[New-Poetry] Bob's Greatest Hits and the breadth and depth of
Pudding
editor at eratiopostmodernpoetry.com
editor at eratiopostmodernpoetry.com
Thu Sep 14 18:18:41 EDT 2006
Here are three reviews I wrote on the subject of Pudding Magazine and
Jennifer Bosveld. One of these appeared in my micro zine, Meat Epoch, and
the other two in, I think, Small Press Review. (I wrote these a while ago, so
please be kind. . . .)
I am really very happy for you, Bob. And to you other guys, Al and Bill, I'm
pleased to meet you and good for you! Far out!
PUDDING MAGAZINE: The International Journal of Applied Poetry
(#24, 1994) Pudding House Publications. 74pp. $6.75. ($15.75, for 3
issues.) ISSN: 0196-5913
There is an aura surrounding Pudding Magazine, an aura in part cast by the
published viewpoints and practical to-dos of its editor, Ms. Jennifer Bosveld,
and in part cast by its longevity, a longevity nourished by the caliber and
stylistic diversity of its contributors. For Ms. Bosvelds part it is foremost her
perseveranceit is her faith in and commitment to poetic expression, and to
poetic expression as cure. But while her commitment is unaffected, her faith
is not naïve. Let us define cure as the realization and cultivation of poetic
sensitivities, the insight to identify challenges and solutions at significant
moments in our lives. This grants a purpose to poetic expression that
extends beyond the sheer aesthetic; this psychology allows that through
poetic expressionthat is, generally speaking, through the artistic, the
deliberate bringing together into words of ones personal and distinctive
feelings and impressions and gone-throughs accrued via direct life
experienceone may, if not defeat adversity, nevertheless make of that
adversity such as can be gainful, tolerable, and perhaps, eventually, the
liberating jewel, for both writer (in the form of a catharsis, a relief from
tension, the breaking of inhibition, self awareness, a knowledge or lesson
obtained, there is generally some hygienic merit) and reader respectively.
Thusly, then, though not exclusively, does Ms. Bosveld exercise her privilege
as editor.
Being chief editor of an established and time- & trial-honed small
magazine, Ms. Bosveld is at once privileged and fated to preview hundreds of
manuscripts, consequently acquiring for herself an almost confidential
knowledge of the latest, the best, the worst, the most promising and the
most obtuse of our poetic afflatus. This confidential knowledge stands
beside her privilege; it is as much her honorher distinguished opportunity
as it is her forte. The poems she has selected for Pudding #24 have
recognizable points in common: There is, perhaps above all, a frank
correspondence to the workaday world, to the actual (if not familiar) lived
realities of towns and cities, farms and classrooms, in kitchens and in cars,
and in vivid dislocative* narrative; these are lives we can recognize and
appreciate; conditions and situations we can understand and, maybe, identify
with. The imagery is pictorial and aural and concrete, the setting is seen as
well as heard, the poem has local color, has ambience, these poets have ears.
And in these narratives, the sentiments and delicacy of feelings and
emotional (and ideational) appeals are appropriateso that they have a
versatility; we are susceptible to them and they belong to us all. Stylistically,
their diversity is for the most part a matter of tone or voice (which is not to
say a prime specimen of a particular literary art will be of course excluded).
This correspondence, and concrete imagery, are the primary characteristics of
realism; however realism also treats us to symbols and archetypes and to a
moral and psychological depth; realism can be unsophisticatedly folksy and
naïve, as well as stylized or refined to a high sophistication. Turning
adversity, even the workaday, into poetic expression can result in an intensely
personal confessional poetry (a sort of special pleading, say, for forgiveness
or re-acceptance, even an exhibitionism), but in its most accessible and
useful transfiguration (and indeed, what seems to appeal to Ms. Bosveld
most), something approaching realism, or the extra-personal, if you will, may
be the desired effectalong with some sense of acceptance, if not total
overcoming.
All works of art are in a sense (most likely, unintentional) personal
documents, but not all personal documents are strictly speaking works of art.
The idea of an applied poetry also involvesbeyond the disclosure of
poignant reflections of human thought and feelingthe considerations of
example and service. Outside of Pudding Magazine, two works, or
documents, come into mind: Autobiography of a Schizophrenic Girl,
presented by Marguerite Sechehaye, and Mars, by the pseudonymous Fritz
Zorn. It is questionable, whether either of these documents (both extreme
cases) can pass for a work of art (notwithstanding passages of extraordinary
flight), but they are rich in frank and exacting disposition, description and
disclosure, rich in raw self-analysis and remarkable psychological acuity, and
both writers were able to express themselves and adapt themselves to their
intention; both works are specimens of the applied. The assumption that
someone has something to say and would benefit from saying it, is the basis
underlying applied poetry. The realization and cultivation of the expressive
and adaptive aspects of such are paramount goals for the instructor of an
applied poetry program. These considerations are clearly acknowledged and
surpassed by Ms. Bosveld, who has devoted much thought and scholarship to
the matter, here and in her sourcebook, Topics for Getting in Touch, now in
its tenth edition.
*Dislocation refers to narrated events, intentions, etc., less the benefit of
depictive locale, usually but not limited to imaginary events.
***
Pudding Magazine: The International Journal of Applied Poetry #32, Dec.,
1996.
Edited by Jennifer Bosveld. 3 / yr; 80 pp. Pudding House Publications.
