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"A note to Pound in heaven: Only one mistake, Ezra! You should have talked to women"
--George Oppen, _Twenty Six Fragments_
Archives:
xoxo Hey, E-Mail Me! xoxo
ManY PoETiKaL HaTs LisT:
Holly's Pirate-girl Hat,
chrismurray in a straw hat,
Michael Helsem's Gray Wyvern NOLA Fedora.
Duchamp's Rrose Selavy's flirting hat.
Max Ernst's Hats of The Hat Makes the Man.
Jordan Davis' The Hat!
poetry. hks' smelly head baseball cap.
Samuel Beckett's Lucky's
Black bowler hat,
giving his oration
on what's questionable in mankind,
in *Waiting for 'God-ot'*.
my friend John Phillips's 1969
dove gray fedora w/ wild feather.
Bob Dylan's mystery lover's Panama Hat.
Bob Creeley's Black Mountain Felt Boater Hat.
Duke Ellington's Satin
Top Hat. Acorn Hats of Tree.
Freud's 1950 City Fedora.
Joseph Brodsky's Sailor Cap.
Harry K Stammer's Copper Hat
Hell. Lewis LaCook's bowler hat(s).
Tom Beckett's Bad Hair Day
Furry Pimp Hat. Daughter Holly's black beret.
harry k stammer's fez. Cat
in the Hat's Hat & best
hat, Googling Texfiles:
crocheted hat with flames.
Harry K Stammer's tinseled berets.
Tex's 10 gallon Gary Cooper felt Stetson cowboy hat.
Jordan Davis's fedora.
Dali's High-heel Shoe Hat. Harry K Stammer's en-blog LAPD Hat
& aluminum baseball cap. cap'n caps. NY-Yankees caps. the HKS-in-person-caps
are blue or green no logos nor captions.
Ma Skanky Possum 10's nighttime cap.
moose antler hat. propeller beenie hat.
doo rag. knit face mask hat. Bob Dylan's & photographer Laziz
Hamani's panama hats. Mark Weiss's Publisher's Hat.
Rebecca Loudon's Seattle-TX-Hats'n'boots.
Ever-Evolving Links:
Silliman's Links
Dominic Rivron
Unidentified
Br Tom @ One & Plainer
Dan Waber: ars poetica anthology
Dan Waber: altered books anthology
chris daniels: Notes to a Fellow Traveller
Chris Daniels: Toward an Anti-Capitalist Poetry
David Daniels: The Gates Of Paradise
subterranean poets: Beijing Poetry Group
Charles Alexander/Chax Press: Chaxblog
Headlines Poetry: the latest weblog entries
Henry Gould's AlephoeBooks
Julie Choffel's Understory
Tom Murphy's former one
Jean Vengua's New Okir
Roger Pao's Asian-American Poetry
Tom Lisk: Oilcloth and Linoleum
Kevin Doran
Reb Livingston's Cackling Jackal Blog
Janet Holmes: Humanophone
Lorna Dee Cervantes
Mark Young's gamma ways
Brian Campbell: Out of the Woodwork
Shanna's DIY Publishing Blog
Galatea Resurrects: a Poetry Review
Tom Beckett
John Sakkis: BOTH BOTH
New Francois Luong:Voices in Utter Dark, KaBlow!sm is...
Old Francois Luong: Voices in Utter Dark
Margin Walker: Andrew Lundwall
Free Space Comix: the latest BK Stefans blog
Adam Lockhart, Experimentalist Composer
Antic View: Alan Bramhall & Jeff Harrison
lookouchblog: Jessica Smith
MiPOradio
Web Log -- Charles Bernstein
Google Poem Generator: Leevi Lehto
Marie Mutsuki Mockett
Feral Scholar: Stan Goff
worderos: Tom Beckett
In Galatea's Purse
Japundit
Quiet Desperation: Jim Ryal
Luca Antara: Martin Edmond
Brief Epigrams: Ryan Alexander MacDonald
Radio My Vocabulary: 4 pm Sunday Poetry Streams
Mark Lamoreaux: [[[0{:}0]]]
Hot Whiskey Blog
louder
Nick Bruno: They Shoot Poets Don't They?
Joe Massey: Rooted Fool
Kate Greenstreet: every other day
heuriskein: Tom Orange
Chiaroscuro Metropoli: Tom Beckett
Behrle's latest spout!
Fluffy Dollars: Michelle Detorie
Jane Dark's Sugar High!
