Regular P&PC readers will remember our ongoing interest in the poetry published in the last quarter of the nineteenth century in The New Northwest—a weekly suffragist newspaper published out of Portland by Abigail Scott Duniway, a leading voice in the fight for Oregon women's suffrage. Between 2010 and 2012, we did a four part series on this poetry, which oftentimes appeared on the paper's front page, which was frequently written by Willamette Valley writers long before folks like William Stafford put Oregon on the national poetry map, and which was sometimes sourced or cut-and-pasted from other newspapers around the country (a common practice in an age when poets and their publishers didn't seem to care about regulating the circulation of verse via copyright laws). Then, in 2012 and 2013, we collated a set of these poems for use in the development of Brightly Dawning Day: Celebrating the Centennial of Women's Suffrage in Oregon, an original and experimental script produced at Willamette University earlier this year in commemoration of the one hundredth anniversary of Oregon women's suffrage.
Now Salem's start-up literary magazine, the Gold Man Review, has joined in the fun, reprinting a portfolio of seven suffragist poems from The New Northwest in its second issue—the one with the snazzy cover pictured above, which puns on the design characteristics of mass market women's magazines to transform the Gold Man pioneer who currently tops the state's capitol building into a Gold Woman pioneer. Themed around the "pioneer spirit," the issue joins the work of nineteenth-century poets with over twenty-five pieces by people writing in Oregon today, and it's also got a long interview with P&PC about The New Northwest, the history of women's suffrage in Oregon, the situation of American poetry in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, and the poems P&PC selected for reprinting in Gold Man with the assistance of students in a "Poetry of the Pacific Northwest" class we taught last Spring.
When you get a chance, pick up a copy of Gold Man Review for yourself. In the meantime, we're giving you a small taste of our interview here—a portion that we think displays some of the best of what an interdisciplinary liberal arts college can offer students: experience working with and using archives, in-class study, cross-departmental collaboration, research into the historical forms and genres of poetry, and engagement with social and community endeavors. We here at P&PC don't talk about the pedagogical possibilities of popular poetry all that frequently, but here's an example of what we do when we're not running the office and bringing you your weekly fix.
Gold Man Review: Why did you and your class decide to pick these poems [for republication in Gold Man Review]?
Mike Chasar: In addition to studying the poems, the most recent instantiation of my "Poetry of the Pacific Northwest" class also partnered with an experimental scriptwriting class in the Theatre Department that wanted to create a play about the history and legacy of women's suffrage in Oregon as one way to mark and commemorate 2012 as the one hundredth anniversary of Oregon women's suffrage. (See Century of Action: Oregon Women Vote 1912-2012 for other such events.) As part of the experimental nature of the script, the Theatre class thought it would be cool to start with a bunch of poems from The New Northwest, using them as raw material to collage, break up, or interlace through the script in funky and innovative ways. It can sometimes be difficult to figure out what to "do" with archival materials other than, well, archive them and study them; so we thought it would be interesting to motivate them in another way, too—toward the creation of a new piece of art.
So, our first goal was to select poems to present to that class, and toward that end we had two main priorities: 1) select poems that surveyed the different types of arguments being made at the time for extending the vote to women; and 2) select poems with varying poetic strategies, rhetorical components, and performance possibilities. We thought the former would gesture to some of the political complexities of that historical moment that get lost in a debate framed simply as "for" or "against" women’s suffrage. (As with the debate about healthcare today, people aren't just for or against it, but have different reasons for being for or against it, or partly for it and partly against it—you get the idea.) And we thought the latter would shine a light on the diversity of styles and poetic techniques of popular verse, which oftentimes gets characterized as entirely "sentimental" and generally homogenous in style, format, rhetoric, etc.; in actuality, the poetry is pretty diverse—song lyrics, persona poems, narrative poems, lyric poems, satire, dialect, etc.—so we wanted to honor that aspect of the writing.
I made the selections for Gold Man keeping these two elements in mind as well, so that we have inspir- ational song lyrics ("Campaign Song"), two very different dramatic monologues that make different arguments about women and the vote ("The Perplexed Housekeeper" and "'Siah’s Vote"), a serious narrative with children as main characters ("Reasons"), a humorous narrative ("Wife Versus Horse"), a romance ("Katie Lee and Willie Grey"), and a lyrical extended metaphor ("My Ship").
In addition to the generic diversity— all are also part of a culture of poetry that lent itself to oral delivery or performance—the poems also make a pretty wide variety of arguments for how and why women should get the vote: "The Perplexed Housekeeper" suggests that women are already excellent multi-taskers and won't be burdened with the additional responsibilities of voting; "'Siah’s Vote" argues that women already participate in voting via the advice they give to their menfolk; "Campaign Song" says women will help clean up a corrupted culture of voting, but also makes the problematic claim that "John Chinaman" can now do the work once done by women and thus free women up for public life; and "The Ship" shows us a character abandoned and forlorn because what must be the "ship of state" mentioned in Duniway's poem never comes for her. That's just a quick overview, but you get the idea: poets are using different poetic strategies to make different types of arguments about the political enfranchisement or disenfranchisement of women.
Showing posts with label gold man review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gold man review. Show all posts
Sunday, May 5, 2013
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Rhyming with Salem

