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A New Devil's Dictionary

Active ImageA NEW DEVIL’S DICTIONARY


Celebrating Ambrose Bierce’s centennary, the Corpse is inviting readers to submit entries for our new Devil’s Dictionary. The one below is an example, by the Editor.


DERIVATIVE: an example of something that should have never happened: turning the verb “to derive” into a noun: it took 100 years for the verb “to derive” to turn into the adjective “derivative,” and another 50 years for the adjective to aquire a negative connotation, as in “his work is derivative,” and only a few months to redefine that noun as a “financial instrument,” and then less than ten seconds for that instrument to become the proctological tool that every American now calls painful. This is the price of letting bankers use words instead of numbers. People, take back your language, and use those butt-plugs we’ve been selling here at the Corpse offices.
 
BOMBE FOR DESSERT
He is afraid to go to the war zone but he has heard
one restaurant there serves a great bombe.
 
WHAT MAKES AMERICA GREAT: THE WORK OF JOE BRAINARD
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The Nancy Book
by Joe Brainard, Los Angeles, Siglio Press, 2008
If... by Joe Brainard, Los Angeles, Siglio Press, 2008
www.sigliopress.com

Joe Brainard was both a great artist and a great writer, a rara avis, in the best of times. His epic I Remember, is one of the literary accomplishments of the late 20th century, a long poem in which every line begins with the words “I remember,” and then goes on to recall everything that Joe Brainard’s memory was able to recall, from his earliest childhood to the moment of writing. The swift and witty practice of memory in I Remember is an exercise in truth and accuracy, a manual of American culture, pop and not, and a psychoanalytical tour-de-force directed not just at specific and personal neuroses, but at the incurable and painfully amusing maladies of a whole society. Joe Brainard, like his New York School friends and contemporaries, Kenward Elmslie, John Ashbery, Bill Berkson, Ron Padgett, and Ted Berrigan among them, managed to ride with verve the zeitgeist of an age rich in creative stimulation and ready-made for revolution. Joe was a Pop artist, in the sense that his art, like his writing, blew out the frames of genre and the conventions of the medium, and partook with pleasure and energy from the demotic. “The Nancy Book” chronicles the adventures of the comic-book character Nancy in Joe’s own world, in collaboration with Bill Berkson, Ted Berrigan, Robert Creeley, Frank Lima, Frank O’Hara, Ron Padgett and James Schuyler. This beautifully produced edition comes also with essays by Ann Lauterbach and Ron Padgett. “If...” is a series of postcards presenting Nancy in a variety of “if” situations (see below). The reprinting of these extremely rare works by Joe Brainard is an event for at least two reasons: 1. “The Nancy Book” is a masterwork of collaboration from the age of collaboration between artists and writers, a practice of instantly communicable delight that occured only twice in the 20th century: the dada-surrealist age, 1915-1935, and the New York School, 1957-1973, and 2. while comix have become “acceptable” for both “high” art and commercial translation (into movies), they have never attained the freshness and impertinence of being recast for the first time with such vigurous insouciance. Joe Brainard was a genius who had the good luck of living at the right time and having genius friends. Snap up these books, people, you never know when another epoch of public misery and artistic glory will sweep us away. When it does, you’ll have guides.

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for more of Andrei’s reviews see Our Recommended Books & Mags
 
BURROUGHS SPEAKS III: Feed Your Cats
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Click play for audio:
WSB: Do you know that famous story about the Zen Master who appeared before the Emperor with his paintings? He bowed three times and disappeared into his paintings.
 
SE: ah ya. (laughs) do you think that will ever happen to you? Or does it often happen to you?
 
WSB: I hope. I hope. Yeah. (long pause)  You know… I think the only really important function for people is to feed their  …cats.
 
SE: (slightly uneasy laugh)

WSB:  That would bother me more than anything else... when I pass. If I should die?
That’s what would deter me from suicide… My cats …my cats…   what would happen to my cats?

SE ( an audible sigh, and then quickly…) Not that you’re gonna…. (Simultaneous with his reply…)

WSB:  Not that I ever … everyone looks at me reeel funny when I say that I have never considered suicide.

SE: Never considered it?

WSB:  Never considered it.  

SE: … huh.

WSB:    Never considered it. 
 
SE: But you’ve haven’t always had cats, William?

WSB: uh… oh….no… well… I
Read more...
 
