The Pee in the Pool of On Line Poetry, by Terreson

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Editor’s note:

You’re a poet or you’d like to be, and you’re at home or maybe work, with your computer.    Wouldn’t it be great to write a poem and post it into a forum for others like yourself to read and give feedback on, maybe spiff up some of your work, get it ready to submit somewhere, learn a few things or a few things more, find some creative, inspiring people?

The forum conversations could tend along the lines of the letters between poet Hart Crane and the editor of Poetry, Harriet Monroe.    Within the recent article in the New York Review of Books, A Great American Visionary, Colm Tóibín discusses the give and take between Monroe and Crane after he submitted his poem “At Melville’s Tomb” to her.    Here is the end of that discussion:

Monroe had commented as well on the opening of the last stanza:

          Compass, quadrant and sextant contrive
          No farther tides….

“Nor do compass, quadrant and sextant,” she wrote, “contrive tides, they merely record them, I believe.”

“Hasn’t it often occurred,” Crane replied,

that instruments originally invented for record and computation have inadvertently so extended the concepts of the entity they were invented to measure (concepts of space, etc.) in the mind and imagination that employed them, that they may metaphorically be said to have extended the original boundaries of the entity measured?

In the same letter, he quoted from Blake and T.S. Eliot to show how the language of the poetry he wrote and admired did not simply ignore logic, it sought to find a logic deeply embedded in metaphor and suggestion.

Wouldn’t it be great to be a modern-day Hart Crane and find a Harriet Monroe to discuss such matters of creativity with? To this end, there is an article here at Clattery MacHinery on Poetry called 25 Online Poetry Forums and Workshops where you can click and explore select poetry forums.    To this same end, you could explore “The IBPC Boards” on the sidebar of The InterBoard Poetry Community web site to see where you might belong and how the conversations tend.    What a perfect place, the internet, where from the comfort of your own home, from wherever the creative urge strikes, you may share your poetry, and enter discussions on poetry with like-minded people.    Maybe, however, you cannot, or it is just not that easy.    Maybe there are community tendencies or social constrictions that would discourage you, and you would give up on this idea.    Maybe on line poetry has grown so large, that it is time for it to look at itself, like any legitimate field must.

Everything written below is by Terreson.

–Clattery MacHinery on Poetry

 

 

 

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Dear Reader,

Are poetry boards good for poetry?

I wonder if anyone else has wondered about something: are online poetry boards good for poetry?    A subset of questions might run something like this.    Do the boards benefit poets, the new and inexperienced especially who, in most cases, are grappling with the vital stuff of finding an authentic voice, gaining confidence in themselves, working through the canon, trying to figure out if they have something essential to say, and all at the same time?    Do the boards, viewed as communities, engender poetry whose language is also authentic or do they falsify the poetry experience?    Another question comes to mind.    Is even the notion of an online poetry community good for poetry?    And maybe one last question.    What impact on poets, and on poetry itself, do the parameters, the rules of conduct and the by-laws, of many boards have?

I think it possible that the poetry board experience falsifies poetry and renders it inauthentic, which is a peculiar thing to have to say about online sites many poets, new and experienced, flock to both in order to improve their skills and to find like-minded people who are devoted to the art in the first place.    In the history of poetry, and with rare exception, no such community of poets and their critics has ever produced first-rate poems.    To the extent poetry is a community it is more like an unendowed college, with each collegian operating in tandem and usually alone.    Simply put poetry has always had the features of a cottage industry standing outside notions of community.    A notable exception might be Mallarme’s famous Tuesday nights in Paris when fellow Symbolists gathered at his home to read their poems to each other.    Even here, however, I am not aware that those poets engaged in analysis, criticism, parsing and such.    Certainly they were motivated to create a, then, radically new aesthetic, a defined program in which they each had a vital interest.    But whether or not community, in and of itself, is beneficial or harmful to poetry is a larger question, looking almost existential actually, and best left to individual poets to sort through.    The smaller, more manageable question might again be this:    generally speaking, are public poetry boards operationally designed in such a way that they kill the art by falsifying the experience or do they benefit the art?

Here is some of what I’ve come to suspect, and drawing on nearly ten years of participating in various online poetry communities, both on the boards and in the chat rooms.
 
Terreson
 

 

 

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The Pee in the Pool of On Line Poetry: Are poetry boards good for poetry?

 

Notions of Community.

Boards and rooms tend to place first emphasis on community cohesion, with poetry, poetry-related conversation, and the free exchange of ideas viewed as secondary.    It is interesting to view a poem allowed in the name of free speech that expresses violence, threats of violence, bigotry, and sexism.    Then to notice how the exchange of views in heated debate is closely monitored by moderators, often admonished, sometimes deleted from a forum as inflammatory.    The contradiction is interesting.    What it signifies is that a particular board’s community cohesion, and its culture, is an animal in its own right and takes precedence over the artistic project(s).    The mantra frequently expressed is: ’be nice.’    The suspicion, however, is that what actually matters, and in top down fashion, is the board’s culture and not the poetry or the exchange over ideas concerning poetry.    So the question becomes: does such a culture falsify the poetry experience?    Does it tell the online poet, say, that parenthetical bitch language in a poem is okay, whereas honesty in critical discussion is not?    My sense is that the free exchange of ideas is viewed as dangerous to community, but that poetry is not, since, it honestly doesn’t matter.
 

Poet/Critic Dialogue.

Rarely, if ever, is the meaningful dialogue allowed between the posting poet and the posting critic.    Board guidelines tend to explicitly discourage the exchange.    Poets are even told to thank the critic no matter what has been offered in the way of critical response.    The password defining the parameters of the poet to critic relationship is “don’t crit the critter.”    It is a rule, an effective gag order, that causes the head to wag and wobble, and one again I believe designed more for the sake of community cohesion than for the sake of the poet and poetry.    The unfortunate consequence is that poet is put at the disadvantage, while critic is allowed to say practically anything with impunity, no matter how uncomprehending, or even biased.

Common sense suggests that the critic is no more likely to know the nature of good poetry than is the poet.    I know of no case in the history of literary criticism where a school of thought has not been superseded eventually by another or taken to task for what it failed to understand.    And the suspicion becomes twofold: comments on a poem are often made only to satisfy a required number of commentaries in order to get a poem posted, and critics can, often do, comment in a compensatory, self-serving fashion, or with a bias that frequently disenables their perspective.    Add to this the extent to which online critics often do not bother to ground themselves in both the canon of poetry and critical theory, and, again, question of motivation comes into play.

Why then should a commentator be given a license the posting poet is not allowed?    It was Auden who divided the world into two camps.    The prolific and the devourer.    In the first camp he put poets along with farmers.    In the second he put professional critics along with politicians.    This rather begs the further question: if poetry boards sanction the frequently inept critic for whom are the boards meant?    Are poets, the bread and butter of poetry boards, also its fodder?    If so, here again there appears to be a falsification of the poetry experience online that is not healthy, especially for the new poet.
 

Poetry Board as Workshop.

Then there is the proposition that poetry boards are intended to function as workshops.    I am satisfied that, by and large, the public boards fail in this function.    First, emphasis is placed on production and not on refinement.    Here too the system of criticism contributes by its own lack of authenticity, by its lack of in-depth reading, and by its lack of sincerity.    And, secondly, the sheer size of many boards is neither conducive to meaningful exchange nor to the kind of developed relationships between poets that can best benefit artistic growth.    Having been a member of a small, private board for nearly two years where the members have had the chance to follow each other’s progress and where, because of the shared history, each other’s poetry is followed, commented on, entered into with greater comprehension, I am convinced of the failure of the larger boards to function as workshops in a meaningful sense of the office.
 

The Insincere Reader.

Participating members can also contribute to the falsifying of poetry.    While I’ve met many poets, new and old, clearly devoted to the discipline for its own sake, and who have both the instinct and the hunger for authentic poetry, two contrary salients stand out.    First, there are the scores of posted responses to poems entirely lacking in sincerity.    They tend to be complimentary and generic.    Recently I was reminded how Donald Hall once decried America’s growing number of “McPoets,” products of false praise and encouragement without the supporting evidence of talent and ability.    If poetry is to be taken seriously the inflationary effect of the unwarranted compliment becomes a serious problem.
 

Anti-intellectual Element.

Then there is the anti-intellectual element on poetry boards.    If, as Yeats thought, poetry is to speak to the whole body and to the whole of the human experience, then it must speak to the whole soma, to the senses, to the ear, to the groin as much as to the head.    In brief: poetry must be as much a felt experience as the felt experience thought about.    And yet there are those, none too few, who would disallow from the boards exchanges in poetics, prosody, and critical thinking.    This is not a good sign.    It does not bode well for poetry.       

 

 
from Gitanjali and Fruit-Gathering by Rabinadrath Tagore, introduction by, the frontispiece by Nandalal Bose
 

Interboard Understanding.

There also seems to be a collusion between public poetry boards that speaks to something resembling a backroom politicians’ understanding.    On many boards, at least, members are not allowed to raise questions about other boards and, by extension, about the design and the parameters of the online poetry board system in general.    Again, the head is made to wag and wobble.    The circumstance speaks to a cartel of shared interests among board administrators.    It too suggests a culture that has less to do with poets and poetry and more to do with safe-guarding its own green zone, what again must end up falsifying the poetry experience on line.

If poets are discouraged from raising questions and challenging precepts in their own community how then can they be expected to see to one of poetry’s cardinal responsibilities, that of breaking taboo and challenging clichés in behavior, perception, and language?    Viewed from a certain standpoint, vital poetry keeps as a danger to the community, be the township bureaucratic, corporate, or domestic.    And I am persuaded that as much is expected of poetry by the many townships.    So what is to be made of a circumstance in which poetry’s own township displays the bunker mentality?   
 

Board Administrations.

I’ve saved the most serious question for last: does the poetry board infrastructure of moderators and site administrators benefit the poet and create a free range environment encouraging poetry?    Closest to the point, does it actually engender the community the system is designed to keep in place?    Here my question is rhetorical as I am persuaded the answer is no.    I have spent some few years as both a board moderator and as a poetry chat room host.    I am settled in the opinion that the greatest danger to poetry on line is the governing system of board moderators and site administrators, which system proves the Orwellian insight.    All animals are created equal, some more than others.    An insight that cannot be more abhorrent to artists in general, poets in particular, whose vocation requires they be slightly anarchistic, certainly free wheeling and passionate in their convictions, if they are to keep creative in their artistic personalities.

I’ve heard all the arguments for the necessity of the governance, which is what it is.    The salient of which might be that the system safeguards public poetry boards from so-called trollers.    The history of the system suggests that the abuses meted out by moderators and site administrators with the tools to delete posts and ban members rather outweigh the safeguards.    A poetry board’s rules and by-laws is often a matter of subjective interpretation, something that fundamentally comes into play.

On a member’s side of the divide, it is clear that moderators are allowed more liberties than they are.    And among members it is generally recognized that a moderator’s own poem should not be taken too closely to account, that a deferential comment, even if falsely given, is best.    (And I guess I must wonder how the circumstance affects the inexperienced poet who perhaps notices the insincere comment on a moderator‘s poem, often praising it without warrant.)    It is also clear that to question a moderator brings down on the member the approbation of other staff moderators, that to criticize a moderator’s poem can result in the same.    When this happens there is an unmistakable closing-of-ranks, and the divide that all too many members know becomes sharper, more well defined, and sends out a certain other, Orwellian message.    Of all the online poetry board features, the politics infused into the environment by the two-tiered system of moderators/site administrators and members may just be the most pernicious, may be what falsifies the online poetry experience the most, at least when the experience is viewed as an artistic project.

The on line poetry experience is not limited to the posting, public airing of a poem.    Nor is it limited to the poet/critic exchange.    To say it again, at its best it is a free range environment, call it a Montessori school yard.    As the system stands I think it possible it is not just a failure, but a betrayal of the instinct for poetry.    Back in 1991 Robert Bly put together a collection of essays on American poetry: “American Poetry: Wildness and Domesticity.”    The collection includes an interview with Bly, conducted by Wayne Dodd.    From the interview:

“Dodd: ‘It may also be that poets will be afraid to risk doing the really different thing, that might seem to be profoundly true to them nonetheless, for fear of being accused of peeing on the floor.’

Bly: ‘Oh, indeed!    That’s right!    I’m sure that the reviewers of Pound’s early work, which had a lot of freaky originality, accused him constantly of being poorly house-trained.    What would originality look like today? . . . It’s possible that originality comes when the man or woman disobeys the collective.    The cause of tameness is fear.    The collective says: “If you do your training well and become a nice boy or girl we will love you.”    We want that.    So a terrible fear comes.    It is a fear that we will lose the love of the collective.    I have felt that intensely.    What the collective offers is not even love, that is what is so horrible, but a kind of absence of loneliness.    Its companionship is ambiguous, like mother love.’”

In my view the collective Bly speaks of and the poetry board culture I draw attention to, at least as it perpetuates itself with an eye to its own maintenance, bear a certain family resemblance.
 

 

 

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Terreson is an itinerant poet, sometime novelist, short fiction writer, and essayist.    Originally from Florida he presently lives in Louisiana where he assists in research into honey bee genomics.    He welcomes your comments at terecone {at} aol {dot} com.
 

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1,490 responses to “The Pee in the Pool of On Line Poetry, by Terreson”

  1. Thank you. This is a subject that needs to be addressed for young poets, old poets, poets still learning unless we want to end up with poets who write to satisfy board monitors but have no individuality, are afraid to speak up and out…when that happens poetry will die alongside free speech.

  2. Hi Vintner,

    So your advise, then, is not to whine about the situation, but to buck up and take it? You seem to be confirming what Terreson is saying, just differing with him on whether to disagree with the situation, or maybe even whether to talk about it. Certainly if one talks about it, or especially if one writes an essay about it, it would be contrued by you as whining.

    C.

  3. Forums and workshops are clubhouses for those too overwhelmed by the loneliness of being a writer. That makes them handy things to have around.

    But poets in packs are an intolerant bunch and each forum’s participant’s narcissism amplifies their neighbors and the end result is an atmosphere antithetical to originality and creativity. That makes ’em poor things for a writer to rely on for anything substantiative.

    Oh, and Vintner’s response is a typical one for a forum habitue who thinks of them as something special, so he should be forgiven his blindness.

    -blue

  4. “So your advice, then, is not to whine about the situation, but to buck up and take it?”

    Take what? The generosity of those who host such sites? The sacrifice of those who administer and moderate them? The selflessness of those who take the time to give us their honest impressions of our writing?

    Short answer: Yes, with gratitude.

    “Certainly if one talks about it, or especially if one writes an essay about it, it would be construed by you as whining.”

    Yes, whining is whining. Spend some time on critical forums. You’ll see hundreds of Terresons and Beau Blues passing through.

    It’s always the writers whose work is savaged or ignored in workshops who whine about how such sites are run. Why do you suppose that is?

  5. Hi Vintner,

    “Take what? The generosity. . .?”, you ask.

    Take what? Abuse too? Among other things, the article pinpoints abusive communication at forums, mistreatment of poets.

    Now I’m speaking, Vintner, and Terreson can speak for himself, but I do not get ignored at the forums, never have. Why do you suppose I would welcome Terreson’s article here? Do you see Pat Jones’ comment above? Pat Jones is a gifted poet and gets ignored at no forum she posts on.

    Precisely which point that Terreson makes do you disagree with? And it’s fine if you do. I could find points to disagree with. But, you are personally attacking the writer, and ignoring both the intent of the article and any of his well-developed thoughts. This post is rocking online poetry right now. And, pardon the attack, but you sound like you are whining. Why do you suppose that is?

    C.

  6. Here are links to accessible poetry forums and blogs that have permitted their poets to discuss this matter:

    The Critical Poet (dot org)

    Babilu

    Books Inq.: The Epilogue

    FreeWrights Peer Review

    Poets.org

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s April 26th by the WordPress calendar, and I am editing in links to discussions at two poetry boards:

    Mosaic Musings

    SplashHall Poetry & Art Forums

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s April 28th, and another poetry forum has added a discussion thread:

    The Gazebo

    Point of information too: that these forums I link to in this response message, are of threads you may click into. Additionally, there are private discussions going on about Terreson’s essay on at least three other forums.

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s later April 28th, and I missed this discussion started a couple days ago:

    The Critical Poet (dot com)

    Developing at The Critical Poet (dot org) as I write: the site moderators are planning on closing that thread.

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s April 29th, and I stand corrected on The Critical Poet (dot org) closing their thread on this subject. See:

    Comment #104

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s April 30th by the WordPress calendar, and a blogger has started a thread:

    Significance & Inspiration

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s May 1st by the WordPress calendar, and another blogger has started a thread:

    Carter’s Little Pill

    Also, a poetry board participant has taken up Terreson’s article point by point in two ongoing discussion threads at these points:

    The Critical Poet (dot com)

    The Critical Poet (dot org)

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s May 2nd by the WordPress calendar, and two more bloggers have started a thread:

    Dragoncave

    Terminal Chaosity

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s May 3rd, and another poetry forum has begun a thread:

    Desert Moon Review

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s May 11th, and I notice two more forums have threads:

    Writers’ Dock

    Poetry in Baltimore

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s May 12th, and another forum has taken up the discussion:

    Poetry 4 Suzanne

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s May 25th, and there are two significant tangent threads:

    Poets.org: Locking Question

    Babilu: Questions for poetry forum survey

    Plus, for easy navigation, the Gazebo discussion is split into four quickly “archived” threads:

    Archived through April 29, 2008

    Archived through May 03, 2008

    Archived through May 04, 2008

    Archived through May 08, 2008

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s June 3rd, and I missed this discussion started May 4th:

    Between the Lines

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s June 27th by the WordPress calendar, and one week ago, another discussion began here:

    Poetry, Inc

    But, same forum, note here as well:

    Poetry, Inc

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s August 20th, and another forum has taken up the discussion:

    Arcanum Cafe

    C.

    ~~~

    It’s November 18, 2008, and I have not added two blog posts and a forum post where the discussion has been taken up since I updated this response last:

    Delectable Mnts

    Nanette R. Rivera: poetry board wars rage on

    Nanette R. Rivera: henry the just

    C.

    ~~~

  7. “Precisely which point that Terreson makes do you disagree with?”

    I disagree with the only point Terreson was trying to make: that workshops are evil because they tell poets the truth about their work from a reader’s perspective (i.e. the only perspective that matters). I don’t get the sense that Terreson is a self-promoting spammer like Beau Blue. The question arises: if these workshops are such dens of inequity why does Terreson frequent so many of them? Is he a hypocrite–the preacher caught in a cathouse? A pseudointellectual who tends to ignore the critical forums in order to use the site’s discussion venues to bore members with tedious rants like this one? A failed poet bitterly trying to shoot the messenger? A sociopath with a messianic martyr complex, desperate to save the world from the ravages of honest artistic evaluation? All of these?

    It matters not.

    “…from the comfort of your own home, from wherever the creative urge strikes, you may share your poetry…”

    As evidenced by the fact that your list of workshops conspicuously omits four of the more serious ones, you make the same error on which Terreson’s pouting is based. You don’t understand the difference between a vanity and a critical venue. No doubt you and he have either never joined such groups or have been ejected from them due to your misapprehensions. At the heart of Terreson’s lack of understanding is this:

    “The password defining the parameters of the poet to critic relationship is ‘don’t crit the critter’.”

    By posting our work in a critical environment we are asking for people’s honest opinions. Once the poet has received these impressions clearly enough what is there left to do but thank the critiquer? These aren’t chat sites; posting a poem is not an invitation to discuss its subject matter at length. If you feel that the critical skills of others are not equal to yours move to another venue. Alternatively, you can take the path chosen by most wannabe artists: blame the audience! Consider them obtuse (“lack of in-depth reading”), disingenuous (“lack of sincerity”), “inept”, “self-serving” or motivated by politics and personality. Walk away, shaking your head and muttering “They just don’t get it!” Continue to falsify the workshop experience. Do whatever keeps the truth of failure at bay. Don’t let a little paranoia (“…permitted their poets to discuss this matter”) get in your way!

    Clearly, Terreson, Beau Blue and you haven’t yet attained the maturity and detachment to benefit from critique. Give it a another decade or two. If you want to jump-start the process ask yourselves this question: “How would a stranger know, without seeing a word of it, that our work was ignored or rejected by knowledgable critics?”

  8. Hi Vintner,

    From the bias you bring to Terreson’s article, I am thinking that by serious workshop, you may mean the most insulting or stifling boards–but I do not know which four you have in mind. List them. It is okay to critique them here. This is what the article is about. You may know four forums I haven’t heard of. We can talk here, even if we cannot there, however.

    Beau Blue speaks for himself in the remarkable work he brings to us at his site: Beau Blue Presents. His commentary is welcome and respected here anytime. He is someone to be listened to, in more ways than one, as his work precedes him most anywhere he goes. Through his singularly creative efforts, he himself qualifies as a knowledgeable critic.

    This blog is one of my contributions to poetry online. Where are yours? When I read a comment by you, what back drop should I bounce it off? You attack Blue, but can you shine his shoes? maybe you can. But what is your work?

    But anyway, Terreson’s point is definitely not that workshops are evil. You made that up. The reason he frequents them, is that he loves them, the same reason he wrote the article. So your misread of what he says is not only apparently bias as above, but also quite basic. He is asking that we all who go to the forums, examine the practices that do not foster good poetry, such that we can foster good poetry. He itemizes these aspects, and critiques them. He has many others thinking, and has entered dialogue with them on the forums and through e-mail. Are you in that dialogue, are you thinking this through, or only reacting in a knee-jerk defense of some set-cement status quo you had been wading in?

    One feature of a good poetry forum, is that it allows poets and those commenting on the posted poems, to enter into conversation. That conversation is necessarily tangential at times. You seem, in your “immaturity” (to use your own insulting terminology back at you) to prefer the rigidity of boards that stifle the dialogue that goes on at true forums, a forum by definition being a place where we can all go and speak our minds freely.

    C.

  9. “But anyway, Terreson’s point is definitely not that workshops are evil.”

    Thanks, but I don’t need your help to read the article. Like you and to almost anyone but you it is transparent enough.

    Have a nice day.

  10. Hi Vintner,

    You cannot say anything without a put-down behind it, it seems. You must thrive on such forums, both in being put down, and doing it too. It’s too bad.

    But, yes, your reading was quite shallow. You are alone in this thread with such a poor read, but you caught a good guffaw over at the poets.org thread. It stifled conversation on the article there momentarily–but not here.

    C.

  11. “You are alone in this thread”

    Actually, we both are. The two spammers hardly count. So much for “rocking online poetry”.

    Since you have bought into Terreson’s sniveling I’m going to mark you down as voting for “whining creed”.

    Thank you for participating.

  12. Spammers?

    No no. In fact the only poet I am unfamiliar with is you, and I get around.

    The three other responders are terrific participants in the online community of poets, and pretty darn good themselves. Two of them have their own web sites designed to get the word out about other people’s poetry and ideas.

    What do you do?

    You can mark me down for anything you want. However, you come into a thread here, with the idea of insulting everyone else, everyone else. There’s Terreson, Pat, Beau, Jennifer, me . . . –and you. You better get a big pad of paper to make your marks on. That’s about the only place you’ll be making your mark.

    C.

  13. Vintner, given your position, and were I you, I woulde argue against my article point by point. Calling me a whiner rather puts you in a bad light. Raises the question that perhaps you have a vested interest in the system my piece looks to question. So prove me wrong. I would rather liked to be proved wrong.

    Terreson

  14. “…insulting everyone…”

    “Calling me a whiner…”

    Poor babies!

    Next you’ll try to convince people that the article isn’t an insult from beginning to end.

    I’ll wager that if you, Terreson or Beau Blue looked at your work from two years ago and your current efforts you wouldn’t see much improvement.

    Ask regular members of these online forums the same question and I’ll wager that at least 80% will report a marked improvement as measured by any criterion you choose: reviews, publications, readership, self-assessment, etc. No one seriously believes that this would be improved by allowing trolling, whining, libel, defamation, ad hominems or any of the other distractions that Terreson espouses.

    I know this. You know this. Terreson knows this. So how should we categorize his deliberate attempt to falsify the experience of all these satisfied participants?

  15. Vintner,

    You’re the poor baby. You insult us, and then follow up by calling us poor babies after the insult, as if you must have had some effect. Get over yourself and take up the discussion.

    Look at what you are doing. You are in a forum where you are allowed your free expression. What the hell do you think Terreson is talking about? If I were one of those moderators at what is apparently one of your favorite forums, I would have deleted your posts after I insulted you, and then registered you as a spammer so your messgaes could never again get through. According to your argument, this would improve your writing significantly in the next two years.

    The entire article is pro-poet. What the hell are you talking about? No one else is whining but you, kiddo. Plus, you’re attempting to critique Beau Blue and who knows who else, can’t tell, on the grounds that you disagree with him on Terreson’s article. This is malarkey.

    You must be saying that you have improved your own poetry these past couple years somewhere where the stifling conditions that Terreson speaks of are rampant. Where is this forum? Which is it? You may speak here, even if you may not there.

    I had asked you before to name the four forums you said were missing from the list. Which are they? You substantiate nothing.

    Now, Terreson has asked you to disagree with him point by point. From here on in, do this, and without any more of your whining.

    C.

  16. “Plus, you’re attempting to critique Beau Blue and who knows who else, can’t tell, on the grounds that you disagree with him on Terreson’s article. This is malarkey.”

    And marginally coherent malarkey at that but, hey, you wrote it.

    “I had asked you before to name the four forums you said were missing from the list. Which are they?”

    PFFA, QED, Thin Men of Haddam and, ironically, Poets.org.

    You also missed the venue with the most traffic: Zoetrope.

    Are you sure you want to discuss online workshops when you don’t even know the heavyweight players?

    Now, do you plan to answer any of my questions any time soon?

    “Now, Terreson has asked you to disagree with him point by point.”

    If either of you would care to review the thread you’ll find that I already have. I even quoted him. Perhaps you missed it because I don’t use six meandering paragraphs to say what can be expressed in 15 words or less.

  17. Hi Vintner,

    Now we’re talking.

    Although I respect Hedgie as a blogger, in fact I like him so much that way, his Compost Heap is one of the select few blogs on the sidepanel here, always has been. And I appreciate that PFFA has the poem-a-day activity that online poets go wild over. But, the treatment poets get there is awful. That’s what PFFA is most known for, for ill treatment of poets, for very good poets never wanting to go there ever, or, once there, ever again. There is no good need of what they do. The free-for-all does not mean free for all poets, it means a free-for-all pile up of moderators attacking poets. To find this out, anyone can go to the forum: PFFA. On any given day, in their topic areas called General Poetry, C&C, and High Critique, just look for the “Moved” poems. Chances are good, you’ll find a poet blind-sided and insulted to the point of verbal abuse, by an irrational and “unneccesary” gang of moderators. I say irrational, not only because of how quickly they are to read and act as a pack, but how often they misread the poem they are acting on.

    I am with Jennifer above on her critique of Poets.org. Click into her links. The point of receiving government money, and then banning poets with heavy-handed, irrational moderators themselves, has got to go. There, we find the case of a set of people, who have other talents, that should not be administrating forums. Have you gone into Jennifer’s site Poets.net?

    On Thin Men of Haddam, when I tried to get in there last, and someone mentioned them to me a couple months ago, the place looked defunct. Do you have a link? I’ll go check it out. If I find the activity there conducive to good conversation and constructive feedback on work posted, and I don’t mean perfection along these lines, I will add them.

    It’s been years since I was at QED, and I was not impressed at the time, and thus have stayed away. I’ll look again when I get a chance.

    Notice, however, that The Gaz is on the list. There is a legitimate case that that forum attracts very good poets. The Gaz actually seeks out fine poets. The fact that they are the ones famous for the “Thank you” rule, does not disqualify them from the list. I agree with Terreson, that they shouldn’t ptobably have it. But that’s their parlor game.

    What case do you make for those forums to be added–and I mean in light of the criteria that if I refer them, I don’t want them blindsided but, rather, welcomed and respected? That link of 25 is a fairly well-used resource by poetry surfers, so I want to keep it valid for its purposes.

    C.

  18. “That’s what PFFA is most known for, for ill treatment of poets,”

    http://www.everypoet.org/pffa/forumdisplay.php?s=8e54e286d5f40d1dda6895929a7f5b9a&f=20

    PFFA isn’t for vanity posters, poseurs, posers, poetasters or illiterates who can’t read guidelines. It ain’t for the thin skinned or the deluded. Don’t like it? Don’t go there. Sure, you have to attach a warning but that is true of all sites. You wouldn’t want to send a serious poet to a “petting zoo” like Zoetrope, right?

    “…for very good poets never wanting to go there ever, or, once there, ever again.”

    “There is a legitimate case that that forum attracts very good poets.”

    Most Gazebans, including all of its better poets that I can think of, are also members of PFFA.

    “I am with Jennifer above on her critique of Poets.org. Click into her links.”

    Am I going to hear both sides of the story there or only from the full-mooners?

    “The point of receiving government money, and then banning poets with heavy-handed, irrational moderators themselves, has got to go.”

    Moderated forums have guidelines. Sociopaths who violate them are banned. What does funding have to do with this?

    “What case do you make for those forums to be added–and I mean in light of the criteria that if I refer them, I don’t want them blindsided but, rather, welcomed and respected?”

    There is a workshop for every need. You’d probably like one of the cozier IBPC sites. Jennifer may be a malcontent but she’s giving you good advice: as courteous as the people are there, you aren’t ready for Poets.org yet.

    I assume Terreson has been banned from most of the serious workshops but he can always find a place on one of the fledgling sites or exploit an opportunity on either an unmoderated venue or one with an absentee administrator.

    The URL for Thin Men of Haddam: http://www.acoloutha.oli.us/index.php

    I assume that some prejudice against metered poetry explains why Eratosphere isn’t on the list.

    http://www.ablemuse.com/erato/Ultimate.cgi

    • “Moderated forums have guidelines. Sociopaths who violate them are banned.”

      Oh I didn’t realize that all the people who get banned from those don’t have a conscience. Now your concern is completely legitimate since we have that tidbit of information. It’s amazing that you have the ability to come to that conclusion just from a few comments posted on the internet.

  19. Vintner,

    I post a link that shows where people can go to see poets get abused, and you respond with “PFFA isn’t for vanity posters, poseurs, posers, poetasters or illiterates who can’t read guidelines.” Do you see the problem with your arguments? You do not answer people on their grounds. You assume that anyone who would not go there is a poetaster or something. You know, there are some very fine poets who would not put up with that stuff. I’ll go a step further to say that it is detrimental to online poetry, and that people have been driven away because of it. On very fine forums with very fine poets, they talk about how bad PFFA is.

    You say that I am not ready for Poets.org. I was a member there for years, when the production and active membership was quite high in both numbers and talent. I don’t like the new rules. I don’t like the way my fellow poets get treated and sometimes banned. By the way, if Terreson has a badge or two from speaking his mind and thus being banned at a site or two, we should think more of him. He is precisely the person to write this article. I have no such badge. The people running the Poets.org site ought to be paying close attention to each of his points, ditching some of thei rmoderators for better ones, beginning to understand that their pattern of rule creation makes no good sense. Nothing has improved, and good poets have left. There may be three in this thread.

    I was invited to edit at Alsops Review. I turned that down only because I have other projects. Life is long, and I should integrate over there sometime again. There are some good gigs there.

    On Thin Men of Haddam. That’s the link I have. Nothing is really happening. I cannot get into the flow. There are other very sleepy forums on the 25 list, but I know how on one someone has been ill, or how on another real fine poets come by and stay for while from time to time. So, there is nothing wrong with being slow-paced, certainly. But I haven’t caught the benefit of Thin Men. I am not against them, but why do you submit them for the list? I am listening.

    Oh, Eratoshpere. Right. I write in meter at times. One of my IBPC placing poems from Poets.org is a villanelle. I thought Eratosphere was going to be on your original missing four. My experience is that they circle the wagons, and condescend. They have their school of ideas, and are thusly stale with them too, but fall back on their expertise. I also question if the forum is good for the poets there. I know one very skilled on-line friend, in fact I go well back with, who feels, that for all that forum’s faults, that poet’s work is well-read there. Okay, but for anyone reading this, who is shopping for a forum, you are forewarned that they circle the wagons and condescend. In other words, Eratosphere is borderline, but I keep reaffirming that they should be off the list.

    C.

  20. “You do not answer people on their grounds.”

    I answered your question directly and honestly–a courtesy you have yet to reciprocate. Please, R.B., stop whining about the fact that mine wasn’t the answer you wanted to hear.

    “…good poets have left. There may be three in this thread.”

    Only one that I’ve seen, but I’m not sure Pat Jones is a Poets.org member; I’ve only seen the name on Eratosphere. Judging from the level of literacy you’ve shown on this site and the fact that you haven’t yet realized that Terreson is attacking the very sites you recommend and serve (he wouldn’t last 5 minutes on PFFA), it’s safe to say you aren’t one of them. Given his long-windedness–a natural outcome of being in love with his own typing–and his bitterness about the critical process, we can be certain that Terreson isn’t one. Barring the two spammers, that leaves only Pat Jones and me. While I’m flattered, I have to wonder who the third would be.

    “But I haven’t caught the benefit of Thin Men. I am not against them, but why do you submit them for the list?”

    Because, along with QED, it has the highest population density of great critics. Great critics are what I look for in a critical web site. I’m funny that way.

    “My experience is that they circle the wagons, and condescend.”

    As you perceive the folks on PFFA and Poets.org doing, no doubt. Good-looking people often complain about excessive sexual interest from others. Meanwhile, Phyllis Diller made a career out of portraying an unattractive woman complaining about how sexually uninterested her husband, “Fang”, was. So, my question is: why do you think so many bright people treat you in a condescending manner?

  21. You know, Vintner, the only one whining here is you.

    You’ve been squealing and crying for days now. All because there are people who don’t think poetry workshops and forums are the be all, end all, dream you think they are. Isn’t it terrible that some of us think that way? And isn’t it unfair that we may have reached our conclusions without your permission? Well, you’ll just have to learn to live with that, Vintner.

    You’ll also have to learn to live with the fact that some people, who have started more poetry forums than you’ve participated in, have seen your adolescent debate tactics before and are really unimpressed with meager understanding of internet poetry’s landscape.

    Personally, I’m only mildly amused at your reaction to my saying that forums were “handy things to have around.” See, I’m more used to being labeled a self-promoting spammer by the trolls on UseNet newsgroups than by some teenage wannabe who has had his feelings hurt by a big, bad, literary pundit from Louisiana.

    Grow up, kid, it’s not hard.

    -blue

  22. “I’m more used to being labeled a self-promoting spammer”

    I would think you would be by now.

    I invite anyone to check out Beau Blue’s “contributions” to online workshops. He’s a “member” of almost all of them.

  23. Member of? Hell, boy, I’ve started more than a few. Been the tech guru of a bunch more. Donated money to more than half a dozen. Maybe, when you mature, you can do more than cry out in pain when someone badmouths one. Maybe not ..

    -blue

  24. I am well aware of and respect your technical and financial contributions. If these come at the price of having to lie to you about your poetry or your attitude towards criticism, though, it exceeds my budget.

    Bad poet. Bad attitude towards critique. Could there be a causal connection there?

  25. Vintner,

    You’re still whining about whining. No wonder you call yourself Vintner. I hail thee king of all whinos: Vintner the Whino. Live with it, or change your ways. Your butt’s just been kicked by Beau Blue.

    You say to me:

    So, my question is: why do you think so many bright people treat you in a condescending manner?

    And I ask you if you’ve stopped beating your wife yet.

    That’s just the type of discussion poetry boards don’t need, all your insults. It’s a good thing Terreson wrote the article. You prove it every time you post.

    C.

    P.S. to all readers:

    There are more Vintners contaminating poetry discussions than you might believe. Whereas one or two forums have the tendency to condescend at times, Vintner here has the penchant for insulting all the time. There are others like him.

    They are called flamers, because they take over the discussions with personal attacks, and the subject matter never gets addressed. In this case, however, he represents one part of the problem. Sometimes people with his personality establish forums, or moderate them. If enlightenment does not come to these people, then at least the poets know there are alternatives, and we can all get experienced in addressing these issues that represent the “Pee in the Pool of On Line Poetry.” The goal is for any poet to be welcome, ply his or her craft, in environments that foster creativity.

    Can we get our best forums to operate at even a higher level than they do now? Can we finally put to bed the abusive forums that will not change their ways?

  26. As expected, a flame war started and maintained by predictable comments about whining, thin skins, and poetasters.

    You know, there are perfectly good poets out there on the boards who neither give abuse, nor put up with it. They give very good critique, when they are able, and they listen well. Terreson, who I’ve known online for over a decade, has consistently been one of those. So has Pat Jones. So have several others I could name.

    Whining about whiners is meta-whining. It contributes nothing to the discussion, because rather than offering a solution it claims that there’s no problem. Or rather, it blames the victim, so to speak. These are precisely the sort of ad hominem attacks on the person, rather than the writing, that are banned on most poetry critique boards. I actually agree with that ban, most of the time—so long as it’s not applied with a heavy hand—because I’m interested in the writing, first and foremost. Personal drama just isn’t that interesting.

    I’ve been on probably two dozen boards, trying them out. There have only ever been two or three that I could call “home,” though, starting with the late, lamented Canned Air (formerly part of Avatar Review). Another one I used to call home just self-immolated in the kind of firestorm that happens when autocratic personalities want to take over a board, then make changes, or choices, that get everybody in trouble. The first thing that happens, in such events, is that the poetry critique goes right out the window.

    Now, don’t get me wrong. I do not totally agree with all of my friend Terreson’s points in his essay. I will at some point get back here to talk about the essay itself, and those points. He’s used to that from me: we often disagree, but we can dialogue about it, and both clarify our thinking as a result. The dialogue of disagreements produces better writing, not hurt feelings.

    And that’s perhaps the ideal of how all this should operate.

  27. Ok. Vintner, I am not going to get personal here the way you have. Well, maybe slightly I’ll get personal. If you are who I think you are, and judging from your stylistic habits, you are Collin Ward aka Kaltica (a mod at Poets.org) aka Deni a brief time mod at TCP.com. Collin Ward has been attacking me for maybe two years now. Once he achieved mod status on that same gov funded site, Poet’s org, I knew I was screwed. And in the spirit of disclosure I was banned from the site…at my request and because of a deliberately posted message. The Collin Ward I know simply loves to delete posts in his capacity as mod. I think one night he deleted three posts of mine within a half-hour. Likely he felt justified and likely he still does, even though I was replying to a post he made, but then he decided was off-topic.

    That is as personal as I am going to get. Maybe it took abusive behavior at the hands of a mod to make me question the whole system, which is a good thing.

    And I do question the system. More to the point I question the top-down character of the culture. Truth is I think the culture of the board system has rotted on the vine. While I still beleive in the boards I think their admins, their mods, their clicques have made something that should be beautiful so god damn damaging to poetry. I am honestly saddened by what the system does to poetry and to new poets especially. This is the crux of my complaint.

    One last word. Before I made myself bannable at Poets.org I started a thread. My informants tell me that, as of this week, it has received over 19,000 hits. The thread is just about poetry. Poetry. If the boards are not about poetry what the hell are they for?

    So, yes, Vintner, I think the culture you defend is corrupt. I think your top-down culture hurts poetry. One last, last word. I have thought long on it. I stand by my essay. The poetry board culture is fucked up. And it is because of maverick mods, defensive admins, and a community-first mentality. ‘Let my people go.’

    Terreson

  28. I doubt that Vintner is Colin Ward. First, Colin is way more more mature and significantly more coherent when expressing himself than “Vintner”. Even when he’s trolling. Second, Colin isn’t into whining, but action. Also, when he disagrees with someone, he at least tries to appear rational and reasonable.

    No, this is someone more like Yankovich or Epstein or MacKensie. You know, real quick to pick a fight but with no real skills at doing anything more than embarrassing themselves.

    -blue

  29. Okay, Blue. So the essay’s question remains this: are poetry boards good for poetry? Yesterday I was told that a mod on one board, in response to my essay, actually said on his own board that poetry boards are irrelevant to poetry.

    Thinking on the mod’s comment I think I would disagree. But I do think there is much in the online poetry community culture that trivializes poetry, makes it even a tertiary concern, and that the problem starts at the top, with admins and mods.

    Somebody prove me wrong. Please. I am persuaded the system is fucked up. What is such a beautiful idea got mangled by board admins and mods.

    Terreson

  30. Interesting read and the essay has a lot of merit. That said, the goal seems lost within the smoke. The reason, imo, for poetry boards is multi-functional; one is to teach, the other is to commune. If you can get the two to coincide, you have ‘communitas’; community with purpose.

    I was weaned at ‘pffa’ and all the rumors are true. That I lasted 8 months without running afoul of the system is miraculous to say the least. That said, this is what I learned; I learned the basics of good, effectual poetry and even some rational I like to repeat at times, and I learned how NOT to treat poets, especially newbies. So, though the sign says ‘not for all’, I don’t think what pffa does is beneficial for people but it houses the roots of knowledge which you will never get at over 90% of the other poetry sites out there.

    I think the single largest truth I found about online poetry forums is this; the nature of poets is a solitary one and when you get too many together, without a vision that supercedes personal agendas, you have only a momentary explosion of creativity and furthering of the genre. And I’ve only been to one site which I have ever felt was unbiased toward learning the basics of effective poetry (yes, the assumed bias inherent that exists for a set of principles which if followed, raises the quality of the poetic piece above the typical tripe that is all over the net) and allowed discussion of any poetic topic, placing poetry first and relationships second, but with the hand-holding-leading sort of priority.

    In the end though, what I learned is that poets are like burning a candle at both ends; spectacular but too brief. Since a major reason I got hooked by the internet forum tragedy is the goodness I received by returning to others what had been taught to me, this has always been enough to continue on, even if in a limited capacity. Where I used to push those nuances which poetry showed me, I now wait for the open mind and heart to come ask. The effort has proven disheartening when I have sought to band together similar minds.

    The simple truth I’ve found with all the poetry boards is this; you have only two choices. One is to be part of the fluff-based commentary of over 90% of the boards in which relating to your fellow poet (and the warm fuzzies that come with attention) takes precedence, or two, be part of an arrogance that often seems justified by the ineptness of the far too many of, self-indulgent poets that come along thinking their words are the end all be all.

    The greatest pleasure I’ve had from online poetry forums is in looking back at those I’ve personally helped learn the basics and note how much better they’ve become as writers. If you can get some to actually trust you, can get them to take a chance on what you’re trying to teach, then watch as over time they employ the basics, THEN you’ll not have to say another word because THEY will be saying it in your place. That’s when I get to smile because I know the beauty and wisdoms I’ve gained are now being shared in fully mindful and heartfelt people. Without public poetry forums, I don’t see this as happening.

    Just my experience. The fact I used to routinely contribute to such essays/expositions as this one but rarely do so anymore, is directly related to how irrelevant poetry seems to have become. There is only the desire to be self-gratified and moments attained. There are little that believe growth comes with some pain and even fewer that understand that conflict is a good thing. How one delivers and embraces conflict, now that is perhaps where the rub is…

    Thanks for the moment to express myself.

  31. Terreson,

    Poetry boards are neither good for, nor bad for poetry. They’re just part of the landscape.

    Good for or bad for poets, on the other hand, is dependent on the individuals involved. Swinburne would’ve loved the current crop of elitist venues driven by the current crop of sado-masochistic administrators and forum participants, you know.

    Today’s workshops are communities of like-minded individuals in need of artistic reassurance and camaraderie. They’re a good way to network, make friends and stimulate appreciation for the art form as practiced by specific artists and specific styles. Nothing more.

    But they’re not poetry. They’re practice. And very little of what goes on within the forums after a piece has been posted can be called “criticism”.

    Real criticism is as hard to do as real poetry. And since so few people are any good at it, the boards are full of pot-shot S&M freaks, hiding behind “Thank You” rules, who think they’re critics and that the workshops are legitimate publication vehicles. They’re not.

    Nor do they accurately reflect the state of the art form. But poetry cannot be injured by any individual or group of individuals, no matter how mistaken their beliefs and practices.

    Your desire for something grander and more nurturing than the lone individual struggling in private is damn near universal. But that’s what the job is and looking for more in the company of others can only disappoint you. Poetry is an annoying habit and it’s a solitary accomplishment. It’s a bitch, but it’s the rules.

    -blue

  32. I dispute that real criticism can’t really happen on the boards. (Although I agree that real criticism is as hard to do as real poetry.) I have participated in two boards where it did. I know I’ve been part of giving real criticism, because to me I’m looking at the poem, and it doesn’t matter to me if it’s on a board or in a face to face critique group. I was part of a monthly poetry critique group that was a really good way to learn to critique; and I also improved as a poet during that period. That happened at the beginning, or just before, my online experience, and so I arrived online with some critical skills already in place, and beginning to write my mature poetry.

    I do agree that this is very individual, and that my experience is not necessarily a majority experience.

    Where I differ from the overall gloom and doom is that I have been part of two online poetry communities that really DID work, that really DID meet many of the ideals, and that really were quasi-anarchistic in their structures, so that real work was engaged with, and there was no heavy-handed Admin interference.

    So, it IS possible, and it HAS happened. I refuse to believe, therefore, that it can never happen again, or that it’s impossible. My experience belies that.

    I do agree, however, that in some ways it’s very difficult to achieve, and requires exactly the right mix of people to work. An Admin does set the tone, even if the tone is benign neglect. But I have been part of online poetry groups that were not top-heavy with heavy-handed interference by Admins and Mods. Therefore, if it happened before, it can happen again. It does need the right situation, the right mix of people, and the right attitude.

    I would submit that you’re more likely to find such havens in small, semi-private, non-IBPC, lower-profile poetry boards. It seems more likely that large public boards are always going to need Mods, because they’re so very public, and draw the attention of assholes, snerts, and flamers just looking to start something. Big public boards tend to develop a class-based system, it’s probably true; but smaller boards don’t have to.

    The truth is, I have a list of poets online whose poetry I like, and whose critique has been good for me, and vice versa. Many of them do not get along with each other, and dislike each other. I can’t control that. In my ideal board, I would run it by inviting the people I like to be there, and no one else. But even that group contains individuals who do not get along with each other.

    Therefore, I submit to you that it is not that poetry boards are bad for poetry, or rather for poets, but that poetry boards merely reflect the climate of competitiveness and personality-driven distemper that is general to artists (poets included) in most venues. I don’t think the problem is unique to poetry groups; I’ve seen the same dynamics in offline poetry groups. Ego-driven bullshit and taking umbrage. Fights about nothing. Things misunderstood that get inflated into umbrage and lead to mutual avoidance and dislike.

    So, I think the problem is really too much ego, no matter what the venue is. I think the problem is when someone gets an inflated ego—either on a power trip as an Admin, or on a power trip as an experienced long-timer on Board X—which leads to a sense of entitlement, which can lead to personal abuse, to people rushing to judge either other rather than come to an understanding, etc.

    If poets could just their goddamn egos and personalities at the door, so that we really COULD just talk about the poetry, that would be great. But that’s a general problem, not really unique to online poetry boards.

    As you yourself have opined, Tere, the reason there’s so much heat and smoke is because there’s really so very little at stake. LOL

  33. Now, here’s one more thing to consider.

    I already proposed that not only is it possible to have a genuine poetry board online, but it has happened. Twice, in my own experience; maybe two and a half times.

    But these things do have a limited time in which to thrive. Life moves us all in directions unexpected, and i suspect that ALL communities of artists—not only poetry boards—have a half-life, a limit to their duration.

    Nothing that good can be permanently sustained. People die. People move on. People develop other interests, or go to school, and no longer have time to devote to communitas on Board X.

    I also believe that it is very possible to have an anarchism-based board where there is no top-down Admin/Mod hovering, where people really are kind to each other, mostly, and work out problems themselves. I have been part of two such communities, in my long time online on the poetry boards. But again, there may be a half-life to such situations.

    Hakim Bey, anarchist and radical, postulated the idea of the “temporary autonomous zone.” This is a place, never permanent in duration, in which utopia CAN emerge. Utopia IS possible: but the mistake most people make is in assuming that ANY cultural situation can endure indefinitely. A brief look at history should educate one to the wisdom that nothing is permanent, nothing endures, and nothing can be sustained indefinitely.

    The trick is, letting go of the instance (the individual TAZ, or place, or board) while continuing to pursue the creation of the ideal, wherever possible. In other words, letting go of the fact of the individual instance, but not letting go of the ideal of the practice itself. In which case, a new TAZ can be created; or moved; or re-initiated, elsewhere, when folks meet up again. I have seen this happen more than once in my experience.

    I recommend reading this material for yourself. It’s all anti-copyright and it’s all available online, For example, here:

    http://www.hermetic.com/bey/taz3.html#labelTAZ

  34. “On any given day, in their topic areas called General Poetry, C&C, and High Critique, just look for the “Moved” poems. Chances are good, you’ll find a poet blind-sided and insulted to the point of verbal abuse, by an irrational and “unneccesary” gang of moderators. I say irrational, not only because of how quickly they are to read and act as a pack, but how often they misread the poem they are acting on.”

    I’m a member of over half a dozen online poetry boards (PFFA, GAZ, DMR, Wild PF, Penshells, Critical Poet, ITWS) and consider myself lucky to have found PFFA within a month of starting to write poetry seriously. I’ve found it a great forum to get a grounding in some of the basic elements of writing poetry, I suspect starting there rather than at a more ‘friendly’ forum helped me to learn at a much greater rate than I’d expect from a forum built on back-patting. The learning largely came from the in-depth critiques insisted on by the moderators (the insistence that I roll up my sleeves and learn to critique benefitted me even than other people critting my poems).

    My participation there and at other boards has made me a better poet. Not good, certainly not great, just better than when I started out and at a faster rate than if I had tried to work things out on my own.

    so for me the answer to this question:

    “Do the boards benefit poets, the new and inexperienced especially who, in most cases, are grappling with the vital stuff of finding an authentic voice, gaining confidence in themselves, working through the canon, trying to figure out if they have something essential to say, and all at the same time? ” is a resounding YES.

    As someone who writes poetry largely in the hope of communicating something of worth to other people the “Thank you” rule is simple: If someone, anyone , takes the time to read something you have written, and then give you any sort of feedback you say “thank you”. If the feedback is snarky or abusive I really don’t care, I have faith in my ability to work out what will be useful for me and what won’t. I’m thanking the critiquer for the time and effort they spent in reading my work, nothing more. If they give me feedback that is helpful to me I generally thank them specifically for that. If I feel unable to take criticism for a poem then I don’t post it. I’ve often had poems ripped to shreds when I’ve posted them, sometimes politely and sometimes rudely. I’ve never found it necessary to respond in kind.

    The ‘outside’ forum you link to at PFFA is one small element of what goes on there. the board is mostly made up of a series of critiquing and discussion forums that run very smoothly. The critiques are, for the most part, rigorous (particularly at the higher levels) and supportive at the same time. If you read carefully in the ‘Outside’ forum the issues usually stem from the poster ignoring the guidelines, getting called on it then blowing up at a mod. It’s not the most pleasant part of the forum but it serves a purpose for the hundreds of members who at any one point are actively participating there.

    When I see discussions like this on the forums it usually comes from the people who spend more time talking ABOUT poetry rather than participating in the workshops themselves. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing because I’m always tracking these discussions as best I can and often learn from them. I’m also not saying those people don’t write poetry, they might be writing great poetry. I just don’t put much stock in being told what’s being gained from a workshop by people who aren’t in there participating.

    Dave R.

  35. Sorry, I was cutting and pasting and moving things around on a separate document and a couple of things droped out of my post–firstly One of the boards I’m a member of is Poets.org and I’m a mod there.

    Secondly, one other benefit of participating in poetry forums is that I’ve gained a much deeper appreciation for reading and enjoying poetry and thinking about it than I ever realized I’d get. to have that is reward enough for me even if I never write another poem in my life.

    Also, thanks for posting the article.

    Dave

  36. I do love it when the gods and goddesses work synchronously. Right now, on the board sponsored by the Academy of American Poets, and partly gov. funded, some poet has been banned for something he/she said in PM to one of the board’s moderators. It appears the board has a relatively new guideline. A member can be banned from the “public” board for comments made in a private message.

    The board exchange rather highlights several points my article takes issue with. That mods are more equal than members, certainly allowed to use insulting language without fear of reprimand, that mods in fact tend to close ranks when board policies are questioned, and that (this is the big one)a board’s self-defined sense of community is placed above an individual member’s participation. All of which are problems my essay points to.

    I guess I could not have asked for a sweeter ongoing scenario to prove my point(s). The board system fails poets. And the board system fails poets when its priority becomes itself.

    Today I decided the online poetry board system needs a watchdog, certainly within the IBPC circuit. Board admin types and moderators cannot always be trusted. They are as subject to moodiness as any other poetry-minded person. If the Academy of American Poets sanctions the kind of censorship its online poetry board metes out without pause there is a big time problem in the online poetry community. Censorship is censorship. And too many of the poetry board admins and mods have gotten intoxicated with the delete/ban power.

    On the other hand, it makes for a rather delicious distinction to have been banned by The Academy of American Poets. Don’t you all see the problem?

    Terreson

  37. “some poet has been banned for something he/she said in PM to one of the board’s moderators. It appears the board has a relatively new guideline. A member can be banned from the “public” board for comments made in a private message.”

    Harrasing members in public posts or private messages is against the guidelines at that forum. Always has been.

    “Today I decided the online poetry board system needs a watchdog, certainly within the IBPC circuit.”

    That is the one of the funniest things I’ve ever heard.

    On the other hand, it makes for a rather delicious distinction to have been banned by The Academy of American Poets.

    Let’s be very clear now, you had to ask repeatedly to be banned in order to receive that delicious distinction.

    cheers,

    Dave

  38. “Don’t you all see the problem?”

    Yes, we do. You think you have some special insight that everyone else is missing and yet you lack the ability to impart it.

    For someone hiding behind a pseudonym you seem quick to attempt outing others.

    While we’re on the subject, though, I have a question for “Clattery Machinery”. How do you think the IBPC participants feel about your remarks regarding Poets.org now that everyone knows that you are Rus Bowden? You should take some trolling lessons from Terreson. He can probably show you all about proxy servers and how to vary your targets. As far as I can tell no one knows who he is. Mind you, that may be because no one cares.

  39. Please, all, keep these comments coming. For those outside the online poetry world, know that the participants here are strong participants at the poetry forums. The discussion, therefore, is becoming somewhat representational.

    In places around the web, I allow people to know who C.M. is, on my terms, for instance in a recent interview and within forum discussion. (I appreciated, Vintner, that you used my iniitials, before, btw.)

    In the online poetry world, C.M. is no secret agent man. Many C.M. posts take on such issues that I do not want it to be easy to find me. And I often prefer simply to write with a pen name. Etc.

    Part of the timing of the publication of this article has to do with e-mail loops that IBPC forum reps participate in or at least receive. The one previous to the looping of this essay by Terreson, involves sharing what the poets like most at the forums. IBPC as a group has the opportunity to move poetry forums deep and positively into the 21st century by sharing knowledge, such that we all become, not only savvy, but creative with this savviness. Precisely what future contributions IBPC can bring, is unknown. But my attitude is that we take those steps into the future, instead of accepting whatever good or bad status quo is here for us, and whatever tides drift us this way or that.

    As a group too, IBPC represents the largest and best representation of on-line poetry forums in the world (WWW). And if you disagree, then for the sake of this discussion allow that it should. I asked in that first constructive loop that the reps participate with an eye that something would be learned, and an improvement would then be made at the forum, some feature added.

    This essay by Terreson is the second loop. I have asked the IBPC forum reps to consider what is wrong about forums in general, and discuss it with “reply all”, yet made no stipulation or suggestion. If Terreson’s article is paid attention to, whether in agreement or disagreement, his topics must be addressed either for the first time, or anew, but especially in total.

    Here, we can talk. If the Poets.org group feels they have nothing to learn or gain from the perspectives shared in this discussion, I cannot help that. There was “fear” expressed of posting a link to this article at some IBPC forums. To Poets.org’s credit, they allowed a thread in. Hopefully, the participants feel free to post how they feel.

    C.

  40. “If the Poets.org group feels they have nothing to learn or gain from the perspectives shared in this discussion, I cannot help that.”

    Where do you get that from? As far as I know there hasn’t been a “Poets.org Group response” to this. I know I took great care to respond based on my personal experiences on poetry boards and focused, for the most part, on my experience at PFFA.

    I only declared my membership and the fact that I am a mod at Poets.org because it felt appropriate to do so, some people would know me by the ‘hatrabbit’ username already, those who don’t who are following the discussion now know it as well.

    Of course when Terreson followed up with what I thought were some pretty silly comments, I responded to that.

    Otherwise, I’m enjoying the conversation and still thinking about Terreson’s post and catching up with the earlier responses.

  41. See Vintner’s question:

    How do you think the IBPC participants feel about your remarks regarding Poets.org . . . ?

    I narrowed that from the wider “IBPC participants” to Poets.org as a group, as that is most pertinent. After all, each participant across the broader IBPCommunity gets to feels the way he or she wants to feel. That Poets.org allowed a topic for discussion on this matter meant that they have the opening to discuss this among themselves, as a Poets.org group.

    The rest of what I intended s/b obvious. Thanks for the request for clarification.

    C.

  42. Vintner,

    I sidestepped nothing. However, if you thought that somehow what I said could have been so misconstrued, or if you wanted me to touch on something other than what I did, then you could ask me yourself a clarifying question. Please do, especially if such a question would further this discussion.

    C.

  43. Are you really this obtuse?

    You run the IBPC. People expect impartiality and detachment from someone administering any contest. Is gratuitously and publicly badmouthing a participant in your contest your idea of impartiality and detachment?

  44. While I hate to reference Henry Kissinger, I would modify his famous quotation to read “[Poetry] politics are vicious precisely because the stakes are so small.”

  45. Vintner,

    Oh, that’s right I forgot. I was suppose to give up my opinions and all online activity to boot, plus either delete everything or apologize profusely while retracting opinions from my past life. Oh well, too late now.

    Or wait. Maybe I should edit my selected list of forums to include those I would not want poets to go to, lest they encounter some of the hammering, flaming moderators who are out there. I should be hypocritical and devious in the cause of impartiality and detachment. You must be thinking of someone else besides me. Or, maybe I could then be like you instead of like me and defend those forums saying they are good for the poets. Okay, sure, sure. Uhm, I’ll sleep on it tonight.

    But, I gratuitously and publicly badmouthed a participant? Who? You mean a forum? I think in terms of poets. What do the poets like? Stop abusing the poets. What do they benefit from? What new features will foster better poetry? And so forth. I empower the forum reps, but I intend on empowering the member poets as well.

    Or maybe I should take a page out of the README files from some of those forums missing from the 25 list, and I should throw a few of the forums out of IBPC instead. One could interpret that as my duty, couldn’t one.

    You see, there are many ways of interpreting what my role ought to be. The worst one is that I would be a detached milquetoast.

    No, we discuss, openly. Period. I even let you do the same.

    Impartiality? I send all poems I receive along to the judge, with the same font, without the poet’s name or the forum that the poem was workshopped at, and lately in alphabetical order by title. I also try to get a qualified cross section of judges, different backgrounds in as many senses as I can. And I balance this with being thematic at the same time, whenever this might bring benefit to the poets, or suit occasions.

    C.

  46. While I hate to reference Henry Kissinger, I would modify his famous quotation to read “[Poetry] politics are vicious precisely because the stakes are so small.”

    Comment by Stephen Bunch — April 25, 2008 @ 3:13 am

    Well, Bunch, this is a sentiment that really irks me. It bothers me as much as Vintner’s opportunism and hatrabitt’s apologetics. As crazy as it may sound, I figure poetry matters. In the context of the poetry boards I figures it matters much more than mods, admin types, and the self-serving culture they perpetuate.

    I remember slightly you are a mod somewhere. Hatrabbit is a mod somewhere as well. I am pretty sure Vintner is a mod somewhere also.

    There is a good possibility that you mods and your admins are what make online poetry irrelavent. Conratulations. Job well done.

    Terreson

  47. Dave R. made this comment:

    <>

    Dave, you have a point. But you also miss the point, which is: If you’re going to have an open forum, you need to let people do what they do. Your suggestion comes dangerously close to telling poets what they SHOULD do. If you don’t like being told something, but you turn and tell somebody something, that seems a little uneven. And you maybe miss some of the reasons WHY people might be on the poetics forums more than the poetry threads per se.

    For example, if a poet is in a fallow period, and isn’t writing much new poetry, maybe they want to continue to participate in the community by talking about poetry. Are you really suggesting that they should just shut up, instead? Talking about poetics is one more way that poets learn to be better writers AND better critiquers. I’ve heard lots of comments along the lines that a poet younger in their craft got a lot out of the poetics discussions, and learned things they didn’t get from the poem crit threads directly. Are you suggesting that that’s invalid?

    I seriously doubt it.

    Another reason is that a person new to a given board is testing the waters, learning about who people are, and where they stand, so that they can get a sense of what kind of critique they can expect, before they post a poem. This is especially true of those poetry board forums wherein a poet must have posted a minimum number of times before they can post a poem to that forum. I’m not suggesting that no poets ever build up their post counts in indirect ways, but on the other hand, engaging in poetics discussions is a great way to test the waters and see if one fits in on a given board. For example, if you’re a formalist poet and you find a new board, looking at the poetics discussions can tell you if anyone else shares your particular interests. Maybe you make a friend with similar interests. Or maybe you realize there’s no place for your particular poems on that particular board. It’s nobody’s fault but it IS a bad match.

    As for your accusation in your first sentence, actually the only poets I can recall who I’ve never seen post a poem of their own for critique are those very same trolls, such as the aforementioned Kaltica, who are quick to lash out but also quick to hide behind BS when actually called on their shit. They go around abusing everyone, but one way in which they don’t play fair is by allowing their own poems to be critiqued. That is another form of arrogance.

    As for all present, of all those who have posted here that I know, every single one of them has posted and critiqued mightily on many boards.

  48. Dave R. made this comment:

    “When I see discussions like this on the forums it usually comes from the people who spend more time talking ABOUT poetry rather than participating in the workshops themselves. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing because I’m always tracking these discussions as best I can and often learn from them. I’m also not saying those people don’t write poetry, they might be writing great poetry. I just don’t put much stock in being told what’s being gained from a workshop by people who aren’t in there participating.”

    Sorry that bit got dropped from my previous post, which of course was the bit I responding to.

    Ah, the joys of HTML and its spawn.

  49. I wondered why my ears were burning!

    This isn’t the first, fifth or tenth time I’ve seen this topic addressed. It’s pointless if only because there is not one policy change that “improves” all sites. Someone mentioned PFFA and Zoetrope. Each serves its constituency. What works on one would be ridiculous on the other. Vive la choix! Vive la difference!

    On the subjects of moderated forums and the critical process my position remains the antipodal opposite of Terreson’s and Beau Blue’s. Beginning with my earliest days on Usenet, the efforts of luminaries like PJR, the Millers and Hannah Craig have more than convinced me of the benefits of online critique. Meanwhile, trolls like Tom Bishop, Will Dockery and Charles Lysaht have made the advantages of moderation abundantly evident.

    If history teaches us anything it is that bombthrowers cause tighter rules, not looser ones. I am the wrong Colin Ward to speak on the subject of anarchism but joining moderated sites with the expressed intention of violating guidelines to “push the envelope” would seem counterproductive at best. As Talleyrand said: “C’est pire qu’un crime. C’est un faut!”

    Whereas Terreson’s actions refute his arguments, I can respect Beau’s stance because it is consistent with his behaviour. He posts his announcements and goes about his business. You could learn a lot from his approach, Terreson. It’s nice to see that I’m still in your thoughts, though.

    Best regards,

    Kaltica (accept no substitutes!)

  50. As the person who posted a link to this article on poets.org, I just wanted to say that, although I am unclear about some of the parameters regarding what constitutes acceptable versus unacceptable commentary on the site, I had no fear about posting the link. There is a guideline that says you cannot discuss other poetry boards, but since Terreson’s article did not mention any specific boards by name, I did not think posting a link to it would be in violation of board policy. I did not fear my post would be deleted or that I would be banned for posting it. I was unsure where to post the link, so the worst I thought would happen is that the thread would be moved. As to how my post would impact my standing in the poets.org community, well, I’ve been posting there long enough that I figured most people have already formed an opinion of me, for good or ill, and would likely view my action accordingly.

  51. I have just been reading through the Guidelines at poets.org, and I can’t seem to find anything that says you can’t discuss other online poetry boards. Maybe I confused this site with another one. Sorry for the confusion.

  52. Hi indy21,

    I came to work here thinking about that rule, just having discussed some IBPC questions of Vintner’s above. And since you brought it up—and there are IBPC boards with that rule—there would be no IBPC unless back in 1999, the poetry boards discussed each other, and decided that there ought to be a competition.

    I actually saw the thread that led to Mike Neff getting the site under webdelsol.com. It was on the old forum software The Block was using. A poet who posted at the old Cafe Utne, called Mask of Zero, brought up the idea there as people were discussing different poetry forums, and IBPC snowballed from there.

    Over at the old Atlantic Unbound at the time, I recall comparative discussions going on about who would have the best poetry, and such. And a lot of that I can see, were seeds that are just coming to bloom now and here. These issues, btw, have been sprouting it more and more around the forums as of late.

    9 years hence, and IBPC still pans this same old stream at times.

    C.

  53. About the Collin Ward post, I figure whether or not the present system of mods and site admins is good for the poetry boards is debatable. It would be nice to have the debate. What is not debatable is that the system, as it stands, is corrupt. Mods who can give insulting language the likes of which members get censored for; posts deleted for the flimsiest of reasons and the deletion always sanctioned by admins; people banned; admins and mods who bring prosodic, religious, and political biases to the boards; members who are friends of the mod staff not taken to task for outrageous behavior when others are; mod staffs closing ranks when a member questions board practices. The list goes on. The system has been corrupted. And I predict it will get worse.

    Terreson

  54. Please check out http://www.Poets.net

    Where freedom of speech still matters.

    Comment by Jennifer — April 22, 2008 @ 6:47 pm

    Somehow this comment seems to have gotten lost in the shuffle. Comment # 9 above, which supplies a link. The matter involves a person who got banned from Poets.org for comments he made in IM to two mods, both of whom have weighed in here, defending what they do.

    Click on the link. Read for yourself what was deemed a bannable offense by Poets.org’s site administrator. And then convince me these mods and admins are not out of control. Incredible. Just incredible.

    Terreson

  55. The discussion is winding down, as it should. There is only so much that can be said about the dysfunctional nature of poetry boards. Thanks, Clattery, for having the sense of honesty to carry an essay critical of a system you are much involved with. You are a big man in my eyes. I should like to toast you over a shot of Irish, aka mother’s milk.

    I want to be clear on something. In response to my article I’ve heard (read) the comment twice now that poetry boards are irrelevant to poetry. Both times, and oddly enough, the comment was made by board moderators. Thinking on it, I know I don’t feel the same way, or that poetry boards are irrelevant to poetry.

    But I do feel this and I feel it strongly. It is you moderators and you site administrators that have fucked up royally a knock-down beautiful idea. Maybe you love yourselves too much. Maybe you need to control conversation too much. Maybe your needs, brought online, are compensatory for something else you lack. But it is you, mods and site admins, that are central to the problem in online poetry venues.

    Of course, poetry will survive you all. Poetry always does.

    Good night and good luck.

    terreson

  56. Tere,

    I think you’ve mischaracterized my position. I don’t think poetry boards are irrelevant to poetry. I only meant to say that what happens on these boards and in the larger world of contemporary poetry is meaningless within the culture in which we find ourselves. That’s more a comment on the culture than it is on the current state of poetry and the subset of Web poetry boards.

    Regarding Mr. Woodman and his screed at poets.net, I think his piece speaks volumes about his state of mind. The fellow has a hobby horse and he beats it furiously. His use of his wife as “sock puppet” is disingenuous and laughable, if it weren’t so pathetic.

    I’ve given more time to this nonsense than I should have. Hell, we’ve got poems to write.

    Sorry it’s come to this point. Best to you.

    Steve

  57. “Hell, we’ve got poems to write”.

    Right on, Stephen. Write on, too…let’s get on with writing/righting poetry. I’ve been on several boards for many years, been banned for defending freedom of speech from only two. We all know which two they are. Banning me was the best thing they could have done for me and my poetry.

    Pat

  58. Okay, Steve. I’ve never had an argument with you. So Woodman got banned from your board because of his state of mind? And that his wife is a sock puppet lends credence to the banning I guess you figure is justified? Didn’t you tell me once you’ve cavorted with the likes of Ginsberg, Creeley, and Dorn? You really think they would be party to how your board proceeds?

    Here is the thing. Your board’s organization, The Academy of American Poets, just banned a poet for the silliest of reasons. Man, if I was you I would cut ties with the Academy. But then I am not you.

    Terreson

  59. Then there’s the boards one chooses to leave, rather than being banned, because the climate is not one of free speech. Some boards do bend over backwards to NOT ban people, which I appreciate. On the other hand, that doesn’t mean it’s all sweetness and light, or free speech and open discourse. The problem remains that the board’s climate might not be all that open, even if they try not to ban folks.

    This discussion is winding down? Sure doesn’t seem like it to me. Maybe that was just wishful thinking.

    I was sorting through some papers tonight, to recycle most of them. I ran across a broadsheet someone had printed up and given to me some years ago. The quote on it is from John Stuart Mill, and seems peculiarly appropriate to this discussion at this time. I think it is pertinent to the climate of boards, and the tenor of the ways people are dealt with on the boards; I think it speaks directly to the lack of tolerance for differing opinions, and even styles of poetry, that is notably lacking on many of the boards, including many of the IBPC boards. Here’s the quote in full:

    “Precisely because the tyranny of opinion is such as to make eccentricity a reproach, it is desirable, in order to break through that tyranny, that people should be eccentric. Eccentricity has always abounded when and where strength of character has abounded: and the amount of eccentricity in a society has generally been proportional to the amount of genius, mental vigor, and moral courage it contained. That so few dare to be eccentric marks the chief danger of the time.”
    –John Stuart Mill, On Liberty, 1859

  60. Tere,

    I can’t imagine having used the word “cavort” in connection with those poets, but yes, I did cross paths with them on occasion and benefitted from it. Your question as to how they might react to poets.org’s fora is, of course, hypothetical, and all three are gone now. From what I know of them and their work, though, I suspect they would have had little use for workshops of any kind.

    Steve

  61. Steve gets at what may be the real issue, perhaps: “workshops of any kind.” There comes a point where the workshop ITSELF is harmful to the poet. I for one had been feeling like I wasn’t getting any really useful critique for many weeks, before the firestorm that broke The Critical Poet happened. I am sad to have seen that community divide and self-immolate, but that’s about friends rather than poetry. In truth, the last few new poems I had posted there, or elsewhere, had been so misunderstood, so poorly received, in in at least one case so openly and viciously attacked as “not poetry” that it caused its own little firestorm. Who wants to post a poem on a poetry board when that’s all you can expect? The whole point of workshopping is to improve as a writer, and to learn. When a workshop is no longer a learning environment, it’s probably time to move on.

    (I find it amusing that the Admin of Desert Moon Review posted a response on one of the parallel threads about this essay. The reason I find it amusing is that my experience of trying to join Desert Moon Review was an example of what Tere is talking about in this essay. I do wish people would look in the metaphorical mirror, sometimes, and realize how they are doing exactly what they claim to not be doing.)

    Which leads me to the truth that I need to go off and do my thing for awhile without any critical feedback. If I go down a blind alley with my poetry that nobody else likes, so be it.

    The argument FOR workshops is often about poets getting lost in blind alleys, wasting their time and effort on what turns out not to be their best work. The theory being that workshopping helps prevent that. But that argument doesn’t allow the poet freedom to make mistakes, and learn from mistakes. Not allowing people to make mistakes and learn from them is a form of parental autocracy.

    Similarly, the argument FOR workshops as communities has both valid points and also has some problems. I don’t think a lot of Mods and Admins realize how much their actions DO set the tone of a board. Actions ALWAYS speak louder than words, in every circumstance. I left Heretics Phaze 2, an otherwise great board with good folks on it, because two of three Admins were refusing to put a leash on the third Admin who was being very abusive towards almost everybody; they made excuses for his behavior, but they didn’t rein it in. (Can you say codependent enabling? I knew you could.) That drove away a bunch of folks. My friend there who had invited me to that board, who was one of those other two Admins, worked hard to try to convince me to stay; but my bottom line is that I was (and am) about the poetry, not about the bullshit. While the abuse was actively going on, no poetry could be dealt with. Poetry requires a certain amount of silence around it, which board drama destroys. So I left.

    Poetry DOES require a certain amount of silence around it. An aura of contemplation, perhaps one might call it. Sometimes a workshop is not good for poetry simply because most people are uncomfortable with silence. They need to fill every pause in a conversation with chatter, because silence is threatening, or scary. That’s never made much sense to me, when I see poets do that.

  62. Bummer. Just lost a comment to cyberspace.

    So let’s say I am wrong. Better yet let me riff on what Vintner posted early on, calling me a whiner. Instead of registering a complaint how about I offer an idea of how I figure the poetry board system can work at its best.

    I know it gets lost amidst the pyrotechnics, but my essay actually ends offering a notion of how the board system might reform itself. It is where I suggest that, at its most vital, poetry needs a free range environment, a Montessori school yard.

    I view Mallarme’s famous Tuesday night gatherings as just such an environment. Historically closer to home, I similarly view the Black Mountain school of poets from the fifties, up in North Carolina. The school not only had participating members on the grounds but there were others, such as Paul Blackburn, who associated themselves with the objectives of the group. At the school itself, the poet Charles Olson served as rector for awhile. But I am not aware he was given to the equivalent of deleting posts and banning members. Nor did the poet/critics try to re-form the poems of others in some strictly defined image of what good poetry should look like. And yet not only did the school’s participants work in tandem but the notions of good poetry they entertained still impact and influence the scene.

    Above, Arthur mentions a poem he recently posted on a board and that was attacked visciously. It was. I saw some of the more uncomprehending and narrow minded comments on the poem. The irony is that in the nearly ten years of visiting poetry boards I would include his poem as one of the best ten I’ve read. It has originality and authenticity. It is a pursuit in the poetic way at its best. (What was it Bly said about how Pound was initially received?)

    I want the Black Mountain model. I want the pushing and the feed-off between poets, not the tearing down that all too many critics call good criticism. I want the first-rate thinking that looks to take chances, push limits, get inside poetry, get perfect poetic expression. I do not want the second-rate, debilitating, limited sense of aesthetic(s) all too frequently setting the tone on the boards. I want the free-range environment, not the territoriality of silver backs that all too often produces turf wars. (I was actually taken to task once on a board for using the metaphor of the silver back to describe how poets can behave.) And I do not want the policing, since, all too often it leads to abuse and to the muzzling of the creative personality.

    So this is some of how I figure the boards can operate at their best. My essay mentions a private board where I sometimes participate. This is pretty much how its members proceed. So I know it is possible.

    Terreson

  63. Something else occurs to me. At poets.org there are two threads I started in its discussion forum. The threads have been in place since last fall. I am no longer allowed there but I am told that one thread has been viewed almost 20,000 times. The other thread has been brought up 10 to 12,000 times. Both threads are devoted to poetry, to poetics, to poetic thinking.

    What the stat suggests to me is that there are a bunch of poets out there wanting something. The threads’ number of visits could serve as a kind of poll of what it is they do want. And so I am going to ask this of all mods, site admins, and crtics. Are your practices and behavior, is the culture you assiduously maintain, giving poets what they want?

    Terreson

  64. Another argument that is made for workshopping is related to the one I already mentioned about blind alleys. Well-meaning critiquers want to keep their fellow poets from making mistakes and getting lost. The problem with that, however, is that what you often wind up with, in practice, is conformity. Again, the overall tone and contents of the board, which the Mods and Admin DO have a large degree of ability to set, can strongly affect this. I am used to being attacked for stating differing opinions. I have even been attacked, once or twice, by a Mod for doing what the board said I should do: give an honest response to the poem. It’s just that my response took the poem apart, line by line, to show where it failed; it was not a typical back-patting or cliquish response. In other words, because I did NOT give a critique that spoke to the board’s tone of conformity, I was attacked. (By the way, even the poet later said I was right about the poem.)

    To his credit, on one occasion the Mod did later apologize to me privately for going off half-cocked. I do not know if that was because another Mod had reined him in, when I asked the other (friendlier) Mod to intervene; or if this was indeed a genuine apology. I accepted it; but I didn’t trust that person ever again.

    But my overall experience has been the same as with newspapers: They almost never print retractions or public apologies. Or if they do, it gets buried somewhere because after all, “we’ve already moved on.”

    That too is a problem: So while the Admins and Mods can claim to have an open process, when someone is censured, and it turns out to have been an error, that is almost never addressed. THis speaks both to the climate of conformity and also to the tendency for people to want to be always in the right, and never allow others to see them with egg on their face. Shame leads to silence, even when it should not.

    As to critical conformity:

    Poetry IS subject to the winds of fashion; at least as much if not more than any other artform. There are always those who follow the tyranny of opinion, as John Stuart Mill said, and those who resist it. What is critically fashionable right now might produce guffaws in just a few years. (One thinks of the whole post-avant LangPo ur-fashion these days.)

    The problem is, on a workshop board as in an MFA classroom, there is usually a de facto tyranny of style. A typical tone that one had better adhere to; and very often a typical KIND of poem. Many boards focus on only one or two kinds of poetry. The Critical Poet Board actually was an exception in that they made a separate forum for those who were interested in focusing on haiku, ghazal, cinquain, and other “Short Forms.” Those poems just weren’t getting the attention they deserved on all the other boards. That ended being a great forum for a long time, full of smart people who were well-versed in those forms and very willing to teach others about them. (I count myself in that number.)

    My aforementioned bad experience at Desert Moon Review was partly because my poems were nothing like what one usually sees on that board; and they made it clear that they didn’t want none of my kind hangin’ ’round thar. It felt a lot like shunning. I actually didn’t take it very personally, because I did figure out on my own that it was a mismatch experience. Posting sonnets on a haiku board wouldn’t be a good match, either, for example.

    But this gets at my point: A lot of people on the boards don’t have a real center to their art. They are learning, or they are practicing, but in many cases they have no clear idea what they want to do. It is very easy to get them to follow the whims of the latest fashion. And where do you go if you write a diverse range of poetry on a diverse range of topics? Where do you find a home for that? Probably you’d have to live on multiple boards—and each board you post on doubles the amount of time you have to spend online, responding and critiquing; logistically, this is not always feasible.

    A lot of negative pillorying critique is very much about insider and conformist cliques: about in-groups and outsiders; about what people think poetry is vs. those who like to experiment and explore. Even the post-avant LangPo camp has closed ranks against most outsiders. I feel honored to be equally vilified by both the LangPoets AND the neo-formalists. LOL I guess I must be doing something right. (And I’ve written an entire essay about how the psychology of both of these camps are insider psychologies; cf. Eric Hoffer’s “The True Believer.”)

    The point is, if the Mods and Admins of a particular board do in fact want to walk their talk about being a board open to ALL kinds of poetry, they had better monitor for just this sort of conformity, cliquishness, and all their related symptoms. Granted, that can be a lot of work. But if the health of poetry is what really matters, then it’s worth it.

  65. Arthur, man, I will come back to your post in awhile. You make a very valid point. But I was just, this moment, reminded of a circumstance I had forgotten about. All of a sudden I am blown away by the recollection.

    Upthread I say the governing system of site admins and moderators is corrupt. My little tale is evidence to that effect.

    As has been touted some months ago, and at my urging, I was banned from Poets.org. It is the online site sponsored by The Academy of American Poets. Some while later I learned that the site’s administrator, who is a paid employee of the Academy, had instructed her staff of moderators, prior to my banning, they could not have pm contact with me. Since she has the capability of viewing all the board’s private messages, of course, she would know of any such contact.

    This is the kind of corruption, the kind of Orwellian mind control, at least one poetry board has descended to. All defenders of the system can call me a whiner until the cows come home and the chickens roost. But there is a problem in the board system. Read my essay again. Read it sentence by sentence and this time read it not dismissevly. If you are reading these words I figure that over on your favorite poetry board some site admin might have the capability to read your private messages and they might take exception to what you say.

    What is that old saying about how power corrupts and how absolute power corrupts absolutely? The system is just wrong.

    Terreson

  66. As has been touted some months ago, and at my urging, I was banned from Poets.org. It is the online site sponsored by The Academy of American Poets. Some while later I learned that the site’s administrator, who is a paid employee of the Academy, had instructed her staff of moderators, prior to my banning, they could not have pm contact with me. Since she has the capability of viewing all the board’s private messages, of course, she would know of any such contact.”

    O.K. Now you’ve just gone barking mad Terreson. Give it up, you’re making a fool of yourself.

  67. Tere,

    My recollection is that you asked and then demanded to be banned. The admin, as far as I know, is not paid for her work, and I can assure you that she never, never forbade PM contact with you. Your source for that misinformation is mistaken (or worse). I don’t mind a debate about how sites are administered, but I don’t like to see such assertions as these offered as fact. I have no argument with you personally, Tere, or with your topic, but I’m concerned about these misrepresentations.

    Steve

  68. Lordy. This afternoon several people have sent me messages saying that over at one of the TCP sites some mod has taken exception to this thread’s title, “The Pee in the Pool of Online Poetry.” Hatrabbit that be you, right?

    I think I read Clattery right enough to guess he is an honest broker. So I don’t think he will object to what I am about to say.

    The title of my essay is this: “Are Poetry Boards Good For Poetry?” On the other hand, I get what Clattery means. Too many of you mods, admins, second-rate critics keep pissing in the waters. You constitute the class of online poetry participants I most object to. Yours is the smugness online most damaging to online poetry.

    So while I didn’t come up with the phrase I’ll take it. Ya’ll just don’t get how much damage you’ve done.

    Terreson

  69. Steve, I was shown the message. I stand by what I said. So ask the Academy if your boss is not a paid employee. And, okay, Hatrabbit, if that is how you need it to be I am crazy. Ya’ll have more to defend than I do.

    Terreson

  70. Terreson,

    I couldn’t care less what the title is, I just made that point that it showed where you were coming from. If that wasn’t the title you wanted over your own post , it’s certainly not my problem. Work it out with your editor.

    What I said, in effect, was that you felt the mods of poetry forums were the ones pissing in the pool.

    And here, in your own words:

    “Too many of you mods, admins, second-rate critics keep pissing in the waters.”

    There. Something we’re in agreement on.

    I find it incredible that you were reduced to outright lies about the Poets.org Admin being a paid employee and non-existent memo’s to the moderators, as well as the clueless notion that the Admin or moderators of Poet.org have access to PM’s.

    Nice work.

  71. Hi Arthur,

    Sorry to take so long to respond.

    “Dave R. made this comment:

    “When I see discussions like this on the forums it usually comes from the people who spend more time talking ABOUT poetry rather than participating in the workshops themselves. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing because I’m always tracking these discussions as best I can and often learn from them. I’m also not saying those people don’t write poetry, they might be writing great poetry. I just don’t put much stock in being told what’s being gained from a workshop by people who aren’t in there participating.”

    I did follow up that first sentence with: I’m not saying that’s a bad thing because I’m always tracking these discussions as best I can and often learn from them. I’m also not saying those people don’t write poetry, they might be writing great poetry. So, in a sense I’ve already agreed with a lot of what you’re saying here. Maybe not as graciously as I could have.

    Re: “If you’re going to have an open forum, you need to let people do what they do. Your suggestion comes dangerously close to telling poets what they SHOULD do. If you don’t like being told something, but you turn and tell somebody something, that seems a little uneven. ”

    I think we’re talking about a continuum of openness here. Poetry forums are, mostly, not completely open. They are semi-directed, I’m aware some think overly directed.
    Terreson mentioned the word ‘organic’ in his article referring to the ideal structure of a forum, and I think that was an interesting term. Even an organic farmer thinks about companion planting, the layout of the land and where the sun is coming from and even what will sell at the farmer’s market. In other words there is some conscious direction required. I think most of the argument is about the level of intervention required to keep a forum moving along successfully. My view is that people are pretty much free to do what they want within the parameters set out at the forums I participate in, whether as a member or as a moderator.

    “For example, if a poet is in a fallow period, and isn’t writing much new poetry, maybe they want to continue to participate in the community by talking about poetry. Are you really suggesting that they should just shut up, instead?”

    No. As I said, I follow a lot of those discussions myself and learned a lot from the experience (funnily enough, the poetics discussions at PFFA, often cited as the most oppressive board, are where I’ve learned the most). There are a lot of members who exclusively, or almost exclusively, post on poetics threads at Poets.org and that is a meaningful and valuable contribution to the forum, often more so than critiquing. My problem was with someone who I saw as not contributing to critique forums telling those who do how those forums should be run. You said everyone posting here has a long history of contributions in that area so I’ll concede that I was misinformed and too quick to snark there. My apologies.

    Cheers,
    Dave

  72. Well, hatrabbit, unless my informants have lied to me I am representing what I believe to be true. And, yes, I did read the memo, as you put it. I suppose this means, again to use your verbiage, I am not the liar. Interesting representation you and bunch give.

    But you know something, rabbit? The tactic you are using in the discussion has become standard operating procedure among mods. Trivialize and marginalize any member who questions the system. It is precisely what you are doing now, rabbit. It is what both sbunch and Ward did upthread. What you did upthread too. It is what ya’ll do on your boards too. Here at least, and so far, I don’t have to worry about your powers to delete and an admin’s powers to ban. So I am going to call your system on its shit for as long as I am allowed to have a voice.

    Today I got an angry and passionate email from someone, I assume he is a young man, who has followed this conversation and who took me to task for caring about poetry when there is so much hatred, killing, and poverty in the world. On a certain level of course he is right. I told him so in reply. But I also told him that if poetry doesn’t matter what the fuck does? If the possibility of beauty in expressed freedom doesn’t matter than nothing matters.

    I am not the problem here, hatrabbit. The system you so need to defend is. You, as a mod, are party to that system, implicating you in the online corruption.

    Sorry to be so blunt. You’ve called me a liar and called me crazy. I don’t know your motives. But I question you.

    Terreson

  73. This will be my last post here.

    Terreson, you are free to believe whom you choose. In effect, you’ve called me a liar. I’m not, at least not in this instance. Seems to me that if you’re going to make claims about the poets.org admin, you need to back them up with something other than hearsay. Dave and I can’t prove a negative, and obviously we’re tainted because we’re moderators. You might contact the Academy and ask about their site admin and moderator payroll. In the interest of full disclosure, I’ll admit that I’m afforded (but only recently) an annual membership, which entitles me to a t-shirt, a book, and some refrigerator magnets. (That’s right–I spend all that time and take all this shit for a tee shirt, a book, and some magnets.) Oh, and I think we get a 10% discount at the poets.org store. Yeah, it’s beginning to add up.

    And this to Rus Bowden, the founder of the feast here, I suspect, though I don’t know for a fact, that you know that Terreson’s allegations are false. If you do have that knowledge, your silence makes you complicit. It would be nice if you’d weigh in on these specific charges or at least ask Terreson to substantiate them.

    I’m done. Thanks for reading.

    S.

  74. Well, the defensiveness finally comes to the surface.

    Bunch, I did not say that you or any other moderator at Poets.org is a paid employee of The Academy of American Poets. I did say that the site’s administrator is. And if you say again the site’s admin did not admonish mods from having pm conversation with me in that private forum you all have you bet I will call you a liar. If you tell me you all don’t share pm’s received from members with each other I will again call you a liar. Your site admin, damned if I can remember her name, said so on your board last fall.

    One last item. Why are you taking exception with Rus Bowden for what are clearly my thoughts? He has attacked no one. Neither has Clattery. I guess you and the rabbit could feel under attack by me. If so, take me on and prove me wrong. Neither of you have proved me wrong.. What I take away from your last post is that if some blog meister makes available a forum for discussion that cannot be mod controlled you get uncomfortable.

    I thought more of you, bunch.

    Terreson

  75. Dave, thank you for that gracious apology about the people here all contributing to the poetry boards–the whole about people having participated, not just complained. Apology accepted.

    In the brief time I was at Poets.org, i was indeed one of those who only posted in the poetics forums, and not on the poetry forums per se. I frankly never liked or trusted the critique on poems themselves, although I did lurk on a few of those boards, and did post critiques if not my own poems for critique. I was even at one time specifically asked by Christine to post an educational piece about haiku on the “Poetic Craft–Resources” forum, which I did. I had prepared a second post at one time, but events interceded before I could follow through on that. It was also pretty obvious to me that hardly anyone was that interested in the topic, anyway. Which is all fine; it is what it is. I believe in enticing people’s interest in things that are new to them; I don’t believe in coercion of any kind, not even in coercing people to do things that prove to be good for them.

    Nonetheless, I have to say this about the discussions on the poetics forums at Poets.org: almost every time I opened my mouth on any of the discussion forums I frequently found myself attacked, often personally, and often predictably by two or three of the same names. (BTW, I save off to my hard drives copies of all such postings, as evidence should I ever need it. Which I have, once or twice.) The overall climate was not one of collegial conversation or rational disagreement; it was usually a hostile environment, in which rudeness was excused as “honesty,” and there was definitely a clique which included a few Mods who were in the lead on the dismissive remarks and hostility. Yes, I can name names (as I said, I save that shit off). As for honesty, I give very frank and honest critique, but if I can manage to do it without being rude or hostile, so can you. (Et vous, aussi.)

    The point, though, is that my experience of watching how this de facto clique worked led me to eventually leave. “Circling the wagons,” indeed. Nor was I the only one to leave when I did. Enough was enough.

    At the same time, there were lots of smart folks around who were willing and interested in engaging in discussions of poetics on a friendly and reasonable basis. That was encouraging at first, but when the same people predictably came along and shouted them down, and when a certain Mod predictably started deleting things he didn’t like (which I have seen him do on three separate boards where he became a Mod), it was very clear that there WAS in fact a division between the general membership and the Mods, and in fact “some people ARE more equal than others.” In the case of that certain Mod, who often seeks out power wherever he goes, corruption does indeed ensue. It would be hilarious if it weren’t so predictable.

    Poets.org is a huge effing board. It’s probably too big to manage. Still, it could be better managed, and with a lighter touch. It’s actually a relief (thanks, Mr. MacH.) to be able to talk about this stuff, finally, because all too often it’s not permitted anywhere. Most boards have a policy of NOT naming names or talking about all this stuff; on many boards, that’s an actionable offense. I understand the rationale behind that, but it also very clearly adds to the problem: Silence breeds resentments, and lack of trust, and (ultimately) resentment, and perhaps even vindictiveness. Many of the boards DO have a close-mouthed policy about disciplinary activities that does not lead to an environment of open justice and trust. (Watch any Western movie to learn about the archetypes involved.) As a general member–I have never been a Mod on any board any of you have ever heard of, and were I asked to become a Mod, I would decline–it is sometimes difficult to see decisions not made openly and publicly as anything but circling the wagons.

    The issue is that of appearance as much as of fact. I have raised the issue of appearance to many Mods on many boards, and only one or two have ever acknowledged that appearances can be a problem. Mostly, they just got defensive. (I frequently had to remind them that I was not blaming them, just pointing out how things looked from the outside. This frequently fell on deaf ears.)

    Again, thanks to Mr. MacH. for a place to air out all this dirty laundry without it being instantly deleted. It’s time to clear the air about all this–because every attempt I’ve seen on the boards themselves to discuss these issues and problems and behaviors HAS been summarily shut down, shouted down, suppressed, and/or deleted. It has always been denied, and it has always been autocratically dealt with, even by Admins who beforehand did not behave autocratically. In the past year or two, I have observed to happen at Poets.org, at The Critical Poet (twice at least), at Capriole, and elsewhere. I have even been personally targeted once or twice by a Mod who apparently went off the deep end and eventually imploded. I might add that all I did was disagree with him, and not even very forcefully.

    So much for the climate of open discourse without personal investment.

    It does lead one back to the recurrent observation that people let out their dark sides to play online in ways they never would face to face. There’s something about the relative anonymity of this text-only medium, and also something about its limitations (no ability to hear tone of voice, etc.), that seems to give certain people the feeling that have license to misbehave. Those of us who struggle hard in our lives to be authentically ourselves, online as well as off, can find this baffling. And yes, people DO hide behind pseudonyms. And some people who become Mods DO abuse the power given to them, aided and abetted by their anonymity and protection from repercussions. When’s the last time you saw a Mod publicly reprimanded, or banned? Hmn?

    So, Terreson’s argument about a climate of defensive management rings true, based on the evidence of observation.

    This doesn’t mean that poetry boards are all bad per se. It doesn’t even mean that the majority of poets involved are anything other than good and well-intentioned people. It doesn’t mean that the climate of hostility cannot some day be mended; and I agree with many of the suggestions upthread about what that might look like. I doubt Terreson would bother to have written his essay if he didn’t care about the future of online poetry in general, and of poetry boards in particular. What it DOES mean is that it is time to air out a lot of dirty laundry. You can all disagree with that, if you wish. You can even shout it down, here and elsewhere. But I hope you all realize that in doing so–or in merely dismissing and disparaging it, and refusing to deal with it–you are complicit in it’s continuation. That is not an accusation: it is an observation.

    As Edmund Burke once famously quoted, “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” I do not say any of this is evil. I do say that doing nothing about it, however, can potentially fester and destroy the very things you all say you care deeply about.

    So, it is indeed high time to discuss it. So far, so good.

  76. I asked that my real name not be used. Call me Clattery, maybe Clay for short, C. for shorter.

    I got up early this morning, went to work, went to my uncle’s funeral, went back to work, went to Cambridge for a concert (Blue Heron: Music from the Era of El Greco & Velázquez: The Musical Patronage of Francisco Gómez de Sandoval y Rojas (1552–1625) Duke of Lerma). I certainly don’t feel complicit in anything by my “silence” as I catch up on my reading before going to bed way too late. For tomorrow, you can interpret my silence as being at work.

    I titled this article. I get to. What’s the problem? What’s the dig for? There something pure about the behavior that’s gone on at the poetry forums? How about in this thread alone? How about a build up of years of this malarkey? How about moderators flaming the threads of poets? How about the stifling, ridiculous rules of discussion that have nothing to do with making poetry that abound on forums? You’re a Martian landing today, looking at this thread, A to Z and back to A, and it supports up and down, by example, that there is territorial dog pee in the pool the poets are swimming in. This essay is one poet’s shot at a filter.

    We talk about poets leaving forums for other forums, and bicker that these are better than those. There are poets not in this discussion because the waters have not been fine. They’re gone from online poetry altogether, never to return. They were not accepted for who they were, but were shoved into rule-based forums, where there ought to be certification exams before posting a poem. Who could anticipate such insanity?

    I bring this issue up so that forums can improve. If admins and moderators choose to dig in and argue side points in order to discount someone they disagree with, in order to gain points toward a “win” like they do on the forums, it is their loss.

    You can interpret the upcoming silence as my going to bed now.

    C.

  77. What C. said.

    I’d like to underline one point: “If admins and moderators choose to dig in and argue side points in order to discount someone they disagree with, in order to gain points toward a “win” like they do on the forums, it is their loss.”

    I do find it fascinating how that same tactic is being used here as well as on the forums: the defensiveness and the need to reply and paint oneself as being in the right, often by impugning one’s person rather than responding directly to the issues raised. That actually began with comment no. 2 on this very thread, and has continued.

    It’s fascinating because the force of the denial speaks to the apparent uncertainty of the position being defended. If it’s a position that’s so strong that it needs no defense, why come here to defend it? That speaks to some deep uncertainty about the truth and fairness of one’s own position, perhaps even some insecurity, and it manifests as a lot of flailing around.

    No one is so insecure of his position as the one who feels a need to shout down all opposition and all questioners.

  78. Incredible to me how nasty the situation has become. On one board especially not only am I getting personally attacked but the host of this blog as well, both in public and in private. And, of course, on the boards there is nothing I can say for fear of reprisal. What a strange order has been created.

    Terreson

  79. Damn, Clattery. I’ve read and replied to Cleo’s comments on the essay. Very thoughtful, measured, even handed. Color me impressed and heartened. You do seem to have some fun friends. Thanks for the lead.

    On the subject of thanks, I want to thank the few people, people such as Arthur, who, over the last eight days, have looked for the constructive dialogue over the essay. I don’t expect everyone to agree with me. Even my best friend takes issue with a point or two the article draws out. But calling someone like me, or even Clattery, the problem is rather like killing the messenger, which, in itself, suggests the problem lies elsewhere.

    Terreson

  80. Hi Terreson,

    Thanks go to you for writing and attending to your essay–even in the face of some of the nastiness. Both your strength and your weakness come from the sweet spot in your soul, which makes some (most) appreciate you, but others want to take you down and eat you for breakfast.

    No matter where you go in poetry, no matter the skill level, the genre, it does not matter–there are so many terrific people. I want the best for them, and we should hear all their voices. Your essay goes a long way toward bringing this about.

    This essay won’t die out. It will continue to live on the web. It will be referenced for some time to come. The comments that come months and years from now will be great to read.

    C.

  81. Clattery, I admire you for carrying the essay. Everyone knows your position in the online poetry board community. It would have been easy, effortless for you, safer actually, not to carry it on your blog. Letting someone speak up is a brave thing. Whether it be in the Defense Department, in Bejing, on the streets of Chicago, on the streets of Madrid, in Chile, or on the American poetry boards where I’ve sadly learned a few new/old lessons.

    I think I said upthread that poetry will outlive the boards. We all know it will. Hell, poetry outlives empires and religions. Politics too and economics. If my essay addresses a certain, local, problem concerning poetry boards, still the board system is just a gadfly to be swatted down.

    In the end, Clattery, and nobody has to believe me, by now many people have called my motives into question, it is the newbees, the first round poets, the passionate youngsters, girl and boy, the middle-aged woman going through a crisis, the older man and woman who for some reason they don’t know come to poetry, and all of these people having something true, sometimes incredibly perfectly beautiful to say, these are a few of the people I had in mind when questioning the online poetry board system. You just never know when your next Rimbaud or Dickinson will show themselves.

    I am satisfied the system sucks. I am satisfied that the system can correct itself. All it needs is for the poetic instinct to come first, and for the community minded (collective) instinct to come a late, late second.

    Terreson

  82. I’ve been reading a lot of the comments on the other boards Mr. MacH. posted above. The amount of vitriol is exceeded only by the number of vested interests who would love to dismiss all this, sweep it under the rug, and revert to their comfortable ideas of the status quo. I’ve even been reading the threads to which I will no longer contribute, having given my word that I would never post there again. It’s tempting but it’s not worth breaking my word, because the results would be as predictable as they have become. In a way, that’s really very sad.

    But I’m still glad this has all been brought up for discussion, despite the many veiled personal attacks and vested dismissals. It has festered for a long time, and it’s good to give the issues involved some air time. My more cynical side has no belief whatsoever that anything will come of it–people don’t like to admit they’re wrong, they don’t like to resign their positions of power, especially when they don’t see why they might consider it, and they don’t like to be told things that they disagree with. The more hopeful remains grateful that it’s been brought up and vigorously discussed, regardless. That way lies potential growth, potential resolution, and potential improvement. The “shut up” attitude, although those who promote seem blind to it, brings us only more of the same, a continuation and deepening of the worst aspects of the status quo, and no chance at all of rebirth. That way lies the victory of entropy–which in itself ought to be reason enough to resist that attitude.

    I just read a comment on another board about all this wherein the poet said he’s been getting emails on a poetry board asking him to not question other poets’ critiques and opinions. Beyond the sheer, astonishingly Orwellian aspects of such a request, that completely contradicts those many guidelines on those many boards who pay at least the minimum lip-service to the free exchange of ideas, information, and discussion and bout poetry. Such blatant attempts to stifle debate are truly stunning.

    La plus ca change, la plus meme chose.

  83. I find myself coming to this conversation very late. I’ve been involved in forums for quite a while, as an admin and mod for several years of one of the biggest (at a time when Tere was an assistant admin/mod), when Calitica’s/Colin Ward’s various aliases were rightly banned, as a current admin of the site Tere suggests represents what poetry sites can amount to when egos and stupidity don’t interfere, and as an active (1000 plus posts) at The Gaz.

    I agree fundamentally with Tere’s original post. I can’t be bothered getting into a slanging match, but in my experience the following statements prove themselves true over and over again.

    1) If Tere gets underneath people’s skn, it’s invariably because they have the sort of fragile self-esteem and psyche that is drawn to seeking small amounts of power in poetry forums. Almost invariably, they lack genuine poetic talent and as such are scared of having their opinions challenged.

    2) people who are drawn to moderating and admining poetry forums often do it because they have no other currency in the world of poetry. Publication isn’t everything (though for me is the goal), but generally admins remain marginal at best and seem to enjoy exercising the small amount of leverage their actual ability ensures they can never otherwise access. Nor are they driven by a desire to contribute to fostering an environment where poets can develop. Poetry isn’t the primary concern- ego is. Occasionally an admin goes against the grain (the Gaz is a good example of that, as ae many of the mods there,)but generally not.

    3) arguments here and elsewhere about the choice of title for the original essay are laughably juvenile and silly. They are the sorts of arguments people resort to when they feel threatened by someone, because they sense somewhere, deep down, that they are wrong.

    4) events a few months ago at poets.org, which i read after the fact, were a validation of my above comments about admins and mods. And, given who the original perpetrator was, it’s hard to see them as anything other than a very small, insecure person taking revenge for a series of bannings that had happened years previously, and an ego clash that was never resolved. The whole incident fundamentally reduces any claims poets.org has as a grownup, strong forum. An analysis of the level of poetry and crituque might lead to the same conclusion.

    5)similarly, events that haappened a few years ago at TCP, which resulted ultimately in a schism and the departure of half a dozen of that site’s leading practitioners, readers, and best people, validate the idea espoused by both Arthur and Tere that power corrupts and that, fundamentally, the sort of poeple drawn to leadership of online forums lack the people skills and ability for self reflection that are completely vital in any form of leadership.

    Like Tere, I have faith in online forums. Certainly, were it not for the encouragement and criticism of some absolutely first rate people, including Pat, Arthur and Tere, I wouldn’t be the writer I am today. For a young australian who’s poetic development occurred largely while living in China, the access to like minds and learning was extremely valued. But, generally speaking, they are riddled with hacks and wannabes, people with grudges to deal with, people who, because of their insecurities, feel threatened by the freeflow of debate and discussion.

  84. I would like to call to attention that both groups of agenda’s are seeking validation in the validated. That is all.

    Also, I’d like to add that the cut of your lip has left a bruise on the table. God forbid you learn to go down on the muse while she’s bleeding.

    P.S. The proof is in the pudding but not everyone has the same number of taste buds.

    End note. A list of books to I think people should read. “The Anxiety of Influence” Harold Bloom. Any Essay by Ralf Waldo Emerson. “Seuxal Personae”…sadly I forget who the author’s name. Um…”Letters to a Young Poet”, by Rilke, “What is Surrealism?” By Andre Breton, “Finite and Infinite Games,” By James something. A handful of poetry anthologies. Read contemporary stuff. The poet has the last word. Um, oh…and most importantly of all,

    those exhalted now…well they have yet to stand the test of time, and the likes of Hall or Collins or Ginsberg and Whomever, once they reach say 200 years, then maybe, possibly, they can be deemed as great….maybe. I don’t know.

    Some other books I think evey poet should have. A dictionary. An etymological dictionary. Poetics and Rhetoric by Aristotle. The Book of Forms by Lewis Turco. Um…hmmm…Books by poets in the locality that you live, whether nationwide, state, county, country….ect…

    oh and never ever trust anyone other than your self. I know that I don’t write great poetry, but I also know that everyone has their own agenda, their own schooling, their ‘favorite’ poets, writers, strippers, singers, pimps, prostitutes, sexual positions, fathers, mothers, spaceships, grandpas. Sasuage.

    Anyhow, I like this magic act of spit and palm, but I have to go.

    It’s been nice. When you guys are done being Polyphemus there’s poems that need to be critiqued, books to be read, and the great pursuit of selfishness that is always in art. Spit and palm. Stroke! Stroke! You guy are drowning.

    – Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

  85. Oh also, to T, I think you made some excellent points about workshops. You must have done a lot of work and spent may hours writing this. And I mean this in the most sincere way of possible. And as a reader and writer who knows that one can never get to where they’re going, only dance in the flux, it’s refreshing to read something that makes sense, and makes one evalulate communication and interaction. I wish more boards would propose questions to the poets. Not enough conversation. And if we are working in the same way that nature works, or if nature is working in the same way we work, it important as little cells of information that we share with each other. It gives a grand and wider scope of who we are in relation to our litte spot on this big cosmic body…which is of course a metaphor, God is not the cause it the Effect.

    Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

    I really only belong two sites Shakespearesmonkeys.com and Alsop…but honestly I’m about tired of workshops, not that I don’t mind valid opinions, but I think a lot of people are looking for justification, I just want to say do it, do it regardless of whatever anyone thinks. I mean, after so many rejections you’ll either get better or you won’t. And if you stick with it long enough you can be a handful of dust under somebody’s kitchen.

  86. Lot of mixed signals there, Ryan. first you mock then you agree? Which is fine, of course. But it definitely muddies the waters of your intent, rather than clarifying them. As for your list of recommended readings, it’s a nice list, and could be added to.

    “Finite and Infinite Games” is by James P. Carse. If you liked that book, you also might like his “Breakfast at the Victory.”

    “Sexual Personae” is by Camille Paglia. Radical provocateur. I assume you’ve also read her book actually about poetry, “Break, Blow, Burn”?

    As for the proof being in the pudding, many of those who have posted to this thread, or parallel threads elsewhere, are fine poets who have substantial bodies of good poetical work. That accusation keeps coming up: that people should shut up in talking about poetry and the poetry boards, unless they too are poets who have contributed to the scenes they’re critiquing. Maybe you didn’t get that far down the thread, but as I said before, yeah, these folks ARE poets, and good ones. They’re not talking about something of which they know nothing; quite the opposite. That’s why it’s worth listening to, and talking about.

