Notes
Toward A Contemporary Poetics Of Cotext
And
Its Possible Cultural And Literary Contexts
by
Chris
Tanasescu
The universal concept of context, as
well as the more specialized one of cotext – in the fields of linguistics or
Bible studies – can and, to a certain extent, have already proved quite useful
in analyzing, assessing, and even writing contemporary poetry. The art of
poetry provides by its nature new contexts (“new and strange” in Shakespeare’s
phrase) for everything it touches, transporting (as the etymological meaning of
“metaphor” conveys) and translating – both as in languages and geometry –
words, feelings, thought, perception, rhythm, characters, images, sounds,
stories, etc. into new and often unexpected spaces and (re)configurations.
And the main vehicle for reaching ever
new contexts and providing alternative cotexts is imagination. Adrienne Rich
has spoken strongly of the transformative power of the imagination, by means of
which “writing is renaming” (Rich 1978, p 34). The radical and political power
of arts thus translates a cultural text in a wider context in which access to
power is not limited to only certain entries. This wider transformative context
actually redefines power itself in a manner that purports the very dismantling
of patriarchal structures, and thus “rename” the given “text” by denying it
too. Power, apparently paradoxically residing now in poets and poetry, becomes
therefore not the “power of domination, but just access to sources”. (ibidem
43; cf Jay Parini’s discussion of her poetics, Parini pp 10-11)
Such sources are sometimes there in
the culture, open to anyone, but access to them is not so much a matter of
affordability or logistics, but rather a personal asset in the seeker. In
reading the correspondence of Robert Duncan and Denise Levertov, Rich discovers
how the latter was fascinated by the former’s “fearless appetite” and “zest for
different things, different worlds really” (Rich 2009, 73). The “sources” for
such power were, Rich determines, in the case of such poets. their “freedom
from the enclosures of academia; [for] these poets were each others’ workshops”
(idem). Such freedom and openness actually go much further than that, as Duncan
himself writes Levertov, “…I aim at keeping my consciousness open (my ideal
would be an expanding awareness)”, which would realize the (Romantic and modernist absolutism) actual plenitude of human
existence by means of some (typically
modernist, and then postmodern skepticism and awareness of artificiality)
artifact – “We too if we are to realize some wide and generous risk, to let a
poem go out that far to include (you say the whole man) – well some substitute
– […]”. (ibidem, 75)
It is more than relevant to follow
such developments of (virtually) the same cultural context in its contrasting
evolutions – Rich thoughtfully reads and validly analyzes Levertov, and
especially Duncan’s poetics, and relevantly underscores stances like those in
which the latter views culture and poetry not as fields of competing
individualisms and inhibiting criticism, but rather as a geological concurrence
of language agglomerates and accumulations. “What if poetry were not some realm
of personal accomplishment, open field day race for critics to judge […] but a
record of what we are, like the record of what the earth is, is left in rocks,
left in language?” (ibidem 74) Still, Rich counterpoints with remarks about
how, in spite of this cosmically harmonizing vision, the poets under discussion
did criticize. Beyond the commonsensical observation of the distance between
stated (ideal) principles and every day practice, (so natural not only) in
these poets, Rich also adds a note closer to her own aesthetic – the one
whereby language is inadequate if it runs in the old cycles (of nature, of
minerals, and geology, as above) and remains revolutionary. Whereas for Duncan
poetry ought to be radical
etymologically speaking, i.e., recuperative of roots and thus genuinely
innovative, for Rich, who resorts to etymology too, the imperative is
nonetheless opposite: language should not be “revolutionary,” but
transformative.
