Inquiring Minds and Other Clichés — Karen J. Weyant

— a poetry interview series by Christine Klocek-Lim




Karen J. Weyant

1. What is your favorite poem that you’ve written? Read? 

My favorite poem that I have every written is called “The Inevitable” – which took about three years to write and revise.  It was originally published in The Fourth River, but also appears in Wearing Heels in the Rust Belt.  However, I have to add, that when I do readings, audience members seem to really like “Roadkill Girls” originally published in The Fiddleback

It’s funny, but if you were to ask me my favorite of anything else, such as my favorite song or my favorite movie, I would stumble, but I know my favorite poem of all time is “Feared Drowned” by Sharon Olds.  This work displays stark and beautiful imagery, with an overall theme that  we can never find what has once been lost.  It’s a beautiful poem. 


2. Do you think there is a disconnect between academic poets/poetry and online poets/poetry? 

I’m afraid that I don’t know what really defines an “academic poet.”  I know that some poets who teach at publish-or-perish institutions have to publish in the “right places” and those right places often do not include online journals. Unfortunately, I believe there is still a mistrust in poetry that is published online, and I’m not sure why.  Poetry, like all art, must evolve and we cannot escape the Internet.  From a more practical standpoint, I find online journals wonderful teaching tools in the classroom.  I teach at a rural community college, and it’s wonderful to take my students to the computer lab and show them beautiful online journals such as diode.

But maybe that disconnect is fading.  Some of my favorite poets writing today, including Mary Biddinger, Jeannine Hall Gailey, Dorianne Laux, and Traci Brimhall, publish online and in print journals.  


3. Has the rise of the poetry MFA been positive or detrimental to the art? 

I guess I have to preface this answer by explaining that I don’t have an MFA, but I have many friends who are great poets and do have MFAs. So, I guess in some aspects, I know both sides.  I do not believe that there are too many MFA programs, nor do I believe these programs are detrimental to the arts.  In fact, there is a big  part of me that finds all the arguments a bit tiresome.  Why not use all this time (and words) to discuss poetry as an art form?  Or how to get more people to read poetry?  In general, I just don’t understand how programs that encourage a love of any art can be detrimental.


4. Do you write for yourself or for an audience/reader? 

I teach rhetoric and composition and I always tell my students that audience is a very important part of any type of writing.  Perhaps, that is why I write narrative poetry – I want my readers to know the people and places found in my poems.  So yes, I write for an audience who wants to hear stories, but because of the subjects of my poems, I also write for audiences who knows the blue collar/working-class world or who want to know this world.  

However, I wouldn’t be truthful if I didn’t say that there is a small part of me that feels a huge desire to capture the stories of working-class/blue collar/rural women.  Even if no one in the world wanted to hear these narratives, I would still write them! 


5. How much of what you write is inspiration vs. perspiration? 

Writing, for me, is mostly perspiration. There are many days that I struggle with even getting one line right in a poem.  In general, I am a slow writer and a slower reviser, and I admire my peers who seemingly write a whole chapbook in a month, a great collection in less than a year.  I wish that I had ideas in the same way that cartoon characters are inspired with magical light bulbs over their head, but that rarely happens with me. Instead, I have to force myself to sit down and face an empty notebook or a blank computer screen, write, and then not be too hard on myself when the immediate work that comes out is not inspired or polished. 


6. How has the way you write changed (or not changed) over time? 

Physically, I find myself approaching writing differently.  I used to draft everything on paper.  Now, while I still draft in small, cheap (I love Dollar Stores) journals, I find myself heading to the computer screen faster.  I also take more chances with my writing, with both language and subject matter.  I attribute this change to the fact that I write more now than I did ten years ago, but I also read everything I can get my hands on.  It’s the number one piece of advice I give to my students who want to write – read! 


