Claire poems
“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Tuesday, August 27, 2024
Claire poems - Karen Chamisso
Saturday, August 24, 2024
That American skaz
In the Europe of the interwar period, there was a whole
lotta interest in the telling of the tale – the system of the tongue and (as
Walter Benjamin, in a brilliant illumination, realized) – the hand as an
instrument of tactile pressure. This system, incidentally, is opposed to the
system of the eye and the hand as an instrument of writing – the pen, the typewriter.
Variations on the old oral/writing binary – but molecularly interesting
variations, and not reducible to the binary mothership.
In the U.S., we already had the most brilliant of skaz texts
– Huckleberry Finn. During this time, a long line of writers – W.C. Williams,
Hemingway, Faulkner, Hurston, etc. – were trying to tap into the American skaz.
And then there is Eudora Welty.
Since, this summer, I am enduring and enjoying the total sun
and occasional breezes of the South of France, around a pool no less, I am in a
sort of American mood. Funny how these things work by contraries. I’m a little
more hopeful about the Motherland – although aware that, on the edges, America
is financing and providing the weaponry for the mass murder in Gaza. Any hoo, I
have a little paperback stack that includes Eudora Welty’s Collected Stories. I’ve
never settled my accounts with Welty. And why not do it now?
I did have in mind, before I started, the Welty that is too
cute by half, the Welty of the inevitably dragged out “Why I live at the P.O.” Gertrude
Stein said that there are stories that are accrochable and stories that are
inaccrochable – taking her metaphor from the painters, who select for their shows
the painting that can hang – that is, sell, or at least represent them – as opposed
to those they paint that they can’t hang, that they just have to do, somehow. “Why
I live at the P.O.” is hyperaccochable.
It is among the stories that wear out their spirit with being overhung.
So there’s that. Reading around, the lit I came upon Lorrie
Moore’s essay on Welty, which is rather stinting. Moore is worried that Welty
is a racist. And no doubt she is. As was the U.S. during the slave, ethnic
cleansing, and apartheid eras. I think – although, in fairness to Moore, I
haven’t checked this out – that if she were writing about, say, Edith Wharton,
she would not be hung up about Wharton’s racism. But she was. And, I should
say, I am – I, too, am a product of the white American middle class. I pre-existed
before I existed, with my people, my grandparents and great grandparents, enjoying
the bounties of Apartheid America and making it up through the middle class in
a racist game that no retroactive sprinkling of “diversity” is going to make up
for or hide.
So there is that.
Anyway, I plunged randomly in the stories and came upon one
that bowled me over: The Hitchhikers. It was published in A curtain of green
and other stories, where the P.O. story was also collected. The Hitchhikers is
a fierce little story about a salesman, Tom Harris, some hitchhikers he picks
up, one surly, one playing a guitar; and the small town he stops in with them, and
the fight between the hitchhikers in which one gets killed, and the prohibition
era drinking and fucking of this little Missipp town near Memphis.
The Skaz needs a traveler: a pilgrim, a knight, a bum. Or a
salesman. Since Balzac virtually discovered the type with Gaudissart, the
traveling salesman has done a lot of business in lit, especially Am. Lit. It
began, in America, as the Yankee salesman, but in the “new South” the salesman is
a bit different, a bit more ambiguous. Flannery O’Connor, who is a very
different kinda writer than Welty, likes her salesmen to come with their Yankee
rationality or cynicism to visit the internal exiles of Dixie (who are her
knockdown characters). Welty, whose father was a salesman, has a much more
level view of the kind. Tom Harris is not proving any point about secularism or
nihilism. Instead, he is a man around whom excitement happens – but who is
increasingly alienated by that excitement, or numb to it. It is a numbness that
bothers him some. It is not a bit folksy,
the way Welty sometimes embroidered a bit with her tellers and their tales.
This is, rather, the pure products of America finding their excitements
growing, each year, a little colder.
I recognized that South.
The ending bits of the story are perfect:
“Harris, fresh from the barbershop, was standing in the
filling station where his car was being polished.
A right of little boys in bright shirt-tails surrounded him
and the car, with some colored boys waiting behind them.
“Could they git all the blood off the seat and steerin’
wheel, Mr. Harris?”
He nodded. They ran away.
“Mr. Harris,” said a little colored boy who stayed. “Does you
want the box?”
“The what?”