    You also seem to imply that seeking validation for one’s viewpoint is a bad thing. You’re quite correct in that many people ARE seeking validation–often because they’ve felt stifled of shut up or invalidated previously, and have not had the chance before to air out their concerns this openly. But that is no bad thing. Everybody likes to feel as if they’re being heard. Speaking only for myself, my life would not be harmed in any way if no one validated me or my ideas: it’s nice, but I don’t need it, and my self-esteem doesn’t depend on it. Especially as a poet; I have to laugh out loud at the very idea.

    There are two ways to read your de facto mockery of people seeking validation (regardless of their viewpoint). (Oh and by the way, there are far more than just two sides to this issue; kindly don’t oversimplify it.) One way is to interpret your comment as an attempt to invalidate the entire argument. Another way to interpret it is that you yourself seek validation of your own outsider status to the issue. Both of these are fine. I’m just holding up a mirror.

    Oh, and also by the way, thanks again for the reading recommendations. Fortunately, they’re all titles I have on my bookshelves, and have already read. Except Aristotle, which I’ve read but don’t own. Cheers.

  87. I have been following this thread in hopes the substantive issues raised in Tere’s article would be taken up.
    Sadly, the discussion was aborted almost immediately by a cheap-shot artist. It seems to me that personal
    attack in lieu of reasoned argument is the last resort of petty power freaks. One of the very problems Tere seeks to address.

    I understand the need to face down
    such a person and I appreciate the
    uncensored environment in which the discussion has taken place. Maybe with time and cooling down, the real discussion can happen. I’ll be thinking on Tere’s points
    and looking forward to that time.

    For the record, I’m a member of poets.org and remember Tere’s participation there; it provoked thought and elevated/expanded the discourse. Often it was met with a volley of cheap shots, often by the mods. I never could figure that out. He rarely, if ever stooped to that level. His response to sincere input was always generous and inclusive.

    Many thanks to C for publishing this.

    Chris

  88. It’s not so much that I intended to mock the thread, I think there are extremely excellent points, I encourage communication to the highest and fullest, and agree most with what T has presented in his essay.

    But, I sit on the sidelines of this, and I read most of the thread, not all but most, and the back and forth became tiresome. So to clarify, yes, I agree with the thread, will it make a difference in the long run? I don’t know.

    But, to clarify more, I left the book list for those wishing, (and more importantly those who don’t have the proper equipment to par take in the discussion, such as younger or less academic writers)to expand there horizons. I’m by no means Mt. Sinai, nor do I claim to be. But…

    I feel that time is the ultimate tell all, which is nothing new, and everything is a nice golden froth, and it should be valued for what it is and isn’t.

    I look at it a number of ways, and the originality isn’t too alarming, there’s always going to be cliques, mirrors, handshakes, smiles, and frowns, ultimately, I guess what I was getting at, is it comes down to what you think, and how honest you are with your self. There’s nothing wrong with being your own critic, as long as you are genuinely honest, I write things all the time that I wish I could write better, so I try to, and if it doesn’t work it doens’t work. I don’t know where I’m going with this…but yeah, communication is key, it helps to harmonize reader and writer.

    What suprises me the most about validation, is that there are those who feel because they’ve attended such and such, and read so and so, that they are now the dog’s tooth in the lamb’s ear. As far as I’m concerned poetry speaks for its self, and you’ll know by any form it takes regardless of the light or shadow. After all it’s no coicidence that we call this universe, it just takes some people more time to appreciate the etchings of their hand.

    1. Be a servant to the masses.
    2. Be a servant to the academcis.
    3. Be a servant to your self.
    4. Be a servant to a particular philosophy.
    5. Die.
    6. Maggots rejoice in your skull.
    7. But in the mean time appreciate the contradictions and beauty (however you define it) and in your quiet solipsism you may come to find your mind is but a little bit of gray matter in a thing bigger than your self and at the same time exactly who you are and who you have always wanted to be.
    8. Then communicate your self to your self.
    9. Arthur did you see your face when you held the mirror up to me?

    -Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

  89. Well, certainly poetry speaks for itself. Whatever that means. It’s sort of a vague statement that doesn’t really tell me very much. I can assume it means that the strength of the poem is what matters; the quality of the writing, etc. But it remains a somewhat vague statement. (One can argue a long time about what quality means, too. There are several scales, and axes of interpretation of meaning.) There have been a lot of oversimplifications already on this thread, used to make rhetorical points.

    I do agree that the test of time is often the final arbiter of quality of creative work; what endures is often the cream rising to the top; although it is interesting to note that even the test of time is wrong about enduring popularity, if not quality. And some great works do get overlooked, too. Many of the great poems of times past are not all that well known. So the test of time is not perfect, although it’s often the only test that matters.

    It’s another sweeping generalization that contains some truth, but also has exceptions. I tend to avoid absolutist statements like that, simply because there are always exceptions, thereby proving that no absolute statements are absolutely true. Welcome to a universe that contains entropy: nothing lasts forever, and nothing avoids change.

    Your original comments, however, seemed to imply that no one here had written poetry that speaks for itself, but were non-poets kvetching about things. I doubt I was the only one who interpreted your remarks that way; but if I was, c’est la vie.

    As for your list of books, it’s not at all a bad list. But speaking of validation, why bother posting a list of books others “should” read? Maybe that’s just another kind of validation being sought. Or not.

    Funny thing about mirrors. Holding one up is an invitation to self-reflection. But not everyone wants to do that; it can take courage, too. Being evasive about it is just another form of refusal. My mirrors are fine, thank you.

  90. Much good thinking going on. Sam is incredible, bloody incredible with the way he synthesizes information. Arthur who has a way of seeing to details. And we all know the devil is in the details. And what about what Chris D says when she says maybe with time and cooling down the real discussion can begin?

    By now both my motives and sanity have been brought into question on a couple of boards. But Chris D is right. I too am looking for the real discussion.

    Terreson

  91. Vintner wrote: “PFFA isn’t for vanity posters, poseurs, posers, poetasters or illiterates who can’t read guidelines. It ain’t for the thin skinned or the deluded.”

    The only ones who are deluded are those who think PFFA isn’t the playpen for sadistic babies who have no power anywhere else, and masochistic poets who like bondage and discipline.

    Diana

    .

  92. Dave wrote:

    “some poet has been banned for something he/she said in PM to one of the board’s moderators. It appears the board has a relatively new guideline. A member can be banned from the “public” board for comments made in a private message.”

    “Harrasing members in public posts or private messages is against the guidelines at that forum. Always has been.”

    Dave you know perfectly well that members PMs to any mod or the site admin are posted again the the moderators’ private forum, which is invisible to members.

    PMs are Ms, but they are not P! Nothing warns members that they can be banned as a result of a Private Message they have sent to a mod or admin, and this is exactly what happened in Terreson’s case. I was there; I witnessed it; I resigned as a result.

    Private Messages are not private.

    Diana

    .

  93. steve wrote:

    “Tere,

    My recollection is that you asked and then demanded to be banned.”

    Steve, if you were being stuck with sharp sticks, wouldn’t you want to go somewhere else?

    Tere was vilified and so was I for defending him and we both left.

    Diana

    .

  94. Dear All,

    In response to Clattery MacHinery’s comment that the Critical Poet (.org) was in the process of closing down Tere’s thread on the subject, I just wanted to state that this is untrue (but an understandable comment). The thread has obviously brought about emotive responses, and any limits sought were based on the idea of the essay being placed in the wrong room there, a room that does not quite have the history of wide discussion as some of our other rooms do.

    The subject remains fully open, and welcomed.

    Jodi.

  95. “In response to Clattery MacHinery’s comment that the Critical Poet (.org) was in the process of closing down Tere’s thread on the subject, I just wanted to state that this is untrue (but an understandable comment). The thread has obviously brought about emotive responses, and any limits sought were based on the idea of the essay being placed in the wrong room there, a room that does not quite have the history of wide discussion as some of our other rooms do.

    The subject remains fully open, and welcomed”.

    Yes, that is true, Jodi. But isn’t it also true that the TCP.org room for discussion was locked by an administrator and is still locked? It certainly appears that it was locked to stifle discussion. If not, for what other reason?

  96. Dear Patricia,

    “To stifle discussion” is a somewhat worrying choice of phrase given that it presupposes a certain narrative of joyous expression and brutal repression – there was stifling certainly, but not in the sense that you put across; instead, it was owing to the following: in the aftermath of the split between Criticalpoet.com and Critcalpoet.org there was a debate on how .org could move forward – as part of that we spoke of censorship, and the idea of an ideological rebirth. The line was that we would be fine up to the point of personal attacks against individuals (directed against the self, not the beliefs), which is a fairly sensible suggestion, along with preliminary discussions on voted-in mods with term limits, and the hope that mod interference would be extremely low (most of us agreed that in principle a board without mods would be good). A few mods were appointed, myself included, by the site admin to help on a short-term basis with interim structuring after the split, and to essentially chair debates on the future guidelines of the site, knowing that there was a need for a revisiting of several aspects of openness that had troubled members into not moving on to the .com sister site.

    Thinking we weren’t being liberal enough (despite a promised wide berth for emotive outbursts, or singular instances etc.), a very small group of members personally attacked others with quite a deal of vitriol, wanting the full freedom of speech we should all have, but at the same time intimidating others who did not agree with the manner of its implementation, both by private message and in public; this was extended further into attacking the poems of others too. It was disappointing to me personally because I wanted to see a good debate on how to implement a nigh-on complete freedom, not with idealism, but with small steps and good poetry. As a consequence, the decision was taken by the site owner to close down the room traditionally used to talk about categories outside of the scope of the other rooms (the “Everything Else” board where most of this had all happened), and in the context of the fragility of the site at that time in the aftermath of the split, it was certainly the right decision (the “Everything Else” archives are available at Criticalpoet.org for your reference)

    The room has not since reopened, but it has been made clear on the board that we hope that will come soon (only the admin has control to do that, and is currently absent, but will undoubtedly take the advice of the mods that the room should be reopened). In addition, our belief is that everyone has the right to speak freely – we’d just appreciate it, as you would yourself, if they would attack each other’s ideas, not their individual personalities, or aspects of them that have nothing to do with the discussion. The very fact that Terreson’s essay is there at Criticalpoet.org, and discussed vigorously, is testament to the fact that the site has come through a difficult period to a point where we can now build a community again that is both challenging and representative of all manner of opinion.

    ^Jodi.

  97. Well I apologize Arthur, I’m not quite sure what for…since my oversimplification, sweeping generalizations, and attempt at an antenagoge or antanagoge following my first post seems to have gotten under your skin. And now since you’ve pointed out my oversimplification I will get down and dirty with T. But first

    “Your original comments, however, seemed to imply that no one here had written poetry that speaks for itself, but were non-poets kvetching about things. I doubt I was the only one who interpreted your remarks that way; but if I was, c’est la vie. ” Yes c’est la vie is what you should do, this is a neat little trick Arthur, call attention to the original post and not the one following it…I believe the second one is where the merit is, or at least how I truly felt about Ts essay. Your attempt at trying to show me as an asshole doesn’t work, because I know I’m an asshole that has nothing to say but a bunch of shit, take it or leave it. Everything is generalizations some more elaborate than others.

    And no where did I ever say I didn’t seek validation either Arthur. So stop trying to Lancelot me.

    Now on to T’s Essay.

    Dear Reader,

    Are poetry boards good for poetry?

    Yes and No. Everything is in flux and can change at anytime. I myself tend to be my own critic, and don’t post poem after poem, but poems I feel need ‘workshopped”, or poems I think could be improved.

    Do the boards benefit poets, the new and inexperienced especially who, in most cases, are grappling with the vital stuff of finding an authentic voice, gaining confidence in themselves, working through the canon, trying to figure out if they have something essential to say, and all at the same time?
    Some boards do, but the funny thing is, to me, as a personal opinion, you can’t create a poet. A person is either a poet or they’re not. It’s not something you can go to school for. Wow that sounds elitist, but I feel it’s true, you have so many people thinking anyone can be a poet. I’ll take this class, I’ll go to the this school, I’ll read these books, and then soon, and by golly, I’ll be a poet. I think if I can borrow out of context, Robert Frost said it best when he said “ To be a poet is a condition, not a profession.” But don’t misconstrue that, we all need proper training, and fellowship is a thing to be admired, so yes the books, the schooling, the influences are important….but it still takes more to be a poet. I think it’s impossible for the inexperienced/new writer, to do all that at one board, or all at the same time, it takes more measurements of time to achieve those things. I’ve been at this since I was in 5th grade, and since 5th grade I’ve improved, but I’m still learning, and I’ll still learn until the day I die. Poetry is always the same, it’s a mirror, but when you get tired of looking at your self, you start to notice the chair behind you, the room in the mirror, the window in the mirror, the shadows, ect…what’s important is it’s you and the mirror, but there’s also a room behind you. So to answer the question again, yes some poetry boards provide that, maybe all of them do, it may require putting up with bourgeoisie attitude of more academic boards, but fuck it, that’s life. It also depends upon how far the along the ‘poet’ is in his or her life. Everything is poetry, but not everything is a poem. And taste and styles will differ, and as they differ or evolve or simply perish, poetry is still there. Influence is the major contributor here, and everyone wants to jerk off their influence, no matter how aware of it they are or not, it’s natural.

    Do the boards, viewed as communities, engender poetry whose language is also authentic or do they falsify the poetry experience?

    Wow, I’ve been to boards whose poetry is authentic but wholly Tristan Tzara. I’ve been to boards, starting out, like poetry.com, who pray on people, but I was also 15 at the time. I was duped! But the Poetry experience can’t be falsified because poetry is the experience. Isn’t the point of a workshop to get to the point where you don’t need it anymore? Because you’ve got your own voice, your own honest critique, you’ve upped your knowledge? That’s what I always thought. Then again, I’m a weirdo.

    Another question comes to mind. Is even the notion of an online poetry community good for poetry?

    Community and fellowship helps to foster poetry, but so does something other than the internet, get involved, get off your computers, get back on your computers, communication is key. Even if it’s not communicating anything, but showing you the way a particular leaf looks against the pocked mouth of a meth addict. Community is detrimental when the poet relies on it. There is no reason, if you are a poet, who is strong voiced, who knows what he or she likes, who has found their self amid the myriad self, and is able to write great poetry , should be using it, then it’s showcasing, why not help the lesser poets, lesser writers. See that’s what I always got, there’s a bunch of great writers out there, and all they’re doing is showcasing their work, whether you like this comment or not, that is precisely what they are doing. They want confirmation, “yes that’s good work Ted.” When they know it is. All you have to do, is learn the rules, the tropes, read, and whamo! There you go. If these writer’s are so great, then they should be helping other writers be the best that can be by providing them with helpful critiques, not hateful, and a way to grow into a voice. But, there are a few times when the poet is unsure of his work, even the greats, and he will post his work in honesty to for help. So I guess I shouldn’t say that poets who’ve already grown into themselves are doing that, but just be aware some are.

    And maybe one last question. What impact on poets, and on poetry itself, do the parameters, the rules of conduct and the by-laws, of many boards have?

    I think more or less that by-laws are there to keep things moving along in a efficient, pleasant manner. One that I disagree with is to thank the critics and move along with no defense to your poem. Sure, if the poem is “My love is pretty, she is like a flower, I love her, she’s amazing…” Then yeah that poet has no room to defend his poem. But if it is something like this:
    Monroe had commented as well on the opening of the last stanza:
    Compass, quadrant and sextant contriveNo farther tides….
    “Nor do compass, quadrant and sextant,” she wrote, “contrive tides, they merely record them, I believe.”
    “Hasn’t it often occurred,” Crane replied,
    that instruments originally invented for record and computation have inadvertently so extended the concepts of the entity they were invented to measure (concepts of space, etc.) in the mind and imagination that employed them, that they may metaphorically be said to have extended the original boundaries of the entity measured?

    See this only works when one poet or editor to another poet, respects one another, not even respects, but knows they are in the know.

    What I find on most poetry boards are people who are in the know, and are absolutists, something to prove, how smart can I sound…pish posh. Just stick to the poem, be honest. If you respect the poet, see some inking of your self in her words then allow for questions, If you’re a good critic then it shouldn’t matter, plus you might be missing something, and if so, you’ve been thrown into a light or darkness greater than your self, and it’ll help you too.

    Great picture of Stephane Mallarme. =)

    “My sense is that the free exchange of ideas is viewed as dangerous to community”
    Of course it is. This is how it is anywhere. Whichever community you are a part of, there is things that can’t be said, or will be disagreed with, whomever the leading collective is. It’s sad, but true.

    “Then to notice how the exchange of views in heated debate is closely monitored by moderators, often admonished, sometimes deleted from a forum as inflammatory. “

    It’s an injustice but to be in justice is a farce. Let go and move on. Or better yet, make your own board. Be the collective make it how you’d visualize it.

    “The mantra frequently expressed is: ’be nice.’ The suspicion, however, is that what actually matters, and in top down fashion, is the board’s culture and not the poetry or the exchange over ideas concerning poetry. “

    Fuck that, be your self.

    “Rarely, if ever, is the meaningful dialogue allowed between the posting poet and the posting critic. Board guidelines tend to explicitly discourage the exchange. Poets are even told to thank the critic no matter what has been offered in the way of critical response. The password defining the parameters of the poet to critic relationship is “don’t crit the critter.” It is a rule, an effective gag order, that causes the head to wag and wobble, and one again I believe designed more for the sake of community cohesion than for the sake of the poet and poetry.”

    This is precisely what it is, say you write me a crit, whether right or wrong, I disagree, then you disagree, then I disagree, but instead of becoming a crit it becomes an argument on whose ass is smoother, and who should get a spanking, again, it sucks but it’s just the way it is.

    Public Boards Vs. Private

    If large boards don’t work for you, don’t use them. If private boards do, then use them. The only thing about private boards, or at least, in my experience, it becomes a jerking off ceremony, not all the time, but a lot of the time. But for the most part I agree, larger boards tend to stink when it comes to meaningful discussions and usually end up being pats on the back, but everything does once you start becoming a better poet.

    “While I’ve met many poets, new and old, clearly devoted to the discipline for its own sake, and who have both the instinct and the hunger for authentic poetry, two contrary salients stand out. First, there are the scores of posted responses to poems entirely lacking in sincerity. They tend to be complimentary and generic. Recently I was reminded how Donald Hall once decried America’s growing number of “
    McPoets,” products of false praise and encouragement without the supporting evidence of talent and ability. “

    I agree with this. But, then there’s nothing wrong with praise if it’s warranted, and sometimes its not, I hate it when I post a poem and someone says wow, that’s good, or whatever, it doesn’t help, but at the same time, I can honestly look at my work and say wow that is total shit. Scrap it or do something with it.

    Anti-intellectual Element.

    Would you like to discuss poetics with a Tzara? Or how about poetics with a Beat? Do you mean poetics and prosody in Turco’s case? Or Steeles? Does this include aesthetics? Plato or Rilke? If we were to get into a whole debate about such things, it’d be hours and hours, and hours long, in that time poems could be started and ended, or at least first drafts made.

    “On many boards, at least, members are not allowed to raise questions about other boards and, by extension, about the design and the parameters of the online poetry board system in general.”

    This is something I always found disheartening my self.

    “If poets are discouraged from raising questions and challenging precepts in their own community how then can they be expected to see to one of poetry’s cardinal responsibilities, that of breaking taboo and challenging clichés in behavior, perception, and language? “

    You hit the nail on the head but whose hammer did you use? Rhetorical question.

    “I am settled in the opinion that the greatest danger to poetry on line is the governing system of board moderators and site administrators, which system proves the Orwellian insight. All animals are created equal, some more than others. An insight that cannot be more abhorrent to artists in general, poets in particular, whose vocation requires they be slightly anarchistic, certainly free wheeling and passionate in their convictions, if they are to keep creative in their artistic personalities.”

    Oh pish posh, the greatest danger to poetry online is not the governing system, it’s playing the victim.

    That’s all I have to say. Great and amazing job T. Though I feel, that you make some great points, I want to say, oh well. You seem to be a very smart and validated person. Buck em? Know what I’m saying? Fuck em. Bend them over and fuck them. Or don’t do anything. See the thing about being human, is that they’re human too, and holding up a mirror to anything is holding up a mirror to poetry. So in the meantime, though I feel that you are correct in what you said…there’s poems to be critiqued, poems to be written, (good or bad) but poetry is always waiting.

    Yours Truly,

    Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

  98. Jodi, thanks for your explanation. I quit reading the board nearly two years ago and didn’t return until I heard the board had split so I missed the reasons for it. I certainly have no desire to read the archives. That’s the reason I quit visiting the board. I know you are working daily to make the TCP.org a better place to workshop and learn. As far as EE, the discussion room goes, it is unfortunate that your hands are tied for the moment I and others appreciate your efforts.

    Pat

  99. Thank you again, Clattery, for making the discussion possible. Board mods can bring my motives into question, which they’ve done. They can call me paranoid, which they’ve done. They can do what they do so well, which is to margianlize, trivialize, and, in the end, dismiss my essay, which some few of them have done. All of which is okay by me.

    What I particularly chuckle over is when I get called a whiner by a mod who then begs good intentions. In my neck of the woods begging good intentions amounts to whining.

    This essay raises so many and larger issues. I would rather go after the larger issues. I actually think the system could work. I also think a lot of people out there are sullying the boards with their dirt, admins, mods, and members.

    Poetry is the thing, people. Now prove my essay wrong.

    Terreson

  100. Hi Terreson,

    Saying something is one thing, and doing it another. I’ve sold cars long enough to know that it does not matter if a customer keeps saying “no” as long as she buys the car. Sometimes I might say, “You sure look like you’re buying it. Do you want to?” The reverse is true too, some customers say they are buying a car, but they sure don’t act like they are.

    Important work has been done, just by displaying the essay. You can hardly do more than have people engage themselves with it, no matter if it seems negative or positive. That’s the wind blowing.

    The comments are in the hundreds, the clicks on the essay link alone, the thousands, even as it appears as the feature. And, safe to say, most online poets, even at the IBPC forums, have no idea this is out yet. Word will continue to get around.

    So, prove it wrong? In their hearts many may try, some may succeed, and some of those may find themselves agreeing months or years from now. Others for any number of reasons will stay on the fence, or never comment about how the essay changed their points of view. It’s about positive change to me, not necessarily the argument(s) along the way.

    It’s about internalizing this knowledge that you have laid out. The muse was with you the day you began this essay. Poets know there’s truth in what the muse has us write.

    C.

  101. I am done with this. I have a garden to plant, poems to write, art to make…you all can keep having at it and I suspect will never agree.

    Hope someone lets me know know when it is over and we’re back to posting poetry.

    Having been banned online, my only advice is to find a poetry board that does not judge or ban you for your opinions or the content of your poems… or for speaking up for others chastised or banned. If you fall into the trap of wanting to please the mods and their followers on a poetry board…certainly not all boards, not respected boards…but if you allow any board to silence you, you will become, not an artist or a poet, but a poetry board puppet/pet.

    I saved a thread from a couple of years back on a poetry board because it was so offensive to me…an exchange where a moderator (whose poetry few have heard of) was so patronizing, self-absorbed in “fostering” new poets, that she referred to herself as the “motherator”, not a “moderator”. To me, that came damn close to pathological.

    You can guess what happened to me when I said so. : )

    Wishing you all the best…and goodnight.

    Pat

  102. Referring back to Tere’s comment upthread about what a good poetry board would look like, I read a comment about all this on a private board this morning, that said, in essence:

    It would be nice to find a poetry board where one could just be oneself.

    So, the goal is to hang out at a board where I can just be myself.

    I’m still looking, but at least that’s a positive goal amongst all the felgercarb.

  103. Here’s my idea for a board.

    1. Instead allowing for the critiques to be seen, have them hidden for x-ammount of days before they go public. I think that will eliminate the piggybacking of critics. And one will get more honest critiques, not just an echo of a homunculus, not that they don’t get honest critiques now, but I think it’d be interesting to see the difference before and after, and as a critic I’d still be able to compare notes and learn what other’s thought once it’d gone public.

    2. No by-laws. We’re all adults. You have the ultimate choice to be offended or not. If some word or person offends you, it is probably out of ignorance, stupidity is everywhere.

    3. Critiquing is open to question and discussion. No, thank the critic and move along now sir. But honest meaningful critiques, where it’s more than one side. I think as seasoned writers you’ll be able to tell who is letting the toilet run, and who isn’t. It’s as simple as this: Critic: Not bad…but…why…what’s good….but it doesn’t work because…. Poet: Thank you…I appreciate….but I feel you’re missing….ect.. If the critic or poet feels they’re both valid, or if the critic should change his mind, then, fine, if not, then fine. I think some people just want to beat a deadhorse until it is dogfood. Engage with each other, then let it go. But if a lot of the private critiques are saying the same thing, that should be a clue.

    That’s all I can think of right now.

    -Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

  104. I’ve read Larina’s alternative viewpoint three times now. I don’t find it entirely convincing. Of course, it’s not objective, it’s reactionary. Not that Tere intended to right something “balanced and fair,” as he was speaking up for issues that all too often have been silenced.

    Of course, there are points in the original essay I disagree with, too. But having read so many of Larina’s comments on the Poets.org thread, many of which pushed that line, and remembering her participation in the kerfluffle on Poets.org during which Tere left there, it’s hard for me to see as anything but even LESS objective (relatively speaking) than other voices.

    There have been several calls on the various threads for ignoring the back-stories, ignoring the histories, and just dealing with the here-and-now. The fatal flaw with that argument is that the back-history is EXACTLY what all this is about. It’s about telling the one side of the histories that has never been fully allowed to be told before, as it WAS swept under the rug and never fully dealt with. So, calls to ignore the histories and just deal with the here-and-now have the flavor, at this time, of just being more repression, even if they are well-meant. I have of course heard some of these comments from people who were not direct witnesses; I understand that viewpoint, but I do not agree with it. The histories AND their repeated repressions are exactly why we’ve ended up where we are now, in all this.

    As always, CTS (Consider The Source). Of course, I think a lot of Larina’s responses are post-CTS responses to Tere, because she doesn’t like him. It’s hard not for me to perceive them, because of the histories, as being anything other than tit-for-tat.

    Just my take on it, of course.

  105. Here’s a thought:

    Let’s redefine what Moderator means. Or rather, this is what it could become, rather than what it has been:

    The new definition would recall the root word “moderation.” They would not have powers beyond those of regular members. They would be called in to moderate, to reconcile, to arbitrate, to aerate. Tere, you once proposed the idea of an ombudsman, who might arbitrate between parties, and be able to step in when a wrong was given but not addressed. An ombudsman could moderate between parties, but also find their common ground.

    This is a more ambassadorial function, and the goal would be reconciliation rather than punishment.

    It’s a complete alteration in viewpoint and function, I realize. I think of Gandhi’s comment once: “And eye for an eye makes the whole world blind.”

    To make this work, of course, people have to be willing to soften and admit that they can be wrong. Even when they know they’re right, they must be willing to listen to the arbitrator’s viewpoint and feedback. They need to be willing to look into that mirror that is being held up to them. They need to be willing to change their position, and compromise. That is perhaps too much to ask of some people; they will go down fighting for their belief that they are in the right, and everyone else is wrong.

    So, it might come down to this, in the end. It might come down to the realization that poetry boards do NOT serve poetry so long as the current culture of reward/punishment takes precedence over the possible replacement culture of arbitration. It might come down to one simple psychological truth, a truth that will eventually kill boards, shut them down, even if only because all the good and moderate people can’t take any more drama and choose to move on. The truth is this:

    You can be right, or you can be dead.

  106. With respect to Larina’s article:

    Tere writes:

    “If poets are discouraged from raising questions and challenging precepts in their own community how then can they be expected to see to one of poetry’s cardinal responsibilities, that of breaking taboo and challenging taboos in behavior, perception and language?”

    Larina writes:

    “I always laugh a little when I hear someone say, ‘Moderators are opposed to certain ideas…and those ideas almost always come from the most creative people.’ Then I laugh even more because what usually follows is an explanation of how ‘artistic personalities’ are naturally ‘moody’ and if they become ‘passionate’ about their ideas, we should all just follow along because hey, Ezra Pound was a dickhead too. Being an artist does not entitle one to be an asshole, and being an asshole is not a prerequisite to being an artist.”

    Problem is, while Larina is laughing herself silly in response
    to a hypothetical, composite caricature, she hasn’t addressed Tere’s question. Who’s arguing for license to be a dickhead here?

    Yes, both sides of an argument should be presented. That doesn’t
    happen when one side is setting up
    straw dogs to knock down.

    Chris

  107. Part of the importance of poets being able to raise questions and challenge precepts, is that it is part of the creative process. It is very important that a poet be able to explore all ideas as they arise. This may be done by engaging another in a challenging discussion. Thus, I go for minimizing rules, on the grounds of creativity, but also on grounds of healthy (versus unhealthy) interaction.

    If various participants at forums often “need” to be reminded of a rule, then that rule is probably not a good one. When it happens fairly often, the rule proves itself to be incompatible with how poets naturally would discuss matters on a forum. However, it may be a functional one. The function it necessarily has is in the selection of who will be accepted into, or even within the community, and who will not or will no longer.

    Another function is that it shows who is in charge, and this gets into transactional analysis. In transactional analysis, the healthiest conversations are adult-adult ones. If not adult-adult, then we get into parent-child ones. This is the slippery slope moderators and admins have, the danger of sliding into treating adults, their peers, as children, assumed underlings.

    One stated reason to have forums rules, is to keep flames down. However, when looking at flames that take place in forum threads, more seem to be initiated by moderators and admins, than by the poet/members. For example, someone makes a comment say about another forum, and a moderator steps in, and a flame ensues about why there is such a rule that one may not talk about another forum. Another example, someone posts a poem, and another member gives a critique to that poem. The poet then responds; an admin comes in and says you cannot crit the critter, and a flame ensues as to why this is a good rule. The moderators hear the same reasons in different variations over and over as they restate the rule time and again, without seeing that the complaints are valid.

    Arthur is right, that we need to look at the role of the moderator. But I say to step back a moment, to realize that often what needs moderation, is the moderator-member interaction. Or better yet, no initial act by a moderator, and thus no rule. If there weren’t so many rules, there would be more natural conversation, and less guidelines and rules for moderators to step into.

    We need to be sure, that we are not having unhealthy discussions. One adult treating another, not as an equal adult eye-to-eye, is unhealthy for both parties. It is disrespectful.

    There we have the transactional way of looking at things. But, there is also the behavioral analysis way. We know that positive reinforcement is the best way to change behavior. We know that punishment and negative reinforcement pale in comparison, and can be detrimental to the receiver of the punishment.

    There simply is no psychological model that supports these stifling and oppressive forum rules, that disallow adult-adult communication by sparking parent-child ones. There is also no educational model that supports the strict classroom approach of not showing teeth or tongue. Full and supportive involvement is always the way to go. (I am a big fan of Alfie Kohn, by the way.)

    I am happy to be involved in what seems to be the constructive side of this discussion coming to the fore. Change and soul-searching is not easy, and the difficult involvement here is heartening. Together, we can find new ways of doing things, or be able to apply some tried and true ways to our internet poetry communities. We need a knowledge base. Thanks to all.

    C.

    .

  108. C. wrote:

    “One stated reason to have forums rules, is to keep flames down. However, when looking at flames that take place in forum threads, more seem to be initiated by moderators and admins, than by the poet/members. For example, someone makes a comment say about another forum, and a moderator steps in, and a flame ensues about why there is such a rule that one may not talk about another forum. Another example, someone posts a poem, and another member gives a critique to that poem. The poet then responds; an admin comes in and says you cannot crit the critter, and a flame ensues as to why this is a good rule. The moderators hear the same reasons in different variations over and over as they restate the rule time and again, without seeing that the complaints are valid.”

    I find this to be very true. I also find it telling that in many of the discussions on the boards that you’ve linked to in Comment 7 (above), most of the flames have indeed been initiated by the Mods and Admins. (Or in some cases, by ex-Mods and ex-Admins; obviously the mindset is still vested in being right, in those cases.) This is particularly telling on Poets.org; which is also the source of some of Larina’s “alternative view.” It’s one reason I find that alternative view unconvincing. First, it’s a rehash. Second, CTS.

  109. Well, I wish you guys the best of luck. All valid points, and I hope that I didn’t come of as a contradiction or Rubik’s mouth. I’m down with anything that encourages better writing.

    End.

  110. I share and workshop my poetry at Shakespearesmonkeys.com and Alsopreview.com. But more than anything I’m my own critic, and workshop only the poems that I feel need the most help. Shakespearesmonkeys is not so much a vanity site, but there are a few exceptional writers there, but not a lot o indepth critiques, and well the Gaz, I’m sure you know the Gaz, where I post under Rohan Pierre Amaya.

    -Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

  111. I have been on every possible side of this debate and, in the end, I think poetry boards, and poets, are better off if they don’t try to be everything to everyone, or even everything to anyone. We are all too varied, we all need too much, to find what we need at one place. If we don’t put too much stake in any one place, or any dozen places, we can’t be hurt by them, or let down by them, or destroyed by them. Poetry is bigger than boards. Poets are bigger than boards. Try new things. Don’t settle.

  112. I have read the article that started this discussion and most of the comments. The tone and tenor of the comments here are a good example of what can happen in the guise of freedom of speech on an internet forum.

    It has always fascinated me that people feel because they are relatively anonymous, then they can be as rude and abrasive as they want without consequences. Imagine saying what was said *in the way it was said* in a face to face interaction with a friend/co-worker/family member.

    Do you really believe that any reasonable observer would consider much of this discussion polite discourse?

    That’s my standard.

    I’m a long time moderator at Wild Poetry Forum. It’s an online poetry critique venue that has a large membership, from teen aged poets to old curmudgeons, from individuals writing their first poems, to those having published. As Julie points out, it is difficult to create an atmosphere that is all things to all poets. But, I work hard at making sure Wild is a place where the discourse is polite.

    That takes the patience of a saint, the communication skills of a diplomat, and the temperament of the Dali Lama. No moderator in the world exists to fill those shoes, but we do our best.

    For the most part, Wild stays a safe place for poetry workshop. That’s the starting place, for me. I don’t believe effective critique can happen if there isn’t safety first.

    In terms of critique, I can say that we have had poet members over the years whose work has evolved from clearly beginning work, full of flat language, cliched and overly sentimental to mature, sophisticated poetry. There are other poets whose work is stagnant and/or who do not seem to act on critique.

    That may be more a function of the individual writer and his or her developmental path than any failing of a workshop.

    I have taken poetry classes, been a member of juried (live) workshops, and participated in on line critique. Each has been valuable in its own way at different points in my writing. It’s up to me to figure out how to get the most from whatever venue I am writing through.

    Are poetry boards good for poetry? I can’t speak for poetry as a whole, but for individual poets, for my poetry, I would answer yes.

    What seems to be missing in this discussion is the responsibility of the individual writer to present his or her critique and commentary in a respectful and emotionally neutral manner. If everyone did that, there would be no need for moderation.

    –Lisa

  113. “What seems to be missing in this discussion is the responsibility of the individual writer to present his or her critique and commentary in a respectful and emotionally neutral manner. If everyone did that, there would be no need for moderation.”

    It’s funny. That’s exactly where the discussion has gone. In some ways it’s even gone there on this comments thread (eg. Terreson’s comment no. 68 above). It has also been directly addressed on the thread on thecriticalpoet.org, starting here. Well, maybe not explicitly as you’d like; but you can remedy that by bringing it up, and starting the discussion, too.

    I might add, I think Tom’s point by point response on that thread is one of the best summations of the entire situation I’ve ever seen. It’s masterful and succinct.

  114. “Do you really believe that any reasonable observer would consider much of this discussion polite discourse?”

    Compared to the tone and tenor of the arguments on many other occasions when it has come up before, yes, I’d say very much that this has been a (mostly) polite discourse. I’ve seen the same subject raised before on several other boards, and when it wasn’t just summarily deleted by a Mod or Admin, it has usually been a lot more heated. And it is interesting, I agree, to see who says what depending on what they’ve invested their time and talents in. Some retorts to the original essay have been glaringly predictable.

  115. Well it’s not my place, but Stephane Antsey runs it, as well as the magazine of the same name. He’s a great person…and like any site where you have a lot of posters you have to sift through the droll to the beautiful…but for the most part I find the site to be very entertaining to say the least, and it is warm, but there are poster’s there that if you ask, they will give you a very critical review, they have no problems breaking it down, and sometimes you don’t even have to ask.

    -Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

  116. “It has always fascinated me that people feel because they are relatively anonymous, then they can be as rude and abrasive as they want without consequences. Imagine saying what was said *in the way it was said* in a face to face interaction with a friend/co-worker/family member.

    Do you really believe that any reasonable observer would consider much of this discussion polite discourse?

    That’s my standard.”

    Wow.

    For the most part I think it is ‘polite’ but, you must live in a very strange world, and no I’m not being rude, I’m being realistic. I mean come on. Have you considered that some people are just naturally rude and abbrasive? Are you critiquing the poem or the poet? The world is not polite. Everything is born out of destruction. Everything is eating each other. For the love of God, the internet allows for you to shed the mask of politeness and get down to the nitty gritty, and if someone is truly being ‘offensive’ it’s as simple as ignoring them. The most dangerous thing anyone can give anybody is a false sense of safety. What amazes me is that you’ve never encountered anyone who willing to say whatever they damn well please regardless of who it is, whether boss, friend, wife, nun, second-cousin, ect…I use to live in an area where you better have a pair or you’re owned, and if you can’t get past the potty language to the core of what is being said. Shame on you. Good poetry grows overtime, great poetry grows no matter what, bad language and all.

    I think a majority of people have presented their arguements in the best manner that they can. You really want to encourage growth? Allow people to be their self. I’ll say it again. Great poetry grows no matter what, in the face of any adversary, whether benevolent or malevolent, perhaps you can take that back to your poetry board.

    Ultimately. What Lisa brings into question for me, is who needs to be protected? It’s a virtual identity. Is she so afraid that the trash heap of my larynx is going to infect the brains of little children? That somone’s poor little persona will suffer a blow, that an ego will be deflated or enraged? No no no! To try an elimanate these evils is asking us to be something other than human, to not feel, to not know confrontation, to feel that weird displacement of self, there is a importance of people like me I suppose, that the more…’domesticated’ often miss, with people like me, you wouldn’t know what a gee golly good person you are, even though you probably have some nasty dark little secret you won’t ever own up to because that will mean you are human like me.

    Now. To get back to the more rational state, all of this is as easy as turning off a TV. Or ignoring something that doesn’t interest you. Just walk away.

    Sidenote – this does not mean I advocate violence or hatred towards one another, but it does mean I advocate for people to genuinely and truly live, regardless of the outcome. I think by age 7 people know there’s consequences to the actions they do, I think people like me, don’t care. But as hostile as I may sound, in all actuality, I’m soft as a kitten in a freshly dried towel in a pile of feathers. It just annoys me to no further end, this idea of big brother watching me, soon we will need moderators for the moderators ad infinitum. As long as you’re in this world there is no safe place. As much as we’d like for this to be the most ideal place, it isn’t. And it’s terrible that it’s this way, and all that jazz, but that’s the way it is. Hasn’t changed in x years and it won’t change. After all is said in done, we all die a king’s death.

    Sorry that may or may not have any relevance, but, I just had to say that and I might be totally off base, but oh well, it wouldn’t be the first time.

    Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

  117. “The world is not polite. Everything is born out of destruction. Everything is eating each other.”

    Wow, right back at you, Ryan. I think you and I do live in very different worlds.

    Perhaps the main difference is that I view a poetry workshop as a community, rather than a reflection of the world of predator and prey. The world is not a safe place. That is true. Everything that lives, dies, and often violently. But we create islands of safety so that we can survive.

    “What amazes me is that you’ve never encountered anyone who willing to say whatever they damn well please regardless of who it is, whether boss, friend, wife, nun, second-cousin, ect…I use to live in an area where you better have a pair or you’re owned, and if you can’t get past the potty language to the core of what is being said. Shame on you. Good poetry grows overtime, great poetry grows no matter what, bad language and all.”

    Trust me, I have heard it all. Both in my personal life, my writing life, and in my profession. No thin skin or meaningless pandering to ‘self-esteem’ here–just ask anyone who has critted with me. I have ‘a pair’ as you put it. It’s not about me anyway. It’s about a philosophic difference between us in relationship to poetry boards.

    There is a vital difference between aggressive and assertive. I believe that critique can be honest and incisive without being cruel and I have ‘just walk[ed] away’ from individuals and communities that don’t share that view.

    Fortunately, the internet is a large place and we can each find what we need.

  118. Yikes!! Interesting discussion. Many thanks to Julie whose blog linked me here.

    Workshopping’s fine so long as you have the ability to take what you can use and leave the rest. It doesn’t hurt to have a thick skin, a good sense of self and the ability to respect those who deserve respect and to be at least semi-kind to those who don’t. Be able to tell the difference. Trust your own ear more than you trust the crits. Be wary of the egotist. Don’t be the egotist.

    Virtually all boards/workshops have their own politics and their own politicians. It’s probably wisest if you take them on only when you feel it necessary on a moral or ethical ground – not just because you can.

    I loved this whole discussion – this is great.

    Thank you.

  119. LJ writes:

    “Perhaps the main difference is that I view a poetry workshop as a community, rather than a reflection of the world of predator and prey. The world is not a safe place. That is true. Everything that lives, dies, and often violently. But we create islands of safety so that we can survive. ”

    It’s not a question of predator and prey usually (although mods can stalk particular members and have.)

    Poetry forums are little oligarchies. And the moderators and site administrators want to keep them that way.

    Whoever speaks truth to power in online forums is invariably told “we like it this way; we’ve done it this way for a long time; we’re happy with the status quo; if you don’t like it here go somewhere else.”

    That word “we” is the tipoff; the community is one entity and the site mods control them.

    If a town, state, country can design democratic governance why can’t a little old poetry forum?

    It won’t happen until members protest the attitude of ownership mods hold and express and demand democratization of guideline changes.

    Moderating a forum should be a service to the poetry community, not an opportunity to own it.

  120. There is Tribal level of reality, and there is the Individual level of reality. (Beyond that, there’s also the Symbolic level. I think the arts operate at the Symbolic level, mostly.)

    The Tribal reality is standard consensus reality, and it is quick to deny what it doesn’t want to accept. This is the slowest-moving of human levels, because everyone has to be brought along. That’s a lot of inertia to overcome.

    The Individual level is very hard to attain, because it means you have to start listening to your inner voices, and trusting your own intuition(s), and believing your own personal truth(s) to be as valid as anything you’ve known before. Everything you were taught as a child at your parents’ side, and in school, is Tribal-level knowledge. If you’re lucky, like I was, you got a few mentors who encouraged you to go your own way, and developed the self-confidence to do so.

    If you think the Tribe is going to support your decision to evolve beyond the parameters and laws they’ve lain out for you, think again. You will receive a constant barrage of conflict, doubt, attack, and “change back” messages. You will be vilified, you will be made to think you’re mad, and you will always find yourself a solitary in opposition to a larger group.

    Sound familiar? It’s what is going with Tere’s essay. Calling the Tribe to task for their bad behavior is never going to be easy, and probably never succeed. Groups evolve at a much slower rate than individuals because the group can never evolve faster than the slowest person in the group. When you question the group, that always is perceived as an attack on the group. “Group-think” is a powerful force. The intelligence quotient of a mob is always in inverse proportion to its mass.

    The Tribe’s power is to convince you that the Tribe is always right, and you’re wrong. When you’re an infant, that’s a good thing. When you’re an adult, it can be extremely bad for you.

    I’ve seen a lot of abusive family situations second- and third-hand. A lot of my inner circle has been through this, one way or another. I recognize the energy dynamic of this pattern in many areas of life. Online poetry boards are the same: Tribal. It’s very relevant here to talk about abuse AND about denial.

    Denial is one of the biggest forces of human shadow-will on the planet. Denial is what allows most people to go about their self-absorbed lives and never deal with bigger issues, or each other. Denial is a great way to avoid developing empathy. It’s not real, so you don’t have to deal with it. Denial is what allows war crimes to happen while people claim they had no idea what was going on. Denial always leads to some kind of larger or smaller holocaust.

    Denial is what Tere’s essay is all about, really. It’s also been brought home by all the comments on the various boards, and by the ad hominem personal attacks on the messenger(s). It’s shocking, but it’s also predictable. This whole issue is all about talking about things that have been suppressed, repressed, denied, deleted, ignored, and rejected. This whole issue is about discussing things that many would prefer to not discuss, and to deny ever happened.

    It’s not even about the factual record. You can present evidence to some people, and they will always reply with some equivalent of “Don’t confuse me with the facts!” Fixed beliefs operate at the Tribal level. They resist Individual analysis and perception because they are impervious to contradictory evidence. This is true both for cultural belief systems and myths, for example the myth that “creative artists are always misfits,” but also for personal myths that are self-serving.

    I would dare say the vast majority of oppressors have always believed they were good people doing the right thing for all concerned. Good people become complicit in atrocity when they do nothing. Doing nothing can come from emotional or spiritual paralysis, but it is driven by denial. Denial can be about the will refusal to believe something; but it can also come from the inability to perceive something so huge and so strange that no one knows how to deal with it. So, complicity is not always willfully malicious, but it can be that way in fact if its’ driven by denial.

    I can forgive a lot of the Mod/Admin culture that gets abusive on member-poets on online poetry boards. But I find myself unable to ever completely trust the people involved again—who knows when they will go off on someone again? Forgiveness is offered freely, by an act of grace. But trust must be earned all over again.

    Yes, Mods and Admins are only human—but that has become a refrain, and an excuse for continued bad behavior. If you’re going to take on the responsibility of being a Mod or an Admin, I don’t think it’s unreasonable that you be held to a higher standard of behavior than “I’m only human, I can make mistakes, too.” You are setting an example of behavior by your actions on your board; or you should be. Whenever I hear a Mod say “I don’t get it” about this, they must be reminded that even the APPEARANCE of an abuse of power is to be avoided, lest one create the dreaded bad impression. Those in power must be even more scrupulous and mindful of their behavior. The “I don’t get it” comment is ridiculous when anyone who pays attention can observe that the Admins and the Mods, by their actions, set the tone for the entire board. This is why an open disciplinary process (if there is to be one) is so essential: a closed-door and private decision-making process can make it seem, to the casual observer, that either the situation is being avoided and swept under the rug, or that no action whatsoever has been taken.

    The fact that we all make mistakes was never in dispute; what remains in dispute is what you do NEXT. It’s not the first episode of failing behavior, it’s the pattern of repetition that follows in its wake. The point is: we are also human in that we can learn from our mistakes, and not repeat them. We are capable of bettering ourselves. So, living up to a higher standard of behavior is the least one can do.

  121. I concur. Well said Arthur. I’ve yet to personally have any attack by a mod or a mini, but I’ve witnessed, and the name of the place will be kept in check, when a poster did go against the critic, and yowzers, that poor poet, not only did the critic lay into him, but his little group of henchmen joined in, as well as a few mods, now I can’t really remember if the abuse was warranted? Not that abuse is warranted at anytime, but looking at both sides, there are some poets who prefer to show-case their work, so when they get to a critical board, and their ego gets deflated, they may jump the gun, so to speak, but, well I don’t know…I’m just trying to look at both sides. It’s such a fine line and a bold endeavor, still, great write Arthur. I thik I agree with 90 percent of it, and what I don’t agree with I’ll keep to my self, one because it’s not that improtant, and two, because it’s hard to distinguish shadows of equal shade from each other, only the source.

  122. Poets is solitary creatures, they do not work well in groups. If they do, no doubt they are not poets.

    They do however, hunger for recognition & acceptance, that might lead them into dangerous waters. Call it that then: “The prolific and the devourer”–the creator and the destroyer–the latter vastly outnumber the former.

    There is difference between writing poetry, and having “a poetic experience.” There is, and always have been very few poets, but many who write verse. The passage of time whittles them down, winnows them out, dilutes them to an essence–

    by all means, continue; the ephemeral will pass away burdened by bruised egos, by legacies of almost was but could never be.

    The issue of Vanity is moot, in the end only the Poem remains and it despite the temporary storms which boil around it is unassailable.

  123. this is a copy of a post i just left at the Gaz- with a few juicy bits reinstated 😉 it’s a response to this thread and others that have emerged, as well as some comments on the site that has been my main home for several years now.

    Quite a few of the comments in this thread display a lack of understanding of how quite a few other poetry sites operate, particularly with regards to moderation and administration at the IBPC sites. That’s not necessarily a bad thing- in fact, i’m somewhat envious of those who seem only to know PFFA and the Gaz (actually, not so envious of those who only know PFFA…). Anyone who has been involved at IBPC sites like poets.org or either of the critical poet sites can probably get what Tere’s saying in that essay, especially if they have been involved in an admin or mod capacity and actually seen what goes on behind the scenes, the petty power plays and lack of real leadership. I cut my teeth at IBPC sites and there’s a reason I’m no longer at them. There’s a general tendency for them to be run by admins who have neither achieved anything in the world of publication, nor have the best interests of poets at heart. (and it’s hard to respect anyone who has done neither of these two things) They become riddled with politics and bogged down by staff who seek ownership, and indeed power, rather than the desire to contribute to poets and poetry. That the owner of the blog in question is who he is, and has said what he’s said in the course of discussions, is further evidence of that- there would be no person alive with a greater understanding of online communities, something that gives further credence to Tere’s essay.

    At the same time, I’d suggest that Tere’s essay isn’t applicable to the Gaz, where admin standards have been super while I’ve been here (though some mod choices have bemused, for instance almost completely inactive mods retaining mod status for months/years, which on at least several occasions i can remember led to mods stepping into discussions that had flaired up, playing the blame game, with no understanding of context. That’s not very common, however. Mostly, leadership is excellent, especially at the very top.

    There’s also an elitist side to me which gets confused by the apparent gravity afforded to the comments of certain long timers at the Gaz, including at least one who in years of posting I’ve never actually seen a poem from (nor seen anything published) and several others who completely lack ability but have been around enough, and have enough confidence, that inexperienced poets might think they speak with some actual merit. That’s something i was concerned about in a recent thread, and have been before, and it’s at the heart of why i think a truly strong community should encourage debate and be open enough to allow assertions to be challenged.

    i have far greater respect for people whose publications (or at posted poems), or at least some sort of demonstrable contribution to a community and its conversations, speak as loud as their criticisms. I give far more weight to a strong poem, than to a harsh critique. And I give weight to a critique which comes from someone who has earnt respect, and who patently has some understanding of contemporary poetics.

    One problem with such critiques is that they might be taken as gospel by genuinely talented writers who don’t yet have confidence in their own ability. And styles might be altered and one’s voice not trusted enough, ultimately leading to generic, crap poetry and the softening of ambition. I suspect if Simic, of Luke davies, or Luke Kennard (three very different, leading poets from the US, Australia and the UK respectively) came here tomorrow and posted work, they’d be shouted down by 1000-plus post posters who have basic understandings of the craft, enough to say ‘this is clearly a beginner’s effort’ but not enough to pick actual talent and help nurture it, and not enough knowledge to pick brilliance outside of their own limited experience. Online communities do, in my experience, tend to favour homogonised, mediocre poetry, at the expense of the 1 percent which readers aren’t talented themselves enough to notice is truly good. Such writers tend to flock together, comment in each others threads, boost each others egos, and sustain a culture of mediocrity. There are names i could mention in this regard, but out of propriety won’t. People who throw their weight around, who claim to be the be all and end all of poetry knowledge, when they in fact know very little. It is something ive noticed of late at the gaz, but if there’s any one thing ive noticed about online communities these past 5 years, it’s that all things are cyclical.

    They are some of the thoughts that occurred to me while reading Tere’s essay and the multiplicity of responses it has encouraged. Over the past 4 or so years tere has been a mentor to me, and remains one of the greatest poets i know, though for some time now not actively publishing. And this actually raises another issue, which is the importance of a mentor for a young writer- I’ve probably been more widely published in good print journals than perhaps any other gazzer over the past year, and for an emerging writer, having someone who can recognise and help foster that talent, while being critical when necessary, is far more important than being bagged out by people who have done nothing to demonstrate that their views hold any weight. (which isn’t bragging, but is to merely state an apparent fact. I’m shit at building things and occasionally am clumsy with interpersonal relationships, am mediocre at maths and have done some very silly things in my 27 years- it’s important to know what one’s strengths and weaknesses are. I’ve experienced enough in life, including seeing several dead bodies, having a gun and knife pulled on me, come very close to dying, hurt deeply from stupidity, been hurt deeply, and seen people’s lives crumbled to know just how close we all are, fundamentally, to having that happen to ourselves, seen immense wisdom and geneority from long time jail inmates, and stupidity and selfishness from respected members of society, to be a fundamentally humble guy and to have some insight into the minor mature of any ‘success’ i might achieve in my life). Though individual comments in threads are generally greatly appreciated and helpful in crafting individual poems, having someone in your corner, a mentor, who follows and encourages your work over a period of time, and thus who’s criticisms really hold weight, is also fundamentally important. This is relevant, however, only in the cases of that small percentage of writers who actually have the ability to go somewhere with their writing- we all know that a lot of new posters here, and a higher percentage of new posters at other sites, are complete beginners and lack talent. They write for other reasons, to discover whether they can do it, or because they love thew classics- but the above comments aren’t strictly relevant in those cases, though those cases remain important for the worlds of poetry in a broader sense, and obviously important to those poets themselves.

    This has been a bit of a rant. I’ve been questioning my own involvement in online communities recently, for the reasons noted above and because i’m lucky enough to have just moved back to a country (after 2 years in the third world) with a really vibrant contemporary poetry scene, with festivals are awesome journals and high calibre people, and thus don’t feel the pull ive felt towards online development over the past few years. I doubt i’ll be active again at the Gaz, mostly because (and this might simply be an indication of my own personality), for every Pat, or Annie, or Adam, people who make the Gaz a genuine pleasure, there’s an offensive fool with no knowledge of anything much waiting to smash posted poetry for reasons of ignorance and ego, and new posters who in response to serious 20 minute critiques of their work resort to name calling. And it’s easy to grow tired of that.

    All a learning and growing experience, i suppose. I’ll continue seeing some of you at the Lily Forum, will keep in contact with some via email, and will continue to follow with great interest who is publishing what, and where.

    signing out for now

  124. actually, i left out the names of people at the gaz Ive found truly rude and idiotic. seemed no point served by naming them.

  125. The suggestion has been made, more than once–Tere has made it himself before, more than once–of having in place a mediator, or ombudsman, or arbitrator, that would step in as a (relatively) neutral third party to settle disputes, resolve conflicts, and facilitate actual communication rather than name-calling. I think this has possibilities. It’s been suggested before, but it’s been mostly ignored. Actually, I’ve seen more than one poetry board consider the idea, even promise to put something in place like this, then not do it. Or, do it so far behind the scenes that the appearance was that it was swept under the rug. (Again.)

    The function of mediation is to resolve disputes not by determining who is right and who isn’t, but by finding common ground upon which to (re-)build a relationship. To facilitate actual communication, so that reconciliation is possible. Or at least polite in future, if not possible.

    In order for this system to work, of course, everyone has to be willing to submit to it, and keep an open mind. In my experience, the worst offenders on all sides of the issue lack the one essential thing notably absent in many of the counter-arguments presented in the comments here: an open mind. A willingness to be wrong. A willingness to actually listen, and be changed. Fixed opinions, fixed attitudes, entrenched positions, hiding behind the rules: these are all far more common.

    It is THIS that is what kills the poetry on the boards. (It kills it by creating an atmosphere in which the poetry itself is secondary to the climate of fear.) It is this that enables the abuse of power, that contributes to the climate of distrust and dislike. (It is disingenuous in the extreme for Admins and Mods to believe that their actions do not set the tone and climate of their boards. And it is irresponsible to deny that they have that ability.) It is this that makes it all very unlikely that this situation will ever change, as good as this discussion has become, as many viewpoints and solid bits of reasoning as have been shown, from many directions. (I refuse to oversimplify this discussion as an Us vs. Them binary polarity; it is far more nuanced that that, and comes from many different and equally valid viewpoints.)

    I await the actual implementation of the several solutions that have already been offered, such as an ombudsman or mediator. But I doubt that will happen. I fully expect to witness a big Nothing Happens. I wish it were otherwise. But the entrenched positions that many of the Mods and Admins frmo the larger boards who HAVE taken time to comment on this essay, here and elsewhere, seem very fixed. (Probably because self-esteem is caught up in being right about their positions.) That very fixity and lack of flexibility, that very brittleness, that very knee-jerk responsiveness, was not only predictable but is largely what the essay was addressing. It is that very brittle certainty and entrenchment that leads to the very abuses that have been objected to, all along. Once again, I am glad this discussion is finally happening. It’s overdue. I hope it clears the air, I really do. But I have few expectations that it will. I expect most of the nay-sayers to revert back to their original styles of actions, after all is said and gone, like moray eels who emerged to snap at a fish retreating back into their caves.

    Probably the only boards this is actually likely to have any positive effect or change on are the smaller, private boards. The big public boards haven’t found their way out of this morass, and their inertia makes it unlikely that they will any time soon, and not without a lot of pushing. That’s too bad, all around, but mostly for the poets.

  126. Upthread, C referred to transactional analysis. Specif- ically, healthy and respectful transactions are adult-adult as opposed to parent-child. To the extent that the boards institu-
    tionalize parent-child
    transactions, they are unhealthy and impede creativity. They are also insulting and engender bad feelings.

    Not all mods engage in this behavior. Conversely, some individual members assume a one-up
    arrogant tone in their dialog
    with other members.

    In his essay at thecriticalpoet.org, Simple Rhyme suggests a work shop model of interaction which includes an exacting level of scrutiny by the critic and a “defending one’s theses” response on the part of the writer. In other words, an adult-adult transaction which just
    might result in more precise thinking and more better writing.

    Problem is, response by the writer
    to critique is severely limited, if not prohibited on most of the big, public boards. That really could and should be allowed for.

    And why not have mediation when people get stuck in hardened, personally heated positions? Seems like a good idea to me.

    Chris

  127. A link was passed on to me for an essay by another poet that is relevant to this discussion:

    Accelerating Poetry: Finding Your Voice, by Jack Conway.

    There’s a lot in there to disagree with, actually. It comes over in some ways as your typical anti-online-poetry comment, and in other ways misses the point entirely. I haven’t time to dissect it at the moment, but I will later.

    Nonetheless, it’s another voice in the discussion.

  128. Hi Arthur,

    Good link. A lot of what Jack Conway says speaks into Donald Hall’s McPoem idea. He elaborates on how poetry forums can inhibit genuine and important creativity.

    I’ll take issue with a point he makes, the idea of writing like someone else, as opposed to finding your own unique and important voice, like Whitman did, say. If you are not an accomplished poet, and to some degree we are all on that scale, a great exercise, indeed an important period of development, entails writing like someone else. Adolescents grow by trying on Eminem’s or Madonna’s clothes. As they grow, they keep what fits, and discard what doesn’t work for them. So, in a workshop atmosphere, this mimicking can be a good thing—I suppose as long as the forum members recognize the healthy adolescent growth that can come of it, not to mention a gem of a tribute poem from time to time.

    Here’s an important excerpt:

    Indeed, several poems that I did manage to place within the framework of poetry forums would have met a horrible end had I not been confident enough in my own work and abilities to further develop them. Ironically, a recent poem, “The Agamemnon Rag” was soundly cuffed about the had and shoulders at one web-based poetry forum only to find its way into the pages of the summer Poetry issue, nestled in among works by Billy Collins, Louise Gluck and Donald Hall. Another, “Sunshine Sandwich” received no support within a particular poetry forum and one lackluster critique went so far as to proclaim it wasn‘t even a poem. Diner, the notable poetry journal in Worchester, Massachusetts thought otherwise and accepted it for publication. Why do I mention this, aside from being blatant advertisements for myself, it demonstrates why poets should not engage in any serious discussion about poetry or their own work in web-based forums where the level of talent, ability and accomplishment is questionable. Poetry forums, if taken remotely seriously will ruin the “voice” of more aspiring poets than help them.

    I agree this is possible, if the feedback is in the form of “cuffing”. That’s the problem, the cuffing about the head and shoulders that takes place on forums. However, no matter how good you get, where you have grown to (or maybe have regressed to) on the poet maturity scale, reader feedback would be welcome from anyone sincere and well-intentioned. If it’s fan-based, great. If constructive toward your personal growth or the improvement of a specific work, all the better.

    But, behind the scenes of Conway’s article, there is the activity of a fairly well-published poet trying his hand at online poetry forums. This demonstrates the rift between what poetry forums are (as a whole) and what they ideally ought to and quite possibly can be. Not only are forums driving away forum newbies and newbie poets, never to try their hand at posting a poem online again, for all the insundry faux pas variations and categories out there, but here is the case of Jack Conway, a “mature” poet being driven away. Who’s left?

    There is the idea that poets will come to forums, get better, and outgrow them after they get so good. To a point, the data might be misinterpreted to show this. Look at the IBPC winners and placers from the last 10 years. I’ll venture to say that most of the poets no longer post anywhere. Why did they leave? Here, Jack Conway gives his own testimony. But how many testimonies would be similar from the newbie, the “adolescent”, and the “mature” poets?

    The problem has to do with, first, how poets are treated, the transactional analysis: parent-child cuffing; versus adult-adult and child-child workshopping. And, by the way, for creativity, the playful child-child communication is very important, and must be fostered without some parent breaking in.

    A second problem that Conway hits upon, is how the feedback is given, the cuffing. Cuffing is different from contructive feedback, the vocational reason why poets of all levels of experience and capability go to workshops of any kind in the first place. I can easily imagine twenty or so of the very best poets, sharing an online poetry forum. Why not? And this, just as there sure are some forums of newbie poets who get along with workshopping quite well.

    A third idea, is that, online forums have grown up in the wild. There are bound to be outlaw towns where oppressive bullies rule, and outposts where either true talent is simply unrecognized, or where methods of fostering creativity are unknown. This is why Terreson’s and Jack Conway’s articles can be important events. We have the opportunity to get together, get down to the roots of the situation, do some pruning, and come to know what a prize pumpkin and apple pie really look like.

    But the idea of the watchdog, I wonder if it would be possible to develop a poet satisfaction survey, with questions such as this:

    How satisfied are you with the feedback you received on your poetry?

    a. Completely satisfied.
    b. Very satisfied.
    c. Satisfied.
    d. Somewhat satisfied.
    e. Not satisfied.

    How satisfied are you with the way you were greeted by a representative of the forum?

    a. Completely satisfied.
    b. Very satisfied.
    c. Satisfied.
    d. Somewhat satisfied.
    e. Not satisfied.

    These threads created by Terreson’s article contain many concerns that poets have for what’s missing and wrong with many forums. Some such survey could be compiled from them. These questions are the type consumers are given when ranking their experience in buying a car at a Chevy store, or eating a pizza at Pizza Hut. Why shouldn’t poetry forum members and moderators be conscious that their forum ranking can slip in their Poet Satisfaction Index (PSI)? There are other measures and measurers. Some organization could send out mystery poets, like those who visit restaurants, and report on the different aspects, the ambience, the food, the service. What serious poet at whatever level, would not want to post at a five-star forum? And, by corollary, what forum would not quickly learn what needs to be done to be a five-star forum?

    C.

  129. The first problem I have with Conway’s essay–there are others–is that while he analyzes the problem rather well, delineating some of the same problems that have already been mentioned here by several people, he is essentially saying “There is no good poetry online, and never will be.” That’s just plain wrong. More on that later.

    It is wise to remember that if Terreson thought that there was no good poetry online, he would walked away from it all. I read his essay as an attempt to analyze and correct something he does care about. Conway on the other hand is basically totally dismissive. Oh, he applies a caveat or two, but they don’t read as sincere.

    Conway also points out that a poem by a great poet appearing on some of the online forums would be roundly hooted. And that has happened, certainly, so there is some truth to that; especially with regards to boards that have plateaued around static, conformist McPoetry; but then, ANY poet posting something different or unique would be hooted on those kinds of boards. Fortunately, in the wider context of online poetry, those are not the only boards around.

    Conway does place himself in that rejected-poem category, ignoring the wider context, which is hubris, though he denies it. What he seems not to understand is that it could happen to anyone. Many of us have had the experience he describes: a poem is vilified on the forum, but published in a (reputable) poetry journal. This is far less extraordinary than Conway appears to believe it is. I suggest he needs to get out more, and pay more attention to the larger context.

    I also have to say: He’s right, in that if he did post some of the poems of his I’ve seen online, or published, in some of the more rigorous forums online, they WOULD receive negative critiques. And those critiques would be valid, in some instances. Some of Conway’s stuff is crap–like every poet around. (Including yours, including mine.) Nor does comparing oneself to Billy Collins as a marker of (publishing) success or quality earn any points in my book. Collins for the most part is a poetaster with a knack for self-marketing. A few of the Conway poems I’ve run across are indeed witty. But there not much more than witty; and they don’t have a long shelf-life, after you get the gimmick.

    The point that Conway repeatedly misses, in his refrain that online poetry sucks, is that most print-published poetry sucks, too. His argument is essentially: online bad, print media good. How often have we heard that argument before? Often enough to know that it’s invalid, and misses the underlying truth that MOST poetry published in whatever medium sucks. Online is certainly no worse off than print. In fact, it might actually be better, because it’s a much broader selection of what poetry is; furthermore, there are poets published online who for various reasons have not made it into the print journals per se, whose work is as good or better than anything in any given issue of Poetry Magazine, etc.

    I do feel that Conway does accurately present the state of affairs, when he describes the situation. Some of that is very on-target. But his analysis as to WHY things are the way they are; that’s mostly BS. It’s hard not to view it as ignorant. I doubt he even has been “in the (online) trenches” enough to draw some of his conclusions. They pretty wildly miss the mark.

  130. I applaude the Collins as a poetaster part – not that I don’t like the very few poems he’s actually written…but, i can’t believe the praise that man recieves and that he was even a Poet Laureate. Some of that I base on personal taste, but, a lot of the things he stands for and his view points, well…I can’t get behind, but, that won’t be brought up here, I just simply wanted to echo your sentiments on Collins.

    -Ryan Barrientos Wilbur

  131. “I doubt he even has been “in the (online) trenches” enough to draw some of his conclusions. ”

    Just to set the record straight, Jack Conway has been banned (in some cases multiple times) from quite a number of poetry boards, including QED (repeatedly), Erato, The Gaz, PFFA, and several others because of his arrogance and extremely and violently abusive language towards those who negatively critiqued his work. In his case, I’d just say, “Consider the source.”

  132. Thanks, Hedge. There are valid reasons to ban a participant…and Conway has surpassed most all of them many times on many boards.

    Banning thoughtful discussion and banning outright abuse/disruption are two entirely different things. I think very few would defend the latter behavior.

    Pat

  133. “Banning thoughtful discussion and banning outright abuse/disruption are two entirely different things. I think very few would defend the latter behavior.”

    I quite agree. Conway is an interesting case study in terms of someone whose abusive and arrogant attitudes as a member got him legitimately banned for not playing well with others. I’m sure I would have agreed with this, had I been present to see it.

    The question then becomes: And when a Mod or an Admin acts that way, what can be done? That’s precisely when the “Mods are only human too” argument fails, and precisely when the conditions we’ve been discussing develop, and also when the solutions that have been suggested could be useful.

    Food for thought, once again.

  134. So I have been out of town for a week, worked hard, worked through the weekend, enjoyed every minute of it. I was in the Catskills overlooking the Hudson River, the birthplace of America’s first art movement, the Hudson River School. I was in apple orchards in blossom, seeing to honey bees traveling from place to place across the country and doing their pollinating trick. And I had no thought for the present discussion. Perspective is a wonderful thing when you stand back for a moment. Now I am catching up with so much I find thoughtful and, in many cases, thought through.

    First, it is interesting and to be noted that of all the discussions now taking place about the poetry boards, here and elsewhere, there are only three such fora where the discussion is reactionary and mostly carried on by mods and admin types. At least, this is the case so far as I can tell. All three forums are places where, in the past, I have questioned the behavior of management. This strikes me as telling. And I don’t expect anyone to believe me if I share that a mod from one of the three boards PMd me last week, expressing concern about my mental health as a result of my essay. Since he made a point of assuring me he is a doctor I have to assume he was serious. So I guess if I am crazy, and judging from the many ongoing discussions on the topic, a bunch of other people might also want to get themselves checked out….or checked in. That is my first thought.

    My second thought has to do with comment 121 above, Clattery’s. I could not have said better what is expressed there. Clattery has all but pointed to the way out of the boards’ dilemma. I honestly don’t expect many standing admins and mods to heed what he says, or even read the comment with anything other than glassy eyes. But I hold out for the hope that untrenched managers will be able to receive the spirit of what Clattery is after. It is the way to go. And I have to say that, at the age of 56, I too resent and mightily the parent-to-child relationship some, many, most, a bunch of mods and admins demand of participants. All the more so, since, as has been pointed out, too much of the board abuse encountered is initiated by these “parents.”

    Third thought. A number of people have said they agree with some, but not all, of what my essay draws attention to. Let it be noted that the essay’s author doesn’t entirely agree with it either. Somewhere, maybe it was here, I shared something a long time beekeeper said about beekeeping when it has become a kind of factory farming. Migratory beekeeping is a bitch, and all for the sake of pollinating so that we all have fruits and vegetables and nuts on the table. It is hard on bees and it is hard on beekeepers. But the man said this: “how can you take something so beautiful and turn it to so much s**t?” This is how I feel about the poetry boards and what, in many cases, has been made of them. The problem is not the idea. The problem lies elsewhere.

    Fourth thought. After a layover in Newark yesterday, and cruising at about thirty thousand feet, I was reading Neruda poetry. I came across an essay of his. Lifting selectively from his essay here is something I want to share. The essay is called “Toward An Impure Poetry.”

    “It is well, at certain hours of the day and night, to look closely at the world of objects at rest…In them one sees the confused impurity of the human condition, the massing of things, the use and disuse of substances, footprints and fingerprints, the abiding presence of the human engulfing all artifacts, inside and out…Let that be the poetry we search for: worn with the hand’s obligations, as by acids, steeped in sweat and in smoke, smelling of lilies and urine, spattered diversely by the trades that we live by, inside the law or beyond it.”

    I think of all my essay’s complaints the one most bothersome, at least to me, is the tendency on the boards for community to come first, poetry second. That is the most debilitating feature of the boards. That is the feature most lethal to poetry. And you bet. I place the blame squarely on the shoulders of admins, mods, self-serving critics, and members whose need for group acceptance outweighs their devotion to poetry. I want what Neruda wanted. I require of the boards they furnish just such an environment in which this ideal of impure poetry gets fostered, gets gestated.

    One other thing. A side note really. Don’t ever ask to get yourself banned from poets.org. Your online membership to the Academy of American Poets is automatically cancelled. (Head once again wagging and wobbling.)

    Terreson

  135. Fascinating. I see there are a number of Gazebo members addding to the thread. I am not a member of that board but I am sure it is a good spot for poetry. One member has sent me the link to the thread Sam started there, the one that links to this link. The most recent comment as of this writing is by a staff person who has just slapped the hand of a member for resorting to a “Nazis Germany comparison.” And yet, upstream, several people congratulate the Gazebo for its style of restrained moderation. Also earlier on someone faults my essay for its lack of specifics. I now present a specific of what, in my view, and more than anything else, stifles real dialogue on the poetry boards. But then I am not of the opinion that a moderator’s job is to direct and channel the give and take between poets.

    Terreson

  136. After-thought. If specifics are what people want I could give specifics, having just given one from a board that has always struck me as a little too in love with itself. I could give board names, mod names, admin names, names of long-standing members who sometimes strike me as a little too smug in their treatment(s) of poets not yet accepted into the cabal. I could do that. I could stoop that low. I just did (couldn’t resist the temptation). But what would be the point? And how would the exercise lend itself to righting what, in many quarters, has become a lousy situation?

    So, but for the one exception, I’ll stick to a certain program. I am okay with being called a whiner. I am okay with having my motives, somewhat disingenuously, being brought into question. I am clear on my motives. It is to have this discussion take place. I’ll presume my critics are clear about their motives too.

    Terreson

  137. ” The most recent comment as of this writing is by a staff person who has just slapped the hand of a member for resorting to a “Nazis Germany comparison.” ”

    Again, to clarify, the mod in question is in fact responding to a non-mod poster’s reference to “Untermensch inhabiting the board” which IS a reference to a Nazi concept (cf. Wkikpedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Untermensch); it is that poster and not the mod who introduced the subject into the discussion.

  138. Right, hedge. And said poster got her/his hand slapped for the comparison introduced into the discussion. Point stands. The greater argument remains. It is not a mod’s place to channel, direct, redirect, reform, or shape the give and take between poets. To take the argument a step further, it is not a board’s place to make members conform to certain ways its management thinks a poet should express what she or he thinks and feels.

    But both of us are remiss, my friend. The greater context of the exchange is that the poster was responding to another poster advocating a board for “pure poetry” inhabited by “real” poets, one on which lesser (I guess not real) poets should be excluded.

    See how screwy it all gets when mods force their personalities and biases onto the discussions? Said mod slaps the hand of said poster for her/his gut response to, what in my eyes at least, was a pretty outrageous suggestion.

    But there I go getting specific again. (Bless me, father, for I have sinned.)

    Terreson

  139. The idea has been raised to enable and utilize a Consumer Reports style media-watch organization or entity. It is an interesting idea. For it to work, however, there are a few things that must be carefully considered. I view these as requirements:

    1. Complete independence, and as complete objectivity as possible. This can mean speaking up will cost you friends. It can also mean that the board that is run by people you generally agree with can come under citation, and there can a price for that.

    A lot of folks don’t understand that independence doesn’t mean “except for me and my friends.” Abuse is abuse is abuse. Even on good boards, an abuse can happen. Even on small private boards. I got personally singled out for attack on a small private board last year. I’m back on that board, now that the offending Admin has disappeared, but trust will never be 100 percent there again, for me.

    2. A CR-type entity cannot afford to become overly confrontational. I am thinking of the late, not-very-lamented Foetry.com (or was it .org?) board. That board tended to be extremely negative, extremely aggressive, and extremely confrontational. Even when they were correctly reporting abuses and/or scams, which they usually were correct about, their attitude was usually more angry and aggressive than it really needed to be.

    This is also unfortunately the case with Cosmoetica.com, which I am affiliated with if not always in agreement with. The tone there can be pit bull rather than sheep dog, more often than not.

    A completely negative tone on a media-watch-type board will never solve the problem, and in the end will only self-destruct.

    So the tone MUST be kept neutral or positive at all times. Otherwise, frankly, and this too happened with Foetry.com, all it will do will create enemies, and its credibility will evaporate when people start to think it’s just a shit-list hit-list outfit.

    3. To follow up on 1. and 2.: Journalistic objectivity and integrity must be maintained, so that it doesn’t turn into something that can people can abuse for their own agendas, or if they have their own axes to grind. Facts would have to be confirmed before something could be posted. Even the hearsay of people one generally finds believable must be checked, even my own, for example, because everybody can have a bad day.

    This will take research time and effort, to verify reports. Who’s going to do that work?

    Anyone involved would have to be impeccable with their word, or the credibility of the efforts would come under a shadow.

    4. Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? (Who watches the watchers?) We’re taling moderating the Mods, administering the Admins, and watching the watchers. That might become a huge, daunting, impossible task.

    Essentially, this proposal is to create a meta-Mod organization. Who is to say that it will not become subject to the same abuses as the Mods/Admins we have been discussing have done? In fact, even if all decisions and made openly, with all the cards on the table at all times, this accusation will still be made. Are you willing to take that on? or rather, Who would be willing to take that on? I know who I would trust to take it on, but I doubt everyone would agree on that list of people.

    5. So, that leads us back to independence. That is, independence and objectivity will become even more critical, if this idea is to work well. Of course, not everyone will ever be convinced of the objectivity of those involved, nor will some people ever be convinced that it isn’t just revenge. One doesn’t need to reply to those biases, but one DOES need to free oneself from as many of one’s own personal biases as one is able. That is harder than it sounds.

    There are people I know who are capable of great objectivity. But not all the time. And not about all subjects. Sometimes their cynicism gets in their way. Sometimes their opinions about human psychology get in their way. I know very few people who are capable of true objectivity. Most people look through filters at the world: filters of their opinions, their experiences, their assumptions, and their judgments. I know a few people who are able to look at the world without prior judgments, and see what is actually going on. They dismiss nothing, neither do they let their opinions get in their way. That too is much harder than it sounds.

    Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Who would you really trust to pull this off? I think is going to be an important question, if the idea is to be carried forward.

  140. All good points, good questions, Arthur, and worth raising. Recently, on one board I suggested the office of ombudsman/ombudsperson. In usual fashion the idea was received favorably and nothing has come of it. (That board managers are as resistant as they are to some form of oversight in itself speaks pretty loudly) But it has come down to that, hasn’t it? I think it was you who pointed out that forgiving a transgression on the part of a mod or admin type comes easy. Trusting again a board’s transgressing admins and mods is a bit more difficult. Yep. That is where I am right now.

    On a slightly different note, or, rather, viewing the topic from a slightly different angle, I wish I had remembered a silk-screen T-shirt when making my essay.

    A couple of years ago I was in touch with a brilliant poet going for her MFA in San Fran. She had a class project, something about when is and how is poetry made public. Thinking on her assignment, in IM I made an off-hand comment. I said: ‘Poetry is public when it puts in the forum what people conspire to ignore.’ My friend took the comment, made a bunch of T-shirts with the sentence silk-screened on front. I forgot to ask what kind of grade she got on the project.

    I figure it is something of this order Clattery has brought to the forum: a dirty little secret concerning poetry board operations we’ve all conspired to ignore.

    Terreson

  141. I want to make sure all know I am not the gifted poet Terreson spoke of, I was just one of the artists who responded to her project, his quote.

    Alas, like Terecone, I never heard how the project was received. I Hope she got an A.

    Pat

  142. Well, Clattery and company, it looks like things are getting troublesome for this poet. Three boards now, all IBPC associated, refuse me entry.

    Man, I wish I could make poetry offensive enough to warrant the dissing.

    Terreson

  143. There are many fine boards that do not participate in IBPC…I’ve tried to go back to one IBPC board after a long hiatus, a change in moderation of the board…but I was mostly ignored. I am happy with the boards I frequent now. And I can barely keep up with them. They are not overly, but skillfully, moderated, they give me encouragement and thoughtful, explicit critique…not always what I want to hear, but always given graciously and with the intent to help. That’s all I ask for in a poetry board. At my age, I do not need to be mothered by a moderator. : )

    Terreson has given us much to think about, things we should think about…to me personally, over the years, he’s been a harsh critic, a mentor, a friend and, most of all, he has taught me to trust my voice as a poet. I look for boards that do that for me and for others…and I have been lucky to find them. Hope you all do too.

    Pat

  144. I have one of those t-shirts, too. I just found it again while sorting through clothes while moving. I still want to do something with someday, but the quote itself is pithy enough as it stands.

  145. Sorry, Clattery. No sooner had I posted the message than I regretted it. Tried to figure out how to delete it even. The hour was late and I was feeling dispirited, which is my only excuse.

    So I guess I’ll leave the boards unnamed. With a clearer head I realize I want to keep to the larger issues, the ones we all want addressed.

    But I will say this. Boards do not have to give reasons for banning, disenfranchising, or refusing applications. That is the Orwellian beauty of it all.

    Terreson

  146. Dispirited? Of a divided spirit? Or disspirited? It makes a difference. I think the former is more salubrious and hope that was your intent.

  147. I want to widen the discussion a little, actually more than just a little. I am going to leave the particulars of the poetry board problem, which it is, to others. And I am going to leave the fix to the problem to others who are probably better mechanics, carpenters and brick layers than I am. My job, as I see it, is to be a gadfly.

    Under the heading ‘Interboard Understanding’ my essay sports this paragraph:

    ‘If poets are discouraged from raising questions and challenging precepts in their own community how then can they be expected to see to one of poetry’s cardinal responsibilities, that of breaking taboo and challenging clichés in behavior, perception, and language? Viewed from a certain standpoint, vital poetry keeps as a danger to the community, be the township bureaucratic, corporate, or domestic. And I am persuaded that as much is expected of poetry by the many townships. So what is to be made of a circumstance in which poetry’s own township displays the bunker mentality?’ The key phrase in the paragraph has to do with poetry viewed as breaking taboo.

    Over five years ago I had an essay carried by an ezine I think has since become defunct. It was a part of a series of essays on poetry related stuff. The essay is called, “Poetry as Taboo.” Here are two paragraphs from the essay having to do with taboo, the breaking of taboo, poetry viewed as the necessary taboo:

    ‘I bet everyone can agree that one of the first conditions of a poem, irrespective of its technical merits, is whether or not it strikes something true and, almost by definition, something dangerous. Does it cause the shiver? Does it involuntarily excite the body? Does it unseat habitual thinking, what is always a killer of the instinct? Does it discomfit the reader? Does it stimulate a non-rational response, animal instinctive? Does it cause a transitory imbalance in the reader whose sense of things has just been challenged and who involuntarily finds the challenge exciting? Or does it leave the reader doe eyed, semi-somnolent, even reassured, comforted and undisturbed? If the last is the case, could it be that the instinct for poetry has been crossed out by an interfering influence? And could the interference have as its source any of a number of other interior, interiorized, voices? Has the poet mistakenly, but understandably, heeded the good citizen voice, the good worker voice, the good child voice, the good domestic voice, the good corporate player voice, the good organization member voice, or any of the other internalized voices whose sole purpose is to maintain equilibrium in the community?’

    Now for the essay’s concluding paragraph:

    ‘If what I suspect is true, if what short circuits the first round poet more than anything else are these other interiorized receptors kept in Pavlovian fashion, the learned system of stimulus and response, there is something even more peculiar about the matter. What it amounts to is that a trick has been played on the novice poet, even possibly on the practiced poet too soon satisfied with poetry contest recognition. Always having been taught, as a member of any of a number of social, communal, or domestically organized groups, to maintain equilibrium, or to keep home and town free of disturbance, in fact the new vocation seems to require a contary thing. Something livid, something that peels away at the finger tips calloused by routine, something to kick start the perceptions fouled by habitual thinking, even something subversive, and, in a sense, immoral, is what the new poet suddenly finds is vocationally required. Closer to the point, and to sum up the thing as categorically as possible, I am inclined to think it is family, town, corporation, or bureaucracy that requires this immoral act, of one variety or another, of poetry. In other words, occupationally, the poet is expected to break rank, step out of the cave, cause a disturbance, unsettle the scene, or force an issue or two the group has tacitly agreed to ignore. When you consider it the expectation makes perfect sense. I mean what could possibly interest a reader in a poem that only reflects, in language, material, or its treatment, what is likely an all too familiar screen set of diminishment and monochromatic returns?…’

    Well, there you have it. To the extent poetry boards require of their members they be good organizational players, seeing to the community first, being nice, not questioning, not challenging, and, well it fits, towing a board’s party line, I submit the boards falsify the poetry experience by subverting its instinct for breaking taboo. And I’ll take it a step further. I also submit that poetry boards, viewed as community, are peculiar in this respect. Whereas other communities expect poets to break a taboo or three poetry boards require just the opposite if the participant wants to be in good standing with management.

    That is a damn bizarre thing to have to say about an unendowed college of poets.

    Terreson

  148. Boy, Clattery! I just visited one of the sites you included today. Man, did you ever think an itinerant poet’s comments would cause so much teeth gnashing? What was it Arthur said above about defensive behavior? Pretty wild.

    So last night I tried to post a poem that the present topics bring to mine. I lost the connection, so I want to try again.

    It is an elegy by Anna Akhmatova, dated Leningrad, 1944. I’ve always loved her genius for the personal political voice. The poem brings to mind a poet I know, someone singlemindedly devoted to poetry but whose voice, for reasons mostly environmental, has been taken from her. By extension I think of a bunch of poets I’ve met on the boards whose voice similarly has been taken from them because of a certain dominating tendency among board critics. Remember that my essay also takes such critics to task, critics in my view who operate in bad faith. Here is the poem.

    From “Northern Elegies,” the fifth, by Anna Akhmatova.

    I, like a river,
    Have been turned aside by this harsh age.
    I am a substitute. My life has flowed
    Into another channel
    And I do not recognize my shores.
    O, how many fine sights I’ve missed,
    How many curtains have risen without me
    And fallen too. How many of my friends
    I’ve not met even once in my life,
    How many city skylines
    Could have drawn tears from my eyes,
    I who only know the one city
    And by touch, in my sleep, I could find it…
    And how many poems I have not written,
    Whose secret chorus swirls around my head
    And possibly one day
    Will stifle me…
    I know the beginnings and the ends of things,
    And life after the end, and something
    It isn’t necessary to remember now.
    And another woman has usurped
    The place that ought to have been mine,
    And bears my rightful name,
    Leaving me a nickmame, with which I have done,
    I like to think, all that was possible.
    But I, alas, won’t lie in my own grave.

    But sometimes a madcap air in spring,
    Or a combination of words in a chance book,
    Or somebody’s smile, suddenly
    Draw me into that non-existent life.
    In such a year would such have taken place,
    Something else in another: travelling, seeing,
    Thinking, remembering, entering a new love
    Like entering a mirror, with a dull sense
    Of treason, and a wrinkle that only yesterday
    Was absent…
    But if, from that life, I could step aside,
    And see my life such as it is, today,
    Then at last I’d know what envy means.

    poem by Anna Akhmatova

  149. Clattery, something occurs to me that is causing a big chuckle. I mean how can I possibly be surprised at the vitriol, the aspersions, the character assasinations, the dissing, even the questions about my sanity? I ain’t leaving anybody any wiggle room am I? How can I really blame mods, site admins, managers, critics operating in bad faith, and other apologists of the board system for feeling under attack, certainly for feeling questioned? They are and no longer just by me. I am almost feeling sorry for the lot of them, truth be told. Almost.

    So what is that great old Don McLean song line? “Everybody loves me, baby. What’s the matter with you.”

    Then there are people like you, Clattery. Viewed from one standpoint the right or the wrong matters less than that the discussion is made possible. You say you are a used car salesman. You are the damndest used car salesman I’ve ever met. Way to go, man.

    Terreson

  150. Hi Terreson,

    As a car salesman, I have for a long time had a high customer satisfaction index. It has been years since a customer of mine has rated me any lower than “Completely Satisfied” on the survey that goes to their homes a few weeks after buying. I’m straightforward and leave no doubt on the table. Before shaking hands, we always know we have done the best we can, precisely what the deal is, and that that’s what we tried to do, or at least that we did the very best that can be done.

    Come to think of it, you got what you bargained for here, and you’ve done good things with the way you followed through. You should be completely satisfied with your effort.

    But I see this more positively than you. I see good ideas coming out of this conversation. It’s out there now. The measure will be durability, how many miles and for how long will this run. When you click into a new and thriving forum years from now and see ideas rooted from your essay, then you’ll know.

    C.

  151. You bet, Clattery. I get what you are saying. Comment 155 above I quote Neruda who talks about poetry “spattered by the trades we live by.” There is everything honorable in the trades. What is honorable in poetry is sometimes less certain I’ve discovered.

    And sure. While I confess to being worried about the immediate future of poetry on the boards I am not so worried about ultimate outcomes for the scene. For every poetry board apologist vested there seem to be two to five participants questioning of the system. Poets who want more than what the boards are giving them. Change is in the wind.

    Terreson

  152. I see you’re being sideways attacked again by the folks of Desert Moon Review. Interesting. My experience of them was that they were a sanctimonious clique who were not at all as open-minded or willing to discuss things as they claim to be. I joined that board a year or so ago, and hung around for awhile, and critiqued and posted poems. The best I can say about the treatment I got there was indifference. The more accurate way to describe my experience there was that they has very closed ideas about what poetry is, can be, or should be. Not even remotely open to the Taboo in poetry, as you put it above.

    So, once again, Consider The Source.

    I can’t take what Chris George says seriously, at this point. The only worthwhile comment on that thread at Desert Moon was Guy Kettelhack’s admonition to get back to writing the poetry. The rest is thinly veiled BS.

    Oops. There, I said what I wanted to say, and I named names. Sorry about that.

  153. Thanks, Arthur, for the comments. Truth be told, man, I can’t take the sideways attacks, as you aptly categorize them, seriously. An online friend, normally quiet but who is speaking up herself in the forums she visits, said something kind of funny over the weekend. In paraphrase she said, ‘They are always calling us whiners. So who’s whining now?’ Wasn’t there a country western song that used that line? And where is sweet Patty from Winchester, VA when you really need her?

    Interesting, don’t you think, how shrill the voice of objection to the essay has been in some quarters? Let’s hope that soon the real dialogue can happen.

    Tere

  154. FWIW, some excerpts from my post at the various Critical Poet Forums (two, the last time I looked), since those threads appear not to be accessible by non-members. Quoted lines are from Tere’s essay above. Sorry, but I’m afraid this may be a tad verbose given the already swollen size of this thread. Heck, they’re verbose in any context. 🙂

    “Do the boards benefit poets, the new and inexperienced especially who, in most cases, are grappling with the vital stuff of finding an authentic voice, gaining confidence in themselves, working through the canon, trying to figure out if they have something essential to say, and all at the same time?”

    Leaping to an unfounded conclusory opinion, I think the boards do, in fact, help new and inexperienced writers ‘work through the canon’ and they assist in that fairly efficiently. Whether the experience fosters authentic voices is much more problematic, IMO. But I’m getting ahead of myself, aren’t I?

    “Do the boards, viewed as communities, engender poetry whose language is also authentic or do they falsify the poetry experience?”

    Falsify? It seems to me that falsification implies that there is some unequivocal (or at least definable) truth that is being negated or a currency that is being counterfeited. If, for the purposes of argument, a great deal of awful romantic poetry was written during the 19th century for the express purpose of getting laid or setting the groundwork for a good grope of whalebone, did this amount to falsification of poetry? Even if it was sincere? Even if it worked? Even if she really did smell like a rose?

    For heaven’s sake, man, there was no match.com or eHarmony to broker the passions back then. Did these rakes, viewed as opportunists, engender poetry whose languange was authentic or did they falsify the poetry experience?

    I’m kidding, of course, but only to an extent. The undefined notion of falsity makes for a poor criterion, IMO, because it is the product of an enthymeme whose premises, if examined, cannot be assumed accepted by a consensus of your readership.

    “…My sense is that the free exchange of ideas is viewed as dangerous to community, but that poetry is not, since, it honestly doesn’t matter.”

    I concur with the first half of this sentence but not necessarily with the explanation in the second half. I’m more inclined to believe that a poem per se is considered less dangerous than free discourse because the poem itself is bounded. It cannot answer charges levied against it and it cannot further engage in insult (or, worse, challenge) directed at an individual or subset of the membership.

    [Note that if a poem is directed at an individual or particular “protected subset”, it IS viewed as dangerous and thus subject at some boards to summary censorship.]

    Conventional wisdom holds that communities and children need boundaries. In the case of children in particular, they actively seek out their boundaries. Even as they decry discipline and rules, children want boundaries and, thus, they test them from time to time if only to reassure themselves that the boundaries remain reliably in place. Few things are more feared than freedom.

    I’d argue that safety, especially among novices, is a much sought-after quality in an online community. Here, it is instructive to harken back to your opening: Are not beginning poets “grappling with the vital stuff of finding an authentic voice, gaining confidence in themselves, working through the canon, trying to figure out if they have something essential to say, and all at the same time?”

    My implied analogy–that beginning poets are somehow like children–would surely not sit well with a majority of poetry board members. Most are adults and some are mature adults. 😉 Nevertheless, I wonder whether the standard-formula board is capable of providing an appropriate degree of safety in the tender years while increasingly allowing members to be exposed to artistic risks as they mature as poets and critics.

    IMO, learning in a low-risk sheltered environment may have its place, but True Art™ without risk is an oxymoron. While that’s a broad enough topic to demand a complete essay of its own (and there are many such essays to be found out there already). I suggest that it’s axiomatic.

    The question, then, in my mind is this: Can the “standard” poetry board, operating as a one-room schoolhouse, attempting to serve K through postgraduate, balance the need for safety and borders at one end of the spectrum with the need to subject serious art to the crucible in which truth is separated and refined?

    “…Poets are even told to thank the critic no matter what has been offered in the way of critical response.”

    Hmm. [i]Thank you, sir, may I have another?[/i] Nothing childish about that, is there?

    [You do realize that tens of thousands of board poets are poised to crucify you for this heresy, don’t you? A lot of people have drunk that Kool-Aid for years and stand ready to defend it by citing chapter and verse. Moreover, they fervently believe that this is the only way critique can exist without plague-like consequences. This rule is as necessary as special military tribunals. Jes sayin… 😀 😀 ]

    “It is a rule, an effective gag order, that causes the head to wag and wobble, and one again I believe designed more for the sake of community cohesion than for the sake of the poet and poetry. The unfortunate consequence is that poet is put at the disadvantage, while critic is allowed to say practically anything with impunity, no matter how uncomprehending, or even biased.”

    You obviously don’t grasp the benefits and efficiencies of a Stalinist court system. What’s wrong with relying on a state-appointed lawyer to do your talking for you and defend you?

    Seriously though, while new writers may need to acquire the skill of hearing criticism (distinguished here from conceding merit to all criticism), that skill should have been mastered in the lower forms. In my view, it does not justify using the same teaching methods with post-doctoral fellows as are used in the second grade.

    Once again, I believe, safety is as much the objective as community cohesion, although both are sought. Considering that members are obligated by rule to contribute some number of critiques for every poem posted, it is as essential to the model workshop that critiquing be as safe as writing poetry.

    “Common sense suggests that the critic is no more likely to know the nature of good poetry than is the poet. I know of no case in the history of literary criticism where a school of thought has not been superseded eventually by another or taken to task for what it failed to understand.”

    I agree. Unfortunately, this is a poor argument when applied to a kindergarten or grammar school setting. There, pupils are not expected to supersede a school of thought; they are charged with learning the canon. Cold. Only after mastering the theses should they indulge in antitheses. (Or at least that’s the usual saw.)

    But perhaps more to the point, the argument suggests that the sole purpose of criticism is to judge ‘good poetry’ (however defined) and, perhaps, even to advance the art or the genre. I’d argue that the pursuit of critical skills is a legitimate end unto itself. If the process leads to members becoming better readers and critical thinkers, then that is hardly a trivial result. (Of course, whether that is, in fact, the usual outcome has yet to be examined.)

    At some platonic level or another, it surely must be true that nothing does less to falsify poetry than the proper education of readers.

    “This rather begs the further question: if poetry boards sanction the frequently inept critic for whom are the boards meant?”

    Nods. They are, of course, meant for both, as members are writers and critics. And let’s not forget coffee-klatchers and schmoozers as well. 😀

    re Poetry Board as Workshop: “First, emphasis is placed on production and not on refinement.”

    Amen! Granting my own premise that the boards work best when introducing novice writers to the cannon, it is not unreasonable to presuppose that development follows a logarithmic learning curve: Much is learned from the first trial, a great deal is learned from the second, and so forth, with diminishing returns. As the number of trials grows, incremental growth slows such that little is learned between, say, the 200th and 201st attempts.

    In the steep slope of initial board participation, new skills are acquired rapidly. Anyone paying attention knows what’s in this toolkit: identifying cliches, praising imagery, dissing abstracts, recognizing telly words, circling enjambed prepositions, jettisoning rhyme, making only authorized iambic substitutions, rejecting simile in favor of metaphor, avoiding repeated words, eschewing forbidden words like “shard”, anti-degerundizing (the practice of exorcizing poems of words ending in “-ing”, whether gerund, participle or true noun–they’re all the same 😉 ) and counting occurrences of the first-person singular pronoun (i.e., “I”).

    During this phase, it can be argued that frequent reps may be justified. That’s how we learned our times tables, isn’t it? And what better way of getting in these reps than signing up for the poem-a-day exercise? Inevitably, however, there comes a time (oh, let’s say six months to a year or two at a poetry board?) when the curve levels out.

    At this point, McStasis sets in. McStasis, it should be noted, is marked by a consistant ability to produce between one and four McPoems per week, each of which demonstrates basic mastery of the toolkit. Comments associated with McStatic works are laudatory, except for the droppings of the occasional troublemaker or ill-informed newbie who doesn’t know any better.

    A McStatic critiquer of a McStatic poet is obligated to find one or two nits per poem, but no more. Alternatively, a word or two may be singled out for triming in order to “tighten” the poem. (Acceptable poetry is, after all, always very tight and most can stand to have a couple of words trimmed!)

    Reading a poem thoroughly for content–much less for secondary layers and extended metaphors–is optional. In actual practice, it is not necessary to read the whole poem if sufficient nits or suggestions surface in time, except that the last line must be read to evaluate the close.

    So is there anything wrong with that scene? Well, I think it depends on the chosen objective. A lot of people enjoy being bad golfers and I doubt seriously that it has the effect of falsifying golf. They have no illusions that they will someday challenge Tiger Woods at the Masters and–who knows?–maybe some day they’ll get grooved and win their annual office outing on the second Wednesday in July.

    [Is this the rough equivalent of getting a piece accepted in a second-rate ezine? I dunno.]

    But if the objective is to become a serious poet (whatever that means) and write poetry with a scratch handicap, then what?

    OK, allow me to be preachy (I forgot that in my list of unpardonables above, didn’t I?) even though I am in no way qualified to fill my own pulpit. IMHO, before a poet settles into irreversible McStasis, s/he should be writing far fewer poems, reading better quality poems and learning to rethink, revisit, revise, revisit, revise, rewrite, revisit, revise and, more often than not, relegate to the round file.

    But it’s more than a matter of pace or work hours, isn’t it? It’s at least as much a matter of risk. Without risk, the poet won’t progress any more than Tiger Woods would progress if he layed up every time he missed a fairway.

    [Groan. My apologies for the dreadful sports analogy. Is anything more banal?]

    “Then there is the anti-intellectual element on poetry boards.”

    I agree. And I wish you had fleshed this out a bit further in your essay, though it’d be a slippery slope to climb in slick rubber boots. At the root, I think, is an all-too-widely-held belief that poetry is all about emotion whereas history, theories and facts should be relegated to other endeavors and disciplines. 😉 Although ancient poetry was a branch of philosophy, modern McBoard™ poetry has its own separate, self-defining epistemology.

    Two corollaries are obvious: (1) if a poem expresses true and heart-felt emotions it is good by definition and (2) poetry should be given the benefit of an absolute form of relativism (e.g., your image of something is as valid as anyone else’s image of something). Thus, metaphor, properly supported by imagery, is the poetic equivalent of truth. That said, intellectual discourse about poetry is always irrelevant or misplaced. Q.E.D.

    “On many boards, at least, members are not allowed to raise questions about other boards and, by extension, about the design and the parameters of the online poetry board system in general…The circumstance speaks to a cartel of shared interests among board administrators.”

    I’m unconvinced that this phenomenon is best characterized as a “cartel”. When I entered the workforce so many years ago, I learned early on never to knock the competition directly. I don’t think this was due to a cartel agreement exactly, but more likely the mutual exercise of “enlightened self-interest”: Who wants to start that war, when it’ll come back to bite us in the ass?

    When the underlying products are the same, branding is important, n’est-ce pas? While the competition may be fierce over taste and packaging, it is in no one’s self-interest to examine too carefully the ingredients they all use.

    “[D]oes the poetry board infrastructure of moderators and site administrators benefit the poet and create a free range environment encouraging poetry?”

    Allow me to divide the question, if I may. First, does it benefit the poet?

    In my view, which I hope I’ve exposed pretty fully by now, the board infrastructure benefits some of the poets some of the time. Specifically, I think it provides initial encouragement to write by supplying an audience with an incentive to read and comment. Further, the mods help provide a degree of safety which is perceived as important, especially to beginners. (And, naturally, the mods assist mightily in chanting those quotidian lessons too!)

    But does this unitary system “create a free range environment encouraging poetry?” Decidedly not. IMO, the model works to the point of McStasis, beyond which it cannot function effectively as an artistic community.

    “All animals are created equal, some more than others. An insight that cannot be more abhorrent to artists in general, poets in particular, whose vocation requires they be slightly anarchistic, certainly free wheeling and passionate in their convictions, if they are to keep creative in their artistic personalities.”

    Here we converge in agreement.

    At the same time, I’m inclined to be sympathetic to protestations to the effect that board administrations mean well most of the time.

    While I think that intentional and direct censorship may be rare at the Better Boards (© Better Boards and Gardens, 2008), that observation misses much of the point.

    Back in the days when the U.S. had a reality-based Supreme Court, it adopted the term “chilling effect” to describe how the color of authority can have indirect pernicious effects on free speech, free press and free thought. It’s a good term, I think, and apropos in this discussion.

    Operating behind closed curtains, a mod board inexorably becomes a hegemon. The mods themselves do not have to do anything overt to achieve this status, because the perception of power is more important than any list of delegated, legitimate powers. Indeed, the perception of power IS actual power. Always.

    In my view, the conclusion is simple enough: The presence of a hegemon is anathema to a community of artists.

    ****

    If I’m even half-right in distinguishing between two de facto communities–one consisting of beginners through McStatic yeomen and another pursuing the objective of transcending McPoetry–I don’t know where that leaves me.

    My thinking is that what’s needed for the serious poet to advance much beyond a cookie-cutter intermediate is:

    1. Taking more risk
    2. Subjecting works to less forgiving critical and intellectual discourse
    3. Defending one’s theses (or, if indefensible, rejecting them)
    4. Reading better poems
    5. Writing fewer poems
    6. Increasing reading diversity (i.e., outside one’s “own niche”)
    7. Taking longer time intervals
    8. Putting as much or more time into revision than original writing
    9. Asserting more artistic freedom

    After a point, though, almost everything about the conventional poetry board works at cross-purposes with this list.

    Risk is conveniently managed by the guidelines. “Less forgiving” critical and intellectual discourse is scarce because it is typically suppressed or discouraged as being (a) off-topic, (b) unnecessarily intellectual, (c) unkind, (d) rude or (e) inflammatory. Defending one’s own theses (a well-recognized virtue in academia) is disallowed by rule. (Remember, we mustn’t crit the critter or defend our poetry.)

    Given the frenetic pace of the larger poetry boards, most or all of the time and energy available for reading poetry is consumed just getting through what friends have posted on a given day.

    [And, face it, most of it is quite bad. That, in itself, may be a problem: What is the effect of reading dreadful poetry day-in and day-out? Does any study suggest it may cause brain damage?]

    The fast pace also operates as an incentive to churn out poems too frequently. In the past, I’ve noticed that if I don’t post a new poem for three weeks, people start asking if I’ve been ill or if I’ve left the site.

    The expected duration of the revision cycle (one or two days, or before the poem rolls to page 2, whichever comes first) is far, far too short. (“Bumping” is, of course, an unpardonable and selfish sin.) Curiously, some boards do not permit revisions. (After some prescribed time has passed, the poet may repost in a new thread. EEEEWWW!)

    The buddy system discourages real risk taking.

    My conclusion? The stock poetry board is useful to a point, after which it threatens to become a bad habit.

  155. I want to post here what I have posted elsewhere:

    i think Tom’s overview is the most rational, non-partisan, and accurate summation of the state of affairs that I have yet encountered, here or anywhere else. Tom’s viewpoint is full of insight and wisdom. The conclusion he reaches is one I wholeheartedly agree with, and full endorse.

    Now, of course, if we want things to be better than that, if we truly want online poetry to be that haven of creativity that Terreson has proposed, more than once, in his comments here, there’s work to do to make it so. Tom’s overview provides a very good place to start, to make whatever corner one wishes to improve, actually improve.

  156. So some people are asking for specifics as evidence supporting the opinions my essay expresses. Mostly I have refused the bait. Now, I see the evidence has been supplied without any effort on my part. The link given under #183 leads to a thread that makes for some pretty revealing behavior. Two items strike me. First the shrillness of the tone displayed by moderators. Secondly, a mod threatens to lock the thread, then (I think) thinks better of it, then congratulates himself on allowing a lively, heated debate. A debate, by the way, said mod is mostly carrying on by himself.

    Over the years I’ve noticed a certain strategy some board managers keep to when treating with questions they find uncomfortable. First, try to trivialize the question. Secondly, try to minimalize the person asking the question. Third, dismiss both question and questioner. But sometimes the strategy fails. When it does, there is no choice but to attack character.

    I sure hope people take a moment and read the “fresh hell” thread. Viewed from a certain standpoint, the turn the conversation took is fortuitous. This is precisely what some, a few, a bunch, many of us have come to expect from some, a few, a bunch, many poetry board managers.

    Thank you boys for making my case. I could not have done it without you. But can we please stop the name calling and get to the more substantiative issues the essay raised, the same as Terrible Tom riffs on?

    Terreson

  157. It truly is amazing. Actions really do speak louder than words. It’s nice when they make your arguments for you, by their actions, so all one has to do is point and say, “See? That’s what we’re talking about.”

    At the same time, it’s truly sad to see. It reflects poorly on all involved, and on the board in question.

  158. Arthur, the managers are counting on people like you and me giving in, going quiet, going away. I want the days before the managers back. I remember those days. They were fertile days. The worst thing that ever happened to online poetry might just be the enfranshisement of a management class. Yep. I am sure of it.

    Terreson

  159. I suppose I should equivocate a little here before making any more enemies.

    I accept that the management class is here to stay. I also get that there are many poetry board participants who feel safe and secure with the presence of managers. Not that I understand the need but I get it.

    Having said as much my sense is that the pendulum needs to swing a little the other way. To moderate a poetry board is not the same as modulating board exchanges between poets. Post deletions and shunning of members has long since become a problem. So there are two correctives I would propose. Self-policing is essential. As is the stated standard for what is deletable, shunnable, bannable. Back in my AOL hosting days there was no gray area and small room for the subjective interpretation of rules. I could delete a post or shun a member for three reasons only: hate speech, threats of violence, intentional sabotage (talibaning) of a thread. That was it. And every time I deleted a post I had to file a report to ownership. One other thing. When I entered a room or board in my offical capacity it was understood I represented an organization. I could not express the opinions of a member only.