Bio:

Karen J. Weyant’s most recent work can be seen in Cave Wall, Conte, Copper Nickel, The Tusculum Review, and River Styx.  Her poem, “The Summer I Stopped Catching Bees” recently appeared in Sundress Publications’ 2011 Best of the Net.  She is the author of two chapbooks, Stealing Dust (Finishing Line Press, 2009) and Wearing Heels in the Rust Belt (Winner of Main Street Rag’s 2011 Chapbook Contest).  She lives in Western Pennsylvania, but crosses the border to teach at Jamestown Community College in Jamestown, New York.  She blogs at www.thescrapperpoet.wordpress.com.


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Couplets: a multi-author poetry blog tour – click for a list of participating blogs and daily entries
Upper Rubber Boot Books is coordinating a book blog tour for April, to help promote poetry and poets for National Poetry Month. Check back here for updates throughout the month of April (we’ll also post updates to our blog, and so will many of the participating poets).
Follow this event on Facebook or Goodreads.



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Inquiring Minds and Other Clichés — O.P.W. Fredericks

— a poetry interview series by Christine Klocek-Lim



O.P.W. Fredericks

1. What is your favorite poem that you’ve written? Read?

I must preface that my answers to both parts of this question are a bit biased.  “Serenade” is my favorite poem that I’ve written because it is a love poem I wrote to my partner, Daniel Milbo, for Valentine’s Day in 2009.  A few weeks later I reprinted it on linen paper and then had it framed for him as a gift.  For me, it is my best work, though I’ve never been satisfied with the poem’s final verse.  I’ve often recited it in my mind as I’ve tried to find something better, but Daniel will never allow me to change it.  To my horror, I found a typo in the framed poem when I read it where it hangs on the wall this past winter.

My answer to the second part of this question also involves Daniel and is based on a very personal event.  The favorite poem that I’ve read has never been, nor ever will be published.  It is titled “Soldier, Come Home,” and it was written for me by Daniel when I began my transition into retirement from nursing in the autumn of 2007.  As I walked into our dining room upon my arrival home after the final day of working full-time as a nurse, I found what appeared to be a framed document at my place on the dining room table.  Unsuspecting, I began to read it when I suddenly realized it was a poem.  It made me cry with the intensity of a cry of release, an unburdening that came from the depths of my soul.  The poem is about the ending of a phase of life and the transition into a new one.  It begins with my life as a caregiver, and the professional and personal challenges, trials, and sacrifices I had experienced and made as a nurse after 30 years at the bedside.  As the poem progresses, it beckons for me to accept the transition and then invites me to rest, recover, and look forward to an unencumbered future.  After I recovered, I discovered (with Daniel’s help) a second poem hidden within the frame, titled “Over The Threshold,” and I cried again with even more emotion.  This poem was about a new beginning.  It recounted all my dreams for the future, all the things I had shared with Daniel; and it reiterated his ongoing desire for me to reach for those dreams and his unwavering support of me to achieve them.  I then realized that the contents of that frame represented the greatest gift I had ever received.

To continue along the lines of what I believe to be the intention of this question, I have read many, many poems on my own and thousands more that have been submitted to our journal and press.  I have a folder on my computer that contains between 90 and 100 poems that have moved, amused, or inspired me, but I’ll list only the following poems because they immediately come to mind.

Do not go gentle into that good night” by Dylan Thomas to which I wrote my first attempt at a glose or glosa, titled “Daddy’s battles,” in response to a challenge offered by Colin Ward on the Poets.org workshop forum.  I think it was one of the 2009 offerings in my NaPoWriMo (National Poetry Writing Month) Poets.org thread.  Also included are:

Blow, Healing Wind” by Esther Greenleaf Mürer
Dirt” by Catherine Rogers
Door Card” by James S. Wilk
Dying” by Stephen Bunch
Final Night” by Tina Hacker
Grasshopper” a DATIA sonnet by Colin Ward
I See God Standing in Stout Grove” by Larina Warnock
Night Shift” by Ed Bennett
No Possum, No Aesop, No ‘Gators” by Stephen Bunch
“Pass on: to give a thing that has been given,” a never published poem written for me by Larina Warnock
no link

