IN WHICH WILL BE FOUND WHAT IS SET FORTH THEREIN

Saturday, January 17, 2009

AMERICAN BOOK AWARDS 2008


That was Ishmael Reed kicking off a Duke Ellington tune at Anna's Jazz Island in Berkeley last month, with Carla Blank taking the lead on violin.

Who knew that in addition to being a novelist, essayist and poet, Reed could take a turn at the keyboard?

The occasion was the 2008 American Book Awards of the Before Columbus Foundation.  Reed was instrumental in the creation of the foundation back in 1976, and they've been giving these awards since 1978.  This year's honorees included Douglas Blackmon, C. S. Giscombe, Nikki Giovanni, Moustafa Bayoumi, Angela Jackson, Fae Ng, Maria Mazziotti Gillian and J.J. Phillips.  Also honored was the posthumous volume by Lorenzo Thomas, Don't Deny My Name, that I edited and introduced, published earlier in the year by the University of Michigan Press.  I was out in Pennsylvania when word of the award reached me, but it transpired that the ceremony in Berkeley was to be held during the time the Modern Language Association was meeting in San Francisco.  So I took some time out from the MLA Poetry Division and other sessions, and jumped on the BART to get across the Bay in time for the festivities.  Seeing Reed at the piano was surprise enough; finding Taj Mahal there in the audience, a musician I have been listening to since I was fifteen, was all the award I needed.

Afterwards, Cecil and his family along with colleague Paul Youngquist joined us on the BART trip back to San Francisco and the Yerba Buena Center where we joined the MLA Off-Site reading, already in progress.  Cecil ran into one of his students on the BART train.




This year's Book Awards were hosted by poet Al Young.


































[principal photography by Anna Everett]

Friday, January 16, 2009

DAVID HOROWITZ LIES TO THE MODERN LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION

I wasn't able to make the MLA panel that featured David Horowitz, having commitments to attend other sessions having to do with, er, modern languages, so I've had to rely on subsequent reports to learn what happened.

The CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION recently ran a column on the event.  In that column they reported on objections to Horowitz's presentation from the audience, highlighting remarks made by Barbara Foley and Grover Furr.  According to the CHRONICLE, Furr said that he objected to Horowitz's presence on the panel not because of Horowitz's ideology, but "because he is a liar."

In his usual thoughtful and temperate way, Horowitz responded by bragging that he "was in the Civil Rights Movement before Barbara Foley was born."

Without outing Barbara's birth certificate, suffice it to say that Horowitz thereby proved Gordon Furr's point.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Tan Lin, Too


The latest volume from Manuel Brito's incomparable and long-running Zasterle Editions is Tan Lin's plagiarism project, which I hereby dutifully copy.

Find information about the press at this link.  Zasterle Editions can also be found at Small Press Distribution.

Monday, January 12, 2009

GAZA

"Are Palestinians and Israelis condemned to destroy each other physically and morally for years and for decades? Real agreements for peace and coexistence, like the ones reached by Mandela and de Klerk in South Africa, show how the bitterest struggles can be resolved by generosity, forgiveness, and a sense of history. Years ago, in my 1988 Palestinian diary, I quoted the words of an intellectual from East Jerusalem about the double dream of descendants of Isaac and Ishmael: the disappearance or nonexistence of the other. But the problem, he concluded, 'as much for ourselves as for them, rests in knowing whether we are prepared to accept something less than our dream.'
"After Oslo, the Israelis cherished the hope that they had realized their dream at the expense of the Palestinians' nightmare. This hope can now be seen to be totally illusory. Only recognition of Palestinian identity and the Palestinian right to an independent, democratic state will one day put an end to the tragedy in the Middle east."
--Juan Goytisolo

Goytisolo wrote these words for the newspaper El Pais a decade ago; they remain sadly timely.

Every day I hear news people on my television insisting that the problem is the refusal of Hamas to admit the right of Israel to exist.  I seldom hear this paired with reminders of such things as Golda Meir's statement that "there is no such thing as a Palestinian."  What can be more clear than that Israel refuses to permit the existence of an independent Palestinian nation with contiguous borders and autonomy. (Not to mention control over its own water and electricity resources.)

Twice I have heard David Shuster on MSNBC insist to his interlocutors that four-fifths of the deaths in Gaza are Hamas fighters, a number contradicted by absoultely every independent source.

The Israeli forces devastated the Jenin refugee camp at the beginning of the Bush administration, pursuing an absolute orgy of destruction in which they even went out of their way to destroy private cars parked along the roads and desktop computers in education offices.  Bush did nothing.  When the IDF invaded Lebanon and again pursued a policy of rampant murder and destruction, Bush again did nothing.  Now the official position of the Bush administration, with no comment from Obama, is that a cease fire from the waves of death in Gaza would be "premature."

In Lebanon, the IDf fired on UN observer posts, claiming that Hezbollah fighters were firing from that area, a claim refuted by multiple independent observers.  In Lebanon the IDf deployed antipersonnel weapons in civilian areas, in open violation of international treaties.

In Gaza, the IDF attacks UN schools where civilians have sought refuge.  The IDF uses mass deployments of white phosphor weapons, with predictable consequences.

Is there any one who truly believes that these tactics will put a halt to the Hamas rocket attacks.  Is there anyone who believes that this will lead to peace?  Is there anyone who believes that the political leadership in Israel sees this as a pathway to peaceful relations with an independent Palestinian neighbor?

Sunday, January 04, 2009

clickaphonnics - Duriel Harris at MLA off-site reading

clickaphonics - A.L. Nielsen at MLA off-site reading

MLA Off-Site Reading Part II









There were a few changes at this year's off-site reading:  People wore masks, Walter Lew's two minutes only took ten minutes, and I didn't wear a tie.