He pointed, to where it lay in the back seat with the sample
cases. “The po’ kilt man’s gittar. Even the policemans didn’t want it.”
“No,” said Harris, and handed it over.”
I love the economy of this ending, with its true American
skaz way with symbols – symbols are embarrassing. That is really one of the
keys to American sentimentality, the edginess with symbols, the embarrassment
one feels when they are too heavily present, one’s sense that symbols lead to
no good thing.
Friday, August 23, 2024
thoughts on Hemingway
1.
In A Moveable Feast, Hemingway is talking about the
fishermen in Paris, the ones on the banks and the bridges that fish in the
Seine. They fascinate him even though, for his part, he prefers to fish in the
mountains. He’s faithful to trout. He sees these people, though. He talks to
these people. And, he writes, “they are good to know about.”
AMF is built on the principle of what it is good to know
about. Ah, the many things – things that attract adjectives like “warm”, “fine”,
“good”. Good is truly a character in these pages. But as we read Hemingway, we find
that the book is built not only on a thesis, but an anti-thesis: the things
that are bad to know about. The accumulated wreckage, broken relationships,
drunks and suicidal tendencies, writer’s blocks and bogus posturing, these give
us a four decades of what is bad to know about. Yet you don’t know anything if
you don’t know what is bad to know about. The good trivializes itself, the work
becomes meaningless.
When I came to France in 1981 to go to the University of
Montpellier, all the Americans I was with, or at least a goodly number, knew
their AMF. How could they not? We were equipped, in high school and college,
with our Hemingway and Scott F. Plus various foreign films. The desire to spend
a year in France has to nourish itself, in a young mind growing up in
Louisiana, on some longing for the cultural monuments, such as they were.
Of course, since 1981 we are told over and over that a sea
change has come, and that the old masters have been given their showtrials and
exiled to used book stores. I have my doubts, however. I imagine that a goodly
number of the American students who will come to France for their year abroad
next year will have some passing acquaintance with Hem and Hadley and Scott and
Zelda.
My generation and the one that came after might have been
fed a systematically canonized Hemingway. We had to tear down that canon in
order to breath, an exercise in our variously achieved enlightenments. What
this meant is that what was good to think about Hemingway – his stubborn faith
in the true sentence – had to overlap with what was bad to think about
Hemingway – the sexism, homophobia, lust for violence, etc. – in order for us
to think at all well about Hemingway.
In his preface to the book, dated 1960, we read, “if the
reader prefers, this book may be regarded as fiction.” Little did Hemingway know that the
60s would belong to these fictional non-fictions. Hemingway knew that a good
way to think about fact was as fiction, he always knew that. So one reads the
hateful bits about Stein and Ford Madox Ford and one reads the faux prole
posturing about knowing as a boy among hobos that one needed a knife and needed
to show one could and would use it to kill to prevent something awful (presumably
rape sodomy) from happening and one grows to feel about this character that he
is, when all things are said and done, worth the time. It works, somehow.
Or it did. It is hard for me to cast off the pathos of
history, of the history since, and read it as straightly as Hemingway hoped it
would be read, or hoped he would, in general, be read.
2.
Tuesday, August 20, 2024
Cleopatra reads T Magazine
Friday, August 16, 2024
Slow (revised)
This is not, I think, my fate. In my imagination, though, I do dip into it. This vacation, I am experiencing the suspended animation of a quasi-country house. Slowness for a time. But not too much time. One of
my favorite sequences in one of my fave films, Bella Tarr’s Satanstango,
concerns the village doctor. We watch him get drunk in his home, fall down in
an apparent stupor, and then get up – after which comes the sequence, which
consists of nothing more than him walking to the village inn to get more
liquor. The thing about it is, the camera follows him in real time. Since
he is old, obese, and intoxicated, that means that the camera watches him make
an at most quarter mile jog in about fifteen minutes. Fifteen minutes! When I
first saw this, I couldn’t believe it – I couldn’t believe Tarr would dare an
audience to basically install itself in the speed and sensibility of one of the
members of the slow cohort of the population – those users of walkers, those
hobblers down sidewalks or the aisles of grocery stores, those old or impaired.
Normally, we’d get a bit of slow hobbling and cut then to the doctor
approaching the inn. We’d get in other words what we expect in the terms of the
speedy cohort, the ones with cars, the ones who run, the ones who stride,
walking their dogs, or over the beach, radiating the get it now ethos.