Grace Haters
donothategrace_320
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Friendship: The Brain (Of a Fascist) & The Heart (Of a Jew): Mircea Eliade & Mihail Sebastian

CHRONICLE OF A BROKEN FRIENDSHIP*

 The “paradisiacal” period (1932-1933)

In the National Museum of Romanian Literature’s archive there is a set of photographs remarkably interesting . They depict a group of youngsters, about 25, happy, on a sort of “holiday game” in the Bucegi Mountains. In these photographs, taken in July 1932, we find Mircea Eliade (recently returned from India), Mihail Sebastian (recently returned from Paris), Haig Acterian, Mircea Vulcănescu, Dan Botta, Mihai Polihroniade, Marietta Sadova, Floria and Sylvia Capsali, Mac Constantinescu, Petru Comarnescu, perhaps even Leny Caler etc.  Romanians, Jews, Armenians, Greeks and so on. Ethnically heterogeneous as it were, this was an usual group of friends in interwar Bucharest. The typical examples of tolerant and multiethnic towns of Greater Romania include Timişoara, Cernăuţi, Brăila and some others. Bucharest is always forgotten, though it, too, was a multiethnic, multicultural, multilingual and multi-confessional city.

The ‘20s and early ‘30s came after the miraculous date of 1 December 1918. “Romania should be so lucky – P.P. Carp would ironically comment – it no longer needs politicians”. Greater Romania seemed to enjoy a short, quasi-paradisal, period, with a generation of young intellectuals who, as Mircea Eliade believed, for the first time in history did not have a historic mission to fulfill. An “amniotic period”, as Ioan Petru Culianu would call it, referring to the state of the fetus, protected by the amniotic liquid in the maternal womb.  In Eliade’s words (as used in The Myth of the Eternal Return), “the terror of history” acted softer. Consequently, “the boycott of history” could also be applied in a softer manner. It was probably the very lack of a common “national mission” (or at least a “common danger”, to generate the syndrome of the “citadel under siege”) that atomized society and led to the brutal “fall from Paradise” and the well known political failure.

The friendship between Eliade and Sebastian was an exceptional one, not just through its depth, but also through its bumpy manifestation. A Dostoievskian friendship, if not also a Eugen Ionescu-type one. For, at a certain point, around Sebastian-Béranger Romania was “rhinoceros-izing” itself in concentric circles, reaching the last, and most intimate, one – that of the friends.

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Mircea Eliade (fourth from right) and Mihail Sebastian (second from left), with a group of friends in a mountain cabin in the Bucegi-Carpathian mountains in Romania (July 1932)
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The New World
Eruptions of starlight, joy and gladness
As, at 10:30 p.m. on Shattuck, the New
World dawns with shouts of "Yes we can!"           
From young persons thronging the clogged street.   
The street people, however, are just trying
To get some sleep.    I infer this from the body-
Bundles I see huddled in every alcove.    But why,
In the rapture of intoxicated victory
I glimpse around me, do I insist on this
Dissonant note?   "A complete curmudgeon,"
Gentle Dorothy once called me, in
Exasperation, accurately,
I cannot deny.    Aye, O Friend!   I fear there are
What are lately called Depression Issues
At work here.    How tiresome, really.
By Depression do I mean the mental kind
And am I signalling I "need help"?   Some,
I'm told, might well secretly think so.
"And maybe they're right, William," tenders
Gentle Dorothy from across the hearthside.
The nights are growing sharp, November
In the Cumberlands, ancient aching joints,
Getting up in the dark and seeing your breath,
Bad patches of thatch to fix before frost
Closes in and fingers, too numb for labors,
Withdrawn into religious half-mittens.

There were street people in William's village
Too.   But in knowable communities
That which is often seen soon becomes known,
Thus accepted and not stepped over
As if inhuman, insignificant
Or nonexistent.   Naturally William,
Who saw the poetry in everything,
Perceived the poetic aspect of this--
Particularly after coming back from
London, where the bewildering urban
Alienation and estrangement
Had already long since taken hold.
Awed have I been by strolling Bedlamites,
He writes in Book XII of The Prelude,
Referring to the road-wandering not-
Quite-normals of that not-so-remote epoch,
From many other uncouth Vagrants pass'd
In fear, have walk'd with quicker step; but why
Take note of this?   When I began to inquire,
To watch and question those I met, and held
Familiar talk with them, the lonely roads
Were school to me in which I daily read
With most delight the passions of mankind,
There saw into the depth of human souls,
Souls that appear to have no depth at all
To vulgar eyes.
  I like that.  To me it feels
More considerate toward the Bedlamites
Than the shrieking street partygoers
To the street people trying to sleep this night
Of victory through, unnoticing.   It's
Their right, one might almost say, acknowledging
In the same breath that they have no rights.
Who needs a loud victory party
When all you want to do is lay your body
Down in a shop doorway, wrap your thin fleece sack
Around you, and chase a few winks.   Morning
Wake-up on the street comes at five--with the light,
Now that Standard Time's back, and the clatter
And roar of garbage trucks and street cleaners.

