Sep 22, 2011

Framing A Life: Former PoemAlley Poet/Artist Premieres Autobiographical Play At John Jay College


The nation misread him,     

The prison enraged him,

His art expressed him,

His woman believed him,

His poetry saved him.


unFRAMED: A Man in Progress

At the age of eleven, Iyaba Ibo Mandingo was plucked from the tropical comfort of his childhood and taken to a new life in a strange country. unFRAMED is his poetic tale of life as an immigrant--from boyhood in Antigua to manhood in America. Using canvas, paint, poetry, prose and song, Iyaba tells a story of his transformation, from “Mommy Me No Wanna Go Merrica”--a prophetic piece that hints at the many trials he will face in a new land, to his powerful political poetry which leads to his arrest and attempted deportation in post- 9/11 America, Iyaba shares his rage, his determination, and his hope while he paints his self-portrait and successfully struggles to redefine his humanity, rediscover his smile, and truly accept himself for the first time. Presented in conjunction with an exhibit of his original artwork, audiences are invited into the studio of the artist where painting and poetry create unframed art.

When:
    Thursday, September 22—Saturday, September 24, 2011
1:30pm--11:30pm

Where:
John Jay College, Gerald W Lynch Theater
899 10th Ave
New York, New York 10019

Admission:
$20 ($10 for students)
212-279-4200



Presented by the Gerald W. Lynch Theater at John Jay College, in collaboration with Double Play Connections and Doing Life Productions; Jane Dubin, Executive Producer, Brent Buell, Director.

 








Other examples of Iyaba's art and performances 
can be found at iyabart.blogspot.com. At right 
is his cover for a PoemAlley collection, to 
which he also contributed three poems (please
see the publications box at the bottom of the blog for ordering).

For more information, go to www.unframedtheplay.com, meanwhile, preview Iyaba's passionate multi-tasking combination of art, poetry and testimony in the  video excerpts from unFRAMED below. 















Sep 11, 2011

Barnes & Noble's September Monday Night Open Mic Poetry With PoemAlley Regular Rona Schenkerman

An avid member at Tuesdays at Curley's, Rona Schenkerman will read several pieces (many of which are the refined end-product of the group's supportive critique process), reflecting her unique blend of quietly atmospheric observation, romance and challenge.

Barnes & Noble's Open Mic Poetry program meets monthly in the Cooking section next to the in-store cafe on the main floor (located in the Stamford Town Center), beginning at 7 p.m., September 12. Rona is a social worker specializing in the needs of adolescents. She aspires to combine her love of animals with poetry, to establish a youth refuge center, where teens can benefit from a program using animal and self-expressive therapies. 


For more information, contact:
Barnes & Noble
Stamford Town Center
100 Greyrock Place Suite H009, Stamford, CT 06901
Phone: 203-323-1248

Sep 6, 2011

At The Mercy Of A Higher Hand

 third and debarbra and fourth and imperato

  The man shuffles the deck, kicks his boots.
He'd excuse himself from the place and take to the road
wondering off he wanders on
reminiscing when the day will come
and thinking bout' them days of old,
he would petition the lord in heaven for good measure
and a bit of  betterment,
the peacock, pelican, and phoenix for stregnth, a hedge of protection,
and sense of discernment.
There would be no starting over but
rather making the best of what's left,
damn it, it was a day like none other yet one
like all the rest.
it was a midsummer night in May
where whistler winds sharp as fangs
tried to kill a man,
not to stab him in the back but to shoot him in the vein,
and then look the other way.
He'd  write a song about it-
The dispassion and the wickedness, the catheter
and tourniquet, and for a minute there he fell,
fallen over like a broken leaf
and was scattered all across the street
from the hospital, on a hill under construction.
They were all in on it-
 a three ring circus ranging from
 the EMS, doctors and nurses to
 the department of fire and the city's finest,
but the poison nurse with Middle Eastern accent was like sushi-a fish out of water
 with Middle Eastern accent that couldn't hit the vein.
The bitch couldn't hit the mark, couldn't hit the fucking mark,
so something would save the man,
pardoning him from the throe and annal, whips and arrows,
of death and dying, dying and death,- hallelujah.
"It's not very good as it is," says the man, So
may as well just get on with it instead.
The man would complain and they'd
arrest him for harassment for all that he underwent.
So it goes, and what would be would be,
yet in the good book the lord says
'vengeance is mine. So there you go,"
 the  man's reassured.
These courts here on this rock of earth all too often fall all too short,
all but a pig circus and kangaroo court. 
These courts don't hold the heart in judgment
but in contempt,
for the higher palm of a higher hand is the one who does
advise and give consent.


