ArchivesSite MapSubmitOur GangHot SitesContact Us
1983-2015
erosion is the mother of art
Stuyvesant Bee
Active Image

Read more...
 
Brautigan’s Brains
Brautigan’s Brains
 
Brains blasted there
upon the page
gray matter gobbed
blood of the poet congealed
this grotesque palimpsest
last words concealed
beneath the blood
shattered neurons
glial cells unglued
glopped, splattered

A text of rage coagulated
there upon the page.

Axons impel thought to take
that fatal fiery leap
across synapse into act
fiction into fact.

Atoms smash against the skull
the neural net tattered warp and woof
the brain that strings the words extruded
globbed, fragmented, spattered
last words occluded by the final proof

The text of rage coagulated
there upon the page.



J.J. Phillips worked with the Brautigan papers at The Bancroft Library at the University of California, Berleley. In a message about the poem, she added: "I know you know that Brautigan blew his brains out, literally blew his mind.  What you might not be aware of is that he blew his brains out all over pages of his last manuscript... I handled them, archived them, ran my hands over his desiccated brain matter on numerous occasions, though at first I had no idea what I was touching because the Library said nothing and even denied what became all too apparent after I eliminated the other possibilities of what this strange stuff could be (I’m not unfamiliar with such things, and my eyes didn’t deceive me).   The coroner’s report confirmed my suspicions. I see what’s on these pages as something of a completely different order than coffee stains, cigarette burns, the tomato seeds that Josephine Miles idly spat onto her mss., even drops of spittle, blood, semen, and the like.  With Brautigan, these are the actual physical remnants of brain tissue, blood splatters, and cerebral fluid of the very brain that gave birth to the ideas he had and the words he wrote, now creating its own narrative on top of those words; and of course that act insured he’d never think or write another word.  Those pages constitute both a palimpsest and something incomprehensibly more.  The two ‘expressive’ mediums, the mingling of flesh and word-made-flesh, merge into one unbelievably complex and believably simple text of death. 
 
Two films by Julian Semilian
 DEVOTEES OF THE PRECIPITATE: A film by Julian Semilian

DEVOTEES OF THE PRECIPITATE

Concerning selected ephemera of one Emuel Dnitsk, an aspirant to Man Ray's circle, also formerly known as EMmanUEL raDNITSKy. Foretelling Ray's derision, Dnitsk restricted the creation of his "moving paintings" (peintures fluides) to furtive yet copious notes.  Devotees endeavors to resurrect Dnisk's vision from the precipice of reticence. Music by Laura Semilian (Cameo apparition by Bruno Schultz). 36 min.





THE DREAM LIFE OF CLEO DE MERODE


A surrealist inquiry into the notorious femme fatale's oneiric journeys.


 
The Gratuitous Trashing of a Literary Giant
The Gratuitous Trashing of a Literary Giant

Active Image
Henry Miller, Pacific Palisades

In The New York Times of 29 January 2012, Jeanette Winterson published a review of Frederick Turner's Renegade: Henry Miller and the Making of "Tropic of Cancer" (Icons of America) . She opens her piece with -

"What happens when the unreliable narrator turns out to be the cultural critic?"

From reading the review, you guess: Not much.

Henry Miller was more than a narrator, he was an Author. Right, with a capital A. 'Schooled by Rabelais' in impertinence, he also gathered his mixed bag of popular philosophical thoughts from countless other writers. His travel books on Greece, e.g. "The Colossus of Maroussi"; on America, "The Air conditioned Nightmare" and "The Oranges of Big Sur", are in themselves outstanding works.

During his lifetime Henry Miller never wanted “Lovely Lesbians,” or “Moloch,” to be published. Nor did he write "Opus Pistorum", which (for whatever reasons, and possibly unscrupulous ones) erroneously credits him as the author. Plus, he never hated women; and he never bore any prejudice towards Jews.
   
“He had plenty of hatred, toward Jews, foreigners and especially America.”

This is simply not true, Jeanette.

I knew Henry Miller during the last years of his life . Over long dinners in Pacific Palisades we discussed his life, his books, his love of music; we spoke of men and women who were dead or alive; of his many friends, some of whom had left an indelible memory. And let's not forget his mother. She was perhaps more important to him than he realized until the very last moment, when he fully accepted her, as she had been.

Above all he despised bores, and couldn't stand to be in their presence. He could hold conversations with muscle-building lesbians and intellectual homosexuals. But he never really cared about 'the world out there', America per se, with its wars and delusions of grandeur. He disliked people whose mentalities were shaped by a country and what they thought was its culture; and whose sole object was to make money, have children, and retire happily. That he found frightfully boring.

