Showing posts with label Allison Cardon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Allison Cardon. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2019

P – Q U E U E #16 : R U I N



There is
space around

a heart. Sharp
frequency. Current,
thread. A smooth
stone

pocket.

two stones. No pocket
sound
on this side of
the event

no one could
say what
touch what sound
happened

never
the word “abide”
until

to fly

the urge
away. (Jill Magi, “WITHOUT/A RUIN”)

I’ve long been a fan of the annual P-QUEUE [see my review of the previous issue here], run out of the English Department at SUNY-Buffalo, both for the strength and the variety of writing included (I am frustrated that the first couple of issues, the only ones I seem to be missing, remain out of print). The latest volume, #16, is subtitled “RUIN,” existing as the third volume edited by poet Allison Cardon (she had a chapbook out a while ago with above/ground press, remember?). With new work by Christina Vega-Westhoff, Jill Magi, José Felipe Alvergue, Declan Gould, Aja Couchois Duncan, Dana Venerable, Robin Lee Jordan, Kayley Berezney, Zack Brown, Ken Chen and A.A. Spencer, the poems in P-QUEUE #16 seem to have been, if not composed to suit the theme, were certainly selected (and possibly even solicited) around such. Referencing a sequence of big screen disaster films in her introduction, editor Cardon writes:

I’d like to propose this volume as an antidote to these disaster scripts. Ruins persist against the cultural wish for guiltless destruction. Ruination do not just happen—ruins tell a story. How that story goes—what sort of testament ruins make—is, of course, to be determined by who is looking, what they are looking at, when and when their look occurs. Ruins are not mute—like the poems in this volume, they speak volumes—and they also enable and invite a particular sort of gaze. The work in this P-Queue locates this gaze in so many different spaces and animate it in ways that challenge ready-to-hand ideas about ruin and responsibility, heroism and progress.

Given I’m new to the work of Jill Magi [see my review of her latest here], I’m fascinated not only to see new work, but her statement on her extended sequence, suggesting a shift in her thinking and her poetics, one that I look forward to seeing further though. As Cardon writes of the piece in her introduction (she writes briefly on all the work in the issue, which I find glorious and impressive): “Jill Magi’s eviscerating elegy is also about dwelling—how to stay in the vacuum created by loss—to faithfully map the contours of that space without giving it borders, means or ends [.]” “My idea of poetry changed at the bedside of two loved ones as they passed.” Magi writes. “One passing so sudden and unimaginable, our family was turned inside out. I saw myself failing, many times, to be present for those I love. There was no blueprint.” She continues:

Until this event, I thought that poetry should be for something political and I was wary of personal writing. Until I understood that to sit with what is impossible is absolutely what poetry is for. This understanding allowed me to see how untrained in poetry and in the political I actually was and how difficult it was for me to abide with grieving, with the impossible, which transcends whatever we call personal and whatever we call political.

This is to say that I do not have one definitive thing to say about this topic. The poem comes from the middle of this prying open but not opening into light—into something else red, hot, nearly stifling.

I’m also, obviously, rather fond of work by José Felipe Alvergue [see his recent Touch the Donkey interview here] and Aja Couchois Duncan [see her recent Touch the Donkey interview here], so am pleased to see them. Alvergue’s work in the issue, “Senescence,” exists as a cut-up, akin to Susan Howe’s work, but more overtly political, as Cardon writes: “Geographically (in multiple senses), he lays out the legal and political linkages of disease, insanity, communism, and racial purity. Pointing to the transformative qualities of cultural amnesia and starvation, such that ‘nothingness passes for its own memory,’ Alvergue argues that borders and boundaries of various sorts pose as though they came from nothing and yet have always been.” Duncan’s submission is another extended selection “from The Intimacy Trials” [the first “chapter” appears in the most recent issue of Touch the Donkey], as Cardon writes: “Meanwhile, in Aja Couchois Duncan’s The Intimacy Trials we witness a denial and erasure of historical and social reproduction that enables many to avoid responsibility for the ongoing history of colonialism—not to mention its reproduction and repetition in climate disaster [.]”

