From: Georges, Danielle
Sent: Friday, November 6, 2015 4:46 PM
To: George Slone
Cc: dougholder@post.harvard.edu; michael@masspoetry.org; laurin@masspoetry.org; january@masspoetry.org; nicco@masspoetry.org
Subject: Re: Boston's new PL satirized in a new P. Maudit cartoon
Mr. Slone,
The time and attention you’ve given to your rendering of the Poet Laureate is impressive and somehow flattering.
A little research (something good journalists, pundits, and even satirists, engage in) on your part would have provided you with the Poet Laureate position criteria and search committee members. This information is public knowledge.
Your approach is cowardly, Mr. Slone. I see that you have my email address, and also could have been in touch had you really wanted answers to your questions, or to understand my Poet Laureate Program in all its facets. It seems to me that a thoughtful conversation doesn’t interest you; that you’d rather send inflammatory volleys from the safe zone behind the computer screen at which you cower.
Also pusillanimous is the attempt to make your confrontation personal. How you have arrived at your presumptions about me, I don’t know, as we have never met. Can you, Mr. Slone, discern whether I can relate, or have related, to dissident poets (as you call them), “poor blacks in Boston,” or others? Methinks not.
Feel free to contact me if you are interested in a real dialogue on poetry, poetics, and politics.
Danielle Legros Georges
Poet Laureate, City of Boston
From: George Slone
Sent: Saturday, November 7, 2015 12:14 PM
To: Georges, Danielle
Subject: Re: Boston's new PL satirized in a new P. Maudit cartoon
To Danielle Legros Georges, Poet Laureate, City of Boston:
Thank you very much for the response! Sincerely! That in itself (from my two-decades of experience) is very rare for an establishment academic and poet. You will note that I am not “picking” on you per se, since ove the years I have created well over 1,000 cartoons on many different poets, academics, cultural-council apparatchiks, librarians, editors, etc. You can take a look at some of them here
http://wwwtheamericandissidentorg.blogspot.com. Your cartoon is now posted at the latter. How sad establishment poetry magazines would NEVER publish such cartoons or criticism! In fact, a number of them refuse to even list THE AMERICAN DISSIDENT with other literary magazines listed (e.g., New Pages, Poetry Foundation, and P&W magazine).
Criticizing establishment icons and organizations has become my principle creative activity and in a sense accords me a certain dignity via the exercise of the basic human right of freedom of expression. In fact, where else might one find criticism of Mass Cultural Council, Mass Poetry Festival, NEA, Poetry mag, etc., etc.? It seems The American Dissident is unique in that sense. Why do the other magazines normally NOT include such criticism? The poetry milieu, in that sense, seems somewhat unique.
Via Google, I did do some research. How else did I find your email address? But I could not find the selection committee member names nor the criteria, which you could have provided in your email, but did not. Mass Poetry will not respond to my request for that. No matter. I expect the selectors were surely academics and without doubt part of the academic/literary establishment. Were they not? Were there any hardcore critics of the academic/literary establishment on the committee? I also expect the criteria to be sufficiently vague and include something to the extent of quantity of publications in establishment magazines. When dealing with art and literature, subjectivity is the prime point in question (like minds usually choose like minds!), though it is often treated as if somehow objective by the establishment.
So, you choose to respond with ad hominem: “cowardly.” Rather than focus on the messenger, why not focus on the message in the cartoon. Why not underscore precisely where the lies are in the satirical sketch and present a factual counter-argumentation? If anything, I am NOT cowardly! Unlike you (most probably), when teaching in academe I have always stood up and openly criticized administrators and colleagues and risked my employment for doing so! Also, unlike you and other literary ladder climbers, I have always chosen RUDE truth (is there any other kind?) above fame, titles, awards, publications, and invitations. With that regard, you might wish to contemplate Emerson: “I am ashamed to think how easily we capitulate to badges and names, to large societies and dead institutions. Every decent and well-spoken individual affects and sways me more than is right. I ought to go upright and vital, and speak the rude truth in all ways.” Clearly, those words inevitably must directly counter your modus operandi.
Sure, I could have contacted you prior to contacting your student newspaper editors, who will likely NOT be responding because of an absence of independence of mind and PC-obligation. But what difference?
