an impractical machine for less permanent results

Showing posts with label J.D. Mitchell-Lumsden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label J.D. Mitchell-Lumsden. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Charles Bernstein's Every True Religion is Bound to Fail

I've finally forced the broadside onto the internet. It's up at Bernstein's blog, as well as included in Ron Silliman's recent list of links

Read about the collaborative manufacturing of the broadside: here.
Read about Bernstein's reading at the event the broadside was produced for: here.


Click image for full-scale version. 

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

performative poetic mortification! the Broadside was appreciated

The broadside I produced for Charles Bernstein's reading was well-received by both him and the attendees. I will soon have it scanned, then post it here, as well as on my website. Though I was excited while at the event, it is always something of a disappointment, as most of my excitement occurs during the procedure, the act of production.  

I am thankful to Blake Butler, William Moor, Walter K. Lew, Dillon Westbrook & J.D. Mitchell-Lumsden for their contributions. I also am thankful for my wife's contribution, which involved acting on behalf of William Moor: using a yellow pencil to circle every word in the poem 150 times. 

Charles Bernstein genuinely expressed appreciation for the piece, both at the reading and in a subsequent email. I felt appreciated. In particular, I was most gratified upon witnessing his own fountain-pen produced typographia: notes, edits, sketches and E.D.-style word alternatives scrawled about the surface of the broadside while in the act of penning his signature. He also personalized a number of them. This was entirely in the spirit of this production, and more than I could have hoped for. He referred to this as his "own final collaboration as cancellation/holograph, fitting both to "Recantorium" and "Every True Religion.""

"Every True Religion is Bound To Fail" is the title of the poem printed in the broadside. "Recantorium" is the title of the poem he read that evening. In the latter poem, he repeatedly and repeatedly recants his poetic waywardness, his socio-poetically sinful swerve toward experimenting with language and context. He plays the straight man, long-faced and too genuine. It gets early and quick laughs. More laughs follow, but as the pattern of recantation, the flogging-like rhythm  of every apologetic synonym compounded, continues, the laughter becomes agitated, less unanimous, more sparse, like the last few kernels of corn surrendering inside the microwave. In the end, looking back on the form as it occurred in our ears, I see that he's guiltier than ever. The audience is left somewhat battered. Again, like having watched a catholic priest enacting corporal mortification, but this is performative poetic mortification enacted by a Jew. 

Getting back to the broadside, his own inscribed additions are also kind(s) of recantation(s), nixing previous lines and words for new ones, changing "fail" to "succeed," or to "win," even emphasizing a rhetorical recant of rhetoric. I'm left thinking that perhaps all apologies is equal to no apologies. It was exciting to hear this poem read aloud. Exciting to be battered this way. I thought about it as a broadside, & I think it would either be impossible or awful. 

Lastly, I've begun compiling a list of possible broadside collaborations & methods. In the meantime, I will take a break from printing. 

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

LAMINATION COLONY publishes J.D. Mitchell-Lumsden and I, among others

Autographed by William Moor, a memorandum taken from my larger work, AUTOGRAPHOGRAPHY, has just been published on the internet in/at Lamination Colony. Also in this issue, 2 twisted tales by J.D. Mitchell-Lumsden, editor of Cricket Online Review. And still more... an excerpt of work by Johannes Goransson, who translated Henry Parland's Ideals Clearance (easily among my top ten favorite collections of poems). 
Finally, be sure to READ Dick Palace 1 through 6 by 6 writers via Blake Butler(s). 


Lamination Colony is edited by Blake Butler.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

The Bucky Monkey

The boys that brought you Cricket Online Review have been hard at work. In the post today, I received several copies of The Bucky Monkey, issue A, as well as Bher, a chapbook by Chad Lietz. The Bucky Monkey, guest edited by Daniel Drew, puts some of the more difficult work(s) of Polis, Chad Lietz, Lizzie Brock, Wm. Moor, J.D. Mitchell-Lumsden, and myself along side each other, creating an all together difficult selection. Sometimes difficult to look at, sometimes difficult to read. 

Always vigilant David Horton has devoted a few lines to discussing my Bucky Monkey contribution, as well as to Chad Lietz' Bher.