Tod? Just wondering where
you get all your free time.
Best,
Joan
PS: I am not at all trying to be antagonistic. I am simply
responding with logic and thought.
PS: Same here.
Hi Joan. Clearly, I have offended you… with certain truths. Well, if
you won't be responding anymore, hopefully you'll at least be open to reading
this final missive. Hopefully, you will learn (think) from it.
First, something seems to be seriously wrong with your reasoning and logic.
But that is understandable for you are trying to speak for the establishment,
while sincerely believing you are not establishment. The
I-don't-have-time-for-debate comment is one I've heard quite shamefully often
from POETS and ACADEMICS. Yet debate ought to be the poet/academic's prime
purpose, as opposed to networking, workshopping, backslapping and
self-congratulating at poesy centers. Could you imagine Socrates
declaring: "I wish I had more time to engage in a debate with you, but
unfortunately, I don't"? Just the same, only the truth can prevail, which
is why I certainly can comprehend your desire to truncate this discussion and to
keep me out of the Concord Poetry Center. I knew that would be the case
from the very beginning.
To obtain a "body of published work" as you call it, a poet must be a networker,
must not irritate important poet pillars, and certainly not academics, who tend
to be the Pulitzer judges (Read my essay (www.geocities.com/enmarge) on the
Pulitzer.). How can you simply deny this? Wright is not a critical
person, not a vocal dissident, and not warring with society (in the words of
Baldwin)! Since as you proclaimed the best poetry is dissident poetry, why
the hell did you invite him? Evidently, networking must have something to
do with it. You invited him because he is now a name with a badge (the
Pulitzer)! Ah, what did Emerson say about names and badges? Can you
not really perceive the fundamental conflict in your system of thought? I
suppose you probably cannot. Yet how can you really be a poet if you fool
yourself?
"Substantial body of published" work jives with America's quantity uber quality
precept. So, I can comprehend that. Just the same, what the hell is
quality in poesy? It is all quite subjective, yet those who admire the
likes of Pulitzer-prize winners seem to think it is all objective!
Students are taught not to question and challenge, but rather think it is all
objective.
Actually, yes, I did hear of you… a week prior to my hearing of the Concord
Poesy Ctr. I found your essay, I believe, on the Chronicle of Higher
Education web site. Why would they publish that essay on that site and
refuse to respond to me with regards my essay, "The Cold Passion…," which is
unique? The answer is evident. Yours is academic-friendly, mine is
not.
Sinclair Lewis made his famous statement after receiving the Prize. I
doubt very much he would have received it if he'd made it prior to receiving it.
Do we agree here… and despite the "substantial body of published work"?
Couldn't you figure that out? If I had said Concord Poetry Ctr is a sham
prior to being invited to teach, do you really think I'd be invited? Just
the same, I do not know whether or not it is or may prove to be a sham. A
true poet speaks the rude truth to power, even small-time literary power.
Poets like Wright are really nothing more than versifiers, heads in the dirt
ostriches. If the likes of him are to be representative of the Concord
Poetry Ctr, well, then…
"The logic here is so faulty I can barely respond. By your logic anyone who wins
the Pulitzer is "establishment." Does that include Lewis?" In a sense,
yes, Lewis has become "establishment." Establishment is really all we have
as far as past authors are concerned. Anti-establishment Bukowski in a
sense too has ended up establishment. Thoreau and Emerson are really
establishment… especially in their adulterated Thoreau-Society approved forms.
In those forms, they are okay for the school children. Sure, there are
rare exceptions. Actually, I can't really think of any. But I'm sure
there must be some. Clearly, Lewis was establishment at the time of his
selection. In any case, this is a complex question, one that needs to be
studied and further contemplated. Of course, we must first define what
"establishment" means. We could begin with the pillars of the community.
Pound and Faulkner certainly began as establishment writers. I do like
some of Pound's essays, though find Faulkner to be wholly unreadable… he is
certainly not harmful to the establishment. The bottom line is who pushes
these fellows? Generally, it is the academics and school teachers who
push! If they did not push Faulkner and Pound, F and P would simply
disappear. Perhaps one of these days I shall examine this question in
detail and scope. As mentioned, it is complicated though fascinating.
It would be interesting to examine writers having an aura or perhaps pseudo-rep
of being anti-establishment. We could look at Dylan with his limos and
mansions, for example. RE Wright can you direct me to his dissident essays
and poetry, material that would offend Pulitzer judges and academics? I
would like to examine such documents.
Well, this is a tricky dicky, slick willy way to get out of admitting to a
ridiculous statement. I suppose indeed you do have a tough time admitting
wrong. Your response to "if you protest poetry at our center then you will
not be permitted to protest poetry" was "No, Tod, the question here is how can
the idea of you protesting the grassroots start up of a place for poets to
gather and learn possibly co-exist in your mind with the idea of you teaching
there? Why would you want to teach at a place you don't even want to
exist?" Again, I never wrote that I did not want the center to exist!
It is interesting and no doubt revealing how you transformed my simple desire to
protest in front of the center in the name of dissident poetry, as opposed to
Pulitzer poetry, as an indication that I did not wish the center to exist.
Why do you reason thusly?
I don't really give a damn if it does exist or not. And I certainly know
my own power or lack thereof to do anything about it, one way or the other.
Indeed, never did I think I'd have the power to eradicate a feel-good,
school-children and pillar-of-the-community friendly poesy center! I
simply stated I would protest in front of the center, especially RE the Pulitzer
invitee. How convenient for you to turn my simple desire to protest into
"It's illogical to me that someone would try to undermine a place for
poets--they have little enough community--never mind try to undermine and then
expect to be welcomed by it."
