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Dispatches: Journals

Kim Addonizio: 04.24.06-04.28.06


Wednesday 04.26.06

desk.gif
Where I'm writing from


Thanks to the people who commented. I was sitting here feeling like I didn’t really want to think, or talk, about poetry today. Poetry, that is, as words on a page. Then I thought, well, if we think poetry is words on the page, we’re missing the essence. I mean, we call poetry Poetry because it is a way to get close to it. The “it” being something else.

I haven't read much Guy Debord. I was reading one of those big UC anthologies, Poems for the Millennium, and all I know is what’s excerpted there. I’m afraid I don’t know shit about Debord. This is true, for me, of many things, and I don’t say it proudly. I have, as someone once wrote of Truman Capote (I think), “the usual deficiencies of the autodidact.” I’m not a scholar, & my ignorance of various names & theories & poetics bothers me, but it also bothers me that poetry has at times been hijacked by intellectuals. Love intelligence, but keep it in its place. Milosz once said something about contemporary poetry being a huge head on a wasted body. Some poems and poetics make me feel like what a non-native speaker told me once: “Oh, this English is like a stone on my head.”

I’m not really ignorant, I just know how much I don’t know, & mostly I feel like I should know more. I used to cover—nod & smile like I knew what the fuck someone was saying—& then run & look it up later. Now I try not to do that. (Nod & smile, I mean. I still run and look it up.)

Would love to know about Debord’s life. Write & tell me/us about him. I think I put him in to have something smart to say.

Brain studies are fascinating to me—the brain as an interface developed by consciousness.

I think that has everything to do with poetry & poetics.


flowers.gif
The flowers outside my window


Comments

On 04.26.06 Anonymous wrote:

hey, anyone read brian campbell's article in rock salt plum review? it relates... but doesn't everything... i feel the flowers in your window. i don't know shit about Debord.


On 04.26.06 Matthew wrote:

Just to add a thought about poetry being hijacked by intellectuals. This is what Federico Garcia Lorca said about intelligence and poetry, and I don't think anyone, including Milosz, has said it better: "Intelligence is often the enemy of poetry, because it limits too much, and it elevates the poet to a sharp-edged throne where he forgets that ants could eat him or that a great arsenic lobster could fall suddenly on his head..." Anyway. Keep those lobsters coming.



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Kim Addonizio
Kim Addonizio's poetry has been called "gritty," but it might be more accurate to say she sees humanity everywhere, even in the darkest corners of the world. In "The Call," for instance, she writes about a phone sex operator walking around her apartment, checking on her sleeping child, talking to a male customer. She cannot see that he’s a paraplegic, "turning his wheelchair right, / left, right. A tube runs down / his pants leg. Sometimes / he thinks he feels something . . . " She is the author of four poetry collections: The Philosopher's Club, Jimmy & Rita, Tell Me, and What Is This Thing Called Love. She recently published her first novel, Little Beauties. She has a spoken word/music CD, Swearing, Smoking, Drinking, & Kissing, with Susan Browne. Her work has been recognized with a Guggenheim Fellowship, two NEA Fellowships, and other honors.

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