From bilingual English/ Spanish readings at the Public Library, to Emily Dickinson set to music, an open-mic night of peace poetry, a couple of fisher poets reading at Willamette University, and contest and publication opportunities, the second half of this month is full of regular and not so regular poetry-related events. Do your soul—and your city—a favor by checking 'em out.

Sunday, April 17, 3-4:30 pm
Loucks Auditorium, Salem Public Library—Free to the Public
Willamette University professor of music and women's studies, Marva Duerksen, brings musical settings of poems by Emily Dickinson to the stage.
Poems for Peace
Sunday, April 17, 7-9 pm
Clockworks Cafe & Cultural Center—Free
Bring your own poem about peace to read, or come to hear others at this all-ages, open-mic event in downtown Salem.

Thursday, April 21, 5:30 pm
Gallery 205, Reed Opera House, Downtown Salem
For the past seven years, the Third Thursday Poets have been meeting to hear and share poetry by Oregon and non-Oregon poets alike. With plans for 501c(3) designation in the works and the creation of Brigadoon Books in the Opera House, TTP is setting the groundwork for another seven years.

Thursday, April 21, 7 pm
Eaton Hall, Room 209
Willamette University—Free to the Public
For the past twenty years Moe Bowstern has been known to fish for shad on New York's Hudson River, shrimp in the Gulf of Mexico, and salmon in Kodiak, Alaska. Geno Leech started fishing for crabs, shrimp, and albacore off the coast of Washington in 1979, but most of his ocean experience comes from working on merchant and salvage ships pulling other boats and barges out of wrecks off the beach. Both participate in the annual Fisher Poets Gathering in Astoria, Oregon, and both appear in the award-winning 2005 documentary Fisher Poets.

Thursday, April 21, 7 pm
Salem Public Library—Free to the Public
Efrain Diaz-Horna and Juan Marcos Cervantes will each do a 20-minute bilingual poetry reading followed by a Q&A and reception. Diaz-Horna, a native of Talara, Peru, has published poetry in Expreso, the Oregonian, the Hispanic News, the National Catholic Reporter, and in the book The Many Faces of Love. Morales, from Oaxaca, Mexico, was awarded the 2010 Proyeccion Latina for first place in poetry; he has recently published El Jardin del Eden.

Saturday, April 23, 6 pm
Undisclosed location that changes month to month
Every month, a group of poetry-lovin' organic farmers and their patrons and fans gather to read poetry and eat good food.
The 5th Annual National Poetry Month Contest for Children & Adults
Deadline: 5:00 pm, Friday, April 29th,
Sponsored by the Willamette Store & the Salem Public Library
In celebration of National Poetry Month, celebrity judges will give awards in three categories (Best Rhymed Poem, Best Unrhymed Poem, Haiku) for four different age groups (grades 1-4, 5-8, 9-12, adult). For complete contest guidelines as well as information on the May 14th awards ceremony and reading at the Salem Public Library, go here.

Named after the pioneer statue on top of the Oregon capitol building in Salem—not for the investor who teamed with Mr. Sachs—the Gold Man Review is accepting email submissions of poetry, fiction, non-fiction, art, and photography until May 1. Dedicated to featuring work by Salem-area residents, Gold Man pitches itself as, ahem, a pioneer in promoting the local arts.
The Blood Orange Review
One third of the editorial board for this online lit mag is located in Salem—poet Stephanie Lenox who recently received a grant from the Oregon Art Commission and who is looking forward to the issue of her first full-length book with the Willamette Valley's poetry publisher, Airlie Press. Blood Orange Review has just come out with its new number.
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