Getrude Press: Arisa White: The Interview

Arisa White is the author of two poetry chapbooks and the recipient of multiple awards and honors. Her first full-length collection Hurrah’s Nest, nominated for the 44th NAACP Image Award, made some of Gertrude’s editorial staff fall in love and want to know more. Her second full-length collection, A Penny Saved, was published by Willow Books. Gertrude’s Elizabeth Simson had the honor of interviewing Arisa for issue 19 of Gertrude. We hope you enjoy what we discovered.

Elizabeth Simson (ES): This is your first collection. How long have you been writing? Talk a little about the journey to creating this book. Poets sometimes ask us about the process of gathering poems for a manuscript. How did you select and order the poems for Hurrah’s Nest?

Arisa White (AW): I’ve been writing for over a decade. “Follow” was written as an undergrad at Sarah Lawrence. I was in a workshop with Thomas Lux. (I enjoyed staring at the slouch socks he wore with his tapered jeans.) After class, Thomas came up to me and said that if I ever needed anything—needed to talk—he was there for me. He thought it was me in the poem. He told me to get out of it. I was upset he thought it was me and equally moved by his caring. As I pulled together the poems of this collection, I had to honor the fact that these were true stories. I couldn’t escape them or separate myself from them.

I continued to write poems, without thinking about them as part of a collection, while taking Cave Canem workshops in Manhattan and in graduate school at UMass Amherst. A variation of Hurrah’s Nest was my thesis project. I sent the manuscript off to contests and publishers after grad school and received rejections. I reflected on what was working, what wasn’t. I got feedback from editor friends and asked non-poetry people to read it to see if it appealed to them, if they had questions about clarity, narrative arc, etc. Using all that feedback over these past four years, I deliberately put all my family poems together, narrowed it down to a time period, chronologically ordered them, and soon I could see what was missing, what wasn’t said.

“Disposition for Shininess” is one of those poems added to give it volume, to give my voice the rage and confusion it needed to create a fully complex emotional experience for the reader. “You smellin ya’self gal?” is the last piece I wrote for Hurrah’s Nest. (I was at Hedgebrook in 2010 and it came to me—I think subconsciously I wanted the challenge of writing lyrical prose—and I enjoyed writing it; I could hear my brothers’ voices so clearly. I laughed so much while writing it.) I needed the prose form to ground the collection, as well as be a narrative fulcrum to which all the other poems could refer.

In thinking about how to open and close the book, it made sense for me to begin it with a poem that uses my siblings’ names. The opening poem is somewhat an epistle to my youngest brother, chronicling the experiences he was not a part of. Then the closing poem addresses another brother, who is older, proposing the need to revisit and unearth the stories and beliefs that have shaped us, so that we are not limited by those stories and beliefs.

When Virtual Artists Collective accepted the book in 2011 for publication, I asked my siblings for permission to use their names. I sent them the manuscript and hoped that they approved of what I wrote. It was so great they said yes, quite immediately after I sent them emails. As I look back, it makes sense that this is my first collection—in some ways it is a tribute to the art making that my siblings and I would do when we were little. We created together, and I still keep them close when I create.

ES: There’s a commitment to truth and complexity in your poems, no simple heroes or villains. How does the form/structure/container of poetry support or challenge this complexity?

AW: I often think of poetry as a small private room. Maybe like a good size walk-in closet. And when I invite moments, experiences, and those people who were involved in the experience or moment into that private room, there is intimacy, there is vulnerability, and we will undeniably be human with each other. Our shadow and our light will come. Our good and our bad. Our shame and our triumphs. We will be sensate witnesses to and for each other. Mirrors and shields. And soon the language of right or wrong won’t make much sense. You are forced to live honestly or find a way to get out. And when you find the appropriate container for the poem, be it free verse or the various poetic forms, that containment requires a shedding (of your bullshit) and letting go (of judgments about self and other) to reach the thing that brought you to write the poem in the first place.

ES: You strongly inhabit your voice as oldest daughter in these poems about mothering and childhood. How does your identity of oldest daughter influence the way you approach writing?