"My work and the work of many writers is rejected constantly. Only 40 journals
have rejected it? Not many." Hmm. That's an academic response!
However, I'm surprised that you didn't mimic the not-unique response.
Again, I underscore that I did read your essay, "Robo-Poetics," and found
nothing in it that stirred anything up as opposed to what the advertisement
stated. Possum Pouch wrote this: "I sent the following e-mail to
Joan Houlihan a few moments ago. She has been writing a series of uninformed and
stupid articles at Web del Sol." Just the same, I think it puerile for its
editor to shoot the messenger as in "is she brain damaged?" I am against
this kind of puerile rhetorical response so prevalent in academe. In fact,
I was not impressed by his open letter at all. (BTW, I did not write that
you were an academic. You simply seem quite like the academic poets I've
known over the years.) In any case, your essay gave me no desire
whatsoever to read seven more of the same. You will note that my essays
stem directly from personal experience and often risk. Do yours? I
don't really think you read my essay. You did not respond to my question
RE the editor of the Georgia Review's letter at the end of it. I am still
really curious about your ideas with regards your statement on the best poets
being dissidents. Of course, dissident can probably mean anything today.
Perhaps you'd like to rescind that statement.
No comment on your funding of course! Top secret! Hmm, maybe William
Bulger's cultural council is giving you a little cash, eh?
I did mention my occupation... professor (French, Spanish, and English). I
have a doctorate. Am I an academic? I suppose so… but blacklisted
just the same. You have not mentioned your occupation. I have been
looking for work for two years, though willingly abandoned my previous job
teaching at an all black female college in the south because I was being
smothered alive by colleague personages probably not too different from you.
Currently, I am teaching two online English courses for cash. That is all
I can find. I am 56 years old and as we both know, academe is as ageist as
they come. Now, what do you do???? Oops, I forgot, the debate is
over.
Since clearly both of us have nothing to hide, I shall post our correspondence
on my website. Also, I shall sketch a lit cartoon on you as poet pillar of
Concord, as opposed to what James Baldwin had in mind. Again, I
stress my disappointment in your not having time for debate. Thank you for
the grist.
Best,
G. Tod
|
Subj: |
Re:
Response... |
|
Date: |
9/21/2004 8:07:50 AM Pacific
Daylight Time |
|
From: |
Enmarge |
|
To: |
joan@concordpoetry.org |
|
PS: Since I am
not destitute, I always make certain that my work as poet, including debate with
other poets, takes precedence over everything else in my life, including job.
Dear Richard Fahlander, Program Director, Emerson Umbrella, Center for the Arts:
As a Concord poet and editor of The American Dissident, a semiannual literary
journal devoted to critical poetry and essays, I wish to express my concern
relative to a remark made by Joan Houlihan, Director of the Concord Poetry
Center.
"The idea of your teaching a workshop or a delivering a lecture on the art of
literary protest or poetry protest, or simply protest (Concord is where it all
started!) occurred to me even before you mentioned it, so, yes, it's something I
will consider as we progress (this is only our first event). However, I must say
I don't favor having you teach at the center if you protest the reading."
The last sentence is troubling. Do you think Thoreau or Emerson would have
understood it? What do you think Solzhenitsyn would have chosen given the
choice of teaching protest poetry or protesting poetry? Is it your
implicit intention to keep Concord dissident poets out of the Concord Poetry
Center because they may choose to protest certain readings? Is it your
intention to keep a Concord literary journal out of the center because of its
critical stance? Is it your intention to define art as child-friendly,
feel good and non critical of the local pillars?
Thank you for your attention. I look forward to your response. And I
hope it will not be a simple "I know nothing about this" because now you do. You
also now officially know of my existence! You also now know that I was
incarcerated in a Concord jail for having had a non violent dispute with a park
ranger at Walden Pond. You also now know that I was requested to leave
Walden because I was holding a placard: NO FREE SPEECH AT WALDEN POND!
You also now know that the Thoreau Society did not give a damn. "Let your
life be a counter friction to stop the machine" (Thoreau). That is what I
do. Recall Emerson: "I am ashamed to think how easily we capitulate
to badges and names, to large societies and dead institutions." Recall
also his proclamation in "Self-Reliance": "go upright and vital, and speak
the truth in all ways." How does the Emerson Umbrella whitewash that
statement?
Sincerely,
G. Tod Slone, Ed.
[No response]
Hi Joan.
Just wanted to let you know that your cartoon is now up on my website. I
couldn't even get a response from the Umbrella chief. At least you
responded, n'est-ce pas?
Best,
G. Tod Slone
www.geocities.com/enmarge
|
Subj: |
Concord
Poetry Center critique |
|
Date: |
10/22/2004 7:31:04 AM Pacific
Daylight Time |
|
From: |
Enmarge |
|
To: |
joan.houlihan@gmail.com |
|
Hi Joan. My criticism of the poet members and Concord Poetry Center is now
up on my site. You might wish to examine it in the context of one of your
meetings. Yes, how refreshing that would be! Indeed, poets who
actually examine criticism, as opposed to ignoring it as if it didn't even
exist. Yes, that would probably be unique in the annals of the nation's
poesy centers, circles and other herds. No doubt you're now rolling in the
dough of establishment cultural council grants et al. Peering upstairs
Saturday night, I was amazed to observe two of your poet members counting stacks
of green bills. What a sight! But keep in mind that dough will not
make you... au contraire, it will probably break you and otherwise pabulum-ize
you in totem.
Best always,
G. Tod Slone, Ed.
[No response]
ALL MATERIAL ON THIS SITE IS COPYRIGHT ©G. Tod
Slone, 2009, The American Dissident
www.theamericandissident.org,
a 501c3 nonprofit.