Still, he was American to the core, in all its immigrant waspish sense (yes, that waspishness did come through from time to time); but freed at last of these hang-ups, he stood up for himself, just like Walt Whitman did. He never questioned Whitman's beliefs, and certainly not his sexuality. Those things didn't matter, as long as the individual in question was a good writer.

It is true that Miller found it difficult to understand a woman loving another woman or a man another man. The “most awful humiliation a man might suffer” is probably a genuine statement of his. Yet it needs to be viewed in the context of the age he was brought up in; a waspish environment, where no real choice was offered other than the male/female connection as the only ”normal” relationship. The same goes for calling male homosexuals names. Instead of facing the unknowable, it was easier to reject homosexuality as “unnatural".

Anaïs Nin posed a much greater threat to Henry's psyche than merely the “awful humiliation” he had to suffer from June. June knew how to humiliate him. She knew how to pull the emotional strings. She knew Val, as she called him, too well. She had proposed that he drop everything and start writing. He was not leeching. He was given the opportunity to write. The sex was part of their 'sex-ploration,' a deal openly discussed as an exploration of romance. It was an agreed affair, a menage à trois; but one Henry could simply not face when it actually happened. Further pain came when June slept with Anaïs. Henry cracked. When Anaïs finally stepped in to direct matters, she managed to get rid of June. But let us set the record straight here.

Anaïs was "living off" her husband Hugo, who was working in a Place Vendôme bank. Henry Miller gave her the needed stimulation to shape her writing. Anaïs co-edited his Tropic of Cancer from hundreds of pages down to what you now find in the book. She raised the money from her husband to pay for its publication, along with Lawrence Durrell's Black Book and her own House of Incest. Obelisk was just the “imprint” so the books could reach the shelves, or rather be sold under the counter like illegal merchandise.

At one point Henry Miller expressed a desire to marry Anaïs once he got a divorce from June. Anaïs thought this a bad idea, since it would mean no longer being able to count on Hugo's benevolence.

To say that America is “more mercenary than the meanest whore" is indeed not a nice way to describe the place, but it wasn't meant to be nice. It was that way and still is. “Whore” has acquired various shades of meaning at different times. I suppose that today you could replace it with Wall Street Bankers, for instance.

"Miller’s hatred: the body politic of America will be worked over and revenged through the body of Woman.”

   
Here you are totally out of context. Or shall we ask if you have still something relevant to talk about? Or how about this 'heroic styling' in NYT:

“Heroic Henry, who has the courage to say [expletive] everything and write a great book.”

Who is afraid of “*fucking* everything?” The New York Times, or you Ms. Winterson? To moot that Miller belongs to that -

“frontiersman mythology, where the fast-talking huckster has a six-shooter mouth”

Is that not what every writer would like to achieve? Was this not said of you? That -
“Miller the renegade wanted his body slaves like any other capitalist — and as cheaply as possible. When he could not pay, Miller the man and Miller the fictional creation worked out how to cheat women with romance. What they could not buy they stole. No connection is made between woman as commodity and the 'slaughterhouse' of capitalism that Miller hates.”

Is this slander or what? Since you didn't know Miller — never met him, never spoke with him (and, so it seems, never really read him!), don't you want to find out why you paint him as so ugly? So indecent? So 'sexist'? As either so immoral or amoral (it's hard to tell whether you know the difference)?

Henry Miller was old-fashioned. His writing was his creation and should be seen as fiction. His novels (e.g., the Tropics, the Rosy Crucifixion trilogy, Black Spring) are entertainments and rarely meant to be take seriously. They became his personal fiction, removed from himself. His life, however, was orderly, quiet, occasionally pedantic, respectful; and yes, sometimes he was angry at the world for the direction it was heading in.

He surely did not want to be plunked into this or that arbitrary category. Women remained a mystery to the end of his life. All he ever sought was the one woman to replace his mother. He needed a woman to remind him what it was to be alive. Love was all that mattered. The rest is literature.

“The overturning of obscenity laws in the United States and Britain and the defiant rise of the porn industry are part of the extra­ordinary 1960s zeitgeist, but also part of a new sex war. “Cancer” was published around the same time the pill was approved for use (1960) and Valium hit the market (1963)."

Tropic of Cancer was not the only major literary work appearing coincidentally at the beginning of the sexual revolution.

