19 October 2008

stop punching those keys, jack

There's a nice profile of the poet Gary Snyder in this week's Nueva Jorker (20 Oct). I don't have a huge affection for those who came to be known as the Beats, although I like some of it. I always put off reading Gary Snyder because of guilt by association. The profile points out that he himself was somewhat upset about this association, and annoyed at Kerouac (although annoyed in the ever so precise and peaceful way that someone who studied Zen can be annoyed), and in reality there wasn't a whole hell of a lot that they had in common other than some days of friendship spent together, and a notorious day of climbing a hill which Kerouac wrote about, only thinly disguising Snyder.

I've always mistrusted the accuracy of labels on literary movements that are invented after the fact for our convenience (or, for example, the comically short-sighted way Pound came up with the name Modernism). Sartre and Camus as existentialists, for example. They were different enough to have a fued and break off their friendship, so there may have been a trend or some similarities, but to group them together is just laziness. 

So I'm looking forward to reading some Snyder. I have an intuition that he may be similar to A. R. Ammons, although I have serious doubts whether anyone can outverse Ammons, one of the most pleasurable poets I've ever read. We shall see.

14 October 2008

youth or consequences

In the 20 Oct issue of The Nueva Jorker, there is an article by Malcom Gladwell about our propensity to think of young prodigies as the epitome of talent, whereas their elderly counterparts just got lucky. "After 17 novels and no success, you're bound to get one right." Thus goes the thought process. But Gladwell points out that there are two distinctly different ways to achieve greatness in art. Instinct and perseverance. Robert Frost, maybe the best known and loved American poet, didn't publish his first book of poetry until he was 40, as just one example of the perseverance path. 

This common misconception may be the reason why Hollywood, for example, worships youth and mistrusts maturity. Screenwriters who have children have been known to make sure during phone conversations with execs that there are absolutely no screams or crying in the background, which may prompt the exec to ask exactly how old the writer is, and thereby blow his or her cover.

I think that if someone is incredibly talented AND young, it is just that much more impressive, so we tend to steer towards youth in order to satisfy our need to believe in something which is nearly unbelievable. 

Of course, the only thing not mentioned is the path that most people take, that of working steadily, gaining small successes here and there, continuing work and improving, and then coming out with a masterpiece in middle-age which was built upon what you have learned as you go along. 

07 October 2008

the debates

Listening to debates, I always think of this great poem by e.e. cummings (don't worry, easy and fun to read cummings, not infuriating cummings):

the way to hump a cow is not
to get yourself a stool
but draw a line around the spot
and call if beautifool

to multiply because and why
dividing thens by nows
and adding and (i understand)
is hows to hump a cows

the way to hump a cow is not
to elevate your tool
but drop a penny in the slot
and bellow like a bool

to lay a wreath from ancient greath
on insulated brows
(while tossing boms at uncle toms)
is hows to hump a cows

the way to hump a cow is not
to push and then to pull
but practicing the art of swot
to preach the golden rull

to vote for me (all decent mem
and wonens will allows
which if they don't to hell with them)
is hows to hump a cows

05 October 2008

patronymic icelandic

(No, that's not Latin in the title of this post).

All surnames in Iceland, to this day, are made up of the name of your father plus the suffix "son" or "dottir" depending on your sex. This is according to Rebecca Solnit's Harper's article (Oct) about her trip to Iceland. The implications of this seem rather far-reaching. 

Imagine if John F. Kennedy's son had survived and run for president under the name John Johnson. Not quite the same punch as John Kennedy Jr. Plus it increases, especially in a country with 1/1000th the population of the United States, accidental incest, although there must be safeguards, if nothing other than you can know a much higher percentage of families in the country because there are so many fewer families. But with the surname changing with every generation, it seems like it would be much more difficult to track which ancestors were yours, although I'd probably have to take a trip to Salt Lake City to confirm this suspicion. It might actually make it easier because of the domino like connectedness of all the names.

Some of the greatest and most overlooked works of world literature are the Icelandic Sagas which were written from about 1100 to about the time of Chaucer, 1400 or thereabouts. I've heard particularly great things about Njal's Saga, but have yet to read it. 

As languages go, Icelandic is one of the most hermetically sealed languages, mostly due to geography, of course. Northern Englanders who have more of an Old Norse pronunciation and vocabulary than Londoners have actually gone to Iceland and used what they consider to be antiquated English words and have been understood in Iceland by people who don't speak English.