The Quilters of Gee’s Bend” by Alarie Tennille
Studying Savonarola” by M.A. Griffiths
The unnamed” by Christine Klocek-Lim

2. Do you think there is a disconnect between academic poets/poetry and online poets/poetry?

Not so much a disconnect or disparity as there is a difference in their approach to poetry.  Also, because I am not an academic, I would have to say that my opinion is inherently biased.  I have found that academic poets more often tend to focus first on craft while online poets more often tend to focus first on content.  Unfortunately, sometimes that’s where the focus ends.  I also find it admirable to a degree that because of the medium in which they are most familiar, each group inherently tends to gravitate towards “home.”  There are large numbers of online poets who seek criticism of their work in open forums where their poetry is exposed to comments from anyone.  I have no evidence to suggest that academic poets, on the whole, do the same, but I have learned that they do seek critique from their academic colleagues.  I do understand that like tends to seek out and attract like, but for either, this can result in a stagnation of the critiquing pool.  Regardless of their background, poets who can connect to an audience achieve the greatest success.

Simply put, I think that these two groups represent two different poetry factions and that there is a tendency for them to want to remain that way, but I do occasionally see crossovers and merging between the two.  This is not to say that there aren’t internet poets whose work has rivaled the level of craft achieved by the academics.  A few of these that come to mind are the late Margaret A Griffiths, Christine Klocek-Lim, Colin Ward, and Larina Warnock.  Nor does this mean that there aren’t those academic poets whose poetry is infused with accessible content allowing their work to connect to a wide audience.  When you encounter the work of a poet like Catherine Rogers, you experience the best of both worlds.


3. Has the rise of the poetry MFA been positive or detrimental to the art?

In general, the positive effects of the rise in MFA’s are an expanding awareness of literature, an increased desire to excel in communicating thoughts and ideas, and an overall elevation in the desire to possess the ability to comprehend the intention of language through the written word.

I can’t say that I believe the possession of a MFA has been detrimental to the art of poetry, but I was surprised to learn a few things about the writing skills of some and the degree to which those skills were lacking.  My impression is based on my experience with the work we’ve received from MFA candidates and those who hold a MFA because my expectations are much higher for someone who would possess such a degree.  I was surprised to learn that some MFA’s / candidates believed that the possession or pursuit of the degree automatically elevated their work to the level of art, qualified their work for acceptance for publication regardless of whether it met a publication’s requirements, submitted work that did not adhere to the basic rules of grammar, or understood the difference in meaning between homophones.


4. Do you write for yourself or for an audience/reader?

I write for both at different times though I rarely begin a piece with an audience in mind.  More often, a piece begins as a personal endeavor, then at some point, usually quite later, I might consider whether it has the potential to be transformed into something that could be appreciated by an audience.


5. How much of what you write is inspiration vs. perspiration?

Considering question #4, I’d say 75% inspiration and 25% perspiration.  I say this because starting a poem is my greatest challenge.  I’ll often have an idea floating around in my mind for days that begins with the need for an emotion to be expressed.  Sometimes it will submerge itself into my sub-conscience to mature until it’s ready to reveal itself.  When this happens, putting it to paper becomes an all-consuming focus.

The annual NaPoWriMo challenge would be an exception to this.  Participation in this endeavor often garners rough or very rough poem drafts that I will return to later in the year.  It forces me to write, whether I think I have something to say or not.


6. If you were a Celtic bard, carrying poems from place to place as if they were the last flame, which ones would you sing?

As a Celtic bard, the poems I would carry would begin with my list in question #1 and end with those in the folder on my computer.


Anything else you’d like to say?

In closing, I have found that I have a greater affinity for poetry editing than poetry writing.  Daniel’s poem, “Over the Threshold,” helped me to realize that the focus of my life has been to contribute to the efforts of others by helping them to achieve their goals and reach their potential.  As a nurse, I enter people’s lives at moments when their life’s journeys are interrupted or their journey in this life is coming to an end.  My skills and efforts help those who are detoured from their journey to return to the course they were traveling.  For those whose journeys are ending, I help them to remember what they have achieved, take pride in their accomplishments, and realize how they have affected and made differences in the lives they have touched along the way.  With regard to poetry, I realized there were many parallels between my vocation in nursing and what I might hope to contribute to poetry.