I’ve had my experience with slowness. When I had a minor
operation on my leg, I was a limper, a crutch-goer. Once, as an afteraffect of
a bad case of pneumonia, I would get out of breath after a pitifully small
number of paces. However, I viewed these as mere accidents to my essential
gait.
Paris is a city with a considerable population of the
elderly, stubbornly clinging to apartments that, as any economist will tell
you, tongue hanging out, should be put up on the free market and bought by
anonymous tycoons with money laundered through Cyprus. But France, shamelessly,
supports its non-use population, and so here we are: on sidewalks behind old
men and women going at their own pace to whereever. I stride past them, full of
pluck, but somewhere in me I know that this pace is coming for me, and sooner
rather than later.
The doctor in Satanstango lives in a village where, aside
from a few cars and tractors, the fastest things are dogs and horses. Not a
metropole. The slow life in the metropole puts one, perhaps, in the margins, or
in the subculture. But what is a major city without a subculture? In the
country, especially the country night in the sticks traversed by our out of
breath doctor, there’s a less kind spirit. Lamed horses are shot, cows and
bulls are only allowed a certain age before they are trucked away and driven up
the chute. And surely some give a slow doctor appraising looks. Yet the whole
village has a sense of itself as slow, against a faster world.
This is not, I think, my fate. In my imagination, though, I
do dip into it. This vacation, I am experiencing the suspended animation of a quasi-country
house. Slowness for a time. But not too much time.
Sunday, August 11, 2024
When the GOP went all wrong: 1928
When Harding and Coolidge ran for President in 1920, under
the slogan a “Fair deal”, their campaign printed an appeal to women. It makes
interesting reading vis a vis the Republican party today.
For instance, H and C pledged that at no time and in no way
would American soldiers go to war unless this was deemed necessary by an
official act of the legislature. Interesting language, already cutting corners
on the old Constitution. And of course regularly violated by all presidents, R and
D, since then.
But the beautiful part must be quoted.
“Republican domestic policy is for the strengthening and
protecting of all elements which keep life on a high plane. It has been under
Republican administration that this country has been an asylum for the less
happy people of Europe, the land of promise and a haven.”
The old pro-immigration Republican party! Now, the promise
to extend asylum and a haven to the less happy peoples of anywhere – save I
suppose Aryan Germans – would cause instant censor by the Repubs.
The twenties saw a crucial reshuffling of a party that was,
up until Hoover, still the party that bragged of being the party of Roosevelt
and Lincoln. Hoover, that vile man, was the grandfather of Nixon’s Southern
strategy, employing the same to Catholic scare the white Dem South and
nominating a well known Southern racist for the Supreme Court, one John Parker.
I’ve written about this before for Willett’s Magazine.
The roots of the abandonment of Lincoln and Roosevelt were encoded
in Hoover’s greatest achievement in the 1920s – his leadership of the Federal
response to the great flood of 1927, when the Mississippi river flooded the
Delta. As John Barry’s Rising Tide has shown, the flood had a surprisingly
large impact on American politics. It was, for one thing, the largest flood
ever experience in the U.S. at its greatest extent, had flooded 27,000 square
miles. Much of the flooded land was in the state of Mississippi, where cotton
plantations depended on a black labor force that they could pay slave wages to.
The white elite was very fearful that black laborers would escape the Delta –
and where then would they find such a mistreatable labor force? This fear was a
powerful driver of the racial atrocities committed during the flood. Hoover
was, in fact, informed of these atrocities from numerous sources.
He not only did nothing, he saw the advantage to being seen
as the champion of white over black, here.
This is why, in 1928, the party of Lincoln witnessed, for
the first time, a considerable desertion by the black Northern voters – the ones
that is who made it around the barriers and could vote.
Then came Judge Parker in Hoover’s nadir year, 1930. He started out as a politician in North
Carolina. A republican politician in the South. It was easier to be Republican
in the solid South under Hoover, due to that recent history that every black
leader knew.
The racial politics of the expansion of the state into the
American economy is a complex story, in which, on the one hand, democratic
economic policies came about, and, on the other hand, American racism became
even more anchored – as if the White working class could only be benefitted if African-Americans
were sacrificed.
