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Poetry Makes Nothing Happen? Ask Laura Bush (barf alert)
The Nation ^ | 2/24/2003 | Katha Pollitt

Posted on 02/25/2003 8:06:18 PM PST by Utah Girl

So Laura Bush will not, after all, be discussing the works of Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman and Langston Hughes with a selected group of American poets at the White House on February 12. The conference, "Poetry and the American Voice," was abruptly "postponed" after Sam Hamill, editor of Copper Canyon Press and author of thirteen books of verse, responded to his invitation by putting out an e-mail urging invitees and others to send him poems and statements opposing the invasion of Iraq. When I spoke to him on the phone, Hamill described himself as a lifelong radical ("What on earth were they thinking?" he wondered out loud), and said he had planned to decline his invitation but had hoped to compile an anthology that another invitee would present to the First Lady. Within days almost 2,000 poets had responded to his plea. It was almost like old times, when Robert Lowell refused to attend a poetry symposium at the Johnson White House to protest the Vietnam War.

Why was the conference canceled? Hamill expresses himself rather forcefully ("I was overcome by a kind of nausea," he wrote of finding the invitation in the mail)--in fact, he sounds a lot like writers of letters to The Nation. But he didn't urge poets to take off their clothes and pee in the punch bowl, or to stage a reading of the Not In Our Name statement. He merely suggested giving the First Lady some poems. Poets these days are a mannerly crowd, and it's a safe bet that those who chose to attend would have been polite. Marilyn Nelson, poet laureate of Connecticut, said she planned to wear a silk scarf decorated with peace symbols, in hopes of attracting the First Lady's eye. So is that it? The White House, so bold to make war, is afraid of poems and scarves?

So much for democracy, free speech, vigorous discussion. In this most insulated and choreographed of administrations, the "American voice"--note the singular--is welcome only when it says what the White House wants to hear. And yet, as so often, censorship backfired. "They did us an extraordinary favor," Hamill told me. "They revealed that there are many, many poets opposed to the Bush regime. And they demonstrated their fear of the carefully chosen word--their fear of poetry."

Now Laura Bush, a former librarian, likes to read, and that's good. As Texas First Lady she helped start the Texas Book Fair, and as First Lady she has held a number of symposia on interesting historical topics--women writers of the West, the Harlem Renaissance and Mark Twain, whom she calls the "first real American writer," so eat your heart out Bradstreet, Edwards, Franklin, Irving, Douglass, Emerson, Thoreau (especially you, Henry, you civilly disobedient antiwar tree-hugger, you). To her credit, she invited to these gatherings serious writers and scholars--Arnold Rampersad, Justin Kaplan, David Levering Lewis, frontier historian Ursula Smith--who she must have known could not, on the whole, be happy with her husband's policies. Still, according to press reports, invitees to these events arrived suspicious, went away charmed. That's how it usually works with the presidency--Bill Clinton beguiled an entire roomful of poets at a 1998 soiree, with only a few refuseniks. Proximity to power, a brush with history, the cachet of exclusivity and, in the case of Laura Bush, a private glimpse of perhaps the biggest contrast-gainer in the history of marriage--say what you like about the irrelevance of poets in today's world, if they're willing to forgo all that, antiwar feeling must be positively rampaging across the land.

"There is nothing political about American literature," Laura Bush has said. But it would be hard to find writers more subversive than the three she chose for her event. Whitman's epic of radical democracy, Leaves of Grass, was so scandalous it got him fired from his government job; Hughes, a Communist sympathizer hounded by McCarthy, wrote constantly and indelibly about racism, injustice, power; Dickinson might seem the least political, but in some ways she was the most lastingly so--every line she wrote is an attack on complacency and conformity of manners, mores, religion, language, gender, thought. None of these quintessentially American writers would have given two cents for family values (Whitman was gay, as perhaps were Hughes and Dickinson), abstinence education, the death penalty, tax cuts for the rich, Ashcroftian attacks on civil liberties or the other hallmarks of the Bush regime. It's hard to imagine them cheering the bombing of Baghdad.

There will be readings all over the country on February 12. As of this writing some 3,500 poets (who knew?) have sent poems and statements to www.poetsagainstthewar.org. Here's mine:

Trying to Write a Poem Against the War

My daughter, who's as beautiful as the day,
hates politics: Face it, Ma,
they don't care what you think! All
passion, like Achilles,

she stalks off to her room,
to confide in her purple guitar and await
life's embassies. She's right,
of course: bombs will be hurled
at ordinary streets
and leaders look grave for the cameras,
and what good are more poems against war
the real subject of which
so often seems to be the poet's superior

moral sensitivities? I could
be mailing myself to the moon
or marrying a palm tree,
and yet what can we do
but offer what we have?
and so I spend
this cold gray glittering morning
trying to write a poem against war
that perhaps may please my daughter

who hates politics
and does not care much for poetry, either.



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1 posted on 02/25/2003 8:06:18 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: rintense; All
Can you use the Dose to ping to this thread? I want as many people as possible to write to Katha Pollitt, the oh so superior witch, and express our feelings in poetry. Katha does not give her email, but here is the email for The Nation's editors. email and express your outrage.

Food for thought: Would you accept an invitation to a Democrat White House for a poetry reading or whatever???

