S10-TS1
Poetry and Politics
Copyright © by Tim Scannell, 5/29/02
Politics
kills poetry. Reading/writing poetry since 1958, I am increasingly
disgusted – not angered -- by the ideological coilings which throttle
it: Political Correctness, Affirmative Action, Polyculturalism (and their
myriad of academic, legislative, regulatory or bureaucratic garottings we
have come to call 'social engineering'). Politics, opportunistic and
equivocal from audience to audience, is surely not a hero with a thousand
faces, but rather, is most assuredly a totalitarianism employing a
thousand devices.
Obversely,
both writer and reader of poetry are individual -- and eternal. Stevens's
"Sunday Morning" will not, given another readership and another
era, transform itself into the poem, "Tuesday Afternoon."
Individual poets -- millions of artisans of past and future -- abhor
'party' and 'faction' and 'societal swarm' of any description (at least,
the best among them have and will). Furthermore, Robert Frost was right: A
poem's single resonance within all the universe is to "…cry out on
life, that what it wants / Is not its own love back in copy speech, / But
counter-love, original response." Politics, being Pavlovian and
capriciously Machiavellian, is unnecessary to poetry which is solely of
Mnemosyne and her nine yakking daughters – "continuous as the stars
that shine" (William Wordsworth).
An
objective, observant human being recognizes that the fount of modern
politics is at the 'lie-and-scream' level of societal retardation, whether
through the manipulative divisiveness of the Clintons (age, color, sex,
wealth) or the more monstrous 7-decade-long thuggism visited upon the
Soviet Union by its ideological tyrants, now mere criminals. Consider the
troglodytic mindlessness of Taliban Buddha-statue-bombers, Algerian internecine butchers, Bosnian parochials
(withdraw K-4 and see what ensues). Now, imagine it poetically.
Or just consider one moron and one action: that of actually burying spikes
in a tree which another single solitary human being, a logger, will cut
down. It beggars the mind how to figure that a poet could have any
recourse whatsoever but to damn
politics with every word, phrase, line or stanza.
Yet,
the true mystery of our era is the tragic and appalling absence of furious
uprising by individual poets and commentators (erstwhile 'guardians' of
our 'minor' art) against this mephitic political bane. All of God's green
earth is now politicized, music, film, and novels, as fully so as
economics, law and religion. One would think that at least one raggedy
scrap of human activity/expression might be nurtured and protected. Sadly,
no. The cunning and unnecessary
invasion of ideology/politics (derived from Aristotle's Rhetoric)
into poetic expression (Aristotle's Poetics,
however incomplete), has been neither monitored nor denounced by
poets/commentators.
Foolishly,
our sentries fret over 'small potatoes': Edmund Wilson (1934) signs
poetry's death certificate, citing what he perceives as an inevitable
drift of poetry to prose. Randall Jarrell (1960) bemoans poetry's death,
saying potential readers are at once starved and stuffed by the media's
universal mediocrity ("television, radio, movies, popular magazines,
and the rest"). Joseph Epstein (1988) opines that poets hang
themselves by fleeing to universities and college writing programs; and
Dana Gioia (1991) says that poets are errant hermits, withdrawn from
poetry's 'natural' adjuncts (music, dance, theater).
These
whispered alarms regarding history, sociology, institutions or lifestyles
have nothing whatever to do with the source of poetry qua poetry –
nothing! The fount of poetry is pre-historic, pre-societal, etc. The
unawareness of these well-read individuals for what is right before them
is troubling. Moreover, it is dangerous to suppose that the art of poetry
is immune from despoilment by ideological/political rhetoric: it is not.
Those who conclude that, "Sing in me, Muse, and through me tell the
story / of that man skilled…", as mere formality to 'get things
started,' are surrendering all that makes creation and eternity and life
believable – and worthy of human toil!
Politics
kills poetry. Robert Mezey recently released his Collected Poems
(1952-1999) through a university press. Included on its jacket are blurbs from two of
his contemporaries, Donald Justice and John Hollander. These are their
respective comments: "absolute classics of calm and beauty" and
"an unyielding poetic integrity that is itself like a beacon against
a darkening literary horizon." Now, between them, Justice and
Hollander have released 115 books. They have been roundabout a good, long
while, and it was incumbent upon them to cite the ideology informing
Mezey's poetry. Out of his 200-poem collection there were a dozen good
poems, but score after score after score were skewed politically. Is this
an example of classic "calm and beauty"…, of "a beacon
against a darkening literary horizon"?
