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1983-2015
erosion is the mother of art
GOODBYE, GEORGE WHITMAN
GOODBYE, GEORGE WHITMAN


Anyone who manages to survive as long and wonderfully as George Whitman did,
surely deserves more than a mere RIP when they pass on.

George, the iconic proprietor of Paris’ legendary Shakespeare & Co. bookshop,
died yesterday just two days after celebrating his 98th birthday!

Here’s the Guardian’s obituary:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/dec/14/george-whitman-obituary

And for those of you who have not yet read it,
here is the story I wrote about my experiences with George,
as published in the online magazine Parisiana:
“A Place to Change Trains”
http://www.parisiana.com/node/125

Along with my condolences to his lovely daughter Sylvia,
and his very many close friends,
there’s nothing else to say other than:
Bon voyage, mon ami.
When the good Lord made thee,
he certainly did break the proverbial mold!

Salute!

EDDIE

Shakespeare & Co. website
http://www.shakespeareandcompany.com/

Eddie Woods website
http://eddiewoods.nl/

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Inside Shakespeare & Co.
 
Stop Snitching
Stop Snitching
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Throat Song And Notes
Throat Song: A Threnody for Ibrahim Qashoush


cutting the throat
utting the throat
tting the throat
ting the throat
ing the throat
ng the throat
g the throat
the throat
he throat
e throat
throat
hroat
roat
oat
at
t


Notes to “Throat Song”

Note on form:  This poem is not, alas, an original construction; nor was the original written as ‘poetry’.  My poem is simply a slightly altered decontextualization and recontextualization in English of a Greco-Roman magical spell, “cutting the uvula,” written in Greek.  The translator speculates about its intended use: “Conceivably, this spell served as an amulet to heal its wearer from inflammation of the uvula.”  It was written in what is called a ‘wing-form’.  I have simply substituted the word “throat” for “uvula.” 

In this wing-form the entire phrase is written out as the first line.  In each succeeding line, the first letter of the preceding line is removed until only the last letter of the phrase remains.  This process also results in the entire phrase being spelled out lengthwise down the left margin.  The process creates not only a wing shape but also a blade shape, and in this instance suggests the drawing of the knife across the throat and the de(con)struction of speech as the throat is slit, the vocal cords sundered, and the throat dissected out. 

“cutting the uvula,” is found in The Greco-Roman Magical Papyri in Translation, ed. by Hans Dieter Betz, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1992, PGM CXX. 1-13, pp. 315-316, translated by Roy D. Kotansky.  I urge interested readers to seek out this book for the many astounding things one will discover therein.

Note on content:  Ibrahim Qashoush, the Syrian poet and singer from Hama, had his throat cut out for a song.  His irreverent song, “Yalla, Erhal Ya Bashar,” “Come on Bashar, Leave,” which denounces Syrian President Bashir al-Assad, became an anthem for the growing resistance to al-Assad’s brutal, bankrupt regime.  There is a video on You Tube of a resistance rally in Hama, and a voice said to be his singing his song at the rally.  Just days later, in early July he was abducted by al-Assad’s goons, and on July 4 his body was found dumped in the river Orontes with his throat cut out.  Another video showing the head and neck of a dead man identified as Ibrahim Qashoush, clearly reveals the ghastly results of this ‘surgery’.  Contemplating this video, it becomes impossible to swallow until the autonomic reflex kicks in.  Even then, deglutition is difficult.  It comes reluctantly and with much guilt because an autonomic reflex is a sign of life.  I can still speak and sing.  I will still swallow whether I want to or not.

Reports of the facts of the life of Ibrahim Qashoush found on the Internet are much more ambiguous, yet one wants to know who this man was when he was alive.  Some accounts have it that he was a fireman and a father of three boys, 42 years old, who composed songs in his spare time.  He has been variously described as a cement worker, a second-rate wedding singer, an informer, still alive.  One article in the New York Times includes an interview with a young man named Abdel-Rahman (clearly alive and kicking), who emphatically states that he wrote the song; and he poses insouciantly in an accompanying photo.  Whether or not this man is the actual author of the song (why do I find this difficult to swallow?), I can’t but wonder why he’s apparently so lustful and desperate for fifteen minutes of fame that he’d not only claim authorship but pose for a photo circulated worldwide online and thus invite the same fate.  Perhaps someday, Inshallah, someone will tell us definitively who Ibrahim Qashoush was because the facts of his life matter as much as his death.

Even as the clinical reality of the killing resists and mocks the urge to see it as an occasion for metaphor and metonymy, its very nature immediately makes it chillingly emblematic, even the stuff of myth and legend, precisely because metaphor, metonymy, and the need to construct a satisfying (if not necessarily veridical) narrative, are fundamental ways in which the human mind makes sense of the world and the self.  So the manner in which Ibrahim Qashoush was murdered--a fiendishly depraved application of lex talionis--is a clear sign to others who would defy al-Assad, even in words and song, a reminder of brutal political reality and how cheap life is under the rule of a psychopath.  A Syrian quoted in the NYT says “They really cut his vocal cords.  Is there any greater symbol of the power of the word?” 