    So here are my suggestions for reforming the system. Self-policing. Setting standards for mod actions. Mods required to represent their boards, not themselves, when acting in an official capacity.

    Terreson

  160. I remain glad for this discussion. It was overdue, and it was good to air out a lot of dirty laundry that had been stifled for far too long.

    Still, I am cynical about any real change happening. Those invested in the status quo are too entrenched, and unlikely to either want substantive change or be able to effect it. Things build up inertia all on their own, and sometimes even well-meant efforts are too little, too late.

    The best option I can see is to start over, in another place, using Tere’s suggestions for how it could work, and let the dead bury their dead in all the existing dead zones.

  161. “Over the years I’ve noticed a certain strategy some board managers keep to when treating with questions they find uncomfortable. First, try to trivialize the question. Secondly, try to minimalize the person asking the question. Third, dismiss both question and questioner. But sometimes the strategy fails. When it does, there is no choice but to attack character.”

    Or, as a last resort, they lock the thread. That happened this morning at poets.org when one of the site admins locked the thread “Complaints on the Forum,” saying: “Yes, we are done with this thread now. Apparently, rancor has a longer shelf life than a twinkie.” Freedom of speech, apparently, has a shorter one.
    http://www.poets.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=15632&start=75

    The whole thing saddens me. As you often say Tere, “It hurts the heart.”

  162. Another thing, less drastic than locking a thread, that sometimes happens when mods are questioned about something they’ve said in a thread, particularly if that something was provocative, is that they decide it is time for them to bow out of the conversation and then suggest anyone who is interested should take up the topic with them in PM. This happened recently at tcp.org:

    http://www.criticalpoet.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=37859&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=120

    Threads like these don’t get locked, but conversation is basically shutdown because members know they aren’t going to get a public response to public statements made on the board.

  163. Wow! Just Wow! I hope it is understood that poets.org is the online venue owned, operated by the Academy of American Poets. The Academy of American Poets!

    And, yes, Halifax, I saw that message too at TCP.org. And, yes again, theirs is a means of censorship typical to them, typical to a bunch of IBPC associated boards.

    This Orwellian shit of group think and thought control has got to stop.

    Terreson

  164. Silly hyperbole. Orwell wouldn’t have known poets.org if it had bitten him in the ass. This whole colloquy is an amazing exercise in bloviation. Play on, mo’ fo’s.

  165. Tere,

    I have decided to give the mods at tcp.org the benefit of the doubt and have PMed
    the mod in question an apology for assuming his motivation was to end the discussion. I regret that statements made in public couldn’t continue to be discussed in public, but I understand the move to bow out of the conversation may have been motivated by a desire to avoid further conflict. As you yourself pointed out, the discussion had shifted from systemic problems to personal ones and had ceased to be productive.

    Alf,

    Orwell may never have heard of poets.org, but the real question is: has poets.org heard of Orwell? Orwell is dead so he can’t bite them in the ass, but maybe group think will. I don’t know.

  166. Deermeat, I can’t be bothered with your likes.

    Halifax, I got this little cricket in my left ear. His first name is Jiminy.

    Terreson

  167. Hi All,

    I just updated question #7.

    Two threads tangential to this conversation have been brought up at Babilu and Poets.org, plus for easy navigation, I entered all four thread links to the Gazebo discussion.

    Here is the Poets.org thread: Locking Threads, begun by TomWest. In his post, he discusses the moderators’ practice at that forum of locking threads, not allowing any further discussion. He begins like so:

    Locking a thread affects all who had anything to do with that thread—readers, as well as posters. Locking deprives all rule-abiding posters from participating in a thread they intellectually own.

    A moderador there, the only respondent to his thoughtful post, instead of furthering the conversation, writes back among other things, this paragraph:

    I know I’m about to blow my reputation as the gentlest, most moderate of moderators here, but I can’t help myself: I’M SICK AND TIRED OF PEOPLE PICKING FIGHTS HERE. And that’s what it is, despite the butter-wouldn’t-melt-in-my-mouth rhetoric and lofty-sounding appeals to principle.

    That’s not only in caps, but in red as well. Believe it or not, she locked the thread.

    At the Babilu thread, Questions for poetry forum survey, there is a call for ideas for a survey of online poets. I want to note here a tool, that there is polldaddy, a free online resource for surveys and polls, which can be embedded into blob posts.

    C.

  168. Thanks, Clattery for the update. The information concerning poets.org is both interesting and timely.

    As it happens two threads have been locked on the board this week, both of which addressing issues concerning board politics and management problems. Additionally, threads earlier locked, maybe because management found them uncomfortable, have since been deleted. Then there is the case of a husband and wife who have been banned from poets.org for asking questions deemed inappropriate. See item 10 above for a link that gives their side of the story.

    I wasn’t the first to point out as much here but, at the expense of getting specific, it bears repeating. Poets.org is the online site sponsored by The Academy of American Poets. All of a sudden the questionable behavior of management working for some small board takes on a new dimension. I wish I could remember the membership the board likes to boast about, but it is in the tens of thousands. Why? Because the board is sponsored by The Academy of American Poets.

    Friends tell me I shouldn’t take the circumstance as seriously as I do, or that a poetry board whose practices of censorship have become so egregious is a part of the Academy’s organization. What they can’t know is how seriously I do take the board’s managing practices. Here is why.

    This is a partial list of some of the Academy’s past chancellors that have served on its board:

    Louise Bogan, W.H. Auden, Randell Jarrell, Robert Lowell, Robert Penn Warren, Archibald MacLeish, Marriane Moore, James Merril, Robert Fitzgerald. Just a few of the early chancellors. Stanley Kunitz comes to mind as does Robert Pinsky.

    Some months ago, long before my essay got written, I tried to contact the Academy to complain about their board’s management behavior. Tried twice. The first time my email was rerouted to the very site administrator whose practices I objected to. The second time my letter was simply dismissed. In a way I suppose I should thank the Academy for its response. It is what steeled me to take to a broadsheet approach to the board problems I have addressed.

    But here is the thing, what has become a real rub. If The Academy of American Poets sanctions the behavior of its board managers I got a big time problem. The board censors discussion, shuns members who they find troublesome, deletes posts, locks threads, and pits its staff against individual members they find irksome. Everything stated here is factual. Some of us out here have taken to saving to our pc’s the more unbelievable exchanges we’ve read on the boards between management and members. There is a record.

    And here is my question, this is what I find so damn discouraging. Where the hell is the spirit of Bogan, Jeffers, MacLeish, Moore, Auden, Jarrell on this board? Where is the sense of free speech and the free exchange of (dangerous?) ideas? Where is the latitude for questioning? Where is the fostering of individualism when it questions authority?

    There is no point in trying to contact the Academy a third time. I choose to assume that the problem of indifference stops at middle management. But I have no way of knowing.

    A moderator at poets.org said once the Academy has no interest in the board’s activities. It is just what he said in public. I can’t know. If it is true then I think the Academy should do one of two things. Shut down the site or reform it, starting at the top.

    Terreson

  169. Terreson,

    The Academy of American Poets is mis-named. It’s true name should be the Academy of New York Poets. They’ve never really shown any interest in anyone but those from the northeast coast of the US for a long time. You attribute too much weight to their influence. They’re part of the reason poetry books no longer appeared on bookstore’s shelves. They’re out of touch and have been for a while.

    Seriously, their idea of an American Poet is some pansy with an MFA prostrate before them waiting for his ‘Golden Recognition Award’. Laugh at them, it’s all they deserve.

    -blue

  170. Okay, blue. While I don’t agree with your characterization of the Academy I get what you are saying. The most vocal critic of the Academy I know of is a New Yorker, a published poet and displayed artist. If you are right then I am wrong for still thinking the Academy can self-correct. We’ll see.

    Terreson

  171. Well, okay. I have a question for the current chancellors of the Academy.

    Frank Bidart, Victor Hernández Cruz, Rita Dove, Lyn Hejinian, Sharon Olds, Ron Padgett, Carl Phillips, Robert Pinsky, Kay Ryan, Gary Snyder, Susan Stewart, Gerald Stern, Ellen Bryant Voigt, C.K. Williams.

    Chancellors, is it true, as I’ve been told, the Academy has no interest in its poets.org’s discussion board and the poetry carried there? Are you people okay with the discussion board’s rules and by-laws. Do you approve of what amounts to censorship and the shunning of members at the Academy’s discussion board?

    I have no other way of contacting you folks or your organization. I tried. This is the best chance I got. It is an easy question. I would just like to know what you folks think about your discussion and poetry board and its practices.

    Terreson

    terecone @AOL.com

  172. to me the question really is, why do you care? if you do not want to post, read, or discuss poetry written on poetry boards, then don’t. it boggles my mind how much people care about what other people do. if i want to write 50 poems a day and post them online it is no concern of yours. grow up and find something better to do with your time, like improving your own mediocre writing skills.

  173. Well, barry graham, bless your heart. Your comment almost pulled me in. Had you resisted from ending on the personal insult I think you might have had me. But you know how it goes, man. Personal insults always speak to motive. So now the return question could be this: why do you not care?

    Terreson

  174. “In fact, I think I’ll lock this thread right now, just because I can, so there. If the Admins and my fellow mods decide I’ve flown off the handle too soon, they can fix it and that will be fine with me.

    You don’t like it? Read my new sig.

    Catherine
    Moderatrix
    Borg Queen Wannabe”

    Since no one has corrected this mod’s comments on the Poets.org board, one has to assume that this kind of domination, censorship is sanctioned by the Academy and the management of their board. That’s really sad.

    Pat

  175. the reason i don’t care is because it is no concern of mine or anyone else’s. that’s just good old common sense. its ashamed that your belief system includes the idea that everyone who has an opinion has a secret agenda. that’s your shortcoming, no one else’s.

  176. barry graham, it is a case of my bad maybe. But I can’t make sense enough of your post to figure out how to reply, what to say, what shortcoming to account for or defend. Sorry, guy. Got to pass you over.

    Pat Jones, about your #204. Bless her heart, this Catherine person. She has no idea how quickly her sign-off made its way through the web. Clattery’s post above, #196, is actually coming late. So many people at poets.org have emailed the person’s sign-off to friends saying, in effect, what the f**k? In a sense this person has become a poster child for a certain type of mod behavior. It is unfortunate.

    In a way, however, I admire this person for her honesty. She at least tacitly admits to what in a few, some, a bunch of poetry boards the office of moderator has become. That of the moderatrix. (If only she had resisted the Borg thing at least.)

    Whether or not poets.org’s parent cares, The Academy of American Poets, no one can say.

    Terreson

  177. And yet you yourself care enough about what other people do to tell them to grow up and improve their own mediocre writing skills. And you went out of your way to say so.

    Seems to me like you care a lot more than you let on. Seems to me you’re doing exactly what you tell other people not to do.

    Which is why I can’t take your comments seriously. They are self-contradictory.

  178. Regarding the locking of threads, as Clattery links to in comment #196 here, it’s as I have been saying for a very long time:

    Actions speak louder than words.

  179. ‘contradiction is an indicator of human genius” – albert einstein.

    thats exactly my point arthur. do you believe that anyone actually cares whether or not you take them seriously? how strange when people take themselves so seriously that they think their opinion matters to anyone but themselves. when i said that terreson’s writing skills were mediocre it is because i believe they are and said so. i didnt say it to encourage others to feel the same way, i was only stating the obvious.

    but indeed you are correct. i care today. tomorrow… we’ll see. thanks for the discussion.

  180. Well, Barry, you’ve again gone out of your way to make your comments. It seems to me that you have much more invested in this than you are letting on.

    One of the patterns that has emerged in this discussion is how invested some folks are in there positions, and how far out of their way they’ve gone to be In The Right. This has been particularly true of those in power who have become invested in maintaining the status quo. It’s the tactic of being unable to dismiss the argument for change, so they are left with attacking the messenger(s); numerous examples of that have occurred on this thread, and on the other threads linked to in Comment 7. What you’re doing here looks an awful like that tactic, which is one reason it’s so unconvincing.

    You undermine your own point about not-caring, which indeed has some validity—as has been said, sometimes the only reason an argument gets so heated is because there’s so very little at stake LOL—when you end your point with what amounts to a personal attack. I doubt you’ve read enough of Terreson’s poetry (or mine, or anyone else’s here) to call it mediocre, or anything else. You also seem to imply that your opinion has more validity than anyone else’s, which is in contradiction to your position on not-caring.

    You can claim the Einstein quote for yourself if you like, but that only further undermines your position by implying arrogance and superiority. It might have been better to quote the Tao Te Ching about independence and humility, for example.

    So, since you started this particular mini-discussion within the larger discussion, one is still left with wondering why YOU care so much, and why you’re invested in being right.

    Not that I care, actually. I’m just pointing out some issues your actions have brought to the table. It’s all food for thought, at this point.

  181. Oh, and in point of fact, I do think that many people DO care whether or not we (or I) take them seriously.

    That’s why they’ve gone so far to extremes in their responses to the original essay. That in itself is an indicator of how invested they are in a particular outcome, as opposed to being open to constructive criticism of the system.

    Which is what you also appear to be doing, at the moment.

  182. Hi Barry,

    Thanks for joining in.

    I cannot find that Einstein quote on contradiction that you have cited, “contradiction is an indicator of human genius.” Do you have it? I was looking for context. For instance, here a famous one by him:

    The fairest thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the fundamental emotion which stands at the cradle of true art and true science.

    C.

  183. hello clattery – the quotation in question is actually in a collection of correspondences between einstein and max born. i was reading in translation, i do not speak german. thank you for welcoming me to the discussion.

    and arthur – you still don’t get it. your little line in 211 is priceless:

    “Oh, and in point of fact, I do think that many people DO care whether or not we (or I) take them seriously.”

    hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahhahahahahahahahhaha

    that was worth the price of admission. i will certainly be left laughing for months.

  184. Hi Barry,

    Thanks, but can you give an excerpt that includes the quotation?

    Now I am wondering if they were discussing the contradictions of wave versus particle theory, or more broadly the contradictions between general relativity theory and quantum mechanics.

    I’d like more context if you have it there to share.

    C.

  185. dear clattery –

    its been so long since i read the exact passage, but i remember they were discussing the need for particles, electrons in prticular, to have a separate reality/identity independent of its measurements, even when it is not, technically, being measured.

    thanks again for the discussion. i guess this is where i sign off. i’ll scroll through my old notebooks from grad school. when i find the quote i’ll send it your way. take care.

    p.s. still laughing at arthur’s pretensions. hilarious.

  186. “look in the mirror”

    hahahahahahaha. like you’re ten years old or something. man you’re killing me. ha ha ha

    ok. im signing off now, really. this is too much. ha

  187. Anon, your comment is just a variant on another tactic of refusal to engage the issues, which is often stated as, “If you don’t like it here, go away.” That’s sandbox-level dismissiveness.

    As to actually starting one’s own board, that takes time and effort, too, and one finds oneself in the role of Admin, rather than contributing poems. Even if it ends up being a drama-free board with no autocratic tendencies, it doesn’t really change anything. It’s not a solution. It just perpetuates the cycle.

  188. From the blog “Significance and Inspiration,” cited above (#7) and independently maintained by one of poets.orgs site administrators:

    “Other people and journals that I discovered during this conference and would like to recommend include Dogz Plot (Editor Barry Graham says, “I just like good writing…

    http://larina.wordpress.com/2008/05/26/new-discoveries-at-a-new-kind-of-literary-conference/

    So I guess this barry graham, while meting out his insults, didn’t see the need to make public his association with the site administrator whose board management practices have come under question. I suppose it can be assumed his sudden appearance at Clattery’s is something other than happen-chance?

    Anyway, 222 posts into the discussion and still no cogent arguments defending the board system as it stands. Only the personal insults, the marginalizations, the trivializations, and the dissmissivness.

    Terreson

  189. i wrote this to tereson a long time ago and do not see it on the blog- and did not hear back- so am sending it again

    now that i see so many responses to tereson i am worried that he might be quite important and i better read all the entries and actully see what he said (i tend to shoot from the hip)

    to clattery-nice illustrations on yr. site-

    to tereson- another person who won’t identify who he/she is- isn’t transparency a good thing? honesty?

    u guys seem a bit non/ not political (now i have to re read)

    2/3rds of the earth’s pop goes to bed hungry or without shelter
    the world descends to the right (the night) into the violence of iraq and global warming

    what the fu k is poetry going to matter then?
    pray tell?

    a lot of responses (i haven’t even read them) sort of parse crap into crap-minutiae

    auden- stevens- crane (yes- u can wonder how i rank them as political poets, but i do ( i have sublety) the great poets address the political issues- it may be indirect but-

    u guys- (well, maybe not u) but creely, ashbery, bukowski- “flarfling”- most of the language school- they seem to be gazing at their own navels-they r like pimples on somethings great arse- occasionally catching a whiff of a sad right wing fart

    a person like blake would curse and roll over and go back to sleep

    the moderns i like? how nice of u to ask- heany, rich, bly, snyder, forche,

    now…let me read these comments and come up w something really considered

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  190. Hi Songbird,

    I read the article, and found it to be dated in ideas, but a contribution to this discussion in the sense that it points up what might be ideal, what could be striven for. The end of the article bore me out in the dated aspect, in that most of the links to poetry sites are broken. My interest there was to look for new sites to add to the list, and I found not one. Although looking served to be a trip down memory lane to a degree.

    Terreson’s article delves into what is wrong and how it is that it is wrong. In itemizing, he challenges each of us to make our poetry forums better, whether we are admins, moderators, or poet-members. His is a call for a movement to the ideal.

    Another important contribution that your link makes, is that when we go back, we can all see what we used to be up to. I met some great friends on line, some whom I have met and had great times with, friends for life online and off.

    Go back to the 3rd reply in the Gazebo thread. Sam Byfield says this:

    I agree Pat, the essay and many threads that have appeared addressing it are a good warning about what can happen in online forums and the things we need to be careful of.

    What we are talking about here is either what can happen or, in far too many cases, what has happened at online poetry forums. For instance, in the article at Perihelion by Pamelyn Casto, she mentions that a good poetry board would not tolerate flaming. Part of the problem is that many boards a few years ago were attacked by both flamers and spammers. Many of the oppressive rules and moderator activities have been applied in reaction to those events, which some forums simply did not survive.

    It led to rules that fill respondent’s lips: when-someone-does-this-you-must-do-that rules. And that led to threads wherein moderators would sidetrack the discussion between two intelligent and grown adults, to say what must be said, and how the rules were not read or abided by, and so forth. It is not that Terreson’s article is imbalanced, but that, as I read it, he would love to get balance back.

    Also, it seems far too obvious that Terreson loves online poetry. That is what underlines each sentence in his essay. Thus, there is no such thing as an argument that purports that he is speaking with a forked tongue. I don’t know how else to read the essay, but in that it is written to have each of us consider well each and every point that he has made. Thus, if there are poets who are at ideal or nearly ideal forums where none of Terreson’s points apply, then we can take Sam Byfield up on the essay being “a good warning about what can happen in online forums and the things we need to be careful of.”

    Otherwise, as Terreson is doing, it’s time to address these issues head on. No poet should ever be treated the way some are being treated right now, as I write, on too many forums. Look just a few comments back, a locked thread after an insult by a moderator. And how about here: Terrible site. These are just the closest threads to me these past couple days. This happens all the time. How can we continue to allow poets to be treated this way? What can be done about it?

    C.

  191. Okay. Before sending my essay to Clattery I sent it to three poets who play on the online poetry boards. The first poet helped me both expand and focus on the problems the essay looks to address. The second poet took me to task for being too nice, and equivocal, about online poetry board conditions. The third poet pretty much said that he and his cast long since let go of poetry boards, and so my essay arrived on his cyber-steps like a dead baby.

    Since the essay’s first appearance here, a few or some poets have taken it to their respective boards. Some have gotten heat for doing so. One poet still gets personally attacked. Another has become afraid of her standing on two boards because she wanted to post the essay. Think about it. What is the deal when poets have to be afraid of speaking up on a poetry board?

    Here is something I’ve decided. Online poetry boards amount to a gorgeous idea. Democratic too. And beautiful. And crystalline. As for poetry board managers…? Oh, hell. Maybe there is pee in the pool.

    Terreson

  192. Here are a couple of comments I made on the board, Babilu, in an ongoing discussion on the topic of poetry boards. They came to my like a realization of what the real problem is:

    Diana, your comment about dissent, speaking truth to power, and what makes for normal makes me reflect on something.

    The Oxford Companion to Philosophy has this marvellous article under its entry for poetry. Here is something the writer, a Scottish philosopher, says about the subject:

    “Poetry is forever fighting against the pressures and seductive power of ordinary language to falsify experience in easy, slack cliche. Poetry feels itself up against the ‘limits of language,’ and forced to modify, maybe do violence to, normal syntax.”

    You are the better versed deconstructionist than I am. So you know well the integral connection between language and social constructs. I don’t need to point out that what is true for poets in language is true for poets in relationship to the falsification of all experience. Remember what my essay asks? Do poetry boards falsify the poetic experience? I suppose I could have said do the social constructs of poetry boards, such as the two-tiered system, the favoritism shown critics, the self-serving critic, the insincere reader, the shunning of undesirables, the banning of members, the silencing of debate, etc., falsify the poetic experience? (You bet these are the social constructs of a few, some, a bunch of poetry boards.) And remember what else the essay points to? Poetry’s responsibility to break taboo.

    My point is this. I don’t view myself, you, or any of the many people now speaking up across the boards as dissenters. Just as I don’t view the falsification of any experience, in this case the poetry experience, as normal. I’ll take it a step further. It is the breaking of taboos I view as normal to poetry, and for the reason my Scottish philosopher suggests. Dissent, for lack of a better word, is not a danger. The falsified experience, however, is not only a supreme danger but a killer, certainly a killer of poetry. This right here was the essay’s impetus. Perhaps if people, some people, a bunch of people could step back from the tableau for a moment and see this the rancour getting played out in some quarters of the debate would ease up.

    Tere

    (and again)

    Still thinking about my last post, the one that mentions a philosopher’s comment on poetry.

    I don’t know how it is for anybody else, maybe others share the same view, but I just realized that this is the crux of the problem. Herein lies the real problem. It actually has less to do with an entrenchment and the sometime abuse of power than with a certain falsification of experience. This is why the debate matters. This is exactly why the breaking of taboo matters. Any good existentialist philosopher would get it. And I bet a bunch of poets and poetry readers instinctively get it, even those on the other side of the debate. It would be so fine if the barricade could be torn down. Here, right here, is the common, shared ground.

    “Mr. Gorbachov, tear down this wall.”

    Terreson

  193. as a wannabe poet**, i’ve tried a couple of the poetry sites, and found much of what you say to be true.

    many of these places have almost a cliquish atmosphere…if you belong, your work receives toady/smarmy compliments – if you don’t, you get eviscerated, AND your work gets disparaged in creatively vicious terms…

    either way, few of us get any real critique.

    maybe a BFA ~is~ the only way to go…

    **anymore, i pretty much stick to doggerel.

  194. Catnap, this is the sort of comment to make the heart hurt. Scew the poetry board cartels and cliques. And don’t settle for the doggerel.

    Terreson

  195. Here we are, weeks into this, and I just came here with my Firefox browser, to discover that the italics never got closed from the beginning.

    My apologies to all who have not been using IE coming here. And now I understand the commenter who said the font was so terrible.

    C.

  196. I received this via e-mail, and think it should be part of the discussion. It is a quote from a Gary Hart article in the Huffington Post: The Perserverance of Idealism:

    As many people seem to be born either liberal or conservative, so many also seem naturally inclined toward either idealism or pragmatism. Overly simplified, the pragmatist says “tell me how the system works and I’ll do my best within it,” and the idealist says, “let’s change the system.”

    Here is part of what the e-mailer said:

    I came across this article online today by Gary Hart, and in a strange way, it reminded me of the difference between those on poetry boards who want to maintain the status quo and those who want to change the system. The mods/admins tend to be pragmatists while the reformers tend to be idealists.

    C.

  197. I dunno. I think calling the reformers idealists implies that the writer thinks they’re not at all pragmatic. That is contradicted by the specific suggestions and proposals that have been made. There is a certain cynicism to labeling the mods/admins as pragmatists, too, because that implies they’re incapable of having or upholding ideals. I don’t think that’s true, either.

    Because there HAVE been boards, ones I’ve been on before for varying amounts of time, on which the “ideal” of a functional system without a lot of oppression or drama HAS been maintained much Admin oversight, and on which even people who didn’t like each other didn’t go out of their way to stifle each others’ viewpoints. The so-called temporary autonomous zone, which is self-regulating and doesn’t need policing, is feasible, and I’ve been in places where it’s happened. In this case, the pragmatist is the one who realizes such a state of affairs is probably temporary, whereas the idealist would like to sustain it indefinitely. But both are correct, from a certain point of view.

    I still think it comes back to the personalities involved. When you give someone power who likes to abuse that power, I’d hardly call them pragmatists. People who have repeatedly demonstrated that they WILL abuse power, if given it, on more than one board, are much more like “idealists” in that they are driven by power-mongering and personal ideology, and do not tolerate questioning or disagreement. That’s a state of mind much more akin to idealism, if you think idealism is somehow disconnected from the nuts and bolts of actual human interaction.

  198. I too recently was sent a link. Because of the heat I’ve received across a few poetry boards my initial reaction was to tell the person that perhaps he should broadcast the information. Having thought on it I’ve decided the issue is much larger than any personal discomfort.

    I’ve read the article. I know neither the principals involved nor poets.org’s side of the story as to why the person was banned. But I am struck by a certain symmetry to the experience described. In all events the information should be out there for people to make their own judgement calls.

    Terreson

    http://www.theamericandissident.org/AcademyAmericanPoets.htm

  199. Been thinking about the Gary Hart article. Here is what it brings to mind.

    Einstein opined that there are two fundamental attitudes towards the universe: that it is a friendly place or that it is an unfriendly place. I think Einstein was right. Aliens are going to arrive and they are either going to wipe out the race or they are going to help us get over ourselves. Or maybe this. The cosmos either amounts to a closed system or an open system.

    Now what about a third type of personality, the tragic hero or heroine who says, ‘Okay. So what if the Milky Way’s center is an enormous black hole that will eventually suck up the whole of this beautiful galaxy? So what? That doesn’t mean I can’t or shouldn’t struggle against the inevitable.’

    In the end you got to feel sorry for the pragmatist who settles for less, either out of the fear Bly mentions or out of sheer inertia.

    Something else I’ve noticed in all the poetry board hoopla. It is easy, really requires no fortitude or stamina, to go on the attack when at your back is a system in place. Interesting study it has all been.

    Terreson

  200. Revisiting all this briefly: a discussion that is not done, even if everyone wants to move on.

    It strikes me that there is something else that gets lost in all the fanfare when poetry boards turn autocratic.

    The idea of service.

    The idea of being OF service: to others, to self.

    It’s an example of classic police-state thoughtlessness: instead of serving the members, the board begins to serve its own (governmental) agenda. The idea of being of service to the poetry community, or at least the poets on that particular board, gets completely drowned in the desire to manage and control, even when the desire to manage and control is a positive one with good intentions. (We all know what the road to hell is paved with.) The desire to ban assholes who do nothing but disrupt and cause chaos is not a bad urge; it is indeed a form of peacekeeping. But in taking over the role of police watchdogs, the administrative functions in a community must be careful to not lose sight of why the community first formed, and what it was first focused on. That happens fairly often. The policing function has a tendency to become self-perpetuating, and to exist for the sake of its own existence. Most such functions do: lots of institutions become self-supporting and self-perpetuating.

    What matters here is the motto one can see on the sides of police vehicles in many large cities: the motto “To protect and serve.” Policing needs to always remember that it is a SERVICE occupation, and that it serves at the pleasure of the people. The goal of service is ultimately altruistic: to serve others, to help all involved to make a better world. (The obvious knee-jerk cynical rejoinder is to deny the possibility of making a better world. Yet so many cynics are bitter, disappointed idealists.)

    So, it strikes me that it is possible to have an online poetry board in which the service ideals are not lost. This requires the administrative voices to always remember that they exist to serve, that they don’t own the playground (even if they nominally do), and that their purpose is to keep the playground safe, not distort it for any personal agenda.

    I’m just rephrasing things that have already been said from a new perspective. I find it useful to remember that service requires humility, and humility is sadly lacking in much of what I have seen opined about this subject.

  201. Arthur, it is true. There are a number of people, managers mostly I think, who want to move on. The discussion has been effectively shut down on three boards I know about. On a few other boards where the link to this site has been posted I’ve noticed how a mod type has stepped in, said something in the spirit of ‘well, this certainly doesn’t apply to us,’ and the discussion has come to a stop. On the other hand, and this is telling, on one board the post linking to essay and Clattery’s ongoing discussion I noticed last week had been viewed over 2,000 times. Interesting don’t you think?

    But your larger point is well made and more important. The best board mods, I’ve noticed, facilitate, incite, nurture, encourage both poetry and discussion. The lesser sort look to channel, direct, stamp their own views on, and, in the end, kill poetry and discussion they don’t like.

    I’ve said it before, man. The principal problem right now on some poetry boards is a top down problem. As you say, management needs to remember it is here to serve. Speaking as a one time waiter I know there is respectability in service. You bet humility is key.

    Terreson

  202. “Poets.org Forum Index
    Critical Information

    You have been banned from this forum.
    Please contact the webmaster or board administrator for more information.”

    This is the message I get when trying to access Poets. org. Getting banned from the Academy’s discussion area gets a person banned from the entire site.

    We are talking about The Academy of American Poets.

    Terreson

  203. Amazing what a stupid little essay will result in.

    A moderator on the poetry board, TCP.org, who has been dogging me ever since my essay appeared has now banned me from the board. Not satisfied with that he has also banned any discussion critical of board practices. Still not satisfied, he has started deleting posts made by anyone taking exception to his behavior.

    Here is the kicker. As moderator he was invested with admin powers to delete posts and ban people less than twenty-four hours ago. It blows me away how quickly online people can get drunk on the powers.

    Initially I was a little hesitant about Clattery’s chosen title for this thread. Now I realize just how fully accurate is the characterization.

    Terreson

  204. A correction to post # 241. It is not entirely accurate to say discussion critical of poetry board practices has been banned from TCP.Org. However, the wording of the announcement makes it clear that any such discussion is discouraged and difficult to enter into given the mod’s stated parameters.

    Terreson

  205. Bloody Sunday Bloody. If I were into conspiracy theories I might think some actions are more orchestrated than coincidental. TCP.org has a sister board, TCP.com. I discover today I have been banned from it too.

    Note to Clattery. There are consequences for criticizing poetry board managers.

    Terreson

  206. They proved your essay to be right and accurate by their actions today. It’s stunning. It’s also unfortunately amazing how quickly the abuse of granted power was fallen into. Everything you have said about this subject was just proven to be true, again, today. Truly amazing.

    I doubt they’re even conscious of it. I doubt they even realize they’re not walking their talk. I doubt they even realize that they have also proven once again that there is a double standard for behavior: Mods and Admins can do whatever the heck they want, and get away with it; but they ban regular members for doing it, too. So, Mods and Admins are not bound by the guidelines that they supposedly are there to uphold. They break their own rules, and suffer no consequences.

    Banning you from the sister board just proves this, as well.

  207. I have learned that my banning from the TCP.com site was, in fact, made in the spirit of preemption. It seems that my comments critical of its management on the .org site was offense enough. I have also learned that a second person has been banned from the .com site for comments made on the .org site, and again in the spirit of preemption. Only this time the member’s critical remarks were limited to management practices on the .org site. And now this post where an admin openly expresses his attitude on banning.

    Terreson

    http://pochapocha.com/babilu/read.php?3,976,976#msg-976

  208. Steve–the comparisons of a poetry board and it’s authority structure to that of a civil authority, namely city, state or country government is pretty specious–the analogy only goes so far.  Let me give you an analogy that is much closer to the reality–a lot of this back and forth is due to the badness of the analogy, which as you’ve seen could be argued indignantly and endlessly.  The better, more apt analogy is that of a home.  The host of this home is the “authority structure.”  It’s not about judges, juries, cops or any civil authorities, but guests and members who are friends that have been invited to a party.  The theme of the party is poetry and the goal is reading and discussing it, and perhaps even writing it, with the hope of gleaning audience response and discussion.  

    When a guest gets drunk, or for whatever other reason arrives with a grudge or personal agenda and begins to argue about politics–something which isn’t the theme of the party, they may have to be asked to leave.  If they begin to criticize the host and perhaps even throw punches at other guests, or at the host because the host reserves the right to redirect the discussion from politics back to poetry, or if the guest complains about the food, or the host’s parenting methods, or any number of other things not related to the point of the gathering, they may have to be forcibly removed from the party to keep the party on track and fun for the rest.  Same goes for party crashers.

    Is another person’s home a democracy–maybe yes, maybe no.  It’s the homeowner’s business, and entirely up to them what kind of parties they want to host, whom to invite and whom to let stay.  They call the shots, because they are the hosts, and they have spent their own money on the guests.

    This is Anne’s home, and she’s put you in charge of the party.  You have a responsibility to play the host.  When someone openly says they either have no interest in posting poetry, or are afraid to or whatever, which is the point of the gathering here, I’d take that as a bad sign.  If they want to persistently harangue you about your abuses of power, seemingly endlessly, ignore your attempts to get back to the point of the gathering repeatedly, and lecture you about your poor treatment of another guest who had openly let it be known he had no interest in posting poetry here, and your forcible removal of him as a last resort, then I’d say you may have to ban this guest too, just to allow the other guests the freedom to do what they were gathered here to do.  This guest is a broken record who’s only purpose is to waste your time and keep you from other more important duties, like running the board and workshopping poetry  and allowing poetry to be workshopped for those interested in doing so.

    For those interested in knowing why we banned Tere at .com, it was because we knew had no interest in posting and critiquing poetry, but only wanted to air old grudges and misperceived wrongs, attack the host, and distract us from our true mission: workshopping poetry.  We watched him do this over here, and didn’t need to watch him do it over there before we had to forcibly remove him.

    Oh and by the way, a word of advice from an old hand who watched how amnesty worked at the ezboard TCP.  It worked about as well as an unmoderated site here.  Old wounds rubbed raw and a whole new set of hurt feelings.

    You’re on the right track, but you might need to start banning a little more freely and stop entertaining all the whining–it will never stop and you will just continue to be distracted from your real mission and responsibility here.

    Frankly, since Anne is absentee, if I were you, I’d lock all the forums, close up shop and focus my energies at .com…you will always be on borrowed time and money here, my friend.

  209. One last thing that needs to be noted here by me, since I have a long history with the site.  Part of the reason this confusion exists in the analogy of a privately owned poetry website and civil government authority structure, and can be so hard to argue with and even see through the fallacy of such an analogy is that TCP in all three of its incarnations has distinguished itself as a larger board that has striven to be democratic, impartial, reasonable and welcoming of diversity and loathe to censor.  We haven’t been forced to, and everyone knows examples of other sites which obviously don’t bother themselves with such noble aims, but we have chosen to.  Which is why voices like Tere’s are tolerated as long as they have been.  If the site’s goals/ambitions were less above board they would have been silenced after a day rather than months of the same stuff.  Will you laugh with me about the irony in this?  

    Power abuse?  No, simply taking ownership, and trying to guard the mission.

    Invariably what you see after flame wars in any poetry workshop are splits and divisions in the leadership, and folks stepping down from those roles or leaving the site, who have volunteered to help serve the mission, admin and mods who are emotionally drained and weary, whose talents, training, dedication and skills don’t come cheap, and members who’s artistic creativity wanes in the aftermath.  This is what I’ve personally witnessed repeatedly month after month for years as a moderator at an online poetry workshop.  It’s still worth it–the mission is–but it would be so much better without all the strife.  However–there is a latin phrase–don’t remember it, but do the english–whoever wants peace must prepare for war…this is true because of the nature of humans, even in poetry it seems.

  210. The above comments that were quoted out of context at Babilu and then linked here are quoted from TCP.org in their entirety now by me here at Clattery. Halifax, please be so kind as to quote me as completely as you did yourself. I noticed that the two most important points in my posts were snipped off by you. This leads me to believe you were trying to soundbyte me for the purposes of shading the truth in a particular way. For the record to any concerned, take the whole thing in context. Since Tere was banned from .org, people have started posting poetry again, and elsewhere than the Everything Else forum–this only supports the action taken–so that the poetry can regain the focus of attention at any given board, once the source of irritation and distraction is removed.

  211. Hi dmehl808,

    Thanks for adding your side, with edification. It is appreciated. And I want to stress this as I take up a tangent—with questioning and disagreement—one avenue of your thoughtful and edifying posts here at Clattery MacHinery on Poetry.

    You point out that more poetry has been posted since Tere’s banning, and that he does not post poetry that often, or any longer. I’m not sure it is wrong for someone to only use discussion forums. I think, rather, that that should be greatly appreciated. Thoughtful input anywhere, is thoughtful input.

    I don’t need to tell you that the biggest ingredient to your poetry forums having strong activity, such that TCP.com had in March and TCP.org had in April–is the feedback the poets receive on their works. Interesting that these two banner months for the TCP forums followed directly, the internal turmoil involved with the .com/.org split.

    I’m not sure you can reasonably say to a poet: “Post your work here or leave” or, fully reasoned, make that part of a decision for banning. There are strong posters who simply don’t write that often. There are others who may be writing, but for the time being anyway, not wanting to post their works for workshopping. There may be poets who use a number of forums, and think that whatever they are working on now is, with due respect, better off somewhere else. There are all sorts of rational and even irrational things going on in the mind of someone who has just completed a poetic creation.

    No matter where Terreson posts, there will be people who will disagree with him. I disagree with some of what is in his essay. But, that’s a good thing in my book. And this holds true for you and I, that wherever we go, people will disagree with us vehemently. In another world, I am a managing editor, and I have been told by great authoruty, that such disagreement is a necessary part of the deal. This is the same with forum administration. So, the idea that Tere is airing old grudges, is another way of saying he still disagrees. It is, rather, a good thing that you disagree with him, and he with you.

    I think as it is important that we embrace where we disagree, we need to breathe sometimes, and find the places where we have common ground too. Maybe this is what you are detecting, the need to breathe out. But this should not include spitting out Terreson, whom we have more in common with than not.

    Terreson has been on an earnest campaign to make poetry forums better. He is one of us. He is on our side.

    C.

  212. Might as well ban me, too, then, by that criteria, since all I’ve posted for months have been in discussion fora. That’s partly because since the split at TCP happened, and because of the terrible way in which it was handled (not to mention the non-apology that was posted months after the fact, which led to the current discussion there, which led to Tere’s getting banned), it’s partly because I’ve been too upset by it all to want to write a goddamn poem. And more importantly, my trust in those fora has been completely eroded to nothing; because it is very apparent to me that banning is about stifling dissent, and not much else. So much for “discussion.”

  213. This is good. This is actually a healthy sign. It is also good the entire texts of Dmhel’s posts are presented, and at his discretion, for everyone to read.

    Here is the thing. I cannot, nor can anyone else, make honest posts free of poetry board fear and loathing on boards not just moderated, but modulated. This is key to the health of any poetry board. Moderators should not tell members what to say or how to say it. Site admins should not throw down the lightening bolt in the spirit of harmony. Said management practices kill poetry.

    Funny. Clattery’s blog allows people to speak up, even disagree with each other without fear of getting banned.

    One last note. Dmhel’s post rather dissimulates. He knows the dozens of poems, prose poems, and vignettes, and the thousands of comments I contributed to his board before getting shunned.

    The discussion here is not about Dmhel and his site and it is not about me. It is about the health of online poetry.

    Terreson

  214. Oh hell. If Aurthur gets banned can I get banned twice? I rather enjoy the bloke’s conversation and company.

    Terreson

  215. Arthur, I’m most sorry to and for you for all that’s happened, but we’ve talked about that. You seem to have chosen what you will and will not believe about it all.

    Tere, what could possibly make it right between you and I at this point. You left our board four years ago for reasons we don’t need to go into here, because it would probably be embarrassing to you. After the split happened, which was unfortunate but inevitable at some point, you saw an opportunity to complain to and about us. I really don’t know what I can do for you. But I’m willing to talk if you are, and am above all interested in the causes of online poetry and workshop excellence. Let’s talk here then, if you like.

    Rus, you remind me of the child that is too young to understand why his parents are fighting and must divorce. “But don’t you love mommy, daddy?” “Well, yes, Russy, I do but we just can’t live together anymore…”

  216. The justification that was made to ban Tere from TCP doesn’t wash. It really doesn’t. As Clattery said:

    “I’m not sure it is wrong for someone to only use discussion forums. I think, rather, that that should be greatly appreciated. Thoughtful input anywhere, is thoughtful input.”

    I agree. And I can attest to the thousands of critiques, poems, and poetics discussion that Tere not only posted to, but initiated, on lots of boards, including TCP. So, that’s a bullshit excuse to ban someone: in fact, that’s exactly what it was: an excuse.

    One of the biggest problems with TCP has always been that certain kinds of discussion were always stifled. A free and open discussion on some topics was never permitted. You could never, for example, name names when discussing the problems people had with bad management at other sites. You could never even mention the names of other sties, in good or bad context, without getting slammed for doing so. There were other rules, of course, and the point is that there were rules that were often in direct conflict with open discussions of even poetic topics. Some of the rationales behind some rules were legitimate—copyright infringement, for example—but they were in the end all fear-based. There is no courage in it. Avoiding risk isn’t even the best way to live, much less the only.

    TCP has already had numerous rules added to as well as clarified, perhaps far too many rules. Poetry.org follows in that tradition of having lots of rules. Even when one wants to follow the guidelines, one can run afoul of them, because there are so many.

    The suggestion has been made, on this thread, on TCP, and in other venues, that a lighter touch might be more beneficial for online poetry. Mods as peacekeepers rather than police. The ideal of service, rather than what Tere calls modulation, which I have talked about on several threads: or rather, the lack of service ideals that I see throughout the online poetry world.

    Rather than reaffirming the status quo, perhaps TCP.whatever could adapt to make things new again. I don’t hold out much hope for that, though, as all I see is continued justifications and redactions of history. This goes beyond a difference of opinion—of course, that can be dismissed as just my opinion—because those in power at both TCP boards have gone beyond relating their version of vents to actually redacting and deleting posts and threads that contradict the party line.

    This, again, is a seriously bad way to rebuild trust. It creates an antithetical environment in which to be creative, and be poets.

  217. If I’ve chosen what to believe, Dave, it’s because you never gave me enough of the story with which to make up my own mind. I’ve already stated this clearly on more than one thread, at TCP. I stand by it.

    You cannot expect me to be convinced of your side of the story when out of discretion you refused to tell it. I mean you collectively. The excuse has been made again and again that the three Admins who caused the split would not talk about it, for the sake of being discrete. Well, duh: How the fuck am I supposed to believe I’m not being lied to when nobody will tell me what the fuck they think happened.

    No one can be convinced of anything in a vacuum of information. It just ain’t gonna happen.

    And you also seem to believe that I am still defending Anne. I never was. I only repeated information that had been given to me.

  218. I’ll just add this: I haven’t CHOSEN to believe anything. I continue to keep an open opinion, and my opinion is also influenced by what I see, what I hear, and the actions I see people take. I keep an open mind.

    There are people who I no longer trust, because their actions have repeatedly shown them to be untrustworthy. Some of these people have been and are currently Mods and Admins on various poetry boards. Their actions speak louder than their words, because actions always do. Does this mean I will never trust these people again? No. It DOES mean they’re damn well going to have to re-earn my trust. They no longer have the right to assume it. And they will have to continue to act in good faith, and not fall off the wagon, as it were, in order to keep that trust in future.

    This has always been about people walking their talk. When they are not in integrity—and when they do nothing, apparently, to explain their actions and get back into integrity—then I reserve the right, as all poetic prophets always have, to speak up about it. I do not expect to ever be loved or appreciated for being honest. That expectation has left my life for the final time.

    This applies to everyone: Mods, Admins, members, drive-bys, whoever:

    Abuse is abuse. Period.

    Abuse of power comes as no surprise. Especially when power is granted to those known to have abused it before, already, previously, whatever. (Some of those have been named here, and it’s up to them to object if they feel wronged. Actions speak louder.) That keeps happening. Why? Because those folks seek out power: power over others. Not power with others, but power over others.

    The whole Mod/Admin problem would be solvable if it didn’t so often involve decisions being made behind closed doors, which are then never explained. Or actions made seemingly in a fit of anger or pique or fed-up-ness. Actions made in haste, without due consideration. The cloak of secrecy really makes things worse. It creates the APPEARANCE of abuse, even when there has been none. But in a ringing silence of no information, especially no information to contradict the appearance, what is one to believe. The idea of “choosing” to believe is offensive.

    You’re goddamn right that Mods/Admins need to spend more time on transparency about what has been decided. The appearance of abuse can never be countered by silence. And I do reserve the right to speak my mind whenever and wherever I choose. THAT is my only choice in operation here.

  219. I am not interested in personalizing the board problem as Dmehl is trying to do. I am not at all embarrassed about stepping down from his board as a moderator. Given the circumstances then I would do it again. And for the same reasons. Interesting to note that an admin uses the same tactics of trivializing a participant’s comments in order to maintain control.

    I am more interested in Durkee’s last post (#259). This gets to the raw of the problem. This gets to why poets feel dispossessed and disenfranchised on one, two, three too many poetry boards.

    If only mods and admins could get beyond their own egos and ask themselves the question: why does the majority of our membership keep so damn quiet?

    Terreson

  220. I’ve read dm’s comments in full and
    as quoted by Halifax. The only thing H. left out was the self-serving hot air.

    The demeaning, dismissive response to
    clattery which compares him to a hapless child is bad form, inept reasoning and truly bad writing. Yup, it’s time to move along, there’s nothing else to see here folks.

    Chris D.

  221. dmehl808 wrote: “The above comments that were quoted out of context at Babilu and then linked here are quoted from TCP.org in their entirety now by me here at Clattery. Halifax, please be so kind as to quote me as completely as you did yourself. I noticed that the two most important points in my posts were snipped off by you. This leads me to believe you were trying to soundbyte me for the purposes of shading the truth in a particular way. For the record to any concerned, take the whole thing in context.”

    I wanted to quote you in full but thought you would object to that. I tried to follow what I thought would be fair usage guidelines. I wasn’t trying to soundbyte you or shade the truth. If I had been trying to do that, I wouldn’t have given the links to your original posts and encouraged people to read them. I quoted one of my posts from the tcp.org thread in full, because I felt free to do so. I didn’t quote the entirety of Hall’s essay if you’ll notice, nor did I quote the rest of my own posts in that thread. Perhaps you think I was purposely trying to soundbyte and shade the truth in those instances as well? Of course I wasn’t.

    I basically responded to your metaphor about poetry board house parties, and that was the part of your post I quoted. If I had known it would be okay to quote you in full, I would have. I will update my posts on other boards and link to this thread, so that people can read your comments in their entirety without going to tcp.org.

  222. Can this all be fixed? Maybe. I don’t hold out a lot of hope for it, though.

    On the other hand, to get the personal attacks over with, let’s just all agree that everybody can be an asshole at times.

    But just because someone is an asshole, doesn’t mean they’re wrong.

    It’s amazing to me that people still just don’t get that truth, and conflate a person’s self with their work. Plenty of assholes have been great artists. You don’t dismiss great artists on those grounds, so why would you do that here? It makes no sense. (Unless of course it’s just another double standard.)

  223. I noticed that the two most important points in my posts were snipped off by you.

    What were the two most important points in your posts as you saw them? As I said, I was interested in exploring the house party metaphor, so that was the part I quoted. Personally, I think that analogy, like the legalistic one you objected to, “only goes so far.” I agree, however, that “the civil government authority structure” analogy doesn’t work either. What I am beginning to realize, and I don’t mean this to be facetious in any way, is that you can’t be a little bit democratic anymore than you can be a little bit pregnant.

    You wrote: “However–there is a latin phrase–don’t remember it, but do the english–whoever wants peace must prepare for war…this is true because of the nature of humans, even in poetry it seems.”

    Are you saying that folks who question, speak up and dissent on poetry boards are the enemy, enemy combatants or terrorists? One of Bush’s former education secretaries, Rod Paige, referred to the NEA as “a terrorist organization,” which came as a shock to NEA members. I don’t think I’ve ever had a conversation with you before, and I am sorry if you consider me the enemy.

  224. The house party analogy fails on one crucial point: an online poetry board isn’t a house. It’s not even a virtual house. It’s certainly not a community in any actual sense of the word, although people can come together and depart in virtual community.

    It has always been ironic to me that those poetry boards that most often state their community values also seem most likely to have lots of rules, lots of bans, and a lot of denial about what goes on behind the scenes. TCP does fall into this category; it did so even when things were basically going smoothly.

    An online poetry board is not at all like a house, or a home. (“An inn is not a home.”—Marianne Moore). A poetry board is more like a public space, a city park with microphones, or a coffeeshop, or high school gymnasium. It is an open space in which people can enter and leave more or less at will, most of the time. I don’t know about you, but this describes no house or home I have ever lived in, or visited. (Maybe a farm house with a big extended family might live this way, perhaps.) It might describe an inn; or a hotel; or a bed and breakfast; or a public library. But a house? Nope.

    I am not avoiding the question of ownership with regards to online poetry boards. (I probably understand this aspect better than most poets, since I am a domain owner/operator and website developer myself.) That an individual owns a website, because the domain name is registered to them, and/or they paid for that registration, is not the point. The point is how that domain name is operated, supervised, handled, and dealt with. As has been said before—a point I don’t really feel has been responded to very well, or very often, by the Admins/Mods’ side of the argument—the tone of the entire space is set BY the owner, by the Admin/Operator/Moderator. The style of interaction displayed by the Owner sets the tone for everyone’s experience.

    What I still haven’t gotten a response to—not that I’m holding my breath—is the issue of accountability, of responsibility for setting that overall tone. The typical responses fall into a couple of categories, which are not real responses:

    1. “If you don’t like it here, I invite you to leave.” In some cases, admission of responsibility is made by the Admin; but their idea of addressing perceived abuses is to reject anyone’s opinion who disagrees with them, and to invite people to leave.

    2. Denial of overall responsibility for setting the tone.

    3. Denial of abuse of power, and justification of abuse of power, even when it’s transparently obvious and virtually the entire membership thinks it was abuse. Here comes that double standard again: Mods get away with behaviors that average members get banned for. We have seen this over and over now. It happened at TCP right after the split, more than once. It just happened again.

    So, what about Mods’ accountability? I don’t hear many Admins/Mods addressing that very often. Except sometimes to agree with me, then go off and abuse their same privileges again. This is really schizophrenic, and it needs to be held accountable.

  225. Wow, dmeh,

    I respectfully welcome you, and then engage you on your points, in comment #251, and somehow that triggers your disrespectful response to me in comment #255. For some reason after I did not reveal your real name, you chose to reveal mine, after we already covered that in this thread. Ya know? That’s disrespect. Why would you do that?

    You made yourself look foolish, and it is almost like you made some Freudian slip or something, revealing the truth behind your “house” metaphor. You’re the mommy. Terreson’s the drunken daddy you’re throwing out of the house. And I’m junior with hurt feelings. How old am I? How badly does it hurt? Please, go on . . .

    C.

  226. Point one. No analogy ever describes or explains a set of dynamics. The poetry boards do not constitute a house. They do not constitute a civil, commonwealth structure. There cannot be a divorce, as Dmehl has put it, since there never was a marriage. And the relationships between mods and members do not parallel the relationships between parents and children. What the poetry boards do constitute is a free association of people who happen to be interested in poetry. Ideally it should be and can be a free association of equals. Herein lies the rub. One, a a couple, a few, several, a bunch of poetry board participants have raised their hands and demanded that one, a couple, a few, several, or a bunch of admin types and mods see them as equals.

    Point two. Over at Babilu’s a new friend needed some convincing before he could allow that the management abuses many of us have spoken about actually occur online. It has simply not been in his ken of experience. At least now he does allow as much. But he has persuaded me of something too. He is a mod on at least one site and maybe more. He has persuaded me to allow also that the kind of board mismanagment my essay addresses and that has subsequently been addressed by others is not the norm, not the rule. According to my new friend mods and admins are barely visible on his board. The perspective is important.

    Point three (subset to point two). I’ve recently discovered two new poetry boards and one old poetry board where, in fact, the footing is more equal between management and member. On the two new boards, Babilu and Poetry.net, the site owners recently posted their philosophy on how boards should be administrated. In brief, I find the environment they look to create friendly to poetry and to all of us crazy ass poets. On the old board, The Gazebo, I am struck by the abscence of two salients I find on boards unfriendly to poetry: the mods do not look to modulate discussion and the exchange of ideas and they do not, as a group, gang up on a member.

    Point four. I’ve been following my essay as it has gone from board to board. On a number of boards the admins have shown a capacity for self-reflection. They have not reacted defensively. On a couple they have engaged me in equal conversation, or without talking down to me. It quickly comes clear that my issues are non-issues for them, since, their management style is not in the least offensive, abusive, unfriendly to their members. This too is an important perspective.

    Point five, the main one and the last. I keep trying to find some dialogue with admins such as Dmehl. (Just giving his name as an example. There are others.) So far, there has been no dialogue. Only the name calling, personal attacks, trivializations, dismissiveness, the sniping, the attempts at discrediting me as some kind of weirdo with a grudge, etc. I almost forgot to mention the bannings on trumped up charges. The response on the part of certain mods and admins amounts to adopting the defensive posture. My essay did say something about a kind of bunker mentality some management displays.

    I want to try a different approach. I want to give a list of specifics I personally do not want to have to treat with when I go to a managed poetry board. Maybe this way the discussion can be raised to the level of issues, not reduced to the level of bickering. For me, this whole debate is not about personalities. It is about practices, specifically management practices, harmful to the freeness of online poetry. Here is my list, given in no particular order of importance.

    I do not want to see anymore board mods ganging up, in group, on a member they declare is undesirable or uncomfortable to them. I think that banning should not be discretionary in the sense of being determined by interpretation of both rules and behavior. (This is what has caused so much fear and loathing.) I think banning should be limited to the most egregious offenses: hate speech, threats of violence, and spamming only. I think moderators should not be allowed to edit a member’s post. (It has happened.) I think moderators should not be allowed to delete a member’s post except at the stated request of the member. I think that moderators, some at least, need to rethink their role. Their rightful job is to facilitate conversation and exchanges. Their wrongful job is to modulate conversations and exchanges by telling members how they should think and speak. (In this respect the two best mods I’ve ever met would be Brenda at TCP.com and Dmanister at Poets,org.) I think that poets, and I am particularly passionate about this point, should always and everywhere be allowed to challenge the comments, assumptions, and sometimes the abusive bullshit, of their critics. Why should a poetry board sanction the critic when it puts a gag order on the poet who was the brave one in the first place? I think both admins and moderators should also have to follow a limits rule on posting poetry, but of a different order. For every poem they post they have to comment on 25, 50, 75, or 100 poems posted by members, depending upon the board’s ratio of members to mods. (I am dead serious. This is the only way to give the boards back over to members and to their poetry.) The last thing I think is this. Site admins and site owners, at least some of them, need to rethink their roles. Being an admin or owner does not give the person privelige or ownership. In poetry there are no priveliges or ownership. There is only talent and the lack of talent. The role does, however, place a particular responsibility on the admin. To administer can mean two things. On the dysfunctional boards it has come to mean to maintain control over. On the functioning boards it has always meant to administer to. Big difference.

    Well, Clattery? You now got my magna carta. I ain’t lettin up. This is important because poetry is important. My essay addressed many issues concerning the falsification of the online poetry experience. Most of them had nothing to do with poetry board management. But I guess the management problem seems to be the most lurid. Come to think of it, I almost feel sorry for board managers. But then I think of so much harm I’ve seen them do and I change my mind. Poetry is the thing.

    Terreson

  227. “I think that poets, and I am particularly passionate about this point, should always and everywhere be allowed to challenge the comments, assumptions, and sometimes the abusive bullshit, of their critics. Why should a poetry board sanction the critic when it puts a gag order on the poet who was the brave one in the first place?”

    Yes, that’s another rule that never made any sense to me.

    Granted, it is possible for a rebuttal to escalate into name-calling and abusiveness, but in that case the Mod’s job is to intervene and restore the discourse to being about the poem and/or the issues the poem raised.

    Instead, what has happened to me several times (mostly at TCP), because of the literalist interpretation of the “don’t critique the critiquer” rule, is that I was taken to task for replying to a post on a thread that began with one of my own poems (!) in which the discussion veered into poetics and/or philosophy. We were all told to stay “on task,” as if it were a kindergarten and we weren’t adult enough. Not to mention that the discussion WAS on target, being some interesting larger issues brought up by the poem.

    At another time, a Mod on the most difficult forum openly attacked one of my recent poems as being “not a poem.” His attack was personal, and as I proved using logic and rebuttal, his attack was based on moral grounds, not poetic ones. (He is a neo-formalist, a physician, and has the arrogant attitude of both. And I’ve been around doctors my whole life, so I know whereof I speak.) I posted a series on my own blog about all this, in addition to posting my replies on the threads at TCP. I do give this Mod credit for acknowledging my points that his attack was a moral one only, and I give him points for apologizing to me later. At the same time, this same Mod has been one of the more critical, personal, and vindictive attackers since the split at TCP. He is convinced his is In The Right, of course.

    And people wonder why I feel bruised by my recent experiences at TCP, and why I have said that it’s no longer a safe place in which to post my poems.

    No accountability for that has been addressed, either. I did received private emails agreeing with all my positions of the above, during events, by other poets who felt they could not speak publicly, for fear of retribution.

    And this is supposed to be a climate of trust? This is supposed to be a house? This is supposed to be a safe place in which to give and receive critique?

    It’s not if you’re spending 90 percent of your energy defending your poem’s very right to exist.

    This experience was very revealing, I’ll say that much.

  228. “dmehl808 and others,

    I invite you to join and post at

    http://poetryinc.net

    The Poets.net Forum is always interested in clarification and both sides of the story.

    Comment by Jennifer — June 30, 2008 @ 8:10 pm”

    Regarding this post ( #263, above) I wish to bear witness to the openness and sincerity of this Forum. Not only are both sides always represented, but I have personally been allowed to say anything I damned well pleased. In fact, I think I’ve used all seven of Carlin’s ‘words’ and they haven’t kicked me off yet! Go figure.

    We just call it freedom of speech.

    Oh yeah…and there’s even real poetry there.

  229. Clattery wrote”

    “Wow, dmeh,

    I respectfully welcome you, and then engage you on your points, in comment #251, and somehow that triggers your disrespectful response to me in comment #255. For some reason after I did not reveal your real name, you chose to reveal mine, after we already covered that in this thread. Ya know? That’s disrespect. Why would you do that?

    You made yourself look foolish, and it is almost like you made some Freudian slip or something, revealing the truth behind your “house” metaphor. You’re the mommy. Terreson’s the drunken daddy you’re throwing out of the house. And I’m junior with hurt feelings. How old am I? How badly does it hurt? Please, go on . . .

    C.”

    I am waiting for the answer to this question, DMEH…is it never okay to reveal a real name, okay to reveal it if it serves your board’s purpose? Such a flap has been made over revealing a name many already knew and now you come in and do it to Clattery here? How do you justify that?

    Frankly, I am astounded. Would love to hear your answer.

    Pat

  230. Okay, here’s the bottom line for me:

    I can understand how a person might be banned from one site, because they are perceived to be stirring up trouble, refusing to Let Go of an issue, and being a provocateur. I can understand that, even if I don’t agree with it.

    But to then ban this same person from another site, eg. a sister site, before they have done any actions on that other site that are bannable offenses—that stepped over the line.

    People should be judged purely on their actions, on a site by site, case by case, basis. Banning someone BEFORE they have broken the rules and violated the guidelines really steps over that line from management into abuse.

    There is no such thing as preemptive banning, or there should not be. Each person should be allowed to prove themselves a troll, each time, on a case by case basis.

    Does that make the world a little more troublesome, a little less controllable, does that make life a little more anxiety-ridden? Yes, it does. But that is the price one pays for being alive: that uncertainty about other people.

    Preemptive banning is autocratic and totalitarian precisely because it doesn’t wait for someone to act, it presumes their ill intent before they have been given a chance to prove, via their actions, what their intent is. It presumes an Enemy, and thus it must put a stop to that Enemy. This is a form of authoritarian psychology that presumes that the possibility of ill intent is enough to act upon. What it leads to are summary drumhead trials, and make no mistake that they ARE trials, in which the person is presumed guilty, with no possibility of innocence. It is precisely this attitude that one of the Founding Fathers was warning against when he stated, “Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.” That phrase has been twisted by totalitarian after totalitarian into the idea that vigilance means Control. But that is the opposite of the statement’s intent; it’s true spirit was to guard against that very totalitarian urge to control what cannot be controlled.

    Control is about fear. A preemptive ban is about fear: fear that someone MIGHT stir up trouble you don’t want to deal with. In no paradigm or model of online poetry can this be justified. No matter how it is justified, no matter what is said about it, the action itself speaks loudly, and speaks to motivation, and that motivation is fear and hatred.

    Are you all so afraid of things that you must cover your eyes with your fists, like an infant, so that they go away? That truly is infantile.

    This is where TCP.whatever stepped over the line, in my opinion. Until then, they could have had a good argument. But when both sites banned Tere, when his arguments had only been posted on one of the sister sites—that truly was the action that revealed the corruption behind the facade of good fellowship.

    It was a completely unjustifiable act. And they know it: that’s why it’s being defended so loudly, even when nobody was talking about it yet.

    (Just to be clear, I believe this to be the actions of one or a few people acting out of fear and/or frustrated exhaustion. I do not blame the general membership, most of whom probably neither know nor care what has been going on. But even though this might explain, it cannot justify.)

  231. Thinking on Arthur’s post, #269. Please all to reread. His anecdotes are not the product of an overly active imagination. The stories are real and fairly represented. When I think of the many instances of abuse I have both experienced and witnessed Arthur’s stories are rather mild. But if I cite the stories here it will only result in more bickering, more counter-attacks, more defensivness on the part of (some) mods and admin types. Much mention has been made of the sister TCP sites. But I can think of two other boards on which similar abuses have been meted out by other mods and admin types. So while I want to believe my new friend at Babilu, that the problem is exceptional and not the norm, I am not persuaded it is of local extent only. Now back to the issues.

    Post #268. There I give something of a magna carta. If I can get anything across to management in general, and if I can get any of my critics to hear me, the sum of the situation would be this: less management is more conducive to an environment friendly to poetry, and to the board exchanges, than more. Less stamping down, less intervention, less coercion, and much, much less modulation of discussion lends itself better to the freeness of poetry than more. Poets don’t need sherriffs, as one mod is fond of styling himself. Poets don’t do well when they are forced to keep an eye for what may be over their shoulder, worried that some admin is ready and poised to pounce on them for how they express themselves. In essence, and on the boards only where mods behave badly, an air of fear and loathing has been produced by the intrusivness of managers and by the double standards maintained where what constitutes a personal attack is different for mod and member. I honestly don’t understand why the principle of less rather than more is so difficult to grasp. But for the extraordinary and rare cases of hate speech and threats of violence, what exactly is it poets need to be protected from? Judging from the actions on some boards I suppose the answer seems to be they need to be protected from themselves. That is the logic of some management actions.

    Something else comes to mind here, and I think I can say this without restarting the bickering. Much has been made by my critics for the personal attacks I am supposed to have made and for which I’ve been banned from two boards. I got two thoughts about this. My personal attacks have amounted to a harsh criticism of individual managers whose behavior I have watched for years. I am guessing my twin banning came after I posted a message, telling a site admin on a board not her own and, at the time, unmoderated, she was not fit to be an admin. or maybe it was when I told another site admin i’ve known for years he has done much harm. If that is a personal attack then so be it. I’ll own it. But I want to know what is the difference between a personal attack and a judgement based on years of observing abusive and manipulative board behavior? Second reflection is this. It has been over two months now, since the 20th of April, of being on the receiving end of personal attacks, character assignation, and general dissing by my critics, some of whom are mods, one of whom is now a site admin. Something to think about the next time someone calls me an asshole.

    One more item, a partial repeat of what was posted upthread. It has to do with not respecting the use of peoples’ given names. As I’ve said a site admin found, or was given, not only my given name but my full name. In an attempt to intimidate me he posted it on his board. I want to be sure the full irresponsibility of what he did gets underscored. He can’t harm me. I’ve become a boring late middle-aged man, soon to be a grumpy old man. But he did expose a bunch of really fine people to cyber-space mischief. And so I am going to say he is not fit to be a site admin too. Imagine if I was a woman, maybe a single woman, raising uncomfortable questions and getting outed for it. Imagine the danger I could have been placed in. The lack of shame blows me away.

    How can these people so believe in the rightness of their collective position? How can they not wonder why some or a bunch of us have come to suspect their motives.

    Clattery, the entrenchment of it all truly does blow me away.

    Terreson

  232. Over on Babilu, we’ve turned towards mockery, which is probably the healthiest response so far. The Mocking of the Popes is a good sign. Perhaps the Liturgy of the High Church of Forumology has more to contribute to this discussion than anything else.

    Since, after all, the Pope IS quite naked.

  233. As I mentioned in a previous post, I travel during the week, and have one day off (with computer and internet access). I hope to respond to each post–this week being a holiday weekend, I have two days off. Please be patient with me and refrain from posting new subjects until I can address each post? otherwise it may become impossible for me to keep up and address everyone…

    Let me just say right off the bat that I’m sorry about my initial post–it started me off on the wrong foot definitely.

    Clattery, in particular–I had no idea that folks didn’t know the identity of the person hosting this site–no idea. Please delete my post addressed to you–I would if I could, but I don’t think I the site enables me that function here. My apologies for revealing your real first name here.

  234. Arthur (answering 257)–I’ve been an admin at TCP for something like 4 years and was a moderator there for 2 years approximately before that. It’s a fair amount of time to see a variety of different kinds of people, poets, and trolls come and go or stay as members. The rules are set up as format for protection to safeguard the mission and the members. They are to provide a veneer of civility–I don’t believe that any society, organization or group of any size can operate for long without them.

    I think the gravest threat to poetry and honest free artistic exchange in online forums is morale that suffers after disputes, rivalries, flame wars. Membership morale can suffer if moderators abuse their power, or even if people are merely arguing unproductively. It can be particularly distracting and destructive if members are arguing about things which have nothing to do with poetry.

    I think it’s important to note that the rules are pretty basic at TCP–primary is no personal attack, no hate speech. The discussion forums are more highly moderated than the poetry forums–there’s almost no censorship of poetry in the poetry forums and the rules there are critique a certain number of poems for every poem posted, don’t argue with the critique and don’t post spam or hate speech. The discussion threads are more open to locking–we hardly ever delete anything–if people get heated and start attacking one another. Politics and religion in the past can be pretty volatile, but there hasn’t been a big problem for 4 years that I can recall. The rule about talking about other sites good or bad is reasonable, because talking about folks behind their back is always bad form, and unprofessional to host this talk–it’s gossip and unproductive and just doesn’t need to happen as far as I’m concerned.

    I’m not sure what threads have ever been stifled. The roles of moderators often becomes a role of mediator between two friends who are fighting–sometimes a moderator will step in to remind folks to stay on track in a thread and avoid attacking one another, or mediate a dispute once one has happened, especially in incendiary topics. It’s a tough job, and not an enviable role to play at times. I hate to see my friends fighting or being attacked.

  235. Arthur (258)–not all dirty laundry needs to be aired to everyone. During the split in particular, I was an admin who was around the least amount of time. There are things that happened that I still don’t know all the details about, but must take the words of others and piece together what happened. If a person isn’t directly involved they don’t need to know, or need to know every gory detail about who did what and why. Discretion is keeping quiet about what doesn’t need to be known by the general public, and sometimes this can look like deception, or power abuse, conspiracy, when it isn’t.

  236. Arthur (259)

    I think we all choose to believe what we believe–sorry if it seemed I was singling you out.

    You don’t know how many times mods and admin tender their resignations because the work is so thankless–you don’t know how many times I have wanted and tried to resign, and this is true of many of those I’ve worked with–there isn’t really any power that is that attractive–mainly the way I see it and I’m being really frank here is that it’s job that others can’t or won’t do and so you step in and say, I’ll do it then. Here’s the worst part of it, you see you’re friend fighting and you have to try to get them to stay friends, not leave the board in a huff, and stay, just so you can continue to have the priviledge of reading their poetry. This is the main part of the job for me as an admin–being a diplomat/mediator between friends and poets who are opinionated and have fiery temperaments. The funny thing is, that you have no idea how I grieved when Tere left our board 4 years ago, and how pleased I was when he reappeared and started critiquing poetry again a few months ago on TCP. When Tere stopped critiquing and made it clear he wouldn’t post poetry again, and became abusive in the discussion threads–the input stopped being thoughtful but was hostile and trollish–that was the reason for the ban. When the destructive outweighs/counters/negates the constructive–this is when a tough decision needs to be made. I am always the last person to want to ban anybody.

    Moderators make mistakes–sometimes bad ones. They should apologize–it’s in the interest of the board, for morale sake–because everyone’s eyes are on the leaders as examples and quick to remind and bring this up later when mistakes are made etc., but some folks have big egos–on the membership side as well as the moderator side–it goes with the territory of poetry–people are flawed–poets are wounded–this is the nature of the online workshop, all we can do is try for fairness, impartiality, reasonableness, and justice and to maintain peace and free expression–why, for the sake of the poetry of course. You say you haven’t written a poem in a long time, because of all the drama and hurt and bad feelings surrounding the split…I don’t think power abuse was the cause but damage and emotional upheaval.

  237. Let me back up a moment–I missed a couple of posts–

    C (252)–the issue is never just disagreement, or even heated disagreement–

    if that’s all it was then there would be no problem. It’s when the discussion forums stop being “thoughtful input” and turn to destructive, abusive, haranguing commentary about a pet agenda or another member or members. Tere’s discussions stopped being about poetry TCP a long time ago. This is a huge loss to TCP, because discussions with him involved were some of the best we ever had.

  238. #276. I am glad to see that Dmehl is willing to enter into an exchange. I am hoping other admins will do the same. I am especially hoping they can enter into a conversation in the true spirit of an exchange among equals, as we all are at Clattery’s. No modulators here. As for TCP’s policies and rules, please to reread the essay starting off the discussion. Then reread #268, point five and #273, par., two. Stated as neutrally as possible management practices at TCP, among other boards putting into practice their guidelines, served as my essay’s template.

    One other thought for now. Stating a board’s policies and guidelines is not quite the same as answering questions raised. That indeed would be a brave act on the part of any admin or mod. On the other hand, it suddenly occurs to me that the paternalism expressed in #276 is precisely what a few, some, or a bunch of us have come to object to. Guess we’ll see if in fact an exchange is even possible in the first place.

    Terreson

  239. Tere (253)–Is this really about the poetry or something else? Honestly, ask yourself that. Please.

    If you so disliked our board and how it was run and the rules it was governed by, why would you come back–why would you want to post there? I really don’t understand, Tere. As I said before I missed you when you left, and was damn sorry to have to “shun” you, but that only happened after it stopped being about the poetry and became an anti-authority/rules jingo.

    I am very interested in knowing the difference between moderating and modulation. Could you elaborate on that?

  240. Chris D. (260)

    Do I know you? Do you know me? How can you attack my post (when you know nothing of the context behind it), and me, and say I’m full of hot air when we know nothing about one another?

  241. Halifax (262)–Thanks for making the adjustment–it’s always best to quote folks in full when possible.

    by the way, I enjoyed your don hall quotes. The cafe metaphor is most apt of all. The funny thing is, that I own one, and have hosted writer’s groups there. As the owner I can still refuse service to someone who gets out of control–it’s not that far from the homeowner analogy except that products are being sold rather than given (as in a home). We don’t sell coffee in an online workshop, but the members are more like customers than party guests, even if they are not paying for anything–wait, by critiquing others perhaps they are paying, just not in money. Every metaphor breaks down at some point.

  242. Jennifer (263)–thanks for the invitation, but it looks like the discussion is taking place here and everyone can speak freely (and even attack ona another if they wish)

    Why continue to repeat the advertisement though–after the second or third time it’s starting to look like spam.

  243. Arthur (264)”On the other hand, to get the personal attacks over with, let’s just all agree that everybody can be an asshole at times.”

    Yes, 🙂

    I would be the first to admit that about myself.

  244. #279. Goodness, goodness, goodness. And it starts already. Personalize the issue(s) and you trivialize the questions. Well, what the hell.

    Dmehl is right. My poetry discussion threads were some of the best on his board. It is the same where ever I have posted. It is less because of my comprehensions than because of my devotion to poetry as a thing in itself, with no agendas. He is right too that my participation there became less about poetry. But here is where #279 trades in the half-truth. What my discussions became more and more about were poetry board politics. And it started when I was a TCP mod back in that hidden forum accessible to mods and admins only. That was the first place and time I was told to shut up and where I had a thread locked. That was the first place and time I questioned management practices. Think about it. If a mod can’t ask questions in private and raise topics uncomfortable to management without feer of reprisal who the hell can? And then there is this. Poetry, and the discussion about the same, never flourish in a repressive environment. It does however turn its attention to the repression itself. That is what makes poetry, and the poet, political.

    It would be so much better if we could keep to the issues rather than turning aside to the particulars. But heh. If need be I’ll play the huckleberry, point by point.

    Terreson

  245. See #287 in response to #282. And, yes, of course this is all about poetry and the extent to which poetry board practices can and on some boards do falsify the poetry experience. Stated again a certain education started in board politics in the mod forum #287 mentions. But it didn’t end there. Repeated patterns elsewhere is what finally produced the essay.

    Terreson

  246. halifax (265)

    The two central points according to me:

    A) poets who stop posting in the poetry forums, but continue to post in discussion forums on topics unrelated to poetry not only cease to be “valued” contributors, but if hostile, antagonistic, abusive, trollish are become liabilities through distraction and destructive influence which negatively impacts not only the discussion forum but often other forums on the site, causing a choice to be made to warn and eventually ban the “non”contributing member. If someone only posts only on discussion forums it’s okay, but the main point of a workshop board is the workshop. If the discussions pertain to poetry it’s still valuable. If they never do, it’s of little value to the site as a whole, and can be costly. If they are incendiary, controversial, off topic as far as the core mission is concerned then they become work to monitor for the moderator, a distraction for the membership and a liability to the site. It’s a tier of priorities and pragmatics, and an issue of morale. No one who hasn’t had to mediate and monitor these difficult threads knows anything about how time consuming and emotionally exhausting this task can be. Tere has, I believe, moderated the EE forum at TCP (and should know all about this dynamic), and I have. The scale is one of constructive versus destructive, and weighing pros and cons, time consumption and cost in members or moderators before one, as a last resort, locks, a thread–rarely is anything deleted, but sometimes, if letting the information stand is hurtful to a member.

    B) Flame wars are costly in moderators, admin (volunteer staff who resigns after them), members who leave the site after a “discussion” which wasn’t even pertinent to the posting or discussion of poetry. Morale and the atmosphere/tone/climate of a site are crucial and directly proportional to the quality and quantity of poetry posted in an online poetry board–leadership diplomacy is a crucial factor in the morale equation because it directly ties in–how long one lets an unproductive thread often relates to the health of the poetry forums, and discussion forums bleed over into the workshop forums. One has to be tolerant but not too tolerant or you lose members or moderators. Flame wars cost a board, especially if unchecked, and most often occur on threads not pertinent to the board’s mission (religion and politics as two common examples). Respect is the key ingredient to the health of any board. Free and open discussion depend on it.

  247. Okay. #282 again. We need to clear up a misconception. My essay, this blog, the ensueing discussion(s) is so not about TCP. TCP is a poster child only, one of several, used as an illustration of, and to say it again, the extent to which the poetry experience can get falsified by management practices. (Of course it is about other aspects of the situation too.) While I sympathize with an admin’s inclination to view the discussion as about his board only, doing so works against the exchange, if exchange at all is possible. An admin type is going to have to disengage for a moment, step back, reclaim a bit of neutrality if he is going to actually get what is being objected to here. That would be a big step to take.

    As for my own small set of objections, as said upthread, please refer to my essay, to #268 point five, and to #273 par. two.

    Terreson

  248. Tere (287)–I would love nothing more than to not personalize the issues, but don’t know how to avoid it. I posted here initially because I felt I was quoted out of context at babilou, and wanted to make sure-especially you–who couldn’t see the full quotes–could see them. Tell me what issues of a nonpersonal (TCP related issues) you wanted to address and specifically how you wanted them addressed. I”m offering you personal opinions based on my experience on a specific board (don’t have a lot of experience elsewhere).

  249. Arthur (266)–I think home works to an extent, just like any other analogy does, to an extent. Your other analogies do too (park, library, etc.–except an online workshop has an owner or owners, a staff, a membership, and a mission or goal for the gathering–I think it is a community–why wouldn’t it be–many of the same people show up everyday, friendships and artistic endeavors evolve, people even meet up nonvirtually.

    “1. “If you don’t like it here, I invite you to leave.” In some cases, admission of responsibility is made by the Admin; but their idea of addressing perceived abuses is to reject anyone’s opinion who disagrees with them, and to invite people to leave.”

    This sometimes happens, it’s true. If a person shows up wanting something we don’t offer, or they want what we offer to become something the other members collectively don’t want, it’s in their interest to find what they want somewhere else, isn’t it?

    “2. Denial of overall responsibility for setting the tone.”

    I think administrator’s and/or owners of a site should accept responsibility for setting the tone–how could they deny it really?

    “3. Denial of abuse of power, and justification of abuse of power, even when it’s transparently obvious and virtually the entire membership thinks it was abuse. Here comes that double standard again: Mods get away with behaviors that average members get banned for. We have seen this over and over now. It happened at TCP right after the split, more than once. It just happened again.”

    It happened at TCP how and where specifically–hard to refute an accusation without knowing specifics. Generally it isn’t a question of whether or not power abuses will occur at any given site, but what is done about them after the fact. Everybody makes mistakes, exercises power wrongly if they have it, and is fallible. What do they do about it after the fact determines their level of integrity and humility?

    “So, what about Mods’ accountability? I don’t hear many Admins/Mods addressing that very often. Except sometimes to agree with me, then go off and abuse their same privileges again. This is really schizophrenic, and it needs to be held accountable.””

    Moderators are ultimately accountable to admin. Admin are accountable to the owner and themselves. There isn’t any overseeing body, so it’s up to the member to decide if they like a board’s tone/leadership–if not they leave. I did speak with Diana at one point when she raised the issue about a greater body of accountability and am not opposed to the idea of some–it could be a valuable resource to all concerned to have oversight, but who, how and what body would do the overseeing is the difficult point to detail out. I suggested to her that a body of peers (other admin from other boards) would be doable for me. Ultimately the member calls the shots–they can stay or go–I’m not being crass–it’s a fact–they are not paying for a service, and they are not being held against their will. They dictate where they will spend their time and artistic energy. Simple as that isn’t it? I think a board has a responsibility and an incentive to retain good and productive contributing members. This is why they should want to behave and conduct themselves above board.

  250. C (267)–You’re right, I did make myself look foolish, and it was wrong to mention you by name (I didn’t know you were incognito), and I’m very sorry about the comment.

  251. #289. And so who mod’s the mod? Who checks the checker? Who ensures the double standard is not applied when treating with mod and member behavior? Who defends a member from the snarkiness of the mod? Who gets to define a flame war? Who keeps mods from ganging up in a pack on a member declared undesirable? Who keeps an admin type from signalling to mods a member needs to be driven from the scene. Who ensures a posting poet can defend a poem against the stupidity of the uncomprehending critic?

    This is where the paternalistic and moralizing stance expressed in #289 breaks down. Of a sudden, and making a small leap here, I am reminded that Plato would drive poets from his ideal Republic because of the danger they represented to ideal order.

    Terreson

  252. Arthur (269)–Perhaps you’re right and the ban was pre-emptive and unjustifiable. I’m not sure it’s all as cut and dried as that, though. The situation is muddied by the fact that TCP.org and TCP.com should be one and the same site, in principle–even though there are different owners. they should be one site, but aren’t. The other complicating factor is that Tere was attacking/abusing/whatever folks at the .com site, so by extension he was banned at .org for attacking folks at .com!? I think the only reason he was not banned prior was because the moderator had no admin power to do it. What is the gain of letting someone antagonize your board–who has no wish to contribute productively? especially when the member who banned Tere at .org is an active member at .com. If there were any constructive reason for not banning Tere at .com we wouldn’t have done it. Perhaps we made a mistake, perhaps not–now that it’s done, it can’t be undone. I don’t know, but I knew if we didn’t, there would be a cost of other members. An admin at any given board is always trading costs–part of the job–in friendships and poets and members. It’s probably the main source of turnover in moderators/admin–having to be in the middle between two friends. Personally I hate it.

  253. I’m not sure why I’m being painted as the bad guy by you. Really in that respect I don’t think you know what you’re talking about:). As for your point 5, I am here, not afraid, and am talking with you…

    “I do not want to see anymore board mods ganging up, in group, on a member they declare is undesirable or uncomfortable to them. I think that banning should not be discretionary in the sense of being determined by interpretation of both rules and behavior. (This is what has caused so much fear and loathing.) I think banning should be limited to the most egregious offenses: hate speech, threats of violence, and spamming only. I think moderators should not be allowed to edit a member’s post. (It has happened.) I think moderators should not be allowed to delete a member’s post except at the stated request of the member. I think that moderators, some at least, need to rethink their role. Their rightful job is to facilitate conversation and exchanges. Their wrongful job is to modulate conversations and exchanges by telling members how they should think and speak. (In this respect the two best mods I’ve ever met would be Brenda at TCP.com and Dmanister at Poets,org.) I think that poets, and I am particularly passionate about this point, should always and everywhere be allowed to challenge the comments, assumptions, and sometimes the abusive bullshit, of their critics. Why should a poetry board sanction the critic when it puts a gag order on the poet who was the brave one in the first place? I think both admins and moderators should also have to follow a limits rule on posting poetry, but of a different order. For every poem they post they have to comment on 25, 50, 75, or 100 poems posted by members, depending upon the board’s ratio of members to mods. (I am dead serious. This is the only way to give the boards back over to members and to their poetry.) The last thing I think is this. Site admins and site owners, at least some of them, need to rethink their roles. Being an admin or owner does not give the person privelige or ownership. In poetry there are no priveliges or ownership. There is only talent and the lack of talent. The role does, however, place a particular responsibility on the admin. To administer can mean two things. On the dysfunctional boards it has come to mean to maintain control over. On the functioning boards it has always meant to administer to. Big difference.”

    This is interesting–I think it’s the first time I’ve actually gotten to see specifically what you’re asking for and wanting from a board and a management style. Your essay was so general that I didn’t find it that helpful–but this is good and something to think about Tere. Thanks.

  254. Arthur #269

    I think you’re right, a poet should be able to elaborate their intent to a critic, and discussions can get really interesting when this happens–we changed the guidelines in the upper forum (HD) to reflect that opening up of the guidelines about a year or two ago. We have been talking about changing it in the middle forum (C&R) as well. There’s a couple of schools of thought on whether a poet should need or be able to explain their poem–the opportunity doesn’t happen anywhere but a workshop–but it is true that interesting discussions and a lot of tangential learning can take place for all concerned. “Don’t crit the critter” should be changed to “don’t attack your critic” really.

  255. Okay, Dmehl. I am not looking to paint you as a bad guy, as you put it. Fundamentally, I bet you are an okay person. I am, however, as are others, taking issue with certain board practices, presently as involves management, in the first forum in which I or anyone else has been allowed to raise certain uncomfortable questions. (To my mind this is key. That Clattery has made available a forum in which dissenting voices can be heard free of reprisal. Don’t you get it?)

    As for finding my essay too general, the point was to raise a long-time festering issue, which it did. As for the specifics of what any of us might envision, when did you or anyone else ask me or anyone else for specifics? When have any of my critics asked the question? There have been attacks, dissing, scoffing, trivializing, in the end, banning. Not one critic, not one mod or admin type felt put on the defensive, has asked, ‘What are you talking about, man? What is the problem? What do you dissenters want?’ Nor have you or anyone else asked me or anyone else here. The info was voluntary and made in the spirit of getting past the fricking bickering.

    I thank you for the several posts you’ve made today. In brief they amount to a site admin’s position paper, which is a good thing. Everybody now can read the opposing positions of two poets who, in the end, and I remember this about you too, are in it for the poetry. And you bet. It comes down to a fundamental, philosophical disagreement. Only, I am going to ask you to read the thoughts of others who have spoken up about what they too view as a lousy situation on a few, some, a bunch of poetry boards. Mine is not the only voice of dissent. I have been hearing their voices raised on a few, some, a bunch of poetry boards for awhile, or at least until they were told to shut up.

    So let’s get past this personal stuff and let’s get to issues.

    One more thing. When I read your posts, #289 especially comes to mind, I realize something. I realize just how right Einstein was when he said there are two fundamental attitudes about the universe. For some it is a friendly place. For others it is as essentially an unfriendly place from which people have to be protected. In my view the paternalistic bent places one in the latter camp. But that is just my view.

    I’ll give you something else too, Dmehl. You have the distinction of being the first and only admin or mod to step out into an uncontrolled environment. Other mods have shown up here, but only on the attack. I respect that.

    Terreson

  256. dm,

    This is what I know of you. You compare poetry work-shops to house parties, hosted by mods and administrators.

    You responded to clattery’s gracious and welcoming comments with dismissive sarcasm. You also ignored
    his explicit request not to reveal his name. Disrespectful indeed.

    I know of you what you have revealed of yourself here.

    I see the conversation has taken a more positive turn and I am pleased to see that. I’ve been away from the computer for a while
    so I am just catching up and responding to your response, upthread.

    Chris

  257. I want to go back to post #248. The author’s maintenance is that it is the text of a message made in full, given as advice to a fellow site admin on a sister board of his. It would be good to read the whole message for the sake of context. But it was the second to last paragraph that stopped me up short.

    “You’re on the right track, but you might need to start banning a little more freely and stop entertaining all the whining–it will never stop and you will just continue to be distracted from your real mission and responsibility here.”

    After reading the post I kind of riffed on the message on another board, Poets.net. It put me in mind of something an abbot is famously supposed to have said in one of the darkest moments of Christendom, when Christian turned murderously on Christian. Here is what came to mind.

    ‘I am a great fan of Troubador poetry and of the Civilization out of which it grew. At its height in the 12th C, and from Provence to Catalonia, there was this flourishing in the arts, sciences, commerce, philosophy, religion, and civic life. But the region’s Cathars, a religious order more gnostic than Pauline in its faith, were declared heretics by Pope Innocent III. And he declared a crusade, since known as the Albigensian Crusade, named after an important town in the south of France. Armies came in mostly from north France. They raped, pillaged, murdered, dispossessed, and generally wiped out the populations of whole towns. (No exaggeration.) Because theirs was a holy war these armies were assured eternal salvation for their holy work.

    In 1209 the city of Beziers was beseiged and eventually taken. There was present a certain spiritual guide, the Abbot of Citeaux. Some of the conquering knights were a little troubled in their consciences because of the sanctioned mass murders. One knight is supposed to have gone to the Abbot and asked how could he distinguish between Catholic and Cathar. Famously the abbot is supposed to have replied, “Kill them all, the Lord will recognize His own.” I guess there is precedent for the site admin’s promotion of preemptive banning. Ban them all, the board in the sky will recognize its own.’

    At the expense of begging the obvious, how is anyone to reconcile the advice to a fellow site admin to “banning a little more freely” with the protestations of good faith the same author is now pleading? What is scarier is trying to figure out the notion of a site admin’s “real mission.” In the land of poetry, always artfully dishevelled, the notion of a real mission makes for some scary shit.

    Terreson

  258. Oh hell. Did I forget to say that out of the 1209 Crusade the Holy Office of the Inquisition was born? And that poets, the Troubadors, were some of the first to be brought before said office? Maybe it is something to think about the next time a board manager declares any one of us a troll, just before the ban notice.

    Terreson

  259. I just reread the essay. It has been long enough since that it comes as news to me. The message seems pretty clear.

    Poets, demand more of your boards. Demand more of your critics, challenge them, and keep them honest when they take on your poetry. Demand more of your board managers. If you don’t keep them honest nobody will. And demand more of yourselves. If you fall into the comfort zone of poetry board culture your poetry is the loser. Rather, your job is to challenge that culture in all the little ways big poetry is made.

    My sense is that today’s Rimbaud or tomorrow’s Dickinson will not be found on the streets, in a book, or in the recording studio. He, as likely she, will be found here, in cyberspace, maybe on a poetry board. This is why the conversation matters.

    Clattery, I’ve decided you are a prince.

    Terreson

  260. dmehl, why can’t a banning be undone by those who done it in the first place? Seems like you abandon authority when it suits you to do so. You can undo a banning in a trice and you know it.

    You come across as a bad guy because you compare adminstering a poetry workshop/forum to hosting a party in your own home for guests you have invited and can disinvite at your pleasure.

    That analogy betrays Your mental state as being other than one of service to the community.

    You’re the gardener, man, and the poolboy and the house painter. You maintain the site.

    Your analogy expresses your sense of ownership, power and entitlement. Some registered members are sick of being treated according to the whims of administrators with that attitude.

    And just because you think TCP.com and TCP.org “should be the same site” (your words), they are not the same site. And you have banned registered members from “your” site based on their behavior in another forum. Where does it stop?

    This is the wire-tapping mentality rife in the U.S. now. But at least Bush claims to be looking for terrorists. What’s your excuse?

    Diana

    .

  261. Tere (290)–“An admin type is going to have to disengage for a moment, step back, reclaim a bit of neutrality if he is going to actually get what is being objected to here. That would be a big step to take.”

    I am trying, listening, and thinking through the issues. To me this isn’t a sparring contest but engagement.

  262. Tere (294)– “And so who mod’s the mod? Who checks the checker? Who ensures the double standard is not applied when treating with mod and member behavior? Who defends a member from the snarkiness of the mod? Who gets to define a flame war? Who keeps mods from ganging up in a pack on a member declared undesirable? Who keeps an admin type from signalling to mods a member needs to be driven from the scene. Who ensures a posting poet can defend a poem against the stupidity of the uncomprehending critic?

    This is where the paternalistic and moralizing stance expressed in #289 breaks down. Of a sudden, and making a small leap here, I am reminded that Plato would drive poets from his ideal Republic because of the danger they represented to ideal order.”

    My responses to this can be found in two posts above this post, here, in “the paternalistic and moralistic post” to you Tere (289): “Respect is the key ingredient to the health of any board. Free and open discussion depend on it,” and here to Arthur (292): “Ultimately the member calls the shots–they can stay or go–I’m not being crass–it’s a fact–they are not paying for a service, and they are not being held against their will. They dictate where they will spend their time and artistic energy. Simple as that isn’t it? I think a board has a responsibility and an incentive to retain good and productive contributing members. This is why they should want to behave and conduct themselves above board.”

    By the way, Plato’s distrust and banning of poets from the Republic wasn’t a political ideal but an artistic (philosophical/religious?) ideal he objected to–he disliked artistic representation of any kind because it diluted through derivation the ideal form rather than representing it in truer form–or as we commonly think of poetry and fiction, a form of truth through lying.

  263. Tere (299)”Okay, Dmehl. I am not looking to paint you as a bad guy, as you put it.”

    thanks, I appreciate that.

    “Fundamentally, I bet you are an okay person.”

    heh.

    “I am, however, as are others, taking issue with certain board practices, presently as involves management, in the first forum in which I or anyone else has been allowed to raise certain uncomfortable questions.”

    In my defense, and perhaps my site’s, you could have posted this essay on our board and we would have discussed it. When a link to this site and the essay was posted in our discussion forum, I was one of the few people to actually respond to your essay and try to bring the thread back to the original point after many tangents had been made and the thread had veered off in other directions.

    “(To my mind this is key. That Clattery has made available a forum in which dissenting voices can be heard free of reprisal. Don’t you get it?)”

    Yeah, I get it, but the problem with a forum like this (just like anywhere) is that it gets diluted with complaints and tangents and the nuggets of real reform potential are tucked away hidden amongst the irrelevant–may I suggest you post a revisit at some point highlighting the key general points and doing away with the personal and specifics for those who don’t have time to wade through the hundreds of irrelevant comments.

    “As for finding my essay too general, the point was to raise a long-time festering issue, which it did. As for the specifics of what any of us might envision, when did you or anyone else ask me or anyone else for specifics?”

    now.

    “When have any of my critics asked the question? There have been attacks, dissing, scoffing, trivializing, in the end, banning.”

    banning was after months of sniping,trollish behavior, petty abuse on an unmoderated board which was brought to a crashing standstill as a result of yours and a few others–is this your solution? I think the largest response to your essay on other boards, with the exception here and at TCP was apathy and indifference?

    “Not one critic, not one mod or admin type felt put on the defensive, has asked, ‘What are you talking about, man? What is the problem? What do you dissenters want?’”

    Actually, I had enough respect for you, and several other mods at TCP did, to ask those questions of ourselves and our site.

    “Nor have you or anyone else asked me or anyone else here. The info was voluntary and made in the spirit of getting past the fricking bickering.”

    May a lot of people didn’t want to enter the fray of bickering, or don’t perceive the problem as being theirs, or that pervasive? I know I thought twice about it.

    “I thank you for the several posts you’ve made today. In brief they amount to a site admin’s position paper, which is a good thing.”

    You’re welcome. I have put myself and my board in a vulnerable position of scrutiny and subject to all kinds of criticism and attack. Hopefully the dialog can remain fruitful and productive for both sides?

    “Everybody now can read the opposing positions of two poets who, in the end, and I remember this about you too, are in it for the poetry.”

    I’m glad you are not only willing to recognize this but acknowledge it–thank you.

    And you bet. It comes down to a fundamental, philosophical disagreement. Only, I am going to ask you to read the thoughts of others who have spoken up about what they too view as a lousy situation on a few, some, a bunch of poetry boards. Mine is not the only voice of dissent. I have been hearing their voices raised on a few, some, a bunch of poetry boards for awhile, or at least until they were told to shut up.

    So let’s get past this personal stuff and let’s get to issues.”

    You’re having a positive impact on my perception of how to run a board through this discussion that hasn’t devolved into a shouting match and name-calling…it needs to be noted that I am not a lone maverick admin but share a position with 3-4 other admin at TCP–and we are all following this discussion.

    “One more thing. When I read your posts, #289 especially comes to mind, I realize something. I realize just how right Einstein was when he said there are two fundamental attitudes about the universe. For some it is a friendly place. For others it is as essentially an unfriendly place from which people have to be protected.”

    The responsibility of any management style in any organization is to run at a level of efficiency and to set goals and try to meet them. The customer or membership or community or party goers demand this of the host, wouldn’t you agree. It isn’t always as sinister as you would portray it, but at the same time, you bet–there are wolves who would ravage the sheep and the admin sometimes plays the shepherd–would you deny this and suggest the world is full of rainbows and gentle sunbeams and fluffy white clouds, all the time?

    “In my view the paternalistic bent places one in the latter camp. But that is just my view.”

    fair enough. I wear a few hats–not just one.

    “I’ll give you something else too, Dmehl. You have the distinction of being the first and only admin or mod to step out into an uncontrolled environment. Other mods have shown up here, but only on the attack. I respect that.”

    thanks. feeling’s mutual or I wouldn’t be here. I’m genuinely glad for the discussion and think it will definitely affect the management style at TCP in days to come.

    Terreson”

  264. Chris (300)”dm,

    This is what I know of you. You compare poetry work-shops to house parties, hosted by mods and administrators.”

    What’s wrong with that? As I said earlier, every analogy breaks down. Why doesn’t this work for you? There are several that could apply to the online poetry workshop…the pervasive analogy that was being used against me and that spurred my counter reply and analogy was that a poetry board was like a civil government/democracy. Now you know the context of my reply.

    “You responded to clattery’s gracious and welcoming comments with dismissive sarcasm.”

    Yes. Partly I was irritated with C, because of a reply he made on our sister board. But I regret my actions and have apologized and asked that that comment be deleted–are you willing to reassess your opinion of me now? I spoke out of anger and shouldn’t have.

    ” You also ignored
    his explicit request not to reveal his name. Disrespectful indeed.”

    This may sound stupid, but I didn’t know this was bad form because I didn’t know there was any question in anyone’s mind of the identity of the host here. He posts announcements on other boards, linking this board with his real name, and I thought it was common knowledge that Clattery was his blog.

    “I know of you what you have revealed of yourself here.”

    true enough. I hope i’m representing myself better now.

    “I see the conversation has taken a more positive turn and I am pleased to see that. I’ve been away from the computer for a while
    so I am just catching up and responding to your response, upthread.”

    I’m glad you’re interested in positive discussion. The rest is a waste of everyone’s time, but people like to rubberneck–it’s a fact of the highway and human nature.

    Chris”

  265. Tere (301)–

    Wow, can you be serious? Are you actually equating actions on an online poetry board with a genocide and a religious war?

    I am wondering if, knowing my religion, you are now trying to mock me for my faith.

    Or is the hyperbole of comparing religious mission with organizational or business “mission” somehow relevant to this discussion?

    If this is a subtle form of mockery for my faith, that’s a little below the belt and personal, rather than rising above the specifics to the general issues that you called for earlier, wouldn’t you say?

    What am I to think about this when you make such outrageous comparisons? Is banning you from a poetry board for unrestrained abuse against us on a sister board, like burning you at the stake or running you through with a sword?

  266. Tere (303)–“My sense is that today’s Rimbaud or tomorrow’s Dickinson will not be found on the streets, in a book, or in the recording studio. He, as likely she, will be found here, in cyberspace, maybe on a poetry board. This is why the conversation matters.”

    This is an interesting proposition, and one that would be worth exploring in another discussion. I doubt Dickinson would have posted on the net, but perhaps she may have–if she had, could she have held onto her individuality and idiosyncrasy–could Dickinson have been an online workshopper and become a Dickinson–we’ll never know 🙂 Interesting to think about. Or could she have been even greater for the workshopping and surpassed herself? Do unknowns on poetry boards have a stab at the same posthumous recognition because they post online? Different topics for different days, but yes, your injunction is a good one, I’d say.

  267. Diana (304)–“dmehl, why can’t a banning be undone by those who done it in the first place? Seems like you abandon authority when it suits you to do so. You can undo a banning in a trice and you know it.”

    We have a “once banned, always banned” policy. We have tried amnesty before with a 99 out of 100 failure rate. I won’t say it never works but it almost never works. If I were to unban Tere, I’m guessing I would be trading him for X amount of other members, some of whom would be moderators and some of whom members who would see the action as inconsistent, unfavorable, and unfair to those who weren’t offered the same opportunity to be unbanned. It would set a new precedent, which when we tried it before, almost brought the board to its knees, because the sudden influx of unbanned members could forgive and forget that we had once banned them. The other question is whether Tere would wish to return, on what terms and in what way, and whether he would really want to participate fully as a contributing member in good standing. All this said–I would consider it. To unban would be a risk to TCP with no guarantee of gain to anyone–him or us. Does this help outline the complexity of the issues to you?

    “You come across as a bad guy because you compare adminstering a poetry workshop/forum to hosting a party in your own home for guests you have invited and can disinvite at your pleasure.”

    I honestly don’t see why this makes me a bad guy 🙂 I mean seriously, it’s about the poetry, and all about the stinking poetry–not management styles and conflict. Why can’t we keep talking about something interesting, like whether Dickinson could have been a Dickinson, if she posted online?

    “That analogy betrays Your mental state as being other than one of service to the community.”

    I don’t see how–a party host is above all a servant–it’s the guests who really get to enjoy the party–all the host does is work, and hopefully enjoys being a host and servant to the community and sneaks an oeur’doeurve and drink as they can…

    “You’re the gardener, man, and the poolboy and the house painter. You maintain the site.”

    Diana–hahahahahahahaha–man have you got that right. heheheh.

    “Your analogy expresses your sense of ownership, power and entitlement. Some registered members are sick of being treated according to the whims of administrators with that attitude.”

    Am I to be ashamed of being the site owner, host and admin now? I am open to constructive criticism and change, but may not always be able to make concessions to individuals when group membership needs are at stake–that’s part of the democratic nature of operations within a large group, eh?

    “And just because you think TCP.com and TCP.org “should be the same site” (your words), they are not the same site.”

    No, you’re right–one is an archive and a virtual graveyard–the other is a thriving poetry board.

    ” And you have banned registered members from “your” site based on their behavior in another forum. Where does it stop?”

    I’ve explained this repeatedly in prior posts–read back, if you haven’t noticed.

    This is the wire-tapping mentality rife in the U.S. now. But at least Bush claims to be looking for terrorists. What’s your excuse?

    Diana”

  268. A bunch of posts there, dmehl. I would say you have caught up nicely. Now for a few responses.

    First off, someone’s personal faith is none of my business. It is not something I need to think about or, in the context of the present discussion, take into account. On the other hand, all that has happened and is noted in the human record is my business and mine to take account of, no matter whose faith, persuasions, or convictions it might it enjoin or even compromise. Anyone who feels insulted by mentions made of what is squarely in the record is going to have to deal with it on their own time. It is not my problem.

    As an aside and before getting to point two, up thread I was asked to draw out the distinction between moderating and modulating. Dmehl has just supplied an example of modulating the conversation by telling me how to think and how to express myself. With all due respect in this venue Dmehl is not in a position to tell anyone how to express themselves.

    Now for point two. The context of my little anecdote about a certain abbot was clearly given. “…start banning a little more freely and stop entertaining all the whining…” It is incredible to me that even its author is not struck by the outrageousness of the attitude.

    Point three. I see once again the charge is levelled at me for “blatant personal abuse.” Please refer to #273, par. 3. To say again what I said there I am guilty of harshly criticizing two, I think it was only two, site admins for their management practices. If that amounts to personal abuse I’ll own it.

    Point four. Dmehl, I need to disabuse you of a misconception. I have no desire to ever again visit TCP. The well is poisoned there. You have several mods who gang up on members. You have mods who can be snarky in their treatment of members. You have a site admin who sets a certain tone and signals to the mod staff who they should diss. You have a mod forum that, unless things have changed, is an ugly hothouse where members get talked about disrespectfully. And lastly, most egregiously of all, you have two members who were involved in outing me by being privy to supplying my full name to your sister site’s admin. Seriously, you can check off your list of things to consider with respect to unbanning me.

    This is more personal than I wanted to be and more direct. But I didn’t bring the topic up. Nor did Dmanister who couched her language in general terms. You turned the comment to my case. So don’t worry your head about, man. As I said before there are four boards I consider poster children for intolerable management practices. I have no desire to contribute my poetry and my thinking about poetry to any of them.

    Terreson

  269. Thanks for clearing all that up. Talk to you in a week, assuming there’s any reason to think something productive may come of it. by the way, I too am sorry I’m not answering the questions/issues raised in a way that satisfies you! I’m not the only modulator around here, bud!

  270. Clattery, let be noted for the record please that this particular poster is quite satisfied with Dmehl’s answers to the issues raised. Any chance passerby can draw her own conclusions on the strength of what has been presented. In itself that is something productive.

    Terreson

  271. dm,

    By your own admission, you’ve made insulting, inappropriate comments in the course of your comments here.

    Your comments were not deleted and you were not banned. Your ideas and your behavior were challenged. You were given unlimited space, time and freedom to respond. You have been treated respectfully. Something for you to contemplate, though I doubt you will.

    Has my opinion of you changed? I
    don’t know, on the one hand you’re
    “glad” I’m “interested in positive
    discussion”, in the next breath I’m implicitly accused of “rubbernecking” and thus I am dismissed.

    For all your efforts to appear reasonable, I think you are not.

    Chris

  272. Well, Chris. Speaking as one rubber necker to another, boy do I love the work out. It so relieves the kinks, don’t you think?

    Clattery, I am finally ready to challenge this whole concept of poetry board ownership. The recent analogy of poetry board being a house, site owner the host, members guests at the poetry party puts a few things into focus for me. Two things come to mind: sweat equity and natural resources.

    In labor economics the concept of sweat equity holds that the factory worker, by virtue of his labor, makes a greater investment in the factory than is compensated for through wages. In brief he is a part owner in the factory, along with the capitalist and possibly the share holder whose investment(s) the capitalist depends upon. I am not proposing yet another analogy for describing poetry board workings. The sweat equity that poets invest on a poetry board through poetry posted, comments made on other poems posted, general participation, and sometimes lit crit type discussions, all of this amounts to an investment and, according to the model of sweat equity, makes them part owners. There is no way of getting around it. The point is valid.

    Second point. Site owners set up shop with absolutely no natural resources. They do not have poetry on a large enough scale. They do not bring participation. They do not bring comments enough on poetry that isn’t available yet anyway without the resource of members. And they do not bring the kind of lit crit and poetry discussions on which many boards thrive. Members do. In fact members not only bring the resources they are the resources on which poetry boards depend for their livelihood. Again, there is no way of getting around this. It really isn’t an arguable point.

    To recap. Board members, by virtue of sweat equity, are not only part owners of any board created, they are also the resource on which the board depends in order keep active. Just ask any board owner whose site has gone defunct through lack of activity if this is not the case.

    Over the years I’ve known many members who have invested in a board through sweat equity and whose participation amounts to a valuable resource. There is this one member who, to all the boards on which she participates, brings literary information gleaned from different sources. Her posts frequently start up conversation, which, of course, is the life blood of boards. Another member I know does something similar. She enters into a discussion, then after having done a little reading and research, adds substantiatively to the proceedings. A third member not only adds to any discussion in which he enters but he shows the board of his choice some of the best poetry likely to be found online. Then there are the countless, countless, countless posting poets who invest so much time in the comments they make on the poetry posted by others. In my case I have a kind of interesting situation going on. On a board from which I was banned about six months ago I left a few posts in the discussion forum. Posts involving lit theory, poetics, and lit crit. One thread is presently at 22,000 plus views. Another thread now has 14,000 plus views. Somebody is getting something out of those threads, and the board is getting the visits. You reckon I should demand residuals?

    So I guess I want to know who the hell owns these boards anyway? And if it is true, which of course it is, that members are part owners, shouldn’t they have some meaningful say in how boards operate?

