Platecleaning and pedagogy

This is based on a talk I gave (with the intentionally stultifying title of "Pedagogical implications of inequalities (social and other) at the graduate level") as part of a one-day conference called "Graduate Student Learning in the Humanities: Challenges, Best Practices, Perspectives", which took place on 28 September 2013 at the University of Toronto. The best bit probably starts around section 43.

Throatclearing

1. When I was invited to participate in a workshop on graduate pedagogy, I agreed to do it, because it was an unusual and interesting request—it was a seductive request—even though I probably should have said no. I mean, I have a dissertation to write, and writing this presentation would be (and was) a distraction from that. It would, so to speak, get in my way. It would be an obstacle.

2. But it would be an interesting obstacle, and one that would have some benefits. It would probably look good on my CV, and it would force me to consider and articulate my ideas about pedagogy, which is something you’re expected to do when you go on the job market. So it might, in some small way, help me towards one of my presumed goals in working on this PhD—of getting a job in academia.

3. And yet I have no mastery of the subject of graduate pedagogy, outside of my own experiences as someone in the fifth year of his PhD programme. I don’t study or research graduate pedagogy. But I was assured that the purpose of this workshop would be to start conversations, rather than to present or perform mastery, and I thought, OK, I can try to start a conversation.

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Names and lamentation

This is the text of a talk I gave way back in May 2011; some details are now out of date. An edited, revised, and finalized version appeared in postmedieval volume 4, issue 3 (Fall 2013). It is dedicated to Jane.


Aamodt. Adatto. Allen. Andersen. Anderson. Anderson. Anderson. Anderson. Antolini. Arce. Archer. Arechiga. Arnold. Ascher. Auricchio. Aver. Baker. Baldridge. Barney. Bartley. Baseel. Baunach. Beach. Beaulieu. Becker. Bedolla Huerta. Beers. Behrman. Belsher. Benjamin...
—David Abel, "Closet Drama"

 

1.

About seven years ago I spent a good ten minutes listening to David Abel recite names. Abel is a poet, and we were at a Sound Poetry Festival, so we were meant to hear this list of names as a poem. There was a note in the program that indicated the list comprised the names of everyone who had died in the past three months in Multnomah County, around Portland, Oregon, where the reading took place. I found it to be an interesting and even moving reading. My mother is not generally a big fan of “experimental” poetry, but she was there and she also found it to be interesting and moving. And so I want to think about this.

 

2.

A few years after that reading, I read Ernst Curtius’s European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages. While discussing “Consolatory Oratory”, Curtius writes:

Agius of Corvey heightens this biblical consolatio in the poem he composed in 876 on the death of the Abbess Hathumod (d. 874). He points out not only the patriarchs but also their wives died; likewise the Apostles and others besides. It takes him over a hundred lines (Poetae, III, 377, 229 ff.). Laudable industry! But hardly a “touching lament,” as it has been called.

Curtius here proposes that “laudable industry” does not necessarily result in a “touching lament”, and I thought: Well, maybe.

 

3.

Conceptual poetry is big right now, or as big as such things get. Marjorie Perloff, former president of the MLA and inveterate backer and promoter of up-and-coming “avant-garde” poetics, has made it her hobbyhorse lately, and a hefty anthology of conceptual writing was published this year. Conceptual writing (or conceptual poetry; the terms may or may not be interchangeable) is, at its purest, more about the idea behind the text than the ideas in the text. Kenneth Goldsmith types all the words in an issue of the New York Times—articles, advertisements, page numbers, obituaries—ignoring column divisions, just reading left to right—and publishes the result as an 840-page book. Laudable industry! But, in fact, yes. Conceptual writing encourages us to valorize the idea of the text regardless of its content. Goldsmith’s book is industry for industry’s sake. It is a monument to that industry, and it is that monumentalism that we might be moved or intrigued by.

 

4.

When we listened to David Abel’s poem, we could appreciate it for its conceptualist monumentalism. We could think: This is a list of the names of the dead. These were not the famous and holy dead of Agius’s poem; these were the ordinary dead. Oregon law keeps personal or specific details of deaths confidential; names and dates are all that the state will publicly proclaim of our deaths, and here Abel was publicly proclaiming them.

But there were details about the act of proclamation that were moving as well. The names were in alphabetical order by month of death, and as Abel read through each month’s list, the procession of the alphabet was one of the few threads we could follow, and that alphabetic procession felt as inevitable and familiar as, well, as the march to death itself, which sounds a little corny when I put it that way, but which was nevertheless effective during the reading. At times, Abel had to guess at how certain names should be pronounced. The society from which those names were drawn is manifestly a multicultural and multilingual one, and the materiality of the languages of those names—with all their inherent potential for interest and intrigue—was brought to forefront in their recitation.

 

5.

