Friday, June 8, 2012

The New Poet Laureate—Since it Ain’t Me, I’m Glad it’s Her


I quickly recovered from my usual depression at being passed over yet again for selection as the new Poet Laureate of the United States.  But first I had to find out just who this Natasha Trethewey is and why her poetry matters. 

First off, I was embarrassed to realize that she had won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 2007 without me noticing.  And that at the young age of 46 this Gulfport, Louisiana born poet has publish three widely hailed volumes of poetry described as “exploring the intersections of memory and history” using both traditional and free verse forms.

Trethewey is the first Southerner to receive the honor since Robert Penn Warren was named the first Poet Laureate by the Library of Congress back in 1987.  She is the first African-American since Rita Dove in 1993 and only the fifth woman out of 27 honorees.

I have to hand it to the Library of Congress selection committee; they have tried hard in recent years to break out of the strict academic ghetto and the stuffy confines of the Eastern literary elite.  Over the last ten years Laureates have included Billy Collins whose work is often funny, accessible, and worst of all from the perspective of certain poetry snobs, popular; Ted Kooser the insurance executive and Unitarian Universalist from Nebraska whose work reflected life on the Great Plains; and Philip Levine, the former factory worker who chronicled the lives of autoworkers, the inheritors of the Jewish immigrant identity, and latter California farm laborers.

Like these poets Trethewey’s life experience informs her work.  She was born the daughter of a Black mother and a White father when such marriages were illegal in Mississippi.  She notes that on her birth certificate her father’s race was listed as Canadian, perhaps as a way to skirt the law.

Coming to grips with her mother’s murder by an estranged second husband when she was a 19 year old college student, has motivated and informed her work.

So has coming to grips with the complicated racial history of the South in innovative ways.

Her first volume of poetry, Domestic Work published in 2000 dealt with the forgotten and neglected of history--black maids, washerwomen, factory workers.  Her second book Bellocq’s Ophelia has been described as a sort of epistolary novella in verse based on a character imagined by a photograph of mixed-race prostitutes in New Orleans at the turn of the 20th Century.

Her third book excited the attention of the Pulitzer committee and led ultimately to her selection as Poet Laureate of MississippiNative Guard dealt with a regiment of freed slaves, the Louisiana Native Guards who were assigned to guard Confederate prisoners of war.

Beyond Katrina: A Meditation on the Mississippi Gulf Coast is a non-fiction work in which she delves deep into her own experience as well as the disaster and includes passages of poetry.

Trethewey is currently Professor of Creative Writing at Emory University in Atlanta.  Her new collection of poetry, Thrall, will be published this fall just about coinciding with her assuming her duties at the Library of Congress.

Letter Home

—New Orleans, November 1910

Four weeks have passed since I left, and still
I must write to you of no work. I've worn down
the soles and walked through the tightness
of my new shoes calling upon the merchants,
their offices bustling. All the while I kept thinking
my plain English and good writing would secure
for me some modest position Though I dress each day
in my best, hands covered with the lace gloves
you crocheted--no one needs a girl. How flat
the word sounds, and heavy. My purse thins.
I spend foolishly to make an appearance of quiet
industry, to mask the desperation that tightens
my throat. I sit watching--

though I pretend not to notice--the dark maids
ambling by with their white charges. Do I deceive
anyone? Were they to see my hands, brown
as your dear face, they'd know I'm not quite
what I pretend to be. I walk these streets
a white woman, or so I think, until I catch the eyes
of some stranger upon me, and I must lower mine,
Letter Home
a negress again. There are enough things here
to remind me who I am. Mules lumbering through
the crowded streets send me into reverie, their footfall
the sound of a pointer and chalk hitting the blackboard
at school, only louder. Then there are women, clicking
their tongues in conversation, carrying their loads
on their heads. Their husky voices, the wash pots
and irons of the laundresses call to me.

I thought not to do the work I once did, back bending
and domestic; my schooling a gift--even those half days
at picking time, listening to Miss J--. How
I'd come to know words, the recitations I practiced
to sound like her, lilting, my sentences curling up
or trailing off at the ends. I read my books until
I nearly broke their spines, and in the cotton field,
I repeated whole sections I'd learned by heart,
spelling each word in my head to make a picture
I could see, as well as a weight I could feel
in my mouth. So now, even as I write this
and think of you at home, Goodbye

is the waving map of your palm, is
a stone on my tongue.

—Natasha Trethewey

From Bellocq’s Ophelia, Graywolf Press, Saint Paul, Minnesota.


1 comment:

  1. As usual, you are spot on in your assessments. Personally, I think you should be the poet laureate. But maybe in another time, when we all can safely be corrupt, like the governor of Wisconsin. I will be home in about a week, and will call you or email you then, about coming back out.

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