T.C.
MARSHALL Engages
Ursula or University by Stephanie
(Krupskaya, 2013)
An
Appreciation of Stephanie Young’s Ursula
or University
“Whatever”
or “What You Will”:
“This
thing that I made that failed” (15) is a sort of tagline built into Stephanie
Young’s Ursula or University that
positions the work poetically. In this new book, she writes from the positions
of being a working member of national, local, and personal communities. She
shows us her struggles over what to do with the demands of a public situation
that clearly calls for political and practical action, while she also includes
her private and “literary” concerns from within those communities. That
“failed” phrase shows up as a sort of song-like refrain, a chorus that reminds
us of some apparent inevitabilities and of what gets done despite them.
The “thing”
referred to in the phrase was an earlier work of “neo-benshi” that attempted to
combine re-scripting of Jeanne Moreau clips with reflection on Oscar Grant’s
killing by a BART cop and that system’s restrictive social functions. It was
apparently a meditation on dramatized flows and forces of the powers that be.
In the recent book, we first see “failed” as a verb and get it also as a
descriptive adjective about that piece that she finally considered a failed
work. In the final section of Ursula or
University, though, people’s names follow the verb “failed” and make it a
transitive one with those names as direct objects. The names are those of
several people murdered by Bay Area police actions in 2009-11: Oscar Grant,
Kenneth Harding, Charles Hill, and Raheim Brown. This little emendation is a
simple poetic move, but in it lies the truth of the poetic tension of Young’s
book in telling whom and what she feels she failed. It also helps create the
strengths of this work, which lie in the truth of what poetry can and does
accomplish.
“Poetry makes
nothing happen,” Charles Bernstein likes to say, as though it always fails. He
is quoting Wystan Hugh Auden who wrote in defense of William Butler Yeats’
imagination, I think. Those three august gentlemen might offer poetic figures
instead of plain answers, but the real question is about what this “nothing”
is. It makes me think of an old image from Westerns, where someone in jail
would use a nothing like a tin drinking cup to rattle the cages of the Sheriffs
and others. In Ursula or University,
I’d say, it is this kind of “nothing” that can and must be attended to. When
“nothing can be done” seems like the answer, poetry’s mite of nothing is what
we must precisely offer to make happen. It is as if we must rattle our little
next-to-nothing against the bars of what little poetry can do, take the cup
they allow us and keep our jailers awake at night with it. Even such a small
power can be taken away. I have on my desk a reminder of that. It’s a yogurt
cup from Soledad, used for drinking. It was given to me by a prisoner as a
souvenir of how anything firm enough to be made into a weapon—like a ceramic or
tin cup—has been taken away from them now just like the chance to earn college
units while incarcerated. The thin plastic cup he gave me wouldn’t make much of
a rattle against the bars, but it rattles me each time I look at it and think
of lives reduced to next to nothing and held down there. In the same thought, I
also think of the poems he and his classmates wrote the day Jeanine Pommy Vega
and I went inside to work with them. They were evocative and forthright, as if
the prisoners had nothing to lose by telling of the things they remembered from
outside, like childhood and the streets.
“Failed lives” is a
myth we use to police the thought of those guys; to those who have lived in
them, those lives and their failures are actually fecund. A failed work turned
into an investigation of all that failed it and all that it failed is a project
worthy of an inclusive vision. Young gives that to this work all the way. The
phrase “Too much work and still to be poets” (11) shows up in “Essay (after
Bernadette Mayer),” the opening piece in Young’s book. It is followed by a pair
of lines that can be read a couple of ways because they lack end punctuation:
“Who are
simultaneously-the-beneficiary-of-our-cultural-heritage-and-victim-of-it
poets,” which could on its own be read as a question, and the next line that
certainly could too, though it’s also a rhetorical one that makes a statement: “Was
there ever a poet who had a self-sufficient loss of certainty” (11). This
sketch of the kind of poet we’re looking at is a small part of a large poem
that ostensibly serves as a prologue to the wide-ranging book and its focus on
the work of a poet in a tangled world.
The next piece,
“January 2011,” begins to use that last question to frame a fresh project by
opening with “I have to begin with this failure. This thing I made that
failed.” Those two sentences are the first paragraph. The second is longer, and
it ends: “I’m trying to write something about being a poet in the middle of
feeling confused about the social stuff, the institutional stuff” (13). In that
prologue “Essay” poem, there had been a claim that “we are among a proletariat
of poets of all the classes” (12). This starts us off with a twist on class
analysis in an ironic truth about her fellow Easy Bay poets that serves as a
window onto “the social stuff, the institutional stuff” (15). To look into and
crawl out of that window is the daring-do of her book. It provides the
“self-sufficient loss of certainty,” as she puts it, that is properly
sufficient to stage her self-doubts as entry points for a questioning of the
poetry world. Young’s pointed questionings of our tasks as poets and of all the
advantages taken by various privileged ones among us make for challenges not
just to herself but to the community.