Still, Duncan’s romantically
integrative vision paradoxically proves more relevant in certain cultural
contexts nowadays than the (literally) radical one of Rich. Dana Gioia has
showed in his 2004 Disappearing Ink
title essay that a new literary and cultural context emerges in contemporary US
and not only, where printed poetry loses ground to oral and performance ones,
and where the true surprises and innovations come not from “literary” poetry,
but from popular variants of it. In face of the great explosion of the latter
and its overwhelming bearing on cultures and media, Gioia assesses that what we
need now is not so much a critical appraise of such works and phenomena, but
rather “an accurate description of what is happening […] – an up-to-date road
map of American poetry, not a Michelin dining guide.” (Gioia 9) Besides, Gioia
shrewdly argues, while literary poetry has grown seclusive and relevant to just
the initiated few, and as innovation comes from the margins, literary criticism
is so much the more losing relevance as its main defining features presently
are “invisible, incomprehensible, inaccessible, and insincere” (ibidem 26).
But for all the stress that he lays on
new multimedia cultures and on the gradual decrease of the print ones, Gioia
cannot but emphasize at the same time the great importance of local experience
and values and how living in a certain particular place and being immersed in
those specific realities and language(s) still influence our lives and
mentalities more than a great deal. This is a notion of significant appeal to
poets that are usually called regionalist, and among them, though his
complexities and nuances cannot be easily contained by any univocal tag, David
Baker is one who both illustrates and challenges the category, a writer that
accepts being referred to as a Midwest poet, while he also dismisses “any form
of blunt parochialism and pride-of-place, be it local, regional, or national.”
(Baker 2009, unpaginated) In a lecture
he gave at the University of Bucharest in December 2009, “Show Me Your
Environment,” of which a shorter version has meanwhile appeared in American Poet, Baker subtly
circumscribes a dialectic of the self and the surrounding environment and
community in a way that can make poetry relevant as cultural text that aims at
making various contexts perceivable, as polyvalent and concurrent. While
acknowledging the adamant value of the person and the self – especially as
asserted in certain feisty verse of Bishop, for instance – Baker typically
qualifies that (as ever-shifting, questionable) with the complementary and
wider interaction provided by the other and the environment, as in the title quote
from Pasternak (whose relevant continuation is “…and I will tell you who you
are”) or one of Gluck’s definitive verse-verdicts, “one’s position determines
one’s feelings.” Baker actually knows how to question and thoroughly scrutinize
everything – his most familiar or allusively dear notions included – without
falling for mere relativism or indeterminacy, but quite consistently (and only
apparently paradoxically so) in search for what is most serious and “deep,”
even capital. While courageously examining, for instance, the perils of a
full-hearted song-like lyricism of a major poetry such as that of Plumly, he
shrewdly uncovers there a wise employment of clichés and an unexpectedly
exemplary postmodernism combined with deeply unsettling reflections on the condition
of humans, the environment, and language. To Baker, discerning such aspects is
following a track beyond even the most difficult to answer concerns of the
craft, towards assessing the possible fate and hopeful rescue of the species.
The accruing obituary [in a Plumly
poem] is for friends and neighbors, memorial in its gravity and stunning in its
detailing. But it serves as obituary
also for the vanishing “swampy interior” and “dense scrub undergrowth” of the
land, the place, the site of language but also of loss. Jonathan Bate argues forcefully in The Song of the Earth that this
fragility and this essential beauty is the contemporary poet’s deepest task of
attention and articulation. Let me say
that again. It is—I contend—fundamental to our survival not just as artists but as
a species. (ibidem, emphasis mine)
Baker points out such questions and
their ultimate gravity without providing answers, or at least not univocal
ones, but preferring to make room for complexities that could not be diagnosed
or solved univocally. Not only he refuses to choose any of the poles of
possible options in contemporary poetry, but he unmasks such bipolarities as
fundamentally wrong or false and he seeks ways of reaching the truth that is
beyond them. Regional, yes, but always drawing relations to other places
(geographically, culturally); the self, yes, but in continuous concurrence with
the other and with/as the environment. His poetics is thus his poetry and his
poetry his poetics, as the essay itself becomes a way of defining and
circumscribing an environment of poets and their poetries (of Midwest but not
only) – among whom the protean and “furiously diverse” C.G. Waldrep is probably
the most intriguing one – that works as a context for surrounding, making manifest,
and defining his own voice and his own poetry, just as his own poetical vision
and his voice are (as an a-priori context) those that pick and portray the
poets we are presented with in this text. “This is
precisely my point: to continue to
imagine webs of relation, housed in place and self, that may extend to other
places and other people. Not the erasure
of either, but the extension and complication of both.” (idem)
Such relations are there and work in
establishing/(re)defining the self also as referred to the other as language.