    Here is a little story underscoring my point. Some years ago I was touring an antebellum plantation. The tour group was all white…except for one African-American couple. You bet I knew what was coming. Can’t remember the original plantation owner’s name. Let’s say it was Beauregard. Tour guide is intoning on how Mr. Beauregard cleared the virgin forest, built the house, drove his cotton a hundred miles to the river, etc. While, of course, Mrs. Beauregard was credited with having seen to all the family’s sewing needs, maintained her favorite rose garden, landscaped the grounds, and still found time to take care of the meals. Anyway, I hung to the back of the group just so I could observe. Sure enough. First the sidelong glances between the Black couple. Then the sharper looks exchanged as the tour progressed. Then finally the looks of incredulity as they realized the extent to which they were witnessing the rewriting of history still in progress.

    Clattery, I’ve decided that irony sometimes lies in perspective.

    Terreson

  273. Permit me to comment on the idea posted upthread that poets in poetry forums should post more poems if they are posting in discussions.

    That’s just another way of getting rid of articulate dissenters!

    Who in hell are mods and admins to tell a poet how much poetry to write?

    If a poet is publishing outside the forum, winning prizes like Terreson is, how does anyone know how much writing the poet is doing on a daily basis?

    Maybe the poet hasn’t got a poem ready to be workshopped. That’s true of me this summer for example. Maybe he or she has got writer’s block. In that case the pressure to post poetry in a workshop will only make the block worse.

    Not only do the guidelines they have written tell members how we have to respond to our ctitics in the forum, but now they want to tell us how many poems we have to workshop!

    Next they’ll be asking to approve of our dates!

    dmehl makes autocracy sound benevolent when he mentions democracy or the greater good. What democracy?

    Guidelines are written by management without any input from members and sometimes over members’ objections.

    Management does not feel compelled to observe their own guidelines, as Leona Helmsley once said about paying taxes, “that’s only for the little people.”

    And worse, management can wield power in a hurtful manner and write the guidelines to justify their actions later.

    *************

    dmehl, where is the guideline that states that a member’s criticism of management in another forum is grounds for banning?

    *************

    Like Tere, I respect your engaging in this discussion, but I feel you still aren’t getting it.

    Diana

    .

  274. Consider this, when you start to compose the new TCP guidelines requirements for ongoing postings of poems by members.

    T.S. Eliot published Prufrock in 1917 and published The Waste Land in 1922.

    In between were years where he wrote no poems.

    T.S. Eliot might have been banned from discussions by The Critical Poet for not writing enough poetry!

    Diana

    .

  275. Hi dmehl,

    On comment #279.

    That message of mine that you responded to, #251 was in relation to banning someone for not posting a poem.

    You say:

    “C (252)–the issue is never just disagreement, or even heated disagreement–”

    I didn’t say that it was. Your “issue” in your statement is a different issue, it seems. The issue addressed here is this relatively new idea that someone should be banned for not posting poetry, or not posting poetry for some length of time; banning someone for only using the forum for its discussion threads.

    Thoughtful posts in a discussion forum should be welcomed, even from those who never write poetry at all. There is a sense that I get that sometimes this new idea for a rule, to insist on poems from people who participate in discussion topics, is being used to increase the number of poems posted. It comes off as a striving toward bigness; either that, or the opposite, a fear of winnowing out.

    C.

  276. Clattery, having read back through the discussion and exchange with one board’s site admin, here are a couple of reflections brought to mind.

    In ancient Greek religion there was a sea god named Proteus, from which the words changable and mutable derive. Proteus predated the arrival of the Olympian, offical state, religion, but he was then adopted by the new religion. He was made into the son of Posiedon and he was given the job of protecting Poseidon’s seals, which made him the bull seal at the center of the pod. He was given the power to tell the future, which he was forced today if and when captured. He was also equipped with the ability to change his shape in order to elude capture. I often think of Proteus when debating and exchanging ideas. He comes to mind whenever the interlocutor changes the shape of his argument in order to avoid addressing a single issue or a set of issues raised. It is actually a pretty common practice in debate. But any forensics coach will tell you it is one of the weakest tactics that can be used.

    Second reflection. In logic, and going back to Aristotle, there is the concept of the ignoratio elenchi, which stands for the irrelevant thesis or irrelevant conclusion. It is popularly known as a red herring as in, ‘that is just a red herring,’ or the argument that does not address the issue in question.

    It is always fascinating to find the red herrings and the protean mutability in a debate.

    I was not declared an undesirable at the admin’s board for a lack of poetry posted. Were that the case, I should think the scores of comments posted on the poetry of others would have off-set the lack. In my view commenting on the poetry of others is far more valuable to a board than constntly posting your own.

    #287 squarely addresses, no coyness, the red herring raised. It was having questioned board politics, especially with respect to its two-tiered mod/member system that led to being declared an undesirable.

    But I think I can suggest a way out of the board admin’s dilemma with respect to a certain set of questions. Certainly it would forestall the red herring need.

    A board’s guidelines could include the clause: ‘No questioning of management practices will be tolerated, nor will any criticism of mod/admin behavior. Doing so is cause for immediate banning.’ They might want to window dress the guideline a little for the sake of recruiting new members. But this could be the message. And all would know the board’s parameters before hitting that button that says, ‘Yes, I agree to the terms.’

    Anyway, this would be my suggestion to all site admins who share the kind of paternalistic, some say autocratic, philosophy about board management having been expressed here. Suddenly no more need for red herrings and the Proteus position. And everybody knows where they stand. Much healthier this way. Don’t you think?

    Tere

  277. It is just self-evident that a forum
    or a workshop is nothing more than the interaction of its participants, without whom it does not exist. A home-owner who hosts a party does not depend upon the attendance of the guests for the very existence of her house. Party hosting is just
    one, very minor element of home ownership–for most folks. But this is all too obvious, kind of like arguing that water-boarding really is torture. What’s the point?

    I’ve noticed how this discussion has evolved without any imposition
    of control by management. I’ve also noticed that those who argue most vehemently for rigid control in the name of order and civility are the least civil and most disorderly. Yet even their flame throwing has not burned the place down. Seems like a group of mostly civilized grown-ups really are capable of engaging one-another without calling the cops. This discussion is the best evidence that Tere’s onto something.

    Chris

  278. I wasn’t going to bring it up this morning, but the topic of changing arguments has been broached since.

    In comment 282, there is this statement made by dmehl808 in response to Terreson:

    As I said before I missed you when you left, and was damn sorry to have to “shun” you, but that only happened after it stopped being about the poetry and became an anti-authority/rules jingo.

    The morphing that has taken place is in changing Terreson’s argument from being against what he sees as poor moderation and administration at forums, to making him anti-authority. As the writer of this essay that has stirred so much discussion, we may agree with him or not, but if he wasn’t before, he has become quite the authority.

    If we replace “anti-authority” with the more precise “mis-management”, a better descriptor for his cause, for the sake of furthering this point we get:

    As I said before I missed you when you left, and was damn sorry to have to “shun” you, but that only happened after it stopped being about the poetry and became a mis-management/rules jingo.

    The word “jingo” loses its extremist connotation and, upon reflection, takes on the connotation of a champion of a real cause instead. However, this switch would make Terreson the authority and dmehl808 the anti-authority, but in a different sense of what authority is. We get the fuller meanings and association of “authority” as in “author” or expert, versus the idea that authority is mere power, in this context via ownership or bestowed by ownership. With this latter definition, if one is “anti-authority”, one is indiscriminately anti-power. Terreson’s essay and his ensuing cause-related actions are much more than that.

    C.

  279. Changing the rules again:

    Never heard of anyone at TCP ever being banned before for NOT posting poems. Reasons for previous bans were along the lines of disruption, being a pestilence, etc. But for NOT posting a poem? That’s completely new. Or if it’s not new in the written guidelines, it was certainly never enforced before.

  280. About #321. Note to self: this Chris D is not only a close reader of text but of nuance and tonality, and what it all speaks to motive. And, yes, Chris D. Six months ago I might have equivocated, being uncertain, about the need for moderators and modulators on a poetry board. I am no longer uncertain. The need is muchly inflated. Instances of hate speech, threats of violence, intrusive hard core porno, spamming, the sometime talibaning of a thread are easily, and can be quickly, dealt with. What more needs to be modulated? Closer to the point, what is the extent of the harm when more is modulated?

    #322. Oddly enough, Clattery, within moments of seeing the post I read an email from someone else who was alerted to something in #282. Only, my correspondent keyed in on the word shunning and sent me a link to a Wikipedia article on the concept. It makes for some pretty interesting reading.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shunning

    Pretty wild what associations a word can bring to mind.

    Terreson

  281. So, Clattery. I have a radical, late night notion just before locking the door and turning off the radio. I am struck by the beauty of it.

    I remember some years ago resigning my position as a poetry board mod. This may sound incredible but I experienced a period of feeling dismembered, dislocated, not sure of who I was or what I was. I also remember that board members on the same board on which I had moderated suddenly treated my poetry differently, less deferentially, more critically. That especially bothered me because I realized their prior assessments had been less than honest, more colored by my mod status. It actually hurt. But it made me realize something big about titles and entitlement. People, not even poetry people, see the man or woman behind the office or the badge. Not even poetry people.

    So, Clattery, I am going to suggest something to all the mods and to all the site admins of poetry boards who’ve maybe been at it too long. (Three years is too long, five years way past too long.) Step down, take off the robe, remove the miter, divest yourself of your office, even sell off your site. (You can always make a new one, if from scratch.) Become a member poet again for at least a year, maybe two. Perspective is a wonderful teacher. Even if sometimes she is a harsh mistress.

    Terreson

  282. Tere,

    I will go one step further and suggest that any organization, from a sewing circle to a nation, that does not permit its members a voice in selecting its own government and governors will suffer from authoritarian abuses.

    Any one-party government is totalitarian by definition. It controls information by censoring the media. It holds itself above the laws which it creates and to which it subjects its members.

    The internet is now one of the few means of disseminating criticism of such one-party, self-electing governments. Even China is failing to completely block incoming and outgoing information.

    The internet is our way of taking our complaints to the streets. The more the authorities attempt to control free speech not only on their own patches but web-wide, as they have done by banning you and others who complained about mismanagement outside the boundaries of the forums in question, the more all members with grievances should make them known.

    Diana

    .

  283. You get no argument from this quarter, Diana.

    On one poetry board there has been talk about creating a poetry board survey, something modelled, I think, after the Consumer Report idea. And why not? The features of the different boards could be gleaned from both each board’s guidelines and from documented board practices. Poetry boards could choose to be included in the site’s listing or they could decline to be listed. Boards included could have features bulleted: board tends to light verse, board promotes hard discussion and hard critique, board is primarily devoted to closed form poetry, board is eclectic, board requires of its membership this, that or the other, board’s management closely monitors poetry and discussion, board’s management does not closely monitor poetry and discussion, and so forth. Poetry boards declining to be included in the survey would also be listed.

    I figure something of this order is the next step to take. It is both positive and objective.

    Back before the poetry boards, in my opinion, were mod heavy, there was a lot more freedom. Freedom is both a good and not so good thing. I miss the raw, unmodulated, naive and damn fine poetry and poetry discussions I used to read in those days, don’t see so much now. I don’t miss the snarkiness. On the other hand the too strict controls since then, maybe well intentioned, have robbed the scene of that beautiful, unselfconscious naivete. I want it back.

    I figure something on the order of a poetry board survey, a clearing house of information, could be the kind of corrective right for the scene.

    Terreson

  284. Tere,

    You may know that poets.org posted a survey but not many of their members participated.

    That’s understandable since they ban members at whim.

    I am working with someone on developing a survey to be posted on a neutral site with enlightened management practices, but my guess is that members of other forums will be afraid that they will be punished for filling it out. Even if it’s done anonymously, site admins have ways of finding users’ IP addresses so it’s simple to figure out who the anons are.

    I don’t know enough about html to know if a workaround exists for this.

    Poetry forum members have been made fearful and docile. Quel domage.

    Diana

    .

  285. I’m a multiple poetry forum member, and I assure you I’m far from fearful or docile, Diana. Who are you talking about exactly? Are you fearful and docile? Are the others here? Or are you wanting to protect those people who easily become fearful and docile? If so, I suggest you snuggle up to them and give them some support. The Net can be an intimidating place, and some people do need support. Why not teach them how to navigate its hazards? I don’t know if it’s realistically possible to empower everyone out there. But I do buy into the idea of online community (to some extent) and the inherent compromises that that notion entails, just as it does in any other community.

  286. Steve:

    You need to check out the Poets.net Forum. Sounds like it’s right up your alley.

    P.S. I don’t know if you were just kidding, but ‘Quelle’ would be incorrect.

  287. Yeah, ‘Quelle’ just seemed highly appropriate for some fazy reason. Sorry, havin a larf.

    Poets.net… Hmm, they didn’t even acknowledge my application a while back. Like a few others.

    Cheers.

  288. NOT Poets.org…poets.net. Free forum. No application required. Terreson and Diana Manister are posting there now, also. Just Google poets.net. When it comes up click on Poets.net Forum.

    Take it from a drunken Irish poet, you’ll love it. No fear. No docility.

  289. About #330. For the sake of the record Steve Parker is the site admin at TCP.org who tried to intimidate me by posting my full name. He made his intention clear. His post is disingenuous to the extreme.

    Terreson

  290. Look. If managers like Parker, and Dmwhatever, and other poetry board managers I could mention want to go toe to toe I’ll be your huckleberry.

    You managers have become a problem far out-weighing member-poets.

    Terreson

  291. Tere:

    Get your ass back over to the Poets.net Forum. I have a bone to pick with you.

    Gary

  292. Bollox, Terreson. I did the same to you as you were doing to someone else, after | asked you repeatedly not to do it. I see you’re still not susceptible to reason.

  293. Gary, are you really a drunken Irish poet? Half my ancestry is Irish (from County Clare and the Ui Fiacre Aidne, so they says), and the other half all Scousers. I had a look at that forum, but I ain’t got enough time to get involved. Heading off down the Cut soon, and can’t feckin wait. Cheers anyway.

    Steve.

  294. It is only because the record needs to keep clear. On his board I addressed a person by her given name. Person in question has or had for years posted her full name. Steve Parker gave out my full name when, for reasons stated above, it was not a good thing to do. The difference makes #340 a lie.

    I can’t debate lies. I can debate issues. And I can point out site admin abuse, such as when member posts not only get deleted but edited.

    Terreson

  295. Ooh, you make me laugh with your affected sensitivities. Oh dear, were you really hurt by it? And YOU debate issues??????? Haha, what you had a brain transplant or something? What utter crap; you posted your name as well if you remember yourself just to show it didn’t mean anything to you, and now you’re gonna say it was some kinda violation? Haha, you really are an idiot. Entertaining, though, in a sad kinda way. DON’T WORRY, YOUR FRIENDS WILL BE ALONG SOON! Oh, TOE TO TOE, haha, what, you want my address? Dear me, all this cyber-fighting and protest from someone so full of nonsense. Do you really feel this inadequate? How about you start telling the truth about what happened back there? Nah, not likely.

    Funny stuff. Got to give it that.

  296. And Steve, although I have visited Castle Fitzgerald, the ancestral home of the Fitzgeralds, Earls of Kildare, I am an American. Texan, even.

    But we Irish-Americans are like the U.S. Marine Corps: once an Irishman (one, two-hundred years notwithstanding), always an Irishman!

    I would also note, as most have surmised, that I have also been to Castle Blarney. And I have kissed the stone!

    Yes, three-sheets. Oops, I mean four…just lost the jib!

  297. #344 and #345. Well the good news is that here, Poets.net, and at Babilue’s people can speak up with out fear of censorship.

    Terreson

  298. I’ve been to Blarney castle too. Used to work in Ireland every Autumn. There was a guy on top of the castle who held your feet while you kissed the stone. Big drop there, eh! He even washed your slobber off with a bucket of water. I figured he must be about the most loquacious geezer in the world with a job like that.

  299. C and Diana–I honestly don’t know how you could make such a ridiculous inference, especially you Diana, since you haven’t posted poetry in such a long time but have been posting on our discussion forums regularly with no warning or threat of ban.

    For the record, there is no problem with posting only on discussion forums and not posting poetry on TCP. Many folks do it.

    However, as I said originally and from which this inference stems I suppose, when a poster says openly, as has happened with several of you, “I will never post poetry or critique here again” and their disussions on the discussion forum are no longer about poetry but are usually grievance related, and usually and especially when the grievance is beyond resolution, reconciliation, is repetitive, or unreasonable, then would it be fair to say the member is now no longer acting within the primary venue of the site’s goals/raison d’etre–ie. posting and critiquing poetry or generally discussion of poetry? Is such a member to be considered a contributor any longer?

    Okay, your turn, twist that around and throw it in my face now. go ahead, I know you will…

  300. Regarding Post 285 by dmehl808 which references Posts 263 & 270 (re.: “spamming”), if you look a little closer you will see that the second post (270) was not from Jennifer but from me. I simply quoted her original post and confirmed what she said about the Poets.net Forum.

    You may also find it interesting that I am NOT a member of the Poets.net forum. I just know a good thing when I see it.

  301. Hi dmehl,

    This is ridiculous:

    However, as I said originally and from which this inference stems I suppose, when a poster says openly, as has happened with several of you, “I will never post poetry or critique here again” and their disussions on the discussion forum are no longer about poetry but are usually grievance related, and usually and especially when the grievance is beyond resolution, reconciliation, is repetitive, or unreasonable, then would it be fair to say the member is now no longer acting within the primary venue of the site’s goals/raison d’etre–ie. posting and critiquing poetry or generally discussion of poetry? Is such a member to be considered a contributor any longer?

    Why do you want to cvontrol what people are talking about? It does not matter if they say they will never post poetry again. If they have grievances, they have grievances. If you cannot handle these things, you should not be an admin or a moderator. What’s ridiculous is someone thinking they need to be telling other adults what they need to be talking about.

    Ridiculous my eye. You are no judge of who or what is ridiculous.

    C.

  302. I call it as I see it, C. Why does this disqualify me to be a mod or admin of a board in which I share ownership? How am I controling the conversation when the inference is clearly ridiculous and what I have said as a whole was not being considered? You have posted no poetry on our board, but hundreds of discussion posts at TCP–how could you think this was ever a problem or worthy of banning? Banning happens rarely and most often to those who personally attack others. Who are you to criticize me as an admin? What do you really know of me or my management of TCP? Have you been involved with it on the inside, or are you basing your judgments on hearsay or your own limited experience as a driveby announcer of this or that?

    I know for example you are a businessman, and I am one too. If a person walks into either of our establishments say and starts throwing around accusations about our business, our management of it, and these are unfounded, or they are an ex-employee with grievances, a history, and a differing perspectives on what really happened precipitating their departure–how do or would you respond? Would you suffer fools, or throw up your hands and put a for sale sign up on your business because of this criticism? Or might you call it libel and call the police? I don’t know, you tell me?

    I have come here to a “neutral” place in hopes to discuss these issues and dispel faulty perceptions about our board and the management of it, and even to consider the possibility of reform and constructive ideas if they seemed applicable or necessary. Instead of people reading what I have said for understanding, they are pulling out this or that in the context of hostility to criticize me, my board and my management style. Excepting my initial post, which I apologized for, I came here not to participate in sparring but to listen and have a more than a one way conversation. Now that it’s become clear that it is a one way conversation and I have become a straw stand in for any and every abuse of authority these posters have come into contact with, I realize I just don’t have the time to participate as I would have liked here.

  303. About #349. I see no need to twist anything around, Dmehl. If that is your board’s position that is your board’s position. Only, it would be best to include as much in the guidelines. Something like: members will be banned who post board grievances and who fail to post poetry. However, members will not be banned when posting board grievances providing they add to literary discussion.

    Also, please reference #320. I was quite serious about including in your board’s guidelines its zero tolerance for poetry board and mod/admin criticism.

    You know something, Clattery? I don’t expect a few, some, a bunch of mods and admins to get the point. But the objection raised here and elsewhere to how some boards operate in fact is political. A political statement is getting made by poets who object to the two-tiered (political) system of boards where members are not allowed equity, where mods and admin types can snipe, snark, attack, spurn and shun members with impugnity, and where the board, because of self-interest, operates in bad faith.

    It suddenly occurs to me there might be nothing dumber, more self-defeating, than trying to tell a poet to shut up. It has never worked. Not once. Poets are rivers who always find a way around a dam.

    Terreson

  304. #352. Melancholy Jesus! (Something Joyce was fond of exclaiming.) The argument here is so spurious I almost feel guilty in pointing out the fallacious analogy. It is even worse than the notion that a poetry board is a home and poetry posted amounts to a poetry party.

    Poetry does not amount to a business in the entreprenureal sense. Neither is a poetry board an established shop offering a service or a commodity. Poetry boards amount to a medium only, a venue. To say again what I said above, posting poets have sweat equity in a poetry board, which gives them as much “ownership” as any site admin type.

    But for the fun of it let me par analogy with analogy. Any tavern owner will tell you he does not get business because of his ownership. He gets business because of the action. The girlie and boy action, the pool table action, the action up on the band stand. I would say the same is pretty much true on a poetry board. Seriously, Dmehl and all other like-minded site owners. There is something you can learn from tavern owners and impresarios: promote and let go.

    Terreson

  305. Hi dmhel,

    Yes, ownership qualifies you to do lots. But we will see that it does not endow you with the judgment of when someone is ridiculous, a word you misdirected.

    First, do you come to this open discussion area to try to put people down? You said:

    C and Diana–I honestly don’t know how you could make such a ridiculous inference, especially you Diana, since you haven’t posted poetry in such a long time but have been posting on our discussion forums regularly with no warning or threat of ban.

    You are no less ridiculous yourself, but in fact at least as ridiculous in your idea that you should step in and tell other adults, in this case your very fellow poets–poets . . . like you, some even smarter than you–what to say and how to say it. You cross a line when you do this. Can you buy a house and then be ridiculous in it? Sure, but is that what you came here to show?

    State the ridiculous inference emphatically, with precision, and then see if I made it. I did not. You inferred wrong. Thus, you created an argument and tried to include me in a group that you would have the argument with. I am not there for you.

    Instead, let’s stay focussed on what really has been inferred. And if we are to enter into this conversation, let us agree that some admins are better than others, that even you and I can get better, no matter how good or bad we each are at present. If we do this, then we must say, for example, that when we try to control what conversation goes on at a forum by other poets like we are, some smarter than we are, say, we would necessarily step over the line. Now, that would be ridiculous, wouldn’t it, for you to try to control another poet’s conversations.

    We know what flames are. This is different. The worst flames are intended to drive forum members, en masse or individually off the forum, to make it impossible for them to post, without getting attacked. It is an attack. A sharp moderator knows when this is taking place.

    Applying what has been discussed in previous tangents from Terreson’s article, if we are to broaden the definition of a flame, beyond being such an attack, we find that moderators do this as often as the forum members they accuse. They start hounding posters for not meeting (ridiculous) guidelines meant to control what they say and where. That’s one kind of flame in a broad sense. Other real flames, though, include what we have seen are the hate-filled ones intended to stir up prejudices, and they usually contain hateful responses to someone, intended often to draw others in, or at least make one poster feel very bad about themselves. It’s abuse.

    True flamers, as true spammers, are fairly dispassionate to the emotions in the havoc they wreak. Spammers just want the links into the Viagara, and know that a small percentage will be good enough. Flamers come to wreak havoc only, dispassionately. So a passionate poet, or even an emotionally bound one, is not a true flamer. Your calling Diana and me ridiculous, even though in the broader sense would be a flame, in the truer sense, was not. If you do it again, for instance, I will not ban you. Onlookers would come to think of it as you being you again. However, a moderator or admin can be abusive if they demonstrate that they couldn’t care less, that they do not care about the emotional pleas of those they hurt, how they repeatedly shake, in our case, poets up, who came to participate.

    Onto the store analogy, and I do not like it, but . . . If someone comes into the store, for example, and starts telling others that they are ridiculous, I just might tell them how ridiculous they look doing so. By the way, we need to watch our step nowadays as far as throwing such a customer out.

    Back to the discussion here, away from the store . . . when you said I made a ridiculous inference in #349. Doing so did not warrant, in my opinion, a reasoned argument, as the statements you then made illustrated that you did not follow what I was saying or that you did not want others to, thus creating a poor inference yourself, one not based in reality. And–by doing so, you seemed to want to draw me into defending myself against whatever I said being a ridiculous inference. It truly wasn’t. Instead, what I showed in #351 was a different aspect of how ridiculous you had been.

    Now, over at your own forum, you can do these things, misunderstand and then call the other poets ridiculous. Yes, you can. It doesn’t make it right, but you can.

    C.

  306. Christ, this is funny stuff. Bit of sloganeering, bit of bullshit, bit of propaganda… No engagament ever with any detail because the boy is incapable of it. Haha, you’re a class act, Terreson. I don’t think I’ve ever met such a moron. Excuse me for laughing. What a bunch of deluded shite!!! Good god, are other people buying into this? Haha, what a freedom fighter you are! It’s utterly hilarious really. Cheers, bee-man, best laugh I had in a long, long time. Can’t wait for you to save the world. Oh my…

    Oh dear, that was good.

  307. Nah, I’m outta here. If I want to waste my time, there are better ways of doing it. It’s easy enough to trace the propaganda and bollox if you read back a few. Whoever you are, no offence to you, but I can’t be bothered with these lightweight transparent lies. Cheers.

  308. From #355. “Instead, let’s stay focussed on what really has been inferred. And if we are to enter into this conversation, let us agree that some admins are better than others, that even you and I can get better, no matter how good or bad we each are at present. If we do this, then we must say, for example, that when we try to control what conversation goes on at a forum by other poets like we are, some smarter than we are, say, we would necessarily step over the line. Now, that would be ridiculous, wouldn’t it, for you to try to control another poet’s conversations.”

    And again from #355. “However, a moderator or admin can be abusive if they demonstrate that they couldn’t care less, that they do not care about the emotional pleas of those they hurt, how they repeatedly shake, in our case, poets up, who came to participate.”

    Clattery, you just stated the case more honestly, unguardedly, maybe more effectively than I have.

    Terreson

  309. Okay, sorry, CM, I guess that was a little short of me above, and I shouldn’t have extended that shortness to you. I thought I should come back and say that. No wish to offend you. My grievance is elsewhere.

    Steve.

  310. Diana wrote this:
    “Permit me to comment on the idea posted upthread that poets in poetry forums should post more poems if they are posting in discussions.

    That’s just another way of getting rid of articulate dissenters!
    Who in hell are mods and admins to tell a poet how much poetry to write?

    If a poet is publishing outside the forum, winning prizes like Terreson is, how does anyone know how much writing the poet is doing on a daily basis?

    Maybe the poet hasn’t got a poem ready to be workshopped. That’s true of me this summer for example. Maybe he or she has got writer’s block. In that case the pressure to post poetry in a workshop will only make the block worse.

    Not only do the guidelines they have written tell members how we have to respond to our ctitics in the forum, but now they want to tell us how many poems we have to workshop!

    Next they’ll be asking to approve of our dates!

    dmehl makes autocracy sound benevolent when he mentions democracy or the greater good. What democracy?

    Guidelines are written by management without any input from members and sometimes over members’ objections.

    Management does not feel compelled to observe their own guidelines, as Leona Helmsley once said about paying taxes, “that’s only for the little people.”

    And worse, management can wield power in a hurtful manner and write the guidelines to justify their actions later.

    *************

    dmehl, where is the guideline that states that a member’s criticism of management in another forum is grounds for banning?”

    CM–you wrote this:

    “Hi dmehl,

    On comment #279.

    That message of mine that you responded to, #251 was in relation to banning someone for not posting a poem.

    You say:

    “C (252)–the issue is never just disagreement, or even heated disagreement–”

    I didn’t say that it was. Your “issue” in your statement is a different issue, it seems. The issue addressed here is this relatively new idea that someone should be banned for not posting poetry, or not posting poetry for some length of time; banning someone for only using the forum for its discussion threads.

    Thoughtful posts in a discussion forum should be welcomed, even from those who never write poetry at all. There is a sense that I get that sometimes this new idea for a rule, to insist on poems from people who participate in discussion topics, is being used to increase the number of poems posted. It comes off as a striving toward bigness; either that, or the opposite, a fear of winnowing out.”

    Originally, I said this in 248:

    “When someone openly says they either have no interest in posting poetry, or are afraid to or whatever, which is the point of the gathering here, I’d take that as a bad sign.”

    Both you and Diana post in the discussion threads but to my knowledge post no poetry, have for some time and without recrimination, warning or banning. To suggest there is suddenly a new policy stating problems with posting in discussions only struck me as ridiculous because you both know full well there never has been one and never will be one.

    My complaint about the ridiculousness of the inference was this: We are not communicating here. What’s happening is a group of people are looking at what I say and picking out things to try to entrap me, point out logical errors, bad analogies or stupidities, or examples of mismanagement on my part. I would submit to you that a despot, a grand inquisitor, a fascist, or even someone who isn’t interested in doing a better job as an admin would never choose to come to a hostile environment like this has proved to be and willingly submit to being interviewed (actually interrogated) and mocked by a banned member and a group of his friends. Until Parker showed up (and I had nothing to do with instigating him coming or posting here) I was and have been on my own here, trying to answer reasonably and calmly the charges against me and my board, and find out if and where we went wrong. I thought there was honest exchange and we might be getting somewhere until Tere brought up the crusades/inquisition. I really did. then it went downhill because respect (I perceived) vanished and once that happens conversation and honest genuine exchange go out the window.

    Let me just say in my defense here, a couple things: Calling an inference ridiculous is different than calling a person ridiculous. Clearly there is no policy against posting even exclusively in a discussion forum. What is inappropriate is subverting a discussion forum into a complaints or grievance forum–especially if the plaintiff will not let go of his complaint, but will not be satisfied until the all the management tenders resignations. That’s what I thought Tere wanted, but was curious to come here and see if i was correct in my INFERENCE. Yes, I admit I make ridiculous ones at times too–I’m not immune.

    Secondly, in my defense, I think it’s kind of rude of you to say others are smarter than I am–I mean it may be and probably is true that others here are smarter/more intelligent than I am, but how does one decide that, prove it, and where is the value in telling me a few times (I think a few) in your post above that others here are? I suppose you thought you would bully the bully, was that it? I would, finally, say that what you may perceive as a lower intelligence in me may actually be the fact that I really don’t have the time to be here discussing this. I am making time to be here but while I do, other pressing responsibilities that may and probably are more important are suffering. This is not said by way of justification or an excuse, but an explanation of fact. I am replying very hastily, trying to read and respond to every post directed to me, etc. and sometimes make mistakes, lose my temper, respond without the luxury of thinking things through carefully because I’m rushed and tired after an 80 hour workweek–the reason I can’t reply in a timely fashion is that I am only available one day a week for an hour or so away from my 5 kids–one 4 the other college age. I don’t know too many people who work as long and hard as I do for a living–I know they are out there, but there aren’t many in my circle of acquaintances. If I have an immediate glaring weakness that you should know about as an admin, it is my lack of presence on the board (TCP)–I have made one or two posts there in the last two weeks so that I could spend my online time here.

    I never have made claims to be anything but a normal, average intelligence person and poet. I drive a truck for crying out loud! I own a coffeehouse as well, but in the last year my wife has stepped into the management of it. My love of poetry, and my dedication to online workshopping is what led me into becoming an admin. I never sought out the position, but as most do, fell into it, was asked to do it and said yes. I don’t see it as a position of power, though it does have that at times, but I see it as a position of service.

    Bad admins never admit they were wrong–I will say this (and no, in admitting this, doesn’t automatically make me a good admin) but still I think I owe it to Tere to admit it, I regret his preemptive banning, and think we made a mistake. If it was going to happen, we should have let him earn it on .com. I don’t think as a result of this, we will ever ban preemptively again.

    Anyway, I’m still hoping for a conversation, and will probably check in again at some point. Sorry I don’t have more time to contribute here.

    Oh one other thing–the poetry party was never intended to be a definitive comparison, neither the business, but as illustrations to make a point. Not acknowledging this, I perceive as a lack of respect, hearing the other side, maybe even a form of attack. I guess we all do it. Communication and conversation should be two way. Am I any less deserving of respect than any of you

  311. First off, the rethinking of preemptive banning is a good sign. I am glad to hear the promise it will not happen again to some other poet. As a show of good faith why not unban the other poet who was also preemptively banned for comments made on the sister board and who, so I’ve been told, has not posted at all on the .com site. In comparison to me his crits of board management were mild. I am sure your board remembers his name. No need to mention it here.

    Secondly, how can otherwise be expected but for management positions and arguments in its own defense be closely parsed? It is an indication of just how much management practices impact poetry board members.

    Third thought. It is axiomatic that entitlement skews perception. What may come across as personal attack, once the playing field is levelled, can also be viewed as an exchange between people occupying equal positions.

    Fourth thought. Many people who come to the boards for poetry can speak of hard jobs and hard lives. I could tell a bunch of instructive stories about the people I’ve met from the boards whose lives are not enviable. Maybe those members should be cut an equal amount of slack for things they say and mistakes they make.

    One last thought. If anything is learned by management I hope it is this. Mismanagement proves time and again the Orwellean insight that all animals on the farm are created equal, but some more than others. If management on (some) boards sees the need for reform let it start here. Maybe the resentment Dmehl is unfortunately the target for is a built up resentment brought about by years of mismanagement practices. This is my message, Dmehl. As for the rest, the history of it all, there is an old witchy saying: done is done.

    Terreson

  312. Hi dmehl,

    There are leaps you continue to make from what I say, that are not included in what I say. Just to point out:

    Secondly, in my defense, I think it’s kind of rude of you to say others are smarter than I am–I mean it may be and probably is true that others here are smarter/more intelligent than I am, but how does one decide that, prove it, and where is the value in telling me a few times (I think a few) in your post above that others here are? I suppose you thought you would bully the bully, was that it? I would, finally, say that what you may perceive as a lower intelligence in me may actually be the fact that I really don’t have the time to be here discussing this.

    I never wanted the “inference” made that I thought of you as being of lower intelligence. That was a postulate for anyone to make for themselves, and of themselves, that some other poets will be smarter, and thus there is a certain ridiculousness to telling them what should be posted and what should not. I then went into the recognition of such things as flames and spam, and how they different from posting members. That’s important because sometimes what we get into is personalities.

    Notice, for instance, that Terreson picked right up on what I was saying, even to say he could not have put it better. I strove for a different argument approach than has been taken, so that the point could be picked up for what it is worth, and he saw what I did for what it was. But now, if I am to accept that aspect of Terreson, the keen and appreciative reader–and, yes, the one who is trying for a better online poetry experience to be taken into the future–then whatever his nerdiness, and we all have that, I must accept as well. And here I used Terreson as a prop, because it would be better to do this for everyone–not the true spammers and the true flamers–but all of us who are putting at least a piece of our hearts and souls into online poetry.

    The point is, that others more intelligent than you or I, say–post at the forums–and here I will add more intelligent in different ways, which in a sense is a category of simply “more intelligent”, just a matter of how so. Thus, to continue our use of Terreson as a prop–but we could substitute you, Dragon, Steve, Diana, and so forth–he qualifies as one more intelligent than you or I at times.

    In other words, anyone reading that statement that I made above, about a poster being smarter, could then follow along, not just you. Therefore, there was no bullying intended, because I did not intended to bully all readers of that comment.

    C.

  313. I think we’re back to conversation again. Good. thank you both.

    Thanks for your comments Tere. I agree slack should always be offered, yes, because one fact about the internet is how little we really know about the person on the other side of the keyboard, their often forgetting their humanity, oblivious to their circumstances, and what’s true about them that they keep hidden or contradict through their presentation of themselves versus the reality. My wife will cynically tell me, you don’t have friends on the internet–you don’t even really know them and have no idea who they are. I won’t go this far.

    CM–glad for your clarifications. I felt heat directed at me, but am glad to have been wrong in that assumption. Smartness is different from intelligence, of which there are many kinds, and neither of those indicate or presuppose wisdom, which even the “simple” have access to. The quote or yours that Tere highlighted, I admired as well, independently. I am by no means stupid or uneducated, but am amongst a smart, intelligent group here. I understand the admonition but anyone who knows me knows that dumbing down or censoring someone in a conversation is the last thing I’m after anywhere, much less on a poetry board–perhaps that’s why it hurts if I think someone wants to characterize me in that light. The tension is seeking to serve what’s best for members as a whole. Democracy? Community? Are these attainable–are they desireable? Getting back to the business analogy–here’s what I would do. hear a disgruntled customer out in the store, then if it got loud or abrasive or disturbing to others–I would attempt to direct them outside away from the flow of business with me. At some point after doing everything I could to appeal to them, win them over or otherwise satisfy their complaint, I might have to choose whether to give up, walk away, or ask them to leave? These things are not easy. I think wisdom is needed in parsing motives–one’s own and another’s. it goes beyond intelligence or erudition. Mistakes sometimes get made–often do in fact on both sides after things get ugly. Sometimes in an attempt to avoid this very thing, a conversation might have to be redirected (modulated) for a higher good–not to censor or out unwillingness to look at hard truths but to avoid wounding and hurt or further damage once hurt has occurred? Dynamics in social interaction are so complex, wouldn’t you agree?

  314. Hi Dmehl,

    I have worked ten years at the Chevy dealership. I’ve never thrown anyone out. But I could if I wanted to.

    There was a time when I went nose-to-nose with, it turns out, a stressed-out state trooper, who was insulting a fairly new salesman, one in his sixties. But I never threw the guy out. His friend was apologizing for him, letting me know that the state had the guy working too many hours at Logan Airport. So this was shortly after 9/11. For a long story short, in the end, I extended my hand and he shook it.

    Now, I’m working on an automobile showroom, so people are telling the salesman all sorts of things during negotiations. It’s emotional. Indeed, except for commercial applications, it’s difficult to make a sale when there is no emotion. People can be defensive just upon arrival, afraid they’ll be treated badly. People get turned down for financing. If people think something’s wrong with a deal, they believe they have been hit hard in the pocketbook, and can get boisterous and emphatic. But nobody gets thrown out. It’s very rare, and it is almost always wrong.

    I remember the last dealership I worked at, a customer came at night, and began complaining on the showroom floor about something in service. The owner happened to be sitting in the showroom talking at the end of his day, just gabbing if I recall. He looked up at the customer and asked, “Did you buy the car here?” The customer said, “No, what difference does that make?” The owner replied, “Well get the f… out of my showroom.”

    Every once in a while, one of my co-workers will say to another, “I would have thrown him out.” But that’s just talk, an expression of how we shouldn’t put up with what people dish out. What we really do is handle it, sometimes so well that we make a sale and a friend.

    Now, lest I seem to characterize the showroom I work on as rowdy, it’s definitely not. We had a busy day today, for instance, sold several cars to several very happy customers. No one yelled at anyone, but there was plenty of laughter, I noticed. That’s a norm in the sense of what usually happens.

    And lest I come across as some bouncer or cooler, in fact I have what is probably the longest-running perfect customer satisfaction index anywhere around. You don’t get that by going nose-to-nose with anyone.

    Now here’s something. As a salesman, I don’t so much get to choose my customers. When I started the day today, I did not know if I was to sell a car, nor necessarily to whom. I had an appointment for first thing, a repeat customer who called me. He bought a car, and so did his mother. Now what personality type do you suppose he is? How about his mother? The answer isn’t important. What’s more important is that I do not throw him out.

    We don’t so much get to choose who will be the next to post a poem or participate in a discussion at the forums. It might be someone with a confrontational aspect to her personality. It might be one of those real sweetheart guys who come by every so often. Or anyone. But just as the people who come on the car lot for the most part are hopeful that maybe they can do business with us, the people who come to the forums are tied together with an interest in, not cars, but poetry, and are hopeful as well.

    C.

  315. I’m going to post this here, because I’m going to name names and cite examples from poetry sites (naming only those names already publicly known, and/or known aliases), and I frankly hope that this will contribute to the discussion here, but elsewhere it would likely get deleted. (Which of course is part of the issue, ennit?) Some of what I will say has been said before, by others, and by myself; not that anyone cares, or that it sunk in then, or that I expect it to now.

    I perceive that two positions have developed in this argument about what poetry sites are analogous to. The problem is conflicting and incompatible paradigms.

    Dave, the reason your analogies are not working is that they are essentially parent-child analogies. Those arguing the other side of this here are proposing adult-adult paradigms, by contrast. (I include myself.) The problem is, these are worldviews in conflict. In my experience, those who argue for the parent-child paradigm frequently don’t understand that there can even BE an alternative; the hierarchical paradigm is so engrained, in religious styles and forms, in school and academic structures, in political systems, that alternatives are dismissed out of hand, because they are not even perceived. Also in my experience, those who argue for the adult-adult, peer-peer paradigms ARE aware of the existence of alternatives, and in many cases are interested in peer-peer groups precisely AS an alternative to hierarchical systems. (Harry Hay’s paradigm of subject-subject consciousness in entirely relevant here; it’s a paradigm in which the other is treated as a person like oneself, rather than as an object or non-equal, as in a subject-object relationship. There are profound implications for how actual democracy might work in all this.)

    In an adult-adult situation, people come together as equals, as adults, as peers. No moderation is necessary, because it’s a conversation. It’s more like what you get at a coffeeshop or bookstore that hosts reading groups. It’s also more like most the real-space critique groups I’ve been part of.

    The analogies you have been making, Dave, such as the houseowner analogy, are all hierarchical, authoritarian, adult-child paradigms, and furthermore they all assume that the default state of human behavior is to behave badly. The “social contract” paradigm that says that laws and civilization are necessary or we’d all tear each others’ throats out. (Gee, ya think? Considering that’s been happening WHEN the authoritarian comes into play, so much for the argument that the authoritarian position is supposed to prevent discord. Clearly it is incapable of that.)

    Speaking as a radical anarchist, I incline more towards the peer-peer model, or adult-adult paradigm.

    Here’s the thing.

    What has happened at TCP.x over recent weeks and months has amply demonstrated that the parent-child model is failing miserably. It only appears to serve. In fact, it actually undermines community. (The citation of Orwell’s “Animal Farm” is entirely apt.)

    TCP used to be much more like the adult-adult paradigm, with moderation mostly kicking in when someone was being deliberately disruptive.

    It has struck me more than once that the move to the new server was very much a power play. It definitely had the appearance of a planned coup d’etat. It also finalized the gradual shift from an environment of peers meeting as equals to an environment of parents having to discipline children.

    In a parent-child model, talking back and dissension are not well tolerated. The children are always wrong, and the parents are always right—even when they’re not.

    This speaks to the apparent inability of any of the Admins or Mods at TCP.x to admit that mistakes were made, or that they were wrong.

    This inability to admit mistakes is characteristic of autocracy, of totalitarian positions, and of controlling parents who treat their children as inferior beasts and not as intelligent, functional entities capable of thinking for themselves. It is consistent with the psychology of abuse. Thus, abuse of power comes as no surprise.

    For example, Incognito’s supposed apology about how the move to the new serve was so badly mishandled, an apology made months after the move, after the .org board was apparently dying and quiescent, was too little too late—and when questioned, or rather opened up to discussion, the apology was effectively withdrawn. This made it a non-apology, a futile gesture, and an apparently pointless act. I’m sure there was frustration felt about that, on all sides of the issue, but the truth is, some of the questions about why such a tepid apology was offered so long after the fact were never directly answered.

    Steve parker recently posted a half-assed apology on TCP.org, saying he basically was acting personally when he banned Terreson, and maybe he shouldn’t done that. But the reason it’s a half-assed apology is that it was posted in a place that the person most effected by it could never read—since he was, after all, banned. This made no sense. Then Parker comes here and mouths off apparently in a fit of temper. Which is his right, of course—but it did zero to increase his credibility or explain his position. And I have no clue what he was mouthing off about, or who it was directed at. It just added to the confusion. So, half-assed, indeed.

    But entirely consistent with a parental paradigm of “do what I say, not what I do!” That’s the inconsistent use of power that has been mentioned by many people on this thread: how Mods have a double standard, and can get away with saying things that gets regular members banned, or their posts deleted.

    The issue here all along with the Mods and Admins abusing power has been congruency and integrity. In a real house, if the parents were completely inconsistent in the way they disciplined their children, any reasonable observer would note how confused the children would become. Unsure of when they will be praised, and always waiting for an outburst to turn into a violent attack. Ask any child who grew up with an alcoholic parent what this does to destroy self-esteem and create an environment of mistrust and angst. The psychology is remarkably similar.

    Sound familiar? Sure looks like what TCP.x has turned into lately.

    If everyone is able to track the paradigms in this way, perhaps there can be an actual discussion. From the sidelines, though, it sure looks like everyone is just talking past each other rather than TO each other.

  316. “Both you and Diana post in the discussion threads but to my knowledge post no poetry, have for some time and without recrimination, warning or banning. To suggest there is suddenly a new policy stating problems with posting in discussions only struck me as ridiculous because you both know full well there never has been one and never will be one.”

    And yet you used that as a rationale for having banned Terreson.

    Do you see the inconsistencies yet?

    That’s the core issue here: congruency and integrity.

    It was also the core issue at Poetry.org. It was also the core issue at TCP.org, when Deni was briefly given Mod power and immediately deleted several Terreson posts. (Not the first time he’s done that, either.)

  317. “Bad admins never admit they were wrong–I will say this (and no, in admitting this, doesn’t automatically make me a good admin) but still I think I owe it to Tere to admit it, I regret his preemptive banning, and think we made a mistake. If it was going to happen, we should have let him earn it on .com. I don’t think as a result of this, we will ever ban preemptively again.”

    This is good to hear.

    How about undoing the mistake, and giving Terreson the chance to either leave or join on his own, in future?

    Do you see how this was a parent-child attitude, to preemptively ban someone before they had even done anything even remotely in violation of the guidelines. Do you see how it was clearly prejudical, how it was clearly inconsistent and out of integrity with the supposed practices of fairness and integrity?

    I certainly hope so. Still, it’s very nice to see your opinion on this.

    This preemptive ban was when TCP finally crossed over that line into abuse, once and for alienating me from every feeling safe there again. That was the last straw. I find it hard to forgive or trust or forget.

    Especially in light of the fact that other, far more offensive things have before and since been said by other members who have always been far more offensive and problematic at TCP than Terreson ever was. One or two of whom even were Mods at TCP, as Tere once also had been.

    Again, congruency and integrity are what I look for amongst Mod/Admin practices. Actions DO speak louder than words. (Or half-assed apologies.) Double standards and inconsistencies are a dead giveaway that a board cannot be trusted to be a fair playground, or a sane and rational one.

  318. Well, good God damn! Clattery, that is some eloquent writing. I am loving your showroom stories. What comes through is that the bloke in front of you is more important than the commission on the sale. Of course, you are right. Lose sight of that and you lose your soul. And I get how the illustration carries over to poetry boards. Lose sight of the humanness in the poem, and the poet, and once again you lose your own soul. Thanks, man. It is a moral lesson never too late for the learning. (Paraphrasing an old folk song here.)

    And, Dragonman, you blow me away sometimes. By golly you know how to parse a dynamic, break it down, see through to the logic of the symbolic actions. You are right. This parent to child bullshit has got to go. As unhealthy as it is for poetry board members it is even more unhealthy for poetry board managers, since, it skews their perspective. You get it. Maybe you get it better than most of us do. Anyway, when you get passionate about something you believe in you are at your best.

    Now, Dmehl, I got two things I want to pass by you. It is unfair to the several people speaking up on Clattery’s blog to lump them in a group called Terreson’s friends, which you’ve done twice now. It is not just unfair. It is also dismissive. While I get that maybe you feel yourself on the defensive, and while I respect you for entering into a conversation that has to be uncomfortable for a site admin, please take on the views of each individual as originating with each of them. Clattery is his own man as he has amply demonstrated. Same is true of Arthur. And the same is true of every one else who has spoken up, man and woman. (I guess I will not mention their names for fear of implicating them by association with me.) But listen to the individual voices. They are not looking to defend Terreson. They are pissed.

    Second item. Dmehl (if I may, Dave) I don’t get it. I don’t fucking get it. You were different three years ago. Or was it four? I mean before you got groomed and became a site admin. You were a different person then. You were a poet stretching his muscles and taking chances. You were a mod looking for, inviting flexibility on the boards. You were not one inclined to censorship. I don’t know. I don’t get it. I don’t get what happens to promising poets sometimes.

    Terreson

  319. Steve Parker writes:

    “I’m a multiple poetry forum member, and I assure you I’m far from fearful or docile, Diana. Who are you talking about exactly?”

    Steve you were a moderator and now have site administrator rights at TCP.org. Obviously I wasn’t referring to you.

    dmehl writes:
    “…and Diana–I honestly don’t know how you could make such a ridiculous inference, especially you Diana, since you haven’t posted poetry in such a long time but have been posting on our discussion forums regularly with no warning or threat of ban. ”

    Dave, I’ve been posting poetry in “Playing with Words” and “Light Verse” on your site.

    Either your not familiar with what is being posted on your own site or you have such a rigid definition of “posting poetry” that light verse and poetry practice does not count.

    And Dave I figure I haven’t been banned yet because I haven’t violated an actual guideline and you know my big mouth would let it be known that I was banned for annoying management rather than for an actual guideline infringement.

    You may however have a guideline that says “a member may be banned for criticizing forum moderators or site administrators.” In that case, I’m vulnerable.

    With reference to some of us being dismissed as “friends of Terreson,” I’m happy to be counted among that fortunate group. And lest that relationship be dismissed as some nefarious alliance, be aware that heated disagreements between Tere and me are all over the forums. Fortunately adults are able to criticize each other without rupturing a friendship.

    Dragon’s comments get right to the point, don’t they?

    I have to say though that the paradigm of adults mismanaging adults whom they treat like children is the schoolroom-par-excellence known as poets.org.

    A poets.org mod recently flaunted her power inebriation on poets.net “just because I can.” Some of you may have caught my response which was posted on the poets.net blog.

    Too much authority breeds revolution.

    Poetry forums are entirely too controlling of members forum behaviors. Lighten up.

    Stop locking threads, using PMs as grounds for bannings (news flash: privacy violation), deleting posts, banning dissenters who criticize mismanagement, and otherwise acting like easily shccked grade school teachers if not enforcers in a police state.

    Dave you or your managers may not engage in all of these mismanagement practices, but other forums definitely do. This thread is not just about you or the TCPs.

    I still would like you to explain why you feel entitled to describe your forum as democratic, as you did upthread, when

    1. Moderators are not elected by the membership.

    2. Members have no grievance procedure or access to arbitration when they are punished, censored or banned. No jury of peers. In many instances, no rights of habeas corpus, in that they are not told of what they’ve been charged. The US Supreme Court recently ruled that even people suspected of terrorism have that right.

    3. The law is created by the governors with no input from the membership, and is applied subjectively by those governors to suit their purposes.

    4.Forum governors are not evaluated by members. Apparently management doesn’t care how members think they’re doing.

    Diana

    .

  320. These are all valid points, and it should be obvious by now that these are general problems endemic to many boards. They are existential problems. Thus, I do not think it unfair to describe a “poetry board management culture,” which some Admins have denied. But again, actions speak louder than words, including denials.

    The fact is, Incognito herself has gone out of her way on more than one occasion over the past few years to point out that TCP is not and never was a democratic board. It always had an owner who was unafraid to step in and claim ownership when she saw something she didn’t like. Calling TCP democratic now isn’t really an accurate assessment, and doesn’t support any argument, especially in light of this current discussion.

    Anybody may feel free to lump me in with any tribe they want to. I am a member of no tribe, but there are times I agree with The Friends of Terreson.

    It is true that adults can disagree and still get along. They can have heated arguments and still remain friends. I have had frequent heated arguments with Tere and Diana, and Clattery, and my friend Beth Vieira, and others. I still listen to their opinions, even when I disagree with them. So, feel free to lump me into any tribe you want to, but the truth is, I will continue to think for myself, as I have always done.

    This is why the best board paradigm is the adult-adult paradigm, and not the parent-child one. It fosters discussion, and learning, and smart talk, in a way that parental-style management does not.

    The truth is, too, there are LOTS of people on the boards who cannot stand even a hint of conflict and disagreement. They hate and fear “drama.” They tend to side with the autocrats, but not in full knowledge of what their choice means. Because what they hate most is disruption, but where they err is in their definitions of disruption. What they are unable to do, it seems, is distinguish between arguments between equals, and personal attacks. There are numerous threads on TCP.org that point this fact out, and it has been discussed numerous times on Everything Else. Similar threads appear on other boards; again, this is a general condition, not specific to TCP. I used TCP in my arguments because of the current context, not to single it out per se but to present one example among many.

    The solution is not to coddle the insecure, but to empower them to speak out themselves. Again, this requires a peer-peer paradigm, rather than a parent-child one. Parent-child models contain inherent imbalances of power: children are not trusted to behave themselves; parents are expected to be disciplinarians. you can see where that will eventually go, on a poetry board; because that is exactly where TCP and Poets.org have gone.

  321. From Arthur Durkee: “Steve parker recently posted a half-assed apology on TCP.org, saying he basically was acting personally when he banned Terreson, and maybe he shouldn’t done that. But the reason it’s a half-assed apology is that it was posted in a place that the person most effected by it could never read—since he was, after all, banned. This made no sense. Then Parker comes here and mouths off apparently in a fit of temper. Which is his right, of course—but it did zero to increase his credibility or explain his position. And I have no clue what he was mouthing off about, or who it was directed at. It just added to the confusion. So, half-assed, indeed.

    But entirely consistent with a parental paradigm of “do what I say, not what I do!” That’s the inconsistent use of power that has been mentioned by many people on this thread: how Mods have a double standard, and can get away with saying things that gets regular members banned, or their posts deleted.”

    If I posted an apology (or an explanation of my human processes anyway), then it is rather more than you guys have ever done in this sequence. I guess none of you made any mistakes whatever throughout all this stuff, eh? The entrenchment becomes absurd. Arthur happens along and accuses me of banning someone for a very specific mentioning of someone’s name… I clarify that that was not the case, and of course he doesn’t reply. He does it again, and again I explain it, and again he doesn’t reply to the explanation. I guess he still won’t. In which case his criticisms remain groundless and absurd. Okay, he can just choose to disbelieve my motives; but then I can equally choose to disbelieve his. That won’t get us too far.

    Sorry, man, when the folly gets too deep I reserve the right to join in with it and shout as loud as the rest of you.

    You want me to fold up and be some idiot compliant pussy while you pursue your anarchism that involves anyone abusing anyone else, then no, I ain’t doing it. I’ve scrupulously answered every criticism so far. Arthur never comes back to answer his. Terreson, well, he just propagandizes, and also never answers any points.

    Impressive stuff here from the counter culture. You know what, I was brought up in anarchist communes until I was 16, and I know damn well this half-assed bullshit doesn’t work. Real anarchism takes real work, and it takes discipline and humility. You guys are just wanking all over it.

    Yeah, I know you won’t respond to any specific points here.

    Cheers.

    Steve.

  322. The most ridiculous thing of all here is that understanding and resolution are achieved through the attempt to venture into the place of the other, and you guys have set up something that is all about conflict and the refusal to understand or relate. Hey. say the word, and I’ll talk on a very different basis. But while you just do this aggression and hostility, there ain’t no meeting, is there. Ask yourselves if you actually want to meet with what you’re seeing as the opposition here. And if you find that too objectionable, then please understand that that in itself will mean an impassable dissonance.

    Always open to it here.

    Steve.

  323. Hi Steve,

    For me, the only opposition are the moderators and admins who want to lord over the poets–for the purposes of this discussion. I know and love too many poets to have them, or others like them, enter into abusive situations.

    So part of the constructive nature of this conversation is having to do with the creation of forum rating by users, similar to consumer reviews, polls, and surveys. These would be used both to show forum admins who are open, where the poets are rating them low, so they can shore these items up, and on the other hand, to show poets such as yourself where they might fit in better.

    If we are to define an aggressive and hostile camp and a non-aggressive and non-hostile camp, you would recently be one in the former–notwithstanding your apologies–because of the repeated aggressive nature of conversation. You may then say–yeah but Dragon was aggressive toward me, or Terreson or something. But we could then go back and see where you have been aggressive as well. So, I would put you into Dragon’s camp on that score. He said “half-assed apology” to you, and you said “most ridiculous thing of all” to anyone reading.

    But, who are these “you guys” who should be apologizing? Again, that sounds as if you see this as an us-and-them thing, and not a striving to improve forums for the online poets.

    What is the different basis that you want to talk on?

    By the way, I did not want to say anything there, but did you notice when the unilateral decision about IBPC participation was made by the admins and moderators at the other TCP, this was followed immediately by multiple objections–and not from anyone who is active currently in this thread here at Clattery, a completely different set of poets.

    In other words, lording it over poets never works. These poets are not intending to be oppositional. I am not oppositional per se. You aren’t. Terreson isn’t. There is no intention of there being an us and them.

    But, there is a disconnect that admins are making, when they continue to be unilateral, a disconnect that this big thread of “opposing” thoughts can speak to and help resolve–or could have by now if listened to for all its constructiveness.

    How does this poorly conceived unilateralism come to be? Someone says that he or she is in charge, a relatively good and smart person, maybe even the board owner. The thought occurs that some things are best done by decisions from the “top”–without democracy, without any congressional approval, no discussion–and a pronouncement is made. There is a problem, though, when the decision is made that this “top” is where decisions ought to be made, when top-down decisions become the rule. In other words, the good and smart person, backed by credentials to prove it, says, “I have made a decision, that it works best when I make the decisions and do the planning (and, sure, I will accept input even), and that everything will go smoothly here when everyone else abides by my decisions and follows my plans.”

    That mentality in and of itself is not abusive. It definitely begs for dissent, cries out for it, and will inevitably get it–and for as long as this “top” decision maker feels there are adjustments that “ought” to be made this way. The abuse, though, spins off from there at forums, where poets are constantly being reminded of what is required of them with the veiled threat that someone will step in and delete their comments and possibly ban them if they step too far out of line.

    If moderators and admins are not as a rule “invisible”, there is a problem with how the forum is being administered.

    C.

  324. Well, Clattery old bean, this particular exchange I am going to sit out and for two reasons. First, having been under personal attack by Steve Parker, and in his position as moderator, since soon after my essay’s appearance, objectivity with respect to his opinions is just a close touch out of my reach. Secondly, I am hard pressed to see what points have been raised in #s 374 and 376.

    Oh. One more thing. While I will defend anyone’s right to freedom of expression, speaking as a guy, I want to apologize to the gals in the symposium for Parker’s unfortunate nomenclature. You bet my mamma would have slapped me so hard I would have had to pick myself up on the far side of Friday.

    Terreson

  325. #376. Yes, Clattery. The kind of constructive rebuilding you bring up is exactly what this symposium-like exchange is all about. And I see two practical ways in which it can be effected. Three actually. But let me back up for a moment.

    Immediately following the TCP break-up there was truly a Prague spring. For several weeks, maybe a month, there were no mods and no intermediaries between members and site owner. Poetry continued to get posted, discussions pursued, and the discussion about the board’s future was lively, civil, and honest. Site owner agreed that a democratization of the mod selection was a good idea. I especially remember that she agreed that the secret mod forum was a particularly pernicious place for gossip and unsavory conversation about members. I remember this because I was dumbfounded by her honesty. But Prague springs last only for a little while. Without getting into particulars the unfortunate happened. A temp mod was named whose abuses elsewhere are documented and were repeated.

    The point is this. Poetry boards can operate in line with the Dragonman, adult-to-adult paradigm. It happened for a brief while at TCP.org. It is happening now here, at Babilu’s, and at Poets.net. And before I forget, I figure you are right, Clattery. The best mods and admins are invisible, there only to deal with basic operations, hate speech, threats of violence, pornography, the chance runnaway vandal lookingto taliban a thread. I was dead serious above. If I ever make a forum again mods will be limited to one poem posted for every 25 or so comments on the poetry of members.

    Back to the practical means of reconstruction. First, to some limited extent this blog of yours has become a room for truth and reconciliation. I do wish more admin types would do what Dmehl has done. I don’t have to agree with him to respect him for stepping up and speaking out where he knows no admin type has an eye to entitlement. I really do wish more admin types and mods would do that, even if it means they have to face a growing resentment on the part of poetry board members. In the long run it would be best for their respective boards precisely because of the growing resentment on the part of members tired of feeling disenfranchised.

    Second practical solution. I can’t remember any more who it was who first proposed a poetry board survey. Upthread I bring it up again, giving some suggestions. Now you are bringing it up again. This needs to happen. There needs to be a clearing house of information on board procedure, protocol, and management style. For example, some people like a closely monitored board, others don’t. Let the poets choose according to their own comfort zones.

    Third practical solution, the most difficult and the most necessary. Board managers need to examine themselves, reform board policy from the inside out, parse their motives honestly: has the board become its own reason for being or is it in place to serve poetry and poets. Trust me. Even, maybe especially, a person new to the boards can tell the difference within a month.

    Maybe one more practical solution. Poetry board guidelines need to be more honest, more specific, and less vague. As a rule managers hide behind vagueness because it allows them latitude to interpret behavior and act accordingly.

    There you go, Clattery. A Sunday night thought. One more week in bayou heat and I get a vacation during which I will finalize revisions of two older collections of short prose.

    Terreson

  326. Your actions and your words speak for themselves, Steve. That’s the point. No other reply was ever necessary.

    That mirror is still available, if you wanted to look into it, and proffer to others the respect you demand for yourself. Another disconnect.

  327. We speak often of the “owner of the board”. Do we all understand that owning a board requires some expense? Does “owning a board” give the one who pays the bill the right to do whatever they want with it…ban those of us they don’t like, the upstarts who question abuse of power. I suspect it does. But why would a “board owner” want to do that if they truly loved poetry, heated discussions by thoughtful people about it? No one has ever addressed or answered that question for me so I am always watching for that abuse of power on a board owned by someone who pays the bills. The Gazebo was criticized for asking poets who post there to help pay the bills by donating…and some of us did contribute…but I did not sense that those who did not were treated differently…BUT…I was not one of them and don’t reallly know how they feel about not having a contributing star by their name, do I?

    Just wondering here…

    Pat

    Pat

  328. Fair point, Pat. Seems to me that the person who pays the bills does have the right to pull the plug.

    But whether they use OR abuse that power is another issue entirely. As has been said many times before, the owner of a board sets the tone of that board. As you say, why would a board owner who professes to love poetry ever misuse their power to ban those they simply don’t like? I agree with you that this question has never really been addressed or answered.

    So, maybe the question really is: Do they love the poetry, or do they love having the power? The weight of evidence based on past actions tends towards the latter assessment.

    Let’s look at two separate examples.

    I don’t see Anne, the old owner of the TCP site server as being particularly abusive. Neglectful, perhaps; usually absent, certainly; but not actively or proactively abusive. I never said that her absence didn’t create problems, but I don’t believe it was worse than anything that’s happened since’ at most it was a sin of passive omission, rather than one of active commission. Nor do I think the things that were said against Anne before and after the site move, or coup d’etat, were anything BUT abusive. Perhaps they were said in order to build up the courage to seize power: people talking themselves into their actions by seeking justifications and rationalizations. For it was a power play, to all appearances. But who knows. The facts and issues around all that remain clouded, for many reasons; that’s been discussed, here, before, too. And I still haven’t seen that satisfactorily addressed or answered, either. As I said once or twice before, lay out the facts and let us judge for ourselves; but don’t expect to taken at one’s word in the absence of information. That again is that parental attitude: “Don’t confuse me with the facts,” or “Do as I say, and don’t ask questions.” The pattern of attitude remains consistent.

    And now for the second example: Pat, you and I were on a board awhile ago where the owner of the board was not only benevolent but supportive. He didn’t ban people, he wasn’t an autocrat, and he participated in the playfulness whenever he had time. That created a good online poetry community, the best I’ve ever been a part of. I’m referring to Canned Air at the old Avatar Review, as you know.

    There was that other board, Capriole, that seemed to be a safe haven for awhile, too. But then the tone of discourse there, which tone again is set by the Admins/Mods, also went weird on that board, too.

    Again, the problem is when those who have the power to take actions start to act on personal grounds, and deal with regular members by misusing their power(s) in ways that are essentially personal rather than reasoned. Steve’s partial apology that he posted back on TCP.org was along these lines: that he had acted personally, and probably shouldn’t have.

    I note that no-one has as yet responded to my suggestion that maybe Terreson should now un-banned on both boards, and given a chance, should he desire to take it, to let things play out the way they might. Give him a chance to be banned for a real reason, if you will, rather than in either a personal attack or in a preemptive banning as was done on the newer board.

    I await what will most likely continue to be a deafening lack of response on all these points.

  329. Actually, Art, I suggested way back to Steve that in the spirit of a new beginning that the banned among us should be reinstated, the guidelines clearly stated and if we took the risk and broke the rules, we’d, at least, know why we were banned. That thread appears to be missing now.

    Canned was the best board ever. It was frequented by a family of differently bright and talented people with all the warts, disagreements and love for one another most families exhibit. Jon is a rare bird in the owner category, indeed. I will always miss Canned air. and, you know, it is still there. Hmmmmmm….

    Pat (Sis)

  330. Pat, I’ve thought about the point you raise, the question of ownership and the entitlement it affords a site owner. Here is my response to the notion of ownership.

    I bet you remember the recently departed U.S. Senator Jesse Helms of North Carolina. An unapologetic white supremicist, socially conservative Republican who made a point of ensuring the defunding of the American Council of the Arts, PBS, and NPR. Effectively his stance was that said organizations were liberally biased. He figured that his was the trump card, and it was. Kill the federal funding and the uncontrollable arts of America get silenced. Helms was damn effective.

    But my position is this. No one, not Helms, not a government, not a charity organization, not a poetry board site owner owns the arts. No one owns artistic expression. If a poetry board site owner elects to make a site then it becomes a case of ‘owner beware.’ When it comes to artistic expression I do not defer to notions of venue proprietorship.

    That is my stance. And I do not at all feel squeemish about talking a site owner down. As poet and conversationalist mine is the sweat equity. As poet and conversationalist mine is the resource on which the site owner depends for the hits and the views and the visits and the new members. Poets make a board, not site owners or admins or mods.

    Terreson

  331. I don’t disagree with you…there’s no reason to have a poetry board if poets don’t post there…indeed, poets make the board. I do not understand the ownership thing of poetry boards, especially being an absentee owner. It would seem to me, they’d drop in now and then just for the sheer love of the art.

    Pat

  332. Sometimes when I look at boards I have loved over the years, they were free boards…someone started them, fostered them but no one owned them. If they died, it was because of spammers, not because of bannings, member spats. We didn’t like the ads, but learned to ignore them.

    Pat

  333. Facts: Terreson was abusive quite outside of the usual run of debate, and his abuse was repeatedly irrelevant. He didn’t answer any of the objections to his points, but instead focused on ad hominem attacks. I don’t mind at all if we get heated with each other, and cross some boundaries there, as long as we are still generally focused on the overall issue. Arthur generally stuck with that, and despite his refusals to respond to specific points, (a deafening lack of response, to make it more relevant to his last post) and his criticisms, he wasn’t banned, nor even warned about it. The point is not just personal attacks, it is about forsaking all standards of debate for personal attacks. If that becomes all that is happening, then the perpetrator deserves little respect, I reckon. He is, at that point, creating an environment in which debate really can’t work, or at least can’t work well. Gratuitous personal attacks just create injury and antipathy, and they don’t lead anywhere. We all know that they are just poor debating techniques that lead to impasse. Given the circumstances on TCP.org, we needed a breaking of the impasse, and a return to some sort of equanimity so that we could survive. Well, we are surviving, just about. My primary concern is with the wider membership, not one member who wants to provoke the admin into being unreasonable by stretching the definitions of an unmoderated site with personally unmoderated hostility.

    As regards ‘give him a chance to be banned for a real reason’, he WAS banned for a real reason on .org, and the real reason was that he was unconstructively and gratuitously abusive, time and time again. He stated unequivocally that he would post no further poetry there, even after my attempts to make peace, and he deleted some of his poems, then proceeded to refer repeatedly to my personal, private circumstances, which had zero to do with the debate. Sorry, but he clearly was exercising no personal standards of control. I let this continue for a while, but he showed no signs of stopping it, and as he clearly had no respect for me or the board, I decided to have none for him. I don’t mind people calling me an asshole or something because they are heated up, but when they abuse irrelevant personal information on the net just because they see they can use it as weaponry, then they go too far.

    All facts, and I stand by them. I wouldn’t dream of abusing anyone out there like that. And I wouldn’t defend people who did so. It’s not personal, and I very deliberately didn’t respond to it until I figured it had gone way beyond the point where I would have intervened in anyone else’s defence for that reason. I had loads of PMs telling me to ban him, I even had someone crying on the phone. I really didn’t want to do it, but eventually I figured I had no choice if the site was to survive. No, I didn’t like it, I fucking hated doing it, but there it was… decision time. The site is better for it, I think. And I’ll live with it. So no apologies, just an explanation and some honesty, all of which will no doubt be thrown back in my face. Anyway, it was not personal. If it was, I would have done something far sooner. So, Arthur, you’re just wrong. Have you ever been in a situation where you’re aware of that illegitimate possibility of the personal? That’s how it was, and that’s why I let it go on and on, so that I kept my own feelings out of it. The reality is that when you’re confronted with this stuff you actually go way beyond the personal because of your feelings of responsibility to everyone else, and that is the reality of what happened there. I would have responded far earlier if it was just personal, but I self-questioned all the way through, and repeatedly tried different ways of resolving it. If you remember, it was me offering to make friends and promising that my crits would bear no residual hostility, which Terreson briefly responded to, but then changed his mind and deleted his poem.

    Believe it or don’t, this is a truthful summary.

    I can do no more really.

    Steve.

  334. #330: “…are you wanting to protect
    those people who easily become fearful and docile? If so,I suggest you snuggle up to them and give them some support.” Steve Parker

    #344: “Haha, you really are and idiot…DON’T WORRY, YOUR FRIENDS WILL BE ALONG SOON!” Steve Parker

    #356: “Christ, this is funny stuff. Bit of sloganeering, bit of bullshit, bit of propaganda…
    I don’t think I’ve ever met such a
    moron.” Steve Parker

    #374: “You want me to fold up and be some idiot compliant pussy while you pursue your anarchism that involves anyone abusing anyone else, then no, I ain’t doing it.” Steve Parker

    #375: “But while you just do this aggression and hostility, there aint no meeting, is there.” Steve
    Parker

    #387: “Believe it or don’t, this is a truthful summary.”

    ChrisD

  335. The posts above are not mutually contradictory, as they reference different stages and levels of the interaction, both there and here. It is just cheap and disingenuous to place them all together as if they existed in the same context. We could all do that with anyone, and it would prove nothing. Good attempt at some tabloid journalistic distortion there. I could go back to .org and assemble something similar about others here, but somehow I don’t think I’ll bother. Cheers.

  336. Anyway, I think I’m declaring myself out of this one. I don’t think it’s gonna get resolved really. Maybe I’m as responsible as the others here for that. It’s been a difficult few roles to fulfil. Certainly some of my stuff hasn’t helped, and I accept that. Must say, I haven’t seen anyone else accepting anything. Okay, what the heck. Hope you all get what you’re after.

  337. Okay, I changed my mind profoundly. Everyone is unbanned. I don’t exactly expect much action from it, but who knows… But I do reserve the right to ban anyone who does nothing but abuse. Other than that, feel free. If it hasn’t worked (I’m new to the controls), then feel free to email me about it on steveparker333@live.com

    Not sure this is the wisest thing I ever did, so I’m winging it on some trust here.

    This is gonna buy me some heavy stuff from the other side of all this.

    Steve.

  338. So, finally…some progress and compromise.

    Now you must all put your swords down and proceed.

  339. Goodness. 387, 389, 390, 391, and 392 make for quite a string of thoughts. And I am loving the sense of record in 388.

    Steve Parker, don’t waste your time on my account. Keep me banned from your board. I would only do again what I’ve done before on the TCP boards. Call you admins and mods on your abusive D/s behavior.

    Now, Clattery, in my list of suggestions upthread I forgot the biggest, most main suggestion for poetry board correction. The office of Ombudsman.

    Every poetry board should have an ombudsman. Here are some features of her or his office as I view them:

    ~takes complaints about treatment received on a board.

    ~reviews cases, documents in hand as needed.

    ~communicates (mediates) between member and mod/admin staff.

    ~makes recommedations.

    ~ombudsman has no powers to delete or edit posts.

    ~answerable only to webmaster/site owner.

    I want the ombudsman/ombudswoman on all the boards.

    Terreson

  340. Maybe this has been mentioned before, and it occurs to me that there are a few reasons an active poet might not be posting poetry on a board he or she frequents.

    1. they’re not writing much right now

    2.a. what they’re writing right now doesn’t need the usual kind of critiques, so the poet might decide to not waste everyone’s time by posting them;

    2.b. the usual critiques may not at present be helpful to the poet, if the poet is growing in a new direction

    3. they might want to still discuss poetics, and the art of poetry, and so forth, but not post poems.

    I don’t think there’s ever any reason to force poets to post poems. I don’t think you can force creativity; in fact, that’s anathema, and a real creativity-killer. If there’s a requirement to post poems in order to also be able to post comments to threads on discussion forums, that doesn’t necessarily serve the poet, or the board. It might set up a false pressure that is the opposite of supportive or nurturing.

    Of course, anyone is free to do whatever the hell they want to do. The trick is figuring out how to do it in a way that doesn’t alienate the rest of humanity.

  341. And why was I banned at TCP.org, Steve? It may have occurred before your time, I realize that. I, as you know now, can only go to TCP.org, post there because my new ISP and screen name slipped through the screening process. All who know me know that I generally give positive critique, write “pretty” love or nature poems, poems that often are not good poems but poems few would find offensive…unless, of course, I slip over the edge into pagan imagery which it appears some in charge do not care for at all.

    I complained about censorship on behalf of a fellow poet/ friend that I admire, got threatening PM’s and e-mails from mods and then “poof” I was gone, too, for defending freedom of speech…or perhaps it was guilt by association…a group dumping of the dissenters. I am not sure which one it was…or which one is worse for that matter. Neither are acceptable to me.

    My whole life does not evolve around poetry like it does for some and I didn’t want to waste my time on it, be with people who found it acceptable so I left quietly and thought no more about it until I heard, obviously incorrectly, that the board had split and TCP.org had changed for the better.

    Before retiring, I spent my life working in the human/civil rights field and, believe me, no poetry board moderator or administrator/owner will ever shut me up on that topic. I will always defend freedom of speech and the few other rights we still have left.

    If we don’t use them, we lose them, pals…

    Pat

  342. And, I should say…and thank you for knowing I was there and not enforcing the former ban. I know it has been a stressful time for you and a thankless job at times. I think your decision to begin again, wave all bannings is a fair one. Hope all will come back and make it a fine poetry board again.

  343. Arthur Durkee writes:

    “The fact is, Incognito herself has gone out of her way on more than one occasion over the past few years to point out that TCP is not and never was a democratic board. It always had an owner who was unafraid to step in and claim ownership when she saw something she didn’t like. Calling TCP democratic now isn’t really an accurate assessment, and doesn’t support any argument, especially in light of this current discussion.”

    Arthur, democracy was brought into the discussion by dmehl, upthread, when he said that many actions of management are done to serve the forum’s democracy.

    But your point is moot anyway; so what if Mussolini admitted Italy was fascist? Did that make it livable?

    We are having a lively discussion of poetry forum foibles over at poets.net. This is my latest post, in response to a description of how the founder of foetry.com was harrassed in ways that went far beyond the harrassment of members on poetry forums. It is relevant here too I think:

    “If ever poetry forums take advertising you can be sure that management’s harrassment of their critics will approach the goon behavior of Alan’s persecutors. Once money is involved the long knives come out.

    “However, the current totalitarian control of members behavior on poetry forums is in the continuum, even though power not money is the issue. Forum managment is unaccountable to the membership or to the public.

    “Although forums exist within a country that has a constitution that guarantees the protection of “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” these mini-states operate according to the arbitrary application of laws they write themselves. Even giant corporate syndicates like Nabisco are more regulated than online forums.

    “Poetry forum members have no rights; they can’t vote, they are convicted and punished without appearing in any court or being tried by a jury of peers, they cannot employ a mediation or appeals process, they can be banned without ever learning what they’ve been charged with, and those who deprive them of rights are never brought to justice. Further, they are punished for using their right of free speech in territories over which forum managers have no jurisdiction!”

    The discussion is here:

    http://poetryinc.net/index.php?topic=15.135

    . Diana

    .

  344. Well, I’m completely out of the loop re: the history of TCP. That said, I’m gobsmacked by Steven’s change of heart and tone, just gobsmacked.

    I’ve got to take a few steps back to absorb the shift…something is definitely shifting.

    I’ve never been banned or made the object of unfair penalties…so I guess it’s easy for me to say.

    Chris

  345. 393: “Steve Parker, don’t waste your time on my account. Keep me banned from your board. I would only do again what I’ve done before on the TCP boards. Call you admins and mods on your abusive D/s behavior.”

    End of story then. No need for me to be further involved here. Adios.

    Steve.

  346. #396 catches my attention and brings something to mind.

    Back in the hayday of the AOL poets and writers chatroom days I remember a room which I am pretty sure was called “The Writers’ Lounge.” It was like an online salon. It was intended for writers who maybe needed a break from the word processor, who needed to relax, who maybe wanted to exchange ideas, and who maybe needed to the company of other writers who might understand whatever it might be they were experiencing, be it writer’s block, writer’s burn out, or just looking for the fruitful conversation with others of their own tribe.

    I’ve always thought this as valuable an outlet as the workshop utility of boards.

    About #401. Possibly the poster misunderstood. For me, at least, the conversation is less about a particular board than about systemmic issues.

    Terreson

  347. No, the poster was only referring to that particular branch of the story in which he was personally involved. The poster is quite aware that the wider clash of narratives rolls on. Okay, now the poster really is gone. The poster hopes he can be forgiven this last instance of Nethead curiosity in contradiction of his last post.

    Poster signing out.

  348. I guess it’s a guy thing you have going on.

    You’re wasting valuable server space with your chest-beating.

    (Now Steve, I didn’t mention your use of p**** as a derogatory, so don’t call me sexist!)

    I’d like us to develop a Members’ Bill of Rights, to be posted somewhere neutral like poets.net.

    I mentioned some of the rights members don’t have upthread before Steve and Tere started hitting each other with tree branches.

    I’m sure there are more rights that forum members lack.

    Anyone?

    Diana

    .

  349. #404. While I am familiar with the author’s love of the zinger one liner, don’t implicate me in the silver back behavior famously observed in great ape societies.

    As for a members’ bill of rights, go back to the essay and to the many concrete suggestions I’ve subsequently made for a better board system and you’ll find at least ten articles.

    Terreson

  350. I have asked this before with no answer…I hear us saying we want boards with little oversight, very little censorship and moderating except for expelling obvious spammers and obvious predators, right? Who do we think pays for such sites? And if they do choose to pay for them, why would they not be allowed to have some say in the rules on the site they pay for?

    At some point in this process, I think we need to be reasonable…all of us bitching could fund a site if we desired. I see no one except Clattery putting his money where our mouths are.

    Pat

  351. There are avenues for donations to site maintenance and fees, to the owner. Jon used to let us do that at Canned. It is perfectly possible to do that. It doesn’t mean that the site owner can’t provide a more democratic space, and set a more open and affirming tone. The tone that the owner sets on the site is not directly related to the issue of payment for site ownership: once the logistics are handled, it’s all a matter of personality.

    So, yes, we could fund a site collectively, and run it that way. As a counterexample, it was explained to me (I have no way to know if this is strictly true, so am open to correction) that the new TCP.com, initially at least, was going to be on a server and domain named owned by one of the three new admins, and run by her husband; now those folks seem to have left the new site in dismay/disgust, etc., after being called on the poor way the transition was managed. (Again, a lot of this reassessment and rethinking of the entire process was triggered by the poor way that was handled.)

    The “site owner” issue has these aspects, that affect the outcome: the owner is the name who is on the domain registration site, wherein the site name is registered, such a Godaddy.com; this usually costs around 10 dollars US a year, or less. If there are server rental fees, rather than being a site that exists on one’s own server in one’s own home (which is similar to where my own sites are hosted: at our studio), they are usually something ridiculously cheap, a few bucks a month. It’s “rent,” though, not ownership. You are at the mercy of the service bureau who runs your server; they too can set a tone, by being absent, or prickly, or wonderful and caring.

    Just to be clear: I am not bitching about site ownership. I never was. If I am bitching about anything, it’s the TONE that an owner sets on their site. I believe I already answered your point, Pat, (comment 373) that owners can do whatever they want. It really is up to them to set the tone.

  352. Pat, I too responded to your comment. See #384. While I respect and appreciate the creation and maintenance of a site I do not automatically defer to its owners on matters of board politics. Said for the third time, mine, yours, ours is the sweat equity and resource that makes a poetry board. And said for a second time nobody owns poetry and discussion about the same.

    On the other hand if a site owner wishes to strictly modulate board business then the approach should be clearly defined in the guidelines so that any potential member knows exactly where she stands when joining the board. Treating with board membership otherwise is, to say the least, disingenuous. I can’t remember the precise words of the then site admin at Poets.org, words spoken in response to complaints about how the board is run. But the sense of it ran something like, ‘the board only seems like a democracy because I allow as much.’ This is an example of disingenuous treatment.

    Anyway, I rather prefer the site owner’s approach over at Babilu’s. Again paraphrasing he said, ‘I don’t want to run a board. I want to be a member too.’ And so he sees to issues involving spam and such and lets the board pretty much run itself. To me this is the way to go.

    Terreson

  353. I know I am bucking the crowd here…yes, Tere, you, we, all of us are contributing sweat equity when we work on a poem or any art we create and post, but we are not paying cold cash for the board we post them on…unless it is on our own. Of course a poetry board will not thrive, continue to attract good poets, good discussions unless its participants are happy, treated well and equally. That’s a given.

    What I don’t understand is spending months attacking board owners/administrators who do not operate in ways that we embrace…we’ve said we don’t appreciate being treated that way by them every way from Sunday.

    The fact remains, during all the time spent hashing and re-hashing it over and over and over again, we’ve seen very little poetry and/or critique posted on new boards we claim to like from those who are complaining the most.

    While I am by no means ignorant, I, for one, am ill-equipped to participate in highly intellectual discussions by those who also dismiss, claim to disdain the academic poets. Not quite sure what kind of “ism” that is, but I am old and wise enough to be wary of it.

    I just miss the nightly poetry.

    As suggested in an e-mail I received today, I will bow out of this board now. I hope you all will work out all the kinks in online poetry and let me know when you’ve found (ed) the perfect board…where you all are writing, posting poetry and critiquing and discussing again.

    Pat

  354. Pat,

    Unless a site’s guidelines warn members that they must post a minimum number of poems to retain their memberships, members are free refrain from posting.

    Site managers are already entirely too controlling of members’ behavior — the last thing poetry forums need is more demands being put on members.

    T.S. Eliot wrote Prufrock in 1917, and The Waste Land in 1920. In between he published very little or no poetry. He may have been writing it, or thinking about it, or composing fragments that were later pulled together for poems, but he had nothing he wished to make public.

    I don’t see the value in setting poets up at an assembly line and setting a minimum production rate for them. The creative process doesn’t work that way.

    In my case, I’m assembling and revising poems for a performance at The Living Theater in August, writing poetry reviews, as well as writing poetry that is not ready for workshopping.

    I wish you and others who complain that forum members who post in discussion threads don’t post enough poetry would consider that you are becoming part of the problem, which is the lack of freedom poets enjoy in the forums.

    Diana

    .

  355. So, Clattery (and all my delightful friends, including those who would mark me with the triple digit number of the beast). I have taken perverse delight in reading all 411 posts. What a tableau vivant everyone has contributed to. It is a play with a theme. And the character portrayals could not be more lively. It is also a play without denoument, which is something Samuel Becket would have delighted in. (Dmanister, you got the raw script right here for that LangPo bit of theater if you ever want to develop it.) I suppose the theme would be “them vs us”. And the scene would be somewhere outside the green zone, some place where no one has the advantage of higher ground. Kind of cool. And so many theatrical asides, so many vignettes, and so many cameo appearances. Not to mention the fact that the on-stage appearance of two real-life site admins really galvanized the drammatic action. What fun! And nobody holding back, being falsely polite. Everyone doing that thing of emoting that the poetry boards tell us is dangerous.

    About #90. Has everyone read that post? What a measured, baritone voice that man has. It stopped me even before I remembered who he is. I hope the author, SamB, doesn’t mind if I divulge the information. Once upon a time and in another galaxy he was a site admin at TCP. He has long since gone on. I predict he will soon be one of Australia’s best loved poets, so keep that name in mind. (Yes, Virginia. When aussies aren’t riding their ‘roos they write poetry too.)

    And #388. Man, I got the automatic, involuntary chuckle out of that one. The crisp slice of irony with no editorial comment. This Chris D person could teach us all a thing or three about what to leave in and what to keep out.

    Also #155. The Neruda quote. It is what we should be about. It is what we are about at our best, when we are not pitted against each other because of stupid turf issues of ownership and who is in control. If only management would accede to the fact that poets cannot be controlled.

    Anyway, it has been a good play. Seriously. Read all 400 plus posts in a sitting and get a sense of the drammatic actions. While I know the essay’s other articles are less sexy than the power politics of board management I also figure they are actually more determining of board health. The insincere reader, the false notion of community, the poet to critic inequality, the stupidity of treating a poetry board as a workshop setting, and the anti-intellectual tone mostly dominant on the boards. These are features killing the boards at least as much as mismanagement.

    Terreson

  356. Tere,

    A beautiful comprehensive summary.

    Clattery, why don’t you print this and market it as a chapbook? I for one give my permission. How about everyone else? Are you willing to have your name out there?

    I’m not kidding!

    I hope someone else posts to this thread so I’m not accused of always wanting the last word!

    Thanks everyone for adding you intelligence and concern to this discussion. Diana

    .

  357. You have my permission.

    Beckett, indeed.

    What interests me at this point is that there have been several solutions offered to the various problems and situations. Some probing analyses, and some careful thinking about how to change things so that it could all be improved.

    And what happens? A lot of defensive rejection. A lot of “yes, buts….” which lead to self-defeat. A lot objections based on thinking that when closely analyzed does not hold water. A lot of irrationality. A lot more objections that have nothing to do with poetry, and everything to do with control, ego, and self-aggrandizement. (Yes, This Means You.)

    It’s too bad. It’s probably predictable. But it’s too bad.

    And that’s why I’m not posting poetry anywhere online anymore, except on my own sites and blogs. There’s obviously no home for it, and no more home for what I used to contribute to. That’s all been exploded. I doubt it can ever be recaptured. Despite my cynicism, I would point out that I have offered several possible solutions, and several scenarios for who it could all be improved. I just have no belief that anyone who has the power to do so, will really want to do so. The proof, as I have said all along, is in the actions, not in the words. No doubt there will be more verbal flailing about it all, with no real substantive action-based positive change.

    And that’s why it seems to devolve into an “us vs. them” scenario—even with people who you basically agree with.

  358. What you say, Dragonman, just hurts the heart. You are one of the better, more accomplished poets I’ve met in the poetry board circuit. What you’ve contributed to the boards, both by throwing your poetry into the pot and through the many thoughtful posts you’ve made in the discussion threads, none of this is replacable. For the boards to lose someone like you amounts to a real loss. And I suspect you are not alone, but, rather, voicing here what others have come to as well, and on which decision they will quietly act. Truth is I’ve already seen as much happen on two boards. And they are the poorer for it. Challenging poetry…zap. Thoughtful discussions and exchanges…zap. In this context I can’t help but observe a simple truth. In the end, entrenchment is a suicide charge. Also this: power politics played as if the contributions of individual members do not matter and can be replaced is self-defeating. Or to draw on and extend the analogy that was presented to us way upthread, what do you suppose happens when somebody throws a poetry party and the guests fail to show?

    Having said as much I am not quite where you are with respect to the poetry boards. Sure, I’ve given up on the boards whose management practices have been most egregious. There is no fun there anymore. Managers there have made it clear they lack the capacity for reform, which is another killer. Hell, in spite of all the verbiage and reasonable arguments presented them they can’t even recognize there is a problem. In my view these are the boards that continue to operate in bad faith. Why would anyone want to stick around on such places? On the other hand, there has been a part of me from the very beginning, since Clattery first posted the essay on 20 April, that figured it likely no change would occur on the worst boards. That the managers would not accede to any complaint. That the two-tiered system of inequality would keep in place. That the right to individual-member ownership would not, in fact could not, be acknowledged. The boards in question were not my essay’s target audience, or only to a secondary or tertiary degree were they. My primary target audience were the boards yet made and boards whose managers and owners had not yet become entrenched.

    Call it a pious hope. But I think there is reason to believe both the essay and the ensueing discussion here, I think especially the discussion with its many voices, has brought a set of questions to the table and that it has all been heard. Who the hell knows if this blog’s contents will influence young and future boards? But it might. It just might. At the very least I don’t think the people here who’ve followed along and who’ve contrubuted to the discussion will be quite the same with respect to board behavior. I’ll even bet a dollar on a donut they’ll not accept again the old way of autocratic management and moderator abuse.

    I know of two new boards that demonstrate a stylistic, operational approach different from the old way. Both are young boards, just starting out, and a bit quiet right now. But networking is a marvellous thing. Hell, online there might even be fewer than six degrees of separation between people. Once the word gets around I predict these boards will heat up. So let me put in a plug for Babilu’s and Poets.net.

    Anyway, you are a good man, Charlie Brown. Bet you’ll be getting a lot more hits on your blog.

    Tere

  359. Well, Clattery, we keep talking about setting up a site of some sort as a clearing house of poetry board information. It hasn’t happened yet. Right now this blog is the best the poetry boards have. You can delete this post. You can tell me to eat shit and bark at the moon. But I am appalled by certain, continueing board management behavior. Man, this is board politics at its dirtiest.

    On June 29 a site owner of TCP.com entered into the discussion here, #248. At the time his intent seemed to be, or so he wanted to convey as much, to enter into a fair dialogue about board management practices. Time and again he pointed out that he was a site owner looking for dialogue with poetry board members. He continued posting for about two weeks. In spite of the fact I fundamentally disagreed with him I found I could respect him for entering into the dialogue. His last post is dated July 13, #366.

    On July 11, two days before the site owner made his last post to the blog, a co-owner announced at TCP.com that the board would be suspending its IBPC association. The announcement was made in one of the board’s public areas. Within days the thread was locked and the board discussion was taken to a forum open to members only. As a one time member of TCP I figure the move to a privatre area means the managers got uncomfortable with the discussion.

    Once again my head is set to wag and wobble. IBPC is a legitimate association of poetry boards. I don’t have to agree with its managers or the judges of its competitions to respect what the umbrella organization does for poets online. So why would TCP.com’s managers suddenly disassociate the board from the group on the same cusp of time one of its site owner’s shows up on this blog?

    Here is where I step into my world famous valley girl imitation. Like, wow! I mean like, so transparent!

    Terreson

  360. Well, I’m signed onto a couple of other (private) poetry boards that you know of. I haven’t been posting poetry on either, for two reasons;

    1. I’m not writing much poetry right now, period. There are lots of reasons for that, some of which are personal history and mean nothing to anyone but me.

    2. It was becoming clear to me that I had reached a plateau of sorts with regard to poetry critique, even before of the implosions and explosions of earlier this year. I was giving a lot of critique, but not getting much that was useful to me anymore. (With some rare exceptions for which I was grateful.) I think it was Tom who pointed out upthread that sometimes you reach a point where you have learned everything you can from a poetry poetry board (or other crit group), and have developed the self-confidence to move on and do your own thing without needing to run absolutely every piece by the group anymore. I find myself, for now, in that place of self-confidence. And there are other reasons, which I’ve blogged about, so I won’t get into them here.

    If and when I start writing anything worth sharing again, I’ll post it. Truth be told, though, one of the boards I’m signed onto moves too slowly for me; and the other one, I don’t really feel like I know anyone there yet, for poetry crit, although I have been posting in the discussion forum.

    I guess the third reason is the combo of the first two: I’m at a point where, even I fail, I need to follow my inner compass and not seek out critique for everything I write. I’m exploring a new direction, and my art has all changed in the wake of the life-changing experiences I’ve been through in the past year and more. Even if the direction I’m exploring turns out in the long run to be a dead end (which has happened before), I’ll still learn from it, and it’s not a waste.

    So, I’m in a place where participation isn’t much benefit to me right now: one doesn’t have the energy, in the wake of the aforementioned life-changing events, to want to give out a lot of juice when it feels like not much comes back. Make sense? It’s simple energy management, nothing more.

    It could all change (back) anytime, tomorrow, or two years from now. I make no plans or predictions for my artistic participation anywhere, anywhen, these days. It is what it is, and it will be what it is. Maybe later? Probably. I keep those doors open. I’m just not inhabiting their thresholds at the moment.

  361. For some reason I am unable to post a message that includes a link to a poetry board exchange in which a poet member had his post deleted and, I think, was banned from a board yesterday for questioning the opinions of the site’s owner. Problem has to be at my end somehow. Or maybe the link in some way cannot be carried over. I don’t know. Without the link I’ll not try to tell a tale. But no, Gary, it is not over. Until site owners agree that they do not own discussion it will not be over.

    Tere

  362. I thought Diana wanted Clattery to publish this. It would need an ending, no?

    Fight on, then, Tere.

    GBF

  363. It’s an ongoing problem without current resolution. It could be published at any time, and appended later, of course.

    Tere, if you want to just paste the URL in the window as text, maybe we can copy it and go look at this instance ourselves? Just a thought.

  364. Dragonman, I’ve tried a bunch of times to get the link and or address to carry over. Everytime I get the message “discarded.” The business occurred at The Gazebo where the owner, Jaimes Alsop, deleted the post of, and I believe banned, one Michael Cantor. Surrounding chat suggests Cantor disagreed with an opinion of Alsop’s. Of course, with post deleted no one can know the offense. Anyone who is a member of The Gazebo should go to the forum: Karen’s Pub > In Today’s Mail – A Billion.

    It is there to read, at least for now.

    Terreson

  365. By the way, Terreson, you’ll find Michael Cantor of Eratosphere talking about you in this thread:

    Gazebo: Archive through April 29, 2008

    He begins a post with this statement:

    I have participated extensively on the Eratosphere for many years, on the Gaz to a lesser extent, and lurk frequently on Sonnet Central and Poetry Round-up. I don’t know where Terreson posts, or under what name, but based on my experience much of what he says is total nonsense – whiney and overstated.

    C.

  366. Well, Clattery old bean, you just gave me a chuckle. I have no notion who this Cantor person. I’ve never registered with the Erato board. A few months ago I registered with the Gazebo, but then chose not to keep as an active member, entirely for personal reasons having nothing to do with the board’s business. Sonnet Central and Poetry Round-up are not boards I had heard about until now.

    Anyway, I haven’t so much brought attention to the information out of defense of the person. It is the issues involved that matter to me. I would do the same for an online enemy, of which by now there are a few.

    As I see it, and saying it again, the case is this: site owners do not own conversation and poetry and debate. Threats of violence, hate speech, stalking, and pornography are offenses deserving deletion and, with the repeat behavior, banning. Nothing less.

    Anyway, this would not be the first time an online player has accused me of whining, then found himself or herself at odds with management practices for the very reasons I whine about. (Lordy, but I love the sweet taste of irony.)

    The issues, Clattery.

    Terreson

  367. Oh, Alf. You are just pathetic, man. Look again. I spoke up because of the Cantor case. This doesn’t make me active. By the way, given what a close reader you are, it is Vico, not Vito. Come on, Alf. Grab yourself by the socks and find a soul.

    Terreson

  368. Pretty wild. Having spoken up on a board I would call one of the online community’s better poetry boards I’ve been told to shut up. Actually I was told to take it elsewhere. In the board’s defense it should be noted that the speaker, so far as I know, is not one of its moderators. He is, however, and again so far as I know, still a moderator on another board, one that has become famous for its censorship: poets.org.

    It just doesn’t stop. The best light I can put on the situation is that there is a fundamental, philosophical difference at play here.

    Tere

  369. I stand corrected and in the most welcome way. The Gazebo has reversed its ban of a member, this Cantor person. Pretty cool to report on when people have that kind of courage.

    Tere

  370. By the way, since we’re on the subject, are we supposed to open an egg on the big end or the little one?

  371. Dear Artie, Patty and Hedge:
    \
    Grow up. Letr’s face it what you really are in your heart of hearts are tight-assed little Nazis who want ot rule the roost with your pedestrian ideas and poetic hogwash. Ridiculous then. Ridiculous now. Hey you wanna compare accomplishments Artie, Patty, Hehde? I didn’t think so. So here’s some advice: sit down shut up and grow up.

  372. What did you’all think it was all gonna go away and then you and your milk-toast therapists could hold hands and sing Girl Scout songs over poetry? Poetry forums aim for the lowest ciommon denominator with the most parocial base of poetic ability and knowledge. Jesus why is it you numbnuts want to keep defending what is indefensiable. Here take alook at QED– there are five people using it and four of them can barely write. Huh? That’s poetic assistance? It’s more like welfare for the poetically handicapped.

  373. Cool. And to think you don’t have half a clue whether I am old JC or jus some troll but you’ll shake and drool and cry litlike little school girls with your panties in a knot all the same. More ridiculous online behavior.

  374. Next time don’t bring my name up and if you do asswipes, you’d better contact me so I can respond to your two-bit philosophy regading me or what I’ve published. Nazi tight-assed poet-wannabes.

  375. PS. Buy my two new books would you. Thanks.And who the frick does hedge think she is the little beanbag. Banned.How fucking ridiculous for any adult to even use that term. Well tight-assed Nazis do now down’t they. lol.

  376. This is just ducky!

    I am (as I have had to recently explain to Quincy Lehr who also has a site here on Word Press that I have a couple of little birdies who occasionally check around and keep me informed of my whereabouts. Whene I crop up somewhere that I haven’t been I will usually show up and set the record straight. I have had to do this at Quincy’s Word Press site and now low-and-behold, I have to do it here. Somebody likes or found Word Press.

    In any event I really don’t have time to respond to comments about my essay “Accelerating Poetry” (to really respond) I am just surprised that it is even being talked about. Good for me.

    I have been too busy to engage in the usual (ahem) lively banter that goes on in poetry forums or blogs. One thing is true about the previous posters postings — I do have two new books out, so finding time to waste is no longer a luxury I can afford.

    I will point out the following just to personally set the record straight:
    Getting banned form these poetry sites is of no consequence to me nor should it be to anyone else. I don’t like poetry forums. I find them counterproductive (see essay) and I find the majority of people who use them not very talented. So what. That’s my opinion based on my experiences.

    Secondly, I really don’t give a hoot about what people on poetry forums think or say since they have no impact on my writing. I get published with or without them, but mostly without them. I have nevr found comments from poetry forum participants insightful or beneficial. It is usually tinged with envy and I am ever-ready to rub someone’s nose in the fact that people on poetry forums wouldn’t know good poetry if it bit them in the arse. Once again my opinion. Don’t lose any sleep over it.

    And lastly, I don’t have the time to argue the points in my essay here or anywhere else. Suffice to say the essay is based on inductive reasoning and hence experiential. There is no reason I can think of to argue my points here with anyone. The essay stands as published much like any essay stands. You can agree, disagree or deconstruct it, but it doesn’t change it or my opinion. So exactly what purpose would that serve? None.

    I hope this serves as explanation and if whoever is suddenly intent on assuming my identity lately could be so kind, would you please shut off the lights before you leave.

    I am not in the habit of “googling” myself but I guess I should. By the way I read this essay and have to say I agree with just about every argument. But I wrote mine first. Just kidding

    JC

  377. I rest my case. Humm. God imagine if this was a rela issue with real consequence, poor Gary here would have a heart attack. Calm down Gary. Have another drink. Take some meds and stay away from any open windows.

  378. Oh yeah, if whoever runs this place could please take down any of the comments that are not mine I would sincerely appreciate it. Thanks.

  379. Hi Jack,

    What’s with the name-calling? You come across like a fucking hammerhead. You trying to be glamorous, make a name for yourself you cannot make with your poetry? I think of all the poets who have more books than you, written far better poetry than you.

    On the other hand, I appreciate you showing up.

    So let’s get to this little table you’ve set that feeds a point of discussion here. Gary, Art, Pat, Howard, no one needs your abuse and certainly not I. These are valid reasons for banning, and in a way I’m also glad you brought them up.

    Verbal abuse is verbal abuse. I would not want these strings of posts you make–apparently to feed your ego as you put others down–mucking up someone’s thread whose trying to work on a poem, so I can see how you get banned. At some point in time, an aberration gets created.

    Congratulations, though. Not only did your essay come out before Terreson’s but you are the first true flamer in this thread. You mix a few points in with your insults, which is different from vice versa. To give you feedback on this, by the way, it’s not very impressive. Who cares about your overbearing persona after a couple posts? It grow old in a hurry.

    I’ll go to work today, sell a couple cars, and when I get home, I’ll see if you have taken your game to the point where I delete some posts or ban you altogether. That’s my point, that there is a point when banning is the way to go.

    C.

  380. “It grow old in a hurry”

    It grow old?

    It does doesn’t it.

    Try reading the posts again when you’re sober.

    Unbelieveable.

    Oh well, I tried to set the record straight. There MUST be a problem with reading for comprehension. No wonder most people view blogs and poetry forums as the last bastion of the feeble and mentally infirmed. Why shouldn’t they. Nobody on them can read.

    Oh and please by all means “ban” me. I’m sure that is more exciting than being a used car salesman. What wouldn’t be.

  381. Here I’ll give you a clue: There are two different people posting here. One is me and one is not. That my dear uneducated friend was the point but of course you in your ultimate used car salesmman wisdom were unable to comprehend that. But of course. (Shakes head at the sheer stupity of someone who cannot read.)

  382. Hi Jack,

    You caught a typo. And that’s what we usually say when we find one in poetry forums. We don’t go crazy with “Unbelievable” and all that.

    You probably won’t listen, but you come across as insincere. When you don’t get out of abuse mode, you are in fact being dishonest. We all know it’s a pose.

    This is not a matter of great comprehension. It’s not any big insight. It’s what anyone would see.

    C.

  383. We all know? Pose? Christ you can’t read and you suffer from paranoia at the same time. Good combination. Try this on for size: DON’T USE MY NAME IN YOUR OBVIOUSLY PEDESTRIAN BLOG. It taints my reputation and besides, based on your comments you aren’t up to my reading level.

  384. (Yawns) (Goes off to work)

    (Reconsiders)

    Seriously, Jack. I’m glad you came. You’re probably a real good guy and a sweat cream puff at heart.

    Yes, you made some points. My point was on the flaming. You’ve made far more insults than points, though.

    C.

  385. I will write this slowly for the reading impaired:

    GET EMAIL

    TOLD SOMEONE USING MY NAME AGAIN TO POST

    NOT ME

    GO TO SITE (YOURS)

    TRY TO MAKE LIGHT OF FACT SOMEONE USING MY NAME

    HAPPENS OFTEN.

    TRY TO CORRECT SITUATION.

    THERE TWO PEOPLE ON YOUR SITE.

    ONE NOT ME.

    ME, CONWAY, JACK

    UGH.

    GET IT NOW.

    END OF STORY.
    POSING? YEAH RIGHT. LIKE I NEED TO.

  386. Dear Mr. Conway:

    I , for one, enjoyed your little tirade, above. My curiosity was piqued so I did a little snooping and found some of your poems.

    Have you considered, maybe, selling shoes?

    GBF

  387. Okay, so maybe that’s not Cricket, but who needs to be cussed out by some megalomaniacal nincompoop?

  388. Gary, it would be impossible for you to read anything, as I can attest by your inability to read the previous posts –moron. And just let me know when you have more books or more poems published than me. Then we can talk but as it stands it appears you have no career or future career in writing anything least of all poetry. Yours in the hopes you learn to read
    Jack

  389. Poetry

    The Norton Anthology

    Anbtioch Review

    What do you read for poetry, Gary…Cricket magazine for Kids?

  390. Try ‘Google’, “dipshit”.

    (Don’t forget the ‘B’).

    I hope you don’t spell this poorly in your poetry.

  391. Ah, yes, quod erat demonstratum. “And by their fruits shall ye know them.”

    Thank you for enacting exactly what everyone has been talking about. You’re the living example of everything being discussed. Genuine thanks for that.

    As for the rest. *shrug*

  392. Gary, i’m sorry but you have absolutely no publications of poetry worth a hoot as far as I can see. You appear to be very much in the mold of poor Arthur Durkee, a poet wannabe who will never amount to much except for some crybaby on a poetry forum. Good for you. You could end up like Arthur, unpublishable and still whining as to why no one appreciates his work: Here’s why Artie…It’s not good. Take it or leave it, but Gary, I’m the most famous, most talented and most published poet you’re ever going to have a chance to speak with. My advice: sit down, shut up and listen. Or then again you can continue on your merry way dreaming of getting published Now enough of this envious bull crap. It seems to me nobody’s reading eithe Durkee’s essay or yours since you couldn;t get one published. And I see no one is discussing yuor poems since you haven’t any. So please give it a rest you’re giving amatuers a bad name. lol

  393. “…but Gary, I’m the most famous, most talented and most published poet you’re ever going to have a chance to speak with.”

    You’d be surprised who my friends are, Jackie, old boy.

  394. Artie, “Never get into a battle of wits with an unarmed man,” is hte apt phrase regarding you and your behavior. Gary’s too. This can be summed up in one single question:
    Do you know who you’re talking to?
    It’s a rhetorical question.
    The answer is NO. You don’t. I could be Jack Conway. Jack Edwards. Jack Off. YOU just don’t know, which is why this and poetry forums in general are a complete waste of time.
    Don’t believe me?
    Watch.

  395. And on it goes. The point is save your brain cells you’ll need them. You have no idea who you’re talking to. So, get over yourself.