As an editor, I try to understand not only the message and meaning of a poem but also the intention of the poet who wrote it.  I do this by assuming the role of a reader and communicator.  When I read a poem, I try to decipher its message, determine how well it conveys its message, and document how it went about achieving that.  Then the editor in me begins to creep in as I consider different or more effective ways that a poet may use to convey the message.

To be successful as a nurse, one must be able to communicate information succinctly, directly, and quickly and in a way that recipients can understand, incorporate it into their lives, and make their own.  Successful poets do much the same.

When I returned to writing 10 years ago, I began by writing prose.  Then, in April 2007, I discovered Poets.org which presented me with the opportunity to return to writing poetry, something I had not done in many years.  Within a short period of time, I realized that I was able to identify the difficulties other poets were having with conveying the intention of their poems more than I was able to identify it in my own work.  After a time, I realized that this revelation was not unique to myself, but it led to my desire to help other poets reach their potential and be recognized for their work.

Bio:

O.P.W. Fredericks is a Registered Nurse from Pennsylvania who is transitioning into retirement.  His clinical practice encompassed medical-surgical, intensive care, and emergency nursing.   He was a volunteer paramedic for twenty-two years.  He returned to creative writing in 2002 after a hiatus of several decades.  His poetry and short stories reflect human interaction and the human condition interpreted by his philosophy of life as well as recollections from his career, his childhood, and his observations of the natural world.  He currently serves as a moderator and the assistant administrator for the Academy of American Poets Poetry Workshop Forum.  He is the editor and publisher of Touch: The Journal of Healing and The Lives You Touch Publications.  His poetry has appeared in The Externalist: A Journal of Perspectives, Autumn Sky Poetry, and Philadelphia Poets.


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Couplets: a multi-author poetry blog tour – click for a list of participating blogs and daily entries
Upper Rubber Boot Books is coordinating a book blog tour for April, to help promote poetry and poets for National Poetry Month. Check back here for updates throughout the month of April (we’ll also post updates to our blog, and so will many of the participating poets).
Follow this event on Facebook or Goodreads.






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Inquiring Minds and Other Clichés — Ayesha Chatterjee

— a poetry interview series by Christine Klocek-Lim

Ayesha Chatterjee

1. What is your favorite poem that you’ve written? Read?

One of my all-time favourite poems is Tennyson’s Ulysses. It was an anthem for me when I was growing up. At the moment, of my own poems, the one that seems least flawed to me is The Last Generation from The Clarity of Distance.

2. Do you write for yourself or for an audience/reader?

I write for myself as an audience, as though I were reading someone else’s work.

3. How much of what you write is inspiration vs. perspiration?

It’s very hard to say. Possibly equal amounts. And sometimes it’s the inspiration that comes first, sometimes it’s a lot of perspiration.

4. If you were a Celtic bard, carrying poems from place to place as if they were the last flame, which ones would you sing?

Emily Dickinson’s I taste a liquor never brewed

Ranjit Hoskote’s The surveyor’s complaint

Thomas Hardy’s The Voice

Jo Shapcott’s Thetis

Kamala Das’ The Dance of the Eunuchs

5. Why do you read or write poetry?

It’s how I make sense of the world. It’s like art and music and philosophy all rolled into one. I read it for the sounds and images and because it surprises me. Because I can and do memorize it and then I carry it around like photographs.

6. How has the way you write changed (or not changed) over time?

I’ve learned to trust myself more as I’ve developed my own voice.  It’s like swimming, you let go of the floats as you gain confidence.

Bio:

Born and raised in Kolkata, India, Ayesha Chatterjee has lived in England, the USA, Germany, and currently resides in Toronto. Her work gained notice when one of her poems was shortlisted in the Guardian Unlimited Poetry Workshop in October 2004.