Another important
tagline, from that second section called “January 2011” is the phrase: “the
mostly white poets I am and hang out with” (19). This phrase becomes
syntactically awkward now and then, and it gets variations played upon it; as I
first heard it in a reading at the mostly white-privileged Montalvo Arts
Center, it stuck out like a thumb in a bandage. It fits, though, as the 1/11 piece
prosily moves forward to comment on a poetry community that Young joined first
through the Buffalo listserv and then fell further into with “blogs, flickr,
myspace, facebook” and, now on the streets of Oakland, twitter. It was, for
Young, “terribly exciting at first…, and then it wavered and felt bad.” She
tells us she is going for a “critique of the networks and systems that surround
and produce poetry communities” and one that “doesn’t leave out [her] feelings”
(22).
I take it that
including her feelings comes from her personal desire but can also be seen as
directed by a dialectic between two poetries: the public image (and lingering
Romantic history) of poetry as “about” and “from” feelings, countered by the
Modernist swing away from the person. She does not directly discuss this.
However, Young uses the Bay Area poetry scene, the scene she visits in NY in
early 2011, and the simultaneous AWP meeting as comparative contexts where she
attends to her feelings and listens to what they tell her about those social
constructions. Her work scene at Mills College in Oakland is another such
context, as are the universities that fund conferences and/or employ some of
the poets who go to them. She takes notice of the facts about tenure-track
employment and distinctive degrees among the panelists at the “Rethinking
Poetics” conference at Columbia and how that is but one of the problematic
aspects of a scene that a friend of hers describes as “the same old theatre of
power” (41). However, some of these profs are also credited with sharply
positive interventions. Charles Bernstein, for example, is both pointed out as
a seriously tenured Harvard grad, an enjoyer of privileges, and gratefully
shouted out for asking that attention be given to “forms of reading, such as the
three-day form of listening-as-reading” (49) that all were caught up in at the
Columbia conference. Young’s enthusiasm is mostly always about community and
what constructs, destroys, or deconstructs it.
Through both her
feelings and her analysis, we get a measure of impetus and drag for poetry in
the situations in which she finds herself. We sense with Young what impels
poetry-making or not as she moves among those who shape today’s avant-garde for
the art. Her challenges to herself and to the flow around her illuminate her
sense of impetus. The poet is not just a rubber ducky in a stream flow. Such a
duck bobs along, bounces off rocks, spins aside in eddies, slows in wide flats,
goes under in falls, gushes along below them, and has an average speed you can
calculate as you trot along beside the creek and glance at your watch. A poet
is, instead, properly helped along by other duckies who, unlike rubber ones,
have the will to collaborate. Community is the impetus, but it also must be
measured against eddying or getting stuck; we must see that those inertial or
frustrating forces, too, can come from others through their acts and rules.
In the poetic
construct of Ursula or University,
Young builds up a sense of community that seems to open out through the poet’s
encounters with what baffles her efforts and what sparks them. We get a
positive glimpse of a kind of “community” that does not rule its component
individuals but compels and impels them in a lively disorder. At the same time,
it provides a kind of antidote to the masked-over anarchy of the petty
middle-class life imposed on us all by the market. That market of misrule,
whether in its AWP or MLA masks or in the suits and numbers of other job lists
or the “open market,” is pulling at the poet’s eye and ear constantly
throughout this book. She has no consistent answer to the problematic
structures nor even a consistent community from which to respond, but her
poetics includes attempts and failures. Her alliances with friends are
presented alongside the liaisons with collegial groups or casual caucuses as
forms of effective community practice for her. Young’s projection of a grander
community stems from these twos and threes and sevenses or dozenses. It rises
naturally in their gossip or their marching or their local conferencing. It is
not solidarity around common identity, even of being poets, so much as a
politics of mutually accessing ways out of the problematic shapes of life in
which we entrap ourselves.
This sense of
community in Young’s U book reminds
me of Giorgio Agamben’s “Coming Community” concept, which, though a bit
overloaded with philosophical language in his framing, shapes pretty much the
same wobbly thing. It is a community constructed not in likenesses that
classify individuals, not in common-ity, but in “usages” that rise as
individuals place themselves “among others” seeking “ease” with others. Those
terms there in scare quotes and plenty of others are given full philosophical
definition in Agamben’s 1990 (trans. 1993) book because his aim is to sketch a
philosophical “ethic” of community. As he does this work, though, an oddly
slangy word crops up. “The being that is engendered on this line,” he writes,
“is ‘whatever’ being, and the manner in which it passes from the common to the
proper and from the proper to the common is called ‘usage’—or rather, ethos” (19). That, of course for us
modern poets, echoes Charles Olson’s usage of ethos to name the “haunts” of a person, where a person lives as
they live in the “cave of their being” (369). Agamben’s “whatever” is not our
slangy one really but the “tel quel”
of the French, the “qualunque of the
Italian, the “quodlibet” of the
church fathers and of philosophy. It names the philosophical fold between the
individual and groupings: “Common and proper, genus and individual are only the
two slopes dropping away from either side of the watershed of whatever” (19).