------------
"The cop" the man recalls, hoovering over him like a ghost with folded arms,
just wanting to have the satisfaction of being
the last chiming ghastly glimpse and final nocturnal image
before the man would eclipse and gasp his last and final  breath.
The room was different, as he'd lay there on his mattress  
like it were his whipping post he'd think,
and sat against the wall was the RN,
straight ahead like sushi, like a fish out of water
and staring dead center ahead at the man's cross,
"you're done," the man told her.
So they and them would pour dirt on the truth,
and bury it with lies on First and McGovern
and Second and Ferguson 'neath distorted
light. They pound down on their chest,
and raise up there fist, but the day of reckoning is not up to us,
for judgement is hanging in the balance as
the hour of day will come
when Jesus will catch up to you like a mosquito bite. 
   Like a bad omen the puckish moon stalks the man
and the chain link fence the dogs would crash
breaking up all the magnolia in a thrash,
bud, bloom, and blossom, our justice of the peace,
stamping her out and voting her down, just like that.

The car across the street hit the gas instead of breaks
making a costly mistake
gridlock traffic at full swing.
It's a mean rain and heavy as a mountain peak,
it's been such a bad streak every single day of the weak.


Enzo Malagisi
August, 2011
original to the blog

"The Curse of Timeless Existence" and "Black Widow 1"
by Christopher Conte

Sep 5, 2011

Our Species' Treasure: A Dialogue On The Utility Of Poetry In Academia And Society


Ralph,

It wasn’t too long ago you suggested I read Eliot’s Four Quartets. I managed to make it through the first part of the first quartet. I will only say that I have no clue what the hell he is talking about except for the bit about time being unredeemable, that part makes sense but the rest is just plain nonsense to me. It takes a learned person to read and understand such things and I am far from that. My own writing comes straight from my heart and has very little to do with my head except that it is in my head where I war with words to make the emotion of the poem fit. All these classic writers are great and all but truly, I understand very little of what they are saying unless it strikes me as something emotional for that is the element of a poem, which to me, is the most facilitating, and which has the greatest effect upon me. Academics scare me because even if they are lying thru their teeth, who am I to challenge it when I have no clue what is taking place beyond the surface. I would go so far as to say that it is for this reason that poetry is kept barely alive…it seems a good old boys club that will not suffer any grandeur other than the prescribed methods that are known only to its members. Perhaps when I am educated a bit more I will at least be able to regurgitate what I have learned, listen to the arguments and then form an opinion of my own.

Best,
Nick


8/19/11

Nick,

Famous poets-not necessarily all great--often figure in my dreams, mostly wish-fulfillment dreams. Once I saw myself as Milosz’ butler whom his old wife came to like so much that the couple would actually insist on having me sit down with them for dinner. I’ve found myself with Eliot numerous times--in my dreams, of course. He and I knelt in the quiet of a 17th century chapel once and said the rosary together--all fifteen mysteries. In another he appeared to me in the form of a Serbian maid (she had an unusually elongated face) who was trying to make a pass at me in a crowded market place and hard as I tried I couldn’t seem to shake her off until her mother found her and reamed her out for not helping cart the full basket of potatoes back into storage.

This is to merely say that although I’m an academic, I’m not merely cerebral and I certainly hope I don’t lie through my teeth as often as you seem to think academics do. I obviously have a dream life, intimately connected with the body, naturally. And I do often write from the heart, as you say you do, although I wonder if it can ever be done without at the same time the mind being engaged in the effort in some mysterious way. Indeed, one can break into a sob in the presence of something sad and sorrowful. But that’s not exactly a poem.

You just read the first movement of the five-part "Burnt Norton" (all of the quartets are symmetrical in this regard.) And it’s not an easy movement to get into because it IS so intellectual, at least the very beginning, and requires one to really ponder some of the metaphysical “assertions” the poet makes in the process of getting his long intellectual/spiritual/mystical reflection underway. I suggest you take it slowly. And try not to leave your heart behind.

Go, said the bird, for the leaves were full of children,
Hidden excitedly, containing laughter.
Go, go, go, said the bird: human kind
Cannot bear very much reality. (ll 40 44)

Is the heart engaged? Mine is!

I also suggest you read some good commentary on this long poem which is laced with place names and historical allusions that you must know in order to grasp the hidden geography and landscape of the poem. Helen Gardner’s book would be a good place to start.

Nick, I’m confident that your patience will pay off. You don’t have to like Eliot’s politics or personality (many don’t!) to recognize and appreciate his magnificent achievement in Four Quartets, a poem that comes very late in his life after he’d moved through near insanity, his wife’s and his own and, famously, of the early part of the 20th century, entre le guerre, between the wars.

While you’re at it, I’d also recommend you read Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet. This would be great preparation for you not only for the Creative Writing program you hope to enter but also for life. There are perceptions and insights in the Letters that will, I’m sure, help form an indispensable foundation for your writing life.