04 October 2008

apocryphal wolfe

I'm reading the Kandy Kolored Tangerine Flake Streamline Baby, a collection of Tom Wolfe's journalism. I thought I had successfully unearthed a good example of Harold Bloom's idea of the anxiety of influence in the title of said work.  Bloom's theory, simplified, is a writer imitating another writer out of admiration, but changing it sufficiently so that he would "make it his own," so to speak. So I poked around, looking for what I thought would be the work that Wolfe was imitating (to make sure that it actually predated the work in question, making influence a possibility), and I found out not only that it was written after the work in question, but it was written in fact by Wolfe himself, The Electric Kool Aid Acid Test, and not Ken Keasy, who the work was about, and not by. So much for catching Wolfe red-handed.

03 October 2008

mailer's letters



There's a piece in this week's Nueva Jorker (6 Oct), a printing of select letters from Norman Mailer. Reading letters from writers that were not intended for you is pure literary voyeurism. I eat it up. Of course you must not let the sudden rush of wind blow off your skeptic hat. 

Writers, especially colossal egos like Mailer, write everything with the knowledge that it may one day be read. This, of course, tends to detract from the intimacy if the letter is actually written to you. I haven't dived in yet, but these types of letters are always a pleasure read. Even if you see posturing, and I think I will with Mailer's letters, it reveals a great deal, if only the fact you sometimes need to shade your eyes from a writer's narcissism. 

Despite it being Mailer's attempt to outdo Capote, The Executioner's Song is one of the greatest pieces of extended journalism ever written, so all the dissing above shouldn't detract from his great abilities as a journalist.

(Later). Finished reading them. There is a surprising candidness about them, but they do not stray far at all from Mailer's persona, that of the rugged in-your-face manly-man wants-to-be worshipped character. Mailer is an interesting study. On the one hand, he wanted to be considered a great novelist and "artist," but on the other hand he never had that detached meditativeness of the stereotypical artist. He would (try to) walk the line between worldliness and tormented talent, but the scale leans heavily towards worldliness, and the artist part of his was more a desire of his than a reality.

dfw

I don't know when I'll be able to stop if I start talking about his death, so.....

I was reading his introduction to The Best American Essays 2007 and came across this phrase:

The existential synecdoche of stagefright.

Shakespearian in its concision, precision and implications.

the bard's mistrustful eye at music

Perhaps because it was the most threatening alternative to playgoing (save bear baiting), Shakespeare seemed to talk some serious trash about the so-called universal language of music. 

There is, of course, the famous opening to Twelfth Night,

If music be the food of love, play on,
Give me excess of it, that surfeiting,
The appetite may sicken, and so die.

Ok, so this might not be strong enough to be called trash talking, but I was listening to Othello, and there's that great scene where the musicians are asked if they can play any music that cannot be heard, and if so to play to their heart's content. More examples if I happen to come across any.

haiku

the more i know
about buddhism, the more i laugh
at jean-paul sartre

02 October 2008

carver country



I got it in my head that I would reread all of Raymond Carver's stories from his collection "Where I'm Calling From," which I read years ago and was the book of my life for a few months, and is still one of my favorites. I have a natural affinity for him partially because of geography (West Coaster), but there is also without a doubt something about his stories that just claw at me. 

I remember reading "Cathedral," easily on my top-ten-stories-of-all-time list. I was living in California at the time, and I rushed to the library to get an atlas to look up Port Angeles, where it said he lived in the biographical blurb. (The collection I was reading from was published when he was still alive, but when I was actually reading it he had already passed away). It remains to me one of those stories that seems utterly unsurpassable, nearly perfect, the kind of story fiction writers would nearly give up their life to write.

studio strobe apprenticeship, part two



Second attempt with studio photography.

studio strobe apprenticeship



This was my first ever attempt with studio lighting. Single light with reflectors.

roman polanski and photography



In an interview about his schooling, Roman Polanski said that you could be a crappy writer and still graduate from film school. You could also be a crappy director and graduate. You could even be a crappy writer and director and still graduate from film school. The one thing you had to do well in order to graduate was photography.

Its importance cannot be overlooked because it is the primary way in which one communicates in the medium. The biggest blunder that new screenwriters make is injecting too much dialogue into a film, essentially making it into a play that is on film. The filmmaker must know how to communicate through photography first and foremost.