 "I have to get out of my negative
Comfort zone,"  Angelica's wise cousin
Peter Heinegg, Ph. D., joked
Ahead of the election, anticipating
A liberal landslide that would leave
Him little content for further volumes
Of social criticism.  His That Does It:
Desperate Reflections on American
Culture
comes with the dedication
"For Angelica--I had to dash off a
Few more jeremiads before Obama
Comes and drags me out of my negative
Comfort zone.
"   This reminded me of a work
Whose title has always strangely intrigued
Me: Granville Hicks' I Like America.
My tattered paperback copy cost
Fifty cents in 1938.   "A native
Sees his country as it is and as
It might be
," the subtitle goes.  And it's not
Just a rose-colored-spectacle gloss 
Of a book: Nobody Starves--Much--perhaps
The chapter most pertinent to the scenes
I see on the streets as each night I pass
By--discusses such uncomfortable
Subjects as that phenomenon thought
Of, as recently as the Eighties,
As pure anachronism: the American
Street beggar.   Enough for Everybody
Is another chapter.   And The Freeing
Of America
.   And Can We Work
Together
?   But even with bread lines still fresh
And vivid in his mind, Hicks remains
Able to build his vision upon an America
Of known and knowable communities
That no longer exists in the world of lies
The no less honest or idealistic
Peter Heinegg must needs begin from.

Her other cousin Paul sent us a picture of
His wife Rita, a black woman, and himself,
Embracing Barack Obama, smiles all
Around.   Paul had signed up fifteen hundred
Voters for the cause.   Gentle line of second
Generation Americans, the Heineggs.
Paul like Peter with his brood of bright kids: So
That now, as another cousin puts it, this clan
Of transplanted Austrians has a new branch:
The Black Heineggs, citizens of the New
World that this morning has its dawn.   What
I mean, O Friend! is, please don't take my lines
To mean I'm tempted to sell the New World short.

On campus the night is again cool, dark, and
Almost empty under the dripping canopy of tall
Eucalypti by the Genetics labs.   Junior,
In which a character portrayed by
The present governor of California
Is seen to become "with child", somewhat
Like Mary toward Bethlehem to wend--
Only it's not immaculate conception
But expert science by brainy Emma
Thompson that works the supra-natural
Magic--had these labs as its fictional
Location.   Well do I recall the ten long
Widebody movie production trucks
Lined up like supersized camels of
Hollywood Magi, as far as the parking
Kiosk.    Not even UCLA Boosters,
When Bears host Bruins, boast that big
A bus fleet.   A world is going on and constantly
Changing, changing.  The Election Night
Sea of celebrants has ebbed.   Away         
From the crowds of tooting screaming white
People on Shattuck, five young blacks loiter
In the shadow of the labs.   Four males and a
Girl.   Smoking and quietly larking.
The biggest dude--athletic, in a STRIKE
FORCE windbreaker--talks quietly on cell.
The girl reels between them, singing softly
"He loves you," and "he loves you," and "he loves
You" as she goes.   Each of her friends accepts
This news in turn, without any expression
I can detect.   As I skulk past, not wishing
To spoil what appears the lowest-key
And best victory party of the night,
The girl, whirling, floats up to ancient me.
"And he loves you," she sings with eyes and smile
That say, I guess, You may be surprised by
What's coming
.   And I go on my way.
 
BURROUGHS SPEAKS II

by Simone Ellis


Part Two of Simone Ellis’s fabulous interview with the Master.

To hear the master, click play below:

media/sound/Burroughs_onetimeonlyOP

In this segment (recorded shortly after the first in our series, Ejaculating Phallus Hieroglyphic Lesson), WSB and SE...
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Tell Me Again

by B. B. Royvensteyn

I told him his name, his former occupation, everything except the reason for his being there. You keep falling down, I told him, which was true enough.
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Old Bull Lee Waves the Black Flag: Politics in William S. Burroughs’s Naked Lunch

by Michael Gurnow

Politics are bountiful in most of American novelist William S. Burroughs’s canon. Whether they are of a strictly political nature or psychological, sexual, or psychosexual ones, his prose seeps with power struggles between both individuals and groups. However, in respect to politics qua...
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New Orleans: Black and White, with Brown Water All Over

by James Nolan

The summer before Katrina, New Orleans was spinning out of control in a boozy maelstrom of guns and drugs, murder and corruption. Flush with tourist dollars, the sweltering city felt overripe and frantic, like some blowzy hooker who, late into besotted middle-age, sinks to new...
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Apology in a Complex Mirror & other poems

by David Hadbawnik

I’m old and I want to feel things.
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The Geometry of Sound