Her poetry has appeared in nthpositionAutumn Sky Poetry, and BluSlate. In 2010, she read at the Poetry with Prakriti Festival in Chennai, India. This October, she will be reading at the International Festival of Authors in Toronto.


Her first poetry collection, The Clarity of Distance, is a meditation on the complexity of existence and the search for moments of truth within it.


Book Details:


The Clarity of Distance at Bayeux Arts
The Clarity of Distance at Barnes & Noble


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Couplets: a multi-author poetry blog tour – click for a list of participating blogs and daily entries
Upper Rubber Boot Books is coordinating a book blog tour for April, to help promote poetry and poets for National Poetry Month. Check back here for updates throughout the month of April (we’ll also post updates to our blog, and so will many of the participating poets).
Follow this event on Facebook or Goodreads.




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Inquiring Minds and Other Clichés — S. Abbas Raza

— a poetry interview series by Christine Klocek-Lim

S. Abbas Raza
(Founding Editor of 3 Quarks Daily)

1. What is your favorite poem that you’ve written? Read?

Learning By Heart” and much as I would like to pretend to be more erudite than I am by choosing something a little more obscure for my favorite of all poems I have read, I’m going to be honest and go with “Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird” by Wallace Stevens.

2. Do you think there is a disconnect between academic poets/poetry and online poets/poetry?

I have no idea.

3. Has the rise of the poetry MFA been positive or detrimental to the art?

I have no idea.

4. Do you write for yourself or for an audience/reader?

For an audience, sometimes a specific reader.

5. How much of what you write is inspiration vs. perspiration?

Mostly inspiration for me, which is why I write so seldom. For example, the imagery of the last stanza in the poem I have given above as my favorite of any I have written came to me in a dream (a faceless man dressed in a dark suit was explained to be the evening itself by a friend in the dream, who then went on to suggest we put a bright tie on him). The rest of the poem was worked backwards from there.

6. Bonus question! Answer any one of the following:

a. Do you ever include the works of others in your readings? If not, why not? If so, who and why?

I’ve never done a reading.

b. If you were a Celtic bard, carrying poems from place to place as if they were the last flame, which ones would you sing?

Waiting for the Barbarians by Cavafy.

c. Why do you read or write poetry?

For fun and also sometimes to impress girls.

d. How has the way you write changed (or not changed) over time?

It hasn’t.

e. What did you have for breakfast this morning?

A Coke Zero, which is my breakfast everyday.

f. Anything else you’d like to say?

Christine, I’ll add this: I have written MANY, MANY poems over the years for friends and family to commemorate special occasions like weddings (at one point I was in some demand as a wedding poet!), birthdays, graduations, etc. These are, obviously, not literary efforts. They talk about the specific people present and tend to be funny and are usually quite crowd-pleasing! I wish more people would put poetry to such less-serious uses and stop trying to be so damn profound!

Bio:
Originally from Karachi, Pakistan, Abbas has an undergraduate degree in electrical engineering & computer science from Johns Hopkins University, and a graduate degree in philosophy from Columbia University. He lives with his wife, Margit Oberrauch, and their feline friend, Frederica Krueger, in the small, very beautiful city of Brixen in the Italian Alps. 
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Upper Rubber Boot Books is coordinating a book blog tour for April, to help promote poetry and poets for National Poetry Month. Check back here for updates throughout the month of April (we’ll also post updates to our blog, and so will many of the participating poets).
Follow this event on Facebook or Goodreads.

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Inquiring Minds and Other Clichés – Hannah Stephenson

— a poetry interview series by Christine Klocek-Lim



Hannah Stephenson


1. What is your favorite poem that you’ve written? Read?

Maybe other poets will agree with me about their own work—my favorite of my own changes often. Recently, I’ve been happy with “Fraction” (because it was inspired by a tweet from Jimmy Kimmel!). When I read my work aloud, I like to read some of the longer, weirder ones (for instance, there is one called “Suddenly, Pasta Salad”). My favorite poem of all-time is Robert Creeley’s “The Language. 

