I read Octavia McBride-Ahebee' s blog because she is an accessible local poet with a powerful voice. She tells the truth through art that tears through the fog and the will to be blind. In her post today, Octavia asks Obama to put himself in the place of drone victims as well in the place of Trayvon Martin. In my mind, the drone program is also Racial Profiling. (See Guilty, Not, my previous post on this blog.)
Octavia McBride-Ahebee's posting today introduced a poet new to me, Solmaz Sharif. In his poem "Drone," he personalized an attack and I saw the connection. Go to her blog--click on the bold title below--read the poem! Come on back and let's talk.
Octavia McBride-Ahebee: Drone by Solmaz Sharif: Victims of Drones I am horrified by the Zimmerman verdict. I am equally confounded not by President Obama’s response to the ve...
Where does inspiration lie? Everywhere! Blessings, too, can arrive in Light and shadow and darkness. We give and we receive. What is the blessing here?
22 July 2013
18 July 2013
Guilty, Not
A hand that could curl around the handle of a gun
and reach with the trigger finger could surely throw
a punch up close and effectively. Maybe not.
Racial Profiling was at play in the beginning
and end of the action, in the "not guilty" of the verdict,
when we were so certain of the guilt. Bewildered.
We had such clarity that we didn't even call for
a Jury of His Peers until too late--because
who would've thunk? Ugly. Small. Law.
Since the murder of Trayvon Martin and the acquittal of George Zimmerman, my hands have been cold and my head has been spinning. Lyrica and Ibuprofen have been ineffective. Only poetry has helped. And thoughts of new ways of treating conflict proven by Nelson Mandela in South Africa. And lots of prayer.
These poems and poets in particular have given me minutes of clarity:
Posted at Poetry Pantry #159 at Poets United.
and reach with the trigger finger could surely throw
a punch up close and effectively. Maybe not.
Racial Profiling was at play in the beginning
and end of the action, in the "not guilty" of the verdict,
when we were so certain of the guilt. Bewildered.
We had such clarity that we didn't even call for
a Jury of His Peers until too late--because
who would've thunk? Ugly. Small. Law.
These poems and poets in particular have given me minutes of clarity:
(1) Velveteen Rabbit and her JULY 17, 2013 poem after Tisha b'Av "WATER FROM THE SOURCE" which addresses blessings fasting and growing while in "the fallen temple of justicemothers wailing for their sons --"
(2) Mama Zen at Another Damn Poetry Blog, where her poem "Not Yet" releases both astonishment and anger.
(3) At her blog, LaTonya's "Lobster Boil" releases both hopelessness and anger.(4) At Blog Over Easy: We stand our Ground
And there will be more to expand this list.
Add your links, please.
Posted at Poetry Pantry #159 at Poets United.
30 June 2013
Doves and. Machines
Let this blow your mind as it blew mine:
It is from the 1969 film Picasso Summer starring Albert Finney and Yvette Mimieux. Adapted into a screenplay by Ray Bradbury from his short story “In a Season of Calm Weather,” it is set to music by Michel Legrand. Despite a weak plot, the music and three animated sequences by Wess Herschensohn moved me no end! Not only did they explore Picasso in a way that helped me to see his work more clearly, the one sequence above also widened my perception of war. After watching the above, I turned off the film to search it on the web, and found this:
It is from the 1969 film Picasso Summer starring Albert Finney and Yvette Mimieux. Adapted into a screenplay by Ray Bradbury from his short story “In a Season of Calm Weather,” it is set to music by Michel Legrand. Despite a weak plot, the music and three animated sequences by Wess Herschensohn moved me no end! Not only did they explore Picasso in a way that helped me to see his work more clearly, the one sequence above also widened my perception of war. After watching the above, I turned off the film to search it on the web, and found this:
and this:
Together, these three videos entered my life as Picasso's Guernica never had before! In my search, I found that the creative reactions to Picasso's Guernica may rival commentary on any Shakespeare play.
Together, these three videos entered my life as Picasso's Guernica never had before! In my search, I found that the creative reactions to Picasso's Guernica may rival commentary on any Shakespeare play.