And the self may not only be extending and complicating, but also forming and
growing towards maturity. Louise Glück has written about “possibilities of
context” in her essay “Education of a Poet”, where she confesses about how in
her early years she was fascinated by the relations between words on a page as
an opportunity for them to develop surprisingly their own “selves” made of
unsuspected meanings, denotations and connotations. “What I responded to, on
the page, was the way a poem could liberate, by means of a word’s setting,
through subtleties of timing, of pacing, that world’s full and surprising range
of meaning.” (3-4) The relationship between a poet’s growth and their
struggling with/learning from language goes in modern times as far back as
Wordsworth’s Prelude, and it has
created a context for poetry in which voice could appropriate registers
previously inaccessible, since “unpoetical,” “prosaic.” The trend went on until
stages where the concept of “voice” itself (along with “self,” “person,” etc.)
was no longer acceptable, as in Language poetry, but even then (or, to some,
even now, in post-Language or other parallel evolutions) a context would be
present and affecting the poem and its life in one way or another. In a famous
poem, “The Republic of Reality,” Charles Bernstein addresses, among other
things, this very issue (a typically Language poem’s contextualism, to approach
or pick as their “(lack of) subject” theoretical issues!) of the context. “This
line is stripped of emotion./ This line is no more than an/ illustration of a
European/ theory. This line is bereft/ of a subject. This line/ has no reference apart/ from its context in/
this line. This line/ is only about itself. [etc]” (312, emphasis mine) All
these harmless funny paradoxes (and no oxymorons) by denial of any context
actually speak of a context, be it as impossible as it may be, namely the one
in which such poetics deny or continuously questions the possibility of verse
to represent reality.
Between these two poles – Glück’s,
where interactions between words make them bloom within a context of
magical/mythological resplendence (a tinge of Emerson’s conviction that
language is fossil poetry can definitely be sensed here) and Bernstein’s, with
its cruelly/ironically disenchanted view of no resounding connecting contexts
at all – lies the territory of (in certain cases) modern will to literalness,
precision, and non-ambiguity, Frost’s “momentary stay against confusion,” and,
closer to our times, Elizabeth Bishop’s obsession with meanings and their
multiplicities hopefully converging to unity. In what has been diagnosed as an
untypical Bishop poem (cf. Dodd 136), the rather typical oscillation of the
poet between unresolved states of mind (with indeed, an untypical lack of the
usual land/sea/cityscapes and oneiric/effaced characters, and in this respect
Dodd is perfectly right) sinuously approaches a presumed point of convergence
somewhere beyond tormenting confusion. Here is “Conversation:”
The
tumult in the heart
keeps
asking questions.
And
then it stops and undertakes to answer
in
the same tone of voice.
No
one could tell the difference.
Uninnocent,
these conversations start,
and
then engage the senses,
only
half-meaning to.
And
then there is no choice,
and
there is no sense;
until
a name
and
all its connotation are the same.