AW: I haven’t consciously thought about my identity as oldest daughter factoring into my approach to writing, but what I have learned and understood as the oldest daughter is that everyone else comes before. A kind of personal neglect occurs. I’m more concerned about others; I often overlook my feelings and needs. So I must be careful about how I may obscure the truth from myself. A close of friend of mind, R. Erica Doyle, once said to me, years ago, that I need to write how I feel. No fancy metaphors, just say it plain. That was strange to me; it didn’t seem like poetry to write how I feel. That was a necessary breakthrough because I recognized I was still in my role as oldest daughter, nurturer, woman. Being so selfless, I had no self. I was a whispering voice. I was performing, instead of being. So writing now is more a discovery of something true, something forgotten, something lost along the way. I write now to nurture what is found into being.

ES: The book is dedicated to your siblings: Jamar, Ibert, Kayana, Shaquana, Nigel, and Uriah. Some of the poems (like “Sister”) seem to be a tribute to them. What do you hope to give your family through your poems? 

AW: Release. You know, sometimes you have those hard cries, where snot is running and tears are fat and stormy, and you allow yourself to be in it without judgment, shame, or embarrassment. There, in it to the max. Then you’re done; a quiet resolution takes over you and you are free—free—from that thing you’ve been holding on to for so very long.

ES: Do you have any advice for poets on writing about personal experiences in childhood?

AW: Write about it until you can’t write about it anymore. We see ourselves more clearly when we write about and from those childhood experiences.

ES: In your final poem in the book you talk about “uncovering to the grain.” While many of the poems in Hurrah’s Nest are painful, there is also a strong undercurrent of purpose in navigating pain in order to speak truth, confront complicity, and move forward in healing. What helps you to “uncover the grain” within your writing?

AW: Having people and, therefore, experiences that challenge me to look more closely, from another angle or perspective, so that I don’t get caught up on this one idea of myself or come to believe there is one way to be or do things. I don’t allow myself to get stuck or complacent—even though it is sometimes easier to go with the status quo, stay quiet, keep my head down. In ways that are healthy and safe for me, I take risks; I follow my dreams; I consider fear but don’t let it be the reason I do or don’t do something. And this enters my writing, this way of being in the world.

ES: In the midst of difficult stories, the poems “My Little Chuleta” and “It’s Not that My Brother Was Acting a Fool” provide the reader with moments of respite. Longer narrative poems, such as “Disposition for Shininess” and “The Small Places I Go,” are punctuated with punch-to-the-gut phrases: “I’ve learned to trust her like a hive” and “It’s winter when it comes to my words.” Can you talk a little about the process of crafting poetry that both carries powerful impact and leaves breathing space?

AW: It is so very intuitive for me. Most of the time, I am taking an emotion, this wordless thing, and putting language to it. I follow the ebb and flow of that emotion, its peaks and valleys, the way it shapes itself in the gut or chest. And because there is movement in emotions, there are places of breath, where it begins and ends. I try to get that down on my first draft, which I always write by longhand. Noticing the natural intelligence of the poem—prosody, line and stanza breaks, the evolvement of a metaphor, etc.—I then craft the poem around these elements. I whittle away, I add, until the poem has fully articulated its emotional life on the page.

What I wanted to capture in “I’ve learned to trust her like a hive” was the wariness, the desire and fear, of approaching something you know is full of sweet and goodness—there are stings, and possibly death if you’re allergic, that come with getting the honey. I try to find phrases and images that are emotionally complex with many layers. You must explore those layers within yourself to really access the full meaning. There is a way in which my poetry needs the reader to go within herself, to be an emotional being, in order to know what is being said. You can’t be afraid to deeply feel—in those most uncomfortable and complicated ways.

ES: What responsibilities do you carry in writing poems, in sharing them with the world?

The Interview continued here.

“Passion” by Kristyna Moran

Last month I had the pleasure of reading at WORD PLAY, a literary community of undergraduates at San Francisco State University. There I met Kristyna, who directs the group, and other word-loving folks. She shared the following poem, which contains line “it feels like I started the day and the sun never came up,” borrowed from the lyrical story in Hurrah’s Nest, “You smellin ya’self gal?”. Thank you for sharing this poem, Kristyna!

