Hey, a blog post with real poetry CONTENT for once. Amazing, you say!
When I started writing poetry, really reading and trying to write “good” poetry (you know, trying to be better than song lyrics) I was eight years old. And I mostly wrote environmental/anti-nuclear war poetry with images of mushroom clouds and “boys in green raincoats.” I’m not sure exactly where this environmental stuff came from – possibly from living in the back yard of Oak Ridge, Tennessee (where they made and processed nuclear weapons) and possibly from reading Madeleine L’Engle’s Swiftly Tilting Planet (about averting nuclear war with time travel!) at an impressionable age.
But, as things went on, and I was chided by professors for trying to obviously to “say something” in our work, etc, the environmental stuff sort of dropped out of my writing. But suddenly, it is back.
It started with writing about Japan, and how Japanese anime is really created out of the shadow of the Hiroshima/Nagasaki nuclear blasts, and then about my father’s work as a high-tech cleanup consultant at various nuclear sites (including Oak Ridge and Fernald in Ohio.) It turns out I knew at a pretty young age that nuclear waste wasn’t easy to contain, protect people from, and certainly the term “Clean up” is awfully optimistic when you’re talking about radioactive waste with a multimillion-year half-life.
Now with my new book I’m writing about this again, more personally – like being exposed to cancer risks (did you know that folks within a ten-mile downwind area of Oak Ridge have a 53% risk of getting cancer, whereas most Americans have about a 5% chance at any given time? This was in my recent research, probably not available even ten years ago to people looking for explanations…) It’s a recurring theme in the short stories of Hakuri Murakami, people who get sick for vague reasons, an undercurrent of paranoia about genetics/the body.
The whole mythology of the X-Men and Heroes has been so fascinating to me, because it challenges us to think of the upside of things like mutagenics. I did a bit of research on PAI-1 deficiency, my own personal genetic mutation, and it seems that although the downside is pretty rough (it acts much like hemophilia) the upside is that studies in mice show that PAI-1 deficiency might have a protective effect against some tumors, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. Although it has a negative effect in gram-negative pneumonia-catching (which could explain why I spent a few years having pneumonia all the time until I got an pneumonia vaccine.)
Anyway, I’m thinking more about how to incorporate my brain and heart into my poetry – keeping the work interesting artisticly and linguistically, but somehow also having a passionate message. Few poems that are explictly political are spectacular. But there’s got to be a balance. Trying not to write something because you are afraid it might be lame is not an excuse to not write something more ambitious socially.
I wasn’t afraid to write about feminist stuff – violence against women et al, and no one has really smacked me on the head about the content of my first book (although I do get the annoying student questions like “Why are you so angry at men?” occasionally. ) And I don’t want to be afraid to write about this enviro-stuff either. I understand it and I’m interested in it. Is that enough?
Cipolline
J9
I can’t wait to read what you’ve got. Apocalyptic nuclear themes are also early territory for me (my father was part of a team of scientists who invented some sort of nuclear waste containment system for air transport; he was a ceramics engineer at Hanford Nuclear Reservation, 2 miles from where I was born). Bill Witherup’s book of poems, “Downwind, Downriver,” is an excellent example of political poetry that sings, and his subjects, among others, relate to living (and dying) in Richland near the nuke rez. Really, if you were born and raised in the state of Washington in the last half of the 20th century, you are a downwinder even if you didn’t live in the TriCities (Pasco, Richland, Kennewick)…all the alfalfa that fed all the dairy cows in the state came from there, so if you ever drank milk that was produced from any Washington state dairy, well…you get the picture. Hey, you can borrow my copy of BW’s book, if you like. —Tamara
Joannie
Good for you! I think it’s especially important considering the resurgence of nuclear power as an (ahem) alternative energy source (?) and the fact that, after the end of the Cold War, people stopped thinking about nuclear dangers in general–not that those dangers went away. I, too, shy away from writing political poetry because it seems so easy to end up with a rant that is either preaching to the choir or trying to hit someone over the head (that old holier-than-thou trap). But on occasion, I convince myself that the price of silence is too great not to try. Good luck with it, and I hope that I get to read your enviro poems sometime.
jeannine
Thanks Tamara and Joannie for your very helpful comments!