(Bishop
77)
While Dodd is again right in signaling
the rhyme-scheme and the quasi-sonnet rhetorical development of the poem, as
well as in, so significantly for our topic, referring understanding of this
particular poem to the context of
poems surrounding it in the collection and the whole oeuvre, she misses the
progress throughout the text towards clarity and convergence, while much of the
pestering confusion and inexplicitness actually springs from difficulty,
alterity, and even ineffability, and not so much (definitely, not exclusively)
from moody obscure state of mind. Somewhat similarly to the earlier “Miracle
for Breakfast,” this poem manages to accumulate and accommodate both negative
perception and sarcastic critique on the one hand, and ardent (modernly
secularized, yet) spiritually intense experience, on the other. While
“Conversation” can be indeed read as an ironical title for a troubled inconsistent
and inconclusive soliloquy, it may also stand for spiritual exchanges – like
in, for instance, St. John Cassian’s “conferences,” or, for that matter,
conversations – and also, con-version, a word with ecstatic resonance that
expresses here a “total” poetical practice that “engages the senses” in a sense beyond meaning (amazing sense
distilled from ordinary meanings, as Dickinson would put it) and reaches a
liberation from the senses and meanings towards the apparently absurd – “no
sense” – and a conversion of arbitrary option into creative liberty as
necessity – “no choice.” From this perspective, the conclusion of the poem fits
better into place and comes up as a testimony of a unique experience, a
quasi-mystical union, a unique inextricable marriage of vital content and
formal constraint in poetry. Or, of name and connotation – since the mystical
bend is present in the choice of “name” rather than “word,” a fundamental
distinction in mystical practices, where sometimes (and for various reasons)
“connotations” are used instead of the name proper, that is, cognomens,
attributes, euphemisms, metonyms, etc, but their effectiveness is basically the
same as they conjure one and the same presence; therefore, “a name and all its
connotations are the same.”
This is, however, in no way saying
that “Conversation” is a cryptically mystical (and so much the less religious)
poem, but that Bishop masterfully uses the self-contained cotext of the poem to
instill various and sometimes even contradictory possible ways of reading the
text, while drawing wider and wider networks (Baker’s “web[s] of relation”
realizing “the extension and complication of both”) within given or thus
(re)generated contexts: the longer sequence (of which “Conversation” is only
part one), the book/oeuvre as a totality, possible connective or connectable
cultures (like the heterodox mysticism I tried to locate here, etc), politics
and sexuality (read with her camouflaged yet edgy gay manifestos in mind, such
as the wiry haywire meta-formal “Sonnet” from 1979, the poem also sheds an
unexpected homoerotic light itself), etc.
Such potential mysticism is typically
absent from Adrienne Rich’s poetry (although Bishop’s will to univocal
convergence is also there, more powerful than ever) where, as David Baker
comments in another essay – “Against Mastery,” from his book of prose Heresy and the Ideal. On Contemporary Poetry
– although the Whitmanian theme of speaker’s obliteration (in the concluding
section of “Song of Myself”) is still present, it is now bereft of any
transcendental dimension and aims at locating and fixating the speaker on the
earth. In reviewing Rich’s An Atlas of the Difficult World, Baker
finds social, political, racial, and, of course, feminist grounds for the
poet’s anti-mastery poetics. But what really caught my attention, as I was
planning this article and trying to draw up a(n) (dis)order of poets and
critics relevant in various ways to my subject, was a brief note that I would
have otherwise enjoyed for the quick subtle distinction, but then would have
just moved on to something else. “In “Two Arts,” speaking directly to the
occupation of the artist, and perhaps resisting the losses beautifully and
ironically “mastered” in Bishop's “One Art,” she clarifies the function as well
as the formal property of her art: “you have a brutal thing to do.”” (Baker
2000, 244) The parallel in this remark takes us back to Bishop and to her
compulsive and multilayered both spiritual and profane tension in search for
convergence and clarity, and to the fact that the latter goals are essential
for Rich too, only without the metaphysical premise. Both such presumptions and
their distinctive alternative developments come, as Baker states from the
beginning of his essay, from Whitman, and we could add of course, in a slightly
wider context, Emerson. To my mind and to the context I am (re)discovering
here, the abovementioned observations are actually the marker of a gradually
emerging thought (a graph that grows by linking discrete points within an
expanding web of relations) that constitutes a context which comes back from
the other and converges again onto the self, thus (re)generating cotext.