Some would say we live post life as if a ghosting of. But we still taste the blood on our lips, still feel the crippling longing for.

We are as real as any manifestation of the perpetual present tense. Our dreams are sensorial. Cloaked in darkness we rummage through our bodies until something settles into place. An elbow or breast. The declension of a belly unfed.

Some nights we stuff our ears so we can’t hear the calls. Switch, you say. You have warned us not to monogomate. But we our soothed by these attachments. The habit, its echo, rests deep in our bones.

The remainder of the issue is made up of names I was previously unfamiliar with, which is always exciting (and a big part of why I return to the journal). There is quite the range of impressive work here, but the names that really jumped out at me were Buffalo, New York poet, translator and arielist Christina Vega-Westhoff, for her “Three Poems,” and Buffalo, New York poet Zack Brown, for his “Poems,” that Cardon describes as “ruined by reference, a semantic allegory for the epistemology of ruin itself: as we shuttle back and forth between the poems, their blanks, and their footnotes, we’re forced to look backwards to recontextualize and to determine whether or not we hav made any progress.” His poems include:

what ruins
in me

my perfect home
becomes useless

its fenestration
the result

of missing gambrel
chasm

blemishes
veil in ivy

sustain in stone
the rootless

stability
can be undone

as can sainthood
—ask Eustace!

I’m really appreciating that most if not all of the included writers have short notes or statements following their sections, allowing both a way of seeing their individual selections and larger works, as well as a glimpse into how the issue was most likely shaped (a call or solicitation for works relating, whether directly or indirectly, to the stated theme). There is such a fine prevision to Brown’s poems, one I appreciate, even as it falls apart, as Brown begins in his “Notes”:

These poems follow the logic of ruin—the logic of the sign of ruin to be exact, though it is always in and as language that such things come to pass. Ruins fall. A ruining is a falling and a ruin is that site which falls. We should say that falling is kept alive in the ruin, which itself ruins. The relevant entries in the Oxford English Dictionary, insofar as they guide these poems, may be of some use to the reader. Ruin, as linguistic signifier, is both internal synchronic logic and external diachronic history. The wager in these poems is to think that signifier not only by describing its history, but, further, by embodying that signified in the text iself, setting to motion the unfolding of its event. These poems are both ruined and ruining: they have fallen and continue to fall. Within them, there is falling and falling is.

On her part, Christina Vega-Westhoff’s three poems actually open the collection, providing both precision and accumulative expansion in intimate, ruinous terms. As Cardon suggests, in Vega-Westhoff’s pieces, “ruin is woven through maternity, natality, and the question of the nation: we are invited to consider the relationship between home and ruin—which and what is here, which and what over there really is. Is the hysteria around porosity a question of relation?” For her part, Vega-Westhoff is one of the few sections sans notes, perhaps allowing the work to speak for itself, as her opening poem “THAT LIGHT SOUND OF LITTLE RAIN” begins:

            or melting
into debt
            or something that rhymes with it
the inability to seek the exact
            the condition of
into the night
            tossing but no feeding
breasts filling
            the condition of
returned toddler
            tab additional entry
into poet and boxer
            and merge
to be professional and paid
            to say whiteness is the indoctrination
of bedtime story
            land filled by
extraction principle
            here comes the a(bn)(ggr)egation of
request
            if in the
removed treaty
            in the felt
in the museum
            the ruins of
set examples of  dwellings


Monday, October 08, 2018

Touch the Donkey supplement: new interviews with Eckes, Cain, Spinosa, Ace, Good, Morrison, Cardon and Boisvert

Anticipating the release next week of the nineteenth issue of Touch the Donkey (a small poetry journal), why not check out the interviews that have appeared over the past few weeks with contributors to the eighteenth issue: Ryan Eckes, Stephen Cain, Dani Spinosa, Samuel Ace, Howie Good, Rusty Morrison, Allison Cardon and Jon Boisvert.