The Katherine Anne Porter Literary Center
(Charles) Olson Now: Michael Kellaher & Ammiel Alcalay
kari edwards' TranssubMUTATION
Notes on the Revival: Jeremy Hawkins
PurPur: Petrus Pokus
Snapper Missives: Scott Pierce
A Sad Day for Sad Birds II: Gina Meyers
Great Works: Peter Philpot
zafusy: experimental poetry journal
Writeboard: a collaborative writing tool
John Latta: Rue Hazard
KP Harris: Croissant Factory
Stephanie Young's New Site
Stephen Vincent's New Site
Portable Press@Yo~Yo Labs
Square America
Amy King's blog
Robert: Peyoetry Hut
Muisti Kirja: Karri Kokko
Karri Kokko's Blonde on Blonde
Yummeee Blog (recipes)
Nice Guy Syndrome: Tim Botta
Left Hook
Del Ray Cross: anachronizms
Juan Cole: Informed Comment
BuzzFlash - Daily Headlines, Breaking News, Links
Aaron McCollough
Chris Lott's Cosmopoetica
Chad Parenteau
Little Emerson
Fever, Light--by Sawako Nakayasu
Second Wish
Nomadics
Alison Croggon
Radical Druid
Ron is Ron: the Ron Silliman Cartoon by Jim Behrle
Dagzine: Positions, Poetics, Populations: Gary Norris
Shadows within Shadows: Tom Beckett
Self Similar Writing: Jukka Pekka Kervinen
The Little Workshop: Cassie Lewis
Sky Bright: Jay Rosevear
Poesy Galore: Emily Lloyd
Lisa Jarnot's Blog
Poetry Hut: Jilly Dybka (has moved here)
Pornfeld: Michael Hoerman
Seven Apples: Justin Ulmer
Hi Spirits: Andrew Burke
Bacon Bargain!: Joe Massey
Ivy is here: Ivy Alvarez
Whimsy Speaks: Jeff Bahr
Umbrella: Jeff Wietor
Chicanas! (Susana L. Gallardo)
Masters of Photography
Blog of Disquiet: Gary Norris' Teaching Blog
Suzanna Gig Jig
Bad with Titles: Jay Thomas
Spaceship Tumblers! Tony Tost
Desert City: Ken Rumble
E-Po
Zotz!
Optative Mood: Tim Morris
ecritures bleues: Laura Carter
The Ingredient: Alli Warren
Skanky Possum Pouch
Slight Publications
Jewishy-Irishy: Laurel Snyder
Sea-Camel: Alberto Romero Bermo
Growing Nations: Jordan Stempleman
Tom Raworth
Entropy and Me: Hal Johnson
Scott Pierce: Snapper's Junk
Chicano Poet: Reyes Cardenas
Semio-Karl M&M
Stephen Vincent
Hoa Nguyen/Teacher's & Writers
a New Word Placements
Narcissus Works: Anny Ballardini
Richard Lopez
Tributary: Allen Bramhall
The_Delay: Chris Vitiello
Jukka Pekka Kervinen: Nonlinear Poetry
Lanny Quarles: Phaneronoemikon
Clifford Duffy: Fictions of Deleuze & Guattari
DagZine
Carrboro Poetry Festival
Steve Evans: Third Factory
DEBORAH PATILLO
SKANKY POSSUM PRESS
Tim Peterson: Mappemunde
WOOD'S LOT
Geof Huth: DBQP
Ann Marie Eldon
Jim Behrle: The Jim Side
Ray Bianchi:Postmodern Collage Poetry
Never Mind the Beasts
Diaryo
New Broom
Flingdump Scattershot
Tony Tost: Unquiet Grave
Grapez
SB POET
Mark Young's Pelican Dreaming
|||AS/IS2|||
Li's A Private Studio
Anny Ballardini's Poet's Corner
Tom Beckett: Vanishing Points
Dumbfoundry
BadGurrrlNest
Jean Vengua's Okir
Hear-it dot org: info on hearing problems
Tim Yu's Tympan
James Yeager's Modern Lives
Tony Robinson: Geneva Convention
Daniel Nestor's Unpleasant Event
Ex-Lion Tamer
Carlos Arribas: Scriptorium
David Nemeth
Ela's Incertain Plume
Mairead Byrne's Heaven
Catherine Daly
Black Spring
Br.Tom's Finish Yr Phrase
Shin Yu Pai: makura-no-soshi
Harry K. Stammer: Downtown LA
Corina's Fledgling Wordsmith
Jilly Dybka's Poetry Hut
Ben Basan's Luminations
Katey: Chewing on Pencils
YaY!! Eileen Tabios: Chatelaine Poetics !
Jill Jones: Ruby Street
Geoffrey Gatza's BlazeVox
Bill Allegrezza's P-Ramblings
Gary Sullivan's Elsewhere
GoldenRuleJones
Poetry_Heat
Bookslut
Chickee's SuperDeluxeGoodPoems
As-Is !
John Latta's Hotel Point
Sawako Nakayasu's Ongoing Show
Shanna Compton's Brand New Insects
Crag Hill
kari edwards: transdada
Fluss
Michael Helsem's Gray Wyvern
Word Placement
Bogue's Blog
Jordan Davis: Equanimity
Robert Flach's Unadulterated Text
Michelle Bautista
Ironic Cinema
Mike Snider
Farewell Tonio!
In Through the Out Door
The Blonde Brunette
Awake at Dawn on Someone's Couch is Toast
Jukka-Pekka Kervinen:Non-Linear
Xpress(ed) !
Chris Lott's Ruminate
Venepoetics
Laura: Yellowslip
Stick Poet Super Hero
Mighty Jens!