Ralph


8/19/11

Ralph,
I did not mean to suggest that academics are heartless liars, it is just that to me it seems they armor those hearts with intellectual scale. Scale that moves and shimmers and offers glimpses of people, places, and ideas,, that most definitely engage us as readers; as for the lying bit, I meant that I am ill prepared to comment on something as deep as Elliot and so if a teacher’s analysis of a poem was something other than it should be, even as a test to his or her students, that I might not catch it. I think poetry should be our treasure as a species and not something that only the learned can cultivate. Young minds are thirsty these days and I think it would be spectacular to give them the tools to make poetry thrive all across the globe and watch them run with it.

I agree that raw emotion does not a poem make. Rather, I feel that a poem should carefully sculpt an emotion…or at least that is how I try to write. For me the whole process is cathartic, it really is my therapy.

Best,
Nicholas


8/21/11

Nick, before I comment on your latest letter, let me share with you my friend Mahriah Blackwolf’s reaction to your first letter in which you express your frustration with Eliot’s Four Quartets.

Mahriah, a dear friend of mine who lives in California, a poet and song writer, is the author of the lyric “Touch the Hand of Love.” Please click (the video clip below) for the great Blossom Dearie’s version, and (below right) for the rendition of the same lyric by one of the much-loved sopranos of our time, Renee Fleming, accompanied by possibly the greatest cellist of the last few decades, Yo-Yo Ma.

 
I shared our brief exchange about Four Quartets with Mahriah. She just called to say that she resonated completely with what you said about your difficulties with Eliot’s poem. “I couldn’t agree with Nick more,” she said. She said that she’d felt stupid reading Eliot’s great poem and not grasping most of it, and she was consoled to know that it was not solely her problem but that there were others who also felt the poem was too obscure, cerebral and, possibly, ultimately not very helpful. Your honesty and courage in saying what you felt moved her deeply. I wanted you to know this, that our brief exchange has touched someone far away, and conversations like ours have the ability to bring people together, deepen culture and our understanding of ourselves.
 
 In your response to me, you say, “I think poetry should be our treasure as a species and not something that only the learned can cultivate. Young minds are thirsty these days and I think it would be spectacular to give them the tools to make poetry thrive all across the globe and watch them run with it.” You’re absolutely right, Nick. Poetry should be a precious shared experience, and not the private possession of a few ancient and isolated geeks!

You go on to say, “I agree that raw emotion does not a poem make. Rather, I feel that a poem should carefully sculpt an emotion…or at least that is how I try to write. For me the whole process is cathartic, it really is my therapy.”

I can think of so many of my friends who would agree with you wholeheartedly about what you identify as the healing effect of the poetic process. I know Mahriah would. (I hope you listened to her utterly heart-centered song and felt the healing that so many report when they hear it.) As you know, in our group at Curley’s, I’ve been known, while affirming our need and responsibility to be completely expressive of our sentiments and feelings, to come down a bit hard on sentimentality. I guess my belief is that in order to achieve the catharsis that you mention and which you achieve through the attentiveness you bring to the shaping of your emotions, one must be open to the complexity of experience, make sure that one is not merely and gratuitously wearing one’s heart on one’s sleeve but find the words that truly delve into the heart of the matter. This is not easy to achieve. It takes “careful sculpting,” as you say.

Thanks for sharing your perceptions with me. Maybe our exchange will widen into a conversation other poets join in and together we’ll move towards claiming poetry, honest and complex, as our common legacy that offers a promise of freedom.

Ralph




What are your views on the issues raised by Nick and Ralph? Post your comments below and join the discussion!

___
About the participants:
Recently accepted into Fairfield University's MFA in Creative Writing program, Nick Miele is a technical analyst for Aircastle, LLC, a Stamford, CT-based firm that leases and sells commercial jets to air carriers worldwide.

Facilitator of PoemAlley's weekly gatherings at Curley's, Ralph Nazareth teaches English at Nassau Community College on Long Island, where he also leads PeaceWork, a peace/social justice group. In addition, Ralph instructs inmates in creative writing at Green Haven Correctional Facility.

Resources:
The critique Ralph mentioned, "The Composition of "Four Quartets" by Helen Gardner, can be ordered from Amazon here: http://www.amazon.com/Composition-Four-Quartets-Helen-Gardner/dp/B001P0GXXC

"Time, Eternity and Immortality" are considered in Four Quartets from an Eastern philosophical perspective in this piece from the journal Modern Science and Vedic Science: http://www.mum.edu/msvs/9199terry.htmlhttp://www.mum.edu/msvs/9199terry.html

Writer/artist Austin Kleon's offers further commentary on Letters to a Young Poet on his engagingly-illustrated blog: http://www.austinkleon.com/2008/07/21/rilkes-letters-to-a-young-poet/http://www.austinkleon.com/2008/07/21/rilkes-letters-to-a-young-poet/

Details on Harvard University Press' new translation of Rilke's collection can be found here:
http://harvardpress.typepad.com/hup_publicity/2011/04/dusting-off-rilkes-letters-to-a-young-poet.html