Tropic of Cancer is Henry Miller's seminal work and has potential for students to seriously explore the making of an American writer for generations to come.

“There is beauty as well as hatred in 'Cancer' and it deserves its place on the shelf.”

We certainly hope so; but who knows how long  Tropic of Cancer  will stay there if it's up to people like you? Or if you read the book again, might you read it differently? The myth-making comes not from ignoring an issue, but instead from talking about it too much – 'as if'. As if it were like that. When in fact it isn't.

“The question is: Why do men revel in the degradation of women?”

They don't, my dear Jeanette. But neither do they revel in the distortion of truth for personal publicity; or the trashing of a literary giant, as you have done.

Henry Miller never used a woman abusively. He wasn't into "abuse". In his personal conversations he never employed the language of his books; never used “fucking” in the way that it has become ubiquitous and accepted...to punctuate anything and everything from corn flakes to sex. And yet it is stricken – censored!!! - from your New York Times review - in a quote.

It is irrational, even foolish, to expect any man, or any woman, to be perfect.

Henry would probably say, "I piss on it all from a considerable height," citing Rabelais. Soit.

© 2012 by Einar Moos

you can leave comments at the site where this was first posted:
 http://www.parisiana.com/content/gratuitous-trashing-literary-giant
 
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

Active Image

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.
Active Image
 
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.

Read more...
 
Steve Kowit reviewed by Charlie Vermont

by Charlie Vermont

Crossing Borders: Poems by Steve Kowit, Drawings and Watercolors by Lenny Silverberg, Spuyten Duyvil 2010
>> more

Multilegged Milliped by Gershon Hepner

by Gershon Hepner

Gershon Hepner (gwhepner@yahoo.com ) is America's news poet, author of seventy thousand (you heard right!) poems on the margins of comments of interest to him, culled from our ever-growing media. His wide interests are expressed in extraordinarily thoughtful,...
>> more

Allen Ginsberg's desk, 1986

by Dave Breithaupt

Allen Ginsberg's desk, 1986
>> more
surround systems by calin-andrei mihailescu

by Calin-Andrei Mihailescu

the politics of tools
>> more

AMBITION'S SOUL by Steve Dolan

by Steve Dolan

May 2010
>> more

CHAPTER TWO: SLEEP WITH YOUR GRANDMOTHER

by Hariette Surovell

SERIAL! VALENTINE DAY SPECIAL TO THE CORPSE!
WE CONTINUE SERIAL PUBLICATION OF HARIETTE SUROVELL’S MEMOIRS! WHAT A LIFE!>> more
At the Movies with Hariette: Valentino the Last Emperor

by Hariette Surovell

"Valentino: The Last Emperor" begins revealingly, as Valentino Garavani, a pint-sized potentate in a "kingdom" of his own imagining proclaims, "I love-a de beauty: de beautiful women, de beautiful dogs, de beautiful statues." 
>> more

In The Dust Zone: Part 2

by Maggie Dubris & Scott Gillis

Active ImageIN THE DUST ZONE :: www.dustzone.com
written by Maggie Dubris
drawings by Scott Gillis
>> more

Two Poems by Harold Norse

by Harold Norse

Carnivorous Saint

we dig up ancient shards
clicking cameras
among the dying cypresses
choked by Athenian smog.

yet cats continue basking
in the hazy sun
the chained goat sways in ecstasy
the Parthenon looks down from creamy...
>> more

The Hariette Surovell Anthology

by Hariette Surrovell

Active ImageChapter One: Witches and Ghosts

I spent my childhood expecting my father, Abe Surovell, to die. He was 50 and I was 16 when his third coronary finally...
>> more

Hariette Surovell: A Tribute

by Cynthia Cotts

Hariette Surovell: A Tribute
>> more
Poems by Grzegorz Wróblewski

by Grzegorz Wróblewski

Poems by Grzegorz Wróblewski

 Translated from the Polish by Adam Zdrodowski

 

 

...
>> more
Market

by Tom Clark

The night is cold and there is a line of fifty, then sixty people waiting with their things in baskets in the checkout line, it is a large market but only the one line is open on a Saturday night and the line has stopped moving because at the head of it a woman has disputed the total the checkout...
>> more

Cobbler by Willie Smith

by Willie Smith

Poured pureed liver into a coffee cup. Drank off the room-temperature goo. He was famished after a long night of nightmares.
>> more