Radio UTA: Toni's Thursday Poetry Show
Tim Morris: Lection
Gabe Gudding
Constant Critic
Sappho's Breathing
Waves of Reading
Jhananin's Insite
Fanaticus
AdvExpo
Stephen Vincent
Stephanie Young: New Well Nourished Moon
Kasey Silem Mohammad's Newest Limetree
Lanny Quarles: (solipsis)//:phaneronoemikon
States Writes
Rebecca's Pocket
Simulacro
Braincase Links
Sentence
Sor Juana
73 Urban Bus Journeys
Poeta Empirica
poetry for the people: canwehaveourballback?
Ernesto Priego's Never Neutral
Nick Piombino's Fait Accompli
Weekly Incite blogresearch
Jim Behrle's first monkey
Jim Behrle's Monkey's Gone to Heaven
David Kirschenbaum's Boog City
Not Nick Moudry
Laurable
David Hess Heathens in Heat
Jack Kimball's Pantaloons
Li Bloom's Abolone
Ron Silliman
Chris Sullivan's Bloggchaff
Chris Sullivan's Slight Publications
Chris Sullivan's Department of Culture
Kasey S. Mohammad's Old-New Limetree
Kasey's Old Limetree
James Meetze: Brutal Kittens
Cassie Lewis: The Jetty
Joseph Mosconi's Harlequin Knights
Nada Gordon's Ululate
ultimate: Stephanie Young's First Well Nourished Moon
Steve Evans: Third Factory
Noah Eli Gordon's Human Verb
Jean Vengua's Blue Kangaroo
Sawako Nakayasu: Texture Notes
Free Space Comix: BK Stefans
Crosfader
Malcolm Davidson's eeksy peeksy
Marsh Hawk Press group
Catherine Meng's Porthole Redux
Josh Corey's Cahiers de Corey
Very Nice! Shampoopoetry
UTA's Lit Mag: ZNine
Wild Honey Press
Jacket
JFK's Poetinresidence
Malcolm Davidson's Tram Spark poems
HYepez: RealiTi
HYpez: Mexperimental
Aimee Nez's Gila Monster
BestMaX: Jim Behrle's jismblog
Cori Copp's Littleshirleybean
Jordan Davis: Million Poems
Eileen Tabios: Corpsepoetics [see Chatelaine above]
YaY! Liz's Thirdwish
Ultra Linking
Henry Gould's HG Poetics
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Saturday, July 12, 2003
mmmmm
tea time. green, jasmine. i guess folks don't like jasmine tea much. Fei doesn't. i really like it tho. now, hey, these tea biscuits are yummy. a delicate orange-creme flavored filling between two plain butter biscuits. not a lot of sugar which is nice considering that everything comes with way too much of it.
But oh I wanted to send a Hi to Li Bloom :
Thanks for sayin'!
chris at
9:47 PM
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Back from shopping. We had so much fun! Lycee nuts!! And beautiful talapia.
going walking--more soon.
chris at
8:34 PM
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On my way to go shopping with Fei!
More soon.
chris at
4:08 PM
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A Continually Evolving Little Experiment in Randomly Tossed Pebbles
(given Julio Cortazar & translator Gregory Rabassa):
Hopscotch* on Hopscotch**
(&) in that instant I know what I am
because I know exactly
this much right now:
canopy of live oaks,
blur of bat wings,
night coming on
like an April dogwood
blizzard of you
(&) what I am not ( what I thereupon ignore astutely ). But there are
three books:
Finnegan's Wake,
The Art of Rhetoric,
& Psappha,
as well as three wishes:
love, good love,
& life.
(&) no words for material in between word and pure vision, like a block of evidence.
The same one who says Hello
on one side, Life on the other
missing an (overrated) O?--
four more crusted sides between
gut & grit. But of those who would know,
perhaps you have known this best of all?
(&) Impossible to objectivize, make precise that defectiveness that I caught during
the homily in Sacred Heart
one Sunday at sixteen:
I knew they were not speaking
to me & I knew who it was
they were speaking to: statues,
slender water fonts,
smoke of i-being
& incense. Here
is the floor of stone,
blank book of song.
(&) the instant and which was clear absence or clear error or clear
touch, given what Psappha continually chants
out of our Aristotle:
If your desire were of things good or fair
and your tongue were not concocting ill will
you would plead your cause outright.
(&) insufficiency but without knowing of what, what.
always of the body:
insufficiency is always body,
which cannot move itself--
it must have inspiration,
breath: literally, breath.
A little intention, intricate as ankle bones
walking.
(&) ... the lack of experience is inevitable, if I read Joyce I am automatically
floating on air, looking for nothing
more than everything, everywhere.
(&) sacrificing another book and vice versa, etc. The feeling of lack is sharper in
the odd morning on waking,
music coming around the building corner,
a woman's voice. Y tu?
(&) It's a little like this: there are lines in the air next to your head
& mine. Somehow
in that instant I know because I know exactly
a pebble cast by the child
to a numbered square
on the concrete walk--
these have discovered each other
in the fold that calls out
to know.
**bolded lines are from Julio Cortazar, Hopscotch. Translated by Gregory Rabassa (Pantheon, 1966) 406
*lines by chris murray
chris at
4:14 AM
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Friday, July 11, 2003
Just back from a walk. Hot out here. Very. But nice at dusk. A little moon shining around mixing it up with the street lights, what cities offer, viz, pools of calm.
