A third question posed by the
new anthology Short Fuse has to do with
the volume's underlying agenda. Its ambition can be gauged by the fact that
Swift & Norton's intervention works in two directions simultaneously.
First, the book attempts to situate oral and performance poetries, aligned in
this particular case most closely to the slam & spoken word scene rather
than to, say, sound poetry, well within the legitimated borders of text-based
work, placed alongside neoformalism, langpo & McPoetry as an equal, not
just something quaint done by wannabes at your local slam tavern. Secondly
& most ambitiously, Short Fuse
argues at least implicitly that oral poetries offer the "missing
link" between contending traditions of verse. Thus Short Fuse offers to transcend the poetry wars by placing itself
front & center.
Although Short Fuse is hardly the first anthology to suggest the breadth
& diversity of oral & performance poetries, it succeeds at its first
task. The book clearly demonstrates a phenomenon that is more global than any
other tendency within English-language poetry & with a lot more pizzazz
than some.
But to succeed at the second,
the performative poetries of Short Fuse
would have to overcome some serious limitations. This version of oral poetry
would have to become, for example, a genuine poetic tradition whose sense of
long term historical memory consists of more than the occasional Robert Service
/ Vachel Lindsay imitation.*
Close to half of the work
presented in this particular vision of oral poetries could be described as
stand-up comedy routines transcribed for the page, some better, some not.
Polysemy in such works is not only close to non-existent, it's often
counterproductive, in that this is a poetry aimed toward an audience that
doesn't identify as readers & which places at least as much value on
agreement & titillation as it does on meaning. Still, multiple levels of
signification are possible, as Guillermo Castro's wry, wonderful homage to
Allen Ginsberg, "A Deli on First Avenue ," demonstrates. But as a rule it's
not evident that, in the context of performativity, richness in content
advantages the text.
I think it’s important to
note that Short Fuse as a project
represents one possible step toward just such an increase in depth & this
may be its major achievement. Oral poetries by their very nature tend to be
local. If you don't see what, say, Edwin Torres
is doing, you have relatively little access &, by itself, a
transcription on paper is seldom enough to suggest all the many layers that are
potentially active when the poem itself is understood first of all as a score.
At a party I attended for the anthology in the offices of CLMP, the Council of
Literary Magazines and Presses, one Toronto poet told me how much she
appreciated hearing the work from Montreal at a reading the previous evening at
the New School. The two scenes, according to this poet, seldom communicate,
even though both are involved in parallel activities within the same country.
In bringing together so many like-minded writers from different regions and
parts of the world, Swift & Norton may ultimately be taking the first steps
toward the creation of a performance metalanguage, a shared vocabulary that
would enable such writers to begin to build on what one another are doing
elsewhere.
The absence of this vocabulary
is a major weakness in many of the oral poetries gathered in Short Fuse. It explains, in part, why so
much of this work falls back on the stand-up comedy routine as a formal
framework from which to operate – it’s something to which all these poets and
their audiences have been exposed. The lack of a metalanguage is precisely the problem
that has kept conceptual art in a position of always having to start over from
scratch with each new work, regardless the worker, regardless the scene. And
the absence of a true sense of tradition, of historical memory, is itself as
much a consequence of this lack of shared vocabulary as it is a cause. It is
precisely this absence that an oral poetics must overcome if it is to become
more than an adjunct to the text-based poetries of the day, interesting more as
sociology than literature.
All of which is to say that I
don't think that Short Fuse, the
anthology, is going to change the world of letters, not now, not yet, but that
by envisioning what such a project might look like, Todd Swift & Philip Norton have upped the ante for performance
poets everywhere. That is a huge achievement. And one from which we all benefit,
whatever our taste in poetry.
*If either
editor has read, for example, Sound
Poetry: A Catalogue, edited by Steve McCaffery and the late bp
Nichol (Underwhich Editions, 1978) or The Poetry Reading: A Contemporary
Compendium on Language & Performance, edited by Stephen Vincent &
Ellen Zweig (Momo’s Press,
1981), it’s not evident. The relative lack of sound poetry and Fluxus-inspired work
in the anthology – Penn Kemp is the notable exception – keeps Short Fuse from being truly definitive as a
gathering of oral poetics.