  396. I believe the point is well taken. The focus should be in the issue since we have no idea whom we are taking with at any given time. I think that is th epoint trying to be made regarding these two articles — we can and should only deal with the content not the mechanic

  397. Does anyone know what is going on? Who is this Jack Conway? What article of his authorship is he speaking of? Who is impersonating him? And when was his name mentioned before his appearance of yesterday?

    I’m trying to figure out what he is talking about. His comments, replies, and rebuttals make no sense in the context of this blog. Not to me, at least.

    Terreson

  398. Hi Clattery,

    Hope you;re feeling better. I know you were sick last month. Take care of yourself. I’m glad you bought some healthy food for the fridge today. It’s better than that junk you eat sometimes.

    Ahhhh. Back from work. Sold a car today. Was setting up my new Bluetooth cellphone for my trip to NC, Florida, and the Dodge next September, entering contacts, ringtones and such, made some calls.

    By the way, C., I like everything you’ve been saying in this thread. And if you’re anything like me, you kind of like Jack’s imaginary friend DarkStar.

    C.

  399. Jack Conway, or whoever you are, you have just commited the one unforgivable sin in my book. You have posted in my name. In years of posting on many blogs, I have always been me. Never once have I assumed a pseudonym…not even ‘anonymous’. Any site owner can verify this by my e-mail address. You have stolen my identity. I am a published, copyrighted writer so this is a federal crime. You have just made this contentious, though fun, exchange very personal.

    Decisions, decisions…should I call the FBI or come over and kick your fucking ass (which I am seriously considering, you sorry son of a bitch!)

    (the genuine) Gary B. Fitzgerald

  400. Hi again, Jack,

    And I confidently call you Jack, including all who are using the name “Jack Conway” above. We are both near where a river falls, aren’t we, great for textile mills. It would be quite the coincidence, if someone posing with your name, has an IP coming out of Fall River Massachusetts.

    You said in post #451:

    Here I’ll give you a clue: There are two different people posting here. One is me and one is not. That my dear uneducated friend was the point but of course you in your ultimate used car salesmman wisdom were unable to comprehend that. But of course. (Shakes head at the sheer stupity of someone who cannot read.)

    No. From the IP addresses, you are every Jack Conway, or someone using a computer near you is. You are also every DarkStar. Plus, you “impersonate” Gary B. Fitzgerald in post #471 and Arthur Durkee in post #472.

    C

  401. You better hope the FBI gets to you first, bucko, because if this Texas Irishman does you will seriously regret it.

    (and I have many friends in MA and can be there in less than six hours).

    GBF

  402. Well, Mr. Conway, you have achieved your purpose. I have read your essay. Your English is a little iffy (did you mean ‘mendacity’ or ‘mediocrity’?), a few rough spots, but, all in all, okay. There are some here that will truly enjoy it. I will recommend it for the ‘Forum freaks’. Your points were well put.

    Please do not EVER use my name again or I really will take unpleasant action. Be an asshole if you want, that’s okay, but stealing a name is beyond the pale. What if I posted on a political blog in your name about how I was going to dispatch with this candidate or another. You could go to prison, son.

    Play rough if you want but, at least, play fair. A poet’s name is sacrosanct!

  403. What Gary said.

    Anyone who posts in my name, without my permission is guilty of identity theft. There are laws against that.

    I expect an apology as well.

    Although I’m going to hold my breath waiting to receive one. Mr. Conway merely reiterates by his actions the points made against him. It’s pitiful and sad, really.

    BTW, I am also documenting all this.

  404. What Gary said, again, except of course that I posted comments above where I think Mr. Conway’s essays has some serious holes in its facts and logic. I stand by my previous assessment.

  405. So I’ve gotten around to reading the Conway aticle, linked by #146. Such a shame. This could have been a much stronger essay had he sought out a few editors. The grammar is bad. Syntax is faulty. Incomplete sentence structure vitiates against the essay’s argument.

    As for his argument, and assuming I get what he is saying, I am pretty sure I disagree with him. I think Conway is saying poetry boards can only produce mediocre poets. I am asking a different sort of set of questions, figuring the boards given back to its poets, is a lively medium for the best in poetry.

    Yep. That is the difference and that is what I am after.

    Tere

  406. Yoy will take unpleasant action? Really? Here take this action you sniveling nobody. I’m so ascared.

  407. Loo stupid. There is NOTHING you can fucking do about whether I use you name of Artie Durkee’s name. I’ll use whateevr fucking anme I want so please stick it up your ass where I suspect other things have gone before it.

    I’m waiting. Come on you blowhard. You don’t know shit about poetty and you know less about internet/ Oh quik hire a lawyer because someobdy made fun of an ashole like you LOL. God you must have taken too many drugs as a child since you’re obviously a dimwitted asswipe today. How’s that? Work for you?

  408. Gary call the FBI at once. Please do. Yes I am sure the FBI wants to heard from you. LOL.

    Hi I’m Gary nobody and someone on a nothing poetry board is usijng my name. Boo-fucking-hoo. See how fast they come and lock you up for being a fuicking hinderance to intellectual sociaty. Call the FBI Gary. Come on. Let’s go. I’m waiting> Who you gonna tell them is using your name? Oh I see Gary the retired woodchuck is so important

  409. Identy theft Identity theft. boo-fucking hoo. Hello this is the FBI is Gary there> Here Gary listen so we can fart in your ear stupid. What an amzing asshole. It’s a wonder you have survived this long in polite society.

  410. Document this Gary…You are an asshole. No quick call the FBI, the CIA and the IRS I’m sure they’ll line up and come chasing after whoeevr is stealing your identity. Pss Gary, you have no identity moron. What a fucking world class asshole you are.

  411. I am so important that the FBI will make sure nobiyd steas my identity Boo-thefucking hoo. You fucking moron.

  412. It’s us. We’re both waiting for an apology because well we have nothing better to do and will somebody tell me how I can get my head out of my ass?

    There isn’t a shit thing you can do about it. So shut the fuck up you paranoid skzoids.

  413. I’ve sen this behavior before. It usually happens just before they lock nuts like this away because they actually think someone cares who the fuck they are. Identity theft? You should be arrested for impersonating a human being.

  414. Anthing else you two morons? No then if not carry on. I’m having a gas wtaching you two morons implode.

  415. We’re all so proud of you, Jack. You’re such a fine individual. A real class act.

    I was unaware that they had internet access in State Hospitals.

    GBF

  416. Seriously, I think it’s pretty clear we’re dealing with some teen-aged High School prankster here, so I’ll be back when the air clears.

    Oh, but Jack…people remember names. You have just deep-sixed your ‘career’ before it ever even began.

    I told you you’d be surprised who my friends are.

    I don’t think we’ll be reading much of your ‘work’ around anymore.

  417. Not to mention that this is being saved off as evidence. All we need is your IP address, which Clattery probably has by now, and your ass is toast.

    And BTW, your poetic fame is all in your mind, along with the other psychotic delusions you seem to be living with.

    Enough.

  418. Duh, can I help?
    Yes, I’m sure Gary B. Fitzgerald, a real living breathing Nobody can ruin someone’s career (lol) because he’s done so much for his own career.
    Have another drink and take some more meds.
    Hey I’ve got your ISP.
    Here it is:Your IP address is U812

    Now Gary try not to make many more threats lest someone send someone out your way to make sure your teeth are still in and not under the rug. lol.

    UR A Re Todd

  419. Oh dear Gary deep sixed someone’s career?
    LOL
    Oh my God to think such morons are allowed to actually drive a car.
    Gary shut the fuck up.

  420. Artie, Artie, Artie
    Boo-the-fucking-hoo someone stole your identity.
    May I ask: What identity stupid?
    You have none.

  421. May I ask? I am very interested.
    I often run into clowns like you Gary who appear to inhabit poetry forums and blogs with an amazing inflated view of themselves. What, really, on this earth makes you think you have the power to do anything to anyone? I mean it. At what point in your head do the circuits tell you that you, who hasn’t been published anywhere and has no publisher how or what makes you think you have any authority? Please give it a go.

  422. Honestly, I promise you, I won’t ask another question or make fun of you and aruther–just tell me what on earth makes clowns like you think you actually have some ability to end someone’s career? Really? Have you taken a good hard look at yourself? Have you. Is it hiding in a faceless nameless Internet site where no one knows you or where you don’t have to have any accomplishments or credentials that makes you believe you do have this ability? I am curious. It seems this Interbet poetry blog/forum environment breeds this (your) kind of misinformed behavior. Now that would be a great psychological study. And another overriding concept that crops up on many Internet blogs and forums: the notion that someone (in this case you and Arthur)has the audacity to question someone far more talented and accomplished and accepted. A what point with hardly any poetic accomplishments to your name does that ircuit in your head once again send you a signal telling you that you have the ability to even dare think about such a notion. Really it astounds me how people on Internet poetry forums think they know what they’re talking abouy and actually dare to talk about it to far more accomplished people. Doesn’t that seem the elast bit assinine> It would be like some eight year old telling his teacher how to do a science experiment. That’s the truth. So what’s up with that. Is it the anonimity that gives you thispuffed up sense of self? It flabberghasts me. So please, if you would, explain all that to me. I’ll wait.

  423. Jack:

    I guess I owe you a little thanks. I have learned that I have sold almost fifty books since this little ‘exchange’ began.

    You?

    Oh, yeah… you need to have a book to sell one, don’t you?

  424. Gayr, you didn’t answer the question and this is just more of this fantasy world stuff you’re involved with. This isn’t the real world and you didn’t “sell” any books, Gary. You paid Authorhouse to publish your books. Authorhouse is not a real publisher. At least face that much reality. Yo puffed yourself up in this Interet fantasyland making all sorts of crazy claims about the FBI and ending people’s careers –Gayr you have no power to do any of those things. You are acting delullisional. It’s not healthy. Doing something or claiming something here in Internet fantasyland isn’t the same as the real world. That’s wha worries me about clowns like you — you actually can’t tell the difference. That is scary. You should lay off the internet stuff for a while Gary until you get a rip on the real world versus the fantasyland here. Everyone is entitled to have their little dreams and fantasies, The real problem comes in when you can’t tell the difference between the real world and the fantasy one. Gary, you don’t have any substantial poetry publications in the real world and you don’t have any books in the real world. Books are published by publishing houses. They pay you advances and roylaties. Publishing yourself is okay but you’ve got to get a grip on the reality of this: It’s not real. It’s make believe. I just would like to know why people like you who hide out in internet poetry forums and blogs get the way you do, all puffed up about themselves based on nothing that really exists. I’ll wait for an answer.

  425. Dear Jack Conway??

    (is that you, Franz? Jimmy? I know you owe me one. Paybacks are a bitch, right?)

    At any rate, I’ve tried to take the high road with you, but it doesn’t seem to work. Apparently I’m not the one who needs to lay off of the ‘meds’.

    I’ll try again. If you have been following the ‘internet’ world for very long then you would know that I am relatively new to it. I don’t hang out in ‘fantasyland’ (but you do, don’t you?). But I do sell books, bucko.

    Regarding my ‘publisher’, I would like to make this observation about ‘self-published’ writers:

    Alexander Pope
    William Blake
    Walt Whitman
    E. E. Cummings
    Ezra Pound
    T.S. Eliot
    Edgar Allan Poe
    Robert Bly
    Lawrence Ferlinghetti
    Robinson Jeffers
    Alfred Lord Tennyson
    Percy Bysshe Shelly
    Robert Service
    Carl Sandburg

    Not to mention,

    R. Kipling
    H. D. Thoreau
    W. E. B. DuBois
    W. Cather
    T. Hardy
    N. Hawthorne
    E. Hemingway
    V. Woolf
    O. Wilde
    D. H. Lawrence

    Jeez…go figure!

    And who, exactly, the fuck are you? You can’t even spell, dude. And your grammar is atrocious. You think you’re a writer?

    You gotta be kiddin’. Don’t you need to start getting ready to go back to High School?

    Junior or Senior this year?

  426. Not a good answer Gary.
    The question remains: What on earth makes you think that someone with few if any credentials or accomplishments hiding in an Internet forum/blog could find something that would inflate hios ego as yours is.

    Gary sorry but it isn’t about me. It’s about your crazy nutjob rant about the FBI and ending someone’s career because you have contacts. Now we know those both are not true. Then again maybe you think they are. That’s what’s got me worried. That you actually think you have some degree of authority. Answer the question Gary: What makes you have such an inflated opinion of yourself given the true circumstances: i.e. you’re in a blog/forum; you haven’t published anywhere of significance and you use a self-publisher. Nothing wrong with any ofthat EXCEPT you seem to think it amounts to something larger than it is. Answer the question Gary. Face some facts and truth for a change.

  427. Gayr you DON’T sell books. Those aren’t books. Those are something you had printed at your expense. Everyopne knows that Authorhouse takes advantage of writers. They make their profits by having the poor authors buy their own books. Please wake up. You sell books when you have a legitimate publisher. And yes pal lots of people self-published and becamse successful, but you’re not one of them. Jesus you need to get off the fantasy train in Internet land. You really do. You keep wanting to make it about me. That’s another online tactic by clowns like you. It isn’t about me. I didn’t rant about the FBIm and ending someone’s career and all the reut of that dellusional stuff. You did and it’s crazy. Will you art leasta dmit to yourself that you haven’t the power to do anything to anyone’s career or that the FBI would even be remotely interested in you. Please for Christ’s sake wake the fuck up.

  428. And Gary, whether I’m Jack Conway, Jack Frist or Jack be Nimble doesn’t matter. What matters is your inflated opinion of yourself. And you don’t want to get into a pissing contest with me over accomplishments and books. You really don’t because you can’t win that fight and it will only drive you even more crazy that you already appear to be.

  429. Let’s just get down to brass tacks, here, Jack.

    I write good poetry. You don’t!

    It’s as simple as that.

    You should learn not to burn your bridges, son.

  430. If you say so Gary but I wouldn’t take that inflated perception of yourself to any REAL bank. Answer the question Gary. What on earth makes you dream you have any authority anywhere? What posesses someone like you with no real credentials, hiding out in a poetry forum or blog to dare to dream to tell anyone what or how to do anything. Your a pompous fool Gary and once again, Authorhouse feeds off poor pathetic ego starved people like you. You just don’t get it and never will. I actually feel sorry for people like you, so entrenched in this fantasy world. I relaly wish you could get some help. I really do.

  431. JUst for shits and giggles who pray tell ever told you that you write good poetry? Mommy? Did she hang it on the refrigerator? What pray tell do you have in terms of real life accomplishments regarding poetry? None. So this blowhard stance of yours is just that: a puffed up ego boost for someone who can’t really adapt to what is required in the real world of publishing or poetry. And again I sya to you what makes you dream you have any authority to do anything? You write good poetry? By whose standards? You have nothing to show for that. it’s more of your FBI I’ll end your career hot air. Silly, Sad and pathetic.

  432. Burn bridges?
    Are you simple-minded?
    These poetry forums and blogs should be required to have a therapist on call at all times so people like Gary can get in touch with reality once in a while.
    Sad. Very sad. And to think you have little buddies like Arthur Durkee allowing you to wallow in this claptrap vision of yourself. Arthur you should be fucking ashamed of yourself. Gary B. Fitzgerld NOBODY except some voice in your head told you that you write anything good and comparing yourself to me or anyone else who is accomplished is just plain mentally unbalanced.

  433. Thanks for NOT answering the question Gary. It absoluely proves my point: These poetry blogs/forums, where anybody can crawl in an hide, like you, breeds an extraordinary number of mentally unbalanced people with no grasp on reality and an amazing imflated opinion of their own self-worth. That would be you Gary. And it’s sad. It’s so sad that you are actually talking to an imginary person. Think of that while you ponder selling fifty books that you paid for to rint and imagine yourself as some published poet. Amazing .

  434. By the way Gary, where’s the FBI and the end of my or anyone else’s career? What happened Gary, did all you many imginary contacts in high places let you down?

  435. What…? You want me to sign it or something?

    This is just another one of your tricks, isn’t it, Conway?

    P.S. That’s spelled ‘sycophant’.

  436. I have problesm spelling in Internet land.
    In the real world, I am lucky to have an editor and typist who makes everything beautiful.
    No. No tricks Gary. You passed the test. You are one tough hombre and I admire that in writers. Besides, who doesn’t need to be told go fuck yourself Jack on occassion (more occassion than some) So there you go. No tricks. No taps. No bargain hunters. Let’s yak. You’ve been at this a long tiem it seems. Good for you. I read the crystal somethign or other somewhere by you. Very good. Impressive. Good for you.

  437. P.P.S. All should know that everything I’ve said (written?) here was said with a grin. I thought we were having fun. (I always loved a good joust).

    I am willing to read your poetry.

    Just don’t beat me up anymore. I’m too old for this shit!

  438. Better.

    Who are you, really?

    You’re a damned Yankee! How did you get published in ‘The Dead Mule’?

    🙂

  439. Jack…join the Poets.net Forum.

    And contribute. Poetry ass is being kicked over there. Right up your alley.

    GBF

  440. And Terreson’s there, too.

    He’s the guy you really want to beat up, isn’t it?

    Sincerely,
    A DIP
    (as my sister-in-law says)

    (Another Drunken Irish Poet)

  441. Jackman, if only you would take this energy and passion of yours and focus it on the real killers of poetry’s instinct. You would be unbeatable.

    Terreson

  442. P.S.:

    Your parents must have been really weird. Who would name their kid ‘anonymous’?

    Or you are. Who would be ashamed of their own damned name?

  443. Hey, still here, just shorter than short of time lately….vacation and other stuff. unfortunately about to leave again, but will be reading and responding soon I hope

    Dave

  444. Thanks for the update, Clattery. It is a lively discussion the board has going on. Thanks also for the lead.

    Terreson

  445. Essentially, a good, mature poet seeks-out forums where s/he will be either abused or covered in vanilla frosting at various points in his/her career to fulfil different points of need along his/her continuum of critical development.

    Usually, this means that a beginning poet – or a long-time poet just beginning with critique – will find, gravitate towards, and enjoy those forums (including those in IBPC) which have moderators and writers who very gently make critiques, if at all, and instead, focus on positive aspects of the poems.

    This provides the “soft” beginning, which helps build writer confidence and, rarely, offers some useful insight with which to improve the poem (if there is enough a poem at this immature stage for it to matter).

    As a poet realizes that s/he is average, below average, or what have you, s/he – if possessed of some gift – will seek-out more critical forums, and the most critical at this point will provide the greatest rapidity and depth of growth in writing.

    The danger in these hypercritical forums is that the ego can by squashed entirely, and if not this, then often a very, very good poet can walk away with a feeling that poetry, itself, is bullshit, because s/he is capable of writing fantastic poetry, and s/he sees that so many people can do the same when they have great poets critiquing and rewriting for them (i.e. the “collective power”).

    That, to me, is the life cycle of an average poetry forum adherent with above-average intelligence and above-average skill at poetry, and I think the end of that life cycle is the abandonment of the on-line poetry boards and a return to more traditional applications of the craft – none of which provide any fame, success, or public appeal anyway (now that pop stars have taken the place of poets), which begs the question, “What the fuck are we poets writing for, today, anyway?”

    The answer – which becomes clear when you become truly great – is that we are writing for our own enjoyment (ours and, perhaps, at times, other poets’), and with that as the sole ultimate end of poetry in today’s society (as opposed to a calling like engineering poetically elegant & finanically lucrative turbines for aircraft engines, for instance), one wonders why anyone is arguing about all this at all (see someone’s salient modified Kissinger quote, above).

    And the answer to that is: “Those poets are still growing, maturing.”

    Well, during that period to enlightenment, it is self-evident that only a healthy mix of forums both abusive and coddling (and all those in-between) can ever be healthy for the world of poets (in other words, unhealthy episodes are definitely critical to poetry, as in necessary, not detrimental: simply, a modicum of unhealthy critique is healthy for poets and their poetry).

    One should probably avoid addictions to unhealthy critique, however (although fatal overdoses are most certainly recommended from time-to-time to pull the poet back into reality). 🙂

    Poetry thrives on heterogeneity – not homogeneity – and it is the diversity of the poetic forums’ landscape that allows for a place for the Vintners, Terresons, and MacHinerys all to ply their craft.

    The fact that there is so much in-fighting and external wrangling and flame-warring ad nauseum is simply part of what makes poetry – like life – such a scrumptous cake.

    As anyone who has baked will tell you, it’s the salt in the chocolate chip cookies that makes them taste so good.

    Keep it all sugar, and they not only taste poorer, they rot your teeth quicker.

    Onward with the great, painful diversity of life in all things – ah, the complexity of how we all need and love both pain and pleasure throughout life’s long journey – just as in poetry’s long journey.

    Here’s to never homogenizing any of that diversity out of life OR poetry.

    Bonne Chance!

  446. Polynomial says a right thing. Heterogeneity is the way to go. In selective breeding it is something achieved through what is called open breeding or free mating, what is intended to keep the gene pool vital.

    And Clattery, old bean, I have a new board to add to the list of online sites devoted to poetry, writing, and free thinking. When power came back after Gustav, it was seven days, I visited my then new favorite board. To my sadness I discovered board management, in the interim, had succombed to the bad old ways of editing posts and outing members. All behind the scenes.

    So I decided to get my hands dirty once again and make a board. If the snerts, spammers, vandals and taliban don’t get to it first I figure the board has a life expectancy of two years.

    Interesting, don’t you think? On the one hand there is too much management that can kill a board. On the other there is the taliban to worry about.

    http://www.runboard.com/bdelectablemnts

    Tere

  447. Thanks, GBF. I guess I figure that it is time for a new generation of boards proceeding differently. Babilu’s is such a place and my inspiration.

    Tere

  448. Hello. I’d like to add that TCP.com left IBPC so they could have their own in-house poetry competitions. How lame. And when I pointed out that it is “funny” that one of the MODS who is probably an owner and his chronies always win and place, I was told to shut up. Then when I wouldn’t, I was banned. Now they give out stars like in second grade.

    One of the owners was also the one who instigated my NASTY COMMENTS thread. This thread then brought over someone who Tere spoke about as a troublemaker. He ranted on for post after post about how nastiness is ok. Well then, how come just stating the truth, just pointing out the emperor has no clothes, causes banning. What a bunch of babies and hypocrites and woman-haters.

  449. This is sad news, Nanette. It looks as if, in some quarters at least, nothing has been learned, which is always just sad.

    Having read your board input on occassion, I am hard pressed to think you might have qualified yourself for banning. Pretty wild. And you bring something up here I wish I had addressed in my original essay, which is a marked degree of misogyny, sometimes subtle and sometimes not so subtle, expressed on some poetry boards.

    Before posting I visited your blog. Judging from your vitae curriculum (kind of impressive and cool) I can’t imagine you stand in need of suggested venues. But there are a couple of new boards that have started up recently you might be interested in. One is poetry.net. (Link is upthread) Its owner is a strong, no nonsense kind of woman whose rules are anything but squirrelly. Another is a board called Babilu. Sometimes slow moving it is, but thoughtful and easy going. Post #549 links to a board I started last month. In its infancy, it is real slow moving. But it looks to conduct a certain experiment in mod-lite.

    This just bums me out about TCP.com. About that trouble maker: they say rust never sleeps.

    Tere

  450. Hi Tere,

    nice for you to write back. Yeah, the “banner” was someone who was always sarcastic to me. But the real bothersome part is that everyone knows that all the boards have had “dust-ups”, have had real horrible arguments and no one was banned. the interloper was from another board – the “nasty comments” thread.

    glad you read my blog and thanks for the compliment. I like to post on poetry boards for feedback, to see where I’m going wrong, to learn to be better and for a little human interaction. But i’m now realizing human interaction isn’t always a good thing.

    i will try out the other boards you mention.

    You’re right, I do notice a different “attitude” towards women. Funny thing is that this particular person was a non-entity in my mind, hardly a poet I even noticed, until he got “power.”

    aah – life – now I know why I stay mostly to myself in real life.

    nice talking to you.

    nanette

  451. I’ve finally gotten around to reading nearly everything since I was last here, catching up. The whole thing is rather overwhelming imagining where to start in a reply, so I’ll narrow in on this,

    Tere said from #412:

    “While I know the essay’s other articles are less sexy than the power politics of board management I also figure they are actually more determining of board health. The insincere reader, the false notion of community, the poet to critic inequality, the stupidity of treating a poetry board as a workshop setting, and the anti-intellectual tone mostly dominant on the boards. These are features killing the boards at least as much as mismanagement.”

    I see you’ve started up your own board, Tere–good for you–I saw that as the proper solution from the getgo. What I’m curious about is why a poetry board can’t be a workshop and community. Do you see it then as publication? That really piques my curiousity, because while I’ve struggled to portray analogies which everyone has shot down as inadequate, and probably rightlys so, I’d be interested to hear one from you. If not community or workshop what is a poetry board in your mind? Do you have a mission or a protocol? I’d be interested in hearing what it is.

    Arthur, you said your question would fall on deaf ears. We won’t unban Tere because it’s water under the bridge, too late for that, and wouldn’t serve any purpose to do it even as an empty gesture (like Steve’s).

    Tere, why poets can’t get along is a source of grief for me. If I had my way, the focus would always be on poetry and nothing but the poetry–but as you must know the poetry and the poet are inextricably tied together–that’s where the friction always comes in, as well as the life, artistic momentum and substance of the poetry. I think you have to be willing to take the good with the bad. I’ve striven to be tolerant to the breaking point in my dealings at TCP. You probably see us as radically different. Actually I don’t. You’ve pissed me off but I’ve never stopped seeing you in my mind as a friend and peer. Perhaps our similarities outweigh our differences–for example I’d say we’re both similarly idealistic. I’d also say we are both equally passionate about poetry and the online movement in presenting and putting forward that fragment of art and culture.

    Oh one other thing–Pat! I like your questions and your curmudgeonly honesty. Money isn’t the issue in owning a board–the cost is fairly minimal from that respect. I’ve always maintained that the biggest cost is in time and responsibility. The owner (s) is/are responsible to the members for what goes on on their site good and bad. You can claim and enact a hands off style but that too is taking responsibility as much as micromanagement. As with anything in life, it’s a balance and harmony is a moving target. I don’t know the specifics as to why you were banned and never have. I didn’t have anything to do with it.

    When good poets leave TCP it breaks my heart, and I usually seek them out elsewhere, because my motivation is enjoyment in reading and commenting–if I have to go somewhere else to read them I will. But if they’ve decided to leave there usually isn’t a lot I can do to stop them.

    Nanette–we’ll miss your work there–my perception of the events were this–you personally melted down, insulted/attacked the mod in question, then in your own words, banned yourself–we only shut the door behind you–regrettably. No one wanted that to happen. I wish you the best in life and poetry always.

    One other thing I thought was funny, and I’ll just throw it out here, at the risk of pissing Sam off–he is an example of one, I’ve gone to the Gaz to read (you too Vico) is that as an admin he was the most trigger happy on the ol ban button of any admin I’ve seen. What does that do for your opinion of him, Tere? One thing I’ve learned from online poetry forums is that as artificial as they are, what happens in them does matter, and they are a microcosm for life, because just as in life, what people say or think about you and what you think or say about yourself (selectively in memory) doesn’t matter. What matters is not what you believe but what you do, over time. God knows that and remembers it more accurately than any of us. This is good and bad.

    I’m not sure the discussion is over, or when I’ll be back. Please trust, I will be back to read your response at some point though.

  452. About #555. This is crazy talk. Seriously. I mean it. This is serious crazy talk. Nanette got banned why? Sam Byfield was a bad admin on your board why? You shut me down in your secret board why?

    Now you want to be a member in a board I create why?

    You may wish to rethink certain values, Dave.

    Tere

  453. Dave, you say:

    “Oh one other thing–Pat! I like your questions and your curmudgeonly honesty”.

    I haven’t visited this board for over a month, but steered to your comment, I had to respond. I am very passionate about principles I believe in, freedom of speech, abuse of control. I admit to that. But I have to add that in real life, all who know me, have known me for all my 63 years would be astounded that anyone would call me “curmudgeonly”.

    I hope your board, this board…all poetry boards thrive, serve and foster poets.

    Pat

  454. Dave,

    I did not “melt down.” Maybe I got sick to my stomach over the snide, snickering, belligerent, rude, smug comments from POSTY, the idiotic leaving from IBPC to start a stupid in-house contest that Posty and some other “important’ people always win or placed in. Maybe that was the last straw. After all, Posty had been smug and rude to me on a continual basis. Anyone who would say the reason my memoir isn’t published is because “maybe it’s not that good” is a rude ________. Then when I reply back that one chapter was nommed for a Pushcart and one WON a prize, he tells me I love myself. Then there was the time he didn’t “feel like” looking up references for my poem, but it’s okay to google other people’s references and it’s okay for him to post a mile-long poem where even I, who majored in philosophy would have to look up every reference. He is snide and nasty.

    The reason “we can’t all get along” is because this is a reflection of the real world. I have known many “Postys” in my life. I worked as a cocktail waitress many years in nightclubs and I ran into tons of these smug, arrogant kinds of men. My own brothers are like that. I can smell one a mile away.

    In addition, it’s also “odd” that I was never “nommed” even for the stupid in-house contests when my work was heads above certain other poets, and YOU KNOW IT.

    When I first came to TCP, I practically REWROTE certain “poets’” poems, yet my stuff in the last 6 months wasn’t even read. I don’t care one nit about the damn contest; it was the principle. Also, to get out of IBPC competition WAS, to me and some others who don’t have the balls to say anything, a sour grapes – let’s just start our own thing.

    Yes, I banned myself, but YOU PEOPLE banned my PC. And why? I only STATED THE TRUTH. The emperor, POSTY, has no clothes.

    Don’t tell me I melted down, or else tell yourself YOU melted down. Didn’t you start trouble with me a year ago? Didn’t plenty of others say worse than I did? I said nothing wrong.

    And what are you doing on this thread all of a sudden anyway? Me thinks thou doth protest too much.

    Nanette

    Nanette–we’ll miss your work there–my perception of the events were this–you personally melted down, insulted/attacked the mod in question, then in your own words, banned yourself–we only shut the door behind you–regrettably. No one wanted that to happen. I wish you the best in life and poetry always.

  455. Nanette, while your address is directed to someone else and while I do not know the specifics, the dynamics you describe are so familiar, all too generally true, I have to speak up and say I get it. This whole mod/member inequity is not just screwed up, it is a clear and present danger, as they say, to the poetry board system. In effect, a mod can behave as he will. A member has to always be looking over her shoulders. It isn’t just that the inequality is wrong. It is more that it is a killer of poetry board expression.

    Melancholy Jesus! I thought I was finished with this argument but I guess I am not. Not when poets keep getting tagged for questioning and challenging questionable mod behavior.

    Doesn’t anyone else remember that old Pogo comic strip frame? “We have met the enemy and he is us.”

    Tere

  456. Hi Tere,

    Thanks for your response. You are so right.

    And now on to Dave:

    How dare you say I attacked a mod?
    First of all, POSTY, that smug piece of dirt has no right to BE a mod. He is a misogynist, pseudo-poet, pseudo intellectual snob. And he is RUDE AND SMUG AND SNIDE. He praises poets who have no talent and ridicules those that do.

    THIS IS WHAT HAPPENED, you lapdog:

    Posty ridiculed me once too often in covert ways that became less and less covert. I told another mod who turned out to be the site administrator who by the way, was supposed to be my friend. SHE told me he was shitty to everyone, so don’t take it personally. SEE, even she said it.

    He spouted his crap once too often and I started a thread called NASTY COMMENTS.

    Then, Kaltica from another board who is also a big fat bully, came on and tried to rile things up more.

    Then, when I saw that the in-house poetry “contests” ( which are nothing more than the clique giving each other pats on the back for SHIT poetry), I said something and POSTY didn’t like that I had the nerve to say something. He thinks that I care what he thinks. He thinks I don’t have the right to say what I want when I see stupidity and corruption.

    So, he USES my NASTY COMMENTS thread against me and says that I’m a hypocrite because by calling him out on his bogus contests, I am “being nasty.” He is so stupid, narcissistic, abusive, so arrogant, so thinking that no one can tell what a creep he is, that by saying this, no one will notice that HE is the jerk. He also underestimated me. I will not be bullied or talked down to by a creep. I was NOT being nasty; I was stating the truth. He got TCP.com out of IBPC so HE and a few others could have their insipid inhouse contest. By saying that, I was NOT rude. I was saying the emperor had no clothes.

    And you, Dave, mind your own business. How dare you twist the truth and say I melted down, or that I attacked him? HE ATTACKED ME OVER AND OVER AND OVER and then expected me to lie down and take it like a good little board member.

    SCREW YOU ALL. YOU ARE BULLIES AND LIARS. Why don’t you run for office? You’d both make a great fat Barney Frank, who screwed up the economy.

    Maybe I should blog about you both. When I first posted my piece about posty and the gang, my hits increased by 1000%. Why do you think that is, Dave?

    Go bully someone else. Go lie about someone else.

  457. Good for you, Nanette, for speaking up. I figure that one to three dissenters can be successfully marginalized through one way or another. With dissenter four, five, six, and seven patterns of dominant behavior get noted.

    I see you’ve taken your complaint to your blog. This is good too. The word has to get out.

    On a slightly different note, your bully address strikes me. On the board I’ve created as a way of getting beyond the mess, a couple of us recently have touched on just that theme in the context of poetry board politics. A bully is a bully, right?

    Tere

  458. Hi Tere,

    I’m glad you are on my side. I know that you, too, have had your share of garbage on these boards.

    I want to go on your board, but I am taking a break right now. Not just because of what’s happened, but because I’m working on a book and I have intense things going on in my life that matter more at this time.

    Yes, a bully is a bully. What amazes me is how bullies think they aren’t seen that way. They think no one will stand up to them. I have always, my whole life, stood up to bullies and I’ve been bullied a lot. In philosophy class, I learned alot of what I already knew. Bullies are cowards; they are fearful that someone else will get something and they won’t. Or they are so mentally deranged they just don’t want anyone to have anything, even if they, themselves have more.

    I have a post on my blog which is a message to people in my “real life.” It’s about narcissism. And that’s what bullies are. Narcissists who get even angrier when you call them out. BUT, I learned that the best way to deal with them is to “mimic” their behavior. They are the ones who melt down. Literally. Their brains short-circuit. If you tell them off, they go crazy but eventually they back down, especially if they believe you are not alone.

    I also notice that people go along with bullies and suck up to them for their own agendas. They are also cowards.

    I can spot one a mile away. Even when other people don’t get it right away, I do.

    Thanks Tere, for understanding and knowing what really goes on.

    On the board I was banned from, they now give out stars next to people’s names. What kind of kindergarten garbage is that? And really bad poems are nommed to win their no-prize, who-cares, no one-sees except them-contests.

    And what is really stupid is that they ban my IP address. Big deal. If I wanted to i could go on another computer.

    nanette

  459. Nanette, there is nothing like literature and life to put into perspective the poetry board talibanning we sometimes have to address. I admire you for standing up and speaking up. Now maybe it is time to step away, refocus.

    You are right, by the way, in bringing attention to poetry board bullies. They are quite real. What I have noticed about them is that they tend to behave in a passive aggressive manner. What I suspect is that their behavior online is compensatory for having no control over their lives off line. All in all they are a sorry lot. You’ve mentioned a couple of players I have tagged as bullies. And there are others. Some of whom are women, which saddens me. While I do fundamentally, philosophically, disagree with dmehl, I do not think he belongs to the bully quota. Even if I wish he would rely less on received, mod-class interpretation and more on what gets put on the screen for everyone to see. More and more I am inclined to believe that the mod system is a peculiar, particularly pernicious institution because it corrupts.

    Above I mentioned three boards of a new generation. And there are others I’ve recently discovered. I think I am right in saying none of them rely on the mod system.

    Hope to see you around in venues where the conversation is about poetry and where members are free of bullies.

    Tere

  460. Barney Frank screwed up the economy? Really?! And here I thought it was because George W. Bush took a budget that had a surplus and then drove us to trillion dollar deficts. My oh my. Nanette, if your political savoy is any indication of your poetic abilities then it’s a goofd thing they banned you. You are utterly off your rocker.

  461. I just read your blog. Yech. You are a right wing bully who thinks Sarah Palin has a fricking brain in her head. The world poetry and political can do without your kind just nicely. And yor poetry sucks as well. Get over yourself..

  462. Henry the Just,

    fuck off-

    Barney Frank and Chris Dodd gave out loans to people who didn’t have a dime. Clinton started the de-regulation. I don’t like Bush either – you are an ass lefty – my poetry has nothing to do with my politics – so shut the f up, you toad. You really are a piece of crap bully, aren’t you? By the way, Barney Frank was screwing a guy from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. Get your damn facts straight.

  463. By the way, toad Henry,

    I am not right wing – I actually have a brain. I am an independent. I weigh issues and don’t think that just because someone is with one party or the other that they are messiahs.

    Right wing bully – I never bullied you – I state facts. you are really an ass – maybe from Acorn???

  464. henry the “just”

    my mistake: I did mention Sarah Palin. But if you weren’t so trigger happy, you would have seen that I said she didn’t mention the important part of the issue.

    as to my poetry – what have you written? you really think you are a judge of me? You are the bully. Funny how you use my comments about bullies to call me a bully. You are a typical sociopath.

    go play with your little penis

  465. Nanette, do you think it is strange the way this seems to always happen to you, both online and in person? Have you ever considered using a bit more tact? Well, I guess it is time to duck the inevitable flame headed my way…

  466. “While I do fundamentally, philosophically, disagree with dmehl, I do not think he belongs to the bully quota.”

    Tere,

    I do not know dmehl, but in the primary encounter I had with him, I felt he was trying to bully me into silence, both directly and indirectly (for example, by recommending others ban me). I’m willing to consider that the aforementioned incident and resultant posts were an aberration and not a true reflection of his usual demeanor and character. Those were indeed contentious times and a source of grief to most involved.

  467. Arnold,

    I haven’t spoken to anyone like that online unless they ridicule me FIRST. I am not going to attack you. What for? You didn’t say anything to attack you for? And guess what, Arnold, up the thread there were MEN saying even worse things, yet where were YOU then? See, it’s the men agains me – guess what – not afraid of you or henry the “Just”, or dmehl, or Posty or any of you.

    Tere: as far as Dave (dmhel), you don’t think it’s a little convient, a little bit of NOT coincidence, that he shows up on this thread, admitting that he hadn’t for a long while, after I do. I was WAY late on this thread, I found it by accident. And there he is. Funny how people who have things to cover over, mangage to sniff out people who are telling what really happened.

    And that henry the just person is incorrigible to make it about politics. And he is stupid. I say more than once on my blog that I am not a Republican. Yet he calls me one. And calls me a bully for telling Dave that he;s wrong and a liar. He is a liar. And for someone to stoop to “yech-ing” my blog, and for a misconception on his part, because he can’t read correctly, AND to make fun of my poetry – he gets what he deserves.

    I spent over 2 years on TCP, was sweet and polite and helped someone who is now an administrator write better poetry, not that it helped, and i get kicked out for stating the truth about a mean, snotty mod. I don’t care.

    Arnold, maybe you should read the whole story, or know the whole story before you call me tactless. Way worse was said to me before.

    i think this is enough already.

  468. Tere,

    I am not afraid of bullies. Here is a case in real life to prove it:
    my neighobor is a druggie loud music playing garbage leaving b.
    After years of putting up with music so loud my heart beats too fast, and parties held in front of my door, my husband and I told her to shut up. She almost took the door off the hinges banging and threatening me. Then she threatened me again outside. I laughed in her face. She is a mean, tough ghetto b. Well, there is no more loud music and her threats never came to fruition.

    so, I certainly am not going to back down from cyber bullies.

    but i have said my piece and this conversation is over for me.

    i thank you for your support, and respect you. and yes, there are a few women bullies. They are even worse.

    nanette

  469. But what do you have to gain from it? For the trollish people who start such things, they get their kicks from stirring up fights. A vitriolic response only legitimizes them, exactly what they are wanting.

  470. Thanks, Halifax, for jogging the memory. That was indeed a nasty set of circumstances. And you were indeed attacked. These things should not be forgotten or swept under the rug.

    And Nanette your instincts are healthy and sound. Frankly, I am still incredulous that you got banned in the first place. It makes no sense to me. It does, however, cement me in my view that the mod system is institutionally bad for poetry and for the free exchange. I can only repeat that Orwellean insight I’ve brought to bear on the topic before. All animals are created equal. Some more than others. This problem is not going away until mods are stripped of their tools, the back rooms for staff only abolished, and admin types and site owners think like members only again. I am serious as a heart beat. Any mod who says otherwise I view as way too invested in her or his robe of office.

    Now for something mentioned in the spirit of disclosure. Dmehl and I have history. Most of it good. Some of it not so good. Working under him as a mod we had much fun. We stirred up a lot of conversation and, I think incited each other poetically. Then I got shunned. My behavior getting viewed as bad for management. Then I got electively, preemptively banned from TCP for what I might do in the future. Now I have created a board and Dmehl has become a contributing member. My board, rather like Rus Bowman’s, is an experiment in management-free poetry boards free of the fear and loathing that has come to characterize a board or three. I welcome Dave and anybody else who wants to get beyond what, in my view, has gotten miscreated.

    And, Arnold, I think I don’t know you, not at least as Arnold. While I get your point about feeding trollish behavior I want to ask a question. Exactly when does a poetry board participant say to the bully enough is enough? This strikes me as key. A good friend recently posted an essay on Delectable Mnts that addresses bullyism. He says that recent poetry board events have inspired him. It is one of the best, most lyrical, treatments of the theme I think I’ve ever read. It resonates. So when do you keep your mouth shut? When do you speak up?

    Tere

  471. Well, Arnold, the advise to a rape victim used to be to go quiescent, go passive. Now the advise is to fight back and hard.

    In my view trolls are rapists. In my view mods who abuse their powers are rapists. I cannot be any clearer than this. While I agree that, at least initially, the best way to treat with trolls is to put them on ignore, when the attacks continue it is time to fight back and hard. I do mean hard.

    What does one gain from fighting back? Freedom and poetry.

    Tere

  472. lookit Nanette from what I can tell you are a raging right-wing racist. I’ve no use for you, your poetry or your politics and you my ugly friend are the BULLY so don’t even dare try to play victim with me. Your type always do.

  473. So, Clattery old bean, have you too noticed a certain rhythmic rise and fall in the discussion? It would be interesting to do a statistical analysis of how many times the conversation has unravelled, devolved into invective. Fascinating, actually.

    Tere

  474. My disclaimer: I read here. I don’t know Nanette. I don’t know HenrytheJust.

    I have read the back and forth here and even went to Nanette’s blog.

    In my opinion I believe Henry to be correct in his assessment of Nanette.
    I think he is a bully and her own comments here begin to show her true colours including attempting to bully people who have dissenting opinions and somehow associating them with “Braney Frank.” Incredulous.

    # 560
    SCREW YOU ALL. YOU ARE BULLIES AND LIARS. Why don’t you run for office? You’d both make a great fat Barney Frank, who screwed up the economy.

    When she speaks about what a bully is, and gives us her definition as shown in post #562, I have to say in my opinion her own narcissism comes shing through. Take a look at her blog for a literal and visual representation of true narcissim.

    # 562.
    It’s about narcissism. And that’s what bullies are. Narcissists who get even angrier when you call them out.

    Henry appears to make the case that if her political acumen is equal to her poetic ability he sees why she was banned. Nothing wrong with that. Her asociation of Barney Frank to the housing meltdown is way off base and cannot be supported UNLESS she uses right wing fringe media Fox News. She does this on her blog.

    #564.
    Nanette, if your political savoy is any indication of your poetic abilities then it’s a goofd thing they banned you. You

    On her blog she attacks every single middle of the road and liberal she can get her hands on and actually cites Bill O’Reilly as a source. Worse I agree with Henry, her comments are tinged with racism including putting down low income people. Please: low income people didn’t give themselves house loans. Greedy, mostly Republican run banks gave away the loads so please get your facts straight.

    Blog.
    on The View, is not the brightest bulb in the lamp. She has got to be the dumbest, least classy dame I’ve ever seen. No matter what someone says, even if they are right, she won’t listen unless they are a Democrat. She is rude to guests who are much more intelligent than she is, and she makes faces like a child. She’s thick as a brick. Today, O’Reilly told her that Barney Frank and Chris Dodd were much more responsible for people losing all their money in IRA’s than Bush was, but she won’t listen. Now, I am not a Republican, so I am not pushing any agenda, but I do know when something is fact. She needs to go. She’s sickening.

    Blog
    I find it incredibly vile that the liberal way-left media is tearing “Joe the Plumber” apart. How come they aren’t camped out at Bill Ayers house or Farrakhan’s or Reverend Wright’s?

    So what if Joe owes $1100? Many people have owed taxes for one reason or another. And that amount is puny. So what if he doesn’t have a license right now. He asked a simple question and the answer he received is exactly what I had suspected all along. Socialism. Robin Hood. Welfare. Take from the middle class and the rich and give to the poor.

    I have to agree with Henry, whether he’s Just or not is debatable, but he is correct: Nanette Rivera claims to be “independent but I do believe she is a liar. Her words and her sources indicate indeed she is a right-winger who relies on right wing fringe media to make her rather Republican arguments. And her self-absorbed tirades and efforts to stifle anyone who criticizes her is all the work of a full-fledged bully.

  475. No kidding. Look at this diatribe:
    “I write to Congress and the Senate many times each week, but my Congressbitch, Carolyn Maloney (in the picture)refuses outright to listen. She’s in charge of the 14th District in Manhattan. She even has her lapdog, Mr. Wolfe tell us that Congress isn’t the place to change or enact laws. Oh yeah, Wolfie baby, YOU WORK FOR ME, YOU SCUM! You don’t want to listen, then why are you in the Congresswoman’s office? To collect a paycheck? Some ratty, scummy Congress we have. The same Congress who allowed the economy to fail. SCUM.”

    Or this:
    “. I would give anything to be thirty again and have a degree that could actually get me a job, instead of the degree I have. But get this: The New School University had programs that could have gotten me a job, but they said I had too many transfer credits, so, no, no, Nanette – you cannot take Drama Therapy, or Graphic Design, or any “real” courses,even though they would allow me to get a real job at AND at something I would be good at. Granted, the money’s not great, but it’s better than NO money, which is what I now to show for my over-priced degree.”

    Apparently it is her school’s fault that she picked bad major. If they were so awful, one wonders why she still went. Wow, Nanette, I thought you simply got angry over politics, but you seem down right unstable.

  476. This looks like a group of Democrats ganging up on a Republican who’s entered their neighborhood a week before the election. That’s when the conversation turned, when Nanette was attacked for her Barney Frank comment. If you read her blog, then you know she is an activist with an outspoken style. In social arenas where it counts, she may be the squeaky wheel getting the grease. And it’s not worse than a gang-up.

    C.

  477. My comments are not political. My point is that the comments she makes are so vitriolic that they work against her. I would add that she attacks democrats and republicans – she sounds like she is a libertarian. If you read her blog, you will see that this style of “activism” only makes things worse for her. I was originally trying to help, but the racist side of her rants is too extreme to stomach.

  478. Speaking as a yellow dog democrat, sympathies populist, belonging to a long tradition of Southern far left leaners, I find it highly objectionable that someone should say a person should get banned from a poetry board because of her political views. I will not be quiet when someone says a person deserves to be banned from a poetry board because of her views.

    Pogo said a smart thing. It is as applicable to the left as it is to the right: we have met the enemy and he is us.

    Take Nanette on for what she says and for what she thinks. But in my view anyone who says a person should be banned from a poetry board because of her political views is himself the manifested problem.

    Terreson

  479. Who said she should be banned? She’s a right-wing racist who spouts Fox News drivel. Once ya know that it sort of dimnishes her appeal to the point that her work becomes pure junk. She’s a nasty bully and that’s that.

  480. Everything about “poetry” is subjective. I find it trite and Hallmarky. In my opinion anyone who uses the line “rancid heart” needs to read and study a whole lot more. Trite! Now, was your point, old bean,that getting into “Mindfire” was some major poetic accomplishment? Sorry, I’m not impressed. I will stick with my opinion regarding her politics which I find putrid and with my assessment of her poetry which I categorize as junk. I will refer you to a recent interview with the poet Dick Allen, “Yet almost every poet I’ve known thinks his or her poetry is the equivalent of the best work b Robert Frost…And it isn’t., it just isn’t…Poetry writing requires enoormous amounts of talent, skill, dedication, devotion to the subject, passion and energy.” I just don’t see that in any of this work of hers.

  481. Hi Henry,

    How did you come up with your assumptions about why I selected those poems? Then, after you come up with your assumptions, you say how unimpressed you are with what you made up, as if you are carrying on some argument with me.

    The fact is, that it is not junk. You simply don’t favor it. But it took skill and a very fine ear to write those pieces, whether you like it or not.

    The problem with your argument, is that it will only be attractive to those who agree with you, who read her poetry and do not like it. You can invite them all to your “I hate Nanette Rayman Rivera” party. And what’s so great about that?

    C.

  482. Hey, Tere…long time no hear.
    Well, since the subject here is politics and since it is election day, I’d like to contribute MY opinion, too:
     

     

    Blue and Red Capitulate

     

    What about your money?

    I don’t care about that green.

    What about the bastards
    getting rich from the oil?
    And look where it’s going…
    to war and waste and death,
    destroying the Earth,
    leaving it ruined and scarred.

    I don’t care.

    Who’s side are you really on?

    Well, I don’t care much for people.
    Nature will do what must be done.
    I don’t see what all this has to do
    with anything important or real.
    This has nothing to do with the
    blue jays and the cardinals sharing
    berries from the bush in my backyard.

     

    Copyright 2008, SOFTWOOD – Seventy-Eight Poems, Gary B. Fitzgerald

     

    (not that poetry has anything to do with all of this, or anything.) 🙂

  483. Clattery,
    I have no problem with you defending her. Like her all you want. And talk about making assumptions. I asked a question which is not in any English language an assuption. You should calm down and read what I wrote not what you think I wrote in your irrational reaction and hotheaded haste to defend your little friend. (You know that is sickening.) I gather from how hot you are getting around the collar that you have a more vested interest in our little Godawful Nanette. You posted that poem as some indication of her ability to write. If it is, I am afraid I still find it trite junk. Now you should rest assured that I am not the only one who finds her work “junk” and your “ASSUMPTION that I am the only one is utterly selfserving and small minded. Please don’t try and make it sound like this isn’t a debatable issue. You have no facts that she is any good, no more than I have. No one I know is asking you not to like her. You can like all the awful poets you wish. Don’t let me or anyone stop you. But anyone that uses those tired lifeless phrases “rancid heart” should seriously consider another worthwhile profession.

  484. My point isn’t that she should be banned, my point is that her way of handling disagreements accomplishes nothing for her.

  485. Hi Henry,

    I am very calm.

    You made the assumptions. You asked a question, and then instead of letting me answer, you rebutted your assumed answer.

    What does it matter about the way she handles disagreements? So don’t propose to her. She’ll find someone else. Tell her mother she doesn’t behave right.

    Where are you going with this?

    C.

  486. First off, me things the detractors of one Nanette R. Rivera protest too much. So much so I now question motive. Hell, for all I know her detractors are spurned suitors.

    Second off, Dragonman your link is spot on.

    Third on, GBF I’ve always found your view of what is real attractive.

    Oh, and Clattery, anyone who calls you irrational and overly excitable online certainly doesn’t know you, your patience, your committment to online poetry, and the poetry board workload you handle while making it look like a cake walk.

    Tere

  487. Good Tere, thanks for more of your hypocritical hyperbole. I will see to it personally that Clattery is awarded the Mother Teresa Award for running a website like millions of other people do on a daily basis. I can readily see why no one bothers to take your drivel seriously. Your motives are transparent. Clattery I am not going anywhere with this. I simply responded to her comments and her politics, which I find racists and right-wing. But since this all about the poetry, I responded to her poetry. I find it junk. Or should I fawn over her endlessly?
    Take a look at her web site. The pathetic thing dedicated a whole column to the fact that I dissed her. Amazing. I can completely understand now how empty her life must be if her ramblings are centered on my comments.

  488. Henry. This is my last riposte to your posts. And, truth is, I am less addressing you than I am speaking to the blog. Experience suggests you are of the type that will not get it.

    Thinking back through the thread’s 597 posts to date I notice a pattern. Or how it is that anyone who speaks up and against a certain class of poetry board politics gets personally attacked. Then what happens is that anyone who disagrees with the attacker gets personally attacked. The tactic is Rovean.

    Tere

  489. Not to mention its very predictability. Which is of course part of the pattern. Not having anything substantial to base their arguments on, they resort to ad hominem attacks, just as on the boards.

  490. It would appear to most, I believe, that the only attacking anyone is Tere and whoever this Durkee guy is. If you can’t stand the fact that some people are not going to like your writing or your policis I have a little tip for you — don’t inflict either your poetry or your political views on the public via a public blog. Everyone wants to go to heavan but nobody wants to die. Someone like Nanette takes great pains to let everyone know she has something important to say and says it in a public blog and encourages everyone to read it and marvel at her intellect and talent? Excuse me? Then, when someone dares to point out, “My God, what tripe!” they get offended and defenders follow suit — like Tere and Durkee — mouthing off their shock that anyone would dare have an opposing opinion. Unbelievable. I have a tip — if you don’t want people to comment on what you have to say (a) don’t say it or(b) don’t say it in public. Keep it in a diary where it probably belongs. Too many people think wrongly that if they start a blog they are somehow immune from anyone criticising them or their ideas or their poetry. Wrong! Anyone who even dreams there is a “pattern” to this really needs to speak to a professional. To have someone, (Nanette) blame the housing crisis on poor people because they got homes thye couldn’t afford is racist and right-wing. Poor people did not, I repeat, did not give themselves those loans. But of course if you happen to get all youe news and information from fringe, right-wing sources like Faux News, then of course you might spout such blitering nonesense. Por Nanette. The VICTIM! As far as her poetry goes, I simply find it trite and goofy –childishly immature. Of course I didn’t have to break into her diary to read it. She proudly posted it for everyone to read and fawn over, except I didn’t. And ther’s the rub. So please keep your feigned shock and awe to yourself. There is no pattern and there is only one way to stop someone from commenting negatively on either your politics or your poetry — just shut up publically. I don’t think that’s an awfully hard thing to do. Or maybe if you are a narcissis long-time suffering vitim it is. You’d have to ask Naette that one.

  491. Hi Henry,

    Now you’re telling Terreson and Arthur how to behave, including to “shut up”. It’s not going to get you anywhere. They’re all grown up, and will use blogs and otherwise respond to people the way they see fit, just like Nanette Rayman Rivera will.

    You are also are attacking Nanette in this post, as you have been this past week or so. Here you call her racist and immature. You are stepping up and attacking Terreson and Arthur in harsher fashion than their ripostes to you.

    Check this out: Books Inq.: One more . . .

    C.

  492. I must have missed the point. I thught we were encouraged to post our comments. Is it inappropriare to say I find someone’s politics repulsive? Is it inaapropriate to say I find someone’s poetry immature? I certainly must have misinterpreted the purpose of posting if that is the case. I don’t see myself as “stepping up” anything or maybe I as Tere suggests “I just won’t get it” if indeed there is anything to “get.”
    I have nothing more to say on the subject of her poetry or her politics, however I presume I can comment in defense of someone telling me “I’m the kind that will never get it.” Now talk abouyt a laughable and immature argument. Be that as it may Nanatte has so many blogs now under her name I would grow weary trying to keep up and respond. I too rest my case.

  493. I would however like very much for you or someone to point out where I attacked poor Tere and Durkee? Exactly what was it I said in this attack on them.

  494. Hi Henry,

    If I respond to you, does that mean I agree that they are “poor Tere and Durkee”? That’s like, “Have you stopped beating your wife yet?” There’s no good way to answer, neither “yes” nor “no” works to communicate the truth of the matter. No, I don’t think of them as “poor Tere and Durkee.” Neither do I think they need to see a “professional” nor do I think they “spout such blitering nonesense” as you put it. However, you don;t see these references as stepping up attacks on Terreson and Art?

    As to Nanette, it’s not her poetry that you called racist. However, the context of the “immature” comment is here, you said, “Por Nanette. The VICTIM! As far as her poetry goes, I simply find it trite and goofy –childishly immature.” You don’t see that as an attack? Should I now start responding to you, “Oh, Poor Henry, thinks I’m going to keep him from posting here.” Is that how we discuss poetry?

    C.

  495. My short term memory ain’t what it used to be. Perhaps a link to Dragonman’s blog where he exposits on the notion of a culture of argument and, specifically, how it infects poetry board exchanges, criticism especially, has been given. But here a link is to his essay. Included in the text is a link he supplies to another essay on the topic, in more general terms, and written by one Deborah Tannen. It too is well worth reading and thinking about.

    http://artdurkee.blogspot.com/2008/09/against-argument-culture.html

    Tere

  496. Well, as far as I am concerned attacking someone would entail saying someone is a fool, and idiot and a know-nothing. I think it is fair game to say someone’s views are racist and fair game to say someone’s poetry is immature. It’s as fair as saying someone’s poetry is mature isn’t it? I don’t think you can have it both ways. And I find it very strange that someone’s ego is shattered to pieces because poor me says they are blithering. I’d say that’s pretty odd. But I’ve said my piece on Nanette. I see no useful point in continuing to address her racist comments or her immature poetry.Or perhaps all would be right with the world if I said her generous and thought-provoking comments and her mature poetry. That I take it would make everything better. That would make everyone have nice dreams and feel safe. Oh well. And Clattery if you remotely imagine saying a person’s poetry is trite, immature and goofy is an attack you simply haven’t read enough poetry reviews or poetry. Or at least poetry NOT on a blog. I believ we can discuss poetry in terms of how we examine it. Unless of course there isa prerecquiste that all people be duely fawned over in some dramtically phony fashion. I don’t think any of this is an attack: not by my standards. And if it is by yours I will simply cease to participate which will leave the party intact and at the level of discourse it was before I dared to intrude and opine a different opinion on comments and poetry that were otherwise widely accepted and adored. I am still amazed that someone is referring to an essay posted (not published) on someone’s blog as an example of what is or isn’t an argument. Sorry but I think there are better sources (or is that an attack too?)

  497. Hi Henry,

    You said: And Clattery if you remotely imagine saying a person’s poetry is trite, immature and goofy is an attack you simply haven’t read enough poetry reviews or poetry. Or at least poetry NOT on a blog.

    Very few people read as much or as many. I do not consider your examination of Nanette Rayman Rivera’s work worthy of either the better poetry blogs, nor the better book reviews. Do you think you can write as well as the people you have been attacking? . . . oh, er, uh, um . . . I mean explicating?

    C.

  498. Jabberwocky

    Lewis Carroll (1832–98)

    T’was brillig, and the slithy toves
    Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
    All mimsy were the borogoves,
    And the mome raths outgrabe.

    “Beware the Jabberwock, my son!
    The jaws that bite, the claws that catch!
    Beware the Jubjub bird, and shun
    The frumious Bandersnatch!”

    He took his vorpal sword in hand:
    Long time the manxome foe he sought—
    So rested he by the Tumtum tree,
    And stood awhile in thought.

    And as in uffish thought he stood,
    The Jabberwock, with eyes of flame,
    Came whiffling through the tulgey wood,
    And burbled as it came!

    One, two! One, two! And through and through
    The vorpal blade went snicker-snack!
    He left it dead, and with its head
    He went galumphing back.

    “And hast thou slain the Jabberwock?
    Come to my arms, my beamish boy!
    O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay!”
    He chortled in his joy.

    T’was brillig, and the slithy toves
    Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
    All mimsy were the borogoves,
    And the mome raths outgrabe.

  499. “According to Chesterton and Green, among others, the original purpose of Jabberwocky was to satirize … ignorant literary critics,…”

  500. “…ignorant literary critics.”

    That’s kind of redundant, isn’t it? What other kind is there?

    After all, anyone who attempts to judge the intentionally subjective from a subjective point of view must be an idiot anyway, don’t you think?

    Those who can, do.
    Those who can’t, teach.
    Those who can, write poetry.
    Those who can’t, critique.

  501. Clattery,
    I don’t imagine being able to write as well as someone else is evidently a requirement for comment or criticsm. If it were, this entire thread would be blank. Suffice to say, if fawning over someone I say “their work is so mature,” causes not great alarm, then neither should saying “their work is immature.” I have yet to hear an explanation of why this isn’t so. All I have heard is the complaint that I attacked poor Nanette. That I am afraid is not an argument or a defense. Too many people so desire to have things just one way–theirs — which is why these blogs are so useful. It gives people an opportunity to fulfill that dream of being in total control of people’s reactions. I have nothing against that. Some people need that outlet from reality.

  502. In my self-proclaimed subpar literary critic mode may I say it’s ” All right,” not “alright.”
    Since I corrected that does that qualify me to be a better writer than the poets I am commenting on?

  503. Hi Henry,

    What do you think of the link Art posted, Deborah Tannen’s For Argument’s Sake (post #615)? That’s where the best of this discussion has gone to. In your further contributions to this discussion, would you apply some of Tannen’s ideas to your critique of Rivera’s efforts. I would also like your opinion of the Michael Crichton comments (post #601), and how they might apply to poetry forums and discussion threads in general.

    C.

  504. Merriam-Webster

    alright
    One entry found.

    Main Entry: al·right
    Pronunciation: \(ˌ)ȯl-ˈrīt, ˈȯl-ˌ\
    Function: adverb or adjective
    Date: 1887
    : all right

    usage: The one-word spelling alright appeared some 75 years after all right itself had reappeared from a 400-year-long absence. Since the early 20th century some critics have insisted alright is wrong, but it has its defenders and its users. It is less frequent than all right but remains in common use especially in journalistic and business publications. It is quite common in fictional dialogue, and is used occasionally in other writing .

    ********************************
    Online Etymology Dictionary –
    : alright

    frequent spelling of all right, attested from 1893.

  505. Clattery,
    I think you misconstrued my comments with an argument not anywhere near the vitrolic that Tannen speaks about. Saying someone is not a good writer is a common practice. I was neither arguing or belittling Nanette. I found her politics racist and still do. I find her poetry immature and still do. That I am afraid is my right. You seem to have tried a great man avenues to get me to say something otherwise. I am afriad that is not going to happen. Because someone disagrees running about waving one’s arms and shouting “Attack! Attack!” doesn’t make it so. Me thinks in our all too politcally correct world we have far too many people who wish to be adored and praised for doing absolutely nothing or less and then get offended when they aren’t. I am sorry, but it doesn’t work that way, or at least anywhere else but self-centered blogs. As far as the defense of all right versus alright goes, I am sorry but I can’t find anyone advocating the use of alright in any of the more widely used writing style guides including the Modern Language Association, APA or The Chicago Style Manual. I suppose if one wishes to use it one can but once again regardless of the blogesphere the reality remians that it is never encouraged. Then again perhaps all these well regarded style guides have no place in the world of blogs. It seems that way. But be my guest less I be accused of trying to tell someone what almost everyone else in writing agrees upon. Far be it for me to burst someone’s internet/blog bubble. I think it’s more than appropriate that peole genuininely keep on doing what they think is correct in blog poetry since I am sure it will keep tham anchored exactly where they belong, in a blog where they can do no harm to anyone.

  506. I must add that I do find it absurdly humorous that the intent to begin with was to rail against being banned when in fact if anyone dares tell someone they are just not good enough to make up their own rules as they go along all hell fire breaks out. My suggestion is that people begin finding new ways to expres themselves thta are not as public and therefore will not run the risk of having someone comment negatively on what they do.

  507. Nanette is an angry, bitter whiner. Just look at her blogs if you need proof. She is the most vile type of person on earth – the kind who never takes responsibility for her own failings, and instead blames others, particularly minorities. She is so unwilling to take direction or criticism that she can’t even hold an entry-level job and is instead on welfare, living in public housing, and still whining about how superior she is to everyone around her. She also mocks the workers who provide her with the services she gets. She reminds me of Mrs. Turpin in O’Connor’s “Revelation.” She is a nasty, pathetic person, and deep down she knows it. Therefore, she makes it her life’s goal to put down others. It is also why she is totally incapably of taking constructive criticism.

  508. I promise this will be my last off-topic post (like hell), but, Henry…I had three choices: all right, all-right and alright. I specifically chose alright due to the informal nature of the thread and the fact that it seemed most appropriate for my response to Arthur.

    However, the modification of language from standard usage is a good thing. It’s called evolution.

    Dost thou not agreeth? Shall thee then speak as did one two-hundred years ago? Better yet, let’s go back to Old English spelling. Then every misspelled word would still be technically correct, nay?

    🙂

  509. Funny. I’ve known Nanette for some time, by being on the same poetry boards for awhile. Not at all the same person you seem to be seeing. Passionate, certainly, but passionate people are engaged with life rather than ironically detached from it.

    Maybe that’s your filters. Maybe it’s all projection. Who knows. Not my problem.

    Or maybe it’s all in how you approach the blowtorch. If you start out inflammatory, that’s what you’re likely to get back.

    Worth thinking about.

  510. I guess I agree with Me, which makes me feel so not alone in regard to my comments previously.
    Obviously all of thisis subjective however it is at least somewhat leveling to understand that others feel the same way. Or maybe, Mr. Durkee, ME is spot on. That could of course be one of the options that you seemed to miss in your evaluation of this. I don’t think I’m the person to engage in the entomology of words, their denotation or connotation. (See Noah Webster) I simply was using this as an example to reinforce my previous defense that their is absolutely no requirment to write better than someone else in ordre to criticize their work. I hope that’s all right.

  511. Between post #625 and the several posts Henry has made the blip on my radar points to cyber-stalking. It all becomes rather obsessive by pattern.

    Terreson

  512. One more thing. About #628. Entomology: the study of insects. Etymology: the study of words, a matter pertaining to linguistics.

    Allright, alright, all right? You are so busted, man, I would suggest you leave off on the attack. The attention you are getting ranges somewhere between tired indifference and the negative.

    Terreson

  513. Subjectivity in all things critical means that the critic really doesn’t a leg to stand on, and knows it. It’s the last defense of an opinion that has no objective weight itself. In other words, attacking something on the grounds that it’s subjective then defending oneself on the grounds of subjectivity reveals that there isn’t anything really to say about the subject of the attack, it’s just an attack.

    Oh yeah, and I also can’t respect a self-appointed who can’t even demonstrate an understanding of the vocabulary they throw around like locusts in a breeze. Which is what entomology is about. Etymology, on the other hand, is about the study of the history of words. But what that has to do with anything is equally unclear.

    Your own misuses unveil you.

  514. Just a general observation: Sometimes when dealing with bullies, people become bullies themselves. It’s understandable, given human nature, but the tendency can hurt, rather than help, one’s cause. Unless, of course, one’s cause is simply to vent, hurt, belittle, be offensive. Most people probably think they are merely telling the truth as they know it. And so they are.

    As a side note, I love the phrase “pure junk.” I may have to steal it. 😉

  515. On the “alright” versus “all right” debate. It is common knowledge that they mean the same, and that either can be used in place of the other. It’s like “okay” versus “OK”. Same thing. The usage is up to the user.

    ~~~

    Addressing Henry’s latest posts, and the one by the person with the screenname Me . . .

    If anyone is wondering, they come from two different IP addresses, even though they both enjoy putting down Nanette, for whatever reasons. If any more people come and do this, we can all consider that we have an important social movement on our hands.

    OK, so “Me” comes in and attacks Nanette, and goes on for a bit about how anyone can see he or she is right. Henry says this is common practice, to say what you feel, but not to frame these comments as attacks. But they are attacks, and I agree that there are online posters who feel these attacks are OK. And here we have the minimizing of negative behavior, the pleading that no one go so far as to call them attacks.

    But, unless they have something to say, besides their dribblings, then they’re doing nothing but amusing each other, and those others who may come to join them, by putting a third person down. And Henry defends to the nth degree his right to do so. It must be better than porn or something, this otherwise useless put down of another human being for the attacker’s gratification. An interesting online activity, to seek people you disagree with, and call them racist if you can, immature, frame them as “poor so-and-so” and so forth. Then, when others point out the absurdity of this behavior, the defense is that this is what is done. Okay. But in the process, no one else’s points get addressed on their grounds.

    My objection remains. That it is useless. It leads nowhere. It has nothing to do with whether anyone is public with their ideas or not. People should not be hounded into being shut ins, because a popular online sport or fetish is to attack them. And that is the sum total of whatever is accomplished, the gratification of the attacker, the joining of like-minded attackers, for the end result of an attack. I go back to what I asked in the beginning, where is Henry going with this. And to go nowhere is supposed to be sufficient. It isn’t.

    Better than this, Art and I have come up with some pretty good links to show how this behavior is unhealthy, that if it is to be endemic to our society, or to our online community, then it has led to an unhealthy social situation. This thread is about that. Henry and “Me’s” responses constitute more pee in the pool of online poetry.

    Okay, so now Nanette and the several other readers of this blog, and the many more to come in the future, will read how, so far, two people think Nanette is a racist, and how her work is disliked. If this were an online workshop, and she posted her work for comment, I would ask that these attacks stop, and that attention is directed at giving constructive feedback. That would be what we were here for, to help Nanette workshop her poetry or whatever, the reason for her to go online in the first place. But this blog’s thread is fairly unique because instead, for whatever good or bad there is in Nanette’s work or approach, what has become more important is the example of poor feedback given by Henry and the person who goes by the name Me. Even though this is not a workshop, and Nanette’s work is posted for Nanette’s audience, versus being in a workshop setting, the result is to have two people come in and give examples of more pee, what we poets have to put up with.

    C.

  516. The only poor feedback I can dechipher is your constant harping on how poor Nantee has been maliagned and how saying anything that doesn’t agree with you is somehow an attack. Please VCLattery do yourself a favor: Quit while you’re a head. You are now sounding pathetic to the point of laughable. And the OK versus okay versus all right vesus alright IS NOT all the same. Obviously Clattery you’ve never either corrected or submitted term papers. If a paper was ever turned in that way alright OK thye would be marked down. Ask any teacher if that is humanly possible. Anyone who would say they are the same just doesn’t get it. This is just more of the sad blog hogwash. Pee in the pool my eye. It’s more like drool at the table.

  517. Clattery,
    It seems to me that the only person “dribbling” is you. It is getting pathetic to the point of being laughable. And to check people’s IP addresses only makes you appear as paranoid. I really think we struck a personal nerve..perhaps as Durkee suggested instead of being spurned someone (you) has a little thing going with poor Nantee. That’s the way it seems to me and probably to ME who doesn’t share the same IP add5ress. This is goijng from the absurd to the downright foolish. This isn’t about peeing in anyone’s pool, Clattery, it’s about people like you who want to take their ball and go home when things don’t go their way. And that is typical.

  518. Durkee,
    Discussing critics, literay useage or grammar with you is useless. I could hardly be bothered. Suffice to sya I suppose Clattery doesn’t view your wrongheaded blithering as an attack. Anyone who dares to utter the tripe you do in public is not worthy of a response.

  519. Hi Henry,

    Now, you attack me. Hah. Whatever.

    But alright (and I do prefer that spelling). As a poet, I can write it any durn way I please, whether you can find the references or whether you had a limited instructor in school who didn’t know squat about usage or not.

    Here’s the pavement talk from yours truly. And I need it now to illustrate the point you are making to the readers of this thread through your responses, what you are ultimately communicating, whether you like it or not. Let’s assume that you’re just dense. You just cannot think things through the way others might expect. This seems to be the case, and would make you stupid–not your fault, a physical limitation that no amount of schooling or self-study will allow you to overcome. It’s so interesting that when I have corrected you, you get insistent, and your attacks have an air of defensiveness. So let’s assume you are stupid.

    Yet, shouldn’t you be applauded for your self-study, your seeking, your willingness to engage. It’s sort of like the American Idol singers who cannot sing.

    Applied to the subject at hand, I wonder now what good it is to try to raise the level of discourse on poetry forums, when people are simply limited. How far can the raising of consciousness go? Can people in society, and specifically on poetry forums, be expected to see themselves objectively? The prerequisite to participating in a poetry forum is the ability to sign in, and then to type.

    C.

  520. Clattery says this: “People should not be hounded into being shut ins, because a popular online sport or fetish is to attack them.”

    Clattery, old bean, of the several smart observations you and others have made this might be the smartest. This is the crux of the problem isn’t it? This is the consequence of the kind of online predation one can find on the poetry board circuit. Rather than engage their attackers many people simply shut-in, as you put it, and leave the scene. The problem is particularly pernicious on boards where the ad hominem attacks are, for one reason or another, sanctioned by management. And trying to reason with the attacker, pointing out as much, is not possible, it never works. Similarly, and going back to the Tannen thesis concerning argument for its own sake, in such an environment in which conversation is bound by fierce disputation, there is the same end: the quiet ones leave. This is always a shame to me and for two reasons. First, I hate seeing people bullied. Secondly, and more pointedly, there is that the quieter folk, as often as not, have the really nuanced things to say, things that make me stop, look up, pay attention, and that show me something new. And time and time again I’ve noticed that when the quieter ones leave the conversation is the poorer for it.

    I guess I don’t know if there is a solution to the problem, at least not a perfect solution. To have an animus against someone or something means to have developed an irrational dislike of that person or thing. And you never can reason with someone whose behavior is irrational. Which behavior seems to be once again on display in the present exchange.

    Such a shame.

    Tere

  521. Well at least Me, Clive and several others feel exactly the opposite of you Tere and your rather simplistic and self-serving analysis. So of course we all must be irratioal and you of course are rational. Please don’ make me laugh out loud. The points people see and respond differently. The problem is in blogs people like you Tere and Clattery demand, insist we all fall into line under your dull, wrong-headed points of view. I am sorry but that will never happen and I suggest rather than accuse everyone of being irrational you try accepting the fact that nobody is following your lead.

  522. Me, and ME and Clive and other don’t appear to be shut-ins. In fact the ONLY problem seems to be that we are not, except of copurse we aren’t little lambs. Did you ever stop and think Tere that YOU might be the real problem o clattery that YOU might be. Or dd that possibility simply escape you?

  523. It reminds me the the philosophical problem o hears requently posed. There are three people in a boat. The boat can only support two. The question always is: Who would you throw out of the boat? The answer really is: Who says you have the authority or ability to throw anyone out. Perhaps they should toss you out. Most people can’t solve this problem. This is an ongoing example of that dilema.

  524. You still will not address the issues. You cannot see that? You don’t see how you phrase things in an insulting manner? Does it make you feel better to talk to people the way you do. Here in your last seven minutes of posting:

    “your rather simplistic and self-serving analysis”

    “Please don’ make me laugh out loud.”

    “under your dull, wrong-headed points of view”

    “Did you ever stop and think”

    “Or dd that possibility simply escape you?”

    Henry, listen up. These remarks are stupid. They are unsubstantiated attacks on people. A friend of mine used to refer to remarks such as these as dribblings of a masturbating mind. There is nothing persuasive about them, nor is there anything of value to them. They are insults blurted out. Your defense is that because they come from you, that should make them acceptable.

    This isn’t a boat where only two can fit. It’s a pool wherein anyone can come in and take a swim. How do we get the pee out of the pool? How do we keep people from peeing in the pool? How do we keep people from treating others disrespectfully?

    C.

  525. To Arthur and Tere:

    Thank you for not getting on the I HATE NANETTE bandwagon.

    To Henry the “Just” and “Me.”:

    I am not a racist.
    First of all, I was brought up in upper middle class. I had a sociopath for a mother and I have taken more responsibilty for myself than either of you could ever do. EVER. I fought against rape, almost was murdered, all trying to survive with no family and no help. I worked for many years in entry level jobs and NOT so entry level jobs. I put myself through school and graduated with honors at a late age.

    I take care of a schizophrenic husband and brought him back from the brink of death and extreme drug addiction when the “system” wouldn’t do anything. I fought the system to the point of getting up on a table in a hospital my husband was in and telling the idiot “social worker” that if they didn’t get him treatment that he was not coming home. And guess what? My so called whining got him treatment when they were ready to let him go out and be an addict again and die. I nursed him back from that and a stroke and I take care of him. Do you take care of a schizoprenic?

    As far as being racist, only someone who spent decades with no family, and no help whatsoever knows about the RACISM of the system. Try being white and not a scummy person in the system. I was the one being treated in a reverse-racist manner. When I am asking for food stamps and a more than one black worker tells me white people can’t get food stamps, who is the racist? And who is the liar and the bully? And it’s not even legal.

    Second of all, when I go for a job, and the interviewer tells me to my face that they have to hire on affirmative action quotas, don’t you dare tell me that I am a racist for telling what happened. Who is really the racist?

    I didn’t live in public housing until a few years ago. My life story is not average. I survived extreme violene, a sociopath mother, two crazy brothers, rape, was almost murdered, have a disease that you wouldn’t want and I could go on and on.

    I am the one who is discriminated against. And I still say, the world would be a better place, if someone who could DO the job GOT the job, and not the one who is being given a handout.

    As far as my poetry, I don’t care if you like it. But to say it is immature, when there are so many poets on these boards writing like fifth graders and writing about fairies and tulips, you have a vendetta against me.

    Also, the internet is full of blogs that opine on their passionate interests. I am not a whiner; I am trying to get out messages about some of the injustices in this country. If you don’t like it, don’t read it.

    And just because I don’t like Barney Frank, doesn’t make me a racist either. He WAS one of the people who caused the meltdown.

    I have taken responsibilty for my life. I have been through more than you could ever deal with and now I take responsibilty for my husband’s life. I do something that many people in my “real” life have commended me for. They said they don’t know how I do it.

    You remind me of the jerk who harasses me from the student loan company. Are you he? By the way, I paid off my first student loans when I wasn’t eating. So don’t tell me I don’t take responsibility.

    Come here, Henry and ME – come to the ghetto – you wouldn’t last one minute and I’m a woman.

    You both make me sick.

  526. ME:

    I am NOT on welfare.

    There are a few things that no one is taking into consideration. After living most of my life, I have realized, and actually always knew, that there are some lives that are not lived in the mainstream of what people think is normal, and it is usually not the person’s fault.

    Most people in America have a family and usually that family behaves as a doctor would: DO NO HARM. But some people are unlucky enough to be born into crazy, mean, psychopathic, sociopath families. All boundaries, borders, rules, paradigms are broken. The one in the family who is not crazy is scapegoated to the point of being ruined and even stalked and having any opportunities ruined.

    ME and Henry the Just: Were you kicked out of your house at 17 with no winter coat, no money and told to fend for yourself? Were you a young girl who had to do anything to just survives? And then did you pick yourself up, teach yourself to type, spend days in the library reading to learn what everyone else already knew? Did you find yourself in dangerous situations that most of the time would have or could have led to your death or mutilation, just so you could earn a tiny living?

    Did your family spy on you and find out you got scholarships to top theatre conservatories and make phone calls to ruin it for you? Or show up at your little hovel of a rooming house and cause scenes to purposely get you thrown out, or call jobs to start problems for you? Did your parents refuse to even let you come home for ONE DAY after after a brutal rape, after a week long hospital stay after almost being murdered? When you tried to start a new life and got cast in a play in New York, did your slimy brother show up on orders of your mother to ruin that too by yelling at the director when he wasn’t even supposed to be in the theatre?

    Did you continue to try for decades to pull yourself up and do ANY job to survive, did you get humiliated by bosses who spilled coffee on you and then told you to clean it up in front of everyone and you had to do it or you’d get evicted?

    Did you have a father who told a woman-beater to take you in so the father wouldn’t have to deal with the ravings of the sociopathic mother?

    Did it take you a lifetime to go to college because your mother refused, even with all their money to fix your overbite, so teeth were messed up one by one, and every dime you earned went to saving those teeth?

    Did you spend years being turned away from jobs, so people who can barely put a sentence together, who got the job to satisfy quotas, and are LIVING AT HOME, can get the job, while I am living in a room the size of a cell with no kitchen and am begging to work and NOT BE ON WELFARE?

    Do you have a deadly disease and still continue to apply for work? Are you at an age of almost retirement and being told you’re a bum, because you are now very tired?

    It is always the people who haven’t been unlucky enough to find themselves in the SYSTEM who tell me that I am ridiculing poor people. They see it all from afar, on the news or in books. The system is not geared to white people who lose their way. It is geared to people who WANT to be in the system. And yes, I do ridicule the people in the system – because it’s a vicious circle. Most are uneducated to the point of not being able to put a sentence together. They hate whitey. They are ignorant of the fact that welfare was begun for white women. They have taken over the system and made it a con game. That is why there was welfare reform.

    My husband is Spanish. He has done terrible thins in his life, but is now a good man. But when he goes with me to get help, things go smoother. If I am by myself, I am shunned, ridiculed and made to jump through hoops while drug addicts and women with 18 babies are fawned over.

    And the people, most of them, who work in the system are people you, Henry and you, ME, wouldn’t want to meet in an alley.

    Also, I have received emails from people from the boards who related stories to me about a relative of theirs, who was white and was treated the same way. UNLESS YOU ARE IN THE SYSTEM, you know nothing about what goes on.

    I was attacked by a crackhead and one of those “workers” you say I am not superior to, actually said that it’s okay to attack me because I’m white.

    In a very successful memoir that came out this year, the woman author says her mother went to welfare and was turned down by the black workers (illegal.) So, there ARE people out there who know I am correct in what I say. Yet, where are you then? How come you’re not calling her a racist or the people who have emailed me?

    As far as being a right wing Bill O’Reilly bully – you are the same as all irate Dems – you actually think that I or anyone who doesn’t agree with you are not able to think for themselves. I don’t need Bill O’Reilly to tell me what Barney Frank did. He specifically said that poor people, no matter their inocome should be given houses. I also stated on my blog that I do NOT like Bush. That I am NOT a Republican.

    Is this still America or not? EVEN if I were a Republican, I would have a right to be.

    Bush, Clinton, Frank, Dodd, Wall STreet – they all caused the problem. So why are you singling me out to call me a right wing bully. I am an equal opportuniy whistle blower.

    And for your information, Carolyn Maloney’s office is wrong when they say they can’t change laws. Then why are they in office?

    And if you really read what I wrote about the SSI laws, you would see that I am NOT ASKING FOR A HANDOUT. I am asking for basic civil rights that YOU have to save my own money.

    It’s funny, that someone on TCP.org wrote to me twice last week stating that what the SSI laws do is inhuman to the spouse taking care of the disabled spouse. See, some people get it.

    And if you are going to call me a whiner, why not call all the bloggers who are on the net whiners?

    Funny how you will stand by someone else to stick up for them when they are druggies and scum, but not for me. And until you live where I live, have gone through what I’ve gone through, have SEEN with my own eyes what goes on, and don’t get your info from the news – then don’t you dare tell me about poor people.

    Most poor people in urban ghettos are not the nicest, cleanest, most moral people and you would be scared to have to live here. You would run! You remind me of a friend I had who said the same stuff to me, so I invited her over – she was too scared – all of a sudden all her lofty principles are the poor and the minorities went out the window – she came to the front of the building and wouldn’t come in and she was shaking because three drug addicts were bothering her. Yet, she had the nerve to tell me I’m “badmouthing’ them. Limousine liberal.

    As far as my poetry, why are you picking on me? Most poets on these boards are worse. And who are you both anyway? COWARDS. Hiding behind your fake names. I could list at least thirty poets on .com and .org who are worse poets than I am.

    “Rancid heart” – big deal – I suppose you never used the “wrong” phrase in a poem or piece of writing and afterit was published, wished you could change it.

    Until you’ve lived in my shoes, don’t judge. I have persevered through more than you could ever know. I see people kill themselves over 1/1000th of what I’ve been dealt in life. We don’t all come into this world with good cards. I’ve made the best of what I was dealt.

    And if you think my blog is vitriolic, how come you aren’t criticizing the REAL right wing blogs? Or standing up for the little old lady who was shoved by the people protesting yesterday about Prop 8?

    You think you are so Democratic, so above me morally, but I’m fighting for the rights of the disabled and their spouses. Because I bet you didn’t think this far: The main reason the mentally ill roam the streets and push people under subway cars, etc, is because of these laws that take away the financial rights of the VERY people (spouses) who would be willing to take care of them. If people could marry the disabled without having THEIR own rights taken away, then maybe YOU wouldn’t be afraid of one who was acting strange in public without their medication.

    Again – what is your motive? There are thousands and thousands of bloggers who are really right wing – why aren’t you bullying them? You also ignore the fact that I am not a Republican.

    What you refuse to understand is that if my mother and brothers were doing what they did to me today, in 2008, they’d be arrested for child abuse. What you don’t understand is that I have a RIGHT to my views and that my views stem from actually LIVING in the system. I also invetigate what the news says and you take things on face value.

    What you don’t realize is that you are a hypocrite. It’s okay with you for Democrats to bully others and for less cause, but I am not allowed, according to you, to speak about a Congresswoman who refuses to listen to what I’m saying,and not just me, my husband, who was UBER polite and crying at the treatment he received by her.

    WHEN YOU HAVE MY LIFE, THROW STONES. By the way, where is YOUR poetry? And come out of the closet and say who you really are, you coward.

  527. two more things:

    you can’t have it both ways. You make fun of me for doing entry level jobs and on the other hand, you say I don’t take responsibity for myself.

    and that “friend” who said I was a racist, but wouldn’t come into the building – guess what? She was in her forties and we both lost our jobs at the same time – but guess what? Her parents bought her a condo. My mother laughed at me.

    ANd still, I went on. I survived anyway. You don’t get that people’s lives don’t all fall into your nice clean categories. I bet if you didn’t have a vendetta against me, and it was some other poet or writer, you’d have compassion and see my side of things.

    Also: where are you when liberal upper middle class poets “try” to write poetry about poverty and homelessness and it comes off as garbage? At least mine are written from hands-on expeience.

    And guess what? If I’m such a jerk, how come there are some people in the system who actually thought I was a spy or a newspaper reporter? Why? Because, yes, I do stand out – I don’t look like, think like, talk like, act like 99.9% of the people in the system.

    You wouldn’t last one hour in the system. They’d eat you alive. What you don’t get it this: Hell hath no fury like a woman put into a situation she doesn’t belong in and is then ridiculed by the likes of you and the scum in the system.

    Come here. I’ll sic a few druggies on you. By the way, could you handle walking through bullets, music so loud your apartment shakes, crack being dealt on the floor beneath you, old people getting beaten to a pulp every day in the lobby? I don’t think so. But I still have the “audacity” to write.

    By the way, how many Pushcart Noms do you have? What good journals have you been published in?

    How many jobs have you been turned away from so an illegal could have it, or so someone who can’t speak English could, or someone acting like a gang member could have it?

    You will not shut me up. You are you anyway? WHy are you more important than me?

  528. Arnold,

    the reason i went to school was to not be homeless when I was told for a decade that i was too old, too smart, too goodlooking, too white to get a job.

    second reason: I used the loan to pay my rent. Have you ever had to do that?

    You are so right. I should not have gone to school. Then I wouldn’t owe $62,000 which was originally $48,000 without penalties and interest. The payments I did make even when i was fighting for food stamps and had no food were basically flushed down the toilet.

    Then, if I didn’t go to school, you would make fun of the fact I was uneducated.

    And yes, they at first said I could take courses that would lead to a job, and it was only AFTER i was enrolled and got the loan money that they called me in and said I had too many transfer credits in theatre and design to take those courses.

    As I’ve said, I have lived in survival mode my whole life and I have survived. WOuld you have, as a woman alone? Don’t think so.

    And guess what? It is unethical for a Congressperson to say they refuse to listen to their constituents. I guess you think I came out of the womb spouting off. No, I played the game, was a good little girl my whole life even as I was raped, attacked, beaten, spied on, screwed by my own family, etc etc and now, I am old and I want to speak. I don’t need your permission.

    Do you really think the Congresspeople are not civil servants paid to work for you and me? You are sadly mistaken.

    And for someone in her office to speak to a schizophrenic man who is shaking and trying to speak from his heart is reprehensible.

    Yes, maybe I am unstable, but not unstable in the “regular” way. I am unstable because I have been through things you couldn’t even imagine. A side of life that you are lucky to not have witnessed or been through. If you read this in a book or saw it in a movie, you would say, “Oh, poor woman.” Especially if I were a minority. Because what I keep trying to say, and no one will hear me is this: There are white families who treat their daughters like crap and set it up for them to fail, who hound them even as adults, who sabotage and set up things that you couldn’t fathom. Did your brother stalk you when you moved to New York because you were asked to go to a theatre program in the summer for free, because they thought you were talented – and said brother came 1000 miles to stalk you, ruin it for you and to lie and try to make you break down, who shoved you into a wall for no reason, who on your way to an audition ripped up your headshots and said your father molested you? Like I wouldn’t know if that happened and when i told him to shut up he threatened to kill me and shoved me again and chased me down the block with a knife? WHo are you to judge me?

    I’m only unstable in a sad way. I have never done anything wrong after all that’s been done to me. But I learned at 5 years old, if you don’t stick up for yourself, you will die. So I have not died yet.

    And yes, I do think it’s ridiculous for a lawyer to take all those loans and someone else’s spot in college if he doesn’t want to be a lawyer. And he doesn’t want to pay his loans. I want to pay mine. I paid my first ones. I would pay them now.

    You are a bully too. You don’t have any idea what you are talking about. I paid one third of my paltry income last year to my loans. Did that guy?

    You, Henry and Me want to have it both ways. You ridicule me for trying and you ridicule me when it doesn’t work.

    You have no idea what I’ve been through.

    I am beginning to believe that one of you is the Sallie Mae stalker who told me to commit suicide because I can’t keep up my payments, who threatened my husband with a baseball bat and who the other day said my “clit” should be hacked with a weedwhacker. You have no idea what goes on in my life.

    You too should come here and see. And guess what? WHen the cops come to this project, if the cop is black and the druggie or shooter or loud music person is black, they tell my husband and me to go to hell. The civilian complaint board even agrees it’s reverse racism.

    I am sick to death of holier than thou people who don’t live like this telling me i’m a racist. The amount of reverse racism is rampant but how would you know? You live in your ivory towers.

    By the way, Henry the Just: I never said, “rancid heart” – I said, rancid politician. I just looked it up.

    I am not a Republican. Why can’t you get that? Used to be that issues – one by one- were the important thing – now everyone is a Dem bully telling me I’m a repub bully. Check my voting card – it says: Independent. That means someone who is not a “party” person, someone who goes by who is the best candidate.

    And look up the facts. Barney Frank is the one who said poor people should have houses. Guess what? I’m poor and if I had the nerve to apply for a house before the meltdown, you would be on my case about that.

    But I’m not stupid enough to think I can afford a house.

    And I’m old enough to remember when merit was what made someone successful. Not skin color.

    It’s amazing to me that while I am an inconsequential person, that the three of you feel the need to harrangue me and hurt me and torture me and bully me. From my experience, it stems from fear and envy.

    I learned that at 5 years old when my mother acted like an envious, jealous B. And if you don’t think I’m right, think about what women do to women in jobs, beauty contests, with men, etc. James Hillman wrote about envy being the stem of evil.

    I am nothing, so why make me so important? I must threaten you in some way.

  529. Please Nanette, you are becoming tiresome with all this bleating. It is what it is and I doubt if I or anyone cares about your poor life story. Put it in a book and see if anyone wants to buy it. My opinion and those of others remains the same regardless of your little temper tantrums and rants. And I don’t owe you anything. MY writing is of no concern to you. YOUR writing should be because it’s trite. and your politics are indeed rancid. Now please go off and blog to your heart’s content. But don’t expect everyone to fawn and fuss because poor poor Nantee had a tough life. BFD. Indeed you d threaten me and everyone like me who sees a phony right wing hate monger whent hey see one.

  530. Clattery,
    We get to make everyone treated with respect when people stop shouting assinie things at the top of their lungs and crying foul when someone tells them it’s assinie. That’s my take on it.

  531. And Clatteyr, I never pretend to be right on everything, so if you will be so kind, pleasedo tell how might one respond to someone who A. Claims poor people who got loas for homes brought it on themselves and are the cause of the housing crisis. B claims as a reliable source the most right wing fringe wrong-headed and ahteful news site inAmerica Faux News and C posts not onloy poems but admiringly congratultes themselves for being published in places that have little or no reputation. Tell em, should we simpy be Mum on such mthings.Or shoudl we kindly sweep them under the rug so the person thinks they are right in their bleatings? What should one do? Say othing? Well, couldn’t it then be said that the person in question might have taken that advice: said nothing?I await your wisdom on this all too pressing problem here in blogosphere

  532. Hi Henry,

    Back at it, I see.

    Look at these quotes from your latest response sequence:

    “you are becoming tiresome with all this bleating”

    “if I or anyone cares about your poor life story”

    “Put it in a book and see if anyone wants to buy it.”

    “your little temper tantrums and rants.”

    “YOUR writing should be because it’s trite. and your politics are indeed rancid.”

    “BFD.”

    “a phony right wing hate monger whent hey see one”

    “We get to make everyone treated with respect when people stop shouting assinie things at the top of their lungs and crying foul when someone tells them it’s assinie”

    “Or shoudl we kindly sweep them under the rug so the person thinks they are right in their bleatings?”

    “By the way, Sarah Palin is a whackjob.”

    Why would anyone spend so much time insulting people? It makes up about half of what you said.

    C.

  533. And to think Clattery, you didn’t even spend an iota of time finding ANYTHING that your Nanette had to say. Oh my. Do I smell a fraud in you Clattery? I think so. Let me try and set the record straight for you Clattery. You actually THINK no one sees through yuor pretense? You actually think that by singling me out and my comments and ignoring all the vile vicious and rancid rants that Nanette said you have PROVEM somethign? Yes Clattery, you have provenm something to me and otghers. TYou have proven that your argument is faulty and your examinations are biased and slanted. This I would presume under anyone’s guise pegs you as phony. So please. Keep on finding fault with what i say and roll over like a love-sick dog for Nanette. I don’t even have to agrue my point. You have done all the work for me. You really, just don’t get it. You must think people are fools not to see through you. Such a shame. Another vacuous blogger defrocked.
    Oh dear Let’s see, would you like em to pick out your little Nanette’sattacks? Or would that send you into a tailspin. Please you diminish yourself and that wheezing sound you hear is your credibility shooting out of you like a deflated balloon. Sorry. You just can’t cut the mustard Clattery because your knife is so dull.

  534. Friday night and I got three comments.

    Nanette, it is true that cruelty, hard times, bad luck, indifference, injustice, and abuse are all color blind. Your story resonates for biographical reasons I bet a bunch of us can get. On the strength of your blog and the vitae curriculum it includes the devotion to artistic expression comes through. This in spite of a stacked deck. If, however, I’ve learned anything online it is that there is no point in trying to defend or explain oneself. One’s enemies always twist the information to suit their attacks.

    Henry, your behavior here is both trollish and, I suspect, disingenuous. My guess is that your attacks are designed to bring attention to yourself, which is the fundamental motive of all trolls. For what it is worth, I figure your kind of behavior has, in large measure, contributed to a certain atmosphere of distrust on the poetry board circuit. But Clattery said it better. Yours is just a bit more pee in the pool.

    And Clattery, old bean, I figure you are a better man than I.

    Tere

  535. We do not see things as they are, but as we are ourselves.
    — Henry M Tomlinson (1873-1958)

    We don’t see things as they are. We see them as we are.
    — Anais Nin (1903-1977)

    We see things as we are, not as they are.
    — Leo Rosten (1908-1997)

    We see things not as they are, but as we are.
    — Stephen Covey

    Longer version of the Corey quote: “Each of us tends to think we see things as they are, that we are objective. But this is not the case. We see the world, not as it is, but as we are—or as we are conditioned to see it.”

    We: you, me, he, she, they: we.

    That’s what’s so powerful about art–it can let us see through someone else’s eyes.

  536. “The time has come,” the Walrus said,
    “To talk of many things:
    Of shoes and ships and sealing wax,
    Of cabbages and kings;
    And why the sea is boiling hot
    And whether pigs have wings.”

    – Lewis Carroll

  537. Sorry, I dozed off. Did I happen to miss the paart where Clattery cited Nanette’s angry attack comments or should I stil be waiting? Thanks. Do tell when they arrive. I have also sent along the tiniest violin in the world to accompany poor Tere’s bleeding heart speech about Nanette. Tere, let’s just say the feeling is mutual regarding you. Talk about being a self centered to the point of needing attention. Ahem Tere old bean you started with this silly drivel about YOUR sad encounters. So please cry me a river.Call me when Clattery gets around to noting your attack or Nanette’s. I will be anxiously waiting, as I suspect others are as well.

  538. Perhaps I should announce that my work is in Folger’s. Is that sufficient recognition or do I need to list some obscure barely read online journal as well???? Just asking.

  539. From one Henry to another:

    “Sorry, I dozed off.”

    HenrytheJust

    “Only that day dawns to which we are awake.”

    Henry David Thoreau

  540. Yes, and then there’s this:

    ‘Tis well said again,
    And ’tis a kind of good deed to say well;
    And yet words are no deeds.

    King Henry the Eighth

  541. I have finally finished reading all the way through this. There are some very outstanding things said and points made. There are some very vitrolic, redundant and unworthy things said. I have been on a numerous amount of poetry sites. I have been flamed, cursed, told that my work is every thing from lower than whale shit to outstanding. I question those that make remarks about others work then refuse to show thier own. What are they hiding? Are they so ashamed to let someone read? If you don’t care for something why expend the energy to persue it? Would these same people go to an art gallery and state as loudly the paintings are all crap? Would they go to a concert, stand up in the middle of the show and yell this is crap? Are they afraid that someone will read thier work and say crap? If someone wishes to state they find my work crap, I have no problem as long as they give me the same oppertunity. I find it hard to believe how far this sort of pervasiveness goes. One has to wonder at the age and maturity level of some of the posters here. I am not an educated man, but that does not mean I am not a smart man. I understand my weaknesses as well as I understand my better aspects. Is it right for someone to be other than civil to me, no. I have yet to experience the admin/mod parent to child side on poetry boards. Except maybe by thier not stepping in when they should have, and at PFFA where I was told because my critique was not up to “thier” standard I would have to post on the begining level. I wonder if I could have gotten banned there. I know I have spoken with Mr Terreson before, I think I even rember him when I first was on AOL at the time you still paid for five hours a day…
    I know Mr Durkee from another site I have posted on. I recognise a lot of names here. I have posted on a lot of the sites mentioned here. Does the experiences of others open my eyes? Yes. Will it stop me from posting? No. Will I rally against censorship and other forms of abuse? You bet I will. As a mod on two different sites, I have only ever once had to tell someone that they had violated the posted rules, and it was just a case of informing more than telling. I hope this discussion brings about lots of changes for the better. Thank you everyone for the very interesting dialogue, the reading, and a few laughs.

  542. How interesting, i’d assumed this discussion would have died already.

    Couple of things to note- It’s hard to argue against the fact that you, Dave, screwed up royally in your petty politicking when Jan became a TCP admin- what happened after I left, following a period of stability and productivity, attests to that. I take some joy out of the fact that, when it comes to australian poetry and internationally, i’m publishing in journals that jan could only dream of, getting paid to appear at festivals that Jan could only dream of, and getting book offers that jan could only dream of. All that stuff is many years ago, but i’d be lying if i said there wasn’t a part of me that relishes proving people wrong- I’m a nice guy but I have a long memory.

    And, on the issue of banning, i doubt there’s any evidence to back up your assertion; but i do remember clowns like The Light and his many guises who came to the site time and time again, and who i was always proactive in banning. And at the Gaz, where I’ve been happily and productively participating now for a few years, i’m usually amongst the first to point out trollish behaviour and point new writers in the direction of communities that’ll be more amenable to their writing.

    Shortly after leaving TCP I started, with Susan Culver, a workshop associated with the ezine Lily Lit Review, which i was helping edit. For quite a while we had a lot of activity and some really productive writing and workshopping from people I’d personally invited from a few other communities, many of whom were sick of the sorts of rubbish that went on at and seems to still go on at tcp. While Lily Forum seems to have ceased, i’m happy that i was able to contribute to getting like minded people involved with each other.

    On another note, I really must say that Nanette is a high quality person and high quality writer. Not sure where she posts these days, but any community with her in it is stronger for it, and any magazine that publishes her has good taste. And anyone who insults her is probably an abject fool.

    There are some wonderful people in the world of online boards and some sad, pathetic people- generally speaking, the latter need attention, often can’t write very well and spend far too much time attacking the good ones and politicking amongst themselves to feed their egos, which musn’t get fed enough elsewhere. It’s a bit unfortunate, really.

    sam b

  543. “‘Tis well said again,
    And ’tis a kind of good deed to say well;
    And yet words are no deeds.

    King Henry the Eighth”

    Henry, it has been established in this thread that you do not like or respect Nanettes’s politcs, personality or poetry. It has also been established that she in turn neither likes nor respects what she knows of yours. Now what?

  544. “And anyone who insults her is probably an abject fool.”

    Oh boy. I guess that told me. Talk about being a fool. Anyone who makes such claims as Sam really eneds to get thier head measured for a tin foil hat.

  545. Words well said, Steve. And I am impressed that you bothered to take in the whole of the thread’s conversation. It is also impressive the way you’ve brought back into focus the several issues at play. That is what is imnportant: the focus.

    And, Sam, it is good to see your thoughts too. I guess I’ve known you since late ’04. Hitting on four years now. I’ve always been taken by the soundness of your intuition. One thing, however. I’ve noticed how the present conversation ebbs and flows. To some extent it has taken on a life of its own. It seems to start up again when someone newly suffers an injustice on a poetry board. The case gets stated. The lines get drawn again. The argument rises from its own ashes. My feeling is that the conversation should not, cannot die. Not until the board management on some certain boards owns up to its mistakes, reforms itself, changes certain procedures and protocol.

    As an aside, and at the risk of pissing some people off, with the case of board abuse Nanette brought to the blog, I notice that I have to note again the name of a board mentioned before, and more than a few times, in the context of banning. TCP really should take stock of itself. It seems pretty clear to me there is a culture there not exactly healthy.

    Something else. I was a mod at TCP when Sam was an admin there. This would have been before the board’s present class of admins, but for one individual, was in place. Hell, Dave was still a mod even, or so I recall. I have no recollection of Sam being trigger happy at the ban button.

    And now for something else that, in my view, puts more pee in the pool. There is the inclination on way too many boards to clique formation. A set of established, long standing members both dominate the rap and they tend to comment on each other’s poetry, almost to the exclusion of everyone else. Point in case. I’ve been visiting a well established board for a few months. Guidelines call for no more than two original poems posted per week, per member, with two to three comments given on the poetry of others. My habit has been to give five comments and post one poem per week. I am lucky to get two comments in the first month. After that my poetry has all but been consigned to the dust bin. Enough people know my poetry to know I ain’t a shabby practitioner in the art. So I am satisfied that the paucity of commentary is not a reflection of the quality of my poetry. I am not just a good poet. I am exceptionally good.

    If poetry boards are to keep vital the cliques have got to go, they need to be killed off. If I say the clique mentality reminds me of my high school days, what I mean is that the habit is immature to the extreme. It needs to stop. It is stifling the workshop-ping. On this particular board, I commented on a poem that struck me big time. I then got a PM from another member, someone who knows the poet’s work better than I. In effect she said, ‘Thank you for saying something. He is a good poet. He gets very little attention here.’

    ‘He gets very little attention here.’ That is a strange thing to have to say about a convocation of poets.

    Tere

  546. Good to see you recognising just how good your work is, Tere.

    I seem to have caused a stir at the Gaz today. oops. I wish people would just behave like adults and not get defensive every time someone (usually me) attempts to actually engage them in conversation. I’ve never been a fan of the ‘don’t crit the critter’ adage- not all crits are equal, not all poems are equal, and trying to pretend that they are is just silly.

    Simple psychological fact- people who have good positive self images are able to take pleasure in the success of others; people who don’t get threatened by it.

  547. Sam-the-man, your bit of insight is so to the point. That is exactly what it is. Once again your intuitive ability clears a certain volume of atmosphere. And let me add to what you say. I’ve come to divide poetry board people into two camps. There are those who are in it for poetry itself, for poetry as a thing-in-itself, irrespective of their own personal stake in it or claim to it. Then there are those for whom poetry is compensatory and for whom board participation is also compensatory.

    The first group has a certain capacity for finding poetry in the poem no matter its form, rules of procedure, or local coloration. (One scholar brought attention to something he called a “poetry of thought,” the eternal thing.) In my view, these individuals time and time again show, what may be, an instinctive largeness in their poetry comprehensions, or for what makes a poem poetry.

    The second group, however, tends to judge the poetry of others by their own preconceptions and by their own preoccupations. When they comment on a poem they are not commenting on the poem as a thing-in-itself. They are commenting on themselves and on what it is they themselves are looking to make. In my view, individuals belonging to the second group operate in the spirit of bad faith.

    By the way, there is everything wrong with the ‘don’t crit the critter’ dictum. It is both emasculating and eviscerating.

    And, Dragonman, I am off to your link. It seems like I’ve read it before. But I want to refresh my memory.

    Tere

  548. “I am not just a good poet. I am exceptionally good.”

    – Terreson

    “Those who say do not know.
    Those who know do not say.”

    – Lao tzu

  549. P.S. Post #592 has been corrected(I left a line out).

    This poem was originally about politics today, but, somehow, it seems to apply to most of the arguments I have found here.

  550. Me,

    How do you know Blogger removed Nanette’s blog? Would the message be different if she had removed them herself?

  551. Just my luck. The first time in my career I toot my own horn and along comes a resurrected Chinese man to bust me.

    Tere

  552. Maybe it was all taken down because of this posted on Septmeber 15, 2008:

    http://www.studentloanjusticeexposed.com/2008/09/15/meet-the-riveras-from-student-loan-justice/

    Meet the Rivera’s from Student Loan Justice
    September 15th, 2008 · No Comments
    Wow, I logged in this morning to find 30 comments. I’ve had some busy times on this website, but this definitely beats anything I’ve encountered this far. Most of the comments are from Nanette and MJ Rivera. I’ve received many absolutely insane comments from Nanette but this is my first time meeting her husband. Talk about a match made in heaven? I’ll post all of their comments in one long string here for everyone to read. Most have to do with them believing that they are exposing me to the world by giving out my name and phone number. The only problem with that notion is that they are wrong.