It is necessary to go into these details in order to
understand, for one thing, why the newspaper pundit story of the Republicans
being “small government” is wrong, and, for another thing, why this history
crucially forgets racist moments in the development of the modern mixed economy
So, why Hoover would elevate a North Carolina obscurity to
the post of Supreme Court justice? In Hoover’s mind, the South was now in play,
and he was on a charm offensive to get Southern votes for 1932. It hadn’t yet
penetrated the political mind that the Depression was for real.
Observers saw what Hoover was doing. The New Republic wrote:
“it was apparent as soon as President Hoover announced the appointment of John
F. Parker of North Carolina that he had chosen an undistinguished candidate for
political reasons…”
And, indeed, the fight against Parker was mounted as a
political campaign. As the New York World said, sensibly, in an editorial: …
the Senate has every right, if it so chooses, to ask the President to maintain
on the Supreme Court bench a balance between liberal and conservative opinion.
This is of course true – although in the years high decorum of the neo-liberal
period, this idea has been systematically mealy-mouthed away as “playing
politics” with the Court.
Two forces militated immediately against Parker. One was the
NAACP, which noted that Parker, though a Republican, had run a campaign in
North Carolina promising to suppress black voting, because “we recognize that
he [the negro] has not reached the stage in his development where he can share
in the burdens and responsibilities of government.” The other, stronger
force militating against Parker was the AFL. Parker’s record as a judge was
unsympathetic to labor in the extreme.
In 1971, in an essay in the NYT, William Rehnquist, who had
been nominated for Nixon for a post on the Court, wrote an essay about nominee
rejects for the NYT. It is a nicely written essay, centering on Parker’s
nomination, which was, Rehnquist writes, “one of the most remarkable battles
over a judicial nominee in the upper chamber.” Rehnquist gives a lot of credit
for the defeat of Parker to Senator William Borah, a populist Republican
senator for whom I myself have a lot of heart. Idaho, before it became famous
as neo-Nazi vacationland, was a radical state, and elected senators who thought
accordingly, from Borah to Church. I have to give Rehnquist, a standard
economic conservative, a lot of credit for giving Borah credit. Most
conservative scholars in this area consider Borah a dirty dog, smearing Parker
by associating him with his decision on a case involving “yellow dog contracts”
– contracts that impressed an obligation on the employee who signed them not to
join a union. Borah, and the Union’s, argument against these contracts may seem
like an issue from another era, but – in my opinion – these arguments are very
relevant to the contract creep we see today, when corporations force employees
to sign non-compete and non-disclosure contracts. Borah ended his indictment of
Parker’s position with an excellent summation of the duties incumbent on the
Senate when deciding on the President’s nominee: : “In passing upon the fitness
of the nominee to that court we are bound to take into consideration everything
which goes to make up a great judge – his character and standing as a man, his
scholarship, his learning in the law, and his statesmanship.”Nobody at that
point doubted Parker’s character and standing. It was his learning in the law –
his decisions – that doomed him. Parker’s fall presaged Hoover’s own. Hoover
lost every state in the South in 1932, including North Caroline, where
Roosevelt beat him 497,566 to 208,344. Somehow, I think that loss must have
really bit. As for Judge Parker, he went on to a fairly distinguished career.
The Dictionary of North Carolina Biography chronicles the life of a state
bigwig, crowned by his appointment as one of the lawyers in the Nuremberg
trials. Of course, the irony of a man who believed the “negro” was not yet in a
state of development to vote representing the Allied moral case at the
Nuremberg trial is something I can only contemplate – hoping that by 1945 he
had learned something. In 1957 he became the chairman of Billy Graham’s General
Crusade committee. Then he died, and was buried with honors.
Life goes on after you are rejected by the Senate. It is all
creme.
Thursday, August 08, 2024
The solipsist's lament
“There is only one perfect place for a camera at any given
moment”
sez the rapist god come down from Mount Sinai
(the mountain, all state of the art digital VFX
was diced and sliced into a number of tax deductible G &
A
and everybody lunched at the Polo Lounge that day).
And isn’t this life itself? Your perfect place
From which to zoom out and in on
Say the fly landing on your lover’s butt
As you are doing your best to keep on fuck.
Your lens mastery, your life, your death.
Later you will ask yourself
(in that deflationary never-never
that epilogues all the roll-the-credits life lessons):
What if there is more than one camera?
- Karen Chamisso
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