2 posted on 02/25/2003 8:09:35 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
To Ms. Politt: (NOT to Utah Girl)

I like to read, too, but I don't need to read your crap.
3 posted on 02/25/2003 8:11:25 PM PST by John Valentine (Writing from downtown Seoul, keeping an eye on the hills to the north.)
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To: John Valentine
Here's much better reading, Poets for the war.
4 posted on 02/25/2003 8:18:44 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: mombonn; ejo; Fiddlstix; lawgirl; Teacup; Miss Marple; Wait4Truth; TruthNtegrity; TXBubba; ...
PING!
5 posted on 02/25/2003 8:21:21 PM PST by rintense (Go Get 'Em Dubya!)
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To: rintense
Thanks!!!
6 posted on 02/25/2003 8:23:55 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
trying to write a poem against war
that perhaps may please my daughter
who hates politics
and does not care much for poetry, either.

No wonder, after being forced, no doubt, to listen to cuckoo mommy's rants.

7 posted on 02/25/2003 8:26:57 PM PST by vikingchick
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To: vikingchick
Katha Pollitt's daughter also wanted to hang a flag in honor of the dead of 9/11. Pollitt wrote a big column about how she refused to let her daughter do so, and detailed the big lectures about the evils of flags.
8 posted on 02/25/2003 8:31:56 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl
Well, there's hope for the kid at least! Maybe she'll become a Freeper one day.
9 posted on 02/25/2003 8:34:53 PM PST by vikingchick
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To: vikingchick
Poets these days are a mannerly crowd,

Only if manners according to an MTV dictionary means:

Most foul, obscene, depraved, vile, morally corrupt, perverted, distorted and deviant.

10 posted on 02/25/2003 8:42:46 PM PST by Lauratealeaf (anti-capitalists, anti-semitics, anti-war types always love Bill Clinton)
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To: Utah Girl
The problem with these so-called poets, they're much like that admitted Pro Communist who was appointed and New Jersey's Poet Lauriat. It isn't even poetry, it's hatred in words that rarely even rhyme. There is nothing uplifting or educational about their spew, just hatred or victim hood written on paper and labeled as poetry. It reminds me of "Modern Art" nothing redeeming or artistic whatsoever, just garbage with a spotlight on it. Much like putting a dress on a pig, underneath the dress you still have a stinking Swine.

I'm very glad Laura was wise enough not to allow these shameless liberals disgrace and dishonor the real poets, past and current. I find it refreshing that Laura Bush had sense enough to see what was coming if she allowed this non-political event become a opportunity for these agenda driven people to use this venue to spew their hatred for this country and our President.

Oh!!! I almost forgot.... I LOATHE LIBERALS

11 posted on 02/25/2003 8:43:21 PM PST by MJY1288 (It's Time To Roll)
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To: rintense; Utah Girl
A Poem (?) to Katha Pollit

You call yourself a poet,
because you write
like this
in lines that don't rhyme.

Ooops, that last one did
internally,
but without intention.
So please enlightened one
forgive my pedestrian attempt
at a craft that is
far superior - you think -
to my rational sensibilities.

I don't have a clue
what you are trying
to convey
with fancy allusions
so grand sounding, but without meaning
except to you, a poet,
so superior to mere humans.

Perhaps you should go
mail yourself to the moon
or marry a palm tree
or some other kinky thing
that I do not understand.
Then your daugher,
might be free of your
insanity and find that
there are plenty of others
who think her mom is an
idiot who writes poetry that sucks.

12 posted on 02/25/2003 8:48:08 PM PST by Jen (Ah Margaritaville, the destination for poets...)
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To: AntiJen
LOL, EXCELLENT!!!!!!!!!!!
13 posted on 02/25/2003 8:49:55 PM PST by MJY1288 (It's Time To Roll)
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To: Lauratealeaf
Oh yeah, like we believe they would all behave like perfect angels once they were at the White House. They probably planned to start chanting their tired anti-war slogans, fists raised high in the air.

Then the Secret Service would be forced to drag their sorry behinds outside where their little photography chums would chronicle the fiasco for some cruddy coffee table book that the libs would purchase with adolescent glee.

Thanks, but NO THANKS. :)

14 posted on 02/25/2003 8:52:59 PM PST by vikingchick
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To: AntiJen
LOL!
15 posted on 02/25/2003 8:53:06 PM PST by Howlin (Time to pull the trigger!)
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To: AntiJen
Excellent!!! I am impressed.
16 posted on 02/25/2003 8:53:15 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: rintense
I forgot to add you in the "To" line for post #11
17 posted on 02/25/2003 8:54:11 PM PST by MJY1288 (It's Time To Roll)
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To: MJY1288
I've been pretty impressed with the poetry on the pro-war poetry site. It makes sense, brings the horror of war, but also says that war is preferable to losing our freedom.
18 posted on 02/25/2003 8:55:59 PM PST by Utah Girl
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To: Utah Girl; Howlin; MJY1288
Tequila gets the poetic juices flowing... ;-) hahahahahaha
19 posted on 02/25/2003 8:57:12 PM PST by Jen (Ah Margaritaville, the destination for poets...)
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To: AntiJen
I love your poem (?) to Katha Pollit! That last line, when said aloud has quite an attitude.
20 posted on 02/25/2003 8:59:16 PM PST by Lauratealeaf (Pollit rhymes with Creep)
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