    The following comments are from Nanette Rayman Rivera:

    Thanks for putting me at the top of your ugly website. And Dog’s wife is not beautiful.

    On to student loans. You ARE Sallie Mae, right? So why should we pay when you steal the payments and don’t credit the account?

    Aren’t you an old geezer with hair in your ears and you work for Sallie Mae because they pay you alot, but you really hate them too? Aren’t you dickless and a reallyl ugly piece of nothing that ruins peoples’ lives to get your rocks off and the big bucks? And if this guy, Jay is so annoying to you, why isn’t he at top of page?

    How come the more you pay Sallie Mae, the more you owe them?

    I hope Alan Collinge gets to beat the crap out of you and you run home to Mommy. Oh, right, you’re too old for that.

    Could you pay my loans for me? Why don’t you come out in the open and say who you are? Is it because you ARE Sallie Mae and they pay you to have this ugly, boring, disgustingly plain blog? Couldn’t you at least make it look good?

    I hope you get sick and can’t pay your bills.

    How come you have so much trouble spelling?

    And how come all the SALLIE MAE bitches who call me are Latrinas? How come they can’t speak English properly? How come they lie and steal? Come here to the ghetto – see how long you last – I know a few guys who’d love to break you bad. Then we’ll see what a bad-ass you really are, SALLIE. A guy named Sallie.

    That’s right. I am insane. I’m insane because I paid my first loans and I don’t deserve to have my life ruined by Congress and Alan Lord paying them off. Maybe if this stupid country got rid of affirmative action, people like me could actually get jobs. Where would you be without SALLIE???? You’d be looking for work too and you wouldn’t get a damn thing – oh no, there goest your FANNIE MAE house – oh no, Mr. Sally. Alan Lord is a piece of crap.

    I contacted the Ombudsman. They are shit too. They told me my loan was already in default and it wasn’t. They won’t help. They are part of the crud.

    Who are you kidding?

    She’s not beautiful. You really are crazy. She might be nice, but not beautiful. But I guess to a guy like you who probably looks like a frog, anyone is beautiful. And of course, you love people who get the bad guy, so how come you’re with Sallie Mae?

    I hope you get sick like some of us and can’t pay your bills either. Then you’ll be the biggest whiner ever.

    You are shit.

    The following are from MJ Rivera…..enjoy the madness:

    Oh yeah – so how come disabled people can’t get discharge options.

    You are exposed now, (name deleted). I know your cell phone number too, pal.

    So you are going to screw everyone because you don’t like Alan?

    1-###-###-#### – that’s your #, right, Mr. (name deleted), Mr. gradgurl, Henry Bones, sASSie MAE

    1-###-###-####

    THAT’S YOUR PHONE #, RIGHT, (name deleted) THE UGH a NOT

    POSTING YOUR NAME AND NUMBER EVERYWHERE – your undercover routine is over, buddy

    ###-###-#### – it’s all over the web now, (name deleted), Sallie Mae hit man, slug, lowlife

    isn’t your phone number ###-###-####

    isn’t your name (name deleted) and you grew up in a cult, you idiot and you are a toad just like Yolanda Holman at Sallie Mae who refuses to credit people’s accounts after they send in payments?

    aren’t you a guy with a tiny penis and a big, big, big ego? and you have nothing to offer the world except your contempt for people in trouble?

    (name deleted) you are a piece of __________

    I don’t have enough time to copy and paste them all, but it continues like this for about 15 more comments. Since I have never actually had the pleasure of meeting this wonderful couple I can’t speak about their level of sanity, but the above comments should help you decide for yourself. As always, keep the comments coming.

  553. Hi Peggy,

    I have been considering whether to delete your comments. Normally I would, but they are an example of a flame, intended to be inflammatory and take this thread off its subject matter for some issue supposedly more important. So, as an inflammatory remark, they are part of the pee in the pool, as it were, and can stand as a warning and example of what should not be taking place on the poetry forums.

    Some years back someone had thought through the different type of flames, and listed them. If my memory serves, one was that a flamer would keep records of anything that could be construed as negative that the “stalked” poster had ever posted, and then use it against the person when the time was right to pounce. This is interesting, because instead of any one of the thousands of poetry posts wherein Nanette has discussed poetry, or of the poetry she has written, we have here the case of when she was trying to take on the corruption and mismanagement she saw in Sallie Mae.

    So now what should Nanette do, if I am not going to delete this post? How would you like it? Why should she, who was addressing this issue of Sallie Mae on that blog, have to come here, and defend herself against attacks of insanity and her views on student loans as the issue relates to the government?

    You see, this flame could take us seriously off the topic. It’s actually quite difficult to relate your post to Terreson’s essay, except that it stands for what can happen online, a type of flame. We are certainly not here to attack anyone personally, are we? And you certainly did not give an example of when it ought to be okay to do so, did you?

    You say that she needs help, but not of the poetic kind. Interesting that she visits poetry boards often to get and give help and discussion on the poetry she writes. And who are you to say that she need any other kind of help? In the outside chance that you are correct, and considering that she has not broken any laws such as Charles Manson or Bonnie and Clyde have, what difference would that make? Let’s say she takes your advice (which is what you want, right?) gets psychiatric help and gets diagnosed with superpsychocalimanicfragilisticdementiaschizoidocious, something quite atrocious. Should she also have had to suffer the put downs of an bunch in a poetry blog discussion? No. But you wanted to accomplish a put-down, like putting down Nanette would have any good bearing on this discussion. No good can come of it.

    C.

  554. I guess some people are willing to justify just about anything Peggy.
    I found your posting of her posting on another site just one more example of the strange behavior if not dnagerous of Nanette. Clattery can think or justify anything he wants and does. You andI and others know differently. That I am afriad is another important part of thge pee in the pool theory –i.e. moderators who despite logic and fact continue to defend a losing and wrong-headed idea. That I am afriad happens all the time in poetry forums as it happens here. But the fact remains no matter how much Clattry tries to defend Nanette abhorant behavior the majority of readers realize the pure ignorance of trying to do so. Clattery you are acting like some miffed moderator because things aren’t going your way. Typical.

  555. And I for one Peggy do not read this as a put down but a fact and some folks just want to disregard facts if they get in the way of their typical fawning. (wink wink nudge nudge)

  556. Hi Henry the just,

    Another misread by you of what I wrote, which also shows a persistent misunderstanding of the points that are being revealed by some of the posters here, you included. You must not understand that every time you post, you take another step in making yourself an example of what poets have to put up with, just to read and share poetry online. No one should have to go through the ordeal that you would like Nanette to go through. She is not to be judged here, and thus should never be defended.

    And I did not defend Nanette. There is no need to defend Nanette. There is no need to defend her, because she should not be under attack in the first place.

    You have been an attacker. Peggy now is another. You are the ones in need of defense, for taking up bandwidth for the mere sake of attacking an online poet. Nanette’s issues with Sallie Mae need not concern us, no matter how you would like people to read or misread them, yet there they are regurgitated in this thread, as if posterity won’t see who’s the problem here.

    This thread, and no other thread that I know of in the poetry world, is a proper place to attack a poet. Like I said, I should delete all posts where Nanette is attacked because in their intent, they have absolutely nothing to do with the discussion at hand. They are so egregious, however, and blatant, that they stand as examples for all readers as more pee in the pool of online poetry.

    C.

  557. Clattery,

    Obviously I disagree. I would however be glad to let people judge for themselves whether commenting on a poet’s behavior beyond the page is appropriate or not. (Dear mee but I do so love that poet. Too bad he’s a Nazi.”)
    I am also more than happy to let people judge fopr themselves just exactly who is peeing in the pool.
    I think you missed the point entirely. The question posed by poster named “Me” was that her blofg had been taken down. It surely wasn’t taken down because of “bad” poetry, at least i don’t assume so. I think Peggy was trying to point out one of the many possible reasons it was taken down, hence, the posting. Peggy did not attack anyone. She merely posted what was free and easy ont he inetrnet. But you proceed to attack her for being what? Factual? This is a silly conversation. Your opinion that you hold so dearly rmains yours, as mine does to me. I think comments like your represent the problem with poetry sites and you think mine are. Humm. Shall we check a book somewhere to prove which opinion isfactual or should we merely resolve to understand that I’m right and you’re wrong or visa versa. Your defense of poor Nannette are becoming hilarious. What next for you Calttery: defending Sarah Palin as a world class thinker?

  558. Henrythejust,

    Why are we commenting here on Nanette’s behavior? This thread has nothing to do with Nanette. Nothing.

    Why are we commenting on her blog being taken down? This thread has nothing to do with her blog not being there any longer. Nothing.

    Why are we taking Nanette’s posts from elsewhere on the internet and posting them here? This thread has nothing to do with the way she fought with Sallie Mae. Nothing!

    Nothing, nothing, nothing, at all!

    Period, damn it!

    I have no defense for Nanete, as she needs none. There is no good reason for this thread to be taken over by a gang hell bent on attacking a poet.

    So just stop it! It’s beyond classless. It’s insistent and disgusting.

    I will remove all posts that speak about Nanette in a derogatory fashion from here on out.

    ~~~

    To all readers,

    Let is be noted that the above attack on Nanette, the way she has been attacked by a single poster, and then the way others have come in as if recruited in gangland fashion, represents how a poet can be drummed off a poetry forum.

    My understanding, from a post ion a poetry forum, is that because of how she has been attacked here, she has left the web on her own, and vowed to not return. You cannot blame her. I only wish she would return, because there are many poets out there who have benefited from her help, and who enjoy her writings.

    C.

  559. This exemplifies exactly why I too have left all online poetry forums, and am unlikely to ever return. The gangland mentality, as you put it, Clattery, is exactly to the point. I for one am glad you’ve left the posts on here that you have, so far, because it exemplifies exactly how these people operate—It’s very educational, from which one can discern not only tactics but the complete and utter lack of logic and objectivity. They reveal so much about themselves by their actions. They reveal more about themselves than they think they do—which is the hallmark of hidden agendas and unconscious motivations. None of this is exactly news, but it does bear the occasional reminder.

    The most telling item that the attackers reveal about themselves is their fundamental insecurity. Their ferocity undercuts their arguments because their emotionalism undercuts all their logic.

    The other telling thing, which drives these actions, is the desire to be always in the right. They have to be right, it’s a compulsion, and it must be achieved at any cost. Being right is more important than being civil—classic childish egoism, even if it is masked as parental or superego superciliousness. If their logic has no teeth then they resort to personal attack. Ad hominem personal attacks are always a deflection and a smoke-screen, and are brought on by their own awareness, on some level, that they are wrong and know it, and will go to great lengths to deny it. So rather than admit to ignorance or error, they go on the attack. This is classic bullying tactics: knock the other person down, wear them down, kick them until they go away. It’s strongarm tactics, and it often works, which is why these folks keep at it.

    This drive to be right, and to prove all others wrong, appears in exactly the same way in those personalities who move in to dominate the boards, and who often become Mods who abuse their power. It shows up in critiques that are designed to belittle, that have a tone of snobbery and know-it-all brilliance, but are really just opinion. When you call them on their ignorance, then you also become a target of attack. The need to be right also shows up in those people who have attacked Terreson directly for his essay by trying to out-smart him; but the fact is, I’ve seen a lot of these attacks fail on purely poetic grounds, when it readily becomes apparent that they just haven’t read enough poetry to bolster their arguments. LOL

    These are people who drive poets off the boards. That they then feel the need to pursue them here—in a continued attempt to be Right at all costs—just underlines the problem. It’s sad and pathetic, really.

  560. If the majority of posters think that reading online poetryalot is the basis of enlightenment when it comes to poetry, then it shows in the comments made by certain people who think this stuff is great. But you can’t help that. If you open up a manhole cover things have a tendency to crawl down into them.

  561. I’m afraid
    of the great reckoning,
    having to see ourselves
    when all grey walls collide
    and every dark oppresses.

    Comfort me, beckoning
    blindly to any help,
    from having to decide
    myself from my impressions.

    .
    Copyright 2005 – Evolving: Poems 1965-2005, Gary B. Fitzgerald

  562. Getting back to the behavior of mods and admins.

    We’ve touched on whatever gets into a person, a moderator or administrator, to be so blinded to the fact that they are not entitled to assume superiority or unhealthy power over the other poets posting at a forum. And the question does not get answered very well, but instead the situation gets illustrated by the way the posts have been made in this thread. This blog thread is quite uncanny this way, the way Terreson’s essay has summoned forth hard examples of what he is talking about, to the tune of nearly 700 comments thus far.

    I was over at Bryan Appleyard’s blog, and he was addressing an entirely different situation, the situation of Robert Mugabe losing control in Zimbabwe. The post is called Which Part of ‘It’s Over’ Don’t You Understand, Mugabe? The post in its entirety is worth reading and commenting on there at Thought Experiments, but here is an excerpt I wanted to snatch:

    I’ve known – and still know – petty tyrants who are plainly doing nothing but harm and yet they persist. This preoccupies me because I keep wondering what I would do if I were such a failed tyrant. I think I would capitulate, not because I am especially virtuous but because my mind is easily changed and I have little sense of my own importance to anybody but myself. This makes me amazed and usually appalled at the spectacle of the ‘strong’ leader – or, perhaps, any leader. How, on earth, do they do it? What do they think they know that gives them any expertise in running the lives of others? Sorry, strange stuff, but that’s the way I am this morning.

    Now, this isn’t meant to say that poetry admins and mods need to be toppled, and their poetry forums taken over with the use of military intervention. It’s a specific question getting raised again in a different, far more extreme, setting. Why cannot people see that they are being tyrants—or even further yet, that they shouldn’t be tyrants? It’s like there is a switch in some if not all people, that can be flipped such that the tyrant in them comes to the fore in certain situations.

    Of course, there is the other switch, whereby people agree to follow tyrants. And let me illustrate that with another extreme example. In A Glimpse of Horror: Read extracts in English from Shin Dong Hyuk’s unprecedented memoir of growing up in one of North Korea’s most brutal prison camps, there are details put forth of how human beings, including children from birth, are being subjected to the most atrocious treatment. But, near the end of the article, Shin Dong Hyuk says this:

    The reason why prisoners don’t resist or rebel goes beyond fear of the armed guards watching over the camp. All prisoners have been brainwashed to believe that they are in the camp for a good reason, that they have done wrong and deserve to be there, and the thought of escape hardly crosses their mind. Most prisoners, including me, believed that they were supposed to be in the camp. My escape wasn’t an act of rebellion against the prison camp system; I was just tired of having to work so much, and I simply wanted to get away.

    Parents report on their children, children on their parents, and neighbors on the people living next door, so an uprising would be impossible. Prisoners may be upset and have gripes against their guards and supervisors, but they never go as far as to think of opposing the prison camp system itself. All they do is suffer in silence. Resistance is simply unthinkable.

    There we have illustrated the other switch that maybe all human beings are able to flip. These are illustrations of the master mentality and slave mentality in people. It’s not pretty.

    The question beyond is whether it is possible to make healthy online communities that are so strong and vibrant, that neither of these frames of mind can take hold.

    C.

  563. Clattery:

    One of the factors that may encourage, if not actually cause, the behaviour you describe is the anonymity offered by the internet. We all modulate our communication based on who we are communicating with. Nobody speaks to one’s boss as they would to their wife, or to their minister as they would the paperboy. We address others relative to whom or what they are. On the internet, we are all basically equal. One cannot know if the other is male or female, 60 years old or 16 years old, a professor or a plumber. This may be a good thing in some ways but, on the other hand, very limiting. And liberating. Anyone can present themselves as anything they want to be. It’s sort of ‘Harry Potterish’ in a way. We can disguise ourselves with our anonymous words. Who are we? Who could we be in anonymity? Guiding lights or pretentious assholes, that’s who. So it is inevitable that this ‘invisibility cloak’ would cause some to take advantage of it and become bullies. The submissive can finally be aggressive with impunity, the weak strong, the frightened fearless.

  564. I addressed the psychology behind the “why do they do this?” question in comments 83 and 183 above. I’ve also addressed it on my own blog, in a post about bullies and the culture of bullying.

    Bullies who are strongmen are often charismatic, and have a strong force of personality that they use to convince others that they are in the right. This variety of charisma is also known to be a factor in the psychological makeup of many diagnosed sociopaths. (Mugabe was at least a sociopath, if not worse.)

    I have seen the marks of this kind of charisma more than once online. You can spot it when someone likes to gather a lot of power to themselves, and likes to be praised, and seen as an expert, and claims to be an expert—but will not tolerate differing viewpoints. Then the fangs are revealed.

    The anonymity factor has also been addressed above, if I recall; I know I’ve written about it extensively, somewhere, if not here. Basically, the truth is as Gary says: the relative anonymity of the internet gives some people the feeling that they can let their darkest selves out to play. This is because the consequences, if any, are hard to enforce; just as in any “lawless frontier.” The blankness of the text-only medium empowers many people to say things they would NEVER say to your face; one often wonders if they are in fact timid or insecure, in real life. The anonymity lets out, as the old SF movie said, “monsters from the Id.” (That’s from the movie “Forbidden Planet,” and if there was ever a movie that demonstrated the dangers of giving too much power to the forces of the unconscious self, in all their jealousies and angers, it is that movie. I recommend it as research for this topic, actually.)

    I still think it’s possible to have healthy online communities. But it has to be done by mutual consent and agreement. It needs the right combination of people, who all agree to certain goals and ideals. The original anarchist theory principles were based on mutual consent, mutual support, communitarian feelings, and willingness to engage with the hard work of solving disputes. Many monastic community traditions are still built on similar principles. And they do function.

    It may only be possible on relatively small scales, in which affinities overbalance disagreements. For example, special-interest groups wherein the mutual interests are stronger than the personal politics.

    It may only be possible in small corners of the vast internet, in smaller places where the trolls don’t go; trolls usually target big, visible, easily-accessed boards. Why? because they want nothing more than to be very visible by being very very disruptive: the more souls they can suck in to their drama cycle, the happier they become. It’s also about the feeling of personal power it gives someone who is basically small and insecure: the classic pattern of tearing someone else down in order to make oneself feel bigger.

    A healthy board requires embracing diversity, and not just tolerating but appreciating and even enjoying the viewpoints of those who disagree with one. This requires an adult, rather than parent/child, relationship between peers.

    It might not be possible on huge open-registration forums, ever, because they’re impossible to get everyone to agree, and they tend to attract trolls. Sometimes it’s a chicken-and-egg question as to who killed the buzz: the admins for being tyrannical, or the trolls for being assholes who forced the admins to become tyrannical to maintain order? Who started the cycle can be hard to sort out, and may vary from case to case. Of course, both sides in those disputes will throw the blame on the other, and neither will admit they’re wrong—which is where we’ve ended up, online, all too often.

  565. Gary’s last sentence was an interesting addition, and he kind of snuck it in there in the end: “The submissive can finally be aggressive with impunity, the weak strong, the frightened fearless.” So, if you’re not a boss at work, or even if your spouse and children walk all over you at home, you can play boss, even become a boss online. The Mr. Big or Mrs. Big in you can come out.

    Even if this applies to only a few of the bossy moderators, it is an interesting insight, that it depends where people are coming from. Let’s presume that it is not genetic to be bossy, that it has a lot to do with one’s environment. instead.

    The stretch is to say that Robert Mugabe is coming from an unhealthy situation. But suspend any argument just for a moment so that we can look at Bryan Appleyard who said this: “I think I would capitulate, not because I am especially virtuous but because my mind is easily changed and I have little sense of my own importance to anybody but myself.” Only someone who has come from a healthy environment could speak those words, in that context.

    What about Shin Dong Hyuk, coming out of an unhealthy situation saying, “Most prisoners, including me, believed that they were supposed to be in the camp.” Only someone who has not been in a healthy community could say this, or one who has forgotten how it was. But for Shin Dong Hyuk, he had never been there. If he were now, after living in relative freedom like Bryan Appleyard, having been socialized into a more democratic society, if we were now to be taken prisoner and placed into a gulag, he would know precisely what was beyond the barbed wire, and know very well that he did not deserve to be a battered subservient.

    Following this line of thought, one way to overcome the possibility of a forum becoming tyrannical, would be to have other forums that are beacons for a better possibility. So, returning to Gary’s last sentence—“The submissive can finally be aggressive with impunity, the weak strong, the frightened fearless”—what if instead these same submissive, weak, and fearful people could find the power of equality?

    C.

  566. For everyone’s edification, the IP addresses show that Henrythejust IS Peggy Lipton of comments 684 & 685, and also Clive Owen Thatcher of comment 581. But of course, he is Jack Conway.

    C.

  567. Clattery, the problem is convincing them that they CAN find the power of equality. it’s like trying to coax a dog that’s been whipped all its life into trusting you enough to let you pet it. Your comment on Gary’s last line is spot on, I think, as was Gary’s insight.

    But the problem is, their acting-out online IS their compensation activity. They’re so powerless in real life, they’re not likely to want to give it up online, whenever they get it. The possibility that they CAN have power online, even if only negative power, is part of the attraction. It becomes power for its own sake, which is always the road to abuse.

    I agree that creating better places to be, off over to side, as beacons, is the ideal. But you’re still left with the problem of trying to convince these folks to treat others as equals; it goes against the grain of their habits, patterns, and basic psychology. I’ve seen this tried, and invited to happen, in just the way you describe, and in the case of the troll I’m thinking of, in every instance he immediately reverted to type, given the slightest chance for it, even on a brand-new and otherwise friendly and supportive board. He was given Mod powers and IMMEDIATELY began abusing his power. I have this documented.

    So I agree with your ideal in principle. I don’t have a better solution. At the same time, it’s very hard to get this personality type to want to change. What person, who has been powerless their whole lives, would ever want to give up their power, once they attain any? To engage in abusive behavior is well-known, in psychological circles, to be caused often enough (if not always) by having been abused oneself.

  568. Hi Arthur,

    This personality type, who has been powerless and abused, but then becomes abusive with power, indicates that there is something inherent in the person to do this, maybe genetic or some other physical reason, maybe from being beaten like a dog or some other psychosocial reason. In fact, it could be that a person has a physical potential to be abusive, but needs the environmental stimulus to trigger that potential. No matter how you cut it, it points to the idea that Bryan Appleyard no matter how unhealthy his possible environment, could never be like Robert Mugabe. Let’s here assume so, and maybe this is a key for us to relook at Mugabe.

    Would Mugabe have, under the healthiest of situations, have become a real-life tyrant? The better question might be: would Mugabe, given time in a healthy environment, become a healthy person, no longer prone to being a tyrant? This is similar to what was raised in regards to Shin Dong Hyuk, only we would imagine a “personality type” that would be prone towards the slave mentality (even though this would be an unfair hypothetical assessment of him, as he was a prisoner since birth). But how quickly do we take on these unhealthy “types” or how quickly revert to them?

    It seems Mugabe, not capitulating, is similar to moderators so entrenched in their bossy powers, not capitulating either, given the many arguments that have been directed their ways. Here again, the resolution seems to be more healthy poetry forums. And yet, the Mugabe “type” indicates that the entrenchment, whatever physical and/or psychological hard wiring has been made, the Mugabe type may never capitulate, even if immersed in a most healthy environment for a good period of time, making him damaged goods, never again to be in his right mind if ever he was. And your example indicates that one who is prone to be a moderator-tyrant would relapse at the drop of a hat. Yet there is the key now, it seems, to maintain the environment, to make it both healthy and durable.

    C.

  569. I’ve had a pc connection problem. So I am behind the power curve. I’ll catch up with the conversation eventually. It seems that much conversation has transpired in the last week.

    Clattery, old bean, you may have to delete this comment too. I wouldn’t blame you.

    Henry, I think you are full of shit. I think your attacks of Nanette are reprehensible enough so that I will remember your name on the boards. This is assuming, of course, you got balls enough to use the same same, which I bet you don’t. And Peggy Lipton your passive-aggressive type is all too familiar.

    I don’t know Nanette. But I do get that she was banned from a poetry board, came to Clattery’s blog to air her grievance, then got attacked by several people who seem to have followed her. (I think that is called stalking.) That kind of turns my stomach.

    Terreson

  570. Clattery,
    Yeah sure We’re all Jack Conway. Claattery why are you lying to people? Is it because you were called out on being a pathetic sexit by Peggy? Or because you are merely a paranoid talentless lout. Please tell you vast reading public. I am not Conway nor is Peggy. Nor are any of the rest of them. You just can’t stand to be told what a fool you are. Go on Clattery prove to us all that the IP addresses are all he same and all Conway. Go on. You can’t. IP addresses you fool are not connected to anyone’s personal site so get off it. Grow up. I hope Conway sues the shit out of you like I heard he did to another sitre. Goon Clattery prove away that I, Peggy or anyone who disagrees with your lame ignorant rants isare all oen person. Go on. You’ve been challenged to prove it Clattery Be a man if you can and prove it to all of us how they are all the same person. If you can’t, please then will you do us all a big favor and get some mental health counseling for extreme paranoia and sexit behavior. Peggy would llike that. Go ob now Clattery prove it all. Show us how all these are the same IPaddresses and that these are in any way connected to anyone in particulare. You can’t. So I guess thta makes you pretty much the asshole you always were.

  571. I’m waiting Clattery. Please show us how you connect any IP addresses to any one person. Go on. Exactly what computer training school did you go to? What’s that you say? None? I got a tip for you. I majored in computer technolgy and IP addresses only pinpoint servers not people you pathetic asshole. Prove it please. Go on. Can’t step up to the plate Clattery? What’s the matter? Not manly enough? I figured as much.
    What a fool you are. But of course poor Tere and Durkee will beleive anything since well they’re not too bright either are they. I’m waiting. Clattery. You just prove your big bad theory about IP addresses. Come on. Foolish and pathetic again. No wonder Peggy questioned your manhood. I see why.

  572. Here this might help:

    “This is the IP address of the machine that requested the page. Typically this is your own IP address. If you used a router/proxy you will not get the correct IP address.

    If you use a home router to connect to the Internet (or your company has a proxy), the IP address shown will be address of your router or proxy. If you use a router and you want to run a server on your computer, you may need to place your computer in the DMZ settings of your router, or enable port forwarding on your router.”
    You Clattery are as dumb as shit honestly.

  573. Hi SueBee,

    Or whomever you’d like to be today, Jack.

    Your IP is 24.60.95.3. It is the only IP that has different names associated with it in all 700+ posts. As noted well above, it comes out of Fall River MA, which is nearby where you live. I used to have AOL dial up. That’s when it was possible for other posters to post from the same IP as mine. It would be relatively rare, but might happen occasionally, as you surely know.

    Additionally, you are the only one who has blatantly used the names of other posters here, such as Gary’s and Arthur’s. So you’re prone to this kind of shenanigans. The glove fits if you’re male, the shoe if you’d like to be Cinderella now. I suppose you think you’re saving the world or making a point for a book you’re writing, or maybe you’re just being a clown for the sake of being a clown, because you like being goofy once on a while.

    But this is not a federal case. OJ’s got the headlines now. You’re busted, Jack, and no one cares. Or would you prefer I call you something else again?

    What we bigshot moderators usually do when we have a culprit’s IP, is disallow any further posts with it. We don’t have to prove anything, Sunshine.

    C.

  574. Terreson said:

    “Henry, I think you are full of shit. I think your attacks of Nanette are reprehensible enough so that I will remember your name on the boards. This is assuming, of course, you got balls enough to use the same same, which I bet you don’t. And Peggy Lipton your passive-aggressive type is all too familiar.”

    Funny. You didn’t seem to feel that way when ol’ Jack was banned for accusing people of pedophilia over at the Poets. net Forum.

  575. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOkay. NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOw I get it.

    Clattery, old bean, maybe you know this already. Back in Aug or Sep this Jack person made certain accusations at Poets.net. He got his hand slapped for the slanderous comments. And I figure the hand slap was justified. I guess he thinks now I was taking up for him when I objected to certain management practices. Not true. I quit the board because of practices having nothing to do with his slander, everything to do with board management practices I object to in principle, such as the admin editing of people’s posts.

    Jackman, let me be clear and categorical. I have no commerce with your quarrel with the Poets.net people. I have no commerce with that board’s quarrel concerning whomever is married to whomever and poetry contests. At least on Clattery’s blog I am a one trick pony. My concern has to do with making poetry boards a better environment for poets. It is a beautiful idea. I want to see it work…for…poets. Your taliban behavior does not add to my trick.

    Tere

  576. This story comes without names. Naming names would serve no purpose, would only muddy the issue by making board admin types defensive.

    A couple of weeks ago on a well established poetry board a poet defended his poem against some pretty harsh crit. The board has that crazy by-law of not critting critters, just say thanks, and so forth. Poet had his hand slapped on the baord. Actually, it has happened twice in the last month to two different posters. natrurally, I spoke up in defense of the poets. While it may or may not be germane to the circumstance both poets have less than 500 posts to their names.

    Some days ago I unfavorably reviewed a poet’s poem. The poet not only defended the poem but I think insulted me. (I say I think because the post’s syntax was so tortured it was difficult to make sense of.) As of last night the poster had not been corrected, reminded of the board’s by-law. So I spoke up, pointed out the contradiction. Again I don’t know if it is germane to the circumstance but the poster is credited with something like 2,000 posts.

    Within hours two management types posted responses to my post. One response was pleasant enough. Tone was neutral. The other manager labelled my message “a diatribe.”

    So I see three issues here that go to the core of the poetry board problem as some boards play them out.

    ~It is eviscerating to a poet who is not allowed to defend a poem, or at least explain intention. The practice also empowers critics to say what they want without consequence. The practice especially empowers “critical” readers whose intentions may be less than in good faith.

    ~In the circumstance I suspect a contradiction in management application, what, in fact, speaks to cronyism, favoritism, preferential treatment, or whatever you want to call it.

    ~The diatribe accusation I view as an attempt, just one more bullying attempt, to shut a person up.

    This stuff is crazy to me. It is all bonkers, off the wall, out in space, insane. I tell my towny friends about these practices. Keep in mind they not only are not poets, they are not even that much interested in the liberal arts. One friend’s reaction was to say, “I thought you said they are poets.” He clearly has a view of poets at variance with what poets can find on poetry boards. Another friend was even more succinct, “This surprises me.”

    I honestly don’t understand why some board managers don’t understand the extent to which they run interference.

    (As an aside, Clattery, I don’t know why my posts are ascribed to Anonymous. I am on a new PC. Maybe that is the problem?)

    Tere

  577. Well, I wasn’t going to name the board in question, but now I am. I am naming the board because I just discovered that once again I have been banned for challenging or questioning board management practices. This is information that needs to be out. I am not at peril. I got my own board. Every poet is at peril who frequents the boards.

    The board called “The Gazebo” banned me for my questions and challenges to their management practices. But don’t take my word for it. Go to the board and figure out the gravity of my infractions qualifying I should have been banned.

    Terreson

  578. Tere is being disingenuous.

    Tere had complete freedom on poets.net.

    Management stepped in ONLY to stop Jack’s porn-spamming.

    Tere merely had personal ego-gripes with one or two posters. He was free to defend corrupt contests, he was free to critique poems, post poems, he was free to post absolutely anything he wanted on poets.net, and did so.

  579. I can’t remember, GBF. It was in one of the threads in the Poetry forum. I could go there as a visitor, I suppose, and pull it up. But that would amount to lurking, which is not something I am inclined to do.

    Anyway, it is the same old problem and I am old enough to know the rules. When you challenge management there are consequences. I could have kept my mouth shut and nose clean like most people do. I chose to raise the issues. Management, when intransigent, doesn’t have choices.

    And, Essex, don’t twist my words around. I never said poets.net banned me. I said I left the board because of certain practices in play. I haven’t been back. Nor will I.

    Anyway, this whole thing of hamstringing poets bugs the bejesus out of me. If a poet can’t defend a poem who the hell will? If a poet doesn’t feel passionate enough to stand up for a poem what is the value of the creation?

    Then, of course, there is the cronyism in which, once again, some members are considered more equal than others.

    These issues matter to me. I guess they matter more than being a good boy.

    Tere

  580. The poem posted at “The Gazebo” which
    triggered the dust-up is, “Overnight
    Guests.”

    Unlike Tere, I’m a lurker. “The Gazebo” has some pretty high quality poetry and critique…so this is disappointing…sigh…

    Chris

  581. Well, Tere, I have good news and bad news.
    .
    The good news is that when my poetry was severely trashed by some nasty trolls at the Poets.net Forum I was given the opportunity there to defend myself. I successfully demonstrated how woefully ignorant and unknowledgeable these individuals were and how far off the mark their interpretation of my poetry was and, by simply exposing their lack of education, embarrassed them sufficiently to shut them up.
    .
    The bad news is that you, of your own volition, chose to leave this site and never enjoyed the opportunity to do this yourself. You rejected the only truly free poetry forum on the internet to return instead and do battle with the ‘establishment’. In fact, I once said something to that very effect to you…that you should tell those who oppressed you to just go to hell and remain in the free lands. You chose rather to return to hell and subject yourself to this punishment.
    .
    Ye reap what ye sow.

    GBF

  582. Thanks, Chris.

    So I took a tour of ‘The Gazebo”.

    I find this comment of yours perplexing:

    “The Gazebo” has some pretty high quality poetry and critique…”

  583. GBF, you are a thoughtful man and, in your own slant way, a wise man.

    My objection to poet.net’s business practices had to do with the editing of posts of other members by management. Not the deleting of the posts. The editing of the posts. To me this is Orwellean. Having last summer, and on another board, seen what such behavior on the part of board managers could lead to I have chosen to reject the practice wholesale. In brief it falsifies conversation, which is not just a killer of poetry but of what it means to be human. Let’s just call it revisionist on the part of those in power.

    As for my penchant for tilting at windmills, guilty as charged, man. I wish I could remember who said it. It might have been Thoreau. Might have been the great naturalist, Edward Abbey. Someone said something to the effect that the man grown too old to feel outrage has grown too old. I guess I feel outrage at the modulating effect of some board managers on poets, poetry, and the free exchange of ideas. Over at the Gazebo when the by-law stating that poets should not defend their poetry or crit the critter, one staff member said that doing such leads to madness. I had to disagree. In my view falsifying any experience is what leads to madness. Also in my view poetry is a most valued experience. What the hell has become to poetry in America if its practitioners sign their names to false contracts for the sake of community niceness? Like I say. I am less wise.

    Now. Chris. If you are who I think you are your message is disengenuous. Had I been you I would have identified myself as the head mod at the Gaz who denied me access to the board. To me that would have been honorable. And I figure even between people who disagree with each other there should remain honor.

    As for the quality of poetry at The Gazebo, it is no better or worse than what I’ve found elsewhere. I figure out of 100 poems read online I am lucky to find five poets who sing true notes, who impact, who carry across, who drive the stake home, who straighten the back. The Gazebo pretty much fits the pattern. (Actually you did have one poem that did just that, straightened my back and I told you so.)

    But ours will have to keep as a fundamental philosophical disagreement. As a manager, and again assuming you are who I think you are, community cohesion has become paramount, has replaced poetry and the exchange as highest value. In my view this is a poetry killer. Also in my view poetry is the one place in which the king of mischief is expected to rule in the community. So let your poets do what they are supposed to do and break taboo.

    The banning is okay, by the way. The cliquishness, in a short three months, was getting kind of cloying. Ya’ll got poets I figure could get anthologized in spite of the treatment the board’s main group hands out to them.

    One other thing, and back to GBF. I know of three other boards that allow for the latitude you say poets.net allows for. Free Wrights Peer has been around for a year or more. There is also this crazy car salesman up in MA who has started a place he calls Babilu’s. Then there is a board friends and I are creating we call Delectable Mnts. (Check out the board, Chris. You wouldn’t be the first mod to ban me that seems to like playing there.) Things are moving on, GBF.

    Good and sweet wishes. Ultimately, I can’t imagine, refuse to believe, turf wars matter when it comes to poetry.

    Tere

  584. You know, Chrisfriend, no sooner had I posted the message when I figured I screwed up. (Actually a mutual friend said she figured I was wrong.) I am so sorry. I owe you a public apology. I hope you will cut me some slack. The head admin at the Gaz goes by the same name. I should be tarred and feathered for being too reactive.

    Tere

  585. Hello, I’m still waiting Calttery. You know in Com 101 we teach the computer rule #1. It’s called the one finger rule.

  586. I realize I owe an aoplogy also to the person for whom I mistook Chrisfriend. Arguments can be good and creative. So long as they are clean. My aplogies.

    Tere

  587. Tere,

    You wrote:

    “And, Essex, don’t twist my words around. I never said poets.net banned me. I said I left the board because of certain practices in play. I haven’t been back. Nor will I.”

    You silly man.

    As usual, you are the one twisting. I didn’t ‘twist your words around’ because I NEVER SAID poets.net banned you.

    There was no ‘editing’ (Orwellian or otherwise) of posts at Poets.net.

    This charge is merely the result of your fevered imagination.

    Jack’s porn-spam was ‘edited’ (i.e. deleted) but all of Jack’s other vitriolic comments were kept in the spirit of open communication. This is the only ‘editing of posts’ that occured.

    Your rhetorical habit of pompously name-dropping politically correct saints like Thoreau and the ‘great naturalist,’ Edward Abbey is annoying. Edward Abbey? WTF? Do you think this makes you admirable? I assure you, it does not. “The great naturalist.” You’re such a fool.

    Your quixotic trip re: poetry boards would be OK, but your personal behavior makes it all quite laughable.

    I do agree with you ‘criticism rules’ on poetry boards are petty in the extreme. It’s almost a pity I agree with you, however, since you come across as such a ridiculous person.

  588. Hi Earl,

    Here is the editing of posts I believe Tere objected to (not Lola/Jack’s post but the posts of other members who referred to him or quoted him in one instance):

    “I had to delete one Lola post due to libel.

    Others will notice that their posts have been edited, for example, Monday and Christopher. I did NOT change any of your posts, but, rather, when you quoted Lola, I changed Lola’s flavor-of-the-day user name to “Lola2.”

    In one case, when someone quoted Lola’s deleted post, I deleted that as well.

    PM me if you have any questions.”

    http://poetryinc.net/index.php?topic=252.msg3110#msg3110

    I didn’t have a problem with Jenninfer doing what she did under the circumstance, but Tere felt differently.

  589. Oh dear, then do I take it Clattery thta indeed you don’t have even the foggiest who I or anyone else is here since you must guess. So I take it EVERYONE using the IP address of the proxy server in the location you named MUST be this Jack fellow. Humm. Remind me to bet with you since you haven’t got a clue from a flying fuck. So let me get this even further straight: You think, guess about someone’s identity because you don’t know (Once again clattery old bean my $1,000 says you csan’t ientify ANYONE’s address based on a proxy server IP address) and you guess at what poetry is or isn’t. Seems to me for a guy that has a whole bunch of useless opinions you do an awful lot of guessing. Anytime you wish to PROVE I am anyone other than Henry be my guest. If you can’t (which you can’t) I’d say the only one “bagged” or “busted” here is you Clattery for being an out and out buffoon. Prove me wrong little man. I’m waiting.

  590. I’m in Fall River does that make me Clattery? Jesus is this place a magnet for assholes or what?
    PS Clattery, no one is using aol stupid. They’re just writing in that they are. Jesus you are lame.

  591. Ther are just me and two other people at poets.net. We cna’t go anywhere else. Please send us CARE packages.

  592. I’m sending this to you via a proxy server too. We all are and guess what? We’re not the same person imbicile. We’re using the same server. Exactly how much of a computer illiterate are you Clattery?

  593. That should keep the small minds busy for weeks trying to figure all this out. Oh the outrage! the outrage! No wonder no one uses poetry forums anymore. They have become inhabited by the lame, useless and derelict.

  594. I’m somebody. I am. I’m writing a meoir. Like anyone gives a flying fuck at a jelly fish. Hey when are my fifteen minutes of fame up?

  595. Stop signing my name to your hate speech. It’s offensive, it’s libelous, and all it proves is that you continue to be a psychopath in search of an audience. I am keeping records of it all towards future legal action if necessary. Just because you’re used to being a bully doesn’t mean anyone’s going to put up with anymore. You reveal your true colors every time you pull a stunt like this.

    You’re obviously ignorant of IP address protocols, and your tone of voice gives you away every time.

  596. I thmink thjat yu re a n idijot arn d I harate ycou an I jst hajte elverybrody axnd yoju carn jisst allm go tor hellllm anyd fuk u nd kisrss myar asess, ydou fuc/ i thijnk yohur stopidu arnd r reejallly aan dumm shrithaed3 so fruckn hyou u bitrch ;goo tu heoll beecuz you re are n irdiot an7 fukk youh alll ard go)ko tyo hellll u adshold agnd ykuo kaa>n alll ju2t k3idss mi arsss.

    Jerck Cramway

  597. I’m still waiting, Yellow Running Dog.

    Aw, Jeez, Jack. You’re no fun anymore.

    Did you finally OD, or what?

  598. I have just discovered that all 150 of the “three line” entries on the Feneon Collective site ‘faitsdiversdelapoesies’ have now been deleted. The purported “explanation” can be found on the link to the Harriet blog, above (#749), however, I suspect that this is also part of the joke.

  599. Truth be told, there is much more in the pool of on-line poetry than the arrogant urinary excretions issued by anal moderators. Within it swims not only the trolling sharks and flaming piranhas, the malignant crabs and amorphous stinging jellyfish of criticism, but also the red tide of uneducated and de-oxygenated thought. The on-line pool is a fetid, stagnant waste dump of empty imagination and stillborn ideas. It is, in fact, a toxic cesspool contaminated by the pitiful discharge of the poetry itself. Yes, a colorful and magnificent fish may swim past on occasion, but soon gasps and dies in the pollution by which it is surrounded.
    This is because this pool does not flow wide and pure like the sea, but is a poisoned retention pond into which all manner of distasteful discharge is dumped unfiltered.

  600. Well, Clattery old bean, I now have reason to think I could live long enough to witness certain mutations that, before now, had seemed unimaginable. Mutations such as lizards morphing, splitting their tails, discovering split tail locomotion and a higher reach. Or mammals grafting the right tissue structure and growing gills for oxygenating under water. Even the complete replacement of sexual reproduction, as we now know it, amongst humans by parthenogenesis.

    I just discovered a poetry board that has a monthly award it calls COTM. The honor is given to the best Criticism Of a poem for The Month. There is no way I could make this up. My imagination is not that fertile.

    Terreson

  601. Tere,

    Are you saying that honoring the best criticism or critique of the month is a bad idea? I don’t think it is. A good critique by an able critic can be very helpful. Writing a good critiqe can take time and require a fair amount of attention. Why not recognize good crits in a workshop setting and perhaps encourage more of them in the process?

  602. Halifax, I’ll assume you play the devil’s advocate. Fair enough.

    Personally my feeling is that poetry critics at their best, online and in any workshop setting, manage to do no to minimal damage. Again, that is the best to be hoped for. At their worst they deflect a poet’s vector, they rob a poet of her natural voice, they can cancel out poetry’s instinct. Any critic who comes to a critique of a poem without a queasy conscience I consider second-rate. Any critic who thinks his crits are creative I consider a frustrated poet.

    But the reason for mentioning this new twist in events speaks back to my essay. To me all too many boards put crit first, poetry second. To me all too many critters love the sound of their voice first and the poem in hand becomes fodder or grist for their mills. The emphasis shift I find disturbing.

    Maybe you know the Yeats poem, “Ego Dominus Tuus.” Check out this strophe.

    “That is our modern hope, and by its light
    We have lit upon the gentle, sensitive mind
    And lost the old nonchalance of the hand;
    Whether we have chosen chisel, pen, or brush,
    We are but critics, or but half create,
    Timid, entangled, empty, and abashed,
    Lacking the countenance of our friends.”

    I’ve always figured the online critic who loves his words too much lacks a certain countenance. Even lacks humility.

    Terreson

  603. Upstream I mention getting banned from the poetry board, The Gazebo. Their term for banning is “account suspended.” I understood the logic involved. While following the board’s rules I also questioned the board’s rules. Actually I took it a step further and questioned the wisdom of the head administrator, which is not entirely true either. I told her on the board I figured she was wrong about that dumb by-law that says poets can’t crit their critters. So I knew it was just a matter of time before she would have to dispose of me. No problem. There are always terms of engagement. And board managers tend to look to their ideas of community maintenance first. But then there is this:

    “Action Not Permitted — IP Banned

    Due to previous abuse, users from your internet service provider are not permitted to post to, administer, search, or otherwise participate on this board. We apologize for this inconvenience.”

    This is the message I got when trying to seek out a particular poet through The Gazebo’s IM service. I wanted to contact the person because of her or his poetry. I wanted to tell the person how extraordinary I figure his or her poetry is. Because I do not have the person’s email address I can’t. And so the board, by suspending my account, has effectively chanelled who can and cannot get in touch with each other.

    I think the thing, however, that is most disturbing about the message is this. I did not abuse any person, any rule, any protocol at The Gazebo. I kept to both rules and protocol. I was not banned because of abusiveness. I was banned because of management’s sense of its control over the board’s commerce.

    Terreson

  604. The only thing Conway would OD on is success, but then what would you know about success in publishing. You’re too busy here pretending.

    Of course the only thing I am is brain dead which is why I keep changing my name here. Like we didn’t know.You are that stupid aren’t you. Amazing.

  605. kind of cool, Clattery. Thanks for showing. ‘Think’ is actually frequently used? There may be hope yet.

    Tere

  606. I just saw a ban notice a (I guess now former) member of the poetry board “Eratosphere” received recently. It is so incredibly cruel it is actually hard to believe. It really hurts the heart. I know nothing about the person or about the surrounding circumstances. But I am incredulous at the notice’s gratuitous cruelty. The message is in caps.

    YOU HAVE BEEN BANNED FROM THIS FORUM FOR NO PARTICULAR REASON. DATE BAN WILL BE LIFTED: NEVER.

    Absolutely unbelievable.

    Tere

  607. Actually, that’s hilarious.

    “…no particular reason…”?

    Really? You have definitely got to get to the bottom of this one.

    This may be a spoof, don’t you think?

  608. Did the checking, Gary. No spoof. Not at liberty to say more concerning specifics.

    Pretty wild, don’t you think? And this from a well thought of poetry board, at least in some quarters.

    Tere

  609. The following text is a message recently posted at The Gazebo poetry board. I’ve not carried over the poster’s name out of courtesy. But anyone can go to the board and read the message for themselves, assuming permission of membership gets granted. While reading keep in mind that The Gazebo has a policy of No Critter Crit by a posting poet.

    “… if you are doggedly determined to recieve no crit whatsoever, and throw an Oscar-worthy hissy fit at anyone who dares besmirch the precious fruit of your poetical loins with anything less than glowing opinion?

    Or why do so, if you are inclined to only listen to one style of critique, let’s say– one dripping with lavish praise and a few points of crit touched on gently with velveteen gloves, in a most gentle and mollifying tone, lest it upset your delicate equilibrium– and then be totally bloody rude to everyone else.

    I am a straight-talking person, so I’ll get to it:

    I am really dismayed to see how many folk here are being habitually horribly rude and defensive when it comes to crit of poetry they have -chosen- to post on a -critique- forum. Presumably, for critique.

    Nobody -has- to give anyone else their opinions. I certainly do not. And the list of people whose poetry I will not comment on here because I feel as though my comments/opinions are not just unwelcome, but recieved in a very hostile manner, is growing daily.

    I don’t at all mind people asking for clarification. My crit tends to be brief and not drip a lot of honey when I am out of pain meds or out of time, or worried about something, whatever life-things prevent me from acting all sunshine and kissy-boo that day. I used to trust we were all grown-ups here, who could give and take, and duck’s back what doesn’t suit. It was, when I got here, manners galore. So where’s all the butthurt come from, lately?

    I am a careful reader, as best I can be at any moment, and put a deal of thought into my comments. I read each piece several times, do my best to understand it, and am happy to come back and amend former statements on realising I have not read closely enough. I know how much thought and time is put to considering poetry, and offering an opinion. And I know there are not many here who crit to simply be malicious. I assure you, I am not one them.

    So, I am quite irked to see people (mind, very few of them are people I bother to comment on any more) getting nasty — and sometimes downright nasty– with the folks who have invested the time to

    a/ read, and

    b/ think about, and

    c/ type up a comment on

    thier poetry.

    I hate having to skip five threads in a row because on former contact with that author I have been repeatedly subjected to a nasty or dramatically wounded response to a comment.

    Sure, I can keep doing that. Or you know, let ’em get away with being horrible little snots while I spend my own precious time and energy offering critique they –supposedly– ask for by posting. The other option is to comment, and simply not visit those threads again afterwards. But then I miss out on learning from the other comments.

    Better, I have decided, to avoid the butthurt brigade and spend my time on those with some manners.

    My final opinion on this, though, is that I shouldn’t –have to– avoid rude, ungrateful, drama-queenish, catty, pissy replies at all, on a crit forum. Where folk post, for opinions. Supposedly.

    The end.”

    I figure there are two ways, at least, of reading the poster’s post. It can be read with sympathy to the critic who draws out how much time gets invested in a poem’s criticism. Or it could be read from the point of view of the poet criticized who could be characterized as petulent but who could be frustrated with a critique lacking in poetry comprehension, perhaps even biased by the critic’s slant having nothing to do with the posting poet’s objectives and chosen language means.

    To me this kind of disjunct between poets and critics online is debilitating. The writer seems to want the freedom to say anything that comes to mind without being challenged by the posting poet. Also, the writer seems to maintain that, by virtue of submitting a poem to a critique forum, the poet should submit, without defense, to any and all opinions. But if the critter is allowed to say anything that comes to mind without being challenged by the posting poet where is the dialogue between poet and (critical) reader? And if there is no dialogue where is the poetry amongst peers?

    My sense is this. If poets must submit to peer review, why shouldn’t critics submit to the same? This rule of not critting the critter falsifies the dialogue.

    One more thing. Why should the critic’s time spent reading, maybe a matter of minutes, maybe a matter of an hour or so, be deemed more precious than the months, maybe the years, a poet has invested in the poem?

    Tere

    • Hi Tere,

      I recently read a thread at one of the don’t crit the critter forums, that also has the “thank you” rule. The threads are very strange. Someone comes in and responds to the poem, and may even begin by saying, “Thank you for posting your poem for critique,” and then a critique follows. The poet then says, “Thank you for the critique. Your comments will prove most useful.” Then someone else comes in and says, “Thank you for posting your poem for critique,” and then gives a critique. And then the poet responds, “Thank you for your critique. It will prove most useful.”

      So let’s say no bashing takes place, just Stepford Poets posting poems, and Stepford Critiquers posting critiques.

      Anyone surfing in, would either get the strange unreal feeling of no true communication going on, or would come away believing that each Stepford Critiquer was one helluva poetry reader, everything they say is thanked for, and everything will prove useful to the poet. Wow! Gaw Dam!

      But there is another, more insidious effect going on, and that is the Stepford Critiquers keep getting thanked and keep getting told their critiques will be useful. And they appear to believe it. Even though it’s all a parlor game. It’s the rules. You get wrapped in cellophane and dropped into the North Sea if you don’t say, “Thank you for your critique. It will prove useful.” Not only does this fill the ego, but it reinforces that how the Stepford Critiquer reads and critiques poems, is a great way to go. The Stepford Critiquers look like they come to believe they are the best poetry readers ever. Everyone finds everything they say useful, and thanks them for all they say.

      C

      • These rules-based forums reminded me of Kohlberg’s stages of moral development. In rule-based forums, neither the members nor the mods can get out of stage 4:

        In Stage four (authority and social order obedience driven), it is important to obey laws, dictums and social conventions because of their importance in maintaining a functioning society. Moral reasoning in stage four is thus beyond the need for individual approval exhibited in stage three; society must learn to transcend individual needs. A central ideal or ideals often prescribe what is right and wrong, such as in the case of fundamentalism. If one person violates a law, perhaps everyone would—thus there is an obligation and a duty to uphold laws and rules. When someone does violate a law, it is morally wrong; culpability is thus a significant factor in this stage as it separates the bad domains from the good ones. Most active members of society remain at Stage four, where morality is still predominantly dictated by an outside force.

        That last sentence is discouraging, and seems to let us know why Stage-4 forums proliferate. But, just as we used transactional analysis to speak of the parent-child interactions versus adult-adult, we can now speak of “Stage-4 poetry forums”.

        Here’s stage 6, by the way, as summarized in that Wikipedia article:

        In Stage six (universal ethical principles driven), moral reasoning is based on abstract reasoning using universal ethical principles. Laws are valid only insofar as they are grounded in justice, and that a commitment to justice carries with it an obligation to disobey unjust laws. Rights are unnecessary as social contracts are not essential for deontic moral action. Decisions are not met hypothetically in a conditional way but rather categorically in an absolute way (see Immanuel Kant’s ‘categorical imperative’). This can be done by imagining what one would do being in anyone’s shoes, who imagined what anyone would do thinking the same (see John Rawls’s ‘veil of ignorance’). The resulting consensus is the action taken. In this way action is never a means but always an end in itself; one acts because it is right, and not because it is instrumental, expected, legal or previously agreed upon. While Kohlberg insisted that stage six exists, he had difficulty finding participants who consistently used it. It appears that people rarely reach stage six of Kohlberg’s model.

        Well, if that last sentence is true, then the best we might be able to find, are stage-5 forums:

        In Stage five (social contract driven), individuals are viewed as holding different opinions and values. Along a similar vein, laws are regarded as social contracts rather than rigid dictums. Those that do not promote the general welfare should be changed when necessary to meet the greatest good for the greatest number of people. This is attained through majority decision, and inevitably compromise. In this way democratic government is ostensibly based on stage five reasoning.

        C.

  610. Clattery, old bean, I follow your reasoning. And thanks to a friend’s reminder here is something else to take into account.

    On poetry boards that keep to a quota system of so many critiques for so many original poems posted exactly why should the receiving poet believe in the critic’s opinion? The quota system sucks, man. It too falsifies the dialogue.

    Tere

  611. You are painting a whole board with a broad brush based on one comment, Tere. I am not sure that is fair play. And we both know you were not banned there.

    Pat

  612. Well, Pat, this is the message I get when trying to log on to the board, The Gazebo.

    “Action Not Permitted — IP Banned

    Due to previous abuse, users from your internet service provider are not permitted to post to, administer, search, or otherwise participate on this board. We apologize for this inconvenience.”

    But don’t take my word for it. Ask the Gazebo head admin. if my account has not been suspended.

    And, yes, you bet I figure The Gazebo’s culture is rotten.

    Terreson

  613. Here is a new poem that is being published in Aethlon. It is my second “sports and poetry” related poem.
    My first, “Shakespeare in the Park,” apperaed in the spring 2008 issue of roger the lit mag for tRoger Williams University.
    Anyway, hope you like the new one and would like to hear your opinion. There is already a question about the pop-up to center field. I went for the beat over the accuracy.
    Anyhow, this is really me so please stop inferring anything other than that. Thanks.

    SERMON ON THE MOUND

    Blessed be the first baseman,
    who stretches for an errant throw
    with the utmost grace and style.

    Blessed be the runner,
    who takes off to steal second,
    for he will be out by a mile.

    Blessed be the pop-up fly out to center field,
    for he has an arm like a rocket,
    and will fire it home to where the catcher waits.

    Blessed be the runner, sliding into home,
    for he will inherit the earth
    but never reach the plate.

    Blessed be the grounder, dribbling down to third,
    for the shortstop will bare-hand it
    and then fire it away.

    Blessed be the batter,
    for he will be shown no mercy,
    for hitting into a double play.

    Blessed be the fastball,
    for it goes ninety miles an hour
    and is seldom hit.

    Blessed be the batter,
    who swings with all his power
    but knows that he still missed.

    Rejoice and be glad, for although your reward
    may not be in the kingdom of heaven, after all,
    it will be in winning the pennant
    sometime this late fall.

  614. This is mine also publshed online in the 2006 issue of Dead Mule:The Schoolo Southern Literature. It addresses the same issues.

    Accelerating Poetry: Finding Your Voice
    by Jack Conway

    It seems many people think that you can say what you want in poetry, just as long as you don’t yell “fire” in a crowded poem. Actually, that is the problem, not enough people are yelling fire. They are whispering sweet nothings and that has driven poetry to a virtual standstill. We need to put the “voice” back in poetry and move drastically away from the homogeneous cookie-cutter production that seems to be going on today in poetry. Why? Because without new voices — without people stretching the limits of poetry — without accelerating the power of words and poetry form, what we are left with are leftovers.

    Much of the poetry being written today is indistinguishable and that is not a good thing, not for the poet and not for poetry in general. I attribute much of that to the emergence of Web-based poetry forums: not entirely, but a good part of it. There are other reasons, including the desire to join the ranks of those who “sound just like” another poet. That seems to be the low watermark for poets today: they strive to write like someone else. In fact, when someone writes a poem it seems the biggest compliment someone can give them is, “I like that poem, it reminds me of someone else.” If a poet today‘s only goal is to write poems that are like something that has come before it then the world of poetry is in big trouble. Writing poetry should be the discovery of the new not the glorification of what has come before.

    Not all but a good part of this falls at the feet of Web-based poetry forums. That is not to condemn these outlets but rather to put these emerging outlets for poets into perspective. By-in-large several things are happening within the framework of these types of forums. The first is that instead of becoming the sanctuary for poets who do not fit into the typical mode of writing, they have become the fortresses of the status quo. Instead of becoming places where poets can experiment freely with new forms and subjects, they have become inhabited by watchdogs for conformity. The idea of the ‘outlaw” poet seems to have escaped these outlets because I believe that instead of attracting people whose work pushes the poetic envelope, it has drawn from the ranks of the people who are frustrated that their work is not being given the recognition they feel it deserves. In stead of promoting discovery these sites have enabled mendacity.

    Why would that happen? Partly because artists are by and large not technologists and the web-based outlets are technology driven. It has also happened due to this frustration I spoke of that is cultivated because a poet has not had success with the traditional outlets despite the fact that they believe they have written poems “just like” things that are getting published and that they have written poems following all the rules and still they are unable to crack the traditional outlets. However, it is the case of not being able to see the forest for the trees. Because they write “like” someone else and because they follow all the poetic rules, are the exact reasons why they cannot access the traditional poetry marketplace. Poetry should not be a quest for familiarity and should not be about rules. Any literary historian can easily argue the point that writing, poetry especially, most writing and poetry that really matters and is successful comes from breaking the rules and from originality. Examples can be seen in fiction in the work of William Faulkner who experimented with fictional points of view such as with the novel The Sound and the Fury (1929) in which he broke up the narrative into four sections, each giving the viewpoint of a different character (including a mentally retarded boy). And it can be seen in the work of Walt Whitman who shook up and forever changed the way American poetry was written by severing his relationship to old world writing styles and subjects. If these forums become the breeding ground for mendacity then poetry will remain as stagnant as it has become.

    The other major problem with these forums is that individuals can write and display their poems will-nilly and these poems are critiqued just as willy-nilly. Anyone should be able to write poetry. Poetry is a big tent. Many styles forms and levels of completeness can exist under it. The problem arises because this unfortunate situation has produced an intellectual wasteland, predicated on poetic inbreeding that has helped lead to this bland and static state of poetry today. Instead of accelerating language, images and ideas, these forums have sent poetry to the graveyard, fit and fashioned into a coffin composed of old rules, regulations and half-baked notions of what poetry is or isn‘t. The issue of “what“ is poetry has been debated since people began writing poetry. To think that this question might be even remotely answered on a web-based poetry forum is a ridiculous notion and yet there remains a preponderance of pontificating about the issue. This is a poem, that isn‘t a poem appears to dominate the ongoing conversations at these various outlets. These are not questions to be asked in such transient outlets never mind answered. It is not exciting. It is not thought provoking. It is not new. It is tired. Boring. And worse — remedial.

    Without getting too deeply into the flaws and foibles of poetry forums as opposed to writer’s groups or classroom study, suffice to say two things occur in Web-based poetry forums that contributes to the overall morass that poetry now finds itself in. First and foremost, unlike writer’s groups or classroom study of poetry and writing, there is no guarantee that the moderators or leaders of these on-line poetry forums have any academic credentials in regard to either poetry and/or writing or both. It is a catch-as-catch-can mentality that pervades this type of forum and in fact, upon closer inspection of some of the existing on-line forums, they are by in large managed not by anyone with either academic or publishing credentials in the world of poetry, but rather technicians who are familiar with various types of computer and Internet technology. In other words, what you have is a car mechanic or plumber or some other person of is proficient in some uncreative field holding court over those with a creative bent. That, again, is not a good thing. That is not to say, all in all, that someone with a technological, science or math background has no business writing poetry — far from it. What it does mean is they have no business telling others how to write it because they have no real knowledge of it. The analogy is simple. If I happen to have enough money to build a restaurant doesn’t mean I have the ability to cook. I hire a chef.

    There are those who would argue and have that one does not have to have an MFA to write good poetry and they site as an example William Carlos Williams, a physician and Wallace Stevens, an insurance executive. I would argue back that these are exceptions not the norm. One has to look at the accomplishments of these two examples before trying to measure them against the status quo. If someone measures up to them, then so be it but they are few and far between. Much if not all of poetry remains coming from within some academic disciple whether we like it or not.

    Lastly, and most troubling about these forums is that when they began they should have opened up the world of poetry to an eclectic discussion of what poetry can do without barriers to confine it they have chosen to formulate more rigid parameters for poetry not less. There is no room for discovery and experimentation and therefore no room for a poet to develop his true voice.

    There are many poetry forums available should one choose that option. They include places like Eratosphere, QED, and Desert Moon. Although some of these forums are populated by what appears to be fairly knowledgeable and accomplished people, by in large they are insulated at best and parochial at worst. A brief scan of these sites indicate they are ongoing “forums” for a select few and the process is exclusive rather than inclusive. Suffice to say I have been banned by almost every web-based poetry forum. Has it hurt my poetry? Far from it. Had I personally listened to much of what is passed off as poetic critiquing at these various sites I would not have published all that I have. Indeed, several poems that I did manage to place within the framework of poetry forums would have met a horrible end had I not been confident enough in my own work and abilities to further develop them. Ironically, a recent poem, “The Agamemnon Rag” was soundly cuffed about the had and shoulders at one web-based poetry forum only to find its way into the pages of the summer Poetry issue, nestled in among works by Billy Collins, Louise Gluck and Donald Hall. Another, “Sunshine Sandwich” received no support within a particular poetry forum and one lackluster critique went so far as to proclaim it wasn‘t even a poem. Diner, the notable poetry journal in Worchester, Massachusetts thought otherwise and accepted it for publication. Why do I mention this, aside from being blatant advertisements for myself, it demonstrates why poets should not engage in any serious discussion about poetry or their own work in web-based forums where the level of talent, ability and accomplishment is questionable. Poetry forums, if taken remotely seriously will ruin the “voice” of more aspiring poets than help them. There will always be a place for poetry forums, make no mistake, not a very good place, but in my estimation they will be forever populated by people who are not truly involved in the very hard work of writing, editing and publishing poetry. Charles Simic I think best summed up the nature of these forums when he wrote in his poem, “School for Visionaries,“ — “When you play chess alone it’s always your move.”

    The fault that poet’s are not developing their own voice does not lie solely with Web-based forums. They are merely a contributing factor. The problem lies, I believe with the poet’s inability or reluctance to accelerate their use of language or expand their poetic horizons. The poet W. H. Auden included five things that a poet must do in order to be of some major importance. They included:
    1. He must write a lot.
    2. His poems must show a wide range in subject matter and treatment.
    3. He must exhibit an unmistakable originality of vision and style.
    4. He must be a master of verse technique.
    5. In the case of all poets we distinguish between their juvenilia and their mature work, but [the major poet’s] process of maturing continues until he dies….

    Of all of these, this: “ He must exhibit an unmistakable originality of vision and style,” is to me of the utmost importance and the one most neglected by poets today. And sadly it is the most important goal whether striving to become a major poet or simply trying to perfect their craft.

    It is difficult to get most writers of poetry to agree on what is or is not poetry. Definitions of what constitutes poetry varies from poet to poet predicated, it seems, on where they appear to be in the development of their own writing abilities. That is to say, that someone new to poetry, having read or studied it in a limited way, may opine that poetry must rhyme. I have in my experience read where people have said this with a straight face. Others have chosen to define poetry based on the devices that they believe should or shouldn’t go into it: metaphor, similes, personification and rhyme scheme — the latter being a method of identifying one sonnet from another, but not necessarily a good way to define what is or isn‘t poetry. And then of course there is the continuing argument over whether a prose poem is a poem or prose. Obviously there is enough literary chatter available to put that particular argument to rest: the prose poem is as much a viable form of poetry as any Shakespearean sonnet.

    Regardless of what level of study or at what level a particular poet might be at in their own development, or in fact how they might define what poetry is or isn’t, most, if not all poets and students of poetry can agree that a poet’s “voice” is part of any poetic endeavor. But even defining the “poetic voice” is sometimes difficult.

    The simplest and most widely accepted definition is: the voice that speaks the poem. This is often referred to as the poet’s mask or persona. It does not have to be identical to the poet writing the verse. Of all the devices and elements that go into the making of a poem, however one wants to define what a poem is, “the voice” is the most important in establishing the poet as a unique and different writer — different from everyone else writing poetry, and thus making their work distinguishable from all the rest of poetry being produced today.

    Anyone with a rhyming dictionary and a decent poetic handbook available to them should be able to write almost any form of poetry, from the different types of sonnets to a villanelle or anything else in between. That is not to imply they (the sonnets or other forms) would be good, it merely points out that form and structure can be easily mimicked. Voice, on the other hand, cannot. Yet much of the poetry being written today, published or posted on Web sites, appears to have abandoned the poetic voice in favor of rigidly defined forms and structures, leaving in its wake a plethora of poetic sameness.

    What distinguishes some of today’s more widely established and well-published poets is not their adherence to a particular form or structure, in fact many have taken it upon themselves to explore new and different forms and structures, often times causing those with a particular traditionalist view of what poetry is or isn’t to run screaming for the safety and comfort of their Oxford Book of English Verse. What distinguishes these poets is their voice — unique and different. And not just today, but clearly in the past.

    It goes without saying that Whitman’s “voice” (as well as his form and structure) was unique and different from what came before it, in fact, so much so that his work heralded the cutting of the poetic umbilical chord from European traditions in American poetry. You cannot read Whitman without hearing his voice or being able to identify his voice in among the other millions of poems and poets. His voice is both eloquent and at the same time robustly colloquial creating an originality to his work.

    Jumping ahead to modern times, the two most unique poetic voices today are John Ashbery and James Tate, followed closely by Charles Simic. In Ashbery’s case, his voice is at times both irreverent and melancholy; his poetry chock-a-block with wayward narratives and ghostly dreamlike images producing at once a welcoming personalized account of daily life, but one steeped in disembodied surrealism. According to author and critic Mark Levine, “ “His wildly profuse language gets at the anxious clamor of contemporary life with startling realism: not the realism of a photograph, but rather that of an MRI…”

    James Tate’s poetry has evolved with its own unique poetic voice as well as producing havoc within the poetic community with his experiments with form and structure. If the guardians of the traditional poetic tenets were dismayed previously with the ever-changing face of poetry, then Tate‘s work will surely send them running for poetic therapy. Like Ashbery and to a degree, Simic, Tate ponders surrealism within the context of the natural order of the world we live in. According to Simic, regarding Tate’s newest book, “ Return to the City of White Donkeys (Ecco Press, 2004) Tate is, “searching for a new way to write a lyric poem.” Ashbery, also weighs in with the following regarding Tate’s latest effort: “ For him, surrealism is something very like the air we breath, the unconscious mind erupting in one-on-one engagements with the life we all live, every day.” Tate’s voice is also tinged with a degree of irreverence, but not as obvious as Ashbery’s. And he too has a faint hint at melancholy in his poetic voice, but once again, not as much as Ashbery. What is unique about Tate’s voice appears to be the wonderment he expresses when confronted with the absurdities of life and the surrealistic notions surrounding it. You can practically hear Tate saying how he discovered a wolf that gave birth to a human baby in the woods behind his house, without blinking an eye and unquestioning except for his sense of great wonderment, not that it happened, but that he was privy to see it. That is a huge difference.

    But even placing the poetry of these two award-winning poets side by side and despite both their tendencies toward chronicling the surrealism within the confines of daily living, they are both distinguishable, not because they follow the rules or adhere to poetic form and structure, but because they don’t and because their poetic voice identifies them from each other.

    What does all this mean for other contemporary poets? Perhaps it means that the engine that drives their poetry should be their voice and that developing their voice may, no in fact it does, require them to experiment with form, structure and other poetic devices and figurative language.

    Playing it safe may produce a well- written poem but it will not produce a unique one and given the multitude of poets writing, submitting and posting poetry the idea of developing a unique voice should be paramount. Some contemporary poets seem obliged to have readers say, “Well that sounds just like such and such’s poetry.” If that is occurring with a poet’s work then they can be pretty sure that their voice is no better or no worse and absolutely no different than just about anyone else. However, if the poet finds themselves being barraged with comments about how their work doesn’t fit into a variety of poetic concepts or how they are not adequately upholding their end of the traditional poetic bargain, the poet can be pretty sure they are headed in the right direction regarding the development of their own unique poetic voice. And this, in my opinion, is a very good thing

  615. Jack…

    Wow!

    Profound!

    I just happen to be right in the middle of a serious existential crisis and your poem just kicked my ass!

    Gary

  616. What a nice thing to say. Thanks.
    I gather you have a book of poetry. I like to collect books from people I have met.(I suppose you can call this meeting.) Gota link to it.

  617. Gary,
    Whew! Lots of writing going on and lots of publishing. Good for you. I am going to order one: which is the best. I can’t afford all of them. I see you used Author House. I did too with my two novels.They were pretty good and I still get royalties from them (Like $37.oo or 37 cents sometimes)It is soooooo difficult to get poetry published in book form. I tried twice with a writing coop out of Providence that then folded. Not ever again. I have been more fortunate with my nonfiction. I am finishing edits now on my new book, “KING OF HEISTS” by Globe Pequot/Lyons out of Conn. try tget back to poetry when I can because it is my first love in writing. I’ve been lucky with my stuff considering all the poets out there writing aand submitting but it remains a huge thrill if and when anything of mine gets accepted anywhere. Let me know which you think is the best book of your to purchase. Always glad to support a fellow poet. Thanks.

    The RJC

  618. I realize this thread is supposed to be about poetry boards and forums. I don’t belong to any. Those that I did usually end up banning me. Yikes! I’m unsure of why all this banning goes on except that I think maybe it has to do with fragile egos on boards. I dunno.
    RJC

  619. “SPAM is poetry”

    Artie, if you are referring to my link at #781, it is a reply to the request for the link in #780. I don’t do spam.

    For the record.

  620. “Let me know which you think is the best book of your to purchase.”

    Jack:

    Buy HARDWOOD from Authorhouse. I think it’s about seven bucks or something. Cheaper that Amazon or B&N. If you do, I get a free beer.
    I’d like to note, though, that HARDWOOD and SOFTWOOD are sort of a matched set.

    I intentionally self-publish. If FS&G or Knopf showed up at my door, I’d chase them off with a shotgun.

    Now THIS was spam. 🙂

  621. “I realize this thread is supposed to be about poetry boards and forums. I don’t belong to any. Those that I did usually end up banning me. Yikes! I’m unsure of why all this banning goes on except that I think maybe it has to do with fragile egos on boards.”

    Hey, poetry is spam. I don’t think you can have a good poetry forum without absolute freedom of sppech. It’s just not the way of true poets.

    Check out this forum setup. <a href="http://postmasters.phpbb3now.com/index.php"<Postmasters is a whole new concept that gives the public the right of way. Be sure to read the operator’s Manuals for each forum.

    NO rules for the public
    FEW rules for members
    MORE rules for mods
    and THE MOST rules for adms

    🙂
    artie

  622. Clattery, old bean, some dirty smelling things simply need to be aired. It is the only way of cleaning up foulness.

    What follows is an exchange occurring on a poetry board that used to be called poetry.net. I think now it is called poetryinc. This Pirvaya person is a mod. over at poets.org. There his screen name is Kaltica. Anyway, check out how this man comports himself.

    Good Poem
    « on: January 12, 2009, 09:20:26 PM »

    Music when Soft Voices Die (To –)

    Music, when soft voices die,
    Vibrates in the memory—
    Odours, when sweet violets sicken,
    Live within the sense they quicken.

    Rose leaves, when the rose is dead,
    Are heaped for the belovèd’s bed;
    And so thy thoughts, when thou art gone,
    Love itself shall slumber on.

    – Percy Bysshe Shelley

    « Last Edit: January 14, 2009, 08:41:42 PM by Gary B. Fitzgerald » Logged
    Gary B. Fitzgerald
    Newbie

    Posts: 26

    Re: The Editor
    « Reply #1 on: January 12, 2009, 09:41:50 PM »

    FYI:

    http://www.blogger.com/profile/17919492445467135425

    Logged
    monday love
    Hero Member

    Posts: 852

    Re: The Editor
    « Reply #2 on: January 14, 2009, 02:34:21 PM »
    Quote from: Gary B. Fitzgerald on January 12, 2009, 09:20:26 PM

    The Editor

    “I’m not finding many references in this poetry.”

    “This is true… I write poems, not puzzles.
    It’s not an English test, you know.”

    “Yes, but shouldn’t there be more depth?
    I’m not seeing much history.”

    “Depth? I wrote about a beautiful Tiger Swallowtail
    eaten by an ugly featherbare, old grackle.
    What does that mean? Explain this mystery!
    What value is put on beauty by death?
    What purpose the esoteric and arcane?
    A poem should be a pleasure…words to enjoy,
    to enlighten, make easily plain.
    It should be old but familiar, even if new,
    not an enigma requiring a degree to explain.
    Let the students study the scholars.
    Let the rest of us hear poetry.”

    “I see…”

    “You don’t!

    ‘A poem is like a happy barking dog that
    simply sees what he sees
    which your critical obfuscation always muzzles.
    Today is the assassin of reference and depth!
    Virgil and Homer…what do I care?
    We all read them years ago.
    Here is the price put on beauty by death:
    today is now, and now is wagging his tail.”

    Copyright 2008 – SOFTWOOD-Seventy-eight Poems, Gary B. Fitzgerald

    Gary,

    I like this poem.

    I see there was a miracle on Clattery Machinery. You and Jack have reached out to each other in a friendly manner, and Jack has posted a long, coherent essay on his poetical views. Embedded in this essay are many of the opinions he expressed piecemeal (and often in an ill-humor) on this board. I recognize the ideas, but now they are expressed in a polite manner. I think Clattery and Tere’s rhetorical earnestness have helped to soothe Jack’s ‘savage beast.’

    I was working just now on a response to Tere’s Clattery thread (which is rolling along smoothly now) but I might as well put it here as a response to your poem, since the discussion on Clattery involves poetry v. criticism on poetry boards, and in general. Your poem is a poem-criticism, and this is just what I was discussing.

    So, here it is:

    I agree with Tere and Clattery (love the “Stepford” reference) that Poets should be able to defend themselves against Critics in any way they choose; Poetry Boards should allow Poet-Critics, Critic-Poets, Poets and Critics to behave in any manner they see fit.

    This is certainly the ideal. But then a personal petulance always arises; the ideal always dies.

    What happens, I think, is that the following scenario exists unconsciously in everyone’s mind: Poets are the fair damsels and Critics, the knights in armor. Leaving aside the actual content of poems which do not necessarily cohere with images of beauty and so forth, the core abstraction holds: poets as ladies, and critics as warriors defines the reality of accepted social behavior. The Poet is not permitted to question the Critic–that which steels itself to nobly carry out non-beautiful operations–the ultimate aim to foster and protect aesthetic expression. On the other hand, knights are expected to behave with chivalry and gallantry. Here, then is the “Stepford” situation, really nothing more than a medieval cosmos in the unconscious minds of poetic practitioners. It matters not that it is, in fact, the loosest modernity, not dark ages formality, which informs the actual thoughts and sentiments of the actual poets and critics; the abstract scenario I have illustrated is the one which unconsciously prevails in terms of behavior and etiquette.

    What goes terribly awry is that quite naturally there arises an imposing class of Poet-Critics, ladies who don armor and sword, or an oddly-shaped class of Critc-Poets, knights who ply their beards with flowers in the sweet shade of trees, thus upsetting the time-honored practice, the social division of Poet and Critic. So the poet complains of being rudely treated by the critic, who in turn, retorts, “Well, let me be honest, dearie, you’re no lady!” The beautiful lady wearing armor also breaks the rule; no one, neither poet nor critic, knows what to make of her. The beautiful lady wearing armor is, of course, the poet who crits the critter. This is considered ‘bad form.’ The ladies who wear dresses, that is, those who never rhetorically fight back as poets, resent those ladies who wear armor. The ladies under the trees resent the knights–without armor–who lie under the trees.

    What obviously needs to happen is to end, once and for all, this silly division between Critic and Poet. We must all strive to reach that rhetorical region where the two are one. The stance taken by Tere, who wants Critic to respect the labor expended by the Poet, is a symptom of that ‘Dark Ages conditioning’ we must escape.

    There is nothing sacred in the Poem, per se, that stands against the Critique–the Poem is, in fact, a Critique, and if, in Tere’s view, Critiques should be critiqued, it follows that no Poem should get special treatment as something apart from Criticism.

    It is ALL Criticism/Poetry.

    We need overcome this idea of the ‘vulnerable poem’ trembling before the harsh criticism.

    On the other hand, Tere is correct that the Poet should be allowed to vociferously defend himself, for this impulse leads us to the promised land where petty distinctions between poem and critique no longer exist.

    The Poem “argues” just as the Criticism “argues.”

    Let Argument reign.

    This does not mean that we can no longer write what looks like a ‘traditional, art’s for art’s sake poem.’ Not at all. “Traditional poems” are Arguments as much as a Criticism is. This is the crucial point.

    Let us free ourselves of the courtesy and manners of medieval chivalry, the division of precious poet and sword-wielding critic; let us banish all these old, antiquated notions.

    Monday
    Logged
    Gary B. Fitzgerald
    Newbie

    Posts: 26

    Re: The Editor
    « Reply #3 on: January 14, 2009, 04:03:38 PM »
    Monday:

    Very well written essay and a fascinating theory. You need to share this kind of thing more widely. This is right on topic for Clattery, for example. You should also visit Harriet (the Poetry Foundation blog) and Silliman’s blog more often. There are great conversations going on over there. There are two raging political debates still ongoing about the invasion of Gaza, for instance, and another about interviewing poets. New stuff comes up every day. Lots o’ fun and tons of links.

    Gary
    Logged
    Pirvaya
    Full Member

    Posts: 121

    Re: Good Poem
    « Reply #4 on: January 14, 2009, 11:02:25 PM »
    Quote from: Thomas Edward Brady
    I like this poem.

    Of course you do.

    Quote from: Thomas Edward Brady
    I see there was a miracle on Clattery Machinery.

    What? Did Victor Rainey (aka Terreson, SextusP., Vico P. Cannito, etc.) finally tell the truth about something? Is anyone keeping count of the number of times he’s been caught lying? I lost track after the “I haven’t joined the new TCP.com” and “I don’t post to Gazebo” whoppers. You’d think he’d at least know how easy these things are to check.

    Quote from: Thomas Edward Brady
    I agree with Tere and Clattery

    Of course you do.

    Quote from: Thomas Edward Brady
    Poets should be able to defend themselves against Critics

    Certainly not if they have agreed not to do so, as by joining a forum with that in their guidelines.

    “Defend themselves” against someone doing them a favor? Makes sense, but only to the paranoid.

    This failure to understand even the basics of the critiquing process explains why you, Rus Bowden, Gary B. Fitzgerald, Victor Rainey, Arthur Durkee and all the other crybabies will be every bit as bad in twenty years as you are right now.

    (end of transmission.)

    Tere

  623. I’m impressed. I got called a crybaby. That’s really mature, and it shows great insight into the mechanics of poetry criticism, as well as deep knowledge of poetry. Wow. I guess we’ve finally learned our lesson.

    Oh, wait. Consider the source. never mind.

  624. And while we’re talking about nasty things, I have just discovered that somebody has changed the photograph I selected at the ‘Openlibrary’ site to something a little less flattering.

    Hard to figure why anyone would even give a shit about a total stranger.

  625. You know, one hears of this kind of thing in other places, but you’d think that those inclined toward poetry would presumably be somewhat educated and literate and therefore a bit more genteel.

    Go figure!

  626. I want it to be fully appreciated that Pirvaya-Kaltica is an officially sanctioned moderator on the poetry board, Poets.org, which is the online extension of The Academy of American Poets. The Academy has received several complaints concerning the abuses he has meted out on their board, but to no satisfactory end. The Academy not only defends his behavior but sanctions it. The most egregious of his abusivenes is a penchant for selectively interpreting board rules in order to delete the posts of those he does not like. Another practice of his is to return to a post he has made that could be characterized as intemperate, then doctor it.

    I’ve been trying to figure out why Pirvaya-Kaltica would make his post on a poetry board in which he has no investment. I can’t speak for the others his post attacks. But I know I have had no dealings with him for somewhere in the neighborhood of six months, plus or minus. I now have reason to think Pirvaya-Kaltica is a cyber-stalker on whose radar I continue to find myself. In his capacity as moderator he has deleted my posts on two boards, and this is the second time he has publically passed on personally identifying information concerning me.

    Here is the point of my post, what speaks to the issues. Pirvaya-Kaltica is a poster boy for moderators behaving badly. I’ve witnessed other moderators who’ve taken advantage of their positions. But Pirvaya-Kaltica takes it to a new degree. My sense is that, because I no longer frequent his board(s), he still needs to lash out. More recently, he and Rus Bowman got into an argument on Poets.org concerning the caliber of IBPC judges. Bowman won the argument, in my view, even if Pirvaya-Kaltica subsequently seems to have persuaded Poets.org to withdraw from the IBPC contest consortium. Affecting a whole bunch of members, I should add.

    Moderators such as Pirvaya-Kaltica are not just dangerous, they are harmful to online poetry. And I figure poetry boards must assume the responsibility for the kind of people they elect to moderate.

    Terreson

  627. Back at post #789, near the end, this part:

    Quote from: Thomas Edward Brady
    Poets should be able to defend themselves against Critics

    Certainly not if they have agreed not to do so, as by joining a forum with that in their guidelines.

    “Defend themselves” against someone doing them a favor? Makes sense, but only to the paranoid.

    This failure to understand even the basics of the critiquing process explains why you, Rus Bowden, Gary B. Fitzgerald, Victor Rainey, Arthur Durkee and all the other crybabies will be every bit as bad in twenty years as you are right now.

    In a workshopping environment, all focus by these people who are called “critiquers” should be on bringing the poem to the next stage, on workshopping the poem. Once a poem is published, then within the culture-at-large, the reviewers and critics may then study the poem for its place or lack of place in canon–Plath’s “Daddy” is always a good one for example–and discuss how it succeeds or fails as a poem. In the workshop setting, though, this is kind of ridiculous, unless parallels are being made in order to assist the poet. Otherwise, attention is drawn more toward this “critiquer” taking him- or herself too seriously, pretending that something much larger is taking place. Workshopping does mean that high-level reading and application of poetics need apply, but at all times in order to be constructive only. Why else would a poet post in a workshop?

    I should point out before moving on, that Arthur Durkee is indeed and by profession a published reviewer and critic. Knowing this, it is difficult to place him in some crybaby category.

    But, for all practical purposes, when a poem is written and offered for workshopping, it often does the conversation well for the poet to speak back to the “critiquers” and give them information they may have missed, even if, and especially if, they were in their heart of hearts doing the poet a favor. This is the same type of discussion that would take place if the reader and poet were in the same room, an expected give-and-take. The poet may always give a simple “Thank you” as a reply as well. After all, it is the poet’s thread of conversation, for his or her poem’s benefit.

    Often times, this ideal that the “critiquer” is doing the poet a “favor” is not the case. There are times when the only one who would benefit from a “critique” is the “critiquer”, especially if done to degrade the poem or poet, and nothing constructive is offered to the poet. In these cases, “defense” is in order, and the poet would not be a crybaby to speak his or her mind, and set such a “critiquer” straight.

    C.

  628. “I figure poetry boards must assume the responsibility for the kind of people they elect to moderate.”

    But how do you go about doing that and have fun too? I think we need to talk about HOW to do things right because we have already seen how it is done the wrong way. Take a gander at these forum rules I have written: These are the rules for the guest forum which is open to the public and is governed by one principle, the the public has the right of way.
    Greetings & Graffiti open circuit posting. Guests post with the status of guest. Note that the guest forum has no rules for the guests. NONE. There are rules for adms, mods and members in that order of priority.

    A prospective member can become elected into the membership by the active membership. The active membership is always expressed with a whole number. That way it is easy to determine relative quantities such as equality, majority and minority. The qualifications for membership are purely objective. We elect members based upon whether they are able and willing to use temporal/ordinal forms and communicate as a group rather than a collection of individuals (clique). This is an objective qualification because at any time if there should be conflicts of personality, order can be maintained. Here are the rules for the Member’s Lounge. The principle applied is that the members have the right of way.

    Now we come to the closed circuit Member’s administrative meeting. Since we have a whole number or members, we can engage in rational discussion forms. I call this section for the group I am planing The Discussion Workshop. Here we learn how to administer as a group. This provides training that can be used in any other web community. The focus is upon group coordinated activities such as playing ordinal games and learning how to apply various forms to a given situation. The group has the right of way.

    Here is the Constitution of Postmasters Discussion Workshop (yet to be ratified) that the members can administer together. Both the membership the officers are elected.

    I am setting up a variety of forums around the web for you to look at. In each instance, I adapted the digital platform to the constitution and the rules. I am not designing the rules and constitution according to the digital platform. I figure since constitutional form is so common and has been adapted to every kind of culture almost everywhere that we go, why not learn it on the Internet. Hell, we are gathering to learn everything under the moon except this. Seems kind of backwoods to me.

    If millions of city, county, state and national governments, plus millions of worldwide service organizations can operate this way, then I find it hard to believe that we can’t organize a community of 20 or 2000 or 20,000 or 200,000 people on the web using the same methods. It’s only a matter of learning it. Now I know that very few people would want to be so adventurous but leadership does not come from the many, but from the few.

    When you have this kind of organization then the platform is not important. The members are not members of a forum. They can meet using email, chats, google groups, forums. If the local restaurant burns down or goes out of business, Rotary goes on. They meet anywhere they want. Same thing with the local poetry group. If one venue goes out of business or kicks them out, it don’t mean beans because the group is coherent and intact.

  629. Thomas Edward Brady
    Rus Bowden
    Victor Rainey
    Gary B. Fitzgerald
    Arthur Durkee

    Damn! Looks like we’ve got a whole new ‘School’ of Poetry here.

    We could call it the ‘Internet’ School, or the ‘Blogger’ School.

    Maybe, even, the ‘People publicly trashed and humiliated by Kaltica’ School.

    I don’t know who ‘Pirvaya’ really is. I’ve heard a number of suspects proposed, but whoever it is could not be a genuine critic. A genuine critic would never be 100% negative about every poem by every poet every time. Only a nasty, angry, jealous, hateful, spiteful, mean and bitter person could do that and a person like that could not possibly love poetry.

  630. Posts 795,796,797. Certainly more thoughtful comments than what gets carried in 789, Artie’s suggestions especially so. This has been the pattern through out the history of this debate. Defenders of the online poetry board’s mod system have consistently resorted to the vituperative comment and personal attack. While those questioning the system have as consistently tried to keep to the issues. Don’t take my word for it. Read the record.

    Tere

  631. Well, Clattery, old bean, I am breaking a rule here by not keeping to the issues. If you choose to edit out the post from the thread you bet I understand. But it turns out I am right about two things. I got a cyberstalker, along with a few others, and Pirvaya is Kaltica.

    http://poetryinc.net/index.php?topic=377.msg4709#msg4709

    Pirvaya-Kaltica’s post says I have reregistered with the board cited. This is not true. I can go there as a guest only. If you look at the main page you see that Terreson is listed as the most recent member. This means someone has registered using my screen name. The information is easy to check. Contact the site owner. Sort out the IP addresses.

    Now read the text of Pirvaya-Kaltica’s post. Notice especially how familiar he is with the behind-the-scene workings at Poets.org where Kaltica is a moderator. He admits to having read a PM that, as I recall, transpired between me and the site’s head admin. Was it last summer? Might have been last spring. I can’t remember. Notice also how familiar he is with the behind-the-scenes IBPC discussion that I guess transpired at Poets.org.

    This man, a moderator at Poets.org and sanctioned by The Academy of American Poets, is clearly a cyber-stalker. I am trying to remember the last time I had online dealings with him. I am pretty sure it was last spring, that would be the spring of ’08. And notice too how he has spread his cyber-stalking net. At least this puts me in good company.

    Okay. I just ran a test. Poetryinc.net does not recognize the password I used when I was a member there. I am not registered. But somebody is using my screen name.

    Pirvaya-Kaltica is one sick bastard. I have no clue what harm I did him. I did question his poetry comprehensions. And I did challenge his administrative decisions. But that was, hell, that was almost a year ago. I moved on.

    It is a shame Poetry.org is not aware of the extent to which he has compromised them. Then, again, maybe they don’t care.

    the real Terreson

  632. Hi Artie,

    On Postmasters.

    Will there be poetry there? Or, will that be up to the membership?

    Also, I notice that spammers go there to attract clickers interested in “dirt cheap airline tickets” in the Robotics forum. Will these posts be allowed ultimately, or is the forum waiting for the constitutional process to unfold in order that such situations be addressed?

    C

  633. I can only suggest that the opposite of “love” (or concern) is not “hate” but indifference. Might I suggest that indifference to this person might be in the offering?

  634. I think I had the same experience at poets.net with Alan Cordle, until someone reminded me that if you ignore him he will go away just like everyone has forgotten what a bad and useless irelevant site foetry.com was. It’s just natural. Ignore it and it will slitheraway. I think pretty much this Prima donna who cna’t crit since I imagine they are very undereducated will go away. I mean who in their right mind would care what someone of such limited knowledge and education thinks? Come on. This person needs attention that they can’t get in the real world because no one takes them seriously so now you’re giving them the attention they can’t get anywhere else except online. Think about it.

  635. Thanks, Clatttery. You reckon the maestro was hypnotized that day?

    And not to worry, Jack C. But thanks. This particular poster has been dogging me for over a year now. Just water on a duck’s back. At least now he seems to be biting at the heels of others.

    Tere

  636. “On Postmasters.

    Will there be poetry there? Or, will that be up to the membership?

    Also, I notice that spammers go there to attract clickers interested in “dirt cheap airline tickets” in the Robotics forum. Will these posts be allowed ultimately, or is the forum waiting for the constitutional process to unfold in order that such situations be addressed?”

    Hello clattery,

    There will be as much poetry as there are poets, I suppose.

    The robots are the most consistent posters on Postmasters now. That’s because there is no word verification. Makes it easier for the public to leave a comment. Until there are as many guests as there are robots posting as consistently as the robots do, I see no problem. They aren’t in the member forums and I doubt that anyone will sponsor their membership or that we would elect a robot. But who knows? I have an open mind. 🙂

    artie

  637. The usual troll can be safely ignored and the average snert who seeks attention will eventually go away if not fed. Idiot trolls post insulting comments on my blog from time to time; I just delete them without comment. No point in feeding the snerts.

    But Kaltica is not your average snert. He’s hateful and he DOEs cyberstalk.

    Kalitca, aka Collin Ward, stalks everybody who contradicts him, or who points out that his word is not and never has been the last word on all things poetic or poetry-critique related. To get on his enemies list, all you have to do is point out an error on his part. His usual tactic is never to admit he is wrong, even factually wrong as has been the case more than once, and then to attempt to drown you with point-by-point contradictions. His tactic is to wear down and silence his opposition by main force. Usually it works, because after awhile he succeeds in killing all the fun anyone with a modicum of intelligence might have. Once the terrier has the rag in its mouth, it shakes it until the rag is “killed.” The process of being attacked, publicly and via PM, by Kaltica is most unpleasant, and I’ve been on the receiving end of his BS several times on several boards. His personality demands that he dominate every place he goes, and if he discovers a new place that you’re already at, he immediately picks up with you where he left from the last board he drove you away from. This is known, and has been witnessed by many. The only people who don’t seem to realize this is a pattern with this individual are those who—well, I can’t understand how anyone could be charmed into giving this person Mod power, but it does seem to keep happening, and he repeatedly abuses that power.

    When TCP had their split between two boards, as yet unhealed, in spring of 2008, he re-appeared after having been ousted from the board previously—not by banning but by making himself so unpopular that no one would play with him—he signed up again as Deni. He presented himself as neutral and calm, so the new admins of the old board were somehow convinced that he could be helpful. So he was given Mod power. He immediately began to delete comments from threads that he didn’t like; among them some comments by Terreson. He immediately began to abuse his Mod power. Immediately. This was predicted, publicly, by 2 or 3 people on that board, that this would happen, and it did. The prediction was accurate because the the behavior remained consistent.

    This is all on record. I have copies of the datafiles and threads in question. I started documenting all this at least three years ago, possibly four.

    I no longer give a frak if anybody on any poetry board, anywhere, ever, cares about what I have to say from my experience. I no longer care if I continue to be targeted by trolls merely for speaking the truth. (The reason the liars target you when you expose their lies is because their whole personalities are built on a foundation of lies, mostly lies to themselves about themselves, aka delusions, and so of course any contradiction to those delusions must be attacked with nuclear force because any disagreement or contradiction to the established lie is seen as a personal attack.) I no longer care if some poetry board I could give a frak about bans me for speaking the truth. I no longer care if anybody like Kaltica demands that everybody drink their brand of koolaid and no one else’s brand. None of means a goddamn thing, in the big scheme of things, and none of it is good for poetry.

  638. I started two threads in the guest forum about your two questions. The poll Will there be poetry here? and the thread Robots in the forums.

    I want to clarify the rules. There are only 73 words in the rules for the public forum (272 in the Gettysburg Address).

    Members, moderators and administrators may not post, reply, edit, delete, sticky, announce, poll or vote in Greetings & Graffiti with logged in accounts, are limited to the permission settings of the Greetings & Graffiti forum and may post, reply, edit, delete, sticky, announce, poll or vote in this forum only as Guests. Moderators and administrators may move, split, lock and delete threads in Greetings & Graffiti only with the approval of the membership.

    These rules are so simple that the public does not even need to read them. The first person that needs to read those rules is the adm, then the mods and members. Likewise for the members forum. They are substantially the same.

    1) Moderators and administrators may not post, reply, edit, delete, sticky, announce, poll or vote in the Member’s Lounge with moderator or administrator accounts, are limited to the permission settings of the Member’s Lounge and may post, reply, edit, delete, sticky, announce, poll or vote in the Member’s Lounge only with logged in member accounts.

    2) Moderators and administrators may move, split, lock and delete threads in the Member’s Lounge only with the approval of the membership.

    I think there is one less word here because the rules don’t apply to the members. The rules for the member’s forum applies to adms and mods. The rules are written so very simply so that the adms can memorize them without a problem.

    In the administrative meeting, the members are in the elected roles of administration and all responsibilities are outlined in the constitution. The Discussion Workshop is somewhat looser, varying from meeting to meeting, and consists of various discussion projects which give the members an opportunity to post as a coordinated group. This is the training that is necessary to perform the administration responsibly.

    The questions are “Will this stand the test?” and “How do we enforce the rules?”
    I’m thinking of changing one word. The word “may” could be change to the word “shall”. This makes it imperative. The adms shall do some things and shall not do some things. The word “may” aonly indicates permission to do or not do these things. I’m going to change this.

  639. Well and cogently stated. In my view the individual in question has for long been a poster child for abusive mod behavior. Of all the abuses I’ve witnessed his are the most egregious. Many people know it. Many people have either gone silent, challenged his behavior, or, as I suspect, left the circuit entirely.

    But there is now a new twist that just occurs to me. I can’t speak for the others his recent Poetryinc.net communique attacks with considerable vitriol. But, so far as I can recall, and unless he has used a screen name I can’t associate with him, I have had no dealings with Pirvaya-Kaltica since the spring of ’08. Further, I’ve not participated on the board where he is a moderator since the Fall of ’07. I think this new twist in the record speaks for itself. It seems he can’t let an old argument go.

    There is something else. It does seem to me that mods should be held to a higher standard of behavior. A board moderator who cyber-stalks, under any name and in any venue, should be held accountable for his actions. Kaltica has known for well over a year that I have tried to keep my real name to myself. My reasons are my business and should have no relevancy to the issue. I think I know how he found my name. And twice now he has made sure it has become public, the second time he has made sure to repeat it several times over.

    This is unconscienable. This is nothing short of cyber-stalking. This should make fearful anyone who enters into the online poetry community and who, for whatever reason, chooses to keep their name to themselves. Pirvaya-Kaltica has crossed a line between honest argument and disagreement and online etiquette.

    Tere

  640. I understand how some boards require one to use one’s real name, as a means of preventing trolls from being anonymous spammers with zero accountability.

    But the flip side of the rules on some boards that requires one to use one’s real name is twofold: first, in the case of those poets who choose to remain mostly anonymous but who are not trolls, there is no incentive to join, nor is there is any incentive to give one’s actual real name; second, using the real name does enable any cyberstalker who comes by in search of someone to continue a grudge against.

    And a third reason that it’s a silly rule: people lie. People don’t might not give their real name anyway. How do you enforce that without becoming a fascist?

    And a fourth reason that just occurred to me: There are poets who are worried that their poems that appear on critique boards will be rejected by some editors of journals as “previously published.” Unless those boards that require real names to be used have some way of protecting their member’s privacy from search engines as well as stalkers, for those who care about such things it’s a genuine worry. And therefore another disincentive to participation.

    So, the real-name might seem like a good idea. But it has numerous drawbacks. Again, I don’t think it real supports a climate of making poetry, because it raises many distracting issues.

  641. Hello Clattery “old bean” 🙂

    Very good point about cyberstalking. I know what that is like. I have had my share of troubles on message boards, only for being creative. But I don’t want to get into that and naming names or going through all that shit.

    This is why I think that the rules I have written so far are only a start. On top of the regular forum rules, I am going to slap adms with a whole handbook of regulations.And I want to develop a system to verify that adms are in compliance.

    Arthur –

    “People don’t might not give their real name anyway. How do you enforce that without becoming a fascist?” – Arthur Durkee

    You don’t. There is such a thing as relative identity. We know that this works for two people. I know that I am not you and you know that you are not me! 🙂 It may also be possible to develop ESP in a small group, where you can tell who it is just from their distinct vocabularies and mannerisms. That’s a very good avenue to explore and I would like to set up some experiments with that in the Discussion Workshop.

    And how about a regulation on adms prohibiting IPeeping? It may be difficult to regulate that, but I think a healthy dose of brains can cure the situation.

    The workshop training should include thorough discussion on administrative ethical standards.

  642. We’ve gone around on that before. The problem is enforcement. When you have a known abuser who has broken every rule to their advantage before, you can’t trust them to keep their word OR to obey even their own rules, if it isn’t to their personal advantage or supporting their personal agendas. There is no trust.

    I view a regulation for Admins against iPeeping to be a completely ineffective waste of time, because since most Mod/Admin sub-boards are invisible to regular members, there is no way to tell who is obeying and who is not. It really entirely on the honor system—and the honor system is broken in onloine poetry boards, which is why this whole discussion began. If there had been no abuses, we wouldn’t be having this discussion. So, nice idea, but very unlikely to be anything more than another way in which some Mods will abuse their power and lie about it. The only way you can enforce this is to give Admin power to everyone on a board—perhaps a good idea in some cases, in boards which can indeed function as anarchistic TAZs—but unlikely to ever be implemented on any board like the ones that have been named here.

    As for not naming names, fine. If you don’t name names, though, no one learns anything, nothing changes, and it all goes on and on and on. It’s been obvious from experience that NOT naming names has solved absolutely zero of these issues.

    The biggest problem online is, without a doubt, trust. Period.

    This is true whether conversations are relatively anonymous, or whether or not everyone already knows each other. Relationships can be built online, to be sure. I’ve met some people face to face who I first met online, and become friends, or deepened those friendships started online. One of the big lessons of this past year online has been getting at the roots of trust. Not even who you can trust and who you can’t, but the very issue of trust itself, as a concept. That’s really what a lot of this is all about.

  643. OK. I agree. Trust is important. It is apparent that as difficult as the task might be it is a priority to make adms responsible, do that trust can be maintained. Now, though it might look difficult, at this moment, I think it’s just like any other difficulty or problem. I think it can be fixed. What I have showed you of my plans is just the tip of the iceberg.

    I am the adm of Postmasters by default. Someone had to set up the board. It’s my personal mission to raise up a group of members who will take full responsibility for the administration. It is not my mission to retain control. If we can raise up a democratic group that works to learn how to apply these ancient principles that go back to when the cave dwellers sat around in a circle and took turns telling stories, and all of the other very workable forms that developed through the ages and were handed down to us, then I think we stand a chance.

    I have been acting as admin. Now I want to ask both of you to do me a favor. I am willing to admit you into the administration panel for an inspection of how it is set up. I would like you to determine whether I have complied with the rules so far. There are some things that you can check just by looking at the board. You can see that there are no posts in the members sections (because I am not an active member yet, I will take membership along with the first people that are willing to qualify themselves along with me) but you don’t know whether I have deleted or edited a post with the adm account. What we can do is make a checklist and do an inspection and see how I rate.

    I can put both of your accounts on adm status, but you also must obey the rules of the administrators. We are not members. It’s not difficult. It just takes some discipline. Everyone in the Workshop will have acting administrator projects assigned to them with mod or adm status (depending on the nature of the project) and their performance will be evaluated by the membership.

    I am pretty sure that you will be able to evaluate me on all of the rules as they stand now. I have another big pile of rules to write up especially for adms and mods. A few will be tricky to verify but I think that brains are bigger than these stoopid boards.

    We will need to have a preliminary meeting and plan on how we will act because there is alot to cover. The actual inspection won’t take us too long though, and I think it will be a revelation.

  644. Oh, damn! I appear to be completely snockered again, so I guess it’s time for true confessions.

    I now know the real names of Clattery MacHinery, Dragon59, Terreson, Monday Love and even Kaltica/Pirvaya, so I guess it’s time I ‘fess up as well:

    My real name is…

    dare I say it…

    Gary B. Fitzgerald!

    Are you people all nuts, or what?

    Who actually gives a damn about all this crap?

    Do poetry!

    Move on!

    Good grief!

  645. Gary, generally I tend to agree with you and take from your capacity for common sense. In this instance, however, your comments border on the cavalier.

    What is your advice to a woman, say, going through a nasty divorce and who finds in the online poetry community something that sustains her through a rough time. Let’s say she gets compromised, or betrayed, by a new poet-friend. Now let’s say information, or just gossip, gets back to the estranged spouse. And let’s spice up the circumstance. Let’s say there is a custody battle in place. All it takes to compromise a person in a court of law sometimes is innuendo.

    And what about a single woman living alone whose name gets broadcast. In many cases all it takes is a google search or a people search to find her address and phone number.

    Third scenario. Let’s say I am a liberal minded teacher working in a very conservative school district. And let’s say my poetry reflects certain attitudes and ideas that could be frowned upon by my employers. Perhaps I put out a poem erotic in nature. Or perhaps I put out a poem bringing to task, maybe just questioning, certain religious notions. Now you come along, are supplied with my real name, discover where I work and contact my employers.

    None of these are hypothetical cases. They are quite real. And I can think of two other instances of de facto cyber stalking having been brought to my attention. One of which involved mass emailings that exposed to cyberspace mischief a member’s associates.

    The issue is very real, Gary, and serious enough so that various law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, are looking into it. My prediction is that within the next two to four years state and local governments will enact laws in response to cyber stalking.

    So anyone putting out personally identifying information against a victim’s will had best take heed. The days of cyber stalking without consequence are soon bound to come to an end. In my view all online boards, not just poetry boards, should look to get in front of the problem rather than the enabling of the stalker(s), which is what they do now by looking the other way. If for no other reason because, one of these days, they may be held liable for any harm done to a member through the airing of personally identifying information against a person’s will. Of course, there is a much better reason. Cyber stalking is wrong.

    Tere

  646. Tere:

    I read over your post, above, a number of times. In it you asked for my advice about cyber stalking.

    This is my advice:

    1. Never do anything or write anyhing for which you will ever be ashamed.

    2. Buy a gun.

    GBF

  647. I am afraid that Colin Ward is an awfully poor poet. I can honestly say he can’t write and his crits, well, he’s not very bright or knowledgable. Sorry. Not worth the time of day I suspect.

  648. The anonymous issue was really brought to the fore when Foetry.com dared to name names in po-biz corruption. Alan Cordle did good work and he did such good work he was naturally reviled. The NY Times, the Boston Globe, the LA Times, Chronicle of Higher Education, and Poets and Writers (on a rather regular basis) made Foetry.com known to the poetry establishment; Robert Creeley wrote on Foetry.com shortly before he died. Joan Houlihan posted anonymously on Foetry.com, savaging Cordle’s mission, and Houlihan also published a letter to the editor in Poets & Writers expressing her dismay that P&W referred to Foetry.com as a “Watchdog site,” which is, indeed, what it was, really; a ‘consumer protection site,’ open to all who had information on what was happening in po-biz. Poets.net does have Foetry.com links, and there we found that Joan Houlihan is a business partner in po-biz with Jeff Levine, the editor who mailed fake-critique letters to poets, including one Christopher Woodman, who was informed by Foetry.com of Levine’s behavior. Joan Houlihan works for Web del Sol which pulls strings at Poets.org—where alarm bells went off when Christopher Woodman showed up. I showed up on Poets.org at the same time and that’s when I met Kaltica—who I have no doubt is Pirvaya on Poets.net, despite what the poster says to the contrary. I recognize all the same rhetorical tics. Odd, in all this, was how Kaltica has many of the same rhetorical mannerisms as Joan Houlihan. They belong to a certain school, I suppose, which is characterized by a certain strident, bullying aesthetical correctness of the ‘smarty-pants’ variety. I might call it here ‘The Smarty Pants School.’ It owns little actual aesthetic wisdom, but desperately wishes to appear exceedingly wise. Pirvaya (Kaltica’s name on Poets.net) calls me Tom Brady, code for sexy and successful, I guess. Kaltica takes special pride in his ability to scan verse, and I showed him up in that department on Poets.org and he has never forgiven me. I do appreciate his visits to Poets.net. I wouldn’t go so far as to call him a “stalker.” I find him amusing.