We agree vociferously and recoil in outrage at this savagery.  But we’re a nation of hypocrites, speaking out of both sides of our mouths because in our own society, though we trumpet our fidelity to free expression and other democratic values, life is also cheap and we silence speech and dissent in myriad ways, sometimes brutally, sometimes subtly.  The alarming erosion of the richness of the English language for debased utilitarian ends, the imposition of “Simple English” and simplistic cliché as the linguistic coin of the realm, the related race- and class-based privileging of certain modes of expression by the lumpenintelligensia, as well as the repressive diktats of the Politically Correct language and thought police on both the left and the right, are some of the greatest dangers to free thought and free expression operative in American society today.

The grisly, iconic death of Ibrahim Qashoush must be a reminder to everyone, not only of the power of the word and the human voice but of their fragility.  The murder of Ibrahim Qashoush can be seen as the ultimate sacrifice to freedom of speech, and his murder is heavily freighted with the atavistic characteristics of actual human sacrifice: in this case, the piacular sacrifice of a subject whose hubris has offended a god-king.  Catholics make The Way of the Cross and meditate for spiritual edification on the gruesome particulars of Christ’s Passion and death, that figure believers call the Logos, the Word made flesh.  In simili modo, everyone who genuinely cares about language and the basic need for freedom of thought and expression should steel themselves and watch this video of Ibrahim Qashoush post mortem, then meditate on the passion and death of Ibrahim Qashoush and reflect on what this act means in the context of the word made flesh in the here and now; and know how easy it is to cut out a man’s throat out for a song.

J.J. Phillips
Berkeley,
15 November 2011   

 
ACTUALISM RETURNS! AFTER HAVING NEVER GONE AWAY! READ ALL ABOUT IT!
ACTUALISM RETURNS!
AFTER HAVING NEVER GONE AWAY!
READ ALL ABOUT IT!
Lucy In the Sky With Darrell

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Table of Contents

Click on heading below to go to ACTUAL chapter!

Part 1: Actualism in the Seventies

The story of a counter-culture poetry movement that began in 1970 in Iowa City.

Lucy In The Sky Interruption for COMIX

Andrei Codrescu, Darrell Gray & James Dickey, Ron Bayes & Steve Levine & Steve Abbott & Lyn Lifshin, Gertrude Stein, Sylvia Plath, T. S. Eliot, Stephen Crane, Steve Toth , Funky Pussies, Mary du Passage, Tom Dish , Top Shelf Art, The Odyssey & Hustler & Penthouse & Playboy


Part 2: A Prose History of Poetry City

A memoir of the 10th poetry marathon--Poem Wrapping a City Block in 1975.

 

Part 3: Poetry Comics

Letters from readers to Poetry Comics that were printed in “The Muse’s Mailbag,” the letters-to-the editor column.

Part 4: Anthology of Collaborations

200 Actualist collaboration poems written in Iowa City and signed by the authors.
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Lucy In the Sky With Darrell: Actualism Part 1
Lucy In the Sky With Darrell
Part 1

The Story of Actualism

In Iowa City

Actualism in the Seventies


 

 

 

~ 1. The Writers Workshop

 

                  

 

In 1969, I was accepted into the Iowa Writers Workshop. Although I’d been writing poetry since I was six years old, I felt as if I was finally and irrevocably an official poet. In two or three years, I would have a diploma to hang on my wall. The Scarecrow couldn’t’ve done better in Oz.

 

I took a greyhound bus to Iowa City. After a lazy 8-hour ride, I wound up at the downtown depot. One of the people who worked there asked me why I was coming to town.

 

“I’m in the Poetry Workshop,” I said. “How about you?”

 

“I’m in the Fiction Workshop. I’m busy right now. How about getting together after I get off work. Let’s meet at the Mill Restaurant on Burlington.”

 

At 9:00 we were sitting at the Mill, drinking beer, and talking about our writing. His name was Joe Ribar. He offered to rent a room to me in his 2nd floor apartment at 214 E. Court Street.

 

It was a small room, but it was a perfect writer’s lair. Joe and I shared the living room, the kitchen, and the bathroom, which made it a very big living space.

 

At the first meeting of the Poetry Workshop, each of the four teachers--Marvin Bell, Kathy Frasier, Anselm Hollo, and Jack Marshall--took turns introducing themselves and reading one of their poems. I had no previous experience with them, no knowledge of their writing.

 

After the reading, the students were asked to write the names of three of the teachers in order of preference that they would like to take their first poetry-writing class with. I wrote my three: Anselm, Jack , and Kathy Frasier. With that information, someone in the workshop would decide whose class each student would be in. The next day I found out that I’d be in Marvin’s class.

 

I was surprised at the decision. Why would I be put in the class taught by the teacher I hadn’t put in my list of choices? It might’ve been because of the manuscript, Fiddling with a Clock, that I’d submitted with my application to the workshop.

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