2. Do you write for yourself or for an audience/reader?

I am definitely writing TO someone (not sure if that is the same thing as FOR someone). I am always speaking to my reader. Blogging my poems has helped me locate my reader. I don’t mean this literally, necessarily. But I do mean that I imagine sitting across a small table with someone, speaking to them pretty intensely and closely. That person is always shifting. Sometimes they are blurry, a collage of a few people (I think of how faces look blurred out on TV to protect identities), but sometimes they are clear. I am writing because I have something to say to my reader. And I really care about them/you.

3. How much of what you write is inspiration vs. perspiration?

I am a firm believer in making my own inspiration happen. And most of the time, inspiration is tough work! Moments of magical and sparkly inspiration occur very rarely (but they do happen). It’s because of the work that we can be ready for them. A beautiful moment of clarity can happen to us, so we better keep our beautiful-moment-of-clarity-muscles limber. 

4. Do you ever include the works of others in your readings? If not, why not? If so, who and why?

Oh, yes! I absolutely love reading work by other writers. Recently, I’ve shared works by Carol Ann Duffy, Zachary Schomburg, and Bob Hicok. It’s so fun to be able to focus on sharing the words of others. I like opening readings with poems by others because it clearly defines the purpose of the reading—we’re here to take delight in words!—and it can remove some of the anxiety and self-consciousness we sometimes feel while reading. 

5. How has the way you write changed (or not changed) over time?

I found some poems I wrote when I was 16. They are embarrassing, but I still see pieces of myself in them. At that age, I would describe my voice as GIDDY-OVERJOYED-THE-WORLD-IS-WONDERFUL!!! When I wrote poems six or seven years ago, or even at the beginning of The Storialist (in 2008), my voice sounds tentative and unfocused (but excited because I’d realized poems didn’t have to be about me). I remember asking myself, “Is this a poem? How do I know if it’s a poem?” Now, my voice sounds much stronger in my head, and I give myself permission to write whatever I’d like, however I’d like. It’s my poem, and I’ll write how I want to (you know, like that Lesley Gore song!). Now, my poems are sprinkled up and down the giddiness spectrum (with ENTHUSIASTIC RAPTURE! on one end, and ONE DAY THE WORLD WILL END, AND THAT IS OK on the other.). 

6. What did you have for breakfast this morning?

Endless coffee. And a Luna bar (I teach an 8 AM class…no time to be fancy during the week). But on the weekend, an omelet with tomato, mushroom, spinach, and cheddar cheese. And many baked goods have distinctly breakfast-like qualities (if there’s oatmeal in it, or cinnamon, or bananas, or berries, or if it can be dipped in coffee) that allow me to think of them as wholesome breakfast options. 



Bio:

Hannah Stephenson is a poet, editor, instructor, and singer-songwriter living in Columbus, Ohio. Hannah earned her M.A. in English from The Ohio State University in 2006, and her poems have appeared recently in places like Contrary, MAYDAY, qarrtsiluni, Huffington Post, The Nervous Breakdown, and Fiddleblack. She is the founder of Paging Columbus!, a literary arts monthly event series. You can visit her daily poetry site, The Storialist, at www.thestorialist.com or connect with her on Twitter and Facebook.

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Upper Rubber Boot Books is coordinating a book blog tour for April, to help promote poetry and poets for National Poetry Month. Check back here for updates throughout the month of April (we’ll also post updates to our blog, and so will many of the participating poets).
Follow this event on Facebook or Goodreads.