$18.95 / yr, $6.95 / copy.
Pudding Magazine is going strong approaching the close of its second
decade. Founding publisher and editor, Jennifer Bosveld, has with gifted
sensibilities and model resolve kept the proceedings on a steady course,
veering only towards improvement. While keeping to the magazines express
purpose, the foundation, demonstration and promotion of applied poetry (a
term originated by Bosveld to signify the beneficial role the creative process
can play in healing, learning, working and integrating with society), there is
also a liberal commitment to bringing forth fine contemporary and
experimental writing. (Its clear that at Pudding the term experimental is not
used as an apology for bad writing; rather, here it means writing that does
not restrict itself to familiar plays of language, writing that purposefully
departs from traditional models.) With applied poetry, the foremost
objective, it seems, is to remove task-attitude constraints which can
otherwise control production; the purpose is to keepsafe the writers
subjectivity while helping him become much less self-conscious. And when
shared, the turning points in a life are exposed to view, and this can revise a
readers perceptions and sensitivities. Thus Pudding is of service both to
writers and to readers. There is also a commitment to Virtual Journalism
(another term originated by Bosveld), which is concerned not with the
reportage only but the transmutation of experience into art, but while this
may sound pretty familiar, its actually quite a specialized art form.
Featured in #32 is Willie Abraham Howard, Jr., and from his excerpted
letters and poetry its clear he does not suffer from dictaphobia, he speaks
his heart with a vividness and penetration. This is just the sort of writer
Bosveld is pleased to discover. Mr. Howards place is Southern-urban, or else
any black enclave just outside or enclosed inside a city. Howard is shrewd
and to a degree worldly-minded, but he is not wearied or cynical; he has
learned, and probably early on, to keep a psychological distance, and this is
key to his style of portraiturewhen his feelings enter the narrative, it is not
to pass judgment, but to register his affections. But Howard has a secret
weapon; he has the ability to translate meaning into value, and value into
poetry. (The authors expression need not only take the form of a shriek.) In
the poems presented here, we see the contrast between the poets ideal and
his reality. In Rockbitch In Vine City, the slang phrases are disturbing, but
still they are only language; with minimum detail Howard tells of a woman
prone to prison and drug abuse, yet despite her wrecked life there remains
something inviolable about her; she is still a human being.
All the writing in Pudding has a direct connection to some or other lived
experience; depending on the style of the author, this connection can be
more or less concrete. And as in Ralph S. Colemans short story, Off the
Main Road, the connection can take the form of a revelation, an awakening
either to or out of a self-deception. Ben Millers Tiny Tales of Mayhem,
Madness and Murder is something of a ringerits typical of Bosveld to
include a piece that is so refreshingly unusual yet still suits her purpose.
These really are tiny tales, excerpts from a longer work; brief paragraphs,
each one with a well wrought twist. Miller may well remind the reader of
Calvino; we cannot possibly foretell the last sentence or word but when we
read it we are treated to the ah-hah effect. Because of the remarkable
quantity of submissions received, Pudding is able to publish three big issues
a year, and submissions meet with an amazingly efficient turn-around time
(manuscripts are read the day received; this is more than a practicality, this is
a courtesy to the authors, and one worthy of emulation). It shouldnt be long
before The Best American Poetry acknowledges Pudding with their selection.
Always begin with a SASE for guidelines.
***
Pudding Magazine:
The International Journal of Applied Poetry
#40, Spring 2000.
Edited by Jennifer Bosveld. 66 pp.
Pudding House Publications.
$18.95 / 3 issues, $7.95 / copy.
http://www.puddinghouse.com
Puddings motto reads in part, Poetry Applied to Intentional Living. The idea,
really the principle, of intentional living has been with me a long time, even
before I found proof of it in Rilke, in Shotetsu, and in Thoreau. It has more
than anything else informed my writing, and, just as importantly, my reading,
of poetry. For I conceive of the poem to be a document, behind which there
lies a life, a person, a history. The poem is, in a sense, a constellation of
sensibilities, drawn from the personal night sky of the poetand sometimes,
should the stars be so aligned, we can make out the outline of an archetype.
Now the enjoyment of poetry is not only a matter of these words, these
images, this particular circumstance, the enjoyment is in where the poem
takes you. Reading Greg Kosmickis Everything Has A Life of Its Own, about
a slight but significant conversation between father and son, I was taken to
remember a man Id met at a retirement party. He asked me what Id been
doing, I told him I was a student, and then he asked me what I loved, and I
told him I loved poetry. The man then took out his wallet, and took out this
old piece of cloth that was folded so to fit inside, and he said that this was
from his childs blanket, and then he held it close and said, This is a poem. I
reread Kosmickis poem, and the others in the set he has published here, as
this issuess featured poet, and they were all equally rewarding.
Rewarding too is Ambivalences of Color, a short slice of life by Robert
T. Sorrells, and John Bennetts Take the A Train, which can be considered a
companion piece to the recently published Outlaw Bible of American Poetry.
Its often said that a magazine reflects the sensibilities of its editor, I think
thats true, and we can be grateful for Jennifer Bosveld, whose sensibilities
include a commitment to people, to poetry, and to intentional living.
--Gregory Vincent St. Thomasino
http://www.laurahird.com/showcase/gregorythomasino.html
http://eratio.blogspot.com/
http://thepostmodernromantic.blogspot.com/
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