Passion
Wandering hearts delve into the song of misery
Lyrics are written in the stars-
Hearts are thundering, beating, drowning;
Lives are made of echoing lies
And wringing truths –
Souls writhe in the agony
Of our forefather’s honesty-
In just a glimpse of Time
Seconds die; Memory springs forth-
I am Me who exists
Solely by thoughts of You.
It feels like I started the day
And the sun never came up-
Clouds painted the atlas
Of thundering skies of happiness-
Life begins to sway and moan
According to invisible choreography;
It is not Truth that makes Me
It is Reality that encases You.

On My Tour: An Ekphrastic Experience at Dillion’s in Boston

Like most writers, I went to AWP in Boston, and I did an offsite reading at Dillion’s. The Heat it was called, and I was asked by my friend Laura Bogart to participate. Because I like to change things up, here and there, I decided to read work from a manuscript-in-progress–where the titles for the poems come from derogatory phrases for “gay” or queer-like creatures. I read the poem “Amazon Molly,” and while reading, an audience member created the drawing below–on the back he wrote: “Repetition is the key to my heart” followed by his signature. Only a pharmacist can make out his name.

It’s nice when poetry inspires more art. It’s like a collaboration of spirit.

Drawing

Me, pictured here with the gentleman who created the drawing while I read "Amazon Molly." Photo by Michael Massey

Me, pictured here with the gentleman who created the drawing while I read “Amazon Molly.” Photo by Michael Massey

Here is the poem for your reading pleasure and if you are inspired to create something from it, please do send it my way:

Amazon Molly

 

Scales are perfectly

shelved on your strands.

 

One at a time, I blow

democratic louses

from your silver head.

 

This is how it goes:

blow, blow until the wish

has the conviction of its sails.

 

It’ll arrive somewhere

in this co-created quantum possum.

 

Pale faces with one

continent between them,

chipping at Cornish hens—

 

Refresh. Please, refresh.

 

I want to hoard glyphs

and solutions for a smaller wound—

we haven’t gotten it yet.

 

Our hearts are weak,

our oratory short buses,

zoom and zoom, then AA.

 

It saddens me

we mark our privates with trees.

 

But sadder than that,

we think we don’t

mark our trees like pirates.

 

Aren’t you tired of looking

on your face like it’s

the only prize in the universe?

 

Don’t you want to know

that it has never been about you?

 

Keeping it fake,

Kleenex can smell your sneeze.

 

Inverting the subject,

the ocean is the eye’s birthplace.

 

But beyond that unblinking dress is Amazon Molly and her fry of she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she she–

 It must be exhausting

for freshwater to lick

all that sheesh!

No, no get me right,

my fairies have

the warmest Sheela-na-gigs.

 

The Charlie horses have been

worked out the hull—

what, you don’t believe my giraffes?

 

Listen, sit shiva.

 

Take your platforms away

and wash your scapulas with pine.

 

I’m serious,

if we are to move on

we must abandon the myth of our begets.

 

But sadder,

sadder than that,

I wait for you to first the line.

 

Check:                         [] yes    or         [] no     if you’re gonna meet me after hambone.

 

 

 

Toxic Masculinity

These are the ideas I’ve been rolling around in my head and grappling with in my poetry. Jacyln Friedman does an excellent job breaking down what it means for all of us, male and female, to be affected by toxic masculinity. We all are struggling to embrace the feminine.

Here’s an excerpt:

It’s time for a serious intervention in masculinity. It’s not enough to not be a rapist. You don’t get a cookie or a Nobel Peace Prize for that. If we want to end the pandemic of rape, it’s going to require an entire global movement of men who are willing to do the hard work required to unpack and interrogate the ideas of masculinity they were raised with, and to create and model new masculinities that don’t enable misogyny. Masculinities built not on power over women, but on power with women.

Toxic masculinity is damaging to men, too, positing them as stoic sex-and-violence machines with allergies to tenderness, playfulness, and vulnerability. A reinvented masculinity will surely give men more room to express and explore themselves without shame or fear.