Finally, tomorrow: Shopping with Fei! Yay!!
Note about Letter to the Editor: the letter was retracted by the writer, who wanted to work on it some more.
chris at
10:21 PM
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Dept. of Continually Changing Bring It On
Hello Fire and Brimstone, nice to meetcha!
No, no, I think you are gorgeous. But I had heard that expressed often by the Angelic One Who Knows, over at the Heavenly Vineyard .
Yeah, well, probably enuff said--time for me to get back to some *cabosilliness* and just *lighten up*
ZaZenY'all
chris at
4:57 PM
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Dept. of Ya Got Me There, Mr. Hess:
Yipes, Yawps, Yellows, Ylang-Ylangs, Yews, Yous, Youths and Palindromes. I'm caught by the Yay Police over at Heathens in Heat:
Chris Murray's Yusing tyu manY YaYs!!
chris at
2:22 PM
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Thursday, July 10, 2003
YaY!! Jim's got an *exquisite* poem going: great fun!--here's my contribution:
Madam, about your prime rib: we ran out of warmly pink an hour before you were born.
chris at
11:18 PM
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SOQ: Just Drafting:
Quandary on Found* Item
found today on walk:
trinkety though no less
lovely silver ankle bracelet
of delicate chain,
small charm-dangles,
glitter diamond-likes,
art for anyone,
everyone,
but with broken clasp.
what to do with it?
leave it?
take it home, fix it?
then return it to same spot?
(wait to see who comes by to claim it?)
what to do with untraceable found things
when obviously they are missed
by anyone who ever held them even once?
leave them where they are
so they are always potentially found
but not kept?
( alright alright quit with the sounds-like-a-quietude-school-kind-of-thing.chris m: what're you doing?)
*not related to the happy restoration of Stephanie's cat to her home!-just an odd riff on found things.--cm
chris at
6:27 PM
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The Bad Boy of Poetrix, Kent Johnson,, is at it again: over at
David Hess' Heathens in Heat -- a letter from Kent is stirring coals, adding kindling, generally flaming it out with twenty dollar names, theories of physics and a little poetic friction.
But as Alexandra says: "Dionysus!! There was no time: Our bones touched, our Thesauri caught fire by themselves..." (viii)--Kent Johnson, Miseries of Poetry ( Skanky Possum Press), 2003
Take a hike down south here about four days to Sunday July 6 if you want to see the review I posted of Kent's book, Miseries. And check out Stephanie Young's insightful comments on Miseries, at Well Nourished Moon .
One thing never changes: it seems like those dang gods are goin' and blaming all that fire they made on that one little old devil, all over again... good thing he's a handsome devil--well, at least according to John Milton, who would certainly know more about it than I ...
chris at
5:02 PM
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Coming Up (tonight!)
-- The Hopscotch Huh? on Hopscotch
-- A San Joaquin Valley reader responds to TxF's fare
chris at
3:06 PM
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Jim B's got it, Oh
goin on
w/ the (Purple)
notebook of the lake
poems goin sooo oooocean
yaay-yaahh
ah ah
But hey, don't stop there: check out Jim Behrle's poem to Billy Collins, too--does that one tell all there is to tell, or what. One great poem!
chris at
2:18 PM
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Sharable Reading Dept:
from Annie Finch:
Summer Solstice Chant
June 21
The sun, rich and open,
stretches and pours on the bloom of our work.
In the center of the new flowers,
a darker wing of the flower
points you like a fire.
Point your fire like a flower.
Calendars. Tupelo, 2003 (49)
****************%%%%%%%%%%%%%************
from Julio Cortazar/Lawrence Ferlinghetti:
121
"With red ink and manifest complacency, Morelli had copied in one of his notebooks the ending of a poem by Ferlinghetti:
'Yet I have slept with beauty
in my own weird way
and I have made a hungry scene or two
with beauty in my bed
and so spilled out another poem or two
upon the Bosch-like world.' "
Hopscotch tr. Gregory Rabassa. Pantheon, 1966 (486)
chris at
4:40 AM
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Gosh Josh Dept:
Quiz Link Really Went Crazy:
This very sleek quiz from Cahiers de Corey : What poetry form are you?--is messed up: takes you to a serial pop up spam like thing. Very Funny, but No Thanks, (how would anyone know it would do this?--got me goin', tho--Word to the Wise: devilishly funny until I had to shut down my computer to get out of it)!
chris at
12:30 AM
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Wednesday, July 09, 2003
Hey! Take the Are You In Love with Jim Behrle Quiz! Though this title restricts answers to yea or nay. Definitely Yea around here. My opinion?--Jim does more today to bring real poetry to real people than anyone else. Maybe better to just go ahead and Barrett-Browning away, ya kno?--Counting all the ways...
chris at
11:14 PM
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Found and Lost Dept:
And all in one hour too! For Znine, I am curious to know more about the poetry & artwork you submitted, Mr. Uzeyir Lokman Cayci. Please try emailing me again, but use this address:
Yaomingsmeow@netscape.net
the artwork you sent is fantastic but the files were so large that they nearly shut down my email account. Use the address above, then, and thanks.
chris at
10:54 PM
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another Yea-yah!: Grace & Frank: thanks, Eileen . What a great read.
chris at
1:54 AM
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Tuesday, July 08, 2003
( Li Bloom, Hey--
by chance is this one, too?)