Baker’s cotext will evolve from these web of relations to the self’s
clarification of a cultural and poetical topos – in one of the essays
contributed to Radiant Lyre, a book
he would co-edit with Ann Townsend in 2007, this thought would find “a
habitation and a name.” In “Elegy and Eros: Configuring Grief,” the image of
heaven in the American psyche is identified, after closely reading certain
poems of Whitman and Dickinson, not as otherworldly, celestial, or solely
spiritual, but of this world and with a specific location – one will find it by
going west and following the sun.
In these remarks I have totally
altered the established acceptance “cotext” has in linguistics and I have
adapted the meaning it has in Biblical studies for my own purpose. While in the
former field it refers to words or language structures/constructions that occur
most frequently in a language together with a certain word or phrase, the
latter is about the words/sentences that appear in the Bible along with a
certain statement/quote, the textual context, the texts that appear around a
certain given text. In Bible studies it is in most cases more than relevant to
look up the cotext of a text, as for instance one may come across the phrase
“There is no God” not only once in the book, but the cotexts dramatically
qualify that statement, as for instance in Psalm 14: 1, where we can read “Only
a fool would say, “There is no God!” People like that are worthless; they are
heartless and cruel and never do right.” My favorite example is a cotext that
gets almost always overlooked, although it sheds an essentially revealing light
on the fragment quoted so often in so many different contexts: “Render
therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar’s.” (Matt. 22: 21) This is a
phrase one can hear now and then where it may make sense as well as where not
so much so. But especially when it is meant as an encouragement to compromise
or complacency it is used in a way that totally ignores and therefore
contradicts the cotext: “…and unto God, the things that are God’s.”
In my comments above, though, I have
employed cotext in the sense of contexts for certain elements/themes/topics
(including the topic of “context” itself) as they evolve within a oeuvre or
poetics (Bishop’s, Rich’s, Baker’s, etc.) and/or develop in various sections
(contexts) of the same text or versions of that text. As I have already focused
above on the first part of this working definition, I will now focus on the
second. As examples, one may consider for instance the motifs of the sun and
the moon in Anthony and Cleopatra as
equated with the protagonists, their dramatic evolution, and the alchemical/astrological
treatment thereof, throughout the play; or, for versions of a text, the cotexts
of love and loss in the traditional 16th century rime “Western
Wind,” its modern version “Blow West Wind” by Robert Penn Warren, and the more
recently contemporary version of Warren’s version, “I Was There,” by Jay
Parini, as detailed by the latter somewhere in his brilliant latest book, Why Poetry Matters (94-98). There, the
poet and critic opens an invaluable window on his own work and on the
relationship between his and his mentor’s approach to writing, while shrewdly
analyzing the equation of tradition and originality in English-language
poetries in general.
A very
interesting version of this working concept of cotext was suggested to me by
Helen Vendler’s book Poets Thinking.
Pope, Whitman, Dickinson, Yeats, where, in the chapter dedicated to
Whitman, while analyzing the poem “Sparkles form the Wheel” (42 et infra), the
author uses a musical genre model, the reprise, to account for the structure of
the poem, gradation of tone, and both enhancement and refining of vision. The
poem presents in its first section a certain scene – a worker in the street, a
knife-grinder sharpening a knife on a wheel – while in its second one it
revisits the scene in a more personal, reflexive, and passionate voice. In the
terms of this article, the poet himself provides a cotext for his own text, a
new version already included in the original, which therefore is already a
duplicate. Duplicates invite duplicates, so I said to myself, let’s write a
cotext for this cotext, or, a reprise of the reprise. And as always, a poem
started in translation – I tried to translate it into Romanian and, as is so
often the case with what I do, my translation started to also include improvisation
(translations actually always include improvisation, the differences come from
the degree and proportion of the latter only); just like in jazz or rock, I
picked up the theme and played it “my way,” that is, in a way I found more
suitable for my time and culture by also including a political-cultural
critique from the standpoint of a partial (voyeuristic) accessory. I presented
my Romanian version at a couple of poetry readings and a few Margento gigs, but
before I got to publish it, it caught poet and translator Martin Woodside’s
attention, who translated it back into English (and thus “betrayed” it, as the
Italians would say, or “cheated on” it, as Romanian classic Caragiale would
mock), coming up with a reprise of a reprise’s reprise, a cotext’s cotext’s
cotext, a Whitmanesque reprise’s reprise hopefully relevant to the American
reader (too). It is titled “After Walt Whitman,” and here is Woodside’s English
version of it:
There
where the world buzzes even late at night
I found myself between a group of boys
and girls at a shop window.