Here is my own:
Slate grey noon and rain in
June
sat me down to pull war
and people
from out my 2D
cartoon-framed
vision in a sheltered
life not Iraq,
Syria, Afghanistan,
Pakistan,
Israel, Palestine and
elsewhere.
Horses
are gone but not foot
soldiers engaged to
dishearten from land mines
and hidden bombs:
providers, mothers, priests,
and young ones with
explosives strapped to their
childhoods.
Doves
are there too close to
open-eyed blood we
pour in to food, zapping out
strength and hope
drowning all openings to the
villains’ millions,
billions—not humans, but dollars—trillions.
Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast
Posting for dVerse Poets Pub Open Link Night ~ Week 103.
Slate grey noon and rain in
June
sat me down to pull war
and people
from out my 2D
cartoon-framed
vision in a sheltered
life not Iraq,
Syria, Afghanistan,
Pakistan,
Israel, Palestine and
elsewhere.
Horses
are gone but not foot
soldiers engaged to
dishearten from land mines
and hidden bombs:
providers, mothers, priests,
and young ones with
explosives strapped to their
childhoods.
Doves
are there too close to
open-eyed blood we
pour in to food, zapping out
strength and hope
drowning all openings to the
villains’ millions,
billions—not humans, but dollars—trillions.
Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast
Posting for dVerse Poets Pub Open Link Night ~ Week 103.
29 June 2013
Birthday Carol
so beautiful that it doesn't take a mother’s
instinct to see me ... and this is my Birthday poem:
Today in South Africa Nelson Mandela
lives on, a prism spreading more Light
the longer he lingers on his death bed,
a man whose choices turned theories into practice
that transformed prisoners and masters into human
beings as restorative justice re-placed violence
with recognition—This is not magic, it is discipline.
Today, I woke privileged: expecting to find
coffee supplies and cat where I left them, to get
potable water from the kitchen tap, fill bowl
for cat, make coffee, and drink in peace at my own
computer—this too is not magic—it took
discipline to earn it within a country of
opportunity—and I want it for everyone.
At 62, I am no longer teaching
theatre, literature and writing, but learning
to apply lessons to my own living.
I’m no Mandela, but neither am I naïve
about causes and effects of poverty here
and there, about the many rewards for letting
go, relaxing, and forgetting now that I have
achieved my quarter acre of heaven on earth, my
ticket to ignore my country’s complicity—
and I need discipline, since I have no magic.
What I have more than ever is time—time
as past experience, as reflections now, as
future words on paper—a regular Christmas
carol of possibility—that wants only
discipline to bloom. Let me then turn this summer
Birthday into carol, an oral song of folk
festivals year round; let me stay inside the dance.
My 62nd birthday finds me a word spinner, trying to get behind my craft and add to the daily discipline of writing an effort to publish and let it fly out into the world. Within one year, let it be!
Copyright © 2013 S.L.Chast
18 May 2013
Stereotypes are Ugly
Geraldine Farrar as Madama Butterfly, 1907Metropolitan Opera de Nova York |
I, who have never met an ugly Asian, sat down to think about
Kelvin's prompt. My Asian experience is all within the USA. Here
are the highlights summarized chronologically:
1. Uncle Nishino
2. Chinese and Indian
food
3. Taiwanese roommate
Ye Fe Chou
4. Madame
Butterfly by Giacomo Puccini
5. Japanese set
designer Jun Maeda
6. Butoh dancers
7. Chinese Canadian
Ping Chong and Company
8. Korean students of English as
a second Language
9. Thai food
10. Noh theatre
11. Kabuki Theatre
12. Chinese Opera
13. M. Butterfly by David
Henry Hwang
14. Tea by Maxine Hong Kingston
15. Bunraku
16. Vietnamese students in Public School
English classes
17. World Affairs Council Seminar in
South East Asian Culture
Of these, Number 13 was probably the most intense. I saw Hwang's M. Butterfly first on Broadway, second in text (as part of the "Freshman Seminar in Multi-Cultural American Drama" I taught at the College of William and Mary), and third as a Hollywood movie. Only the movie disappointed.