Listening to Ricki Lee Jones, Flyin' Cowboys:
It's got my favorite prescription filled:
1. First thing in the morning, one of these:
Don't let the sun catch you cryin' (crying? use only sparingly !)
followed by:
funkiness of oooooos woooos snare drummmmmms and a little spritely trumpeting goin' off
with six verses of this after each meal:
2.Well, love's gonna
bring us
back around...
Baby, love will bring us
back around
over the mountains...
yes yeah yeah &
we ain't never stop lovin now...
i wz such a baby...
Well tell me--
will you walk thru this world alone?
And don't forget liberal amounts
of Yea-ah!s applied to freshly washed hands.
Next up? Miles D., Ballads & Blues
chris at
11:21 PM
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How Beauty-Fly the Blurb?
YaY! Stephanie Young weighs in
on Kent Johnson's Miseries of Poetry ( Dale Smith's Skanky Possum Press, 2003 ).
And what are the true miseries of poetry? Check below, here, too: Sunday, July 6, for a nice little review of Kent's radical work.
chris at
10:58 PM
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My regular email is back. It's not necessary to use the aol addie now.
chris at
6:26 PM
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Tornado Alley Countdown Love # 93
art slipping skin charm by nothing cheek
is never
awake
hungry
asleep
enough touch for us
sate your up baby
strawberry street side sometimes
photons cafe ever so
looking
glass
quakes & street engine
clang, remember
to bend sun
rays shiver distant sure kissing
to your salt lick prism
interrupt
every loss
with all -ing--
gerund some flesh muse
shale blue stick figure with wanting
cloth almost embodied:
buttoning, yeah
& again all art
unbuttoning
Tornado Alley Series, Chris Murray
chris at
3:07 PM
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Monday, July 07, 2003
As if things were not confusing enough, I forgot to add the 88 to my aol addie; so I just did, below.
On a much *brighter* note: after one of those downpours today, a fantastic rainbow cupped across the sky. usually they disperse quickly here (tho at Grand Canyon and other points loved in AZ, rainbows can last for years... no, really I mean something like an hour or so, depending. this one here today stayed for a while--at least a half hour, plenty long enough for me to drive home from the store and change clothes to go for my walk. There it wz, too, for much of the walk. before there wz religion to muck things up for regular folks, you know this is the kind of natural event that made everyone feel around in their language for an arch of a word, meaning *blessed.*
anyway, I wz lovin' it.
chris at
11:21 PM
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If by chance you were trying to email me but got no answer, here is the problem: my cmurray@uta.edu email is down again. I guess they're doing something about that hacker competition that's blowing out webstuff all over. Dunno...
I can be reached at:
cmrry88@aol.com
It's really pleasant here tonight for a July evening in Texas: it rained on and off all afternoon so it's cooler, there's a little breeze going, everything's kinda ZaZenY'all & nice.
chris at
11:03 PM
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Dept. of Will Wonders Ever Cease?
Hah! The verrryyyy lemonnneee gEkKo is back and playing chase around the live oak trunk with a sparrow: sparrow? afoot!
Shopping with Fei Update:my very good friend Fei Xie called the other day to say she had not gone shopping but had gone to a farm somewhere around here where you can pick your own blueberries. I never heard of this but she left me a message telling me to come over because she has lots of extra. I LOVE blueberries, too! So I'm on my way over there in a little while to get some and have *wonders of nice visity* with Fei, her husband, and her brother.
Also: meeting up this evening with Mr. Cedrick May to hear all about the research on the Dr. Martin Luther King Museum book.
More: Coming Soon: Wonders Will Never Cease!
chris at
3:35 PM
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Dept. of Final Exams:
Essay Exam Question: What is American Literature?
(part of) One Student's Response:
"You think of America, and you think of American authors. American literature is not just about those things. From American literature you get poems from Phyllis Wheatley, you get letters from Christopher Columbus, and a powerful novel by Zora Neale Hurston. This literature is about people expressing themselves.They express themselves in many different ways. You learn about people's lives, the struggles that they went through to get where they are. You learn the history of America and the journeys that people take. You ask, What is American Literature? It is what you learn from the things you've read."
chris at
9:50 AM
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Notes from the Dalai Lama:
"Freedom is the real source
of human happiness and creativity.
Only when it is allowed to flourish,
can a genuinely stable international climate exist."
chris at
3:09 AM
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Sunday, July 06, 2003
Today's Best Google search yielding TexFiles:
"Fredrick Douglass Speech July 4, 1852"
Texfiles turned up # 8 in all that--who woulda thought?