IRREVERENT HOMAGE

by Eddie Woods

for Roberto Valenza

They keep telling me to write a poem for you.
No, my friend Ted keeps telling me.
Since he also knew you.
But knows I knew you a lot better.
I don’t wanna write a poem for you!
I want you here: alive, kicking,...
>> more

The Animals Began on the Porch

by Willis Barnstone

They began on the porch.  My daughter saw them first and she said they came in all sizes and they were goats, but my son said no they were deer, perfectly formed deer who had come in from the forests and their coats were immaculately clean pelts of Irish setters but they were certainly not...
>> more

Death by Scott Bailey

by Scott Bailey

DEATH
>> more

Special to the Corpse: Big News from Dave Breithaupt

by David Breithaupt

Dave Breithaupt Breaks the Literary News of the Year! Special to the Corpse!
>> more

ANDREI MOLOTIU: IMI ADUC AMINTE

by Andrei Molotiu


Our contributor Andrei Molotiu writes: „Looking on an old hard drive, I found about three pages of my own Romanian version of Georges Perec's "Je me souviens"--which I wrote one night, though fully realizing that the project was completely pointless,...
>> more

Precious (A Christmas Carol)

by Hariette Surovell

Active ImageLouis Farrakhan is an evil sociopathic anti-Semite who was responsible for the murder of Malcolm X, but he was right-on about one thing-- the Jews who ran Hollywood were racists. The...
>> more

Portrait and Dream: Selected Poems by Bill Berkson

by Charlie Vermont

An uptown, downtown poet or is it a downtown uptown poet. Then too, as Edwin Denby said of dancers "They should be pretty"
as part of the environment, there is a look to these poems over the years that's consistent. Also could live in an elite basket but
doesn't...
>> more

Interview with John-Ivan Palmer

by Tom Bradley

Active ImageJohn-Ivan Palmer’s novel, Motels of Burning Madness, Confessions of a Male Stripper, has just been released by The Drill Press. Palmer, a stage hypnotist,...
>> more

M.G. Stephens: New Poems

by M.G. Stephens

VISITORS

The Piccadilly Line to Leicester Square,
I said, and then change for the Northern Line,
But make sure it is the Edgware Branch,
Get off in Hampstead, I’ll be waiting outside,
Old, bald, worn, your classmate from grade school,...
>> more

Direct from Boston: A Postmodern Day by Majed Fawaz

by Majed Fawaz

Boston: A Chemist's Day
>> more

PERCH & TWIRL: New Works

by Elinor Nauen

Mine eyes have seen the glory of
THE BATH ARTIST
My husband is a philistine. When I woke him at 5:45 this morning to offer a private viewing of my greatest creation to date, he rolled away, stuck his head under a pillow and growled. He therefore missed
(1) the...
>> more

Hariette Surrovell (Har)

by eds

Active Image
HARIETTE SURROVELL
>> more
Four New Poems by Pat Nolan

by Pat Nolan

FOUR NEW POEMS BY PAT NOLAN
>> more

A poem by Marc Vincenz

by Andrei Codrescu





For the Shadow Council
,

>> more

New Poems by Richard Martin, our man in Boston

by Richard Martin

 Free Immanuel Kant! says Richard Martin of 40 Searle Road, Boston, MA...
>> more

9/11, god, and the mets by michael andre

by Michael Andre

the legend of the unmuzzled ox speaks
>> more

Andrei Oisteanu: NARCOTICS AND HALLUCINOGENS

by Andrei Oisteanu

NARCOTICS AND HALLUCINOGENS

In 1674 Moldavian boyar Nicolae Milescu took residence in Moscow, having been offered...
>> more
YES MEN HONCHO SPRUNG FROM CLINK

by The Yes Men

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 24, 2009


The Yes Men: http://www.theyesmen.org

Andy Bichlbaum, co-founder of activist group the Yes Men, emerged after 26 hours in New York City's central lockup with all charges...
>> more

Ruxandra Cesereanu in the Chelsea Hotel 2009

by Ruxandra Cesereanu

Ruxandra met two old-timers on the Chelsea's fifth floor instantly: they invited us into their ancient apartments & studios and nearly captured her. She'd still be there if she didn't have to be in Cluj and Galilee.
>> more

In The Dust Zone: Part 3

by Maggie Dubris & Scott Gillis

In the Dust Zone: part 3
>> more
Poison by Ruxandra Cesereanu

by Ruxandra Cesereanu

New Orleans magic poison distilled by Romania's great poet!
>> more

Other:
Featured Art:
Recent:
Popular:
Art: