Andre Vltchek on Empire, Revolution, and Art.

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=By= CounterPunch Radio Interviews Andre Vltchek

De Typemachine Festival (Creative Commons)

De Typemachine Festival (Creative Commons)

[dropcap]I[/dropcap]n this episode of CounterPunch Radio, our Contributing Editor and Roaming Correspondent Extraordinaire for the Left, Andre Vltchek, engages in brief discussion of his new book, Exposing Lies of Empire, in which he puts a truly human face on the imperialism of the Untied States. He then enters into a broader and deeper commentary on a variety of issues from the intellectual milieu of contemporary “thinkers,” to the role of art and philosophy in revolution. He argues that there is a tremendous gap as many in the intelligentsia seem to actively avoid the artistic side of expression; the literature of art, poetry, and fiction.

Here is one short quote to whet your appetite.

“As a philosopher I want to divorce philosophy from the university, universities, from academia. I think philosophy belongs to the barricades now. It belongs to the slums. The same thing with fiction. We are living long decades when fiction and films both feature and documentary lost passion. They lost ideology. And I really think people need ideology; they need passion; they need to also dream. A lot of, in the west, a lot of non-fiction writers activists, a lot of left wing thinkers, they actually don’t read fiction. Even some of my friends (I’d better not say) but even some greatest names in left wing intellectual milieu, they don’t touch a book of poetry; they don’t a book of fiction; yet some of the greatest cries for revolution in Latin America and Russia, but also in China, are written in poetry.”

The interview goes on to discuss the view of the actions of empire from the perspective of the global south, and the activism of people around the globe.


Andre-Vltchek_2011_420pxContributing Editor Andre Vltchek is a philosopher, novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. His latest books are: “Exposing Lies Of The Empire” and “Fighting Against Western Imperialism”. Discussion with Noam Chomsky: On Western TerrorismPoint of No Return is his critically acclaimed political novel. Oceania – a book on Western imperialism in the South Pacific. His provocative book about Indonesia: “Indonesia – The Archipelago of Fear”. Andre is making films for teleSUR and Press TV. After living for many years in Latin America and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides and works in East Asia and the Middle East. He can be reached through his website or his Twitter.




Source Interview: CounterPunch Episode 31.
Lead Graphic:  Wiki Commons

 

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Shelley Poem Rediscovered

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Art and Resistance

=By= Gaither Stewart & Rowan Wolf

Battle of Waterloo, 1815 by William Saddler II

A poem that had been misplaced and presumably lost for almost two centureis has surfaced. It is “A Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things” by Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822), published in 1811. In it Sheely express his outrage at “the existing state of things” – most particularly the Napoleonic War, and the poverty extant in Britain.  As Matilda Battersby of The Independent states:

The 172 line poem by the romantic poet expresses his outrage at the government, the Napoleonic war and the state of poverty in Britain among other things.

All copies were believed to have been destroyed after Shelley was kicked out of Oxford University – where he was an undergraduate — not long after it was written.

However, it turns out that Shelley gave one copy of the poem, which was published as a 10-page pamphlet, to his cousin Pilfold Medwin who took it to Italy.

It remained in a family collection for nearly two centuries before being bought in 2006 by an enthusiast who kept its contents firmly hidden and only allowed a handful of academics access.

Now the poem is set to go on public display back in Oxford where it was written, at the world famous Bodleian Library, where it will become the 12 millionth printed book in the collection.

Particularly gripping is the conclusion of the poem which reads:

Man must assert his native rights, must say

We take from Monarchs’ hand the granted sway;

Oppressive law no more shall power retain,

Peace, love, and concord, once shall rule again,

And heal the anguish of a suffering world;

Then, then shall things, which now confusedly hurled,

Seem Chaos, be resolved to order’s sway,

And errors night be turned to virtue’s day.—

 

Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things


Author Name Bio

Source
Article: Quoted text from The Independent.
Lead Graphic: Portrait of Percy Bysshe Shelley by Amelia Curran, 1819

 

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We Walk On Fire

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TRIBUTE
=By= José M. Tirado
Dept of Energy

Nevada Test Site radioactive waste

 

WE WALK ON FIRE

(In memory of John Trudell, Feb. 15, 1946 – Dec. 8, 2015)

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]here is fire beneath our feet,
it doesn´t warm, it burns-
we plant seeds of red fire and
walk on scorched Earth:
Mother, Father, giver of food of medicine,
of Life, but
We walk on fire now…

Black tar waters, poisoned fish,
the running streams are sick, the lakes emptied.
Water tables are set with bones,
dinner is served cold
over a cauldron of Death,
meat for the masses.
We walk on fire now…

A foot from his stomach
an extra head, no eyes,
no brains in Brownsville , either,
(no heart anywhere).
Others walk on bended knees
set securely with metal pins
their faces masks of pain
their bodies Agent Orange suckled…
all over they are there watching us,
haunting consciences, such as there are left…
we walk on fire now…

They´ll battle it here
they´ll battle it there
barrels and bomblets on
bakeries and babies,
(the wedding crashers of the West)
flatten with their lackies
girls in their frilly dresses and
little boys on the beach
a hand, a finger, a fist,
there is no justification for
any of this-
we walk on fire now…

Purity drowns near Lesvos´ beaches
washes up with sneakers and jacket still on
and cameras carry the cries into homes
far away, tuning in
for a mini-series or politician´s lies
before tuning out
and turning away.
Turning away…
Always, turning away…
We walk on fire now…

A long way away from hope,
where the stars
are dimmer,
the oceans warmer, now Beijing produces
bricks from dirty air.
A plastic fork is taken from a tortoises ´nose,
a dead bird has plastic toys and paper clips
in its ripped belly,
alligators swim near golf clubs,
(Ojala! they would eat well there!)

Along Amazonian waters yellowed debris
and black poison feed the living
while the dead atop mountains are displayed,
glaciers revealing their dwindling goods.

Fire now.
We walk on fire now…

A world ablaze and spirits dying
We walk with bare feet on bare lands
while fire burns the hearts
and the soles of our feet
never touching the ground
never touching
the ground
in love…
never touching the ground
as we walk,
we walk on fire
to the never receding horizon
lit by different fires
coming near
burning us in the Fire
we will never walk on again.

José M. Tirado is a Puertorican poet, Buddhist priest, and political writer living in Hafnarfjorður, Iceland, known for its elves, “hidden people” and lava fields. His articles and poetry have been featured in CounterPunch, Cyrano´s Journal, The Galway Review, Dissident Voice, La Respuesta, Op-Ed News, among others. He can be reached at tirado.jm@gmail.com.


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A case of justifiable nepotism :)


django“Journalists” in the mainstream media indulge in this all the time, talking incessantly about themselves.
  Their family achievements and milestones—paltry or nonexistent—are duly noted, from weddings to departures to the great beyond.  Well, it’s a minor peccadillo compared to the 24/7 misinforming they do at the behest of their employers. And I suppose it’s only human. In our case, this rarely happens, despite the fact that, yes, we’re also human, but when it does we’d like to think it is for a very good and valid reason.

So it is with our dear colleague and long suffering (and niggardly paid) European correspondent Gaither Stewart. It so happens that Gaither has a grandson and he is something of a 9-year old genius. His poetic ability is certainly precocious, to say the least. We are so impressed that we thought it would only be fair and just to let Django (the young bard’s name) see his first poems published on a friendly and appreciative site.

So here, without further eloquence, as the legendary Mr Dooley would say, the poem, by Django Stewart, on The Greanville Post:

 

Where do thoughts go?

Do they flow through the river of brain?
Do they go into the objects they made?
So I think we should just let it go. 




Prologue: A Conversation with Diane Wakoski About Bay of Angels and Crashing Through Mirrors.”

Gary-CorseriWith Gary Corseri                                                                                       

“I had been dreaming a complicated dream about helping poets revise their poems, so that each ending would open like a flower.  I was not arguing, but engaged in a rousing discussion.”

–Diane Wakoski (from the Introduction to Bay of Angels)

Intro: I’m sure that any “literary” person, any then-nascent-feminist, any now-graybeard-hippie remembers Diane Wakoski from the 60s/70s when she was “one of the pillars of the Beat Movement” (with Ferlinghetti, Ginsberg, Corso, Snyder, Denise Levertov, Imamu Baraka, et. al.). And many of us have remained loyal fans–joining new fans–as Diane has continued to track our pulsating Culture in inimitable poetry these past 45 years!

I initiated first-contact with Diane a little after I learned that her next book, BAY OF ANGELS, would be published by Anhinga Press (it’s out now). Anhinga had published my first collection back in 1989. About 3 weeks ago, as guest-poetry editor at Counterpunch, I solicited poems, and was happy to post 2 excellent ones from Diane (including, “Frisked for Butterflies,” unpublished/unposted elsewhere): http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/08/30/wakoski-and-smith-ferri/

Over the past year or so, I’ve posted a series of conversational pieces (now called “Prologues” because one builds on, leads into, another). I collaborated with “working-class poet” Charles Orloski and with Russian scientist-poet-translator, Victor Postnikov. My most recent one with Victor Postnikov appeared here: http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/08/12/conversations-on-the-arts-politics-and-science-between-a-russian-and-an-american/

After I posted her poems, I sent Diane a copy of the above. I asked her if she’d like to collaborate with me on such. Her response: “I’m game.”

For me, these conversations are a way to present the Arts, make it “relevant,” and invite the reader to participate. It’s not a prof pontificating on meter, similes and metaphors; but, rather, two adults talking about what’s going on in the world and what they care about! A wonderful book that did for myth what I hope to do for the Arts is Joseph Campbell’s and Bill Moyers’ THE POWER OF MYTH. Based on the PBS hit from the 80s, that NY Times bestseller’s appeal was in the flowing, electric current of words between two educated, interested, down-to-earth participants!—Gary Corseri

 

Gary Corseri:  You write in your Introduction to Bay of Angels that your own poetry and prosody have been strongly influenced by: “The New Criticism—at least the aspect of it that I interpreted like this: each poem must be a self-contained whole, not dependent on other (often arcane) works of literature.”

That’s a positive interpretation of that form of Lit Crit which established itself as the dominant modality from the 1920s to 1970s, with celebrants and exponents like T. S. Eliot, I. A. Richards, John Crowe Ransom and Cleanth Brooks.  When I was an undergrad in the 60s, and, after a long work-hiatus, a Ph.D. candidate in the early 80s, New Criticism was still the methodological lens for examining a literary work.  (Of course, by the early 80s there were other “contenders”—structuralism, post-structuralism, deconstructionism, and a plethora of other schisms and isms!)

One problem I had with New Critical thought was that it tended to minimize the author, to remove him/her from the political/economic milieu of his/her period.  I could understand that as a reaction against 19th Century Romanticism which placed the author him/her-self front and center, over-emphasizing Shelley’s capers, or Byron’s  romantic affairs, or Dickinson’s eremitism… but, I often wondered if the New Critics hadn’t strayed too far in the other direction—against the biographical, against personal contexting?  I wondered if a better balance might be struck?  So, I was surprised to read your salute to New Criticism, and even more surprised to find your poems in Bay of Angels quite personal, self-revelatory, and, often interwoven so that one poem is, in fact, dependent on another for its full realization, it’s “opening like a flower.”

I hope you can expatiate on this theme: What does “New Criticism” mean to you?  How do you reconcile your very personal, interwoven poems with the New Critical idea of “self-contained” works of literature?

Diane Wakoski: I first began writing poetry in the late fifties when The New Criticism was new, and it gave young poets permission to become Whitmanian self-heroes/heroines of their own poems. I felt I was no longer minimalized; no longer did I have to pretend I was living in the world of Oedipus, King Arthur, Athena, or any other mythic or legendary figure. I could invent Diane as a persona—there was no stigma to writing in the first person. This was as liberating as free verse itself.

Ironically, in the late eighties, when I began to write The Archaeology of Movies and Books, my quartet of books exploring the Classic myth of Medea and Jason, again casting myself in the role of the mythic heroine, I did not feel I was abandoning New Criticism concepts, but that I was finally using them more originally. I have often quoted Henry James biographer, Leon Edel, who said something like this: “Of course, The New Critics cheated. They all knew each other and, thus, understood each other’s references. They were still alluding to matters and ideas outside the poems, just more contemporary ones.”

Young poets in the sixties were adamant about being able to use contemporary references. This led to using mythologies and legends other than the Classical, ranging from the Native American to movie gods and goddesses. One aspect of this was writing about current events, such as the Vietnam War. My own writing has always focused on the personal, and despite the fact that I grew up with a naval father, I have never written about war or other current events. But I, too, “cheat” in the sense that while I don’t require that my readers be erudite, I do want them to know my references.

GC:Bay of Angels, the title of your newest book of poems—your 20th!— is the English translation of Jaque Demy’s film noir, “La Baie des Anges,” starring Jean Moreau (fetchingly, cinematically pictured on the cover of your book).  In your Intro you write that many of your poems in Angels are about “finding solace in looking at something with a different perspective.”  I found this one of the most interesting aspects of Angels, this flowing between worlds, trying on different identities.  You weave movie “realities” with your personal life—lives, really.  (And vice versa!)  Fantasies about screen lovers like Jean Paul Belmondo merge with blood and flesh highschool boyfriends met again after 50 years!

Writers/poets used to allude to other writers; Angels is allusive to films—actors like Belmondo and Moreau and directors like Orson Wells, Roman Polansky, Jacque Demy and Woody Allen.  This opens another cartography for poetry.  What other poets can you name who have mined this modern common ground?  Do you see yourself doing more mining here?  Would you recommend that students explore these veins of gold?

DW: I, personally, don’t really know of such poets, though I suppose almost every contemporary poet has at least one poem about film.

I started writing poems using film in the Archaeology series in the ‘90s. One of my favorite poems, “Beauty and the Beast,” about the Cocteau film, La Belle et La Bete, can be found online, read by a Canadian actor, accompanied by stills from the black and white film. … I hope when a poet writes a movie poem, it is a real poem, not just a prose description of a movie!

GC: I especially liked the ending of your poem, “La Femme Nikita,” alluding to the 1990 French film.  I like it because it is contradictory—gives me different insights into the (secret) world of women, “dominant-submissive relationships,” etc.:

“… Are you surprised that

I have always wanted an imprisoning world?

One that needed me enough to own me,

and that I have wanted being owned to

 

actually

be an adventure?  Are you surprised that

I have found myself wishing to be La Femme Nikita,

not because she’s free or strong, but

because

 

she is bound,

she’s Promethean,

A rebel against all corrupt gods,

yet like all submissives, she

is the one who can change the balance of power?”

 

This highlights two contrapuntal themes in your book: expansiveness that keeps testing limits (expansiveness encapsulated in ideas like a “parallel universe,” “string theory,” “quantum mechanics”) and a proclivity for wanting to be held, “enslaved” even, “owned,” utterly known and possessed.  Is this a modern female thing or is it your thing?  I don’t think anyone would describe this as a “masculine” trait, but we’ve become so very sensitive about ascribing traits to gender… I confess to being a little perplexed about how to approach this.

I like the flow of language here because the words are straightforward, but suggestive of deeper mysteries.  I think the best of your work does that.  And, as I’ve said, this book can be quite personal—about your childhood diffidence, sense of abandonment by your “sailor-father,” loneliness growing up on the edge of a California orange grove, in a shack of a farmhouse dominated by two lonely women; and then some difficult adult relationships, etc.  Coleridge defined poetry as the “reconcilement of opposites.”  I wonder to what degree you are consciously working with opposites and striving towards “reconcilement”?  Could one have a “rousing discussion” with oneself… and  bottle the genie of poetry from that?

DW: I am always working with opposites, working towards their reconcilement.

I think if I were you–or any great conversationalist–I could have a “rousing discussion” with myself. However, as Diane, I am usually silent, tongue- tied, or a speaker of platitudes. I am busy in poetry trying to choose my words so that they include everything. I think that poetry should be more than just a conversation with oneself, no matter how rousing. That’s probably what our dreams are.

Art? Maybe art is that Zen idea of one hand clapping. I think art is a way of reaching out–to have a dialogue, discussion, conversation with the reader—who, for better or worse, can never be simply a mirror image of the poet. The reader has to want to respond.   By the moment of transformation at the end of a poem, a reader should grasp that the poet is different from what he first thought. Therefore, with the genie out of the bottle, there’s a new wholeness. How can the reader not identify with that? But, it’s not a mirror-image of poet-reader. It is, rather, Cocteau’s poet bursting through the mirror—bloodless–to the place of imagination, taking the reader with him.

GC: My favorite poem from the first half of your fairly long collection is “`The Spiral Staircase’: Apples vs. Oranges.”  Much of Angels is about a gamble, a noir image in shadow; an imagined lover, re-imagined lovers; a merging of celluloid and the scent of gardenias.  This flitting between shadows is actually more effective because in certain poems there is a pause, as herein, and we can catch the real figure—toying, flirting, elusive, allusive, frightened, daring.  Film noir has particular appeal to you, and is used  metaphorically—as in “Some Beauty Needs a Dimness” (“the alchemical chisel of black and white”)– because its stark contrasts actually sharpen, define and clarify.

The mystery revealed in “The Spiral Staircase…,” the unfolding, takes the form of a daily eaten orange plucked from a grove next to your childhood home.  The surprise here is that the mythic world, symbolized by the literary “golden apples of Hesperides” is too vulnerable to smudge-pot soot, harsh rays of California sun…, but the real, globed fruit of orange is protected by a sturdy rind, and the fruit “held destiny” for “this little sorceress” poet, this “little witch-child” who learns to conjure from her life experiences.

Many of the poems in Angels are wholly or partly meditations on poetry—the evolution and development of the poet.  You train an unrelenting eye on yourself, mistakes made along the way, while reflecting, with a sense of wonder, on how you got to be 75, with a successful career as a writer and teacher:

“Had I been less superficial,

I’d have cleaved to the man with the hands

I never found handsome.”

*

“While the others tour ancient churches,

improve their minds and sensibilities at

museums and archeological sites, I

dig into my own so

superficial past,

wondering about the wealth and complexity I rejected

or gave away.”

 

*

And, in the same poem, “California Eyes: A Meditation From Poitou-Charentes,” we read:

 

“Superficial Diane.

That’s me, loving the surfaces,

always the surfaces.

That’s how I knew, wheNever rejected,

it was my own surfaces

that had failed.”

 

That’s three times in a four-page poem, you mention “superficial”!

Well, most sensitive people have dark moods and various occasions to doubt their own sincerity!  Fortunately, these moods and doubts and implacable regrets are balanced by the scrutinies of age, wisdom extracted from failures:

“but when I bathe naked and alone each morning,

behind the navy blue shower curtain, imprinted with gold

figures of the zodiac, I look

at my old body

and I know that all my youthful

cruelties

cover me, clothe me with age’s

cobwebbed skin, my belly swollen as if

I were illicitly pregnant,

and the sight of my own nakedness strips me

of any goddess qualities I might

ever have possessed.”

 

And so, in “Showering Behind the Zodiac’s Curtain,” a kind of resolution, a kind of cinematic denouement, a washing away of youthful and not-so-youthful follies.

I’ve been trying here to get into the thorny question of how a poet develops.  I’ve taken a few leaps-of-faith and leaps in the dark, and I’m hoping you can set me straight.  I hope you can talk about process now—how you write, what inspires you, how you’ve managed to maintain a vital 50-year career as a poet.  What do you recommend to your students, to youthful mariners just embarking on this, sometimes perilous, voyage?  How does one keep a steady keel?

DW: Thinking about the quotations you’ve selected and the importance that I have always placed on self-criticism, I need to offer the word: balance.

A fellow undergraduate at Berkeley (’56-’60) once bemusedly said to me, talking about that great uncertainty, being a young poet, “Diane, I don’t understand how you can believe in yourself so completely.” I’ve remembered this over the years, because I recognized the truth of his statement, the minute he uttered it. I do believe in myself, I have since childhood, and though I constantly question myself, try to look at my failures honestly, try to be a stronger, better person, at root I believe in myself. Being born poor and from an uneducated family, I learned early that if things went wrong, no one would fix them. I had to say to myself, “How can I fix this, what did I do wrong? If I did nothing wrong, it doesn’t matter; I still have to be the one who finds a solution.”

Self-belief=Self-questioning. If they are in balance, you can progress with some success in your personal life.

Poems have many functions, but one of them is problem-solving. My process is to take some material, which generates a question and that interests me, and try to transform it. You ask what inspires me? Books, movies, food, gambling; female objects of beauty such as butterflies, jewels, flowers, shoes; male objects of beauty such as motorcycles, carpentry & tools; hands; feet; mouths; the Garden Myth; the Orpheus Myth; gold and silver; sun and moon! Things inspire me, though beauty as an idea also can fill me with something to say.

You ask about keeping a “steady keel.” Simple: poetry is my lifeline. It is an essential way I connect with the world. I must keep writing to survive.

GC:  As the music swells, and the lights fade, I’d like to get a little personal again… because, let’s face it, the New Critics were fine in their time, but we’re in a very different era now, and as you write in Angels’ final poem, “nakedness, not invisibility, is one’s best disguise.”

That poem, “Meditation on Flowers,” references Jean Cocteau’s film, “The Blood of a Poet,” and I see Cocteau’s image of a man crashing through a mirror—from the inside out!—as a startling metaphor for your work.  The reader surveys the mirror, finds all in place, when, suddenly—kaboom!  A crashing through from the other side!

Given the richly considered perspective of 51 years—from your first book, Coins and Coffins in 1962 to Bay of Angels now—you’ve witnessed and participated in metamorphoses in the arts—from the “howl” of the Beat movement to the reined-in academicism starting in the 70s, to an amazingly pliable but viable, open form today, this ancient art of poetry transforms itself, crashes through mirrors, then puts itself together again.  You’ve been a professor, a woman of letters, and you dream of “rousing discussions.”  Poets have been oracles since Homer’s day, since Sappho’s.  Can you tell us—Where do you see us heading now?

DW: I don’t think my concept of poetry or the poet’s place in the world has ever changed. Like Robinson Jeffers, I believe poets are Cassandras, prophets who have access to some small splinter of truth, which we feel compelled to utter and, like Cassandra, we have been cursed by the Gods to speak the truth—even if we are not believed.

I believe, as Emerson says, that virtue is its own reward. Speaking the truth may bring us nothing except the joy of speaking the truth, even if no one believes us. I believe my splinter of truth-seeing allows me to understand beauty and, even if no one believes, understands, or accepts my truth, that I am rewarded by that understanding.

Poetry, like any art or literature, should connect the present and past. I am a safe oracle, since no one will believe me. So, Diane, as Pythoness, says that those who pay more attention to beauty–not surface beauty, but to its secrets that underlie even the impure–will save the world.

 Diane Wakoski has published 21 books of poetry, and her work has appeared at numerous periodicals, including Counterpunch. Her most recent book is Bay of Angels (2013, Anhinga Press). A pillar of the “Beat Movement,” her life and work have inspired generations of American and international writers.

Gary Corseri has published novels, books of poetry and a literary anthology (editor). His dramas have been performed on PBS-Atlanta, and he has read his poems at the Carter Presidential Center. His articles have appeared at The New York Times, Village Voice, The Greanville Post, etc.