Interviews with contributors to the first seventeen issues (over one hundred interviews to date) remain online, including: Laura Theobald, Suzanne Wise, Sean Braune, Dale Smith, Valerie Coulton, Phil Hall, Sarah MacDonell, Janet Kaplan, Kyle Flemmer, Julia Polyck-O’Neill, A.M. O’Malley, Catriona Strang, Anthony Etherin, Claire Lacey ,Sacha Archer, Michael e. Casteels, Harold Abramowitz, Cindy Savett, Tessy Ward, Christine Stewart, David James Miller, Jonathan Ball, Cody-Rose Clevidence, mwpm, Andrew McEwan, Brynne Rebele-Henry, Joseph Mosconi, Douglas Barbour and Sheila Murphy, Oliver Cusimano, Sue Landers, Marthe Reed, Colin Smith, Nathaniel G. Moore, David Buuck, Kate Greenstreet, Kate Hargreaves, Shazia Hafiz Ramji, Erín Moure, Sarah Swan, Buck Downs, Kemeny Babineau, Ryan Murphy, Norma Cole, Lea Graham, kevin mcpherson eckhoff, Oana Avasilichioaei, Meredith Quartermain, Amanda Earl, Luke Kennard, Shane Rhodes, Renée Sarojini Saklikar, Sarah Cook, François Turcot, Gregory Betts, Eric Schmaltz, Paul Zits, Laura Sims, Stephen Collis, Mary Kasimor, Billy Mavreas, damian lopes, Pete Smith, Sonnet L’Abbé, Katie L. Price, a rawlings, Suzanne Zelazo, Helen Hajnoczky, Kathryn MacLeod, Shannon Maguire, Sarah Mangold, Amish Trivedi, Lola Lemire Tostevin, Aaron Tucker, Kayla Czaga, Jason Christie, Jennifer Kronovet, Jordan Abel, Deborah Poe, Edward Smallfield, ryan fitzpatrick, Elizabeth Robinson, nathan dueck, Paige Taggart, Christine McNair, Stan Rogal, Jessica Smith, Nikki Sheppy, Kirsten Kaschock, Lise Downe, Lisa Jarnot, Chris Turnbull, Gary Barwin, Susan Briante, derek beaulieu, Megan Kaminski, Roland Prevost, Emily Ursuliak, j/j hastain, Catherine Wagner, Susanne Dyckman, Susan Holbrook, Julie Carr, David Peter Clark, Pearl Pirie, Eric Baus, Pattie McCarthy, Camille Martin and Gil McElroy.

The forthcoming nineteenth issue features new writing by: Michael Robins, Ken Hunt, Rob Manery, Rae Armantrout, robert majzels, Stephanie Strickland, Kate Siklosi and Marie Larson.


And of course, copies of the first eighteen issues are still very much available. Why not subscribe?

We even have our own Facebook group. It’s remarkably easy.

Sunday, July 22, 2018

P-QUEUE #15 : BLOOD



Hello Some

We all know that some cook & some clean some cut leaves gather stones some pick them up some others open & close & unravel

Some eat quickly some take breaks some list grievances & others say them out loud

Some dream of violence & murder & some dream nicely some take triggers & wait by the road some clean their afterthoughts

Some protest & some watch walking on the other side by the hour some hold hands & some travel tell stories some are the stories some count for much longer and whose some, hello some, whose some. Hello. (Eunsong Kim)

I’ve long been an admirer of SUNY-Buffalo’s annual P-QUEUE (I’m still seeking copies of the first few volumes, if anyone has copies or suggestions of how to procure), and the latest, their “BLOOD” issue, Allison Cardon’s second volume as editor, includes new work by Biswamit Dwibedy, Joan Retallack, Eunsong Kim, Petra Kuppers, Travis Sharp, Renee Angle, erica kaufman and Soham Patel. Throughout its history, P-QUEUE has held to an idea of a loose “theme” for each volume—“Anomolies” (2), “Space” (6), “Polemic” (7), “Document” (8), “Mourning” (13) etcetera—an idea that has, throughout the journal’s five editors-to-date, has existed as a thread to connect sometimes disparate works, as opposed to any thematic bludgeon. Fundamentally, the strength of the writing has always propelled each volume, and has done so quite brilliantly. As Cardon writes to close her introduction:

In this, P-Queue’s fifteenth issue, blood conveys a wealth of information that is less in need of discovery than of care. As blood covers the intersection of history with finitude and relation, these poetic, polyvalent explorations of this viscious and revelatory bodily substance help us imagine a form of vitality disarticulated from blood’s labor time, net work, or progression.

[photo lifted from Allison Cardon's facebook page] 

I’ve always been fond, also, of journals that provide enough space for a writer’s work to stretch out, and reveal itself, as opposed to including only a couple of pieces, or even a single poem (for the sake of getting in as many writers as possible). Even beyond the variety P-QUEUE is traditionally known for, I’ve appreciated the journal’s interest in including multiple pieces, even longer singular, extended works, by fewer authors. Highlights in this volume abound: erica kaufman’s work is stellar—sharp, rich and smart—writing: “when i say i’m driving through / mountains i mean not just words / or filth, skepticism, & pronouns. / staccato is ordinary reception / like rabies or powerpoint or generic / welcoming verbs who need punctuation.” (“Post Classic”). Eunsong Kim’s work is powerful, and makes me want more, as she opens the poem “Tithing”: “This city’s symbol a woman who killed her colonizer // Woman is euphemism for recorded state property.” The authors collected here write blood and discomfort, trauma and progress, and Cardon’s introduction outlines the issue both generally and specifically quite beautifully. Basically, there is plenty here worth paying attention to, continuing a strong presence for an annual I have long learned to pay attention to.

Alabama Is a State on Mars #3

In the hospital twice in two years, first a heart attack and now a mugging. Sitting in his van outside his daughter’s pharmacy, he is dragged out of it, pistol whipped, punched repeatedly, possibly kicked. Daughter and coworkers inside lock the door and call the police. In the hospital face already swollen beginning to bruise. He smiles when he sees me.

Now staying up late and with a machete under his chair. Now circling the yard with the machete. Now asking everyone in the house if they, too, saw that light across the lawn. A flashlight? Do you think it was a flashlight? (Travis Sharp)



Friday, July 20, 2018

new from above/ground press: Jarvis, Downe, Cardon + Graham, (as the 25th anniversary summer sale continues!

year of pulses
Jenna Jarvis
$4

See link here for more information

PROPOSITIONS
Lise Downe
$5

See link here for more information

 

What was the sign you gave (a selection)
by Allison Cardon
$5

See link here for more information

Spell to Spell
by Lea Graham
$5

See link here for more information


keep an eye on the above/ground press blog for author interviews, new writing, reviews, upcoming readings and tons of other material;

published in Ottawa by above/ground press
July 2018
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy of each


To order, send cheques (add $1 for postage; outside Canada, add $2) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9 or paypal (above). Scroll down here to see various backlist titles (many, many things are still in print).

Review copies of any title (while supplies last) also available, upon request.

Forthcoming chapbooks by Beth Ayer, Lisa Rawn, Ian Dreiblatt, Jamie Townsend, Cole Swensen, Jason Christie, Melissa Eleftherion, Uxío Novoneyra (trans. Erín Moure), Travis Sharp, Stuart Kinmond / Phil Hall, Natalee Caple, Jon Boisvert, Stuart Ross, Dennis Cooley, Michael Martin Shea, Jennifer Stella, Miguel E. Ortiz Rodríguez + Julia Polyck-O'Neill.

And there’s totally still time to subscribe for 2018, by the way (backdating to January 1st, obviously).

