NaPoWriMo
I’ve never participated in any writing intensives, but this month I have been writing a poem every day for National Poetry Month. It’s been fun experimenting at the edge of form and from intriguing prompts. I would never have written these poems otherwise. I have written on the Tar Sands, on being given up for dead as a 2-year-old, about being in NYC for Hurricane Sandy, about a magician on the metro in Paris, a poem made up of ten lies, a poem to something inanimate, and so on. Catch the New York School prompt, below, for a great example of what we’ve been challenged with.
The other terrific part has been participating as a group member with 17 extremely talented Canadian poets–their support has been invaluable, their talent and skill breath-taking. To read their work day after day? Priceless. (For everything else, there’s MC.)
This challenge has been completely and utterly exhausting. I will be glad when it’s over next week. Really, really glad.
To quote Thom Donovan, whose guidelines we used for the New York School poem:
“It is a “recipe” or constraint of sorts for writing a New York School poem (my class read James Schuyler, Bernadette Mayer, Charles Bernstein, and Dorothea Lasky—a heterodox selection, I realize; and listened to Eileen Myles, Schuyler, Robert Creeley, and Ron Padgett via PennSound).
“Students were encouraged to use as many of the following “ingredients” as possible:
- at least one addressee (to which you may or may not wish to dedicate your poem)
- use of specific place names and dates (time, day, month, year)–especially the names of places in and around New York City
- prolific use of proper names
- at least one reminiscence, aside, digression, or anecdote
- one or more quotations, especially from things people have said in conversation or through the media
- a moment where you call into question at least one thing you have said or proposed throughout your poem so far
- something that sounds amazing even if it doesn’t make any sense to you
- pop cultural references
- consumer goods/services
- mention of natural phenomena (in which natural phenomena do not appear ‘natural’)
- slang/colloquialism/vernacular/the word “fuck”
- at least one celebrity
- at least one question directed at the addressee/imagined reader
- reference to sex or use of sexual innuendo
- the words “life” and “death”
- at least one exclamation/declaration of love
- references to fine art, theater, music, or film
- mention of genitals and body parts
- food items
- drug references (legal or illegal)
- gossip
- mention of sleep or dreaming
- use of ironic overtones”