Maybe it was because Chris Sullivan linked
to Texfiles when he posted the entire Douglass speech (Yes!)
on his blog the other day. Then, too, there was that passage I
posted a month ago quoting Norton Anth's description that I think makes Douglass sound like a pop-cult figure of his time (rightly so).
chris at
7:16 PM
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Olja at home in Novi Sad!!
http://www.exitfest.org/english/indexenglish.htm>
If you go to the most recent issue of Znine, at
http://www.uta.edu/english/znine.edu
which is UTA's lit journal that I write for and help edit, you will find a poem of mine, "Postcard from Novi Sad." It's dedicated to one of my dearest friends, Olja Jokic. She's completing a doc degree in comp lit/cultural studies at UMich Ann Arbor, but right now is home in Yugoslavia on holiday and sent me this link to post so we could see whazzup over there. (For some unknown reason I can't make the link work in html so sorry!--but just copy it up and go)
Thanks, O!!
Be sure, now, to go get some ZaZenY'all
chris at
6:54 PM
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Front Page: The 17th & 18th Centuries, Causes for Pause Edition
"Even as the Papists have their He and Shee Saint Protectors as St. George, St. Patrick, St. Denis, Virgin Mary, &c.
"Squauanit____________________The Woman's God
Muckquachuckquand____________The Children's God
...
Keesuckquand ________________The Sun God
Nanepaushat__________________The Moone God
Paumpagussit__________________The Sea
Ytaanit________________________The Fire God
Supposing that Deities be in these &c."
Roger Williams, "A Key Into the Language of America," (1643) qtd. @ Heath Anthol. Am Lit. 4th ed., 2002.
chris at
6:12 PM
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Dept. of Very Late News: Gossip about the *Poetical*
from William Byrd
(1735, Virginia):
"But alas what can we poor hermits do, who know of no intrigues, but such as are carry'd on by the amorous turtles, or some such innocent lovers? Our vices & disorders want all that wit & refinement, which make them palatable to the fine world. We are unskild in the arts of making our follys agreeable, nor can we dress up the D!!!! so much to advantage, as to make him pass for an angel of light. Therefore without a little invention, it would not be possible for one of us anchorites to carry on a tolerable correspondence, but like French historians, where we don't meet with pretty incidents, we must e'en make them, & lard a little truth with a great deal of fiction.
"Perhaps you'll think the story I am going to tell you is of this poetical sort. We have here an Italian bona roba [wench], whose whole study is to make her person charming, which to be sure will sound very strangely in the ears of an English lady. Those who understand physognomy suspect this dear creature has been a Venetian cortezan, because of her whole mein & every motion proves she has been trained up in the art of pleasing. She does not only practice graces at her glass, but by her skill in opticks, has intstructed her eyes to reflect their rays in a very mischeivous manner. In a word she knows how to make the most of every part that composes her lovely frame, as you will see by the harmles adventure that follows... ."
"Letter to Mrs. Jane Pratt Taylor," qtd., from Heath Anthol. Am Lit. ed. Lauter, 2002.
Look out ! Those femme fatales have Opticks Skills...
qtd. @ Heath Anthol. Am. Lit., 4th Ed., 2002
I'm thinking this an apt way to define historical awareness: "very late news."
chris at
6:09 PM
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Qualifies for Special Mystic t.X.Files Experiences Folder: Sleepless in 1743 Dept.
"I continued in a sweet and lively sense of Divine things, until I retired to rest. That night... was the sweetest night I ever had in my life. I never before, for so long a time together, enjoyed so much of the light, and rest, and sweetness of heaven in my soul, but without the least agitation in my body during the whole time. The great part of the night I lay awake, sometimes asleep, and sometimes between sleeping and waking. But all night I continued in a constant, clear and lively sense of the heavenly sweetness of Christ's excellent and transcendent love, of his nearness to me, and of my dearness to him. .... At the same time, my heart and soul all flowed out in love to Christ; so that there seemed to be a constant flowing and reflowing of heavenly and divine love... and I appeared to myself to float or swim, in these great beams of the love of Christ. So far as I am capable of making a comparison, I think that what I felt each minute, during the continuance of the whole time, was worth more than all the outward comfort and pleasure, which I had enjoyed in my whole life put together. It was a pure delight, which fed and satisfied the soul. It was pleasure, without the least sting, or any interruption. It was a sweetness, which my soul was lost in. It seemed to be all that my feeble frame could sustain, of that fulness of joy... ."
So sayeth Sister Sara Pierrepont Edwards (1710-1758), in a testimony of her religious feeling after conversion (her husband, Jonathan [better known author than she] drew heavily from this to write his classic, "Some Thoughts Concerning the Present Revival of Religion in New England," in 1743).
Amen, Sister.
qtd. @Heath Anthol. Am Lit., 4th Ed., 2002
chris at
5:40 PM
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from A Sappho Series
# 102 *
Come here, to me,
rose-like Graces--
in the July hour
outside parade
& what passes
through me
so familiar
Xaris, flow
from all
coming
gesture
Muses, [bind up] your lovely hair--
I have bound mine,
wiping heat's--You are?--
sweat
from my face
not absent
minded
the strands for this
salt
sweet
* cf. Josephine Balmer translation, Sappho: Poems & Fragments.
Lobel & Page 128. interlinear dispersions: chris murray
chris at
12:33 PM
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The Encolpius Skirt: Alexandra’s Afterlife
--a few thoughts in 3 Blogger segments,
on Alexandra Papaditsas' and Kent Johnson’s
Miseries of Poetry: Traductions from the Greek--
segment 1: Bringing Miseries to a Classroom
“1. A single mind is all things.
