Teaching persona poetry, and a Face to Meet the Faces
Happy Mardi Gras! Appropriate for a day of masks, today I had the lovely opportunity to teach the persona poem to a great group of students at Cascadia Community College. It was a lovely and enthusiastic group of people and I always enjoy talking about persona poetry, which I happen to still feel passionate about. We talked about zombies, the Hunger Games, Buffy versus The Vampire Diaries, anime and haibun, as well. Good times.
Arriving about two hours too late for the class, my contributor copy of the persona poetry anthology A Face to Meet the Faces: An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry came in the mail today. I was happy to be keeping company with wonderful poets like Collin Kelly, Jericho Brown, Ivy Alvarez…an interesting aspect is that the editors had the writers write a short note about their use of persona at the end of the book, so if you’re using this as a teaching tool, that would be great for students! It is true there is not a lot of material available for those teaching persona poetry, so this anthology is a welcome addition. I’m looking forward to using it next time I teach persona poetry!
Happy Fat Tuesday! AWP is almost upon us. I’m sad to be missing it but hope you will all have a great time and bring home to your blogs lots of gossip. I am so ready for February to be over already – this is Seattle’s meanest month, for sure. I saw a branch of cherry (or plum?) blossoms outside of a decaying barn on the way to see a house a few days ago, I think that was the first sign that indeed there may be life in this earth after the long winter…
November Doldrums
I’ve been reading around the blogosphere about people being a little down, and I think it’s been getting to me too: the November doldrums. The days are getting shorter, the little bit of sunshine we get is really cold, job applications and poetry submissions seem harder and heavier, somehow…
I don’t know if this will cheer anyone up, but if you’re a speculative poetry writer who loves persona poetry, you probably want to submit to the Science Fiction Poetry Association’s poetry journal Eye To the Telescope, in the next month, because…guess what? The guest editor is me!
http://eyetothetelescope.com/submit.html
And, if you’re a member of Goodreads, I’d be honored if you wrote in She Returns to the Floating World as your choice for Best Poetry Book of the year! (Write-in votes are by “Your Choice” at the bottom of the page) as your favorite poetry read:
http://www.goodreads.com/award/choice/#56024-Best-Poetry
Of course, my lovely friends Dorianne Laux and Aimee Nezhukumatathil are also very good choices. It’s a tough year for poetry competitions!
So what are you doing to battle the doldrums this November? I’m baking, staying in denial about the ever-shortening days, and I’m getting ready to read with a bunch of friends at a reading celebration for Day of the Dead:
Saturday, November 5 @ 4-5:45 pm
Day of the Dead reading with Judith Roche, Carolyne Wright, Jeannine Hall Gaily, Chris Jarmick, John Burgess, Scott Galasso, & Raul Sanchez at Lake City Library.
I am sorry that I won’t be seeing the awesome poets at the West Hollywood Book Fair today – so sorry Cati Porter, Michelle Bitting, and many others who I hoped to meet at the Poemeleon reading! I’ve been in bed with the worst (and longest-lasting) stomach flu I’ve ever had – and on top of that, had my ankle x-rayed because they now think it might be broken. Boo! And, can I point out I’m really tired of the taste of rice broth and Pepto and ginger ale?
In other news, click here for a great call for submissions for a persona poetry anthology!
I also got a really, really nice rejection yesterday from a really great journal – it was the kind of rejection that said so many nice things, I almost forgot they weren’t taking my poems. Anyway, it cheered me up – and they specifically liked one of my “Robot Scientist Daughter” series of poems, which made me feel better about that whole project. I’ve felt a little discouraged trying to get my second book published – who knew it would take so long? But persistence, persistence, persistence, right? Anyway, it just goes to show how a thoughtful rejection can cheer you up almost as much as an acceptance.
Still beautiful in Napa. Sun is shining, clear blue skies, perfect 70-degree weather during the day. Seriously, why don’t you all move out here? It’s got a good library, a good bookstore, and a LOT of wine. Palm trees and oak trees right next to each other, cacti growing next to rose gardens. I can’t wait to grow some herbs out on our apartment balcony, and maybe some hummingbird-attracting flowers – we’ve already got two regulars at our hummingbird feeder, two Anna’s hummingbirds.
I know exactly what you want to do with your beautiful Memorial Day weekend – get a peek at my thesis essay on persona poetry! You know you want to.
If you’ve been following this blog, you know I’ve been interested in persona poetry pretty much since I started writing. Poemeleon, that paragon of online poetry magazines, just published its theme issue on persona poetry, which contains poems by me (from the Japanese MS,) Mary Agner, Dorianne Laux, Bob Hicok, Lana Ayers (her Red Riding Hood is a hoot,) and a bunch of other cool poets.
Plus, a shorter-and-sweeter version of my MFA thesis critical essay on the persona poetry of Lucille Clifton, Louise Gluck, and Margaret Atwood called “Why We Wear Masks.” Also, why isn’t there a good anthology of persona poetry already out there? Paging publishers and anthologists!
A few notes on persona poetry
Someone asked if I would blog a little about persona poetry to make up for the fact that I missed giving a pedagogy paper on the same subject at AWP, so I will! It would be boring if I just posted the paper here, so I’ll write about why I personally like writing persona poems, how I discovered them, and why I think they’re useful in a classroom.
I really had not discovered contemporary female poetry until I was in college – Plath, Gluck, H.D., Atwood, Rita Dove and Lucille Clifton. I was engaged and enraptured. One thing I could not help but notice was how many of these writers wrote in personas: male and female, angel and demon, flower and stone, Gretel in Darkness and Helen of Troy as a stripper. Why, I wondered, had so many female poets taken up this strategy for writing? What did it do for them? What could it do for me?