This ethics of the “whatever” is an attempt to free the idea of community from
the idea of what we (have to) have in common. Of course, seeing what I have in
common with the homeless woman can be liberating, but Young’s cry is not for
identification with the black male victims of the BART Police; it is more
against the categories policing thrusts upon our lives. The shrug of “whatever”
in its slangy sense is flipped in Agamben’s “quodlibet” (what you will) whatever. If you ask me why I
demonstrate and I say I have no reason, I may just say “whatever” and mean it
both ways.
The other force
that Agamben’s book offers to Young’s approach is in these two sentences: “The
perfect art of writing comes not from a power to write, but from an impotence
that turns back on itself and in this way comes to itself as a pure act (which
Aristotle calls agent intellect). This is why in the Arab tradition agent intellect
has the form of an angel whose name is Qalam, Pen, and its place is an
unfathomable potentiality” (36). Agamben is again talking about being and
essence here and of the supreme power in the potentia potentiae and all kinds of other big stuff, but Young’s
repeated phrase “the thing that I made that failed” does more than Bartleby’s
refusal (Agamben’s reference point in literature for his point) by refusing to
refuse to go on. She goes on with an enactment of something that incorporates
and re-enacts the elements of that failure, embracing them and giving them
their potential back. Ursula or
University highlights the unfathomable quality of its recombinant elements:
that neo-benshi’s enjambment of Moreau-vian romance with protest against
murders by policemen, “the mostly white/leftist poets I am and hang out with,”
the “institutional stuff” like that ReThinking conference and its rooms and
voices, the “social stuff” of the poetry world and its scenes and a “critique
of the networks and systems” therein, the “cultural heritage” we supposedly
share, the Steinian wisdom of gossip, the East Bay discussion of poets’ labor
and descriptions from their conference on that, “feelings” as “nothing more
than feelings,” the names of the dead, the names of authors and their books,
“the problem of the person,” the description of Occupy actions and of one’s
choices of participation or not, the descriptions of police actions, some
earthquake stuff, the recognition of misogynies, the acts of editing &
reflecting, or of reading & thinking, the history of freeskools, the sense
of friendship, and the “whatever” of it all.
This scramble is
certainly enough to incite the “self-sufficient loss of certainty,” and yet,
and yet … (as Kobaiyashi Issa says in contemplating “this world of dew”). What
I get here from Young’s writing is a sense of person that is delightfully mixed
and mixed up. It is not a label-able individual, a dividend of the division
into likenesses by matching up exteriors. Young’s person is, instead, actually
the kind of a “whatever” that constantly faces whatever is in the adjacent open
space accessed by consideration of others and of situation. I think we might
return here to Agamben’s fancy talk because he goes right at this sense of
person as a basis for “the coming community” near the end of his short book. He
explains this kind of self situation as an “ek-stasis”
and locates it as “the experience of being—within
an outside” (67). It is “determined
only through its relation to an idea,
that is, to the totality of its possibilities.” This kind of person is “a
singularity plus an empty space,” both “finite” and “indeterminable according
to a concept” (66). This is not the “perfect exteriority” of politically
correct alignment nor that of the profilings by advertising or the police. As
Agamben puts it, it is instead the “pure exteriority” and “exposed singularity”
of its thus-ness and the “whatever”
that it is (64-67). If we refuse to let go of our slangy angle on “whatever,”
this can make a lot of sense even to us non-philosophes.
It helps explain
the Occupy approach that Agamben seems to have prophesied in his “coming
community” idea: “The novelty of the
coming politics is that it will no longer be a struggle for the conquest or
control of the State, but a struggle between the State and the non-State
(humanity), an insurmountable disjunction between whatever singularity and the
State organization” (84––his italics). “What the State cannot tolerate in
any way … is that the singularities form a community without affirming an
identity, that humans co-belong without any representable condition of
belonging (even in the form of a simple proposition)” (85). “I am never this or that, but always such, thus. … Not possession but limit
[threshold], not presupposition but exposure. … That you are exposed is not one
of your qualities, but neither is it other than them (we could say, in fact,
that it is none-other than them)” (96). Though he plays with common expressions
like “none other than,” Agamben gets deep into philosophical lingo as he closes
his book: “Existence as exposure is the being-as of a such” (97).
Whatever that means, he’s right with us in this decade and in reading Stephanie
Young because what we have in Ursula or
University is the quotidian “whatever” version of his philosophical quodlibet. Her book is the serious, fun,
funny, more-than-serious redemption of that word in writing and writing’s
failures—in poetry in other words.
Works Cited
Agamben, Giorgio. The Coming Community. Trans. Michael Hardt. (Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1993).
Olson, Charles. Collected Prose. Ed. Donald Allen & Benjamin Friedlander. (Berkeley: U of California P, 1997).
Young, Stephanie. Ursula or University. (San Francisco: Krupskaya, 2013).
*****
T. C. Marshall lives near Fall Creek in California’s Santa Cruz Mountains where he used to walk regularly with Norman O. Brown; Tom claims to be able still to hear the wise old codger singing Morenita Mía on the trail and asking sharp questions about the biome. Some of Tom’s own creative works in progress can be seen at postlanguage.blogspot.com, on YouTube, & at maizepoem.blogspot.com. His next performance to be YouTubed will come in the Spring and be called something like “Face their Violence or Face the Music.”
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