The cartoon below was sketched in April 2005 and the poem written in 2014. Doug Holder is still around and listed as a poet publicist for Harris Gardner's Boston National Poetry Month. I began writing a critical poem last night after looking at Poets&Writers magazine and the Academy of American Poets website, both dross laden and thus excellent grist for creative writing.
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Notes on Artistic Sterility and the Academic Imprimatur
The dude* sent me an email announcement—a great
self-congratulating pat on his back—, I was his bête noire.
Since he was on my list, I was now on his, though
Since he was on my list, I was now on his, though
when I shotgunned, it was usually to announce
not the light of lime, but rather a good sledgehammering.
His press had teamed up with a regional college to promote
His press had teamed up with a regional college to promote
the “literary arts” and the likely modus operandi
of innocuous icon idolatry.
His vision of art seemed to be a castration of it,
eliciting the approval of ladder-climbing pedagogues
—those chairs, deans, chancellors, VPs, and presidents—,
other members of the local chambers of commerce,
and, of course, the proverbial old ladies in the audience.
To be first in the series, as concrete illustration of the benefits
of sucking up, kissing ass, and playing the literary game,
he chose Boston Poet Laureate Sam Cornish,
editor of children’s literature
and renowned author of An Apron Full of Beans.
and renowned author of An Apron Full of Beans.
The dude’s purpose, besides pushing his own press,
was to help students of creative writing
to garner not the courage to stand up and away from the herd,
but rather to gain expertise in the fine art of literary networking.
"This is a wonderful opportunity to be aligned
with a rising academic institution,”
he declared, sounding more like a politician than a bard.
"I want the literary community and the community at large
to know about the vital literary programming at Endicott...”
Yet how could he proclaim “vital” the output of programmers
who rarely, if ever, railed viscerally against the machine?
who rarely, if ever, railed viscerally against the machine?
“I am hoping to be involved in the creation of the Hub
for the Arts on the North Shore ,” he career-fully excogitated,
when perhaps as a poet he should have instead
truthfully excoriated.
Just what higher ed needed, I thought, a tad depressed
by the persistence of poetry into the smiley-face verse factory
—another hub, yes, oh sadly,
of artistic censors, blind-eye turners, PC and far too much civility.
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*Doug Holder, publisher, Ibbetson Street Press, and Endicott College adjunct instructor
back in the day Ibettsen had an open forum where you could make comments, argue whatever. then you became a poetry sales sight, where poets could proffer their books, but closed to the public.
ReplyDeleted
On target! Poetry has become a business, fully (or almost) coopted and castrated by the establishment, which includes Ibbetson Press.
ReplyDeleteThanks for remembering me...doug
ReplyDeleteIf poetry is a business it's based on a faulty profit model.
ReplyDeleteSteve,
ReplyDeleteThanks for commenting. Lots of poets (i.e., poets of the machine) make lots of cash via grants, academic tenure, invitation fees, book deals, awards, etc. Poets & Writers magazine editors likely make lots of cash. And don't forget Poetry Magazine's $200 million dollar Lilly drug money foundation! T