The
Broadway play in 1989 with actors John
Lithgow as Gallimard and BD Wong as
Song Liling literally put me in my place. Not forewarned about the
content and message of the piece nor anticipating its relationship to Madame
Butterfly, I was taken in by the same racist stereotypes as Gallimard who
was “loosely based on” French diplomat Bernard
Boursicot and his relationship with Shi Pei Pu,
a male Peking
opera singer. Here is Wikipedia’s
summary of the
plot:
The
first act introduces the main character, Rene Gallimard, who is a civil servant
attached to the French embassy in China. He falls in love with a beautiful
Chinese opera diva, Song Liling, who is actually a man masquerading as a woman.
In traditional Beijing opera, females were banned from the stage;
all female roles (dan) were played by males.
Act
two begins with Song coming to France and resuming his affair with Gallimard.
They stay together for 20 years until the truth is revealed, and Gallimard is
convicted of treason and imprisoned. Unable to face the fact that his
"perfect woman" is actually a man, that has been posing as a woman
for 20 years to be able to spy, he retreats deep within himself and his
memories. The action of the play is depicted as his disordered, distorted
recollection of the events surrounding their affair.
The
third act portrays Gallimard committing seppuku (also
known as harakiri, ritual Japanese suicide through
self-disembowelment) while Song watches and smokes a cigarette.
So what were the stereotypes?
The
worst is that all of Asia is feminine/submissive to the male western world—HA! Here
are some memorable quotes from the play found at Goodreads:
“As soon as a Western man comes into contact
with the East -- he's already confused. The
West has sort of an international rape mentality towards the East.
...Basically, 'Her mouth says no, but her eyes say yes.' The West thinks of
itself as masculine -- big guns, big industry, big money -- so the East is
feminine -- weak, delicate, poor...but good at art, and full of inscrutable
wisdom -- the feminine mystique. Her mouth says no, but her eyes say yes. The
West believes the East, deep down, wants to be dominated -- because a woman
can't think for herself. ...You expect Oriental countries to submit to your
guns, and you expect Oriental women to be submissive to your men.”
― David Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly
― David Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly
“Consider it this way: what would you say if a
blond homecoming queen fell in love with a short Japanese businessman? He
treats her cruelly, then goes home for three years, during which time she prays
to his picture and turns down marriage from a young Kennedy. Then, when she
learns he has remarried, she kills herself. Now I believe you should consider
this girl to be a deranged idiot, correct? But because it's an Oriental who
kills herself for a Westerner–ah!–you find it beautiful.”
― David Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly
― David Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly
“Why, in the Peking Opera, are women's roles
played by men?...Because only a man knows how a woman is supposed to act.”
― David Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly
― David Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly
“Tonight, I've finally learned to tell fantasy
from reality. And, knowing the difference, I choose fantasy.”
― David Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly
― David Henry Hwang, M. Butterfly
The
classes I have taught since 1989 have all, in one way or another, been about identity
vs. stereotypes/expectations. I champion curiosity, inquiry, listening. As in Kelvin’s prompt, the results I am after
are much bigger, but we start always with individual experience. I enjoy diversity.
I
first learned I was white European and racist in 1969, two decades before this
play taught me the depth of that racism, sexism, and classism. I was getting on a Greyhound bus in Worcester,
MA, to travel to Albany, NY where my parents were waiting for me. I looked up
and saw all the faces, all black faces. I
had never been in a place where everyone else was Black, and I wondered for the
first time in my life how it felt for my African-American friends to experience
White. My first instinct was to back up
and step off the bus, but I didn't I
walked to the back of the bus and sat down.
I had experienced difference, but not danger—I hope I will never know the full
extent of racism experientially.
Now
I love that this life-changing moment occurred on Memorial Day weekend. Insight into self, good or bad, is always
memorable.
Thank you, Kelvin S.M.
Thank you, Kelvin S.M.
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