2. All things are a single mind
[Large holes: Moths? American academics?]...
14. Spit out your self and swallow others.
[Large strange holes, mysterious gaps, frightening loss.]...
28. The boat and the shore travel at the same time, walk together,
without floating or turning.”
--Alexandra Papaditsas and Kent Johnson, The Miseries of Poetry (18)
[1] “But look here,” I protested, “aren’t you professors hounded by just these same Furies of inflated language and pompous heroics? How else can you account for all that wretched rant: ‘Nay, but gentle sirs, mark ye well these wounds I suffered in the struggle to preserve our common liberties. Twas on thy behalf...’ ... And so on: ‘No one would mind this claptrap if only it put our students on the road to real eloquence. [No, instead] we keep them utterly ignorant of real life... ”
--Petronius, Satyricon (21)
Skewering academic life, its aspirations toward impractical or baroque philosophizing, its tedious scholastics (no less the scholiasts themselves, poor devils), its furry fetishes with texts and cramped, imprisoning or censorious literary endeavors, has been a favorite of the wilder poets and slingers of poetic arts at least since Plato’s Phaedrus and Symposium, and probably well before. Several centuries after Plato’s litotes ridden romps in Athens, we find Petronius in Rome writing a text doing more La Bamba Baby than even Socrates and Alcibiades could have withstood, criss-crossing the flooring of accumulated Ciceronian high ideals of ethereal body-denying eloquence: all that “claptrap” Virgil got paid to monumentalize (not to blame Virgil, of course: was he not just doing his job?), and that Cicero gladly disseminated in (his odd idea of mostly monologic) dialogue form. We should be well used to this wondrous fun-poking committed in the smirky Janus names of textual/sexual intercourse.
We are not. Why this is so makes for added fun via infinite speculation regarding the superbly radical text, The Miseries of Poetry, which gathers, layers, weaves, fictionalizes gloriously, and reweaves many ancient fragmentary texts to create a work worthy of Lobel and Page’s attention, were these serious fellows of highest learning within the biz and buzz of Classics translation still alive and cranking out text. Alas, they are gone. They have missed a chance at gaining a sense of humor one more time! Who to turn to so to understand the import of this fun? And how do I know that we are probably not yet used to any such wondrous fun-poking as can be found in works such as that of Petronius? I will be teaching Mr. Johnson’s text next spring semester, so, lately by way of preparation I have had to compose the persona, to picture myself as a dignified Ciceronian prof (but female: thus, cross-dressed? I mean poor Cicero is just so, well, MALE) in a college classroom, professing to know well this particular text. Pause. And just to really bring this home, now, let’s just say it’s a Texas classroom. Pause. And here is what we are reading aloud--for, poetry, especially ancient poetry, must be read aloud:
On the Bastard Boupalous
Be a coat rack for me, dear, while I clock
Boupalous on his snot-filled nose.
Following this, be a four-legged bench,
as I fuck from the rear his sweet,
the idiot giantess of Rhegium.
Thank you, Ibykos, handsome whore-boy,
for supporting my revenge.
--Alexandra Papaditsas and Kent Johnson, Miseries (4)
Well then. This is different than the usual classroom fare.
chris at
12:55 AM
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segment 2. Escape Hatches Available to the Wily.
Long pause. In which I must observe that apparently my audience is not prepared for the considerations of bodily matters that this poem plainly makes explicit. What to do with that? Well, fortunately the writer knew what to do. Mr. Johnson has used two very reasonable escape hatches available to the wily (certainly wilier than Plato, I am starting to think) writer: one is the use of Alexandra as authoritative presence (if not exactly voice). The other is that old bugbear of poets and book planners everywhere: strategic placement (eg., as clichéd from Aristotle: save the best for last). Each of these elements is a well documented matter of rhetorical knowledge or awareness: the one considers positions of enunciation in terms of performative voicing. Plato invented and took liberties with his voice of Socrates, which of course extended to all manner of imagined play. And for his part, Socrates had done something similar with Diotima (browse: several essays cover this well in Before Sexuality: Constructions of Erotic Experience in the Ancient Greek World, David Halperin, John Winkler, Froma Zeitlin, eds., Princeton UP, 1990). Alternatively, Mr. Johnson here very modestly proposes (for all textuality is a matter of proposing, of creating propositions to place under consideration) Alexandra, thereby assuaging a fervent complaint of feminists who track developments in classical studies (see “Why is Diotima a Woman?” by David Halperin, in Before Sexuality), thereby also restoring in proper revisionist portion, a specialness to the indeterminacy of literally, sexual/textual femaleness.