You note: “It seems to me that a thoughtful conversation doesn’t interest you; that you’d rather send inflammatory volleys from the safe zone behind the computer screen at which you cower.” Well, why not invite me to your classes to present my point of view, which is likely at antipodes to your point of view? In fact, despite my requests, only one professor in America has been willing to do that: Dr. Dan Sklar, Emerson College. Also, why not help get me invited to the Mass Poetry Festival to present my point of view? MPF will NOT even respond, nor will the organizers of the Boston National Poetry Month. I do NOT hide behind my computer screen. I have OFTEN stood alone outside in protest against establishment poetry readings et al. In fact, several years ago, I was permanently trespassed from my neighborhood library w/o due process because of my written criticism. In fact, I was also trespassed from part of Fitchburg State University, where I was on the tenure track. One professor had claimed she was afraid of me. For those in power, the claim of fear is a typical ploy to crush dissidents. In any case, how can YOU make an assertion of cowardice without knowing anything about me? BTW, Lesley used to house PEN New England, which shamefully refused (and still does) to respond to any of my correspondance! It does NOT care about my civil rights! If Joan Houlihan is still present at Lesley, she too is an absurdity who once told me she would not permit me to teach any workshops at her Concord Poetry Center if I protested in front of the center (see
http://theamericandissident.org/orgs/concord_poetry_center.html). Well, this coward chose to protest and to hell with teaching the workshops! Check that linke to see the cartoon I drew on Houlihan. And how sad it is that college students are generally NOT introduced to criticism like mine! Lesley would never subscribe to The American Dissident.
So, where do I find the names of the selection committee members and the criteria for the selection?
Also, why do you NOT give a damn that poets like me are fully ostracized by the establishment, which viscerally rejects criticism, satire, etc.? Why?
For you, the one question still remains: how can one possibly reach the status of PL without groveling, ladder climbing, backslapping, self-congratulating, turning a blind eye, and especially avoiding criticizing at all costs? For me, the answer is quite simple: one can NOT reach that status without such less than noble activity. Even way back, poets of the establishment like Alexander Pope and Lord Byron knew quite well that the position of PL was generally a farce! Think of Stalinist State Poet Gorky, who’d argued that the archipelago gulags were nice places! And how to read Solzhenitsyn’s The Oak and the Calf without noting the remarkable similarity between literature under the Soviet dictatorship and that in America today?
As noted in my satire, the PL is clearly a badge of safety… accorded by the establishment! How you can NOT perceive that is something you’d have to seriously contemplate. Could someone like me ever be anointed PL by the poet, cultural-apparatchik, and local hack selectors, who I’ve likely already openly criticized? Of course not! And that is the fundament, the crux of the PL problem.
In fact, achieving the position of PL is akin to achieving tenure as a professor. You might not be tenured, but you surely must know deep down what one must not say, what expression one must conceal. In fact, the position of PL demands a certain blindness to the fact that dissidents like me are indeed fully ostracized and, for example, canNOT get public funding. Despite my 501c3 status, the NEA, Mass Cultural Council, etc. will not accord The American Dissident one penny of public funds. In fact, because of my criticism, the Concord Cultural Council even enacted a policy prohibiting funding to any art it deemed to be of a political nature. But then because I mocked that policy (see http://theamericandissident.org/orgs/massachusetts_cultural_council.html), it quickly withdrew it. Sure, it’s not on paper today, but it is still firmly implanted in the minds of the establishment apparatchiks on the council.
Finally, of course, I’d be willing to “dialogue” with you and others. I have no criminal record of violence and have NEVER threatened anyone. Why not try using your new power to allot just a tiny little space in the world of poetry to hardcore critical poetry with regards the poetry establishment? Why not investigate why so many poets have such thin skin and thus cannot bear to be criticized? Why are not MFA poetry students encouraged to contemplate the poetry infrastructure and encouraged to criticize it?
[No response]
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From: George Slone
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2015 2:47 PM
To: Georges, Danielle
Subject: Re: Boston's new PL satirized in a new P. Maudit cartoon
To the PL,
So, your definition of a “real dialogue” is to simply and gently close the door? Or are you just too busy for “real dialogue” now? Or does “real dialogue” really mean PC-minded dialogue? I suspect that you only responded to my initial email because it was sent to a few of your colleagues and Lesley University student newspaper editors, all of whom decided NOT to respond. Surprise? Not in the least! And that’s what is so sad about higher education (Lesley University et al) and the literary milieu today: the absolute rejection of “real dialogue.” In fact, a poet laureate is normally chosen because of her proven rejection of “real dialogue,” n’est-ce pas?
[No response. Some dialogue on poetry, eh!]