I
make a lot of money and have a perfect tan;
…I've
dominated women ever since the world began –
Yes,
I'm phallocentric, logocentric, Eurocentric Man!
I've
conquered everybody from Peru to Hindustan
And
make 'em speak my language, though they very rarely can;
I'm
the king, the pope, the CEO, the chieftan of the clan –
Yes,
I'm phallologo, logophallo, Eurocentric Man!
Um…,
all these terms of debasement: sounds very Politically Correct to me!
Um…, all this historical revisionism: sounds very ideological to me!
Um…, taken altogether, this item (screed?)
strikes me as an instance of pristine 'social engineering.' Its author has
abandoned poetry for rhetoric…and so, must be evaluated that way (ethos/pathos: the speaker's moral character/the audience's own
emotions, respectively).
Dust off the ol' Port Huron
Statement.
Submit the tub-thump to
Mother Jones. Lend it as manifesto to our WTO urban terrorists. Give
it (from among a myraid), to Hollywood's Oliver Stone! It's not poetry:
Mezey's 'beauty/integrity' is about as far away
from the plinth as Stephen Hawking's astronomical musings are from
Pac Man and Donkey Kong. If Justice and Hollander choose to remain silent,
shame on them!
It behooves
us as both writers and reviewers of poetry to get back to basics. First,
the fount of poetry are the Musae - Mnemosyne (Memory) and her nine
yakking daughters -- each and all concepts, and none in any way congruent
with or allied to politics. The first through last word of any poem must
show, weep, propitiate, titillate, laugh, laud, sing, dance, and record
all inspired topics coming to them in word-analogues representing,
respectively: Urania, Melpomene, Polyhymnia, Erato, Thalia, Calliope,
Euterpe, Terpsichore, and Clio. That Greek had it right: poetry from
Aristotle's Poetics, politics
from his Rhetoric! And let us be
clear that all of these 'daughter-concepts' derived from Memory predate
the 'political animal' (and more than 400 Greek constitutions/states) by
thousands of seasons, hundreds of human generations.
In short, a poet may choose to deliberately insert the rhetoric of
politics into his poetry, but there is nothing whatsoever natural,
destined or necessary in the
entanglement of the two.
Second,
the choice of a poetical topic and theme is derived from the poet's trust
in a private persona, tone and voice. Personally, I do not tamper with any
of the triad, but leave it to Memory to sound/speak an initial word or
phrase: I am not structuring a 'public address.' It may turn out that the
poem is about a bird or snowfall, laziness or love, or a satire/sarcasm
about modernity, yet the topic of a poem is never, of necessity, politics.
I
couldn't care less what academe and its
present-day, politicized minions think: Deconstruction-ers, Political
Correctness-ites, Affirmative Action-ists. I was among them over 20 years,
the air of the teacher's lounge logorrheic with second-hand mouthings of
social engineering by this person's favorite politician, that person's
selection of media (see the rest of Randall Jarrell's, "A Sad Heart
at the Supermarket", cited above). The blather was so person-specific
and repetitive regarding political affiliation/media loyalty that I am
certain it gave rise to the coinage of summative inference – and
dismissal: "Whatever..."
Third.
Politics is rhetorical ploy -- propaganda -- and serves only ideological
interests (Caesar's variegated corruptions). Tedious, current hothouses of
political pseudo-poems are Central and South America and Africa (over 80 countries
and not one democracy among them). Send them guns, but do not analyze
their bathetic political verse under the delusion that they are poems. An
oft-cited poet was and is Pablo Neruda (1904-73). In his "Letter
to Miguel Otero Silva, In Caracas", the persona bemoans the
"garbage, and depression" of life in the mines, and orates to
others about it. The local police force
...showed
disgust, left off saying
hello,
gave
up calling me Theocritus, and ended by insulting
me
and
assigning the entire police force to arrest me,
because
I did not continue to be occupied exclusively with
metaphysical subjects.