This is going to take real work, which is why so many men resist it. It requires destabilizing your own identity, and giving up attitudes and behaviors from which you’re used to deriving power, likely before you learn how to derive power from other, more just and productive places. There are real risks for men who challenge toxic masculinity, from social shaming to actual “don’t be a fag” violence—punishments that won’t ease until many, many men take the plunge. But there are great rewards to be had, too, beyond stopping rape. Toxic masculinity is damaging to men, too, positing them as stoic sex-and-violence machines with allergies to tenderness, playfulness, and vulnerability. A reinvented masculinity will surely give men more room to express and explore themselves without shame or fear. (It will also, not incidentally, reduce rape against men as well, because many rapes of men are committed by other men with the intention of “feminizing”—that is, humiliating through dominance—their victim.)

These interventions start with a “feminine” activity: introspection. What did you learn about “being a man,” from whom? How are those lessons working out for you, and for the people you love and your communities? Taking action can be as simple as men publicly owning their preference for “female” coded things, whether that’s child-rearing, nonviolence, feminism, or anything else—and being willing to suffer the social consequences. It can be more formal, working with established organizations like Men Stopping Violence. As more men take responsibility for the work, it will surely also take on forms no one has yet envisioned.

Read the complete article here: Toxic Masculinity.

No One Should Have to Live in Fear of Violence | The White House

Today, President Obama signed a bill that both strengthened and reauthorized the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA).  Thanks to this bipartisan agreement, thousands of women and men across the country who are victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence and stalking will be able to access resources they need in their communities to help heal from their trauma. In addition, thousands of law enforcement officers will be better equipped to stop violence before it starts, and respond to calls of help when they are needed.

President Obama and Vice President Biden have steadfastly supported reauthorization—it’s what’s right for our country. We thank Senators Patrick Leahy, Mike Crapo, and Patty Murray and Representatives Nancy Pelosi, Steny Hoyer and Gwen Moore for guiding this legislation to passage.

For the past 18 years, since Vice President Biden initially wrote the Act in 1994, VAWA has helped to decrease the rates of domestic violence across the country. Three years ago, our federal interagency group on violence against women began meeting to consider gaps in our country’s response to this violence and make recommendations to Congress to fill those gaps. We are proud that many of these recommendations were included in the final bill. Now, we will be better equipped to recognize violence in its early stages, and help to reduce the number of domestic violence homicides.

The reauthorization also makes a strong effort to address the extraordinarily high rates of violence among our young people. Last week, in honor of Teen Dating Violence Awareness month, I had the opportunity to speak, along with Vice President Biden, at an event with families of victims of dating violence, and youth and organizations. It was incredibly encouraging to see people of all ages united in the fight against teen dating violence.

I am proud to say that now, teens and young adults will have better access to prevention and intervention programs to help break the cycle of violence around the country. Studies have shown that one in five women will be the victim of an attempted or completed sexual assault while they are in college. We need to find a way to help these young scholars be able to focus on growing and learning, instead of being fearful of being assaulted on campus. This Act will help by requiring colleges and universities to provide information to students about dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking and improve data collection about these crimes. We call on all of our colleges and universities to make ending sexual assault a top priority.

In addition, the bill removes barriers faced by lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) victims, whose needs are often overlooked by law enforcement, prosecutors, courts, and victim service providers.

We are also thrilled that Congress held the line and maintained protections for battered immigrants and took the important step of also reauthorizing the Trafficking Victims Protection Act in this same legislation.

Finally and very importantly, VAWA will bring justice for Native American victims. Rates of domestic violence perpetrated on Native American women are among the highest in the country. VAWA will help to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of the tribal justice system and bring perpetrators of violence to justice.

No one should have to live in fear of violence, especially in her home, and VAWA affirms that belief. Today’s signing ensures that victims and survivors can continue to be provided the vital resources they deserve. Our country is better off for it.

No One Should Have to Live in Fear of Violence | The White House.

Heading East to AWP

March 7—AWP Boston, MA
VIDA Prom
240 Newbury Street Boston, MA
8pm doors open, 9pm reading 10pm party
www.vidaweb.org/events/vida-prom-at-awp-2013

March 8—AWP Boston, MA
Willow Books Showcase
12pm, Room 306, Level 3
www.awpwriter.org/awp_conference/schedule_fri

AWP HEAT: The Fire Inside Reading
Dillion’s Restaurant & Bar
2:30pm, 955 Boylston Street
www.facebook.com/events/154887241333160/

The Next Big Thing

I’m it.