One boundary that many women, at least in our society, feel is the boundary of being “nice,” and “likeable.” And many women poets write nice, likable poems about their nice, likable lives. But those poems did not interest me. The first time I read “Daddy” (which, by the way, I took to be a persona poem) I laughed out loud – I thought it was hilarious, unbounded; it was like reading a lightning storm. Gluck’s Meadowlands had a similar effect. Atwood, of course, practices the art of the tart-tongued villainess in her fiction and her poetry like nobody’s business.
So I wanted in. Tentatively I took steps towards various personas: my first were in the voice of Philomel, because at the time I was reading a lot of Ovid and TS Eliot (I think now that at least one of TS Eliot’s alter egos, or maybe is anima-self, was Philomel, the violated young girl who is a very strong presence in “The Waste Land.”) Then I explored more characters: Wonder Woman (a ubiquitous presence in my childhood), the wicked stepmother, mermaids and melusines.
Allowing me to write outside of the lines, so to speak, on the edges and fragments of story lines, was wonderfully freeing – here, I could make up the story and character as I went along. Why, I wonder, was persona poetry so attractive to me? And what benefits might it have for poetry students today?
Well, here’s my little list, in a nutshell:
–It gives poets some of the creative freedoms of the fiction writer: character and plot, mythic landscapes – to me, a much more fun place to play than say, my own backyard. Because I can only write so many poems about my own fascinating life.
Using our imaginations = good.
–It helps writers extend and exercise empathy for the “other;” it allows us to imagine what it’s like in other people’s shoes. This one’s pretty self-explanatory – you just have to get in the mindset of someone else to write a poem in their voice – and often, we surprise ourselves by really identifying with characters we thought we had nothing in common with. Expanding our own (and our students’) humanity, to put it grandly. If you don’t some empathy with the character you’re writing, the poem will sound false, incomplete. Again, this is an exercise in humanism and imagination. It’s harder to create an “us” and “them” when you work really hard to get into “their” mindset. Have a Democrat write a poem as a Republican; a girl write a poem in a boy’s voice; and of course, my favorite: assign them the task of writing (and humanizing) the villain of a story.
–It allows a writer to re-write history and mythology; any group that has been left out of the hero position for a long time has got to like that. Subversion isn’t just a graduate school catchphrase – it is a real and powerful tool to rebalance the world in our own writing, a way to challenge conventional thought, and a way to address issues of inequality. I recommend having students pick two opposing characters from a folk tale, comic book, or myth, and writing a poem in each voice. I’ve always gotten wonderful work, at least one really good poem, from this exercise.
–A last reason, which is really more psychological than anything else, is that writing in persona allows us to free the shadow self; any restrictions (or false memories) we might place on our autobiographical writing tends to disappear when writing in persona. Now, it doesn’t really protect the writer; after all, there’s a reason any writer chooses the speakers they do, and the emotions they choose to reflect are still aspects of their own selves. But writing in persona can trick us, momentarily, into freedom while we write.
Back from a cool and rainy beach, where we saw the following: six baby peacocks and a white parent peacock, ten baby quail and parents, a mother and baby racoon, 12,000 fawns and various deer, otters, harbour seals, and a multitude of seagulls. After reading Lucia Perillo’s I’ve Heard the Vultures Singing, I can even identify the kinds of seagulls. Yes, that’s my takeaway from the poet’s book: the wildlife biology.
Well, I came back to a Tempest on the Wompo list over whether writing poetry in persona was proper, ethical, allowable, etc. I had to write a little post on the topic, and here it is:
Dear Wompo crowd,
My goodness! What a passionate discussion about something I thought was an accepted truth in our literary world – that the speaker is not the poet. We do not assume writers of plays, or novels, or songs, etc must always write as themselves, but somehow the poet is expected to do so. I love to write dramatic monologues and fiction, but I happen to be a poet, so I use persona poetry.
Perhaps it’s because of some of my favorite poets write in persona, such as Gluck and Margaret Atwood and Lucille Clifton, to name a few, or perhaps I find persona poetry a nice contrast, to the I-was-walking-through-the-woods-and-had-this-epiphany poem you find all over the place or the sixties-era confessionalism that still seems to be one of the main modes today. I hope we can all agree there’s room for that kind of poetry, and for poetry that allows us to create character, plot, and dialogue in our minds as well.
In a little class I prepared for college students, I talked about the benefits – or the reasons why – of writing persona poetry.
Here’s a condensed version:
-Empathy. Allowing us to put ourselves in the shoes of the “other.”
-Imagination. Getting out of the prison of your own life and circumstances, and into someone else’s. Or a different universe altogether. This is one of the reasons it is the mode of writing I’m most strongly drawn to.
-Especially for women, allowing their full range of voice in a society that may or may not be happy to hear what they’re thinking or feeling. The three poets above (Gluck, Atwood, and Clifton) are pretty sly in the way they critique society through their personas, in ways they would maybe not be able to get away with writing as themselves. I’m also thinking of HD here. There’s a social aspect to giving voices to the voiceless…the midrash – to re-writing mythology and history by using a woman character’s voice to critique the social situations they found/find themselves in. I mean, Mary Magdalene didn’t get to write her own story. or Leda, Philomel, Helen of Troy. Or, come to think of it, Wonder Woman. Sure, these women are fictional, but don’t they deserve to be heard?
The two cents of a passionate persona poetry lover and writer, Jeannine Hall Gailey