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Inquiring Minds and Other Clichés – Neil Aitken

— a poetry interview series by Christine Klocek-Lim



Neil Aitken

1. What is your favorite poem that you’ve written? Read?

Usually I’m most attached to the poem I’ve most recently written, which at the moment would be “Babbage Descending into Mt. Vesuvius, 1828.” Part of a series revolving around the life and experiences of Charles Babbage, 19th century mathematician, philosopher, and inventor of the Difference and Analytical Engines (designed, but never completed mechanical precursors to the modern computer), this particular poem focuses on the year following his wife’s early death, when he traveled to continental Europe and became obsessed with volcanoes, even going so far as to have himself lowered into Mt. Vesuvius and conducting a survey of the inside of the main crater.  Although I’d done the research for the poem several months ago, it wasn’t until recently that the elements came together and the poem really took shape.  I find the juxtaposition of Babbage’s personal grief and his reckless obsession with volcanic activity strangely compelling, at once speaking to his personal dedication to learning how things worked, and simultaneously exposing some darker impulse to take these life-threatening risks in the aftermath of a year that saw the loss of his beloved wife, his estranged father, and two of his children.

My favorite poem by someone else is Philip Levine’s “My Father With Cigarette, Twelve Years Before the Nazis Could Break His Heart.”  I love this poem — the way it assembles a reality out of an accumulation of seemingly meaningless details, how it twists and turns, opening itself up to the reader, constructing the scene in memory as if it were a stage play, and how in the end the most powerful elements of the poem are those that have been the most silent.

2. Do you think there is a disconnect between academic poets/poetry and online poets/poetry?

Not really.  In many ways I feel like this question assumes a false dichotomy — while the field of contemporary poetry is fairly diverse and complex (and sometimes fractured), I find that the divisions aren’t usually along the lines of  “academic” vs “online” — at least, it hasn’t been so in my experience.  As the editor of an online literary journal, Boxcar Poetry Review, which has been around for over six years and regularly publishes poets from all sorts of backgrounds and at varying levels of publishing history, I find that my emphasis is always on the quality of the work, not on the previous publications of the poet or whether or not they’ve been “trained” in an MFA environment.  I’ve also found that more and more “academic” poets feel comfortable submitting work to online journals if they feel the journal maintains a high standard for publication.

On the other hand, I think there is a disconnect between certain camps of “academic” poetry and a general reading public.  It’s true that certain poets are strongly informed and shaped by critical theory and have developed approaches to poetry that generate texts which are very difficult for an untrained reader to appreciate, or seem to require specialized knowledge of obscure history or little-known primary texts to appreciate their nuanced meanings.  Sometimes the project of the poetic endeavor overtakes the poem’s ability to connect to the reader in a visceral and compelling fashion, and does not really leave room for the poem to speak to something universal about the human experience.  For me at least, these are the poems that represent that divide.

3. Has the rise of the poetry MFA been positive or detrimental to the art?

It’s true that MFA programs have created safe havens for writers to work and practice, developing their skills and their craft in the company of other writers and mentors.  It’s also true that while they do much good in terms of creating useful spaces of creative exchange and opportunities to encounter new texts and writers, they can also inhibit a writer’s growth if that writer isn’t being proactive in their efforts to define themselves through thoughtful negotiation and analysis of what they encounter.  Provided that students recognize that MFA programs are best used as a means toward an end, that end being the creation of a manuscript through the development of their writing craft, I believe they do much good and have a place.  On the other hand, they should not be viewed as gateways to the teaching profession or as some sort of certification that they have become bona-fide writers.  Much of the disappointment and frustration with the poetry MFA stems from belief in the latter two myths — and the subsequent realization that when you graduate, there are no guarantees of employment or manuscript publication).

I can only speak from my own experience — namely that the MFA was hugely beneficial in my growth as a writer.  My undergraduate work was in computer science and mathematics, and although I did take some graduate workshop classes as an undergraduate, I spent most of my time after graduation working in a field unconnected with literature.  During my  years as a programmer, I was dependent on the local open mic poetry community and the small writing group I participated in for my continued training and growth.  It was in those two spaces that I could listen and learn about poetry, while also generating new work and receiving feedback.  Eventually I realized I needed more structure and could benefit from more experienced mentors if I was going to move forward– at that point I started researching MFA programs and found one that provided a space and mentors I felt would be conducive to my growth.