Thank you Rosebud Ben-Oni for tagging me to be a part of The Next Big Thing, which is blog-tag of writers answering a series questions about their next books and/or writing projects. If it weren’t for Cate Marvin, I wouldn’t have met Rosebud—my co-editor at HER KIND, a playwright, and poet whose collection SOLECISM is soon to be released in March by Virtual Artists Collective. (Big-up to the VAC crew!) Kamilah Aisha Moon says of Rosebud’s debut collection: “ The world needs these tough angel anthems.”

I know what she means—I get those “tough angel anthems” and the desire to write them, because with A Penny Saved, my next book, Thomas Sayers Ellis points out that my “nearly Olympian approach to Penny’s gradually forming voice proves that there are still modes of poetic expression, finely tuned strings, capable of reaching both despair and love in a single pluck or utterance.”

What is the title of your book? A Penny Saved


What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
 A poetic narrative that reimagines the true-life story of Polly Mitchell, who was held captive in her home for 10 years.

What genre does your book fall under? Poetry (and I would even say creative non-fiction)

Where did the idea come from for the book?
 Larry King. I was housesitting for a poet friend of mine and she had cable—a treat since I was in graduate school at the time and could only watch VHS movies on my TV/VCR. He was interviewing Polly Mitchell and I was taken by her story—why did she stay for so long? This was the question everyone was asking—why didn’t you leave? For me those questions resonated personally, and Mitchell’s story was a situation that allowed me to investigate what strong women do with all their strength when they enter an extreme situation. Her story exposed something deep within and I took the opportunity to find out something about myself, our culture, about love, and devotion.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?
 I started writing poems for this in 2006 while in residence at Atlantic Center for the Arts with Sharon Olds. Then I stopped for four years—I didn’t know what to do next with the poems. I was primarily writing poems from Penny’s (Polly) perspective. I was getting bored—there needed to be more voices, more perspectives, to this collection if I was to stay interested. I was reading Leadbelly by Tyehimba Jess at the time and got the idea to write from the point of view of the House where Penny lived. (Jess personifies Leadbelly’s guitar in his debut collection.) While on residence at Hedgebrook in 2010, I wrote poems from the point of views of Penny’s children, and of an imaginary friend; in 2011 I completed the first draft of the manuscript on residence at The Rose O’Neill Literary House, finishing it off with poems in the husband’s voice.

Who or what inspired you to write this book? Polly Mitchell, my mother, the culture of violence against women and children, fear, wellness, hope, and those beautiful, good days that I want to share.

Who is the publisher of your book?
 Willow Books, an imprint of Aquarius Press

What other works would you compare this book to within your genre?
 This is hard one for me to do, but while creating A Penny Saved, I read poems by Ai, Patricia Smith, Claudia Rankine, Dara Wier’s Reverse Rapture, Nikky Finney’s The World Is Round, The Bridge by Hart Crane, Philadelphia Fire by John Edgar Wideman . . . .

What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?
 Thandie Lewis would play Penny; Derek Luke—her husband, David; Quvenzhané Wallis would be the eight-year old daughter Lizzybeth; and the House would be the voice of Phylicia Rashad.

What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest? Funds-willing, I will collaborate with a director and choreographer to make a staged version of A Penny Saved.

Check out my tags for next Wednesday, February 6—an incredible bunch of writers, they are:

Roger Bonair-Agard, author of Bury My Clothes. A native of Trinidad & Tobago, a Cave Canem fellow and author of Tarnish and Masquerade and GULLY, co-founder and artistic director of NYC’s louderARTS Project, Roger is an MFA candidate at University of Southern Maine’s Stonecoast Program. He is a consulting artist with Young Chicago Authors and teaches at Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center. He is expecting his first child. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.

Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, author of Love Cake. 2012 Lambda Literary Award Winner and 2011 Pushcart Prize nominee Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha is a queer disabled Sri Lankan writer, teacher and cultural worker. She co-founded Mangos With Chili, the national queer and trans people of color performance organization, is a lead artist with Sins Invalid and teaches with June Jordan’s Poetry for the People.

Vickie Vértiz, author of Swallows.Vickie was born and raised in south east Los Angeles. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from Williams College and a Master of Public Affairs degree from the LBJ School of Public Policy, at the University of Texas, Austin. Her work is largely informed by urban immigrant whimsy.