AND THE ABOVE/GROUND PRESS 25TH ANNIVERSARY SUMMER SALE CONTINUES! (until August 15th,

AND DON'T FORGET THE ABOVE/GROUND PRESS 25TH ANNIVERSARY EVENT IN OTTAWA ON AUGUST 25TH AT VIMY BREWING COMPANY! READINGS AND LAUNCHES BY JASON CHRISTIE, JULIA POLYCK-O'NEILL, STUART ROSS, AARON TUCKER, NATALEE CAPLE + OTHERS!

Tuesday, August 01, 2017

P-QUEUE #14 : Revenge




Are we too bold to present this city, Sanctuary?

[17 January 2017, 2 days after MLK Jr day,
3 days before Inauguration of the Tyrant.]

Am I entitled to my father’s whiteness? Did I believe?
in his return, every scotomizing son to every MacArthur,
pipe and drape, pomp and puddle, replenishing from
boat, leap you from that leak, or lack and muddle,
white liberals here visa hack no safe return nor
safe passage, between venues, or famished strip tease,
adopt to basic frights, and you still want muster to
head of line privilege no white wants against garrison,
a garish rubber bullet, give me a recruiting narrative,
I can believe, in gush we trust, but tarry malevolence
so it does not factfire, your disguise as vacant homily
to rule of law, how to not flirt in white spcaes,
because collaborating sheriffs need not explanation
ache to book private prison, promise me reading
material for my vagrancy, service one white master
for another, and isn’t that what my master[s] is good for,
here chaw like covenant, I’ve returned. Agsubliac Pay!
is so much fun, to jig a brown dance on milky stage,

let’s do it twice,
let’s do it thrice? (Sean Labrador Y Manzano, “REBLANCHEMENT”)

Buffalo poet Allison Cardon’s first issue of P-QUEUE as editor is #14 (2017). For anyone paying attention, P-QUEUE has long been one of my favourite American literary journals [see my reviews of #10-13; #7-8; #5 here], and it appears annually through the Poetics Program and the English Department at SUNY Buffalo. Edited and produced by students as part of the program, it’s comparable to Concordia’s annual headlight anthology; unlike headlight, which attempts to focus on immediate students and graduates, bringing their work out into the world, P-QUEUE has always been more of a mix, allowing students and more established writers to meet and mix within its pages. Subtitled “Revenge,” Cardon ends her introduction to the issue offering that:

It should be clear that revenge is not the only thread weaving this issue together. And yet all of the pieces here do take up a related interest in reckoning: approaches that distinguish structural, historical, and personal accounts from the kinds of bookkeeping in which sunk losses are only to be forsaken, ignored, or forgotten.

The new issue features a wide array of writing and artwork by Sean Labrador Y Manzano, Stacey Tran, Laura Henriksen, Shayna S. Israel, Eric Sneathen & Daniel Case, Woogee Bae, Jocelyn Saidenberg, Brandon Shimoda and Adam Mitts. Highlights abound: I’m always fascinated by the work of Brandon Shimoda (despite being very behind on his work), and am curious about the forthcoming debut chapbook that Laura Henriksen has with Imp. The author of numerous poetry titles, and founding editor of KRUPSKAYA Books, Jocelyn Saidenberg is a wonderful discovery; a poet I hadn’t even heard of before this (which is my failing, obviously). Her poems included here, “from KITH & KIN,” meander and flow in the most incredible ways, writing out loops and twirls and line-breaks that somehow seem both straightforward and disjunctive simultaneously. I’m very keen to see the full project emerges, most likely as a full-length collection (I would suspect) down the road.

OCTOBER

fewer birds are bolder coming closer
as curiosity’s companion for light
to a dream place in that used to be &
is no longer a self interloped & poaching

            I did repair the hole in the rug
with the tools she’d given me
I did repair the breach with Bob
when horrible things happen
the smallest lapse an insult felt

but when intensity
lessens which is worse
to pause to remember to remember

            reading word disorder for order
humiliation for friendship for what
guarantor what author for Martial
making a book makes the book a debt
for its maker & that’s literal when
what costs grow augmented
or not towards the growers
of what may be matter
then I look with solicitude
& console the impossible