4. Do you write for yourself or for an audience/reader?

I write primarily for myself — that is to say, I write about the things I find interesting and compelling, I choose my own subjects and my approaches.  I’m always somewhat aware of an audience, but I’m not writing to please others or elicit some sort of response or adulation from them.  I’m just interested in creating something I can be happy with — a poem that surprises me with its turns, that strikes a chord buried within.  I feel that writing honestly for yourself enables a space where the poem can be open to others.

5. How much of what you write is inspiration vs. perspiration?

There’s a lot of pre-writing work that happens for me, especially with my current project which has much more of a historical connection than my first book.  Most of the perspiration is expended in research and contemplation.  I read a lot about my subject or the elements I sense will end up in the poem.  For example, in working on my poem “Babbage Descending into Mt. Vesuvius, 1828 ,” I spent a lot of time reading through Anthony Hyman’s biography of Charles Babbage as well as Babbage’s own account of his exploration within the crater.  I also read up on other 18th and 19th century literary figures who visited Mt. Vesuvius.  I read about other active volcanoes and recent volcanic eruptions which would have been known to Babbage.  I studied the impact that a massive 1815 eruption had on climate in Europe as well as the ways in which it was related to Lord Byron’s famous literary gathering at Lake Geneva, Switzerland and the peculiar yellowish light in J.M.W. Turner’s paintings.  A lot of what I research never makes it into the poem, but doing the research allows me to imagine more completely and with greater confidence the world in which the poem exists and is taking shape.  I find inspiration in the things I research — and sometimes the research for one poem becomes the starting point of another poem.  When I finally sit down to write though, I usually finish that poem within an hour or two.

6. How has the way you write changed (or not changed) over time?

Some things have changed, others have stay about the same.  For example, I’m quite attached to a narrative lyric approach, although at times my poems can be a bit more narrative than lyric, and other times more lyric than narrative.  My earliest poems tended to feature short lines (some as short as a single word) and often felt more fragmented.  Over time my lines have become longer and often more complex in their use of clauses.  The Babbage poems, which are more historical, have much longer lines than my other poems, partly to consciously reflect the character of Babbage as a more contemplative one, and partly due to the demands of a more historical context (more details and positioning needed).

In terms of process, I find that I don’t write as many poems in a year as I used to.  When I was a programmer, I would spend time every day at the end of work writing for forty minutes to an hour while I waited for traffic to die down.  While most of the poems weren’t that good, the practice of writing daily did help me hone my skills and enabled me to get through a lot of bad writing to get to the good writing.  These days I read and research more and write less, but in general the poems I write I’m very happy with.  There’s a happy balance to be reached between those two approaches — one I’m still looking for.

Information:

The Lost Country of Sight won the 2007 Philip Levine Prize winner (Anhinga Press)

Neil Aitken’s website

Bio:

Neil Aitken is the author of The Lost Country of Sight which won the 2007 Philip Levine Prize for Poetry and was published by Anhinga Press in 2008. His poetry has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize three times and has appeared in Crab Orchard Review, The Drunken Boat, Ninth Letter, Poetry Southeast, Sou’wester,and elsewhere. He recently received the DJS Translation Prize in recognition for his translations of contemporary Chinese poetry.  A former computer games programmer, he is currently completing a Ph.D. in literature and creative writing at the University of Southern California.

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This interview is brought to you by  Couplets: a multi-author poetry blog tour in coordination with Upper Rubber Boots Books.



Upper Rubber Boot Books is coordinating a book blog tour for April, to help promote poetry and poets for National Poetry Month. Check back here for updates throughout the month of April (we’ll also post updates to our blog, and so will many of the participating poets).
Follow this event on Facebook or Goodreads


Entries

  • Coming in April 2012.
Blogroll
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Coming soon! couplets: a multi-author poetry blog tour

Upper Rubber Boot Books is coordinating a book blog tour for April, to help promote poetry and poets for National Poetry Month. Check back here for updates throughout the month of April (we’ll also post updates to our blog, and so will many of the participating poets).
Follow this event on Facebook or Goodreads

Entries

  • Coming in April 2012.
Blogroll