This occurs in Agius’s poem as well. He is writing in elegiac couplets, which means trying to work Hebrew names into a Latin meter. Working names into Latin metrical verse is a challenge, because names don’t always fit into the metrical patterns allowed in verse. Hebrew names are a particular challenge, since it isn’t always clear how the name should scan. And Hebrew names surely sounded as odd to medieval poets as they do to many of us today—that is to say, they could assert themselves as language outside of a meaningful context—especially stacked up in a row. Agius offers several lines or couplets that are nothing but names fit tightly into hexameter, Tetris-style.

 

6.

Again, laudable industry! But does this sort of formal showboating fit with Curtius’s demand that this poem be a “touching lament”? Well, maybe, maybe not, but we can certainly recognize it as another source of literary pleasure, a particularly oulipian pleasure. The Oulipo is a group of mathematicians and writers that formed in 1960 in Paris in order to investigate new forms for literature—Oulipo is short for “ouvroir de littérature potentielle”, a “workshop” or “sewing circle for potential literature”. Oulipian writing, then often features elaborate forms or constraints. Georges Perec’s novel La Disparation was written entirely without the letter e; it is, in part, a lament for his mother, who was “disappeared” by the Nazis and probably died in Auschwitz. The constrained writing, again, serves as a monument to his mother, all the more touching because of all the laudable industry that went into it.

But the novel is not all gloom; halfway through, the characters come across some famous poems, rewritten to exclude the letter e. The English translation features Hamlet’s “To be or not to be” speech, rewritten as “Living or not living: that is what I ask...”—and the pleasure of this text comes from the old wine poured into a new and tighter skin. Other medieval writers were more explicitly oulipean in their creative endeavours—Hucbald of St. Amand’s “Ecloga de calvis” is a 136-line poem in praise of bald men in which every single word begins with the letter c—but enjoying and valorizing Agius’s poem is easier now that the Oulipo have refined, articulated, and given context to its pleasures.

 

7.

Harry Mathews, a member of the Oulipo, writes:

Without a time machine at its disposal, the Oulipo has been unable to rescue from the limbo of the past those writers who, lamentably unaware of the group’s existence, could not know that they were creating paleo-Oulipian texts without acknowledgement. They have been placed in the special category of anticipatory plagiary.

Also known as anticipatory plagiarism. It’s a really wonderful idea that plays with the ready observation that people keep doing things in the past that hadn’t been invented yet. Aesthetics may be socially construed, but a particular type of aesthetic experience may well be enjoyed or created long before the process of articulation and refinement allows it to be socially construable.

 

8.

Listening to David Abel’s poem, though, my mother—a nurse—and I—a gay guy who came of age in the early ’90s—had another precedent in mind: The recitation of names at AIDS Quilt memorials. We’d sat through enough of those in our time to be familiar with the genre.

 

9.

What to do with all these connections, with all these desires? A new desire is articulated, a new difference from what was previously understood as universal is isolated, and communities that share that difference coalesce, and some look for evidence that this desire existed before it became socially construable. This is as true for sexual desires as for aesthetic desires. This is, in fact, what Curtius was doing in his book—looking in the Middle Ages for a precursor to his own socially construed aesthetic sense. But Curtius was convinced that his construal was the only possible and permissible aesthetics. Many avant-garde predecessors would have argued a similar thing about their aesthetics, that the “experiments” they made today would be widely read—universal—tomorrow.  But the queer swerve we’ve had since then encourages us to use the recovery of marginal creative practices and the reclamation of an ex post facto–garde to expand the list of possibilities, of differences, and of potential literatures, and to recognize that there are regions of our desire and of our humanity that we have not yet mapped.


Notes.

David Abel's “Closet Drama” was performed at Sound Poetry Festival II, 28 August 2004, Portland, Ore.; see also. Agius of Corvey's poem was translated into English in Frederick S. Paxton, Anchoress & Abbess in Ninth-Century Saxony: The Lives of Liutbirga of Wendhausen and Hathumoda of Gandersheim (Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 2009). The quote from Ernst Robert Curtius in on pages 80–81 of European Literature and the Latin Middle Ages [1948], translated by William R. Trask (New York: Routledge, 1953). For Marjorie Perloff on conceptual poetry, see her Unoriginal Genius: Poetry by Other Means in the New Century (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010). The anthology of conceptual poetry that had just been released when this was written was Against Expression: An Anthology of Conceptual Writing (Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern UP, 2011), edited by Craig Dworkin and Kenneth Goldsmith; other models of conceptual writing are available. Goldsmith's New York Times project is Day (Great Barrington, Mass.: The Figures, 2003.) Georges Perec e-less novel A Void was translated by Gilbert Adair (London: Harvill Press, 1995). You can find the c-ful tribute to bald men, along with an English translation, in Thomas Klein's article “In Praise of Bald Men: A Translation of Hucbald's Ecloga de Calvis” in the journal Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, volume 26 (1995). The Harry Mathews quote comes from page 207 of the Oulipo Compendium edited by Mathews and Alastair Brotchie (London: Atlas Press, 1998).

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