But to the practical problem of my students: they will not know this. They will be saying who the heck is this Alexandra Papaditsas, anyway? They will be saying, Umm... Mr. Johnson?--is everything okay up there, man? So they will have to be led to this realization: there could not be a more ingenious way to take aim at and deftly slingshot several early twenty-first century cultural squirrels (hi Kasey!) than to discover your own Alexandra P on a Greek Isle (where can we all find one of these?--I’m calling Travelocity today, yes!). She is tradition, history, gender (female), martyrly, and nun-like yet motherly all in one. Not since the Virgin Mary has textuality had such a compactly singular gender synechdoche. Appropriately, she is such a sultry culture-martyr, a learned figure of mystique and a monumental, terrible, sentimental grief for the (apparently) lost essence of femaleness--whatever that was, or so the logic must go which will certainly one day lead us all to understanding what it (femaleness) is now. YaY!
But I do have to say this: Mr. Johnson, as a feminist, I am offended. Here is why: Alexandra, although certainly more of a pastoral woman than a civic one, should not have been associated with a “billy goat.” (iii) This is a problem not of superficial representation but of quality in deepest proportion. Rather than the billy goat, known for its stubbornness, the more appropriate comparison would have been to the Grand Canyon Big Horn Sheep, known not only for stubbornness, sure, but also even more notably for its wile, its sure footed-ness, and its longevity--this animal, unlike the billy goat, can last well over 100 years in conditions of the steepest build-up of petrified bat guano. And, if all these characteristics were not enough to recommend this fine animal to you as more proper source for comparison, then consider this: the “keras” of the Grand Canyon Big Horn Sheep necessarily winds and curls luxuriantly into several layers of whorls over the animal’s long life time (Pantene is rumored to be distilling a life prolonging substance from this animal’s horn). Simple syllogism, Mr. Johnson: if Alexandra is as remarkable as Mr. Slavoj Zizak is quoted as saying in the book’s “Introduction” (1), and if, as you yourself claim when you write,
“her textual eruptions should be seen as bony knobs sprouting from the heads of such minotaurish translations as these--weird but extrinsic appendages of the ravaged body in which they root... projections of love’s ultimate excrescence,” (iv)
then the only way to find, as you also, more wistfully write, “ her curling horn... within the layered strata of the asteroidal debris,” (iv) is to compare this magical woman to the Grand Canyon Big Horn Sheep. In this I think I have made my point.
chris at
12:51 AM
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segment 3: (Legal) Freedom Is Only One Hundred and Thirty Eight Years Old.
The other matter of rhetorical awareness, which is placement, does tweak very slyly and to good effect, with a linear reading process which is to say the development of things one step at a time: one following the other step-by-step in strict order, like numbers or car parts on an assembly line in Detroit circa 1971. Thus, we do not hear about Boupalous’s far more unconventional bodily positionings until well after we have heard some things that are easier on the delicate ears and mental sensibilities of today’s educational aspirants. For example, we hear in the first poem, “Social Dictum,” that “The City is the teacher of Man.” Fair enough, and most of today’s audiences would not be at loss to hear this. A few lines further on down the line, however, things start to get a little more, well, sticky:
shit steams in the public places,
writhes and curls like slugs into letter shapes,
which our slaves, spilling limed water from amphorae,
wash away before the lesson can be read. (1)
We are not only back at the body and its discomfiting fluids and overflows but such is compared to an alphabet hearkening unto Mr. de Sade himself, who wrote so much of bodily excess and overflow that he was censored, jailed, and left without his means of pen and paper so that his only choice for ink and venue became his own excrement on the wall. The students will probably pause over this passage but it can be explained as an allusion as well as a political statement about the depravity forced on others in the despicable state of human relations called slavery. All students need reminding that this problem is ancient in that the state of human relations called (legal) freedom is only (barely) one hundred and thirty eight years old: in other words, things are not as secure as students may think. Enough said when the word “Vigilance” is then brought into discourse.
We also find the hint of another possible cause for raised eyebrows from students and Others, in the poem, “Bacchanalia of Poets.” This poem mentions “arses” but does so as politely as possible. Students might smirk a little but will probably not stop reading over this. Rather, what has slyly happened here is a steady build-up of images and actions that are borderline: they could be questionable or could cause outrage in some but not in most members of an audience of students. In other words, the majority of the audience has been eased into an awareness that this is a candid text about the body, sure. So far, however, there has been no reason to stop engaging this text since there is not yet any mention of explicit sexuality, which would be the real trigger or panic button for late Victorian sensibilities of the kind most common today.
That matter is left to our Boupalous poem, quoted above in segment 1. But of course, by the time the students reach it in their linear procedure, they can see it in context with other body matters of an explicit nature. Therefore (although somewhat of a risk in terms of alienating audience), it should not alienate the majority of audience which is the point according to both Aristotle and Cicero. Sway the majority and the desired change will occur. Sway polemically and you find or breed chaos. Besides, it is bad manners. You can consult Adam Smith on that--his lectures on Belles Lettres. His economics going hand in hand, of course.
This brings us to an end of our chosen topics in the prescribed linear development known as expository prose. There has been a twofold main point of all this:
**Get This Book from Skanky Possum or SPD and Read It--no one else is writing this radically about the western tradition’s poetic and rhetorical legacies. No one.
** Do not bother asking Kent Johnson why there is an Alexandra. He does not know, so cannot tell you. Instead, simply be gladdened by this textual and imagistic presence.
Just call it the Encolpius Skirt, or Alexandra's Afterlife.
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