  649. re: comment 799. Since my name is being used in that thread at Poets.net, and since I have no interest in engaging with Kaltica/Privaya/Deni, I won’t comment over there.

    But I will categorically state, for the record, that that private message I sent to Larina was never leaked by me, and never was intended to be used as public fodder as it has obviously become. I don’t recall if I cc:ed that PM to a Mod I trusted at the time, there. I would have to go look it up in my documents; and frankly, it’s not interesting enough to bother. But I can say, categorically, that using that PM from me to Larina was become a public bit of personal attack on me, now, illustrating in a fundamental way how Mod abuses happen, how they use PMs to their advantage, and how someone completely unethical can twist even the best-intended efforts towards communication to their own ends, irregardless of the original intention.

    It illustrates exactly why Mods and Admins at boards like Poetry.org cannot be trusted. If they can’t even keep a PM private, how could you ever trust them to keep your personal data private? Obviously, personal data is also being used as a bludgeon to try to shame people, or force them into compliance with some Mod/Admin’s personal and political agenda.

    It’s shameful, and it was predictable. In fact, it was predicted, and has come true. That in itself shows how broken the system is.

  650. The admin can also be restricted to log ins for certain times such as an executive meeting, thereby greatly reducing the amount of time that the adm is logged in.

    Because most of the board activity is in posting, why is it necessary for the mod or adm to be logged in and lollygagging at the adm panel? The adm accounts are only tools. They are not allowed a post count. I will have my own member account for posting in discussions. So my voice is equal to every other member. Same with all of the adm accounts. Members use these accounts simply as tools to accomplish a member approved action.

    The logs document those actions. We might also require mre detailed documents be kept by each adm or mod. So if adms are limited to logging in at certain days and times, the adm log shows those times. Regular inspections by members can be given periodically(weekly?).

    A cursory inspection of posts and stickies on the G&G forum will show that I am in somewhat not in compliance. I took a few liberties here and there, but not very many and it’s only during the setup stage. I only have 1 post t my post count and that was to check out the posting functions of an account. But I’ll delete that post when the board gets active. With an active membership, there will be few infractions.

    Whenever you people want to start talking solutions, I’m in. I am fairly certain that it is possible to get 99% verification of adm compliance to these rules. I am willing to stage a demonstration and have offered to both Arthur and Clattery to visit the admin panel and do a thorough inspection of the adm log.

    Postmasters

  651. artie,

    I wish you well in your endeavours, and all success in your new poetry board. I mean no disrespect to you in what I say now—and what could possibly induce me to go over there and take on even distaff Admin authority? I respect your ideals, they seem in alignment with many ideals I share, but I’m not likely to get involved in any community again anytime soon, having so recently turned my back on all online poetry boards, period. (As I’ve said here before.)

    First, you’re asking for us to spend a fair bit of time and effort in doing you a favor; tasks which I have done before, which I know eat up a lot of time; time which I would devote to my own projects and writings. I would rather devote my time and energy to my own projects than to undertake what you ask; which is essentially like asking the international nuclear regulatory people to go into a new country and check their nuclear power plants for security and weapons manufacturing. No thanks.

    Second, I recently gave up my entire life to move back in with my parents and be their live-in caregiver until the day they died, after which the list of things to do was enormous, and the caregiving continued to take up all my time even after they were gone. I don’t expect you to have known that, so I’m telling you know. And I view your request as asking me to take on caretaking for a place in which I have no stake, which is neither family nor community to me, after having spent several years caregiving for my family. I have sworn off all such caregiving situations from here on out. I am moving on with my life, and I won’t be ever caregiving for anyone ever again. Period. Especially people I don’t know.

    Third, to the issue of trust. You don’t know me, and I don’t know you. There is no relationship, and no trust has been built or has had any chance to be built. I have no incentive whatsoever to engage in playing cop to a board that I don’t know or care about.

    Perhaps you view your offer as a way to establish an objective standard of trust, as an example of how that could be done. Perhaps it is just that.

    But why would I want to be involved in something like that? I’m not a cop, and I’ve never had even the remotest desire to be a Mod or Admin. I could care less. I’ve done such things before, for other poetry boards, when asked to, and it was a thankless task for which the only reward was vilification and exile. What could possibly entice me into putting myself into such a position again? Nothing. Especially not as a favor to a stranger for which there is no probable reward or remuneration. (And as I have had to repeatedly remind many folks lately with regard to my creative talents, people PAY me to do things like this, so I’m not likely to do it for free, except as a rare favor to a close friend.)

    Fourth, this thread on Clattery is about the abuse of power relationships, and how it’s bad for creativity. It is not really about how to manage power. At least not in my opinion. It IS about documenting abuses that have occurred. Other alternatives have been proposed, if you read upthread. And some of those have been put in place.

    But I’m not interested in power. I’m interested in poetry. That has been the problem all along.

    As I said, I wish you well in your projects, but I have my own projects I would rather devote my time to. If I were to donate my time and energy somewhere, I’d rather donate my free time to Hospice, or a soup kitchen, than to an unknown online poetry board where I have relationships.

    Lastly, I tend to be involved with only one board at a time. Ever. It’s all I’ve ever had time for. And it’s all I’m interested in. So since I’m already engaged somewhere else, I don’t have time for a new project apparently both nebulous and demanding.

    So, thank you for asking. And with all due respect, no thanks.

  652. I’m not sure why literary people are so terrified of Argument. The internet is such a marvelous gift where free discussion can flower instantaneously and yet what I mostly hear are whining voices of the thin-skinned and self-obsessed.

    Arthur Durkee writes at length why he doesn’t have time for strangers, and yet he gives details of his life’s woes to a bunch of strangers. He moans that he wants “poetry, not power.” It is impossible to separate the two, and the greatest poets know this.

    As I said in my post earlier, the key word is Argument. Get to the Argument, whether as a poet or a critic. We don’t care about your personal problems or the fact that people pick on your poetry, or that moderators are mean to you, or that bloggers are losers and print media is all that really matters. Shut up, already. The internet is a gift. Use it to advance and elevate Letters (in ALL its aspects) and spare us your personal sob stories.

    Tere provided good reasons why people are anonymous. Anonymity will always live on the web. Get over it. Deal with the content of posts and forget about who the ‘real’ people are. In Letters there are no ‘real people,’ there are only reputations, and 99% of them are false, or changing, or being challenged, and that’s good.

    As for this idea that the internet is simply a cesspool of losers, this is neither here nor there, since there are no winners in poetry right now, unless you speak of professors with cushy jobs, but this is irrelevant—a lot of people have cushy jobs, cushy lives, whatever. That’s not ultimately important. There is no authority in poetry. When it came time to choose a poet to read a poem following the inaugural address of the new president of the United States, there was no consensus as to who that poet should be. Poetry has no national authority. It is completely ghettoized. How many well-known poets would have loved to have had that world stage given to Elizabeth Alexander yesterday? There was a great void, however, and the task fell to a friend of Obama’s, and the poem, read to the world right after the new president’s speech, was sloppy and clichéd.

    So, when Jack writes on this thread:

    I think I had the same experience at poets.net with Alan Cordle, until someone reminded me that if you ignore him he will go away just like everyone has forgotten what a bad and useless irelevant site foetry.com was. It’s just natural. Ignore it and it will slitheraway. I think pretty much this Prima donna who cna’t crit since I imagine they are very undereducated will go away. I mean who in their right mind would care what someone of such limited knowledge and education thinks? Come on. This person needs attention that they can’t get in the real world because no one takes them seriously so now you’re giving them the attention they can’t get anywhere else except online. Think about it.

    He has no idea what he is talking about. The “real world” which Jack mentions does not exist. The truth is rarely spoken in official circles. What Alan Cordle did with the internet had tremendous impact and opened up a lot of eyes. Power and poetry are related. We know that now. It has always been the case. They are not the same, true, but they are related.

    Argument: Say what needs to be said now. You don’t need to wait for a sub-editor to put you in a book. You could go that route, if you wanted to, but you need not put on airs if you do. The truth is here if you want it.

  653. I started two threads in the guest forum about your two questions. The poll Will there be poetry here? and the thread Robots in the forums. And I started a poll for the best blogs I found while visiting you here. There are five blogs listed and each guest can choose three. Rather than just vote, why not comment on how you are making the decision. That’s what I will be doing the next day or two. Poetry Blog Poll Another idea is how about making poetry and artwork out of spam? Poetry Spam!

    I’ve also opened another club at the International forum with the same constitution applied to a different format. This club also will be turned over to the next generation of members. That’s the Post A Month Club. We have 14 members.

  654. “He has no idea what he is talking about. The “real world” which Jack mentions does not exist. The truth is rarely spoken in official circles. What Alan Cordle did with the internet had tremendous impact and opened up a lot of eyes. Power and poetry are related. We know that now. It has always been the case. They are not the same, true, but they are related.”

    I’m sorry but your argument is based on very faulty logic. The only “impact” it had on me and those I know was that we found it sad. disgusting and self-serving since based on loads of information Cordle did it to help his wife who I heard used to be his professor. How unethicla is that? No. This is no argument. This is balderdash.

  655. If you would like to argue the point let me post as evidence (I will use a logical appeal — logos)the information that was neevr disputed by Cordle. Janet Holmes stated clearly that Cordle married his college professor. Cordle never denied this therefore it appears to be true. ANYONE who engages in such behavior is in mos people’s book unethical. In fact, professors can be fired for engaging in affairs with students. Now if wha Holmes said was true, and since Cordle refuses to deny it then it must be true. If it is true his effort to seem as thought he was fighting an ethical batle is shot through with holes. Now if you would like to disprove my evidence in some way, be my guest. You asked for an argument and I am making my claim and supporting it with just this first bit of evidence. Care to dispute it?

  656. Sorry Monday Love (Thomas Brady) you have been an apologist for Cordle for years. Your opinion as far as I am concerned carries no weight not with me. Sorry.

  657. Jack,

    Here’s the problem you have. You have this stuck-up definition of what is important in Letters. In your eyes, Keats is not much of a poet because he doesn’t have an MFA or a Ph.D. You are obsessed with false hierarchies in the world of Letters, but you don’t care about real cheating and real deceit. You are ga-ga over the term “professor.” You are overly impressed by the term. Teachers should not take advantage of kids, but that’s far, far different here: professors these days are often younger than their students. Cordle’s “crime” in your eyes is that he was once a “student.” You have no evidence of any teacher-student impropriety whatsoever. You are overly impressed by titles and so forth, and so “professor” has you tangled up in knots and sputtering for breath. Try something else.

  658. Sorry MONDAY LOVE, that’s not what I wrote or argued. Please try to respond to the argument. His “crime” isn’t that he was a student. I didn’t say that. I said it is unethical for a professor to engage in a romatic relationship with a student, never mind marry them. That is unethical. Idf you care to disprove that please do so. If not well you remain an aplogist for Cordle. Sorry MONDAY LOVE I’m not buying your simplistic melodramaic outrage. Did anyone ever teach you HOW to debate an argument or did you think a debate entailed you banning everyone who disagreed with you. lol. Not working here for you is it? Any argument an be disproved with suffiicient evidence. Try some. Cordle at least according to Holmes married his professor and then tried to embarass people who didn’t accept her poetry. Many of us saw through that sham a long time ago. I’d be glad to listen to you argue that having a teacher marry their student ISN’T unethical. Go on. I’ll wait.

  659. So are you saying he dIDN’T marry his professor? Please explain so I can notify Holmes of her error. I was always wondering why Cordle didn’t dispute that claim in the first place.

  660. Jack,

    The truth of the matter is that I am your professor.

    I taught you much when you were on poets.net.

    Remember how you thought Waldo Emerson did manual labor?

    Are you crying now, because a professor owned you?

    Do you think anyone cares that a professor owned you?

    No one cares, Jack.

    Is this why you are obsessed with malicious gossip from Janet Holmes? Because a professor showed you up?

    Foetry.com always stuck to simple facts regarding literary influence. If a poetry contest winner was the student of a judge this was put out there for consumer information.

    Malice of a personal nature never came into it. Malice entered into the picture when those upset by this simple information began to kick up a fuss.

    Now, one could say it was just a wild coincidence that Jorie Graham, for instance, was picking her students when she judged national contests. One was certainly allowed to draw one’s own conclusions on the matter. Foetry.com simply pulled aside the veil on mundane public associations. Private matters were properly left out of sight.

    You don’t seem to understand this important distinction, Jack. Only one person has been banned from Poets.net. Only one person chose to come on that site and spread malicious, off-the-wall, libelous untruths, and because of this behavior, was banned. That was you.

    You lecture me in vain, professor.

  661. MONDAY LOVE, thgis isn’t aout being banned. It’s about my argument. Now you can fume and fuss and stomp your feet all you want but that doesn’t negate my premise nor my argument. So try and stay focused. All the the blue smoke and mirrors doesn’t change things and your efforst to change the discussion won’t work here since you have no real authority here and I bet that bugs the crap out of you. Just get to the point. I said and I said it very clearly that MY argument was that Cordle tried to portray himself as some sort of ethical standard bearer when in fact he MARRRIED HIS PROFESSOR — who it turns out is the poet/wife whom he tried to protect from the big bad world of rejection.It failed and she became the laughing stock. Now you seem to be missing the point. My argument has nothing to do with getting married but with the UNETHICAL practice of professors engaging in romatic liasons with their students which obviously Cordle was engaged in. Either yes or no whether he was or wasn’t. If he was, he has no “ETHICAL” leg to stand on which is why his site became the object of so much ridicule and scorn (except for apologists like yourself). Now stick to the argument. Or are you saying that you think that professors enaging in romatic liasons with their students, nevermind marrying them is ETHICAL. MONDAY LOVE this is not a difficult argument to dispute. Either you feel it’s ethical or you don’t. Either Cordle married his professor or he didn’t. This is not a tough one to grapple with. So I’ll make it easy for you since you became so high and mighty about the argument: Do you think a professor having a relationship and or marrying a student is ethical? Did Cordle marry his professor? Yes or no. That’s easy enough so please try not to hide all this with some silly assinie banter. Remember MONDAY LOVE your record as a Cordle apologist and as someone who can’t argue a point unless they can ban someone follows you everywhere. So stuck to my argument. Go on. I’ll wait . They are two very easy questions for you to answer.Let’s see if you can without blowing another head gasket.

  662. You really don’t get it do you MONDAY. The issue remains on the table no matter how hard you try to change it. Cordle married his professor which is unethical in anyone’s book (except maybe some lame apologists). Now holmes said it and it stuck and everyone who found out about it saw foetry.com fro what it truly was, which is why it failed so miserably.

  663. Now this is the same argument I posted at poets.net but then Gary some weird sociopath connected with that site hacked into my posts. Such a weird and childish thinbg to do. But Gary’s not here to save you MONDAY LOVE now is he. So stick to the argument and maybe someone (not me) will respect your opinion.

  664. Now one last thing MONDAY (Let’s see how much of a big lie I CAN catch you in.) Are you saying you DIDN’T know Cordle married his professor? Please explain. (Actually I already know the answer and will be glad to post it here from yuor previous defense of poor widdle Alan. Come on. Let’s see how mucgh of your OWN lies you have come to believe. lol. This is far too easy for me.

  665. And don’t forget MONDAY LOVE as Cordle’s chief apologist you can stem the tide of this “rumor” simply by proving us wrong. All it takes is some evidence to the contrary. Just think what a feather it wold be in your cap to disprove this allegation of unethical behavior that Holmes declared and Cordle did not respond to. He could have. He should have, unless..well, unless it’s true. But go on you disprove it and all will be right with the world again and we’ll all have to eat our words. Just takes evidence to the contrary.

  666. Not that I have a dog in the foetry hunt. But having followed the quarrel at a distance I am trying to figure something out. So what exactly is unethical if a student marries his or her professor? I mean it happens all the time, probably on every university campus through out the world. The record indicates that early alchemists had intimate relationships with their assistants who tended to be women. The record is clear that the great treacher and philosopher, Abelard, was intimate with the woman who was arguably his best student, Heloise.

    I guess I don’t get the ethics charge in this case.

    Terreson

  667. You don’t see anything unethical about a professor screwing around with a student? How about grades? Do you think the student mIGHT get abetter grade? Come on. By your crieteria Tere then it would be perfectlyall right for a high school teacher to engage in a relationship with their student?And you see nothing wrong with that? Whew. Do you have kids? We are not talking about fantasy land Abelard etc. We are speaking about someone taking on the ethical banner while all the while being unethical. No, I’m sorry. Professors enaging in relationships with their students is not only unethical but borders of sexual harassment. In many if not all ijncidents such as this the profesor will be let go. Terminated. Now I am not trying to be too fussy Tere but exavtly what university did you go to and are you telling me they had no rules and regulations regarding the association of teachers and students? Please if so let me know whch university it was since I doin’t think anyone with kids wille evr want to send their kids there.

  668. Jack,

    Millions of students are falling in love with their professors as we speak.

    Jack, the “poet” wants to stop all this love! LOL

    You accuse me of “smoke and mirrors” and ask me to stay on point, but you are the one guilty of “smoke and mirrors.” You are trying to insinuate some HS teacher and her teenage student relationship libel here from a falsehood put forth by a bitter and exposed Janet Holmes. You are attempting a smear-job and I have exposed you in your lie graciously, sweetly and accurately.

    You shouldn’t listen to Janet Holmes. There’s still hope for you, Jack.

    All you have to do is stick to the facts and not take malicious gossip to heart.

    OK?

  669. Regarding what I assume is a reference to me, above, Jack, I’d like to set the record straight.

    First, I’m a misanthrope, not a sociopath.

    Second, I’ve never hacked into anybody’s posts. I can barely use a computer. I couldn’t even download a picture on the site the one time I wanted to. I’m still on dial-up, for crissakes.

    Third, why don’t you guys argue about something a little more recent like, say, was Lee Harvey Oswald really the only shooter or that rumor that the Beatles might break up?

  670. I hope you understand Monday that there are loads and loads of people who know this so-called “gossip” which explaisn why foetry couldn’t attract an audience other than a handful of disgruntled poetry wannabes.

    It would be one thing IF Cordle and his ilk attacked Graham for playing fast and loose but they didn’t. Tjhey attacked her because she was MARRIED to the person she ghave a prize to. Then he had the audacity to call it unethical and him standing there with his pants down in public. remainds me of thoose right-wing politicians spouting off about gay marriage and then getting caught in the stall at a bus terminal trying to solicit gay sex. i think that’s what happened to foetry. He got bagged. Oh the outrage! How dare anyone attack the widdle guy who thought eh could. I wonder do you think marrying your professor is part of the cirriculumn?

  671. I’m not arguing. One cannot argue a fact, Gary and NO it wasn’t about you. There are of course other people name Gary (I think..lol).

  672. Does your precious Ally know you are perpetuating this discussion MONDAY LOVE? I’ll bet he’s pleased as punch about it and his wife must be too. I’ll bet you get a nice thank you card.

  673. Yup. Jorie Graham gave a poetry prize to Peter Sacks with the help of Georgia Prize director Bin Ramke. Some U.VA. punk runs that prize now (Ramke had to resign) and is awarding himself. LOL

    The whole thing stinks and it’s hurting poetry.

    This corruption has NOTHING to do with what poor Jack is raving about. He’s spreading meaningless gossip on behalf of a bitter lady (and lousy poet) Janet Holmes.

    LOL

  674. “why foetry couldn’t attract an audience other than a handful of disgruntled poetry wannabes.”

    Really? The “Songs Post-Foetry” thread on Foetry.com has over 65,000 hits.

    “couldn’t attract an audience”

    LOL

    Last time I went to a Jorie Graham reading there were 20 people and 15 were Harvard students who had to be there…

  675. Thomas, don’t confuse “Argument” with “discussion.” I think you’re talking about discussion rather than argument. I have written before here about how so much of the online culture devolves to arguing for the sake of arguing, and yes I do think that’s unproductive. I also cited Deborah Tannen’s book and essay “For Argument’s Sake,” which questions the utility of argument culture. Discussion is fine with me, such as many folks have been doing on this thread (and to be clear, I don’t require everyone to agree with each other, although I prefer civility to ad hominem BS); arguing just because you want to have an argument is not.

    As for strangers, I can write any fucking thing I want to on my blog, and I can’t control who reads it. So what? I know that. I know that I can’t control it, and I don’t want to.

    What you missed completely is that I don’t have any inclination to do professional favors for strangers, as opposed to doing professional favors for friends. If I didn’t make that clear enough before, I do so now.

    As for poetry and power, I said that I had no interest in power. Nowhere did I claim that power wasn’t part of the poetry equation, or world politics, or anything else. Read more closely before you ascribe opinions to people. What I said that was *I* had no interest in power. You obviously do. I question the position of dominance you place power in, since I think there are other motivations out there, too.

    But whatever. Feel free to continue with your Argument. I’m done with it.

  676. Goodness. Look up thread, and viewed from a certain distance granting a degree of objectivity.

    Argument can be creative if you say to me: I disagree with you and here is my laundry list of why I think you are wrong. Argument is unproductive if you say to me: because you disagree with me you must either be stupid or with vested interest.

    I subscribe to Arthur Durkee’s notion of creative argument. I’ve read the essay he has introduced into the discussion. It works for me. A culture committed to the kind of argumentativeness that holds that one must win at all cost is a sterile culture because the debate becomes sterile.

    On a different note, the Graham/Sacks/Ramke scandal is, indeed, a scandal. It damn near makes lurid, certainly puts into high relief, much of what is wrong on the American poetry scene. Hell, this kind of patronage is going down all the time. It is one reason why I left the poetry pub scene damn near twenty years ago: too many sweetheart contracts, as they say in labor union/company relationships. Just a sweetheart contract that ends up screwing the common laborer/poet. But it is not only wrong, the whole affair is just plain stupid. Had I been Graham I would have told my lover: either you remove yourself from the contest or I remove myself. Had I been Sacks I would not have wanted to put my lover in such a no-win situation. Had I been Ramke I would have disqualified either the judge or the contestant. While some ethical questions might need a Solomon who could filter through to the right judgement, this is not one of them. The trio screwed up. Along the way they compromised their standing in the professional poetry circuit. Why anyone would choose to compromise their name for the sake of a stupid contest I don’t know.

    Oh. I almost forgot. Jackman, I would be surprised if there is a college in America where you cannot find a good twenty liasons ongoing between student and teacher. To riff on something Dr. King said, love doesn’t happen between professional stations: it happens between individuals.

    Tere

  677. Tere,
    I didn’t say it DIDN’T happen. I said it was unethical. So for “discussion” purposes, I have no problem agreeing that it does happen. My question is: Do you see a relationship between a college professor and a student as unethical? I don’t see where you have addressed this. You don’t have. It’s not my place to ask you to. But simply for discussion purposes: Despite the fact that it goes on, do you find it unethical? I do for loads of reasons, nt the least of which is the not the least of which is the vunderability of the student to the power figure of the professor.
    And then of course there is usually the vast age difference.

    As far as the Cordle matter goes, I am still waiting for Thomas Grace to answer the question. Janet Holmes made the statement that Cordle, who attacked her, was unethical in his behavior from the get-go because he married his own professor when he was a student. She appears to maintain that his behavoior disqualified him from being a standard bearer for all the alleged “unethical” practices going on in poetry contests.

    Cordle didn’t deny this accusation. And some folks have it appears subsequently verified it. Since that is the case, I must agree with Holmes that his behavior is unethical.

    Personally I found foetry a sham and always felt he did it because his wife, or his former professor couldn’t win any contests. That is my belief and many other felt the same way. The upshot of his ridiculous site was that his poor wife appears to have been black-balled in most literary circles.
    And Cordle was viewed as a laughing stock in many circles.

    And Thomas Grace, the matter of 65,000 hits. Oh my. Everyone likes to view a train wreck now don’t they?

    Now Thomas Grace I am still waiting for a logical and appropriate answer to the very simple questions I posed in my argument. Did Cordle or did he not marry his professor? Should I speak more slowly so you can understand the question? There are three possible answers:
    1. Yes he did.
    2. No he didn’t.
    3. I don’t know.
    You however can’t seem to address this question without getting huffy, beligerant and bloated with self-importance. Since this is a discussion and since it goes to the behavior of “mods” on poetry sites and since Cordle and YOU have been mods and since you have banned people for disagreeing with your views and/or questioning Cordles ethical behavior, I think this is a vaild discussion for this thread.

    For example: You are reacting just the same way you have always reacted as a mod at foetry and elsewhere. Instead of answering a question posed to you, you have looked for the ban button. Poor Thomas Grace, Monday Love, how it must distress you that you have none of that authority here. Dear me.

    I am still waiting for a lucid answer, Thomas Grace, Monday Love regarding the Cordle affair. You can easily put this so-called gossip, malicious or otherwise, to rest with a simple yes or no. My reaction to your subtefuge is that inded Holmes mut have benn correct and hence my opinion regarding the unethical behavior remains valid. Would you care to disprove that? If so please do. If not I guess the issue remains on the table.

    A way back you made some vague reference to libelous staements. If you would like to expand on that allegation I would LOVE to discuss it with you. Obviously I assume your knowledge of the law is equal to your knowledge of poetry, hence my deepest disregard.

  678. And Thomas Grafce, why this stalking-like obsession with Jorie Graham? It seems unbalanced to me. I see she won a Pulitzer. Maybe those 15 students voted for her. LOL.

    She’s still holds a cair a Harvard. Humm. Yes foetry really ruined her career. Imagine all those 65,000 hits. Oh the ungodly damage they did to poor Jorie. I’m sorry but she’s still on top of the world.

  679. Jack,

    You are a lunatic. Plain and simple.

    You consider Foetry.com a “sham” because Janet Holmes–bitter and vengeful because of Foetry.com facts on fee-based, public poetry contests–mentions some meaningless bit of gossip which you, in a witch-hunt frenzy, term “unethical” as the whole world laughs at you for your manic, puritan position. You don’t seem to realize how ridiculous you are making Janet Holmes appear before the world. Cordle’s wife is a successful poet who has won contests and was never involved with Foetry.com; Cordle helped save poetry because he saw problems with it. He’s a very ethical man, and so is his wife.

    You didn’t know how to respond to 65,000 hits, did you? I knew that would shut you up. And now you’re sputtering something about Jorie Graham being “on top.” LOL

    As I told you before, I am your professor. I have schooled you. If you and I got married, it wouldn’t be “unethical.” You’d consider yourself extremely lucky. Everyone would congratulate you. You’d weep with joy. Nothing as fortunate could possibly befall you as our marriage. You’d be “ethical” for the first time in your life. LOL

  680. I see Thomas Grace you are the same coward you always have been. Answer the question. Did he marry his professor or not? It’s a simple question. I’m sorry but Jorie Graham is in much better shape than Cordle’s wife who used to be his professor or Cordle. LOL. Come on Thomas Grace try not to be such a little coward all your life. Answer the question. o one is buying your little song and dance here my little coward.

  681. I am beginning to wonder Thomas Grace, Monday Love, is English a second langauge for you since you obviously don’t sem to be able to read. Humm. Or maybe it’s just that being a high school kid some of the words I’ve used are too big for you. Boy what an unethical thing Cordle did. And boy what a sham foetry was. It’s too bad everyone laughs at that site.

  682. Answer the question MOnday Love, Thomas Grace: Did he marry his professor. Come on. Stop being a litlte sniveling coward. Atta boy. Act like a big boy. Answer the question. lol. ()Actually Thomas Grace we alreayd know the answer. It’s been sent to me and dozens of others whuch is why poor Cordle lost so much credibility in the first place. Except for you of course but then again you can’t read English can you. lol.
    Come on Monday Love: Say it. Repeat it. Your icon married his professor. Come on. Oh God you are pathetic.

  683. I appreciate the tangent. But Foetry is off topic. This thread is for discussing online poetry forums, and specifically how they relate to Terreson’s essay and how to makwe them better, which is wide enough berth.

    C.

  684. Jack, your obsessive/compulsive three (3) posts repeating the same rant: ‘marriage is unethical’ is no longer funny. Enough, already. We get your point. Janet Holmes has declared Foetry.com a failure because Cordle married his professor. Horrors!!! LOL

    So, when are you and I to be wed? LOL

  685. Tomorrow I will be deleting these off-topic posts, unless you can show how this furthers the conversation about Terreson’s essay, and informs the conversation about online poetry forums.

    It’s a flame, plain and simple, and an off topic flame.

    Fair warning.

    C.

  686. Hi All,

    The “discussion” here has passed the “argument” stage and entered a tie-up, this following some hitting below the belt. I am asking all fighters to break cleanly.

    I deleted Coin Operated’s posts this morning, the three placed following the last post, #865, because I asked for explanation, not insult. But I deleted no others.

    C.

  687. I agree with Clattery that off-topic insult has no place in civil discussion.

    On-topic insult, or playful insult which adds to ‘between-the-lines’ moral nuance in a philsophical or political wrestling match, on the other hand is fine.

    I don’t mind ‘fighting,’ as long as it advances moral expression, and ‘fighting’ often does. Keats understood the beauty of a quarrel, even a street-fight; I forget the exact quote at the moment.

    Letters is called ‘polite,’ but sometimes I think Letters is war by other means, or, it used to be.

    Poetry has been sapped of its energy, I think, precisely because no one fights with it anymore, and I don’t mean writing overt poltical propaganda poems, but there is a constant ‘war of taste’ which goes on all the time in human relations, and which touches on religion and politics in ways which those two never grapple, and that’s precisely why we have poetry.

    The rise of the Workshop has made poetry a ‘study’ rather than an individual’s personal weapon in which he expresses his own philosophy of taste against the wrongs and woes of the world.

    Poetry now exists in the line rather than the stanza. The stanza is the only way poetry as speech becomes truly memorable, but today poets are obsessed with the line. Stanza belongs to music, but I hear poets today just ‘handing me a line.’ A line of insult does not sound very interesting, but a stanza of insult sounds beautiful, doesn’t it?

  688. There is no objective evaluation of discussion. The primary objective should be to attain an orderly form. Many of the posts in this thread are clearly in the expository mode, yet without expository form, since the posters have not agreed to an order for posting, an order of the posters themselves (ABC ABC …). Since the posting order is random, we leave a huge space for people to veer into the dramatic mode. Therefore. the off topic posting is a direct result of the expository poster’s failure to adhere to an expository form which is conducive to a proper listening experience. Rather than delete these posts, it would be better for those who are serious about this discussion to post in form. I find it hard to imagine that the dramatic mode could hold for more than a couple of posts within such a form. But we can place no responsibility upon the dramatic posting since the expository posters have no respect for expository form. A suitable form would improve this discussion about 1000%.

    Discussion Workshop

  689. Clattery, I think this is relevent to the discussion, at least as concerns online poetry boards operationally. If you see it otherwise, do please delete the post.

    http://www.runboard.com/bdelectablemnts.f1.t4

    The above is a link to a discussion that transpired on Delectable Mnts last September. The thread was entitled, “Against Argument Culture.” An early post links to a very fine essay on the topic by Arthur Durkee. I found the exchange not only impressive but creative, dialectically speaking, in the way conversation at its best can be. I also noticed that members who generally tend to go quiet when a few posters dominate the conversation, often resorting to personal insult, entered into the exchange. To me this is the real prize: when all members get engaged. One article most participants seemed to agree upon is that argument for the sake of argument only is a waste of time, which I suppose stands contra the opinion expressed in #867.

    The point of giving the link is to demonstrate that poetry boards, both in critical conversation and in the critic/poet exchange, are not necessarily bound by certain forensic rules that all too often dominate the boards and therefore channel discussion. Naturally, I can’t imagine that the board’s model would be attractive to some people who rather enjoy argument as an end product in itself.

    Tere

  690. Artie,

    I admire your ambition re: organizing discussion.

    I followed your link and read ‘What is a forum?’ Very interesting!

    I’m just not sure how the order of the posts could ever be more important than the posts themselves.

    I don’t see why intelligent people can’t steer discussions themselves in a free manner.

    The issue is complex, I think, because in on-line forums you have two things happening at once: the writing of a text by a group-mind on one hand, and, on the other, individuals having a ‘live’ discussion in which neither ‘text’ as such, nor ‘group-authorship’ as a creator of that text, holds any interest for the participants as individuals. And will not this always be the case, whether the posting is random, or whether it is ABC, ABC?

    How can the quality of the posts themselves be changed by the order in which they appear? For will not the intelligence of posters manifest itself, surely, in the way the content of their posts naturally reflect (or even creatively alter!) the actual flow or ordering of the discussion itself?

  691. Certainly there is objective evaluation of discussion, when discussion crosses the line into ad hominem argument. Personal attack is pretty objectively and clearly personal attack.

    But your idea of “posting order” is out of left field. What does it mean? Are you saying that people should wait their turns? Are you saying that there are rules about what should or can be said when? Good luck with that in any kind of open forum, when people come in and out at different times, and pick up different points to comment on. An order to posts? A “form”? What?

    Sorry, I’m not following your train of thought at all. To me it reads like rhetorical jargon thrown together almost randomly, I can’t make any sense of it.

    Perhaps you might clarify?

  692. Arthur,

    I was responding to Artie’s #868 and his “Discussion Workshop” link.

    I agree with you that such ‘ordering’ would be nearly impossible to realize and be of little use.

    The attempt to ‘organize’ discussion is part of a larger problem in which people don’t trust others, and they want others to fall into line. They desire that some authority make everyone play ‘nice.’

    They don’t read a book unless it is blurbed by a poet who has a book which has been blurbed in turn.

    They don’t trust themselves and their own ideas. They are always looking above themselves and checking out credentials.

    The greatest writers “attack.” The “personal attack” has always been a feature of Letters.

    The irony is that people who lack a basic trust in themselves and in human nature are overly fearful of “personal attacks,” which is normative in nature and always will be.

    I trust myself enough to attack and be attacked–without running away.

    And then people think because I’m not afraid of “attacks,” that I am not “nice.” But I am nice. I am nice because I trust others. I want them to say what they are feeling.

  693. A simple Yes?

    Who gets to decide who waits in which order? Isn’t that just another imposition of authoritarian order onto free and open discussion? Who determines whose turn it is to go next? Are we all somehow supposed to be telepathically aware whose turn it is to go next? (Not to mention that being telepathically aware of things would mitigate this entire discussion and the situations that caused it. But I digress.) Who gets to choose? Who gets to have the power to choose?

    This whole discussion was prompted by people in power abusing their power over who gets to talk in which order—in your terms, taking their turns—and was enforced by arbitrary deletions and the occasional ban that was made merely for speaking out in disagreement, not for breaking the board’s state rules. This whole discussion has been about the abuse of power by many board moderators; and it has been about raising the question that the authoritarian model many boards operate under is inherently prone to such abuses.

    So, your reply seems to put you on the side of the abusers and the authoritarians. Is that really what you’re trying to say? Is that really where you place yourself? I’m asking, not pre-judging.

    Not everyone seeks out power over others, and that too is at the root of the discussion. There are those who have sought out power over others as Mods and Admins, and who do relish their power, and

    Have you ever heard of the terms confocal and consilience? I suggest you look them up, they’re relevant to your reply. As is the term, used in its historical communitarian sense rather than in the pejorative modern sense, anarchism.

    In the latter political model, trust is key. As it is everywhere else, of course. But in an open model, people trust each other to speak up and speak their minds. Nobody has to “wait their turn” because when they speak up it IS their turn. This is, of course, an anti-authoritarian model that makes many of the discussants here foam at the mouth. you’d think asking them to share power was like asking them to eat their cat, for all the rationality of the responses.

  694. Or you could look at the Quaker Meeting House paradigm. When someone is moved to speak, they rise and speak. Otherwise, things proceed in silence. That the Quakers have a demonstrated track record of peacefulness and also of being a force for active change in the world towards achieving social justice, one can look at their paradigm of speaking as a positive role model for what poetry boards COULD be.

    Again, when one is moved to speak, one speaks. That IS taking their turn.

    *

    (I didn’t finish one thought above, sorry, so append it here:)

    Not everyone seeks out power over others, and that too is at the root of the discussion. There are those who have sought out power over others as Mods and Admins, and who do relish their power, and have abused it. This is documented, and names have already been named in this discussion thread.

    The alternative paradigm is to seek out power WITH others, rather than over others. I’ve mentioned the Quaker paradigm. There is also the Lakota council fire paradigm. There is also the commune paradigm, which actually worked sometimes, and in some instances still operates as community food co-ops in many cities around the globe. The credit union paradigm was similarly invented as a power-with paradigm as an alternative to traditional banking’s power-over paradigm.

    So, if you’re going to talk about models for poetry boards, be they political or economic models, you’d best do your homework.

  695. “So, your reply seems to put you on the side of the abusers and the authoritarians. Is that really what you’re trying to say? Is that really where you place yourself?”

    No

  696. I would also like to elucidate the issue of ‘personal attack.’

    When a teacher gives a student a bad grade, when a critic gives a poet a bad review, this, in some ways, is a ‘personal attack.’ But of course such ‘personal attacks’ are perfectly OK and necessary for civil life.

    Jorie Graham’s personal life should not be anyone’s concern. But if she is awarding poetry prizes to friends in fee-collecting contests open to the public, than that ‘personal issue’ does become a concern.

    I just thought I would clarify that.

    I do not condone ‘personal attacks,’ that are truly ‘personal.’

  697. With regards to argument culture, or arguing for the sake of arguing, David Denby has published a small book called “Snark,” in which he points out that the dominate tone on the internet is snarkiness. This is certainly true on this thread about what’s wrong with poetry boards; it’s also the dominant tone on several of those poetry boards that have been the problem. So I think it’s relevant. (If not, Clattery, feel free to excise.)

    Here’s an excerpt from an interview:

    Correspondent: So I’m saying that perhaps, maybe, instead of essentially fanning the flames of discontent against this type, it’s steering them in the right direction. Which you do do in this book. Maybe this is just a growing stage before they blossom into some writer of virtue.

    Denby: Well, that would be nice. Also, I think they’re naive if they think that they can make a whole professional career out of this. Because you cannot underestimate the ruthlessness of editors. In other words, this is something that Adam Sternbergh doesn’t know. That his kind of wise guy stuff pales very quickly. And when styles of humor change, editors get rid of you if you don’t keep up. So there can be something naive. It’s a way of gaining a professional foothold. But you’ve got to move beyond it pretty fast. But just to return to Sternbergh, as I remember, the main thrust of his critique was that snark is an appropriate response to a corrupt and dishonorable world. Well, I’m not going to argue with his characterization. I think it is a corrupt and dishonorable world. But the appropriate response to it is not snark. The appropriate response to it is criticism, analysis, and, best of all, satire. Which is what I praise over and over again. The kind of stuff that Stewart and Colbert do. Most of snark is weak. It’s mostly impotent. It’s more a confession of defeat than an appropriate response to anything.

    Some links to the Denby material:

    http://www.edrants.com/the-bat-segundo-show-david-denby/

    http://www.cjr.org/page_views/sticks_and_stones_1.php?page=all

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/25/snark-new-yorker

    Some of the responses to Denby have been so snarky themselves that they rather prove his point.

  698. “Argument for argument’s sake.”

    Nothing wrong with that. The Socratic dialogue might be described thus.

    I really don’t trust anyone who gripes about ‘snark.’ Denby wants ‘satire,’ not ‘snark.’ But aren’t those very close, finally?

    I don’t think one can dictate rhetoric with such a fine measure: satire, snark…

    Funny, I just saw Denby on Charlie Rose and he didn’t come off very well.

  699. I think one can, because it’s all about tone and intent. Because I think Denby’s point about snark being impotent and weak is true: it doesn’t affect the system, it only reinforces it in a negative way. It doesn’t lead to change.

    I think you can argue about terminology, but that’s partly semantics and also partly arguing for its own sake.

    As for the difference between discussion and arguing for its own sake, follow the link to the Deboarh Tannen article and re-read it. Her point is that there IS a difference; I agree with her.

  700. Vis a vis the notion that argument for the sake of argument can be a good thing, and, by good thing, I mean a productive thing, I have two thoughts.

    It has been decades since I read Plato’s dialogues. But I do remember a few points. About the socratic dialogue, and the dialectic it involves, I remember a metaphor Socrates used to describe how it proceeds. He likened it to two friends walking the streets of Athens. One friend puts a foot forward, which action necessitates the other friend do the same, which in turn requires of the first friend he take another forward step. By this action the two friends reach their destination. Socrates doesn’t seem to have imagined no destination was in mind: the end product, the something other than argument, the understanding.

    Second item. The position that argument for its own sake is a desirable thing puts me in mind of something John Paul Sartre said. From memory he said the intellectual’s inclination is to frustrate action.

    To me it is a rum notion that poetry board conversation, and the poet/critic exchange, could be driven this way twofold: to have no destination in mind and to look to frustrate a poem’s symbolic action.

    Tere

  701. Socratic dialogue was hardly argument for the sake of argument. It was, first, discussion whose goal was to discover the truth of a matter. Arguing for its own sake has no such goal, its only goal is to argue. That’s pretty fundamental a difference from Socratic dialogue.

    Furthermore, “dialogue” does not inherently imply argument. That’s why they’re called the Socratic dialogues, not the Socratic arguments. Dialogue does imply discussion, and doesn’t exclude heated discussion or strong disagreement. But the goal remains to reveal the truth, not simply to argue.

  702. Thanks, Tere. You shine on this board, by the way.

    The metaphor I recall Socrates using was ‘let us allow the winds of the argument to blow us where it will and if our initial positions are overthrown, so be it.’

    As for Denby, how has he ‘affected the system’ and made ‘change?’ It seems to me that only time can sort this all out and say which was the best snark or the most relevant satire and which led to ‘change,’ etc. You cannot make these grand generalizations re: on-line snark v. ‘New Yorker’ film reviews. That’s just ridiculous. It is Denby who is indulging in the negative here. Frankly, I can’t think of anything more arrogant and silly than Denby’s position. As for the Tannen essay, I have read it and to me it is worthless, for it falls into the same error in which it is assumed that discourse can somehow be policed into niceness and this will make the world better. What absolute nonsense. It is like someone crying out to their lover, “oh love me, but not too much!” No, I say. Bring it on.

  703. I believe I can tie two different subjects that have come up on this thread together here.

    ‘Anonymous’ said:

    “Frankly, I can’t think of anything more arrogant and silly than Denby’s position.” and “As for the Tannen essay, I have read it and to me it is worthless,…”

    The point of arguing, one could say, is ultimately to convince the person with whom you are arguing of the validity of your perspective and so cause them to agree with you. This is called politics, no? A very important part of that process is the nature of the opponent. Do they have credibility? Do they appear to have knowledge and understanding of the subject? Do you respect them as a person?

    So, how can any value be assigned to the opinions of one who doesn’t even have a name let alone credentials and authority?

    You will say that only the point being made by the words matters, but that is not so. The weight of the words is also important, and that weight is derived from the speaker. A professor emeritus and a sixth grader may say the same words, but the weight (value) of one outweighs the other simply because, based on the knowledge and experience of the one, you are more likely to believe them. Who cares what ‘nobody’ thinks?

    “I read this, I read that. I think it’s baloney!”

    Never before did this retort apply so appropriately: “So? Who the hell are you?”

  704. “A professor emeritus and a sixth grader may say the same words…”

    The words matter. Who cares who says them?

    You’re kidding, right, when you say it really matters who says them?

    I’m not trying to ‘convince’ you that Tannen and Denby have trivial arguments. I’m just trying to nudge you out of your complacency. If you are truly impressed by the content of Tannen and Denby’s arguments, then there’s really nothing I can do for you.

    How can one possibly police human behavior?

    I take it one post at a time, and no matter how snarky or sarcastic, if a good point is being made, a good point is being made, and I don’t care who’s making it.

    Simple. To argue otherwise is nothing more than special pleading, and just a waste of time.

  705. For the most part I think poetry “forums” have run there course. Most are dead or merely inhabited by the least common denominator. As an experiment in public discourse I think they failed.As a tool for learning I also think they failed. As an example of how the Internet can become a bastion for those whose opinions would not otherwise be considered it was a HUGE success. LOL.

  706. Jack,

    I think poetry today is a failure. It’s not like the World of Letters on the printed page today is some great rocking success. Again, ‘book’ vs. ‘on-line’ or ‘Ph.D.’ vs. ‘anonymous blogger,’ who cares? Why the big, huffy competition? I look for the truthful and the witty, and it usually comes from anonymous bloggers, since the credentialing complex has made ‘official’ Letters phony and boring. There’s no need for a contest between the two. Let’s be thankful on-line can snark pitiful rags such as ‘Poetry,’ ‘APR,’ ‘The New Yorker,’ newspapers, and other print media, and also other on-line sites, as well. Only an ass would resent the truth. Only a stuffy, bent-over, myopic, wanna-be literary professor/editor/poet phony-baloney would call internet-Letters a failure, per se.

    As for on-line poetry workshops, I agree with you that these are a failure, since all poetry workshops are a poor model for any poet. As I said before, poetry should not be a ‘study,’ but an expressiveness that becomes part of the poet’s very personality; the Byronic ego, however, is frowned upon by the milk-and-water academic setting of the workshop.

  707. Personally I will stick with Poetry, The New Yorker and APR and others as my reference source. I find they provide quality work. You are welcome to your opinion but you are wrong. Most of what you said is absolute foolishness. It’s laughable and sounds to me like the uneducated, unpublished, uncredentialed crybaby rants I hear all the time on poetry forums. It’s ridiculous. The internet is filled with people who just can’t cut it so like players losing the game they claim they never wanted to play in the first place. But think what you want. The majority don’t and for that I am grateful. It still requires formal education to teach poetry in any academic environment and that is a huge blessing.

  708. Jack,

    Could you reference one piece of ‘quality work’ from a recent issue of Poetry, APR, or New Yorker?

    Just curious.

  709. Glad to:

    C. P. Cavafy “It must Have Been the Spirits”

    and Susan Stewart “Last Robot Song”
    from NYer, most recent issue

    C.K. Williams “Wait”
    Scott Cairns “Idiot Psalms”
    Langston Hughes (archives) “You and Your Whole Race”

    Poetry, most recent issue

    I would call any of these quality work. Of course how could they ever compare to poems posted on “Holly’s Flip and Curl and Poetry Forum” but what the heck. I mean what does the Pulitzer Committee know from anything compared to someone named Wingnut posting anonmously at Holly’s Flip and Curl. I mean, education, knowledge, accomplishments and credentials be damned. Still I think these quality poems would give any of the “so-called” poems posted over at Holly’s Flip and Curl and Poetry Forum a run for their money. Of course then again what do I and thousands upon thousands of educators, editors and publishers know from beans? I mean we only spent half our lives studying, writing and publishing when compared to anonymous posters like Wingnut and other so highly qualified poetry posters who devoted their lives to refrigerator repair where they learned every in and out of poetry.

  710. But then again, poetry is so very subjective; there’s no accounting for what people might imagine “quality” poetry is.

  711. Then again, I happen to think “The Agamemnon Rag” is a “quality” poem. I guess so did Poetry. lol.

  712. Jack,

    I see you’re easily impressed by names and your own sense of self-importance.

    Keeping track of names in poetry has a (very) minor historical interest which is certainly valid, and you are certainly entitled to have that interest.

    By the way, I believe it was Pinsky who wrote the Robot poem, not Stewart. (I have a subscription to the New Yorker.)

    You haven’t cited high quality work in terms of poetry, I’m afraid.

    Interest in poetry trumps historical interest, since ultimately the history of poetry is just that—the history of poetry, not the poetry of history.

    I think even you would agree that poetry read for history would be rather like the snake ‘n the adage eating its tail.

    Why are you so eager to cancel out the internet with the New Yorker or Poetry? Surely both can live in the same world?

    If you are going to present yourself as a disinterested scholar, it looks bad to begrudge a Foetry.com thread with 65,000 hits, especially when you’ve given no indication to anyone that you can actually discern literary quality.

  713. The following is a letter published in the January 2009 issue of “Poetry:”

    Treemont Retirement Community has a poetry study group that meets every week. We have studied individual poets and their works, processed every word of “An Introduction to Poetry,” worked our way through “The Best Poems of the English Language,” and read Garrison Keillor’s collections. So naturally I felt that a subscription to “Poetry” would provide the group with some stimulating discussion.

    As it turns out, we cannot make head or tail out of your selected “poems.” We agree that there is no rhyme and very little reason–only phrases, snatches of words or thoughts in random order, with very little cohesion. The poems are neither enjoyable or enlightening.

    We feel that we are giving “Poetry” a fair trial, but we are dismayed to think that this magazine represents the best of modern poetry.

    [LOL!]

  714. Thanks for the heads-up on the Pinsky poem. Loved the poem. Thought it was Stewart’s. My bad.

    I think the foetry thingy is a dead issue, or at least it is for me, here. Without beating a dead horse (or horse’s ass) I already told you how I feel about it and why. Nothing has changed my mind and most of thsoe I associate with feel pretty much the same.

    I think the only indication to anyone that I can “actually” discern literary quality was determined a long time ago when I was chosen to teach English at several notable academic environments. I presume you understand that in order to do this one is more or less required to appear before a fairly well credentialed body of educators in the particular field (sort of like defending your thesis). I think I can safely say I concur with their opinion about my abilities. So, I will merely have to rely on THEIR good and educated judgement that I possess more than enough ability to discern quality work. Of course then again, I didn’t have to appear before Holly at Holly’s Flip and Curl and Poetry Forum or Wingnut. But I’ll put my lot in with the others which gives me some real authority regarding this issue.Of course then again no one has to agree with that. But of course to me it doesn’t much matter since the people I need to impress have been. Suffice to say my opinions regarding quality are pretty well accepted in certain real life environments. That I am afraid is very good for me.

    Hence that is my barometer for quality work. One doesn’t have to agree with it but then again people who disagree usually are not in an academic environment nor are they alllowed to teach writing, literature or poetrty. Imagine if you will what would happen if university and college students had to be taught poetry and interpret quality based on an internet poetry forum. Oh no!

    Besides all that, who gives a hoot what I think is good poetry or not here or on any other forum. For me, at least, it doesn’t really count since I think that avenue is fully covered by my real life experiences and credentials. In other words when I tell people this or that is a poem worth studying, they usually do. That’s good enough for me.

    Let’s face it I have the wonderful opportunity given the circumstances to impress on students the worth and value of certain poems including the historical signifcance of the work and the writer. (Emerson included)Therefore, I guess I shape enough minds in the real world to feel my ability to discern quality qwork is fairly well accepted in circles where it really matters.

  715. I forgot to respond to one of your questions. Do I think the internet and Poetry and the New Yorker can co-exist? Yes. However I tend to lean toward the icons of poetrty as a basis of my judgement. I see too much uneducated guess work on the internet. It’s like using Wikapedia as a reliable academic source. It has no credibility. I don’t find much credibility in poetry forums. Again that’s just me. I sort of like tried and true venues of agreed upon quality.

  716. I mean, hell I’ve published ten books and have even sold movie rights to one. I guess I must be able to discern something regarding quality. lol.

  717. re: #899. I suppose the first question is to ask exactly what constitutes poetry credibility on line and in the poetry forums? Is this a question concerning the poetry itself, poetry criticism, and or poetry comprehensions (which I define as the capacity for recognizing poetry when and where it appears irrespective of such environmentally bound measures as bias to style and form). I suppose it is true that I find more poetry posters than I find credible poets. True as well that I find more poetry critics than I find credible critics of poetry. And again true that I find a smallish capacity for poetry comprehension, especially amongst those online readers of poetry that press, what in my view, is a limited agenda of what makes for good poetry and who can be the loudest in their declarations of what makes for good poetry.

    Similarly, however, I find much the same circumstance off line, in print. I find it in the professional magazines, in what gets published in books, and in what gets promoted in universities and colleges. “Poetry”, for example, is a magazine that should have died a natural death when Harriet Monroe kicked the bucket. Then there is a story Pres. Carter told back in the nineties concerning a book of poetry he made. At first, his publisher rejected the submission. So the peanut farmer went to a bookstore, bought a bunch of contemporary poetry books, read them, then sent them to his editor with the question: now how exactly is this poetry better than mine? Jimmy’s book got published. As for the college poetry scene, it has been sterile for as long as I can remember. Certainly since the early seventies. Ideologies have changed since then perhaps. The dust bowl of the environment has not.

    There are two thing I do find in the on line poetry circuit I do not find as often in my bookstores’ poetry sections. I find first-round, non-professional poets who can only be described as naturals, who are ‘un-smart’ enough not to be weighed down by agenda and ideology, and who time and time again say the true things in authentic language carefully wordsmithed. I also find gifted poetry readers who have that capacity I have come to value: poetry comprehension.

    Maybe there is a third thing I find on line I do not find off line and in print. A certain democratizing of poetry. On line I can find poetry by an eighteen year old girl whose sense of internal, organic form leaves me shaking my head. I can find poetry by a truck driver whose syntax-play strips away at perceptual bias. I can find the unguarded lyricism of a housewife looking to make experience, at least symbolically, authentic. And I can find the dreamer not speaking to an audience or a committee, but to the dream.

    I suppose in the end I don’t much care about credibility. It’s just a second-hand emotion. Second-hand to poetry. Since I first came on line I’ve had this crazy notion that the best of on line poetry should somewhere, somehow get anthologized. I frankly think it is better, the best of it, than what filters through, filters past, arbiters working in print.

    Tere

  718. Anyone who is enthralled by accreditation, or conversely lauds its lack, is as invested in the status quo as it is possible to be. Anyone who thinks that having a Ph.D. gives you more credibility than someone who doesn’t is really, really invested in the System itself. Nor was Foetry.com the only gadfly pulling the System’s trousers down.

    Think about it. Who really gives a shit about credentials? Plenty of credentialed poets write total crap. Plenty of poets outside the accredited and academic realms write much better poems.

    What matters is the quality of the writing, not who wrote it. In the long run, the test of history is the only real test that matters.

  719. I give a shit about it and a majority of poets, writers, editors, publishers, students and readers do. Does that answer your question? There are many more people who put their trust in accfredidation than in anything else.

  720. That fine Tere but I doubt anyone writing seriously is going to change thrie mind about Poetry and its role in Poetry. Heda to head there isn’t a soul I know who would care less about online poetry but revere Poetry, as they should be. The reason online poetry is not really taken seriously is for the same reason Wikapedia has been banned as a research source from most colleges and universities: they lack credibility. Online poetry seems fine for those who read online poetry. Everythign seeks its own level. But no one I know who takes poetry seriously gives it much credibility. There jusyt isn’t enough proven talent there. There are loads of people using it but it is not very good.

  721. I keep hitting the send button before I’ve finished. I apologize.

    We all have to live in the real world and thereal world IS one where Poetry magazine matters and places like Random House DO publish and universities DO teach poetry, writing and literature.

    Of course there are exceptions but they remain just that: fringe.

    On top of that the majority of people reading poetry flock to Poetry as their source NOT online forums. Poetry remains the gold standard in poetry.

    There is nothign wrong with self publishing or starting your own forum however gaining acceptability is another matter.

    I’ve taught at any number of colleges and universities and no one evr has referred students to an online forum as a good source. In fact many professors discourage it. It has the same reputation that vainity publishing had many years ago. Or those poetry anthologies where people pay for a copy of the poem that they publish. And on top pf that I have never heard any student poets or writers advocate getting their work published or posted on an online forum as opposed to Poetry and the host f other much more widely accepted and credible journals.

    I think it is not ever going to change to anything remotely like what many forum dwellers wish. It’s a cycle. You go to university for a higher degree. University is taught by professors who don’t find forums credible. Students stay away from them. When they go on for a garduate degree and becoem professors themselves they in turn don’t advocate forums.

    Add to that cycle that most people who advocate on lne forums cannot get into that mix, especially as a professor since they are usually nOT credentialed. SWo they are in no position to change the cycle. Proclaiming it from a forum does no good since the onyl people listening are those AREADY using a forum.

    That’s my opinion of it. In fact there seems to me to be an inordinate amount of hostility toward people who are writing who are credntialed, which leads me to believe there is a lot of sour grapes out there and that people who could not otherwise get published or teach poetry found thier calling in forums mand yet they expect the real world to take notice of them. It’s not going to happen. You wanna play you gotta pay. mThere is no easy way around it although some folks truly think online peotry is their ticket to stardom.

    I mean just try and explain to anyone in any academic environment that your work is all self-published or that you have been published on a poetryt forum. I met someone once who wanted a job as an editor and on tjheir resume they listed being a moderator on a forum. I mean, come on. What d you think someone;s going to take that person over someone with a Masters degree in publishing from Boston University? No. It;’s the real world.

    They can exist simultaneously but I doubt anyone in an academic environment orpublishing is going to take the online forum world seriously.

    I sometime laugh when I think of it. I cannot imagine (although I’m sure it happens) going to a literary agent with a bio or credits that includes online posting as a credit.

  722. I aplogize for the typos etc. I type wicked fast and usually have someone to revise my copy. When I type on my own I am prone to huge mistakes. God bless copy editors!

  723. I disagree with your estimations, Jackman. I am happily satisfied to leave it at that.

    Except maybe that your comments bring to mind a story Vonnegut used to tell about his days spent teaching creative writing courses. Keep in mind he considered the occupation an act of slumming. Anyway, from memory he once said that he would look around at all his students and think: they are all such gifted writers and they have nothing to write about.

    Good luck with your choices. I have found my way. You must find your own. (Nietzsche said that.)

    Tere

  724. Jack,

    On-line is becoming more ‘real world’ every day. Higher education is changing. Colleges are businesses–they offer on-line courses. Any dope can get a masters degree these days. You seem a little out-of-touch. My professor friends are overworked and marginalized by their work. You don’t seem to realize how marginalized print poetry and poetry in the universities has become. Professors publish with university presses and the only ones buying are their students–because they hope to get published in turn. It’s a pyramid scheme. Your ‘real world’ is becoming more bereft every day. The credentialing industry is eating itself. You don’t seem to realize how marginal your ‘real world’ is. Your professional world is dying.

    “Poetry” is nothing more than a few individuals making aesthetic decisions. Tell me it’s anything more than that.

    I agree that on-line forums generally suffer from the same afflictions impacting your so-called ‘real world,’ but if on-line is where people go, then the ‘professionals,’ too, will go there. Robert Creeley logged on to Foetry.com at the end of his life, because, let’s face it, more people read Foetry.com then went to Black Mountain.

    All significant revolutions begin with criticism. Ideally, they should begin with something positive and new, but they don’t. The most glorious revolution begins with the idea that the current regime is oppressive and ‘calling out’ that regime is the revolution, and the revolution’s ‘positive’ is defined by the negative of criticizing the old regime. The ‘new world’ is nothing but the ‘old world’ with a little more freedom practiced by reckless types who want freedom first and have faith that something good will happen later on. Free the slaves. Pay less tax. Will this solve all problems? No, but the old wrongs must go, even if new problems arise in their place.

    On-line has a unique opportunity to expose the serious problems in ‘real world’ poetry right now, and that’s why Foetry.com was so important and had so much potential and was resisted by so many in the ‘real world.’ The ‘real world’ of poetry has real problems and on-line can simply continue on with those problems or, it can expose them in a revolutionary way.

    If one looks briefly at the two mediums, ‘Face to face’ features more dishonesty, finally, than on-line. ‘Face to face’ is more civil, but since when was civility an advantage in the philosophical and artistic sciences?

    On-line will be a failure unless it use its independence to speak the truth, the kind I am speaking now. It’s pretty simple. Credentials don’t matter. The medium doesn’t matter. Truth matters.

  725. Tere, Thank you. Yes, I’ve always been a big Vonnegut fan. He also said this and I use it in regard to internet forums, “Be careful what you wish for.”

    Thomas Grace,

    Truth does matter. I agree. But I am afraid I can’t agree with you about the rest of it. Maybe you are hanging out with the wrong crowd. I have yet to hear or find in my travels in the academic world few if any “marginalized” professors. It seems to me we impact every level of culture and more or less define a majoriy of norms. I know most of us want truth in writing and publishing, but most of us would prefer to get our truth from reliable, accredited and credentialed sources. And yes, people can get Master’s degrees from all sorts of online places. Problem is they aren’t accredited and hence are not really legitimate degrees or at least are not recognized as such within the academic world. You are free to obtain your truth anywhere you so desire. It’s not my problem. I will throw my lot in with the real world. I am afraid the internet world remains pretty phony to me in every regard. I prefer to get published in Poetry since most poets consider it the Holy Grail of publishing. That’s good enough for me. I guess I’m just not good enough for Betty’s Flip and Curl and Poetry Forum. lol.

  726. Jack,

    I’m talking about accredited on-line courses offered by accredited institutions. It’s the wave of the future. Surely you’re not ignorant of this?

    The ‘Holy Grail’ of publishing? LOL

    Did you see that ‘poem’ they published a while back in ‘Poetry’ which was merely a series of horrible puns, ‘Agamemnon’s Rag’ or something like that? LOL

    Memo: There’s no ‘holy grail.’ There’s no ‘real’ about your ‘real world.’ The only thing ‘real’ about Letters is criticism which detects objective worth beyond the fantasy of deluded individuals who either luck into or buy into superficial and momentary notoriety. Society lives by truth (criticism) not by fantasy (flattery and vanity).

    “Poetry” was a self-important ‘zine for a clique of marginalized writers in the early 20th century who no one read because their work was too obscure for mainstream publishers. The current (hollow) notoriety of those writers published in that ‘zine and read by a few dozen people back then, exists solely in university text books such as “Understanding Poetry” by Brooks and Warren (part of the same John Crowe Ransom/Ezra Pound 1930s right-wing clique) read by GIs who flocked to college after World War Two and were spoon-fed the academic pablum of ‘revolutionary’ modernism.

    The rubbish of modernism exists in beard-scratch academia, and, except for modern art sales, has not added one positive thing to the economy or education or society in general. It is a vanity exercise propped up by a few wealthy naifs (the sort Pound was so good at preying upon) and is completely dying as we speak. “Poetry” is busily trying to escape the legacy of Pound as it continues to print poetry no one can understand. The whole thing is rather amusing. For you to call “Poetry” the ‘real world’ is tremendously funny, but I’m sure you don’t get the joke.

  727. I’m sorry you don’t agree with the rest of the intellectual world. That’s up to you,. Perhaps you just don’t have any position or contact within the academic community but I’m afraid Poetry is called the Holy Grail of poetry publishing. The again it was only the New Yorker that called it that.It might not be to you but then again,you’re not a porfessor of literature are you and you think foetry matters. Good for you. I can see from your comments that you would never make in in an academic environment. For a lot of reasons including what I presume is a lack of credentials. That’s fine. Stick with online poetrry forums and online “accredited” college courses. I’m sure you’ll go far.

  728. And by the by Thomas Grace you can move along. This discussion has run its course. Like so much of online poetry forum banter it doesn’t amount to anything. I’ll stick with my accepted Holy Grail and you can stick with foetry. I’ll stick with major publishers and Hollywood and you can stick with whatever.

  729. Jack,

    You are the poster boy of “accredidation:” all you can bring to the table is a jejune pissing match.

    Good luck to you.

  730. Thomas,

    I guess things could be worse. I could be the poster boy for foetry, but I understand that job is already taken.

  731. Well, actually, you’re both correct.

    Poetry Magazine is the holy grail, perhaps, but now tarnished.

    The internet is the new horizon, maybe, but unvarnished.

    But, what difference? The medium does not obscure the message.

    Poetry is always poetry.

    .

  732. Gary,

    Glad to see you’re still inflicting your poetry on the pretentious. This post from the Silly Man thread sums up the inanity of the intellectual who thinks he has everything to say but has nothing to say. Is it OK for me to quote the poor fool here?:

    “I appreciate your acknowledgment of the role that place–particularly Southern California–plays in Rae Armantrout’s writing. While she isn’t in any conventional sense a regional poet, I think place plays more of a role in her poetry that people often recognize. Not simply that the descriptive moments often do describe Southern California, but also that the absences and ellipses often are related in her work to specific cultural conditions in the place where she lives. The sense of distance in her work, that things are missing–often and especially complex interconnections with others–aren’t necessarily generalizations about the world, or even a generalized existentialism, but seem closely linked to the place where she (and recently me too) live, while at the same time she manages to give them very broad implications that go beyond place.”

    What do you DO when a person like this is sitting across from you at some “workshop?”

    Run screaming from the room?

    Kill them?

    No.

    You give them a Gary Fitzgerald poem.

    LOL

  733. Gary,

    Yes my typing is awful. Good thing my writing isn’t. I can readily assure you one doesn’t get ten books published by typing the way I type on forums. Publishers are funny about that. They want everything done just so. Imagine that?

    In another matter:

    If this is indeed F. Wright
    ( I love his work) then i couldn;’t have said it better myself (or at least UI couldn’t have typed it better.)

    “This whole busi­ness is, what, five years old? Can your life be THAT boring. I sup­pose I should be flat­tered by this obses­sion with my life, but my God, it is kind of appalling–I mean, I spent my life, sac­ri­ficed my life, trying to con­tribute some­thing. It is simply beyond my com­pre­hen­sion, this eager­ness on some peoples’ parts to jump into the envi­ous anony­mous losers club! Lots of luck, FW”

    Loved it.

    Good luck on the poems.I only wriote two poems last year because of other writing committments. I am fortunate though that they were both picked up. “Shakespeare in the Park” (a baseball poem) was picked up by :”roger” the Roger Williams University lit mag. and “Sermon on the Mound” was picked up by another university press. Good for me. (I can assure you they were typed correctly–it’s amazing to what ends one goes to when it REALLY matters in the real world. lol)

    I am working on a new poem as there is a lull in the action.
    I will post it in its unfinished form here later.

    Good luck on your work.
    ps I ordered your book.

    best regards,

    Jacckk

  734. Jack is suprisingly civil when he talks about his illustrious writing career. He only flips out when someone disagrees with him. That’s usually the way of the credentialed–since the credentials are not to be argued with, likewise the acumen of the credentialed is not to argued with.

  735. It’s nice to see you disagree gracefully.

    My faith in humanity is restored.

    And bless you for all your writing accomplishments!

  736. This one’s for you Jack.

    It seems Poe, who invented virtually every modern literary genre, also invented blogging, which all must now concede takes its rightful place as a respectful form of literature, higher even that literature interefered with by publishers, editors and other anti-democratic hacks.

    “… authors will perceive the immense advantage of giving their own manuscripts directly to the public without the expensive interference of the type-setter, and the often ruinous intervention of the publisher. All that a man of letters need do will be to pay some attention to legibility of manuscript, arrange his pages to suit himself, and stereotype them instantaneously, as arranged. He may intersperse them with his own drawings, or with anything to please his own fancy, … In the new régime the humblest will speak as often and as freely as the most exalted, and will be sure of receiving just that amount of attention which the intrinsic merit of their speeches may deserve.”

    –E.A. Poe

    Beautiful!!

  737. “…just that amount of attention which the intrinsic merit of their speeches may deserve.”

    Who couldn’t agree with this?! I know I do. Especially the “may deserve” part.

  738. I mark this as good news. TCP.org has unbanned all of its banned poets. And I think they are looking to make an experiment, proceeding without moderators.

    Tere

  739. Jack,

    Glad you agree with the Poe document which validates blogging on the highest possible level.

    The key phrase, however, in my mind, is “intrinsic merit”–as opposed to ass-kissing credentials.

  740. Thomas Grace,

    I looked and looked but saw nothing remotely associated with “ass-kissing credentials,” in Poe’s summation. I did see where he clearly inferred that those of little talent, credentials,ability, education, accomplishments, etc, will no doubt get what they deserve. I agree. And they have. They have not been successful in anyone of worth’s eyes. So Poe was correct. And I concur. I would no sooner send my work to an uncredentialled outlet as I would accept the opinion of third graders as to the sum and substance of let’s say, well, Poe’s work. I classify them more or less in the same realm. Third graders are not experientially or intellectually able to respond intelligently to poetry of a high order such as Poe’s work and my opinion is those less fortunate in the credentialling and accommplishment department suffer the same sad fate. I would also concur with Franz Wright’s assessment of this hogwash that tries to pass itself off as poetry in blogs and forums. I have no idea what people outside of university may opine, nor do I care. It remains irrelevant. As irrelevant as let’s say foetry.

  741. In other more important matters: Tere, I say we hold a contest to see who gets “banned” from this self-proclaimed poetry forum first and why and then make it into a case study.

  742. Jack,

    You still don’t get it, do you?

    You equate “credentials” with “talent” and “worth,” etc.

    Poe put it very concisely: “intrinsic merit.” The key word is “intrinsic.” Credentials have nothing to do with intrinsic worth—but you don’t seem to understand this.

    When I am reading a Franz Wright poem, I don’t care a fig whether he finished third grade, or has a Ph.D.–those are externals, Jack.

    On the other hand, how Franz Wright experiences the world and learns to write poetry has intrinsic worth.

    A Ph.D. has NO intrinsic worth.

    Are we getting through to you?

    You can fuss and fume all you want about the worth of this or that poem or this or that idea, and that’s fine. But per this issue of credentials, you seem really, really confused.

  743. Jackman, don’t pull me into the present discussion. I have no dog in this particular hunt. I can only refer you to post #901 for my position on the topic you keep to. I am no more persuaded of your arguments now than I was upthread.

    Tere

  744. Thomas Grace

    I have no problem with your view of the world. Keep it. It just doesn’t happen to be correct or mine.

    Tere,
    Not asking you into this discussion. I’m not particularly concerned about what others want to believe. I find it faulty logic but people are free to thibk whatever they want however erroneous. I was responding to your TCP announcement.

  745. This resolves everything–Jack has published a book!

    I guess we can end the thread. Discussion is over. Jack has published a book!

    Let’s make a pilgrimage to the great author! When is the Nobel coming? Where can I buy the Library of America volumes of your collected work? Jack has published a book!

    I see you’re nostalgic for old bank robberies. That’s nice. You swaggering bank robber, you! Published author, and everything… Jack has published a book!

    Books… I remember those! Congratulations, Jack. A trillion books in the world and I bet yours goes far! Jack has published a book!

    In all seriousness, congratulations, Jack, that’s wonderful, and the best of success to you. You’ve published a book and linked it on-line!

    I’m sure this is what Tere had in mind for this thread: advertising space for Jack’s books! Hey, everybody, Jack has published a book!

    Jack adds to his resume…and…he wins! Bet you’ll be invited to lots of fancy parties with all sorts of important people now…Oh, here he comes, the published author…Jack has published a book!

    LOL

  746. Take it easy Thomas before you bust a gut. First and foremost Ive published nearly ten books.
    Try and get it straight at least.

    Secondly, anytime you wish to post your published books here I’m sure Tere wouldn’t mind.

    Perhaps it is necessary to speak slower so you can actually follow the thread. My point, by example is simply that credentials, acaccomplishments and education have a huge standing within the real world of publishing. Hence books.

    If anyone would like to dispute this, please, be my guest.

    My contention remains that all this hogwash about poetry forums holding some envious position in the world of writing can not be substantiated. I can substantiate my claim. What about you?

    I like having my books sold throughout the world. Then again Thomas Grace, Monday Love, it couldn’t possibly top being on a defunct forum. lol.

    I can only echo Franz Wright’s comments to you: “It is simply beyond my com­pre­hen­sion, this eager­ness on some peoples’ parts to jump into the envi­ous anony­mous losers club! Lots of luck, FW”

  747. Jack,

    You have not “substantiated” anything.

    You are denigrating on-line communication on-line. LOL

    You are trying to amass some kind of credentialed authority for yourself and your good friend Franz Wright and have utterly failed to so.

    You have failed to grasp Poe’s phrase “intrinsic merit.”

    Now, run along. Don’t you need to sign all your books, or ship them to France, or something?

  748. If you say so, but then again, I really can’t substantiate that you have any real authority to come to any conclusions. But that’s okay. Poeple using forums are often prone to saying things that no one in the real world finds realistic. You really need to take a break Tommy Boy. Your envy is beginning to show. lol.

  749. I’m sory Tommy Boy but I just checked with a Poe scholar (a real one with degrees and everything—lol) and he says that I am correct in my analysis of Poe’s stance. He says Poe, in his usual manner, as an editor first, (He actually went head to head with Sarah Hale by the by…and lost….I can refer you to the article I wrote on Poe and publishing. It appears in my book, NEW ENGLAND WOMEN OF SUBSTANCE)was being sardonic and that you (Maybe it’s because you have so few credentials, I dunno) missed his point and the satire completely. Sorry. Have you thought of going back to school and learning more? It might be a step in the right direction instead of investing so heavily in online poetry forums and places like foetry. It’s just a thought.

  750. This is very good, Jack, and I must say your new strategy is excellent and delights me utterly.

    You have realized the “intrinsic merit” of Poe’s quote.

    You realize I won’t let you escape its relevance with some juvenile attack on me, so now you have decided to save yourself by a direct assault on the very author of the quotation you cannot escape—Edgar Poe.

    I’m tickled to death by this bold strategy on your part.

    Poe didn’t even earn a college degree! Poe was merely a starving journalist who brought attention to himself by writing hack horror fiction and insulting far more credentialed gentlemen of Letters than himself, like Professor Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

    A desperate, but highly predictable, gambit on your part–if you only knew how amusing I find it!

    Poe “lost” to Sarah Hale—and you have put this story in a book.

    And now you feel you have gained some authority in this discussion.

    Pray, explain how this sheds light on your inability to grasp the meaning of “intrinsic merit.”

    We are all ears.

  751. I think Thomas Grace you are having a very difficult time following all this because I’m sorry to say it’s over your head.
    Poe didn’t have to earn a college degree but then again that was several centuries ago. Be my guest if you think that’s the way it works now. It doesn’t. Your failings at getting an education is neither my concern or my fault.
    What Poe is saying is that the ultimate worth of any writing will seek its own “deserved” level. Poe was an editor and a fairly good one. He knew full well that the very notion that some uneducated guess work when it came to writing would indeed get the attention it deserved; meaning none of any worth. Or at least that’s how I interpreted it and that’s how others more qualified than either you or I see it. Once again, I willgladly put my stock with someone who is a Poe scholar rather than someone without a fair amount of education or someone trying to act as though they are somewhat educated in a blog or forum. I believe most people would. No one is asking you to but then don’t get all huffy when someone qualiied tells you that you’re wrong. That’s the way of the world. I am sorry if you don’t grasp that in all levels of art and literature and elsewhere. It actaully applis to every segement of our society (in this century) and as an analogy I would simply cite why people buy cookbooks by chefs and not by someone who happens to like cooking. I’m sorry but your misunderstanding of Poe only equals your misunderstanding of Emerson. But once again, you get the response you deserve, which is Iam afraid the same one that Franz Wright has given to such pompous and wrong-headed notions. You are just going to have to live with the fact that a lot of people are just plain a whole lot smarter than you and that writing on a blog or a poetry forum does’t qualify you as an expert in anything other than spouting off wrong-headed ideas that only those using such forums would even consider vald. In otjer words you get what you deserve Thomas Grace, Monday Love, which is pretty much a roll of the yes, a snicker and a shrug when it comes to most of the unqualified things you post. That’s the way it is. Learn to live with it or learn something.

  752. I am sure you know or have heard what an encyclopeida is. Peopleaare cosen to write entires into it. They aren’t wikapedia. They are peer edited entries. Now just who do you presume is allowed to make entries– people who have no education, credentials or accomplishments? There are so many people who want to play in this game of writing without doing their homework or their work. It just doesn’t work that way Thomas Grace, Monday Love. Now enough. You lost the argument but now you’re acting like a sore loser who keeps trying to replay the game. It’s over. You lost. Move along.

  753. Lastly, that’s the whole point Thomas Grace, Mondya Love, noone cares that you find it amusing because no one thinks you have any real authority or knowledge regarding these isuues. That’s what you don’t get. Since you are not a scholar or an educator or even remotely accomplished who cares what you find amusing. You’re just notin any position for it to matter what you think or believe.

  754. Three rambling posts to make the same feeble, spiteful, irrelevant point over and over again…

    What does your “Poe scholar” and Franz Wright have to do with the fact that you cannot grasp Poe’s idea of “intrinsic merit?”

    It seems your vaunted “education” is a stumbling block. You don’t sound learned in the least.

    You, with all your credentials, losing a debate to Monday Love–a mere beast, raised by wolves…

  755. Sorry, but I’m not really that concenred with what you may or may not think. Thayt might offend you and I hope it does but you really don’t carry much weight with me for the reasons stated above and previously. You simply missed tPoe’s point and I can’t imagine why except that perhaps you just don’t read enough to comprehend it.

  756. New Poem: The Syllabus for Life 101

    The prerequisite for the course is successful navigation down a birth canal, not to be mistakenly confused with a canal in Venice in which case the student is advised to take geography 101 as a refresher course.

    Required texts for this course will include, the Bible, the Koran and the teachings of Buddha. Students should become somewhat familiar with the supplemental reading of “The Sermon on the Mount.” Other required supplemental readings will include: cards, letters, notices, credit reports, contracts, loans, death certificates, power of attorney, medical reports, accident reports mortgages, x-rays, and so forth. Be advised that objects in this life may appear closer than they are. Students will experience a certain degree of things slipping from their grasp. Happiness may escape the student during this course but rest assured that the blood hounds will surely pick up its scent.

    Absences will require a doctor’s certificate. In the event that the student should go missing, an all points bulletin will probably be filed and at the very least, a missing person’s report. Trained dogs are available upon request to, if it does become necessary, to sniff out your remains. Withdrawal from this course is your right however in some states it is illegal (See Dr. Kevorkian).

    The course description includes providing every student of the opportunity to develop his or her potential within certain predetermine parameters. Some bootstraps will be required. For some students there will be sociological, cultural and economic hurdles, to overcome, however, these should not prohibit the successful completion of this course. (See Booker T. Washington).

    In trying to accomplish the course outcomes, students will be required to conduct research, both primary and secondary. Hopefully secondary research will allow students to learn from others’ mistakes although that appears seldom to be the case.  

    Students are required to complete every assignment however fundamentally absurd and demeaning and to demonstrate knowledge of the vast cosmic differences that we encounter and act accordingly, with fervor, regret, anticipation, joy, ineptitude, grace, harmony and reluctance. Students will undertake an independent quest for truth to include an attempt to determine whether balloons should be tax deductible for clowns.
    Students will be required to compare and contrast love and hate, good and evil, rich and poor, war and peace and a variety of religious tenets, many of which the student can feel free to disregard, and including the proposition of becoming an agnostic atheist (one who cannot decide which God not to believe in). Objective opinions will hardly be tolerated and students will rely heavily on their subjective opinions couched in flimsy biases, prejudices, sexism, and racism.

    Grades will be based on how much joy, happiness and genuine comfort you can fill up your life with and extend to fellow students, understanding full well that money is an accommodation and not necessarily a requirement for the successful completion of this course (although preferable).

    Students may work in groups, couples or individually. You may divorce yourself from any of these situations at any time, however please be advised that substantial alimony may apply. Tardiness, although not encouraged, is accepted, since late bloomers are always appreciated (See George Bernard Shaw). Attendance is required both day and night for as long as allowed.

    You may leave early but that is suicide for this course. Plagiarism is not allowed. Stealing work and lives is nearly impossible. (See: “The Great Imposter” with Tony Curtis or “Catch Me If You Can” with Leonardo DiCapprio). Disability services are inevitable in some cases but should not be a handicap for success in this course (See Stephen Hawking).

    There is an open

  757. I will be submitting this to several university literary magazines and print jurnals as well as posting it on several forums.

    I am genuinely interested in comparing the responses as it goes to my overall thesis regarding the levels of comprehension between them.

  758. Jack,

    Such a comfortable world you live in, where those you deem “Poe scholars” provide “the correct answers” LOL and resumes (George W. Bush: 8 years, president of the United States) are everything.

    Good luck with that.

    You confuse banal, “Reader’s Digest” humor with poetry.

    Good luck with that, too.

  759. Jackman and Brady and Essex and all I hope you’ll pardon me if I don’t go after your conversation, as worth while as I am sure it is.

    Clattery, old bean, as regards the pee in the pool of online poetry, I figure we have some unfinished business. Remember what we were going after?

    Over at Delectable Mnts I started a thread called ‘My Rimbaud.’ I want to bring over two posts from the thread. I think they speak to the pee in the pool, at least to some of it. It includes a letter I received from a longtime friend who all but turned her back on the online poetry board scene and why. (I’ve been given her permission to carry it publically.) The second post involves thoughts her letter brought back to mind and helped me crystalize. You may recall that my essay dealt with much more than what got focused on. Now that the dust has settled, so to speak, maybe we can focus on some of the other stuff that endangers the vitality of the boards.

    The first post introduces my friend and her letter, cites her letter, then concludes with a few remarks.

    Post one:

    ~ I have this friend of long standing. I think of her as my Rimbaud. Everyone knows the story of how he made brilliant and lasting poetry, all before the age of 18. And everyone knows that, soon after, he turned his back on European civilization to become a smuggler and gun runner in (I think) Asyria. But I don’t think it is as generally understood that it wasn’t just Europe he was turning his back on. It was also the contemporary poetry scene which he decided was rotten and not repairable. I am not saying my friend’s poetry is necessarily brilliant. But she is remarkably gifted, a natural, and she has an extraordinary capacity for working in that pre-cognitive range. Her improv poetry always delights and sometimes is stunning. The more deliberately constructed poetry always follows its own interior logic and its language tends to the authentic, actually both in language and experience. And also in Rimbaud fashion she has all but turned her back on the online poetry scene and for similar reasons pointing to the sometime futility of dealing with critical readers. In fact, I am not entirely certain she still makes poetry. I seem to recall she told me a couple of years ago she had even given up on poetry writing. And again because of some pretty bad online poetry experiences.

    I’ve asked for and received permission to post a slightly edited version of a recent letter from her. Edited to the extent of removing identifying information. It touches on something quite real. There is something oddly affecting about my friend’s comments. It’s kind of like an ingenue standing in the doorway, looking on the proceedings, scratching her head and saying I don’t get. Or maybe like a visitor to the empire’s capital uncomprehending of habits the inhabitants take as normal. Here is the letter:

    ~~ I visited your board and read some of your discussions, I will return and read more. I find it interesting.

    Thing I find so strange is everyone wants to categorize poetry, take it apart, see what makes it what it is, perhaps that is why I never fit in any place, I take it at face value, its all about how it makes me feel. Maybe because partly I probably don’t even read a poem like others do.

    For example, I am still on X’s mailing list, he publishes over and over again, someone always wants to do a new book of his works. He turns out poems by the masses. Some I find terribly boring he is so into the everything is “non reality” thing, Or whatever he calls it, yet now and then there is a poem that is so beautiful and real, you cannot help but be captured by the words.

    Next some write a poem in ten minutes, others write a poem in 20 years, yet both can be beautiful.

    Next there is the monster poet, who writes the most beautiful poems that flow like a sweet caress, they make one want to cry, he on the other hand is a real unfeeling ass as a human.

    Or there was the kid in an old poetry room that read a poem one night, that everyone just panned to death, and I can’t remember its title right now, but I still have it, because it touched me so deeply I thought it was wonderful.

    There are some that say you must be a scholar to write a decent poem. Yet, I have seen beautiful poems written by the uneducated. I listen to Richard Burton on a poetry tape he did reading the old masters, and I swear that man could have read aloud Dick and Jane books and made them beautiful and poetic.

    I cannot find the logic in: this is a real poem, this is not, this way is best, no this way is best, it is like an endless debate that never ends, with each person wanting to be the one who says what a true poem is and what one needs to be to write it……….

    That said……lol……no wonder I remain confused……..I would be a lousy contributor on your message board, because I cannot take things apart and talk of them that way never could, you know that already.

    Still I enjoy the reads that were posted and I read.

    Sorry for the long dullness, take care. ~~

    Interesting and fresh, don’t you think? I for one find myself thinking, I can’t blame her for giving up on the scene. I don’t know why it is some poetry readers, and none too infrequently, take the spirit out of poetry. Maybe some are motivated by the need to dominate. Others by the need to shape another’s poem in their own image. Still others who feel they have to say something critical, no matter what it is, just in order to say something at all. But my friend is right. Much of what gets said about poetry posted is stupid. And, in my view, self-serving. It is no wonder that, on most boards, the majority of poets and poetry readers keep quiet much of the time. I also feel that the rule requiring so many comments for every poem posted devalues the exchange. I much prefer a quid pro quo arrangement between members.

    Anyway, I know I am preaching to the choir here. But it can’t be a bad thing to take in how a quiet spoke views the scene.

    Tere ~

    Okay, Clattery. This was the thread’s first post. Then I got to thinking about what my Rimbaud was really saying, saying between the lines, saying without actually saying it. And I remembered a certain kind of person, a certain kind of office, I call the gifted poetry reader. And this is what I posted in response this afternoon. (The allusions to duende have to do with another ongoing conversation. They will have to stand in spite of the lack of context.)

    Post two

    ~ It is a better day. I want to come back to something pointed to upthread. It has nothing to do with the differing opinions expressed concerning the board’s composition. It has everything to do with something my friend’s letter initially brought to mind, even as it is an idea that has sat in the back of my brain for a long time.

    A few posts ago I said this:

    ~~ I do not want to, and I will not, go back to the bad old days at the TCP boards, and the Gazebo, and Poets.Org, etc., where criticism is the most honored activity and where, because of this, the critic’s is the dominant voice. I hate those days viscerally. I dis myself for having played into the game. Critics are necessary and good. But they are just a component. And, frankly, I find the occupation tertiary. Delectable Mnts has been designed to proceed differently. Here the artist comes first. And the thinker. And the journalist of experience. And, quite frankly, before the critic comes the reader who, in my experience, tends to be more the aficionado.~~

    Let’s forget about the online poetry board politics and the various competing stances of the boards. Let me focus on the passage’s last two sentences: ‘Here the artist comes first. And the thinker. And the journalist of experience. And, quite frankly, before the critic comes the reader who, in my experience, tends to be more the aficionado.’

    This is what my friend’s letter highlighted for me. It is also some of what I had in mind when, in the thread devoted to duende, I shared the Lorca story of the singer who, letting go of her craft and all the formal lessons she had learned, tosses back the throat burning brandy and submerges herself in duende. Remember how the aficionados were left unimpressed until she did?

    I have a term now for describing the kind of poetry aficionado I have in mind: the gifted poetry reader. And I am convinced that she, it could be he, plies an art as valid and of equal footing as the critic’s art and the poet’s art. I am also convinced that my gifted poetry reader is more demanding, expects much more, and is less fooled, than is the kind of critic for whom, as the saying goes, parts is parts and whose critical approach is mechanical. As demanding, in fact, as Lorca’s aficionados. Mind you, I know of critics who are also some of the most gifted poetry readers I’ve met. One especially comes to mind and who I sorely miss. But her approach rather proves my point. Exquistely intuitive, she always read on the gut level first, seeking out the poem’s duende and its truth-experience, then only returning to the poem with a critical eye if it was first deemed worth her valuable time.

    The gifted reader. Man! I sure do praise her, and him, who is so easily lost sight of, lost in the shuffle, and whose usually quiet voice is seldom heard over the din. I’ve noticed she tends to express herself, and register a response, in few words. And I’ve noticed that her words tend to be carefully chosen and not at all pyrotechnic or bringing undue attention to herself. She is simply responding, and on the gut level, to the poem in front of her. It is as if her primary question is: what, if anything, does this poem do to me. This strikes me as a valid criterion. If pushed on the subject I might even hold that it is the prime, if not only, criterion. What does the poem do to me? Where does it take me? Does it change me? Does it stop me? Does it make me silently scream? Does it push me outside my own body?

    I am sure I cannot adequately describe the gifted poetry reader. I just know she, and he, exists. I am also sure that, in my reckoning at least, the gifted poetry reader comes before the critic. I am equally as sure that, both online and off, poets lose sight of the gifted poetry reader, having become enamored of the critic. If some poet asked: why bother with the gifted poetry reader, especially since she is not going to further my career or my standing? My answer would run along the lines of this: what else really matters in poetry and in art? Who else is going to actively involve herself in a poem? Where else is a poem going to find a home?

    Again, my thoughts are not exclusionary or categorical. I know poets who are also gifted readers, even if they are few. Poets can be so preoccuppied with their own stuff they can lack a certain receptivity and responsiveness to other poets. And I know critics who can also be gifted readers, even if they are more in the minority. Agenda and ideology and bias and preconception can all be such a killer of poetry. All I want to do is bring attention back to that third participant, that third spoke, at the table. For me, and only me, the gifted poetry reader can make or break a poem of mine. The critic dealing in parts less frequently so.

    Thank you, my Rimbaud. Not for the first time you’ve righted my mind.

    Tere ~

    There you have it, Clattery. You remember how, last spring and summer, so many board managers got their panties in a wad over my essay? It was understandable. Not only their authority but their intentions got brought into question. Still are in question so far as I am concerned. But when it comes to poetry board health and vitality they are the lesser of evils. In my view the greatest harm comes at the hands of critics who are something less than the gifted poetry readers, and they are like Myrmidons, Achilles unquestioning soldiers who were his soldier ants. Also, in my view, to the extent the poet loses sight of her gifted poetry reader, heeding the critic only, she is screwed.

    Yeah. This is the real pee. The debilitating thing.

    Tere

  760. Tere,

    Your “Rimbaud friend” who has “turned her back” on the “on-line scene” is certainly the rule, not the exception. I heard in her voice a voice I hear all the time, (and they tend to be women) poets who just want to enjoy poetry and have no patience for ‘What Is Poetry?’ Critics. I know that you, Terreson, also do not like these critics, who tend to be male and bossy, and this seems to be, in a nutshell, your whole complaint.

    If only the Kalticas and the Monday Loves of the world would just go away, everything would be fine.

    As one these ‘What is Poetry?’ critics (I could explore ‘what is poetry’ all day and never tire of it, it’s my love and my inspiration) I think I should respond.

    I just read an introduction to Hawthorne’s “Twice Told Tales” by a lady scholar who said she didn’t think much of Hawthorne in school because the teacher was always looking for ‘symbols’ in a pedantic manner and she found she couldn’t just enjoy Hawthorne’s work, but then, later, when it was just her and Hawthorne, she fell in love with his work. This is also a common thing, as common as your ‘Rimbaud friend’s’ feelings, and I completely understand and sympathize with these feelings.

    But bossy teachers and criticism will never go away. Those who ‘want to know what poetry really is’ will never go away. Poets will always tend to have a brain that ‘wonders what poetry is’ and a heart that ‘just wants to enjoy the damn poetry.’ There will always be intellectual bullies and those who approach poetry like soldiers or priests or philosophers, and who will always intimidate those like your “Rimbaud friend” who just wants to enjoy the poetry.

    So what do we do? Do we take our ball and go home? Do we roll up into a ball and find a corner somewhere and have a good cry? There are a million options, and all of us find a comfort zone by picking and choosing our battles.

    Here’s what I do. I cultivate my philsophical ‘what is poetry’ side as well as my passionate ‘I just love poetry’ side. I learn everything I can, so that no critic can bully or intimidate me, or, I even let myself be instructed by a bullying critic, because, just maybe, even a bullying critc can teach me something. Learning may be a war, at times, but in that war at least I will never die.

    I never take my ball and go home, and this is how I show that I love poetry completely.

    I immerse myself in everything that I can, and I believe that cultivating my ‘what is poetry’ mind also helps my ‘I love poetry’ heart.

    My motto is ‘everything exists.’

    I deny none of it. I argue with it, but I don’t deny it. I battle it, if I cannot love it, but I will never run away from it. My favorites are Socrates and Pope and Poe. Socrates willingly took the hemlock, Pope turned to gardening, Poe was still looking for his own magazine. There are many stories; so many, that we need to be vigilant to make sense of it. Even poetry must, at times, lay down to rest. Even poetry must, at times, find the tune of the simple song, and murmur that song to itself, for comfort, and fall asleep. But the soul of the poet rests never.

  761. Actually, Essex, our respective approaches are not so dissimilar. I spend much time in discussion forums, looking to figure out the nature of poetry. When not making poetry, thinking about what makes poetry poetry is a favorite occupation. On the other hand when I am reading a poem maybe the second thing I am looking for is what the poet herself thinks is the nature of poetry. The first thing, of course, being what does the poem do to me, to my body. So I don’t think my post has to do with what you seem to think it has to do with.

    As for Kaltica and Monday Love and others of their ilk, I don’t want them to go away necessarily. I just want them to grow up, grow in their comprehensions of what makes poetry poetry. It is so much more than what a certain ‘school’ allows. And so I come back to my gifted poetry reader who frequently gets it when the critic doesn’t. I would also like to see more allowance for the three way conversation, and not so much an insistence on the poet/critic axis. I am not suggesting an either/or situation. Just a widening.

    Tere

  762. Tere,

    To get beyond the poet/critic axis is an ambitious task suffused with noble sentiments, I suppose, but I don’t think ‘gifted poetry reader’ helps us escape, for ‘gifted poetry reader’ will always look like ‘critic’ and I don’t think there’s any cure for that. There can be no preordainment of critics; the critic will always be an ‘other’ who will annoy to the degree that poetic attainment is vulnerable, and I don’t see how poetic attainment can ever not be vulnerable.

    Poetry is a horror in that the critic who is our enemy must be embraced as a lover in the poetic act–whenever poetry is for the public square and not our sock drawer. We cannot delimit the public square; we cannot chop the public in two, or three; the public is–the public.

    A three-way conversation is merely a drop in the ocean of ‘the public,’ whose existence is predicated on multiple conversations at all times.

    The cross-over already exists; readers will always be re-writers and writers will always be re-readers. So in that sense the poet/critic axis is overcome by Letters naturally.

    Does a poem affect ‘your’ body or ‘the’ body? If the former, then we enter a world in which ‘difference’ trumps ‘body,’ and if the latter, we enter a world in which the critic ‘speaks’ for ‘the body’ as well as it can. In either case, we still must suffer what you call the ‘poet/critic axis,’ for the body of the poet and the critic will never be the same. But this is not necessarily a bad thing.

    “I just want them to grow up.” You want them to be better critics, but such a demand cannot be made outside of poetry itself, and within poetry we are back to that great, unavoidable annoyance, the poet/critic axis.

  763. All this talk about critiques. A proper critique is not for a poetry workshop. A workshop is where a poet goes to get constructive feedback on his or her poem in progress. Therefore, anyone who is commenting is to give constructive feedback.

    If there are professional critics out there, who publish in scholarly journals, or professional reviewers of published books, who want to join online poetry workshops, then their particular points of view would be welcomed. But, the online forum is not the place for critique as such, as if to pretend that each poem has been completed and read at someone’s inauguration or something already.

    As for bossy types. Being bossy is a learned behavior, and should be unlearned when it comes to workshopping. Just because people do it, does not mean poets should put up with it in forums. That argument would be to accept that because people steal or act unruly, or even kill people, that this should be tolerated. Nooooo. What’s bad is bad. The idea is to have good forums. What we are finding is that bossy types, on the impetus of being bossy types and on nothing that would qualify them otherwise, are seeking moderator positions and bossing their fellow online poets around. Let’s recognize this and stop it, or at least be repulsed by it.

    C.

  764. C,

    I don’t see why workshop feedback cannot be ‘professional review’ quality. I think you are making a false distinction. ‘professional reviewers’ can be hacks, too. There are all sorts of ‘critiques’ and depending on circumstances, the work in question, the mood of the reviewer, the time the reviewer may have to work with, well, there are a million factors involved. Any poet who says, ‘this is just a first draft, go easy on it’ is just kidding themselves. Why should feedback EVER be dumb-ed down? Why should we aim to have a ‘professional review’ standard here and a mere ‘workshop critique’ there? I assume we’re all grownups and I assume we don’t over-estimate the ‘professional reviewer’ ranks as if they are gods or something. A crappy review can come from any number of fronts, but we need not legislate what sort of review or critique is to occur. Let’s just do the best critical job we can, at all times, and not assume ‘professionals’ are better, or that workshop students should be treated with kid-gloves.

    As far as ‘bossy,’ yea, I agree ‘bossy’ is bad. I can live with any sort of personality, as long as the person is intelligent, and not psychotically aggressive. I can live with ‘bossy.’ The pathological personality is another can of worms, and not a poetic issue, per se.

  765. Hi Thomas,

    My distinction was on the status of the poem being looked at, not on the ability of the person reading, which is why I included that professional reviewers and critics could be the ones reading and commenting on the poetry.

    Feedback should not be dumbed down. In fact, so many of the poets are so highly skilled, feedback cannot often be both dumbed down and make sense.

    But the task is not to give critique. Critique is for published work, out there in the world. I read these all the time. This is not what the poetry workshops are for. If a professional critic comes in and for kicks, instead of giving constructive feedback on a poem, gives a stirring critique of it, then this is a compliment to the writer, and should be both given and received as such. But the idea is to read the poem for the poet, and say what is working and what is not, in such a way that the poet can use what has been said to improve the work at hand, thus speaking into why the poem was posted in the first place, attending to the creative activity at hand.

    C.

  766. I got three items.

    ~ Clattery says this: “But the task is not to give critique. Critique is for published work, out there in the world. I read these all the time. This is not what the poetry workshops are for. If a professional critic comes in and for kicks, instead of giving constructive feedback on a poem, gives a stirring critique of it, then this is a compliment to the writer, and should be both given and received as such. But the idea is to read the poem for the poet, and say what is working and what is not, in such a way that the poet can use what has been said to improve the work at hand, thus speaking into why the poem was posted in the first place, attending to the creative activity at hand.”

    This is precisely the case and succinctly stated. Lit crit, by which I mean, in the present context, textual analysis is for the final product, even for the dead poet. It is of no creative value for the poem presented in a workshop setting. When C. says a poem should be read for the poem and with what does and does not work getting highlighted, in my view, this is the sole function of the online (workshop) critic. Viewed in any other way the online critic oversteps himself, which is certainly the case with a certain class of dominant (bossy) poetry board critics. It is not the board critic’s job to remake a poem. It is not the job of the board critic to recast a poem in his own image, nor remake the poem according to his own aesthetic or prosodic biases. I know of no gifted teacher of poetry, of all creative writing for that matter, who would think to proceed otherwise. Immediately coming to mind are the teacher-likes of Ransom, Lowell, Winters, Duncan, Snodgrass, and Stafford. That a certain class or kind of poetry board critic doesn’t get the real value of workshopping, in my mind, brings motive into question.

    ~ I have tried on so many different boards, in so many different venues, to get across the notion of poetry comprehension, of the capacity for poetry comprehension. Those who get the idea, they seem to be in the minority, seem to get it immediately. And, frankly, they didn’t need me to point out the capacity in the first place. Those who don’t get it seem to never get it. This is interesting to me. It suggests that the capacity for poetry comprehensions is innate and not learned.

    My model here, the poet whose poetry comprehensions were extraordinary, is Ezra Pound. Whether or not we can agree he was a poet is irrelevant. Another of my models, someone who tended to work in closed-form verse, said he never considered Pound a poet. It is why he didn’t put his name on the petition to get Pound out of the insame asylum. But here is what cannot be denied Pound. He could spot poetry no matter its provenance. He was not hemmed in or limited to stylistic, formulaic bias. He found poetry in Arnold, in Hardy, in Frost, in Cummings, in Mina Loy, and in Williams, not to mention what he found in hundreds of poets going back 2,000 years or so. This brings me to my main complaint with a certain kind of poetry board critic, a kind that looks to dominate the rap. They do not demonstrate the same capacity for poetry comprehension. They are limited to their own biases and prosodic values. Poetry is much more than a formulaic of meter and syllabics. Pound got it. Gifted poetry readers always get it. Poetry critics less frequently so, or so it would seem.

    ~ Personally, I tend to pay scant attention to a certain kind of poetry board critic. I know my own metrics, my own syllabics, my own constructions and rhythmic objectives. And so, increasingly, a certain dominant poetry board critic has become irrelevant to me. I find I am not alone in this. People can be smart and intuitive. Sometimes poets can be too. The time has come for a widening of the range in which poet and poetry reader meet. The poet/critic axis is not the only way. The hyper-critic would have us beleive that the only alternative to him is the innocuous read of and response to a poem. He says so because he needs poets to believe they need him in order to become a better poet. He is wrong. No poet has ever needed this certain kind of critic dominating the poetry boards to become a better poet.

    I want other voices in the conversation. I want the housewife with time on her hands. I want the single mother with no time on her hands. I want the steel worker with or without time on his hands. I want the waiter or waitress for whom poetry matters for no reason they can articulate. I want a widening of the conversation that makes a place at the table for the gifted poetry reader no matter her or his place at the table.

    Terreson

  767. Poets & Critics

    A pandemonium of shoots and seeds
    and tendrils,
    growth and life and creeping vines,
    many colored flowers, great oaks and pines,
    gentle bamboo and bees and beasts…
    a forest growing beautiful and
    natural
    and wild.

    Others come here, collect these leaves and petals,
    take them home, identify and classify and file,
    press them between books,
    then compare these specimens to
    one another.

    .
    copyright 2008, Gary B. Fitzgerald

  768. “If there are professional critics out there, who publish in scholarly journals, or professional reviewers of published books, who want to join online poetry workshops, then their particular points of view would be welcomed.”

    Yikes, Whatever will Thomas Graves think about this? Yo mean there are REAL critics ot phony online wannabes? Amazing.

    On another note, this:

    “Jack,

    Congratulations! Your poem “Syllabus for Life 101″ has been selected for publication in the 2009 edition of Temper, due out in April. We will let you know when the copies of the journal are in.

    –The Temper Team”

    A university press literary magazine. Good for me. I only had time tosend it to one place. I guess I can save on stamps and emails now.

  769. C.

    I love your site! I post something and it shows up immediately. Over at the Poetry Foundation’s Poetry Blog I post something and it may take hours, days, or never, for the post to show up. (I am proud of myself for defending Poe on Harriet’s ‘Prufrock’ thread.)

    So let me understand something. If I read a workshop student’s non-published efforts, I should withhold certain things which I would say in a published review of a published work? Why?

    If I’m telling a student what, as you said, ‘doesn’t work’ in their poem, how is this not ‘kicking’ their poem? And why would I ever want to limit myself as to what I say regarding any poem at any time? If a workshop effort reminds me of Rimbaud or Horace, I will say so. If I am reviewing a published author, and I notice a Rimbaud or a Horace influence, I will note that, just the same. If a published work is faulty, I will say why, just the same way I would articulate my thoughts to a workshop student.

    If this is just about being ‘nice’ to the young student, well, yea, sure…but is that what you are saying? I guess I’m still not understanding your distinction.

    I also just want to say: Thanks for letting me post here.

  770. Thomas Graves,
    I don’t think you are a teacher so what’s with the positioning regarding students? If you are a teacher just say so, but every indication is you are not, so you are not criting student’s work, you are critting a peer’s work. Big difference. Being the teacher implies you know something about the subject-hence the status as teacher. Could you please clarify this since I was under the impression that you have no formal education or training as a teacher — far less a professor in the arts. If I am wrong please correct me. If not, could you get your terms correct. It is peer to peer critting unless you are a legitimate certified and crednetialled teacher. Then it is teacher to student. I would hate people to get the wrong impression. So please clarify.

  771. Tere,

    You agree with Clattery, and so I would pose to you the same question: where comes this distinction between a review of a published poem and a critique of a non-published poem? If there is an implicit standard involved here—a standard the published poem meets and the non-published poem does not, wouldn’t that ‘standard’ be ‘doing the work’ in judging the non-published poem, anyway?

    Now, if there is no ‘standard’ at work, then what is the source of the distinction in the way we approach poem X (published) and poem Y (workshop submission)?

    Shouldn’t the student expect ‘professional review’ quality critique at all times?

    And, secondly, why should a high standard of review/critique do harm, or offend the poet? Nastiness comes in all sorts of guises and disguises, ‘professional’ and ‘non-professional’ alike. I know that you and Clattery are more sophisticated than that: you are not simply telling critics to ‘be nice.’ So again, what exactly are you saying?

    You mention Ransom, Lowell, Winters, Duncan, Snodgrass, Stafford, and Pound as exemplary critics. As for Pound: firstly, I dispute the sagacity of making a virtue out of appreciating all sorts of poetry, which is easily done and done all the time, and secondly, Pound was actually hare-brained in his judgments and ignored great swaths of poetic history with a wave of his hand. But leaving that aside; were any of the men you listed your teachers in workshop? This seems to be what you are implying. Or, do you know anyone personally who had these men as teachers? And if so, how exactly did they critique work in ways superior to others? Did they all critique in the same manner? How was their ‘professional reviewing’ different? Again, with all due respect, it’s not clear to me what you are saying.

  772. Jack,

    That’s correct. I have no formal education.

    I’m a squirrel. I eat nuts. I have 50 children, 33 girls and 17 boys, and 601 grandchildren, 341 boys and 260 girls. That’s about it!

    Yours,

    Thomas

  773. Hi Thomas,

    It is more for you to show the two, the professional critique and the workshop critique, how they would be similar. Do you have a couple links to illustrate your point?

    Because at this hypothetical level, I would say that the workshop “crit” would be more similar to the editor who has accepted the work for publication, or is seriously considering it, and is asking that the poem gets spiffed up–showing where it is weak, but saying at the same time what not to lose as the poem gets readied for publication.

    But still, this isn’t exactly the case. A workshop crit is for the benefit of the poet only, and usually specific to one poem. This is quite different from the scholastic critique, such as we could do for Ezra Pound’s work, or E.E. Cummings’, or Sylvia Plath’s–nothing you’re going to say is going to help a dead poet improve his or her work. The online forum is live, and probably is best compared with being in the same room with other poets as they all or we all help each other improve ourselves as poets and our poetry.

    C

  774. C,

    It seems to me that the unit of all poetry feedback is the poem, whether the poet is right there in the room with you, or dead.

    From there we proceed with our analysis downwards, or upwards. Downwards through stanza, line, syllable, or upwards through intention, mood, meaning, theme, historical influence, philosophical/ aesthetic impact, or re-influence. Both the living and the dead deserve no less.