There, on the TV screens lined up wall
to wall, in every corner
a naked woman (German, Scandinavian?)
keeps tugging
at a hard penis dangling above her
eyes; apparently that clean
day time programming turns pornographic
at night, the shop clerks
long gone; she pulls at it slowly,
rubs it, strokes it, plays around this way
and that a rhythmic motion, fast then
slow, squeezing with a firm
but gentle hand, until the silvery
jets spurt out,
streaming white sparkles of sex.
The scene and the science behind it,
how they can enthrall
and impress me, that woman done up in
such
lurid vitality, perfect fake breasts,
looking up at an invisible man,
I myself in full effusion, fluent, a
curious phantasm set afloat by
the here and now absorbed and
arrested,
group (the town’s G-spot neglected a
vast concrete expanse)
of boys and girls at attention, the
infrequent blinking raspy wheezing of night
traffic subsiding, the man’s scratchy
groaning, light swish of the hand,
a silver shower squirting, splashing,
powder and mascara running over :
streaming white sparkle of sex.
(Tanasescu
168)
Given its millennium-long background
and the spectacular evolution towards a major element in writing poetry, a lyric
mode, and even a genre (Eliot’s Waste
Land, Pound’s Cantos, the
profusion of contemporary renditions of Greco-Latin classics in English
“original” versions, from Robert Hasss to C.K. Stead, to Dan Chiasson, and
onward) in modernism and postmodernism, poetic cotext has generated an enormous
corpus of literature, and with the more recent flarf, google, and
assemblage-like modes of “composition” and performance, it seems to gain more
and more ground in wider and wider contexts that both poets and audiences so
often come across and sometimes distill creatively in their busy global
every-day lives.
Works Cited
Baker, David. “Show Me Your
Environment.” Lecture given at the University of Bucharest, Dec 3rd
2009, manuscript courtesy of the poet.
Baker, David and Ann Townsend. Radiant Lyre. Essays on Lyric Poetry.
Saint Paul, MN: Graywolf Press, 2007.
Baker, David.. Heresy and the Ideal. On Contemporary Poetry. Fayetteville, AR:
University of Arkansas Press, 2000.
Bernstein, Charles. My Way: Speeches and Poems. Chicago, IL:
University of Chicago Press, 1999.
Bishop, Elizabeth. The Complete Poems, 1927-1979. New York:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1984.
Dodd, Elizabeth Caroline. The Veiled Mirror and the Woman Poet: H.D.,
Louise Bogan, Elizabeth Bishop. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press,
1992.
Gioia, Dana. Disappearing Ink. Poetry at the End of Print Culture. Saint Paul,
MN: Graywolf Press, 2004.
Glück, Louise. Proofs & Theories: Essays on Poetry. New York: Ecco, 1994.
Parini,
Jay. Why Poetry Matters. New Haven
and London: Yale University Press, 2008.
Rich, Adrienne. A Human Eye. Essays on Art in Society 1997-2008. New York &
London: W.W. Norton, 2009.
____________ On Lies, Secrets, and Silence: Selected Prose, 1966-1978. New York:
W.W. Norton, 1978.
Tanasescu, Chris. Trans. Martin
Woodside. “After Walt Whitman” in Chris Tanasescu, Cartea de la Curtea, with a Margento Jam Session and English
Translations; poems. Bucharest: Vinea Press, 2010.
Vendler, Helen. Poets Thinking. Pope, Whitman, Dickinson, Yeats. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 2004.