Now,
Neruda may choose to entwine politics into rhetorical address (with
stanzaic patina, etc.), but not from necessity: The choice expresses
Neruda's public ism. Scores of
other Neruda poems are entirely devoid of 'politics,' celebrate sensual
topics/themes of the marketplace, seashore, mountains, neighbors,
lovers, etc. If his politics elicits pathos, then that audience should: 1)
join up, and 2) accompany him fully-armed to kill his political
opposition. But do know that your action/cause are in no way poetic! We
fought our 8-year Revolution before
its 'political' construction in a Constitution (6 more years, 1783-89, to
cobble that into shape).
We
are the only nation to have founded itself on two documents: the
Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. While I believe in both,
I also recognize that, for all their beauty and import, they are formed of
rhetorical words, phrasings, lists and structures, not poetry. The natural
human being (poet or not) knows that "life, liberty and the pursuit
of happiness" are God-given endowments, not the talking points of
some man-made political 'oversoul' or ideologically-driven program of
social engineering. Mnemosyne and the Musae precede such obvious
intrusions of the political state, political animal by millennia.
Fourth,
finally (and in fact, most importantly), we have recourse back to the
origin of poetry qua poetry, its immutable plinth among the Musae:
wordwonder, wordwail, wordprayer, wordlove, wordlaughter, wordlauding,
wordsong, worddance, and wordhistory (once again, metaphorical analogues).
These preoccupations of mind and emotion which thrive in all human beings,
at all times existed long, long before any ideology or political leader's
ism which so dishonestly divides us by gender, age, color, creed, status
or wealth -- when we are foolish enough to assent to the division -- or
seeks to manipulate us (fools again) through poll and vacuous 'focus
group.'
Forty-six
thousand years ago the people of the cave placed one of their dead kinsmen
in his grave on the cave floor of their time, setting his body on a bed of
woody branches and flowers - grape hyacinth, yellow groundsel, hollyhock
and yarrow...red ocher...offerings of meat.
This example
from R. S. Solecki's Shanidar is
the anicent and abiding truth, this poetic – Hesiodic -- event in a
Neanderthal cave (Iraq). Nearly 50,000 years later, blessed by the startle
of waking yet again, happy with coffee and Dunkin' Donuts sweet roll, I
still feel the emotive, imaginative force of their unspoken words, their
placement of a corpse, their choice of flowers, propitiary dusting with
ocher. In that rudimentary persona, tone and voice, I hear and see and
love a 'song' and 'prayer and 'dance' of apolitical, unsocially-engineered
daily living. I read the preliterate wonder surrounding all of the worthy
poetic topics we labor over still today: man versus man, man versus
himself, man versus nature, and man versus the gods. Their act of
propitiation and praise -- a nanosecond in humanity's development -- is
wholly poetical manna to me (in that cave and in that dirt and in that
moment), a lyric of raw existence.
Neither the slightest moment's meaning of life, nor the most
ephemeral of poems, is ever attached, intertwined or controlled by some necessary
taint of ideology or ism. Let there be some benighted
poets and commentators who deem politics important, but I will not be
among them. Best for poet and poem to "cry out on life." Don't
tax the reader with political rhetoric.
This example
from R. S. Solecki's Shanidar is
the anicent and abiding truth, this poetic – Hesiodic -- event in a
Neanderthal cave (Iraq). Nearly 50,000 years later, blessed by the startle
of waking yet again, happy with coffee and Dunkin' Donuts sweet roll, I
still feel the emotive, imaginative force of their unspoken words, their
placement of a corpse, their choice of flowers, propitiary dusting with
ocher. In that rudimentary persona, tone and voice, I hear and see and
love a 'song' and 'prayer and 'dance' of apolitical, unsocially-engineered
daily living. I read the preliterate wonder surrounding all of the worthy
poetic topics we labor over still today: man versus man, man versus
himself, man versus nature, and man versus the gods. Their act of
propitiation and praise -- a nanosecond in humanity's development -- is
wholly poetical manna to me (in that cave and in that dirt and in that
moment), a lyric of raw existence.
Neither the slightest moment's meaning of life, nor the most
ephemeral of poems, is ever attached, intertwined or controlled by some necessary
taint of ideology or ism. Let there be some benighted
poets and commentators who deem politics important, but I will not be
among them. Best for poet and poem to "cry out on life." Don't
tax the reader with political rhetoric.
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