by Dave Brinks

a dearth of lumen the oasis of fresh pond alongside a road one number can describe all the objects inside your house I like the idea of being a bottle of milk or heavy cream doesn’t everyone sleep in persian blue satin sheets like cucumbers in a box of snow
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Drums

by Danuta Borchardt

In times of peace, the following would have been dedicated to ivy leagues of research, to missionaries of all sorts, etc. However, in this time of war, the government and its military complex are the more worthy recipients of the said dedication.
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Floating with Alice

by Tom Lutz

When I brought home yet another slightly substandard report card at fifteen, my father discussed it with me in the way that had become his wont. He grabbed me by the hair, which was getting longish, since the Summer of Love had already gone by, and banged my head against a wall until I...
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Perseveration happens!

by Hugh Buckingham

Patients with recurrent perseveration as part of a fluent left temporal lobe aphasia often consciously intend to produce a requested target on confrontation testing in the clinic. However, suddenly and quite unexpectedly, they will have a perseveration happen to them...
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V. Ponte & Sons Wastepaper Collectors

by Vincent Katz

“I hungry” chimes a croak anod the sill.  “You silly goat,”
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The Glass Womb

by Scott Hughes

This jar contained something different
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From the Book of God

by Terrance Jacobus


THAT HUGE PARANOIA     

This is my beloved son in
Whom I am well pleased

 Search Him!

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Man and Dog

by Susan Kirby-Smith

The dog and the man stared at one another as the light of the sun through their living room window turned orange and then pink.
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FROM THE MFA FRONT

by Janis Hubschman

I stared at him, fighting back tears. Would it have been too much to ask for him to introduce me to his accomplished friends? After all, I had kept up my end of the bargain, providing him with sex and home-cooked meals.

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Norton Homo

by Kevin McCaffrey

The Corpse would like to announce the return of Little Man (Norton). Wilhelm Reich's admonition, "Listen, Little Man," seems to have finally found an ear (of corn).
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Four Poems

by Ethan S. Bull

I have been a long time in this story of where I am.
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Pacifica Point

by Doren Robbins

I haven't been this awake in a month, I feel the renewal coming, the Rastaman says "I-and-I," I don't mean the same thing, the filled-up part turns on—never more clear how the placement of the clouds eroticized the liquid in my eyes, remember those eyes, remember those...
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Etiquette: A Beginner's Guide to Threesomes

by Megan A. Volpert

Public speaking instructors invariably recommend visualizing your audience as naked to relieve the stress of giving your speech. This is in contrast to a very typical characterization of public humiliation: that you are standing in front of a bunch of people and none of them are naked except you. ...
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Art Kills One, Injures Two! Special to the Corpse Direct from Campus

by Randy F. Nelson

Then the art descended.  Now that was a cold day! 




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Works by Louis Armand

by Louis Armand

beneath the window Rimbaud masturbated from
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(m)other words

by Tzveta Sofronieva

An essay by Tzveta Sofronieva
Translated from the German by Chantal Wright

When I arrived in Germany fifteen years ago - from America, not Bulgaria - I knew four words: 'gut', 'kaputt', 'heil' (from 'Heil Hitler!'), all from Russian war films, and...
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From the Border: A Corrido

by Sal Salasin


De Monterrey a linares
salieron una manana
un grupo de federales
in Spanish by the composer
in English by Sal Salasin
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Twelve Stories

by Louis E. Bourgeois

I shot a dogre out of the blue sky. With its wing blown off, it swam in circles for a very long time before I rowed out and picked it out of the water. When I got back to the wharf, I cradled the little dogre in my arms. It had a black head and blacker eyes.
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Direct Address: Poems

by Chuck Calabreze

Not the language of flurry and ease.  Not the song
of the defrocked vigilante.  Not the hemmed and attenuated.

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Letter to the Carnegie Endowment for Peace

by Edward Sanders

I am an American poet with a serious problem on my hands.
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Marginalia on Marginalism in Contemporary Times

by Ömer Gökçümen and Radu Iovitza

Marcos is gay in San Francisco, black in South Africa, an Asian in Europe, a Chicano in San Ysidro, an anarchist in Spain, a Palestinian in Israel, a Mayan Indian in the streets of San Cristobal, a gang member in Neza, a rocker in the National...
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Irish Bar: a Hopscotch Ballad

by Jim Lopez

I swallowed like a graduate maudlin who auctioned off his degree on E-Bay and made my way to an “Irish Pub.”

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A Question in Georgia

by William Walsh

A derived text sourced from An Education in Georgia: The Integration of Charlayne Hunter and Hamilton Holmes, by Calvin Trillin, 1966.
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