    If, as an editor, you received ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, and read it for the first time, you would probably wish to convey to the young Tom Eliot in private correspondence the same thing you would wish to convey to a general audience of readers reading your review of the poem: “I find this an important poem for reasons A, B, C, and my reservations are X, Y, and Z.”

    The dead poet cannot make ‘changes,’ the living poet can–but the living poet may not make the changes you suggest, and, further, in either case, you as a critic state what you feel might make the poem better–whether the poet is dead, and can actually make the changes, or not.

    I have read Edgar Poe in a review making actual revisions to a poem by Milton, as if the poet were alive, and standing there, and I don’t see what’s wrong with this.

    The audacity to ‘workshop’ a famous, dead poet!

    Why not?

    How do I show respect to a living poet I workshop: I act as if they were dead! Then, after my critique, the poem dies–and the poet comes back to life. Then, if the poet is good, he will die, putting his life back into the poem, which then lives.

    A poem is like a meal on the plate; one does not want it running about; one wants it good and dead. If the poem won’t stand still, kill the poem, or kill the chef.

    A good review of a bad poet will kill the poet. (Again, it does not matter whether the poet under review is actually ‘dead,’ or not.) Or so I’ve been told.

  775. Hi Thomas,

    Show me examples of when and how the poet would be served by having a critique the likes of how you would give it to a dead poet. Or how society would be served by workshop feedback the likes of how you would give it to a poet. These are two different things. It sounds to me that there are online readers who would like to workshop their critique abilities and styles, so the best they can do is practice on unfinished poems.

    C.

  776. The point is Thomas Graves, that without any real crednetials then who cares what you or anyone without credentials thinks. Why should they? It’s laughable to think they would or should. That is the whole point.

  777. Thomas Brady, this is where, time and time again, online discussions break down. I have a rule I learned from a forensics coach coaching his debating team: he who defines the terms controls the argument. I see that you have subtly looked to define, or redefine, the terms of the argument.

    #961. I did not call Ransom and company critics. I called them teacher-like. The difference is huge. Certainly Ransom, especially, was a lit crit of the highest order, especially when it came to textual analysis and the emphasis he placed on the same through his notions getting bound up in the theories of New Criticism, many of which he kind of borrowed from the Cambridge school of Empson and company. But my immediate objective was to bring attention to their teacher-like occupations. And perhaps this is part of the problem. Or the inability on the part of would-be critics to distinguish between the two roles, that of the teacher, who at her best is a midwife, and that of the critic, who at his best is something between a surgeon and a medical examiner bending over the cadaver. (I actually think so.)

    Also, and in the same post, you suggest I presented Pound as a critic. I did not. I brought attention to a certain capacity he had for poetry comprehensions. I know Pound’s body of work pretty well. I am not aware of a lit crit collection of essays by Pound. If you are, do please right my mind. I would love to read it. Sure he said some seminal, damn near oracular things. I’ve always loved the way he dissed the iambic rhythm: “the god damn iamb magnetizes certain verbal sequences.” He meant that working in the iamb limits what words a poet has at her disposal. About the means for breaking the tyranny of the iamb he also said this: “to compose in the sequence of the musical phrase, not in sequence of a metronome.” But, in my view, these are the comments of the practicing poet looking to find new rhythms, not the comments of a critic.

    Then there is this. In a subsequent post where you address Clattery Machinery, you assign to him mention made of dead poets. But for his reply to your post he never said anything about dead poets. I did. Without intending offense, I have to say that the forensics of argument here strikes me as disengenuous. So you see, man? How is it possible for any of us to get to something real if we all, like scholastic philosophers, depend on the rhetorical device only to win a point? Isn’t poetry something more than this kind of posturing?

    On a slightly different note, I have to say that #969 strikes a nerve. The post doesn’t say as much but this is what it brings to mind:

    On the poetry boards it is less the responsibility of the poet to prove herself and more the responsibility of the critic to prove his capacity for poetry. This is my stand. Prove to me that, as critic, you have poetry comprehension. The burden of proof is the critic’s, not the poet’s.

    Tere

  778. Hi Thomas,

    Let me lead out, then, with examples. It’s tough for me, because I don’t see your point. So I can only reach for what you must be talking about, making myself inevitably wrong about your point. But here, to get this aspect of our discussion off . . .

    First, a poem workshopped successfully, last year’s IBPC winner, “Bad Weather” by Dale McLain. You’ll need to be able to sign on at Wild Poetry Forum to view the thread, but here is where to begin if you have a sign-on already: Wild Poetry Forum Hall of Fame: “bad weather”. Below the poem, just under where it says, “© 2007 Dale McLain,” there is a link to follow. You actually click where it says, “Follow this link to comment” in fine print. If you’re not already signed in, then you’ll go to the sign-on page, and on to the poem’s thread, where 9 poets chimed in. I personally go a bit deeper into the crit than the poets who commented there, but then again, most of those poets have placed very well themselves in IBPC, and are used to workshopping the best of the web as well. Let me add the comments by Bryan Appleyard, who selected the poem for first place for the month of June 2007, and also the commentary from Kelly Cherry, who selected the poem for first place for 2007. They are both on the same page with the poem here: About Poetry: InterBoard Poetry Competition: First Place Winner, June 2007.

    For a professional critique of a recent poem, let me select a books editor, David Ulin’s article on Elizabeth Alexander’s “Praise Song for the Day,” read at Obama’s inauguration. Here is the link: LA Times: Inaugural poem is less than praiseworthy. Mark Doty posted the poem at his blog here: Elizabeth’s poem (and note parenthetically that he called it a “beautiful inaugural poem”). The poem is followed in its thread by 24 comments.

    And for more inline-type reading of poetry, and to keep it recent, scanning down the latest at Poetry & Poets in Rags, here is a review by Frances Leviston of Emma Jones’ latest collection, The Striped World: The Guardian: And a wind carries birds.

    Feel free to add your own examples. But I think that the variety of responses that the poems garner in different settings has a lot to do with those settings, and what is trying to be accomplished by the writers. Why review a book? Why critique an inauguration poem. Why discuss it on a blog? Why workshop a poem at a forum? Why comment on a winning poem? And so forth.

    C.

  779. Jack,

    Would you like to swing on a star,
    carry moonbeams home in a jar?
    Would you like to be better than you are?

    Thomas

  780. Tere,

    You write:

    “Then there is this. In a subsequent post where you address Clattery Machinery, you assign to him mention made of dead poets. But for his reply to your post he never said anything about dead poets. I did. Without intending offense, I have to say that the forensics of argument here strikes me as disengenuous. So you see, man? How is it possible for any of us to get to something real if we all, like scholastic philosophers, depend on the rhetorical device only to win a point? Isn’t poetry something more than this kind of posturing?”

    But Clattery DID specifically refer to dead poets in his post to me:

    “A workshop crit is for the benefit of the poet only, and usually specific to one poem. This is quite different from the scholastic critique, such as we could do for Ezra Pound’s work, or E.E. Cummings’, or Sylvia Plath’s–nothing you’re going to say is going to help a dead poet improve his or her work. The online forum is live, and probably is best compared with being in the same room with other poets as they all or we all help each other improve ourselves as poets and our poetry.”

    Pound formulated all sorts of critical dicta in his role as teacher-critic.

    I asked you if had experienced the men you listed in the classroom as teachers and then you tell me ‘I didn’t refer to them as critics, but as teachers.’ That’s exactly why I specifically asked you if you had experienced these guys as teachers.

    I was interested in hearing you speak to the teacher/critic distinction.

    My position is that teacher and critic are essentially the same, and that we shouldn’t try and box in the critical enterprise, but I’m open to anything you might have to say.

    Thomas

  781. Clattery,

    Thanks for those links.

    We can talk about a poem in an infinite number of ways. I fail to see why we need rules as to how to approach a poem, whether one is workshopping a poem, or writing a review, or writing a critical essay.

    Thomas

  782. Hi Thomas,

    The rules at a baseball diamond, have to do with playing baseball. You don’t go tackling people in the outfield, nor do you hit the ball with a tennis racket.

    In an online poetry workshop, the entire reason for posting a workshop crit is to help the poem, help the poet with the poem. Nothing else. That’s the focus. The entire reason for a poet posting a poem in an online workshop is to receive constructive feedback.

    Themz the rules. It’s a social contract. Anything else is a parlor game.

    C.

  783. In order to BE a teacher or a critic you first must BE a teacher or a critic not pretend to be one on an online forum. That is the real problem with online poetry forums. Too many wannabes who couldn’t really cut the mustard in the real world so they hid eout in forums where they can pretend to be something they never could be.

  784. Earl the Pearl,

    I’ll let you know when I sign the contract option with the movie company for my book.
    I can’t see how it could get much better than that.

    Unless of course you’d like to compare your literary situation to mine.

  785. C,

    A sports analogy??

    Who is playing the ‘parlour game?’

    I hate to beat a dead horse, but I’ll say it again: critical feedback can take all sorts of forms, new forms, even, depending on the poem, the critic, and whether the wind is blowing SSE or NNW.

    I suspect that what you are saying is ‘play nice’ and nothing more, which is an valid position, I suppose. I do respect your position, and when you say ‘social contract,’ well, that is important, and ‘playing nice’ does help civilization function, etc. I just wanted to know exactly where you were coming from and now I think I understand.

    It does make me a little sad, because I always assumed philosophy and Criticism were noble callings and could be applied wherever minds gather, and did not need to be patted down and searched before entering the symposium.

    By the way, that winning poem, ‘Bad Weather’ is a mess, a heap of similes which attempts to sound ‘poetic’ at the expense of prose meaning and flow; it is a rather stunning reminder of what Pound asked: a poem needs to be at least as good as prose before it can be a good poem; ‘Bad Weather’ fails miserably on this point. Was it coaxed and pinched and prodded by a workshop committee? Yes, it certainly looks that way! The result of all that ‘constructive criticism’ is a poem resembling a pile of jello: some good things floating around in it, but not deserving any prizes. It’s crying out for a tough, single-minded editor.

    thomas

  786. Hi Thomas,

    Nothing from you that addresses me as I try to address you on your own grounds. You have given no examples of what you are trying to say.

    But now, we’ve got real issues, and you just made Jack’s case for him, while I was trying to pry out of you something that would give you some credit. The judges who selected “bad weather” are superb readers of poetry: Bryan Appleyard & Kelly Cherry. You should not be disregarding the poem offhand, but instead taking Bryan & Kelly’s comments to heart.

    And no, you cannot summarize what I have been saying as “play nice.” Nothing I have said could possibly lead to that conclusion. You made that up. What I have been saying is that the feedback we give to a poet is given to help that poet bring the poem along. That’s why we read and comment on a poem posted at an online forum, and why the poet posted it in the first place, to receive such constructive feedback. Anything else is to make up a parlor game, as I said.

    C.

  787. #982, last paragraph, rather begs two questions:

    ~ By what standards, by whose standards, and, most closely, by what criteria is the mentioned poem judged to be “a mess?” Time and time again I try to point out to self-declared critics, on line and off, something Einstein showed us about the universe. To whit, there are no priveliged positions in the whole of the cosmos from which to look around and determine the size, shape, and nature of the whole. None. Every position is relative. And every position is biased by local conditions. In the case of poetry critics I point out the obvious. Every criteria is relative to the subjective experience of the critic himself. Every critic’s judgement is biased by predisposition (which is irrational), predeliction (also irrationally based), and by the critic’s own developed system of aesthetics. Here is a point in case. EA Poe was certain he had developed a right sensibility for what makes for good poetry. His near contemporary, Whitman, found Poe’s poems trapped by their “limited range of melody (like perpetual chimes of music bells ringing from lower b flat up to g)… So who is right? The answer is relative to which partisan camp controls the conversation.

    Vis a vis the critic my position is this. It is not his job to tell me what is and is not a good poem. He is too compromised by predisposition, predeliction, and his relative environment to be in a position to know what is good and what is bad in poetry. His job is limited to prosodic parsing and textual analysis. His job is to tell me how the poem works. That is all.

    ~ Second problem with the paragraph. Just as the critic’s occupation has been earlier conflated to include the teacher’s, so now it is confounded with the editor’s. The critic is no teacher. The critic is no editor. The editor is no critic. The editor is no teacher. The teacher is neither critic or editor. The critic’s function is limited to prosodic parsing and textual analysis. What is more key to the role is that the critic does not address the poet. The critic addresses the poetry reader. The teacher’s role is that, so to speak, of the psychopomp. To lead, to suggest, to question, to even sow doubt. And what is key to the teacher’s role is that the address is directed to the poet. The editor’s role is that of pure midwifery. The editor’s address is to the text itself. The editor has no concern with either poet or reader. Her or his only concern is with delivery.

    Thomas Brady, I don’t expect you are or any other poetry board critic to get what I am trying to say. I don’t expect you or any other poetry board critic to feel something essential just before commenting on a poem: am I going to help or am I going to harm the poet by my comments?

    I think my questions, distinctions of roles, and sortings are valid. I also think there is a larger body of successful poetry, on line and off, to be found in spite of, not because of, critics, teachers, and editors. Which brings me back to the gifted poetry reader, proof of which I demand before heeding the crit, lesson, or editing.

    Tere

  788. And this is what I mean. Examine Cherry’s credentials and accomplishments. They are open and public and deserving of respect. Now compare her to an unknown quantity posting annoynmously on a poetry forum. There is no contes. PLEASE: unless someone cna show some worth or value in the world of poetry their conclusions remain suspect at best. Just look at what Chery has done. And compare that to what? Nameless, faceless, unaccomplished wannabes?

    No contest.

    “Kelly Cherry is a well-known poet who has published many books. She is a professor
    of the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. I was fortunate to
    attend her poetry reading this year at the University of Alabama at Huntsville,
    and afterwards I met Kelly and asked her for permission to print this poem. Later
    I also obtained permission from the publisher, Louisiana State University Press, to
    use this poem from Kelly’s book Death and Transfiguration. This moving poem
    is a picture of her father and his Alzheimer’s. Her parents were musicians;
    They had lived for their music, but Alzheimer’s and other health problems changed all
    of that. When I told Kelly that my mother had been an Alzheimer’s patient, she said,
    “Then you know what it’s like.” When I told her about my web site Kelly also granted me
    permission to use a story about Alzheimer’s from her book: My Life and Dr. Joyce Brothers,
    This story, “That Old Man I Used to Know”,is now also linked at this site. It is an honor
    to have her writings here at this site. Thank you so much to Kelly Cherry
    for sharing your works with us! ”

    Let’s get off the dime on all this. Of course ANYONE has the right to comment on a poem posted on a forum. The problems really lie when the poet basically tells the person commenting they are full of shit. Then the nameless faceless usually uncredentialled commentator has a hissy fit.

    Ask yourself this simple question: When I need my ca fixex, who do I go to: a mechanic or some guy down the street how has read a few things about cars? Gte real. This forum stuff is the last bastion f unqualified people hoping someone will listen to their blather.

  789. Tere,

    Einstein’ Theory of Relativity was not remarkable simply because it said ‘everything is relative.’ You are misreading and simplifying Einstein. But anyway, let’s grant that everything is relative. Then why do you seem so dogmatically sure that you are right and I am wrong? If I say, just as a wild example, that Poe is a better poet than Whitman, am I wrong, because you say ‘everything is relative’ and therefore I cannot make such a judgment? But if everything is relative, I can make that judgment, and my judgment is just as valid as yours, or anyone else’s. On the other hand, if things are NOT all ‘relative,’ then as a matter of course we have to make judgments that say ‘this is better than that,’ or, this person has earned more credentials than that person, or this person got an A in school, and this person got a B+ (Jack’s view).

    You write, “The critic’s function is limited to prosodic parsing and textual analysis.” No, it’s not. Why do you ‘limit’ the critic’s function like that? Of course, ‘textual analysis’ does cover quite a bit, and I don’t see why a good workshop couldn’t thrive on ‘textual analysis.’ But, again, I don’t think you can limit what a teacher or a critic can say at any time.

    I am utterly perplexed by you and Clattery’s desire to limit what a critic can say, or what a teacher can say, or what anyone can say re: poetry. And then with Professor Jack chiming in that I can’t have an opinion that questions the worth of a poem because it’s been workshopped by some professor at the University of Wisconsin, whose name is Cherry, is it any surprise I feel like I’m at the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party?

    Is everyone going to start talking backwards, now?

    Thomas

  790. Now Thomas,

    How can you be utterly perplexed by my assertion that on a poetry forum, where a poet posts a poem to get constructive feedback, that we commenting would do anything otherwise? That’s what a workshop is for.

    You are holding to a position that you cannot support. You don;t support your position, nor do you answer others on their grounds. Doing a little whoskidoo with words, as if to accuse me of limiting you (of all things) . . . Is it that you are incapable of assisting a poet with a poem? Why wouldn’t you want to help a poet who posts into a workshop?

    C.

  791. Thomas Brady, you don’t get it and you will not get it. You, like so many poetry board critics, are far too enamoured with the office. I mean look at this: “I am utterly perplexed by you and Clattery’s desire to limit what a critic can say, or what a teacher can say, or what anyone can say re: poetry.” You say this. These are your words. But isn’t this precisely what you self-proclaimed critics do to poets? Limiting them to both what and how they can say what they say? It is precisely what your sort does. You are forever putting out the limits on what a poet can do and how a poet can proceed.

    If pushed to the extreme I would say this. Poetry critics too convinced of their office operate in bad faith. Without poetry critics there will always be poetry. Without poetry there can be no poetry critics. Deal with it. There are, in fact, limitations to the critic’s, the teacher’s, the editor’s office. Not much creative involved there.

    I do hate what critics have done to the poetry boards. Ten years ago there was more poetry, more breadth of poetry. Now there is more criticism.

    Tere

  792. Now, backwards talking all are we, yes.

    There is only one answer here and that is the one-state solution. The poets post, the critics critique, the poets reply and let the fun begin. Let them all fight it out. A free-for-all! And all, I think, will learn a thing or two.

    Einstein demonstrated that space and time are the same thing and both deformed by gravity. Likewise poetry and its readers…and both deformed by critics. We should allow the poets to fight back.

  793. Thomas Grace,
    Do you have alearning disability? Nobody, especially me, said you can’t have an opinion. That’s not what I said. What I said is your opinion versus a truly qualified critic like Cherry is on the bottom of worthwhile comments. If you don’t understand that then I have to say you have no business involved with poetry.

  794. Thomas Grace,
    Instead of spending so much time on poetry forums trying to pretend to be a knowledgeable poetry critic why don’t you go back to school and learn more about poetry so you CAN speak intelligently about it. Or perhaps devote your available tome to garnering some accomplishments or credentials that would make people care what you had to say since you seem so almighty concerned that people take your comments seriously. I’m afraid they can’t given your current circumstances.

  795. C.

    If well-meaning advice makes a poem worse, is that ‘constructive feedback?’ You are making rules, so the burden is on you to define them and to say why their limits are useful, and what exactly comprises ‘constructive feedback.’
    I am not saying there is any way that a critic needs to behave in any situation other than making a criticism. “Constructive feedback” assumes success. I am not making that assumption. Critical feedback, in my terms, could bruise an ego so badly that poetry is abandonded and gardening is taken up. Justice, and the Muse, are blind.

    Critical acumen is developed privately, just like skill in composing poetry is developed in private. In public, we see the results of private development, and the public aspect should not suppress what has been learned in private, simply for the sake of ego. This has nothing to do with credentials, or even right and wrong; again, I am not assuming correctness, but freedom of opinion–which sounds simple, but for some, is not.

    You write:

    “You are holding to a position that you cannot support.”

    No, I am holding a position that YOU cannot support. Which is fine. I support YOUR right not to support me. But it’s nothing short of insidious for you to say, ‘you are holding a position that you cannot support.’

    You are implying that I don’t want to ‘help’ a poet in a workshop; but this is absurd, for it assumes all sorts of things which have not been established; we are discussing method; my method refuses to be hemmed in by limits YOU feel are necessary.

  796. Tere,

    You write:

    “But isn’t this precisely what you self-proclaimed critics do to poets? Limiting them to both what and how they can say what they say? It is precisely what your sort does. You are forever putting out the limits on what a poet can do and how a poet can proceed.”

    By the nature of things, a poem is limited.

    A poem is more limited than a criticism. A poem cannot defend itself. A criticism, however, not only gets to ‘have its way’ with the poem, but a criticism gets to defend itself in the process. A poem needs to be very, very good, therefore, while a criticism can be done while eating soup and doing the laundry at the same time. The poem is usually composed in pain and tears, while a criticism is done with mirth and jollity. The critic has no soul, but gets to dine on the souls of others; the poet has one soul and worries about it being stolen and eaten every day.

    Unfortunately, the poem is ‘limited,’ for we say ‘poem’ and not ‘poems.’ ‘Poems’ can be nearly limitless, but the critic, unfortunately, will pick on the poor, limited ‘poem’ and treat its limitation with a ruthless contempt in the open-ended freedom of his criticism. I have seen poems broiled for hours by a certain critic. It was not a pretty sight. Did you know Keats was killed by a criticism?

    Once, a long time ago, there was a war. Millions of poems died. Some say the poems were killed by other poems. Others say the poems died, alone in their trenches, from neglect.

    But I know who killed those poems. It was criticisms, criticisms of black smoke and yellow fire.

  797. Jack,

    You’re kidding, right?

    Is there some grand, credentialed pecking order, and professor Jorie Graham is above professor Cherry, and so on? All opinion in perfect order around the Muse-head?

    Do you have charts and stuff?

    And badges and uniforms?

    Does it comfort you to think of poetry as a cult?

  798. NEW POEM: PERSON OF INTEREST

    When I heard the television newscaster say,
    the police were engaged in a search for
    a person of interest in the case,
    I wondered if that might be me;
    that I might be a person of interest.
    I have always been a suspect,
    I suspect, in crimes I’ve never committed,
    or admitted to; a criminal involved in
    unsolved cases of larceny of the heart and stolen kisses,
    an accomplice in original sin,
    a Siamese twin cat burglar anxiously
    awaiting someone to release
    an all points bulletin for him.
    My hands are bloodied from killing time,
    and I’m ready to confess my crimes:
    I have shot off my mouth,
    killed my chances,
    I shot the messenger and buried his body
    on the grounds of the abandoned amusement park.
    There are skeletons in my closet.
    I am a serial killer of dreams who has
    buried the hatchet I used.
    I have made so many shots in the dark
    and I admit to shooting for the moon
    I have beaten my fair share of dead horses too
    I pray someone will catch me soon and
    I would gladly confess at my arrest
    to being a person of interest.

    BIO
    Jack Conway teaches English at The University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth and Bristol Community College in Fall River. He is the author of ten books including the soon-to-be-released, King of Heists published by the Globe Pequot Press and American Literacy published by William Morrow. His poems have appeared in Poetry, The Antioch Review, The Columbia Review, Rattle, Light, The Hiram Poetry Review and in The Norton Book of Light Verse among others.

  799. Thomas Graves

    I hate to say this (not really) but it’s people like you Thomas Monday, Grave Love, who have given poetry forums a bad name. They are shunned by a majority of poets just because of your attitude. I believe you must be suffering from a brain injury of some sort, Thomas Love, Monday Graves,if you can’t understand the simpilest of poetic parameters. Yes, there is a pecking order and it begins with people who either have accomlishments in the field, have academic credentials in the field or have both. From that lofty position there trails a food chain of poetic wannabes. Lookit kiddo, there is no short cut to becoming a poet or a critic. Yo imagine you have discovered the Fountain of Poetry in the nameless, faceless poetry forum where poetic opinions are a dime a dozen and often ill-conceived, trite and wrong-headed — simply because the people offering these innane comments know nothing about poetry, have never studied it, have no academic credentials and have no known publishing accomplishments. I’m sorry but I repeat: You imagine you have found a short-cut to Poetry Nirvana — Sorry Charlie, you haven’t. There are no short cuts. There is however a fairly obvious path but it involves academics, and publication. Without these two things to support any poetic premise the poster is not in the game but sits in the bleahers drinking beer and calling the umpire names. You can get in the game– anyone can, but sorry Thomas Monday, Grave Love, there is no short cut and YES the opinion of those with academic credentials and publishing accomplishments do mean more than those who have none. You will just have to learn to live with that. Or you can go on ranting about this nonsense that is becoming boring, trite and useless.

  800. Let me put it to you another way Thomas Graves, I have every chance of winning a Pulitzer Prize. Do you? If not, I don’t think you have the authority to continue this crowing of yours.

  801. I have posted “Person of Interest” on Poetry Free for All. I am anxious to see the comments. I received one from a person who moved it because they couldn’t figure out if the cliches were intential or not. My, my, I am in awe at the level of miss perception.

  802. Here is the first comment by “HYDRO”
    “With all due respect, cliches aren’t the only problem here and aren’t the only thing warranting the move to C&C. Presentation is another – grammar, for one, as well as that damn double-line space formatting. In High (as in all the forums) they ask for as much care to be put into the presentation of your work as you (presumably) put into writing it.

    With that, I’ll be back to give you a more lengthy critique when the painful formatting is sorted out.

    Cheers,

    Hydro

    Grammar? Surely you jest.

  803. There is a good possibility I can get banned from there in record time and still no one has addressed my poet. This is priceless.

  804. Banned. Recod time. Simply amazing. And not ONE comment on the poem. Priceless. When I go back to post I am going to send them a link to here.

  805. William Shakespeare teaches at…

    Wait a minute…

    John Keats is a professor at…

    Ooops, hold on…

    Edgar Poe has a Ph.D. in…

    Damn it!

  806. Jack,

    I don’t understand Hydro’s remarks.

    Why did you get banned?

    It’s obvious to me that the cliches are intentional, and I don’t have any problem with the presentation; “Person of Interest” is a perfectly good piece of Light Verse. I could see it being published in an ‘Intro to Poetry’ textbook.

    Sorry about the banning; I’m wondering why they felt the need to do that.

    I could see how your poem might annoy ‘serious types,’ since good writing is supposed to write away from cliche, but here you are embracing them.

    Yet, the banning doesn’t make any sense.

    Hey, good luck with the Pulitzer. I hope you win it.

    Thomas

  807. Tommy,
    Didn’t Shakespeare die in what 1607 and Keats when was that?
    Now my calendar says it’s 2009.
    Ah, I’d say times have changed wouldn’t you?
    Can this be correct?
    Is Shakespeare still posting at forums?
    How about Keats?

  808. Hi Thomas,

    You said in post 994:

    If well-meaning advice makes a poem worse, is that ‘constructive feedback?’ You are making rules, so the burden is on you to define them and to say why their limits are useful, and what exactly comprises ‘constructive feedback.’

    Oh no, you’re making up the rule that it is okay to post a critique of a poem in progress, one that is posted for constructive feedback. I wanted you to give an example of a critique that would be appropriate in a workshop environment, where the idea is obvious, to workshop the poem. Although, you could make a forum in which people who want to get better at critique, would endear poets to post their works published or otherwise, in order for them to practice. The poets and other readers would then give the critics constructive feedback on how they did with the critique. For instance, you criticized Dale McLain’s winning poem in this thread, and got feedback on how you did. Here is your criticism, really, at post 984:

    By the way, that winning poem, ‘Bad Weather’ is a mess, a heap of similes which attempts to sound ‘poetic’ at the expense of prose meaning and flow; it is a rather stunning reminder of what Pound asked: a poem needs to be at least as good as prose before it can be a good poem; ‘Bad Weather’ fails miserably on this point. Was it coaxed and pinched and prodded by a workshop committee? Yes, it certainly looks that way! The result of all that ‘constructive criticism’ is a poem resembling a pile of jello: some good things floating around in it, but not deserving any prizes. It’s crying out for a tough, single-minded editor.

    If you had gone into Wild Poetry Forum and had given her such feedback, it would have been nothing she could have used, especially since you would have given her nothing constructive to go on, to make the poem better. If, for instance, you had been so discouraging to her that she would have withdrawn the poem from Poem of the Week consideration, therefore IBPC Poem of the Month consideration, and therefore IBPC Poem of the Year consideration, you would have done her and Wild Poetry Forum a disservice, and kept the many people who have had the chance already to enjoy her poem, and those many who will do so in the future, from being able to–thus being destructive rather than constructive. Of course, Dale would probably have discerned that the problem was with your critique and not her poem.

    Therefore, give me an example of a critique that would belong in a poetry workshop. Your comment about Dale’s poem is an example of what should not be given at a forum. There would have been no good reason to have written and posted it. Or maybe I should ask you. What purpose would such a comment serve in a workshop setting, or what value would such a comment have? Because if it has no value or purpose, then it might as well not have been posted.

    You said:

    I am not saying there is any way that a critic needs to behave in any situation other than making a criticism. “Constructive feedback” assumes success. I am not making that assumption. Critical feedback, in my terms, could bruise an ego so badly that poetry is abandonded and gardening is taken up. Justice, and the Muse, are blind.

    It’s not that you are making the assumption that you would be constructive. It is that being constructive is the task at hand. It may be that you would fail at the task. For instance, there may not be anything you could do to help Dale with her poem. Yet maybe someone else could. But the task at hand would have been to help her along with the poem.

    You said:

    Critical acumen is developed privately, just like skill in composing poetry is developed in private. In public, we see the results of private development, and the public aspect should not suppress what has been learned in private, simply for the sake of ego. This has nothing to do with credentials, or even right and wrong; again, I am not assuming correctness, but freedom of opinion–which sounds simple, but for some, is not.

    You may have your opinion about Obama’s financial programs, but Dale’s poetry thread would not have been the place to discuss them. Like I said above, it seems what you desire is a critique workshop, where the task is to help critics develop this acumen you speak of.

    You said to me in post 994:

    You write:

    “You are holding to a position that you cannot support.”

    No, I am holding a position that YOU cannot support. Which is fine. I support YOUR right not to support me. But it’s nothing short of insidious for you to say, ‘you are holding a position that you cannot support.’

    You are implying that I don’t want to ‘help’ a poet in a workshop; but this is absurd, for it assumes all sorts of things which have not been established; we are discussing method; my method refuses to be hemmed in by limits YOU feel are necessary.

    You are saying here that your method is designed to help a poet, that it would be absurd of me to think otherwise. You have not told what this method is, however, thus leaving your position unsupported. And you are trying to imply that I would limit you from practicing this heretofore secret method. What exactly is this method that poets benefit from? And how do the poets benefit from it?

    C.

  809. Paranoia runs deep into the Poets Free for All. My God those poor souls. That isn’t a poetry forum, it’s an institution for the mildly absurd and unflinchingly paranoid. Poetry is the farthest thing going on over there. Unbelieveable.

  810. C,

    My “method” is to have no “method.”

    I have no need for rules and I have no need for workshops, run by John Gardner, or Jorie Graham, or anyone else. Workshops are business models and they exist for money and prestige; they are not necessary. I wouldn’t take a workshop with Edgar Allan Poe, or Alexander Pope, although they might be funny; they’d make all their students cry, and I would laugh.

    Look, this is all blather. All of it. It’s a bunch of insecure wankers wanking each other and insecure types whining and crying.

    Publish your poems and let them be honestly reviewed. All the rest is social stroking/business models and nothing more.

    I had a nice HS English teacher who encouraged my early poetry. OK, fine. A certain amount of encouragement can occur in HS. I don’t even know if the encouragement helped me, by the way. How can I finally know, really? You fall in love with writing and you read and you try and write yourself. After you are an adult, you shouldn’t keep needing encouragement, because if encouragement doesn’t come from the fact that you are actually good, why should it come from anywhere else? If you’re over 21 and you’re looking for people to say nice things about your poems (and looking for the same thing) in supportive little workshops, then I have no interest in you.

    If your girlfriend or your boyfriend love your work, that’s great. If you’re in a radical cell and you’re writing revolutionary poems for each other, that’s great, too. It’s easy to find encouragement in real life, if you’re a half-way decent writer. But workshops, where grown-ups ‘learn’ to write poetry in workshops, where everybody’s nice to each other? Pffft.

    I think the important thing to realize is that the teaching of writing is 99% bullsh*t. Good writers find a way on their own, and the good writers do not learn the same way, except to imitate the writing of others. There is no pep talk, no blackboard formula, no lecture, no micro-criticism that’s going to make you a good writer. Read Shakespeare. Don’t let anyone tell you what Shakespeare is doing, or who Shakespeare is, because if you can’t read Shakespeare on your own and process that greatness within you, then who are you kidding? Or, you may reject Shakespeare completely and still be a great writer, but what ‘teacher’ is going to tell you to reject Shakespeare? Only you can do that. Only you can do the work, the hard work, alone, when no one else is looking. Buy Shakespeare, or not, only you can make that choice, and if you can’t, what’s a teacher going to do for you, that Shakespeare can’t do?

    I realize the creative writing industry is going to have its reasons and the industry is going to apply a tremendous amount of pressure to reject what I’m saying. Friends are not enough, they’ll say. Your own judgement is not enough, they’ll say. You need a ‘teacher!’ You need a ‘workshop community!’ And, if you go down our path and pay enough money and stroke the right people, you could win a ‘prize!’

    No thanks.

    General talking and sharing in a free environment where everyone is assumed to be equal, a little wrestling, arguing, debating, sharing a poem, an idea or two, like I’m doing here, great, I’m all for it. But poetry doesn’t need moderators and teachers and judges and workshop/retreat/contest prize industries. It doesn’t. This industry is a vain and over-scrutinizing enterprise. Good writing will and can arise on its own.

    People want poetry. People want criticism. Both are a joy. Workshops, however, are a fake compromise between the two.

  811. Tere,

    Thanks for that link to Kaltica and Poets.Ogre.

    This is exactly what I’m talking about. Look at the verbosity, the social give-and-take, the rhetorical energy, all for what? To position yourself as a ‘reasonable person’ on how to behave in a workshop, should that workshop actually get under way, and an actual poem of unknown worth make its appearance before some assembled critics of unknown quantity, maybe…? Some day? The only meaningful thing said was when Kaltica judged Shakespeare’s first sonnet to be ‘unspeakable shite.’ What a clown! Kaltica will never write a poem as good as that sonnet in his life. As for John Garnder, and his writing industry textbook reputation, has anyone read Gardner’s fiction recently? He was a crummy writer! Has anyone read his ‘Grendel?’ Who cares what someone says about appropriate workshop behavior? The whole industry is a business model, so writers can earn an extra buck. Anyone who swallows that bilge of the ‘great writing teacher’ needs to get laid, or something. Good grief.

  812. “Paranoia runs deep into the Poets Free for All. My God those poor souls. That isn’t a poetry forum, it’s an institution for the mildly absurd and unflinchingly paranoid. Poetry is the farthest thing going on over there. Unbelieveable.”

    Right on, Jack! I’m starting to like you…

  813. I actually find common ground with the opinion expressed in #1012, Essex. Workshops have value, but the value is limited, and the setting comes with problems debilitating enough to throw a poet off her own vector, mass-modulate her voice, make her second-guess her instincts, which last is the real killer. Critics have value too. Only, not in the classroom, workshop, or poetry board environment. As said already upthread, the critic’s address is to the poetry reader by way of prosodic and textual analysis, even by way of theory, but not to the poet. When he addresses the poet he is no longer a critic. He is a meddler in the unfinished affairs of others. And, all too often, he is looking to stamp his personality on the poetic production of others, what always brings motive into question.

    On Delectable Mnts we have a bunch of forums in which creative writing, in both prose and poetry, can get played out. But we only have one forum in which the poet/critic dialogue takes place. The design is deliberate. The hunch is that poets and writers and readers have other ways of relating to each other beyond that of what gets set by the poet/critic axis. And it occurs to me that what frightens board critics the most is that, without the license to criticize, they might not have any means of relating and they might not get the attention they seem to need. I also find something else. Board people have become so accustomed to the poet/critic axis they find it difficult making the paradigm shift. It is all quite interesting to watch.

    I have no animus against the poetry critic. I am just tired of his dominating presence on the boards. The second-rate thinker I ignore or call him out on his manual learned and second-hand pronouncements. The critic who is first the gifted poetry reader I heed. And I get to judge between the two classes.

    You know something, Essex? Were I you, were I as devoted to the job of poetry crit as you are, I would proceed differently. I would illustrate by example. I would parse the bones off a Sexton, Collins, Pinsky, Crane, Snodgrass, Roethke, Muldoney, Simac, Eliot or Poe poem, etc. Now this would satisfy a niche nobody addresses on poetry boards. Turn what you enjoy doing to benefit.

    Tere

  814. Hi Thomas,

    So you have no method, and yet you assert in post #994 that it would be absurd to think you are not helpful with your method. You wrote:

    You are implying that I don’t want to ‘help’ a poet in a workshop; but this is absurd, for it assumes all sorts of things which have not been established; we are discussing method; my method refuses to be hemmed in by limits YOU feel are necessary.

    So you have a method. And in post #1012 you say this:

    My “method” is to have no “method.”

    You also say in #1012 that there is blathering going on by insecure wankers.

    C.

  815. C.

    Look, I’m not a HS English teacher! I could whip out a resume, but I have no interest in doing that. I’ll be frank; I’m somewhat disappointed in the way you are approaching me; it feels like you are merely trying to ‘trip me up,’ instead of listening to what I am saying. You obviously have some investment in the workshop process and I’m stepping on your toes, I guess. I’m sorry about that. If something exists, it must have a reason to exist, right? There’s a reason workshops are everywhere. However, I think even you would agree that we all don’t have to feel the same way about them, or even embrace their overall function. My position is a radical one compared to yours; I understand that, and I don’t wish to take advantage of something you love by being glib, and I apologize if I ever come across as snide. I trust you understand that I am arguing sincerely, and I hope we can find some common ground.

    I don’t know if you realize it, but your site is my ideal; this thread is my ideal. I’ve reached nirvana. I don’t have to look any further. I owe some of that to you, so thanks.

    Thomas

  816. Hi Thomas,

    No, I am not trying to trip you up. That last post seems like a projection, because it does not speak to what I have been writing in response to you.

    By the way, I was going to point out that your comments here are very blog oriented. So my asking you to provide examples of what you see as to workshop oriented crits, was to explore your ideas. To ask how are they helpful to the poet is pertinent. But, we need an example first, which you have not provided.

    By not speaking into my grounds, as I have spoken into yours, you have stifled the discussion and led us into this never-ending loop.

    C.

  817. Tere,

    I’m glad we are able to find some agreement.

    It’s true that a critic probably works best in a magazine essay format, rather than in a workshop situation where the critic has to worry about treading on egos: and this is what I was addressing; I think after HS, worrying about egos has to go out the window, and if you can’t take the heat, get out of the kitchen. If criticism hurts feelings, even if it partakes of a kind of ‘soul-violence’ I don’t think that’s wrong, per se. The human is an animal that fights, it’s in our blood and our bones, and the only thing we can do is sublimate that aggression as much as we can. “Constructive criticism” is not possible, really, because, well, the truth hurts, but what we can aim for is constructive debate. Poetry has lost its teeth. It is now serving another master, and that master is unction. Social ritual is a necessary lubricant, but life suffers from too much unction, and Letters has a surfeit of it today.

    Posting on Harriet, I found no constructive debate; quite frankly, I found ignorance and running away from debate, and other posters blatantly misreading and misquoting me, and instead of apologizing, getting more hostile and threatening to cut off the discourse if I wouldn’t play nice. One can go there right now and read it; on the ‘Translation/Blake’ thread and the ‘Prufrock Moment’ thread, you can actually see the ‘paranoia’ that Jack mentions–and I really don’t think ‘paranoia’ is too strong a word. I experienced debate being narrowed, trivialized, and personalized to an extreme degree. One is expected to say things like, ‘And X said something really brilliant which I would like to remark on, but first I would also like to pursue something a dazzling point which Y made…’

    There is a tendency in Letters to forget the past, to forget the actual subject of literature and replace it with mere talk. We need touchstones, like Shakespeare, and Kaltica’s remark on Sonnet #1 says more about him than anything else; and Edgar Poe happens to be one of the truly brilliant touchstones of our literary past; check out the hostility and ignorance expressed on Harriet on the two threads I mentioned. I’m not making it up; it’s absolutely clear for anyone to see.

    One of the reasons paranoia breaks out any time literary discussion happens in an open, ‘unsupervised,’ format, is that the study of literature is steadily being replaced by the vanity business model of the Poetry-Writing MFA. Learning, and its adjunct, curiostiy, are being replaced by unctuous, ‘circle-the-wagons’ fear.

    Thomas

  818. Well, Essex, as all too frequently happens in online conversations, I see we are speaking at cross-purposes. I did not say, nor do I intend to say, critics are out of place in the workshop setting for fear of hurting feelings and bruising egos. What I said is that critics have no place meddling in unfinished business. I also said that the critic’s proper address is to the reader and not to the poet. This because his provenance is prosodic and textual analysis. But to start in on the business of such analysis when the work is a thing in progress is rather like the doctor offering critical comment on the baby half in, half out of the womb. Clearly the moment is inappropriate and, potentially, harmful to the delivery.

    As for whether or not workshops benefit poetry it seems to me the outcome has less to do with the setting itself and more to do with the principals and participants involved. There are good teachers, teachers who instinctively know when to nurture,when to abort, and when to stay out of the poem’s way, and there are bad teachers, teachers who tend to want their students to write like them, only not so well. There are gifted readers and there are pedestrian readers. There are readers generous enough to be able to throw themselves into the poem in front of them and there are stingy readers who can only judge a poem by there own preoccupations, prejudices, and biases. Finally, there are talented poets and there are poets who will never get it, poets for whom the transformative act of making words into a poem will never come to them. And between these extremes there are all sorts of gradations in terms of ability and the capacity for poetry comprehensions.

    I am getting to where I have nothing more to add to the topic. Maybe I am already there. I’ve defined both my terms and how I view the various occupations of teacher, critic, reader, poet, and editor. I’ve offered a sorting system involving the same. And I’ve suggested that what is most needed on poetry boards is a paradigm shift away from the poet/critic axis. Yep. At this point I could only repeat myself.

    Over at Delectable Mnts I suggested to the board that possibly there are others ways of poetry type people to relate to each other. By way of response one member said this:

    “Tere,

    ‘a board in which the critic’s is not the dominant voice…’ will take some getting used to. Some unlearning of limitations the critic imposes. At least on me.

    What would that be like, I wonder.”

    Keep in mind that the board has a healthy critique forum, and one predicated on the notion of dialogue between poet and the critical reader in which as much is demanded of the critical reader as of the poem. Nobody holds back. On the other hand no critical reader is allowed the conceit that he occupies a priveliged position from which to look down on the poem.

    Just time for a paradigm shift, man.

    Tere

  819. Dinner with Critics

    Read a poetry review,
    a critic’s report, basic analysis
    and dissection.
    Such discordant worlds described,
    such different views and direction
    from the same words.

    One night a man had a fine dinner,
    prime rib and lobster,
    music and laughter, hors d’oeuvres;
    fine red wine.

    Later that night, after his murder,
    the coroner sliced open a pink
    and blue sack of stomach,
    emptied it of leftover lobster
    and prime rib. A faint sour smell
    of red wine.

    Copyright 2007 – Gary B. Fitzgerald

  820. Let me and try and put it this way.

    Gary’s poem, with its visceral, dogmatic punch, has inspired me.

    Gary’s poem sees critic as coroner, who presents a fine meal half-digested; a brilliant way to describe the natural disgust poets feel for critics. Well done, Gary.

    Now, as a critic, I am going to mingle my thoughts and feelings with your poem.

    Your poem gave me pleasure; now I am going to add to my pleasure by taking your poem into my critical embrace.

    Pleasure is now surging through my body as I begin to think of the task before me…

    Criticism is a fine meal to me; it pleases me as much as poetry.

    Poetry gives me pleasure within the context of my critical mind. This is simple philosophy: objects of pleasure need receptors of pleasure; the pleasure I receive from poetry could not exist for me without my critical receptors.

    For me, poetry and criticism cannot exist without each other; without criticism, poems are not fertile; they bear no children.

    Gary’s metaphor creates a division between poetry and criticism; in Gary’s poem, poetry is a fine meal, and criticsm is a ‘faint sour smell’ of that meal.

    Gary’s poem brilliantly describes boring commentaries on poems.

    My criticism however, the kind you are reading right now, enjoying as you would a fine meal, is poetry’s wife and breeds more poetry, more wisdom, more beauty, and more love.

    Criticism is a beautiful woman who bears poetry’s children.

    Poetry is the wind of inspiration, which blows sometimes with great force, and sometimes, alas, not at all, but while poetry moves the sails, criticism is the rudder which steers the ship of Letters.

    A critic climbs philosophical heights, charts the stars that steer all poems; a critic sees ahead to the rocks in the stream which may dash the poem to pieces, and has the vision to see the journey the poem is on, and the destination, and knows if there are enough supplies to make the long voyage. The critic catches the essence of the poem, and may even alter the course of the poem, and love informs the whole process.

  821. Tere,

    You write:

    “There are readers generous enough to be able to throw themselves into the poem in front of them and there are stingy readers who can only judge a poem by there own preoccupations, prejudices, and biases. Finally, there are talented poets and there are poets who will never get it, poets for whom the transformative act of making words into a poem will never come to them. And between these extremes there are all sorts of gradations in terms of ability and the capacity for poetry comprehensions.

    I am getting to where I have nothing more to add to the topic. Maybe I am already there. I’ve defined both my terms and how I view the various occupations of teacher, critic, reader, poet, and editor. I’ve offered a sorting system involving the same. And I’ve suggested that what is most needed on poetry boards is a paradigm shift away from the poet/critic axis.”

    You make a distinction above between “talented poets” and “poets who will never get it, poets for whom the transformative act of making words into a poem will never come to them.” To put it simply, you are saying there are good poets and there are bad poets. And, then as you say, “there are all sorts of gradations in terms of ability and the capacity for poetry comprehensions.”

    What is more crucial to you, that one has a strong “capacity for poetry comprehensions” or that one happens to be a teacher, critic, reader, poet, or editor?

    If a person has little or no capacity for “poetry comprehensions,” then does it even matter if that person is a teacher, critic, poet, or editor?

    Now, in addition, if a person has an extremely high “capacity for poetry comprehensions,” wouldn’t you respect that person and listen to their judgment, no matter what particular form it took, whether that person were a teacher, critic, reader, poet, or editor?

    I don’t believe there are forms and regulations and rules which apply to teacher, critic, reader, and editor. Clattery wants examples in order to clarify behavior on the part of teacher, critic, reader, and editor, but beyond a certain civility, there is absolute nothing which says what form feedback should take. Examples abound, obviously, but there is no limit to what they can be.

    This is one thing I would like us all to agree on.

    Then, and only then, I can supply any “example” you guys wish.

    I do think it is essential we clarify this before we move on.

    Thomas

  822. Let us look at the poem which our martinet, Kaltica of Poets.Ogre, called “unspeakable shite.”

    Shakespeare’s First Sonnet

    From fairest creatures we desire increase,
    2. That thereby beauty’s rose might never die,
    3. But as the riper should by time decease,
    4. His tender heir might bear his memory:
    5. But thou contracted to thine own bright eyes,
    6. Feed’st thy light’s flame with self-substantial fuel,
    7. Making a famine where abundance lies,
    8. Thy self thy foe, to thy sweet self too cruel:
    9. Thou that art now the world’s fresh ornament,
    10. And only herald to the gaudy spring,
    11. Within thine own bud buriest thy content,
    12. And, tender churl, mak’st waste in niggarding:
    13. Pity the world, or else this glutton be,
    14. To eat the world’s due, by the grave and thee.

    What use all of Kaltica’s utterances, critical formations, speedy advice, deep-felt conclusions, nuances and nudges, if the poem above seems to him “unspeakable shite?” Would you have such a person as a teacher or a critic or an editor?

    No! you would instead administer a sound whipping to such a person, and cast them outdoors, and let them eat berries and live in the woods, until they were cold, and begged to be let in to the place by the fire, where poetry is found to be a fair subject among the old and the young…

  823. About #1023. Thomas, upthread I’ve indicated that I think the gifted poetry reader, the one whose capacity for poetry comprehensions is demonstrated, comes before the editor, critic, and teacher. In my view she knows poetry in her body, and in the way, to paraphrase Housman, a terrier knows a rat without necesserily being able to define it. Upthread I’ve also indicated that I believe the gifted poetry reader can be an editor, a teacher, or a critic. So I guess we do have grounds for agreement. The qualification would be this: not all editors, teachers, and critics, by definition, are gifted poetry readers. The fact is I figure that somewhere in the range of many to most editors, teachers, and critics are not gifted poetry readers, that they do not demonstrate the capacity for identifying poetry no matter its form, that they are severely limited by their biases, preoccupations, and, worst of all, by their ideologies. The truth is that I figure the gifted poetry reader is far from uncommon, except among editors, teachers, and critics who become obsessed with their standing as editor, teacher, or critic.

    As for what form teaching, editing, criticizing can take, frankly I am less concerned with what form it all takes than I am with putting the teacher, editor, and critic into perspective on the poetry boards. The critic’s especially has become the dominant voice on the boards. This is not just wrong, it is a killer of poetry. I can only say again what I said earlier. In a workshop setting the critic can be like the doctor who pauses in mid-delivery to point out the faults of the infant. How stupid, potentially lethal, is that?

    About #1024. In my view Kaltica is the poster child of poetry crit. gone south on the poetry boards. Were I you, were I a poetry critic, I wouldn’t be arguing with the likes of me. I would be looking to drum out a certain kind of critic giving the profession a bad name. But I’ve never understood why poetry critics don’t take each other to task in the same way poets take each other to task.

    Tere

  824. Who is Katlicker?

    Who is Shakespeare?

    Oh I get it now.

    Nobody will remeber or even care who Katlicker is and that makes him mad because he thinks he’s better than Sgakespeare.

    Dear boy isn’t a critic anyone cares about. He’s a candidate for some serious mental health counseling. It’s called an inflated ego propelled by deluuision of granduer.

    Shakespeare – yes.

    Katlicker- who cares?

  825. Anonymous,

    Wrong!

    The Shakespeare canon refers to the sonnets as they appear in Shakespeare’s Sonnet sequence. It is mere quirky speculation that Sonnet 145 was “Shakespeare’s first sonnet,” and only a clown would call it so. No one knows in what order the sonnets were written; the sequence itself, however, of the 154, is not only historically verified, but if one studies the sonnet order, the sequence also makes sense as a human journey towards immortality, modeled after Plato’s Symposium.

    First, it is just plain silly to refer to no. 145 as no. 1, flying in the face of historical order as well as Shakespeare’s aesthetic order.

    Second, this poem is also of high quality and only a clown would call it “unspeakable shite.”

    Sonnet #145 aesthetically and philosophically resembles the other sonnets in Shakespeare’s famous sequence, with its playful yet profound study of identity and immortality. “Not you” saves the poet. It’s close to the idea of ‘losing your life’ to win it, which Shakespeare would have understood and embraced. This is a major theme of the Sonnets.

    I’m afraid you’ve put too much ‘school boy faith’ in that website which you linked, my dear anonymous. You shouldn’t be so narrow and pedantic. Look at all the evidence and learn to make up your own mind.

    Here, I present this lovely, lovely sonnet, no. 145:

    Those lips that Love’s own hand did make,
    Breathed forth the sound that said ‘I hate’,
    To me that languished for her sake:
    But when she saw my woeful state,
    Straight in her heart did mercy come,
    Chiding that tongue that ever sweet
    Was used in giving gentle doom;
    And taught it thus anew to greet;
    ‘I hate’ she altered with an end,
    That followed it as gentle day,
    Doth follow night, who like a fiend
    From heaven to hell is flown away.
    ‘I hate’, from hate away she threw,
    And saved my life, saying ‘not you’.

  826. Tere,

    You write:

    “The fact is I figure that somewhere in the range of many to most editors, teachers, and critics are not gifted poetry readers, that they do not demonstrate the capacity for identifying poetry no matter its form, that they are severely limited by their biases, preoccupations, and, worst of all, by their ideologies.”

    True, so true. This is why history is so important, and why we have to know our literary history. Someone might decide Shakespeare is a ‘right-wing Christian’ and hate him for that reason. Yes, I agree, ‘ideologies’ come into play a great deal more than most of us would care to admit. This is why history, and his Wife, Time, the great River who cleanses us of ideology, is so important. We trace Shakespeare back to Plato, back to the beginnings of literature and there, under the shade of a tree, by the bank of a river, we discourse on what is eternal, free of ideology. But if we don’t know history, this is impossible. If the only authors we know are born after 1900, then ideology will inevitably be our game.

    Did you see how I just crushed pesky Anonymous? I am able to do so through long study.

    You also write,

    “I wouldn’t be arguing with the likes of me.”

    Oh, dear Terreson, I’m not arguing with you.

    Love, Terreson. It’s love.

    Thomas

  827. “Did you see how I just crushed pesky Anonymous? I am able to do so through long study.”

    Not of Shakespeare’s juvenilia, obviously.

  828. About #1029. Essex, when it comes to the historical dimension you would be preaching to the choir here. When I was a young man and my peers were falling over the likes of Bukowski and Williams, I was reading Greek lyric poetry, studying Classical (quantitative) prosody, reading the like of Catullus and Propertius, studying the troubadors, anglo-saxon poetry, pretty much just working my way, albeit selectively, through the canon. Here too I find a severe limitation among all too many poetry board critics. Rather than going to the original stuff, and to the inventors of this or that form, they satisfy themselves with referring to the manuals. It also blows me away how, at their worst, they set themselves up as experts without having bothered to study the various schools of lit crit, without having mastered the rather creative theories of the schools extending from the Russian Formalists to the Cambridge folk to the New Criticism people to the Feminist thinkers, even to everything in crit that followed on the footseps of Saussure, just to name a few. You would think a board critic would bother himself with such stuff before hanging out his shingle.

    Tere

  829. Anonymous,

    Simply calling that terrific sonnet by Shakespeare “juvenilia” does not get you off the hook.

    You lose this one.

    Sorry.

    Maybe you’ll win the next one.

    Yours,

    Thomas

  830. Earl,
    Are you kidding me. PBS Do you even know what that is? I mean it’s one thing to spout off endlessly like you do constantly but I’m afraid once again you look like the world’s biggets fool. PBS is thousands of times more kowledgeable than you could even dream of being. Please. Give it a rest. You are beginning to sound like an intellectual clown. Annyomous is not wrong you dumb bunny. Read something sometime instead of spouting off. You are intellectually vacant. Please go away.

  831. I take it Thomas Grace that you flunked out of school. Can you even imagine how stupid you appear to educated people? Are you simply so psychotic that you actually beleive you are smarter than PBS, Shakespeare etc. If so please, please get some mental health help before you harm yourself or someone else. My God you are increasingly militantly ignorant.

  832. Jack,

    My dear, dear friend,

    With all due respect,

    Did you go to the PBS site and read what it says there?

    “From fairest creatures we desire increase” is recognized by ALL scholars as Sonnet #1 in Shakespeare’s sonnet sequence.

    “Those Lips that Love’s own Hand did make” is, similarly, universally acknowledged as Sonnet # 145 in Shakespeare’s sonnet sequence.

    Are you aware of this? Or are you just a quarrelsome fool who is looking to pick a fight?

    Secondly, these sonnets are both masterful examples of the genre, and only a clown would call them ‘unspeakable shite.’

    Further, only a moron would dismiss a poem by a poet because that poet happened to be 18 years of age when they wrote the poem.

    Shakespeare may have inserted #145 into the sequence, as the PBS site speculates, but Shakespeare also may have inserted many of the sonnets written earlier into the sequence; no one knows for sure, and no one knows for sure which poem was Shakespeare’s first composition. IF you had read the PBS site (do I know what PBS is? DOH!) you would see that PBS, like CVS, CBS, and everyone else, cannot confirm what Shakespeare’s ‘first’ poem is; it is mere speculation, and not accepted fact. Anyone who runs about asserting that Sonnet #145 is Shakespeare’s ‘first sonnet’ is a clown. And, more of a clown for saying it is “unspeakable shite.”

    Are you taking the side of the clown on this one?

    Good for you. Take it, by all means.

    Thomas

  833. And anyone who runs around saying it is NOT since the person (YOU) have already stated that NO ONE KNOWS, is also a clown. Or does that complex logic escape you?

  834. This is called deductive reasoning Thomas.

    When you get older and more educated you will run into it.

    If NO ONE can confirm whether it is his first sonnet then if you are someone, you can’t determine it either.

    And if no one can determine whether it is or not then no one can determine that it isn’t.

    Hence you can’t proclaim otherwise.

    Get it?

    Whew. I know this is going to be tough sledding.

  835. Jack,

    I love your passion, I really do. It’s one of the reasons, I’m sure, that you are a successful writer.

    But what you are saying is all statements are equal.

    Of course this is not true. Shakespeare’s 154 Sonnet Sequence is an accepted standard.

    Calling #145 his “first sonnet” is NOT.

    Secondly, Sonnet #145 (which Kaltica was foolish enough to call Shakespeare’s “first” sonnet and “unspeakable shite”) is a beautiful sonnet.

    But thanks for you input, Jack.

    I do appreciate your care and concern.

    Thomas

  836. I agree with Jack. Who, or what, is Katlicker?

    Is this the famous Piranha, I mean ‘Pirvaya’ of Poets.net, the famous Kaltica/Colin Ward of Poets.org, Gazebo and Manitoba?

    [[sentence edited out by C.]]

  837. That last sentence crossed a line, Gary. I can delete either the line or the whole post. But I cannot leave it up there, as it both identifies someone, and only disparages him at the same time.

    I need to go to work, and when I return tonight, I will do the deleting, which will include this comment, and the one in which you reply to this, if you do.

    Colin may be wrong in his perspective and politics in poetry, but he also contributes. I want to say this to balance that sentence until I return tonight. It is nothing that he can rebut, thus is firmly and only comes under name calling.

    C.

  838. Clattery, old bean, maybe I shouldn’t say this and just keep quiet. But what the hell. You, sir, are an honorable man. We both know from first-hand experience the same respect is not always shown in certain quarters. But you are right. This whole struggle with certain dominating poetry board type critics is best pursued by a code of conduct. Thanks for the reminder.

    Tere

  839. The sentence in post #1040 that “crossed a line” has been edited out. Nothing else has.

    I left the rest up, because of Tere’s comment in #1042, making the whole tangent pertinent to the overall discussion.

    C.

  840. I’ve been quietly following several different conversations on several different poetry boards between poetry critics and individuals who are questioning certain critical practices and approaches to poetry criticism. I would link to the particular boards. Except that I know from experience poetry board moderators are sometimes given to retaliation when their practices are questioned. And so I do not want to place these questioners in jeopardy.

    I am struck, however, by some of the more bizarre justifications these poetry board critics come up with. None of which I can cite here for, again, fear of outing a board’s members. Truly bizarre and straight from bizarro world. There seems to be a certain type of poetry critic on the boards that has persuaded himself that cruelty is, in fact, an expression of love and devotion. How weird is that? I know how weird it is. It is Marquis de Sade weird.

    I want the poetry board environment of the nineties back. Then, there were no experts, no dominating critical voices on the boards. There were poets and afficionados and the creative exchange between poet and poetry reader and the wranglings between equals. The boards were workshops, not clearing houses under management.

    I have finally realized that if there is going to be a procedural change on the poetry boards it is going to have to come from two directions. It is going to have to come from the bottom up. Instead of scraping and bowing, poets are going to have to question their critics, seriously question their critics’ assumptions. And it is going to have to come from the top down. Board managers are going to have to set standards for criticism while also encouraging the poet/critic dialogue as something between equals.

    Without these reforms I predict the demise of poetry board poetry. The best poets will simply stay away.

    Tere

  841. Tere,

    When the scrappy critic Edgar Poe let have poet Longfellow have it, Henry Wadsworth, the Harvard Professor, said nothing in his defense, and so Poe made up ‘Outis’ to defend Longfellow.

    Yes, poets should argue back.

    But critics should never be afraid to criticize. There are many opportunities for warm, fuzzy feelings in life; putting your poems before the public has NEVER been a guaranteed method to produce fuzzy, warm feelings; showing a love poem to your lover even takes a risk, though, in that case, it’s pretty certain that ‘it’s the thought that counts’ will prevail. But thrusting poems before the public eye or as a workshop assignment is no guarantee of the warm and fuzzy reaction–why should it be? Who, but a tyrant would demand such a thing?

    Thomas

  842. Tere,

    If you reply: as a poet I’m not looking for ‘warm and fuzzy,’ but merely an intelligent reading, yes, certainly, but here we bump up against the huge question, for either someone likes your poem or not; it is an either/or, and the monster Warm & Fuzzy needs to be fed; if someone tells us they don’t like our poem, or they find fault with it here–and here–and here–there is no tact or intgelligence but the Feeling will not overwhelm, for this is the law of Feeling and even we intellectuals understand its power, and isn’t this the source of all the strife you depict? You know in your heart it is; it isn’t aesthetic theory; it finally comes down to lack of warm and fuzzy. Look in your heart. Isn’t that true? I can disagree with Kaltica all day on an intellectual level but the ‘harm,’ the ‘trouble,’ the great ‘issue’ comes down to this– the Either/Or Monster, Warm & Fuzzy.

    The monster Warm & Fuzzy must be made to sleep, or it will murder us all.

    Intellectual disputation is the soul of Letters, precisely because poems that give X joy will be a positive horror to Y, and these disputes will always be, and are best reconciled coldly, and heaven forbid these disagreements be suppressed, for then intellectually we die.

    Thomas

  843. Clattery, you have edited out perhaps the funniest line I’ve written in years. More to the point, you did not witness, nor did Terreson, the brutality, nay, savagery, that my poetry was subjected to by ‘Pirvaya’ on the Poets.net Forum. Franz Wright threatened to punch out William Logan for much less. Ask Thomas Brady. He can testify to this.

    At any rate, I also notice that you did not edit out Post 448 where Jack Conway said: “Hey Gary blow me dipshit.”, or post 461 in which he calls me a moron and hopes I will learn to read, or 471, 491, 492, 493, 494, 499 and 500 where he posted with my name. How about 490 in which I am a “sniveling nobody” or 491 where I am “stupid”, should “stick it up my ass”, a blowhard, don’t know shit about poetry, an asshole and a dimwitted asswipe?

    And it’s a good thing, too, because Jack and I have become friends. Has it occurred to you that I might also be attempting to befriend yet another former persecutor? Many of the closest friendships begin with antagonism, no? A ‘worthy opponent’ and all that. Besides, I see no harm in asking what end of a cat one licks. Hell, cats even lick their own asses, don’t they?

  844. #1045 & #1046. Well, Essex, you have indeed anticipated my response to your posts. Good for you. All the same you have in fact posited the same worn out false dichotomy that certain defenders of poetry criticism continue to pose and use in order to silence those who object to their methods. The argument is tantamount to calling anyone objecting to their slash and burn techniques whimps. Or worse. Then, of course, the argument runs that anyone who cannot stand up to a variety of crit that can be characterized as sadistic has no business posting their poetry on the boards in the first place. (As an aside I want to know who the hell appointed these critics as the final arbiter of what does and does not get posted on the boards. Somehow I wasn’t asked to vote on the issue.)

    So you bet. Once again the false dichotomy has been posed and the choice is given between “good” crit and the warm and fuzzy “feel good” comment. (As I keep saying, it is a classic case of he who defines the terms controlling the argument.) The real choice is that between the sadistic, cruel, and destructive crit, on the one hand, and the candid, carefully reasoned, crit that helps the poet make a better, more effective poem. This, my friend, is the correct sorting system of what makes for good crit.

    Something else in your post puts a blip on my radar: “But critics should never be afraid to criticize.” I am willing to bet a dollar on your donut that what you mean by this is that the critic should be given the freedom, amounting to license, to say whatever he feels like saying in his critical comments. My dear Essex, I neither give you or any other self-appointed arbiter of good poetry such a freedom. I expect you to respect my poem, taking it on its own terms and not yours. If you choose to parse my poem I expect you to first figure out the prosodics on which it draws. And if you choose to make the textual analysis I fully expect you to judge my language means within the context of my poem, and not against the bar of your own assumptions. I can only say again what I continue to say: critics do not occupy some privileged place in the universe from which they can look down on all. So you see? From my standpoint the critic is in fact limited by what he can say. He is limited by the little world or universe my poem has created. I require of him relevance.

    But let me be more succinct. If I have to chose between defending your right, as a critic, to say whatever you feel like saying, and the promising, developing poet who is made so uncomfortable by slash and burn techniques she stays away from the boards, I’ll leave your tribe out in the cold eight days a week. Critics are the ones in need of reform here. Not poets.

    Something else. You say: “The monster Warm & Fuzzy must be made to sleep, or it will murder us all.” I reject this notion. I for one can read a poem on many different levels and I can do it all at the same time. I can approach it intellectually, experientally, emotionally, sensorily, somaticly, and so forth. I can read a poem as record. And I can read a poem with in mind how well it has dealt with the word hoard. Any critic who is not commesurate to the same capacity for reading poetry has no place in the business and should take down his shingle.

    But let’s play real and cut to the chase. There has come upon the scene a class of critics looking to dominate the boards. He demands total submission to his opinions. He is intellectually dishonest. And all too frequently he is a second-rate thinker. The only antidote to him is as I indicated upthread. (#1044). It has to come from the bottom up and from the top down. But how is it to come from the bottom up on those boards where critting the critter is a bannable offense. And how is it going to come from the top down when and where such a critic is a moderator and member of management? Man! Talk about looking through the glass darkly, huh? “Intellectual disputation is the soul of Letters,” you say. How can there be intellectual disputation when there is no equality between poet and critic? And why is it some critics assure the rest of us their assumptions and biases should not be questioned?

    While I assume your good intentions I don’t think you’ve actually come to terms with certain members of your own tribe. They give you all a bad name, man.

    Tere

  845. Tere,

    Do you believe a poem contains within it the all the criteria by which it should be judged?

    Secondly, how can you manage criticism?

    In the big leagues, a pitcher throws the hardest fastball he can, the nastiest curve he can, and the batter doesn’t get to say, “No, that fastball was too fast! It doesn’t count!”

    Your poem is a target and, as a target, it cannot tell the archer how to shoot at it; that’s the archer’s job. The target has no business not being a target. You, as a poet, cannot tell others how to read your poem. That would be tyranny. That would be playing with a stacked deck. That would be cheating. How can you condone anything like that?

    Now, under my rules, this does mean that a critic who is simply an a. hole has the freedom to say a. hole things regarding your poem.

    But notice this is just policing a. holes and has nothing to do with aesthetics.

    But, a. holes will always exist, and one does not let the a. holes make the rules. The rule is: freedom of speech. A. holes don’t get to end freedom of speech because they are a. holes. Freedom of speech is more important than the a. holes. Anyone could be an a. hole. The poet could be an a. hole, write a bad poem, and threaten to beat up the person who says something bad about their poem. But the bottom line is you play by the rules, and the rule here is freedom of speech. If an a. hole critic says something invalid about a poem, that invalid remark will be noted by the group; that’s how good discussion is protected. We don’t shut down free speech.

    We have to assume good intentions on the part of both critics and poets and then let the chips fall where they may.

    No one ever got hurt or killed over a criticism.

    A poet simply cannot make rules about how his poem is going to be criticized. I just don’t see how you support do this.

    If a thousand critics read a poem of yours, for instance, and you got a thousand different responses, how do you justify selecting which are valid and which are not? You have to let every one of the thousand exist. If someone doesn’t say it, they’ll think it, and if you don’t let someone say something, you are not letting them think something about your poem, which is nuts. You of course can favor some responses over others, but that’s different than asserting that some of the thousand can’t exist.

    It’s also human nature, that no poem on the planet is going to get 1,000 out of 1,000 favorable responses, anyway.

    I think you’re locked into a ‘doth protest too much’ rhetoric from which you need to escape. The way to deal with the Kaltica’s of the world is to give it right back to them, same as they give it to you, battle them intellectually; that’s what I do. It’s what we should all do. Did you use the word, wimp? Yea, we shouldn’t be wimps. Poets should be less wimpy than the average. You know in your heart you’re never going to make ‘the mean critics’ go away. Death and taxes, Tere, death and taxes.

    We all have to pay up.

    Not that I want to be grim about it. I smile when I’ve got Kaltica against the ropes…

    Thomas

  846. Well, my dear Essex, here is where we come to what Clattery now famously has called “the never-ending loop.” We are simply going to have to agree to disagree.

    You bet I can make certain demands of my critics. I can demand they prove they have a certain capacity for poetry comprehension. I can demand they take on my poem on its own terms and not theirs. Nor do I allow that poetry is sufficient grounds, a playing field, for what you call intellectual disputation, especially when the intellectual disputation is carried on for its own sake, becomes an animal in its own right, having nothing to do with the poem in hand. Lastly, I have no intentions of playing this particular game by the rules bad critics set: “The way to deal with the Kaltica’s of the world is to give it right back to them, same as they give it to you, battle them intellectually; that’s what I do.” If this is your way, then I say good on you and happy hunting. This is not my way and mostly because of the sterility of the ego-clash the game involves.

    The fact is I am wanting a different poetry board game, one in which the procedural rules are different. In my game the poem comes first, the (I want to say innately) gifted poetry reader comes a close second, and the poetry critic comes a distant third. Why a distant third? Because time and time again he is guilty of intellectual dishonesty, of being bound by his own prejudices and biases, of lacking the capacity for poetry comprehension.

    Your remarks bring to mind something I once read concerning Plato and his generation of philosophers. Likely you recall that Plato was a lyric poet, and a damn fine poet, before he got seduced by Socrates. Likely you recall that it was Plato who exiled poets from his ideal Republic. He decided, or so he said, that poets were not only liars but a pernicious influence on society. One commentator views Plato’s condemnation differently. According to him Plato’s motives were not so pure. According to him Plato knew he had to discredit poets, whose moral authority was generally accepted in the ancient world, if he was to win the ear of rulers and governors. And so he exiles poetry and the poet.

    I rather feel the same way about poetry critics in hyper-motion and needing to tell poets that, without the critic, they are nothing. This is what your comments bring to mind. As do all the K’s of the poetry board scene. I am here to disagree with you and the rest of the poetry critic tribe. Good poetry gets made not because of you but in spite of your offices.

    Essex, I can go toe to toe with you or any other poetry board critic on this intellectual crap any day of the week, in any state of sobriety, on any work night. I just find it all supremely boring and tertiary to poetry.

    Tere

  847. On #1049 . . .

    Someone’s face is not a punching bag, and passersby are not boxers in a gymnasium.

    A dog in the road is not a baseball, and the bumper of your car is not a baseball bat.

    Easter dinner on the set table are not duckpins, and the hassock in the den is not a bowling ball.

    A poem posted in an online workshop is not a target, and the respondents are not archers.

    The project at hand is to give feedback to the poet that will assist in moving the poem to completion.

    Thus, a poetry workshop is not a place for someone who wants to pretend to be a poetry critic. It’s not going to work. That would be like throwing the pies at a party.

    If someone wants to practice being a critic, then that person can get a blog like this one, buy some poetry books, and critique away and forever. If that person turns out to be any good at it, then readers will follow the blog, and poets will send their books to critique for free. Imagine, free poems to critique, and a forum to do it in. Kewl! But, if nothing else, it will keep such a wannabee critic from shooting arrows in a room full of poets.

    C.

  848. Tere,

    Plato didn’t ban the poets. He said poets who praised heroes and gods could stay. see ‘The Republic.’

    You can certainly identify with this, since you only want critics in ‘your republic’ who praise poems.

    You want to protect poems from the slings and arrows of critics. Plato wanted to protect the world from poets’ slings and arrows.

    It’s interesting to think about, isn’t it?

    You assume the critic is the bad guy who has to watch himself, and the poem is always innocent.

    Why?

    I know I’m speaking broadly here, but your assumptions really need to be examined.

    You might say, “What harm can poems do? They aren’t capable of hurting anyone.” But if poems today have no ‘real world’ impact, it’s interesting why these essentially trivial objects need rules and restrictions to protect them. As if they were living creatures, and not just words on a page!

    Yet, if poems did have a significant impact on the world (as they did in Plato’s day) why shouldn’t the world be protected from their impact, if they are harmful?

    I’m not having some academic, artsy-fartsy discussion here. This is crucial stuff. Either poems are insignificant and thus deserve no special treatment for that reason, or, they are significant, and don’t get special treatment for that reason.

    Again, I am painting with a broad brush, but these are significant underlying issues.

    This is no “loop,” Tere. You have a chance for a significant breakthrough, here.

    You might be right: Critics should only praise the poem. But are you willing to ask that poems only praise?

    Thomas

  849. C,

    Good one.

    The following is brilliant:

    “Someone’s face is not a punching bag, and passersby are not boxers in a gymnasium.

    A dog in the road is not a baseball, and the bumper of your car is not a baseball bat.

    Easter dinner on the set table are not duckpins, and the hassock in the den is not a bowling ball.

    A poem posted in an online workshop is not a target, and the respondents are not archers.”

    I was using a metaphor, and you, doing a much better job of it, are doing the same.

    Let me counter, since you seem genuinely troubled with my archer/target metaphor.

    Look, a poem is not a dog. No one can hurt a poem. That’s the first thing.

    Secondly, constructive criticism can be violent! To improve our looks, we CUT hair! Surgery CUTS flesh. To build, we sometimes DESTROY old structures! In nature, to survive, creatures KILL AND EAT other creatures! Can you imagine?

    But God forbid a poem sit still long enough to be lanced!

    THOU SHALT NOT TOUCH A HAIR ON THIS POEM’S HEAD!

    You sum it up well, here:

    “The project at hand is to give feedback to the poet that will assist in moving the poem to completion.”

    How do we move the poem to completion? Do we point out which parts of the poem, in our opinion, are toxic, and are hurting the rest of the poem? Even if the toxic part of the poem is 90% of it? Or, should we not be honest?

    And, when we have honestly made our critical opinion known, that 90% of the poem should go, who re-writes the poem? The poet, I would think? The person giving the feedback is not the poet. So the feedback says, ‘90% of your poem must go.’ One can say this politely, but this is what is said, this is ‘the constructive feedback,’ spoken honestly. Is this too violent? Too harsh? To ‘move to completion,’ we must travel backwards 90%. What if the poet disagrees? Who is right? How should we proceed? What is the rule?

    Thomas

  850. Hi Thomas,

    Okay. Let’s move metaphors. And let’s say we are pediatric doctors and diagnosticians, and the poem is the child-patient. We are trying to tell the mother, the poet, how to get little tike better. So let’s say we think the poem is sick (poor little guy), as opposed to being the robust poem down the street out running and playing.

    You are absolutely correct. There are times when violence is needed to cure the sick child. Sometimes it’s yucky-tasting medicine. Sometimes it’s sutures. In cases of cancer, it’s chemotherapy and radiation. In cases where the child’s legs are stuck beneath a toppled farm tractor, there’s the case of amputation, often times without anesthesia. There is no time, in these cases, to be nice about it to the poem’s mother, or very little, something like, “We’re sorry, Mrs. Poet, here’s a fan in case you get the vapors, but there is no time to lose, and you really need to consider having no more children after this one dies on our kiddie operating table.”

    That’s life in the cruel world of the pediatric office.

    C.

  851. re: #1052. I do love the internet. It saves me so much time and so many words. All I have to do is type this into my search engine: Plato and poets. I come up with something from Stanford University.

    http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/plato-rhetoric/notes.html

    Do please pay especial attention to bullet 7, 16, 17, 18, 19, and 23. If, dear Essex, you are still unpersuaded of Plato’s (and Socrates’s) fundamentally unfriendly approach to poetry let me know. Or maybe don’t let me know. Just use your search engine. Type in: Plato and poetry. Rediscover the adversarial approach for yourself, the same approach I find among poetry board critics too enamored by their office.

    At the expense of appearing boring I’ll say it again. Poetry boards need to be returned to poets and to poetry readers. Poetry critics need to be put into perspective in the same way Plato’s less than selfless motives need to be put into perspective.

    Tere

  852. Yes to #1051. Anyone who doesn’t get that poetry boards are workshops, and not a culling (killing) field, doesn’t get it. And, in my experience, those who don’t get it care less about the poem posted than about their own personal agendas.

    Tere

  853. Tere,

    You linked to footnotes by scholars talking in general re: Plato and art. OK, fine. (I thought you were going to link to Plato himself)

    It’s well-known that Plato had an issue with poets. I don’t deny that, nor have I, nor will I. It’s also–as even the notes you linked point out–an extremely nuanced issue. Anyone who simply says that Plato hated all poetry and all poets is distorting what Plato actually wrote.

    In ‘The Republic’ Plato says explicitly poets who praise gods and heroes are welcome. I believe it’s Book X.

    The links you provided do not dispute this, so I’m really not sure what your point is.

    Moving on, let me make it even simpler.

    Let’s put your view in a philosophical formula:

    The poem is always right,
    Therefore the critic is sometimes wrong.

    The poem is sacred,
    Therefore the critic is sometimes blasphemous.

    Art may never be muzzled.
    Criticism, however, may be muzzled.

    Do you agree with these statements? If not, how would you re-formulate them?

  854. Clattery,

    Oh, so I’m killing babies now am I? (raising eyebrows like Groucho Marx)

    It seems what I’ve been saying all along is correct, then. All you are really saying is that the critic has to be “nice” to the poet. Don’t kill his poems, and don’t tell the poet he can never write poetry again. (Pound did say this to the editor of ‘New Directions’ who went on to publish him, did you know that?) Well, of course; that’s civility. I will never behave like Ezra Pound. I promise!

    There are critics on-line, however, who enjoy a punishing rhetorical style. So what? We’re not children. We can make up our own minds about things. Most people are not going to be swayed by nasty rhetoric.

    Do you think that I was swayed for one second by Pirvaya savaging Gary Fitzgerald’s poetry on Poets.net? Nope. Pirvaya’s harsh words were his own, and, as an adult, I, upon reading Pirvaya’s words, took them for what they were worth, and no more; they had no affect on my opinion of Gary’s poetry. They may have, if Pirvaya spoke even a grain of truth or understanding, but as it happened, they did not.

    But would I take away Pirvaya’s right to express his opinion?

    Never in a million years.

  855. Hi Thomas,

    You are having a hard time with metaphors. You were the one who brought up the absurd idea that a poet who posts a poem for workshopping, has made the poem a target for violence and archers’ arrows that might be lurking in the area.

    Now you raise your eyebrows as if I accused you of being a baby killer. Well, in your own metaphoric world, you are. Now, how about raising that other eyebrow in an aha moment, knowing how ridiculous you have been.

    There is no good reason to do any critiquing as such to unfinished poems. Go kill some published poems instead. We all know a little secret here, and that is no matter how good a poem is, no one has yet written the perfect poem. So, no matter what poem you have in front of you, you can do violence to it. Get that blog, buy some published books, and knock yourself out with your violent critiquing. And if you want to channel Ezra Pound, make the name of your blog, “What Would Ezra Say?”

    C.

  856. About #1057.

    Come on, my dear Essex. In the language of argument and rational discourse, your “philosophical formulations” amount to a red herring, otherwise known as the ignoratio elenchi: the irrelevant conclusion or the irrelevant thesis.

    Wikipedia is such a handy tool:

    Aristotle believed that an ignoratio elenchi is a mistake made by a questioner while attempting to refute a respondent’s argument. He called it an ignorance of what makes for a refutation. For Aristotle, then, ignoratio elenchi amounts to ignorance of logic. In fact, Aristotle goes so far as to say that all logical fallacies can be reduced to what he calls ignoratio elenchi.

    Closer to the point the Wiki article says this:

    Similar to ignoratio elenchi, a red herring is an argument, given in reply, that does not address the original issue. Critically, a red herring is a deliberate attempt to change the subject or divert the argument. This is known formally in the English vocabulary as a digression which is usually denoted as “red herring”.

    You, sir, are now guilty of displaying an ignorance of logic. Show me where and when I say the things you attribute to me. If this is how you interpret my comments I am satisfied that the problem is not mine, that you are missing the point.

    The point? Poetry boards are workshops. They amount to a venue for peer review. The point of peer review is the kind of close, objective examination that, at its best, enambles the poet to self-correct her poem. Poetry boards are not killing fields, culling sheds, threshing floors.

    If you or any other poetry critic confuse the two environments, confounding one with the other, the problem is not mine. The problem is yours and that of similarly minded poetry critics. I cannot state the case more categorically.

    So how else can I get the notion across? Poets I talk to get it. Poetry readers I talk to get it. The only class of poetry board habitues that don’t seem to get it are those critics who predicate their relevance on poetry criticism.

    Tere

  857. Clattery & Tere,

    Which one of you brought up the ‘loop?’

    You guys are just spinning your wheels.

    You’re demanding specific critical criteria under vague rubrics like ‘helpful’ and ‘constructive’ without any expressed notion of what would actually help make a poem better. All I’m saying is dogmatic restrictions on the critical process are not required and you keep falling back on some mystical, unproven point that by default you are really nice, caring, understanding guys, who love poetry and I don’t, because I’m not nice, and I want to shoot an arrow through somebody’s eyeball, or kick a dog, and I don’t understand what you are saying.

    Yea, it’s a ‘loop’ all right.

    Loopy, in fact.

    What’s going on is I’m trying to trip you up on principle and you are trying to trip me up as some kind of mean person.

    OK, I apologize for my failure to get through to you guys. I take full responsibility for that.

    I call “truce!”

    Maybe we can critique an actual unfinished poem together and see what we’re really talking about.

    My apologies again,

    Essex

  858. Hi Essex,

    In addition to conflating workshop critiques of poems in progress with literary criticism of published pieces, you are overlooking the fact that on a number of online poetry boards the poet is indeed muzzled when it comes to responding to critiques. On these boards, the poet is not allowed to defend his poem or to dispute the critiques he receives and must respond to all comments with thank you.

    The warm fuzzy feeling that makes you happy when you get Kalitca against the ropes is not something you could ever experience in a thread in which you posted one of your poems and he responded, but could only be felt in your fantasy land version of such an exchange. I guess it’s possible that you could get all warm and fuzzy and start smiling if you got Kaltica against the ropes in a thread in which he posted one of his poems, you responded and he said thanks, assuming the guidelines about required expressions of gratitude and prohibitions against disagreeing with one’s critics were applied equally to you both.

    In the world of literary criticism, if a critic writes up a bad review of one of your poems, you can write a rebuttal; in the world of many online poetry workshops, you can’t. I have seen people who were upset about critiques they received, but couldn’t respond to, respond by writing a poem to/about the critic and posting it on the board. The poems were deleted, and those poets were banned.

    You will say let both the poet and the critic in workshops have unfettered freedom of speech. It sounds good in theory, and I think it could work on an experts-only forum, but on an open board, which has no membership requirements and attracts members of all ages (including some as young as 13) and of all experience levels (including complete novices), I think it is likely that a handful of trolls would take down the place.

  859. While following this debate it occurred to me that what seems to be missing in the online poetry world is some middle ground. On the one hand we have the poetry workshops, open to all and where all poems are subjected to, indeed, intended for, critique. On the other we have the online journals or “experts-only forums”.

    In the one case, if you post a poem you are subject to the public comments of those who read it, which, I think we can all agree, can get pretty nasty at times. In the other, the poem is subject to approval before posting which stirs up all the demons of subjectivity. Who is to say if the ‘judge’ who rejected the poem, or the reviewers who subsequently comment on it, are qualified? Was it a terrible poem? Was it a good one that someone unqualified did not appreciate? It could even have been a good poem that was not accepted for less than honorable (personal) reasons.

    There seems to be no place for the ‘finished’ poem.

    Is there no online venue, other than a personal blog, where one can simply post poetry for others to either enjoy or hate but WITHOUT COMMENT?

  860. Hi Gary,

    I always liked the poetry forums with no expertise levels, one big topic area for all, and all invited, which allow all to post, the 15-year-old expert to the 100-year-old beginner.

    The task at hand, then, is to take the poems written by experts, and speak to them in ways that will help them improve said poems. The task, then, is also to take the poems written by the novices, and speak to them also in ways that will help them improve their said poems. Same. You talk to the person about his or her poem. So simple. So so so so simple.

    The problem with expert and novice levels, is that they are at the discretion of the board moderators who will inevitably be wrong. The better they are, the less wrong they are, okay, but there are too may areas to be wrong in. And so much of the talk on such forums is bogged down with trying to tell poets that they posted in the wrong topic area, that the poem is advanced beginner, and not beginner advanced, certainly not good enough to be in the super-expert topic area, which is different from the somewhat expert posting area. However, the super expert topic area is inevitably cluttered with poems from poets that have made the grade socially, but who are not as good as the forum moderators pretend him or her to be, who are more somewhat expert and often medium advanced.

    So, we don’t need no stinking badges. We need poems by all different poets. And readers who will help the cause.

    C.

  861. About #1064. Actually, Gary, there is at least one board that satisfies what you are asking for. Delectable Mnts was deliberately designed to carry four forums for writing, prose and poetry. (Four out of fifteen forums.) Of the four there is one forum for the poet/critic exchange. It happens to be the busiest of the four, which circumstance tells me that, contrary to the notion some maintain that poets want the “feel good” comment only, in fact poets want to get workshopped. But, then, the forum is also designed to allow a poet-to-critic dialogue. There, poets can defend their poems. There, critics have no systemic advantage in the exchange. Both parties come to the poem on an equal footing.

    Of the other three forums, all non-crit forums, there is one especially that satisfies what you suggest. It is both a chalkboard for anyone who feels like writing to the screen (maybe in the spirit of improv or even draft writing) and a billboard for anyone who wants to display, share, show off the finished project.

    So the options are out there. Nobody is captive to a board system that disadvantages the poet in favor of the critter.

    Tere

  862. About #1063. Now we come to the politics of the situation, the dirty side, the soft underbelly of (some) poetry board arrangements. The poster’s characterizations are correct. And it occcurs to me this particular conversation wouldn’t even be taking place but for what has been miscreated by board managers.

    Let my people go. Let poets speak back to their critics.

    Tere

  863. Hey, nice to see you, Indy. I hear what you’re saying. I can’t believe there are sites like that. I can understand the poet being silent for 24 hours, or something, and then being able to reply. But never??

    I agree with Tere.

    Let poets speak back to critics.

    Are they being poets when they do so, or critics?

    Critics.

    We are all critics; we just don’t realize it.

    ‘Poet’ is hopelessly sentimental and artsy-fartsy terminology, really.

    The secret is: we are all critics.

    To finish off my boxing match with Clattery and Tere:

    Actually, Clattery, you have been vague. This is not your fault; it’s the nature of our discussion.

    We’re in a theoretical realm. I never mind being there. Some people do.

    Even if you point to actual examples of on-line workshops, how can we assume this is a model?

    I might approach two different poems in two completely different ways, based on a variety of factors. We never step in the same stream twice. Every critic is different.

    I am being equally vague, true, but I’m adding philosophical rigor where I can; my message is that we cannot impose dogmatic restrictions on the critical process, and for some reason you and Tere find this satanic, or something; so far you have failed to prove I’m a terrible guy because I choose to philosophically defend the critic; beyond that, I haven’t the faintest idea, really, what you and Tere are trying to say.

    But, now that you guys have me on the ropes, and I’m about to go down, let me try still another approach:

    You are a movie reviewer. As a reviewer, you tell your audience that a particular movie is trash (perhaps it’s one of those slasher flicks).

    You also teach film-making at a university. One of your students is making a slasher flick. As his instructor, guiding him as a novice film-maker, you withhold your real feelings for this type of film in order to teach your student the fundamentals of film-making.

    Is this the sort of distinction you and Tere are trying to draw between the poetry critic and the workshop teacher of poetry?

  864. Dear Essex. Three things for you. First, I have no intention of painting you as a bad guy. What is that old R&R song line? ‘There ain’t no good guys, there ain’t no bad guys…we just disagree.” I guess you and I just disagree about how poetry board’s should be viewed. I see them as workshops. I see critical comment as means of a poem’s self-correction. You view poetry boards differently; as places, I think, for the critical review. So we do have a fundamental disagreement. This is fine by me.

    Second item. Way up-thread I suggested you do something that would be way cool on the boards. I suggested you critically review published, finalized works. This, instead of critically reviewing works in progress. I would love to see such a board feature. I think also that, to the extent poetry crit is a creative process for you, it would satisfy the urge nicely. My suggestion was serious.

    Third item. Rus Bowden has given me permission to bring over from the board, Babilu’s, a recent set of comments he made on a poem I posted called “Savory.” To me it amounts to a practical illustration of the kind of workshop comments at their best. Sure, we all have different ways of workshopping poetry. My way, in fact, is not Rusman’s way. But this is how it can be done, both creatively and productively. Notice how he takes on the poem on its own terms. Notice how he takes exceptions to usages he figures vitiate against the poem. Notice how he makes suggestions that, in his view, make for a stronger poem. As the author I don’t have to agree with him on every point. But I can take note on what, from his standpoint, does and does not work. To me his reading respects the poem while pointing out its weaknesses, all the time not trying to fit it to a preset bias. See what you think.

    ~ Savory

    What singularly interests me
    are the particulars in
    the possibilities of desire.

    May I sway you with
    word, rhythm, even the
    laying on of hands, or
    the sculpting finger touch to
    part the ripened, red, swollen petals
    in moon drop and warm pool? (this stanza is a tongue-twister, and the line breaks don’t help the reader read it. but, it moves the poem along well thematically. i wonder if you could start with this stanza, reworked a bit for ease of enunciation and readability, and follow this with the first.)

    The warm pool when lively and
    as rounded as
    the perfect pearl secretion
    instinctively seeded. (no predicate, only subject–okay)

    But the subject is
    a certain variety of desire. (subject as subject, then predicate–so a form-suggested stanza break here. and possibly use parentheses or even brackets. both these ideas to make the reader savvy with you, and yet the vocalization is the same.)

    And the delivery is tender.
    Just where the under urge is its
    own cause for wanting
    the lurid life unsated, kept
    unabated, what thrives in
    the bottom belly distended by
    all we conspire to ignore. (nice meter. the poem gets nicely paced, and in the pacing is effective form loosening. also this stanza too is a bit of a tongue-twister with a readability issue, but it works with practice–okay. but you’re skirting the line of the readability of the poem getting accent over the read of the poem.)

    Did I already say I am drawn to
    the wet slip, the easy slip consorting
    in your company?

    And just imagine (weak line, with its only purpose being rhythm and rhyme in tandem with the next. but not having that seems better, the simply stated question–)
    what might happen if
    this decadence of emotion
    aroused you to a life of your own?
    In the spider’s spool,
    in sunlight’s thread,
    in September’s noon,
    in your lifted head,
    what refinement of thought
    seated might give
    stark ascension in your eyes? (I enjoy the shift into end rhyme and short line metric play.)

    Or you who demand in long, dry grass,
    and pulling Pandora’s student down,
    “I will take my pleasure now.” ( i think there’s a little more to the poem than this end. i’m not talking about making this into a too much longer poem, but there seems to be more to say. is this where what’s savory leads us? no, this is what it leads through. then what? make the myth). ~

    Thanks, Rusman, for the permission.

    Tere

  865. Tere,

    I love the first stanza of your poem. I love it so much, I consider it gold and the rest dross.

    The theme which struck me was: sexuality, or passion, hidden by lofty speech.

    I thought it best, then, that your poem keep re-visiting this marvelous first stanza in sound and sense, always keeping to the theme, with slight variations, until the great secret is teased out.

    The following is just an example, as I spin out stanzas which ponder the first one.

    WHAT SINGULARLY INTERESTS ME

    What singularly interests me
    Are the particulars in
    The possibilities of desire.

    Can I say this any better?
    Will you bring the bucket over here?
    If we fill it, spring will come.

    I enjoy watching the status
    Of land and sea altered
    In relation to each other,

    Especially when barren wind
    Hunts the rain and piece
    By piece builds the fire.

    Did I already say I am drawn
    To your particulars in
    My possibilities of desire?

    The pool of the moon
    And the moon of your distinguishing
    Kindness, yes?

    This red berry and this moist green,
    Left you with many possibilities:
    A quadrant, a something delicate in-between.

    I didn’t say that.
    You know that if I did
    I would not be able to say what I just said now.

    What singing! Singing to me
    the choruses of blind-
    Ness, who live only for singing!

    If only the singing did not
    Continually say to me, “not me!
    You are continually thinking of something else!”

    I will sit down and ask you
    For a favor that my kindness until now
    May, or may not, have prepared you for.

    Maybe you’ll say “I do not ask for rain;
    But if the rain should fall delicately,
    There is a chance I won‘t miss the sun.”

    If only I could have read your thoughts!
    Gate is guarded by gate.
    Thinking is not something we can easily hold.

    What singularly interests me
    Are the particulars!
    And those, too, that are rare.

    Anyway, this is my ‘criticism’ of your poem. That other fellow’s critique is fine as it goes, but I don’t think it’s radical enough; I don’t think he quite understands what your ‘theme.’ Perhaps I’m too chaste; I didn’t like it when the poem became too sexually overt, especially with that ‘red swollen petals’ image. That ruined the poem for me, for it violated what I thought was established so beautifully in that restrained and subtle first stanza–which is the absolute key to your poem.

    OK, how’d I do?

  866. But E of E,

    You lost the musing almost entirely, and with it, the music and too much of the meaning, including that pulling out the “overt” sexuality, you made the poem bland.

    I wonder if that’s the issue, that some people cannot truly muse, or cannot understand another’s musing, and so the poems written through such poetry-writing trances, cannot be fully appreciated. There is a need for a certain poetic empathy, instead of an assertion of the workshopper’s ego. Part of what we do in workshopping would be to pick up in the poem that muse-inspired frame of mind if we can, that spell the poet was working under. To do otherwise, is to lose the poem.

    C.

  867. Clattery,

    C,

    Were you demonstrating workshop etiquette in your last post, or just giving your opinion of Tere’s poem? My take on Tere’s poem is subjective, as is yours, but that’s not the issue, is it? Are you saying the method I just demonstrated is not allowed in workshop? That’s what I want to know. I’m sure you would never say a person can be wrong in how they feel about a poem, but the bottom line is: are there right and wrong feedback methodologies in the workshop? Can we be too ‘creative’ in our feedback, and did I just cross that line?

    Essex

  868. OK, perhaps my critique was too ‘radical.’

    Using all of Tere’s lines, this is how the poem works better for me:

    WHAT SINGULARLY INTERESTS ME

    What singularly interests me
    Are the particulars in
    The possibilities of desire.

    What might happen if
    this decadence of emotion
    aroused you to a life of your own?

    In the spider’s spool,
    in sunlight’s thread,
    in September’s noon,
    in your lifted head,
    what refinement of thought
    seated might give
    stark ascension in your eyes?

    My goal is never to settle on a nice poem; I want an extraordinary poem. No lines that ‘say too much,’ no lines that water down the thrust of the poem, no weak lines.

  869. My dear Essex, it is official. I give up on you. I could point out the several reasons why your “crit,” such as it is, is a failure. But what would be the point? You would only come back with another reason why yours is a superior intellect and how it is you have a special and singular take on what is true. I finally realize you remind me of something Sartre said about intellectuals. Or that their greatest danger, amounting to the essential temptation, is to frustrate action. More to the point I am reminded of something Carolyn Kizer wrote in her introduction to a book of Roethke’s writings on poetry. “Bill Mathews has said that a really good writing teacher wants you to write more and more like yourself, while a less good teacher wants you to write like him or her – only slightly less well!”

    You, sir, are no teacher. You might even be dangerous to younger poets and poets just starting out, possibly lacking a certain degree of self-confidance. To be frank, if this is your approach, all I see is a tom cat marking trees, buildings, and pant legs.

    There is no profit in an exchange that amounts to an intellectual glass bead game.

    Anyway. So, Clattery old bean, I brought over the Rus Bowden crit to give a concrete example of what can amounnt to the kind of productive exchange between poem and its critical reader (possibly) resulting in the refined poetic expression. This is the register in which I am thinking right now. I wonder what are some other approaches that might result in the productive exchange?

    Tere

  870. Hi Thomas,

    Your method is ineffective. The issue is not how you feel about the poem. That’s for a critique, and even a critique should be based in objective knowledge and practice. The issue is what can Terreson do with the feedback you give him.

    Also, Tere’s poem already has some extraordinary features to it. Here is a case of a knowledgeable and capable poet who has written a pretty complete piece. What he needs is ideas for tweaking. Your rewrites are not nearly as good as his poem–this last one reducing his poem to an unremarkable speech with a couple of the ideas he had–and part of the reason appears to be that you have not gotten into either his musing, which is most important, nor his music.

    C.

  871. “Your method is ineffective.”

    What does this mean? Are you saying this as a critic? A poet? A workshop facilitator?

    What rule did I break? What principle? Where is my philosophy faulty? How is my method “ineffective?”

    I ask these questions rhetorically. Of course you don’t have to answer them.

    I would like it if you would answer this one: if you were in charge, would you delete my feedback? Or, would you let it stand, and merely voice your disapproval as you are doing now?

    Thomas

  872. Tere,

    Honestly, are you less of a poet now then you were before you read my feedback of your poem?

    Did my reading of your poem harm you in some way?

    I felt strongly that your first stanza was the strongest feature of your poem, and that it needed to be re-visited, or re-echoed, in stanzas that followed. My examples were meant as just that: examples. You can take them or leave them. I wasn’t writing my own poem; I was only making a demonstration, which you can take, or leave.

    If my feedback strategy was errant, I would think this would only reaffirm you in the direction you were going.

    Essex

  873. Hi Thomas,

    It was ineffective in that such a rewrite would not help the poet, and that’s what your task is when giving a poet feedback in a workshop, to help the poet.

    What was your agenda? What were you trying to accomplish?

    C.

  874. Hi Thomas,

    On the questions of deleting. No. In fact, I probably would not discuss it in the poem’s thread. Therefore, we have a forum such as this to talk it over. But, I would not be opposed to the effectiveness of feedback being discussed in the thread either, which is why I favor threaded versus flat discussions, so that the tangent can be made and separate from the poem’s feedback.

    (For the sake of clarity for all who might read, blog threads are flat, whereas threaded discussions branch out into tangents. So, for example, if you wanted to respond to a post above, your comment would appear up there and indented. But you can’t do that with a flat blog thread. It appears as the latest and last comment.)

    For me to delete a comment in a poem’s thread, what would make a difference would be if the feedback were given in spite, or with condescension. Poets should be treated well, and I don’t mean with kid gloves, but with respect–in transactional analysis, adult-to-adult.

    C.

  875. Clattery,

    “On the questions of deleting. No.”

    Good.

    “It was ineffective in that such a rewrite would not help the poet, and that’s what your task is when giving a poet feedback in a workshop, to help the poet.”

    That’s your subjective opinion.

    Frankly, even a poet cannot finally know if feedback has helped, or not. The poet may wake up one morning 10 years later and the worm of the critique has hatched into a butterfly in the poet’s soul.

    Who is to say, finally? An off-hand remark can change the world. Or not.

    “What was your agenda? What were you trying to accomplish?”

    Critical feedback.

  876. Clattery, I’ve been increasingly thinking about something lately. Something simple but a bit odd too. Having recently designed a board I think is what has brought about a certain reckoning. It is simply the extent to which, on many boards, the poet to critic axis has not only come to dominate conversations, it has come to be viewed as the only currency of exchange between poet and poetry reader. In brief, and all too often, no other relationship, no other conversation, no other exchange is entertained.

    This strikes me as a strange thing to have to say about poetry-context conversations. Or that the only means of relating to a poet is through critique, with no other avenue considered legitimate. And here is the weirdest part about it: we’ve all bought into the paradigm. Recently I had to say ‘no’ to a couple of board members who wanted more fora devoted to crit. Talk about role reversals, huh? And I may have lost their participation as a result. But my reasoning was that one poetry forum devoted to the poet and critic dialogue is plenty, is more than adequate. And my crazy, Montessori-like conviction is that there are so many other possible approaches to the poet-to-reader (reader-to-poet) relationship. About the idea I read one member to say, in effect, this is going to take some getting used to. It was the comment that startled me, stopped me, made me register what a bizarre circumstance, some, a few, maybe many of us have helped create.

    If you were to ask me, ‘well, what are these other avenues’ I am not sure I could give them names. And if I could I am not sure I would. You know how it is: sometimes naming a thing kills it or changes its vector. It is sort of like when you are in love and you want to say to your lover ‘I love you.’ And you know that no sooner said than the feeling gets diminished or contained or, worst of all, set on a predictable course. Something like that.

    I don’t know, man. Maybe I am crazy. On the other hand maybe this poet to critic (critic to poet) axis comes at a certain diminishment of the poetry experience. I remember something Stanley Kunitz was quoted as saying, maybe ten years ago, on NPR. The report had to do with a scandal involving the Academy of American Poets. And Kunitz was talking about the contemporary American poetry scene. Paraphrasing here he said: ‘Contemporary poetry lacks imagination, which is an odd thing to say about art.’ Maybe something similar is true about how poets and poetry readers relate to each other, at least on the boards. Lacking imagination.

    Tere

  877. Hi Thomas,

    Okay, very funny. You say you were trying to accomplish critical feedback. The question was what were you trying to accomplish with that “critical feedback”. Who was going to benefit and how were they going to benefit? What was accomplished?

    C.

  878. Hi Tere,

    I find such conversations not conversations at all. And there’s a serious problem with that, with structuring the poet/reader relationship, and this so-called ‘critique’ is becoming sad to me, because many poets that I have met online have become good friends.

    These bad habits at forums become learned behavior, and acceptable social interaction that goes nowhere, and yet is designed to tap both the poet and the reader emotionally even if nonconstructive. It’s not about the poetry anymore, but the individuals getting social fixes. Poetry, though, comes out of social situations and culture, and when the personal part of it is diminished, when potential friends get robotized into roles (who’s the leader, who’s the smart one, who’s the savant, who’s the idiot, who’s the bouncer, and so forth), the poetry and the creativity is diminished. On healthy forums, you can witness creativity in action.

    If I came to you with an investment question. Let’s say we had an investment forum. I start a discussion saying that I have $10,000 to invest and what do you think of my putting $1,000 into Goldman Sachs. You could robotize your answer, and give me your pat “‘expert’ opinion” and tell me as well how stupid it is of me to invest in such a stock at this time. But if true workshopping, the conversation would be a give and take. And furthermore, when creative (as a poetry workshop should be), would lead to some remarkably brainstormed ideas about what to do with $1,000, such remarkable ideas that could only come from creative people riffing off each other.

    The other side is what is mentioned above, the friendship. It’s like we are all going down to the park or the tavern or whatever, to hang out. The riffing is the jamming of musicians. And none of it should be formal until the song is good and ready for its stage, whatever its purpose, maybe to be sung to a lover at Valentines Day. Until that point, we are all trying to get the acts together–creatively, trying different things until we get what works.

    C.

  879. I was just talking to friends last evening in Jack Kerouac’s old bar about how when you buy and collect your favorite songs they can lose that magic they have when you just happen to hear them on the radio now and then. Once you cross the line from random enjoyer to collector, some sort of intangible appreciation gets lost somehow. Ironically, this phenomenon does not dim the passion of the collector; it increases it, for the collector needs to collect more and more to feed his fix, which is fed by the fact that ‘collecting’ has taken on a self-perpetuating character, born of a genuine love for whatever is being collected, but which, ironically, the collecting passion helps destroy. However, once the collection gets large enough, the volume of songs now makes the occasional listen a fact again.

    I think perhaps what Tere, if not Clattery, is getting at, is the critic is like the collector, who needs to sort and sift and compile and compare, while the poet is more like the random enjoyer who is grateful for the song that happens to come along and finds a joy in the song that the collector cannot, who is earnestly taking possession of it as the analyzing compiler.

    Another feature of the collector, is a feeling of certainty about what his ‘favorites’ are, and what songs really, really need to be collected and owned.

    The enjoyer is happy for someone else, or randomness, to be his “DJ,” and actually enjoys being surprised, and will appreciate a greater variety of songs for their own sake, while the collector is listening for songs that need to be collected.

    I think this analogy relates to our current discussion. I have been in both roles: enjoyer and collector, and I like them both, for different reasons. Both impulses are very powerful, and I think there’s some of the collector and the enjoyer in all of us, but in some areas, one comes to dominate.

  880. Tere,

    One thing about this poet/critic axis you keep talking about: what I’m trying to articulate is my deep belief that all poets are critics and that poetry is criticism, too, and that a critical response can be a poetic one; there is so much variety possible within the paradigm that you are defining, that it kind of blows apart your thesis. There is more in Criticism and Poetry than is dreamed of in your philosophy. Poetry and Criticism are secret lovers, and exchanging identities all the time. You and I both agree more than we know, since we both want to transcend the poet/critic axis–but just from different points of view.

  881. Dear Essex, your misrepresentations of what I said have less to do with a misunderstanding and more to do with deliberation: done for the sake of winning an argument. It is one of your tactics. And your reasoning is reductive.

    This especially is both patently absurd and self-serving: “I think perhaps what Tere, if not Clattery, is getting at, is the critic is like the collector, who needs to sort and sift and compile and compare, while the poet is more like the random enjoyer who is grateful for the song that happens to come along and finds a joy in the song that the collector cannot, who is earnestly taking possession of it as the analyzing compiler.”

    So transparent.

    Tere

  882. Tere,

    You see my remarks as ‘winning an argument,’ but I can assure you my discussion of collector/enjoyer was not done with you in mind whatsoever. I was enjoying myself at a bar and was not thinking about this thread at all.

    You don’t need to respond to my remarks–which I thought were a bridge, not a ‘winning an argument’ gesture (strange, that you took it that way!) since I was going afield from the critic/poet contretemps to look at an analagous situation all can understand–but I really don’t see how it helps to take a negative view of my motive, saying ‘transparent…’ Yes, transparent…I was not taking sides one way or the other in regards to my enjoyer/collector analogy, and yet the analogy is relevant, so how in the world am I ‘winning an argument’ here? The enjoyer is important, as is the collector, and we all share these two to a certain extent–isn’t that what I said? I thought it was closer to an olive branch than anything else.

    If it weren’t for the terrain and the hour, I could swear my olive branch was on the ground, and a bit worse for wear.

    Look, yes, I disagree with you, and I am trying to explain my position as best I can; (if that is trying to ‘win an argument’ then I’m really sorry) that’s all that’s happening on my part; you are using terms like “absurd,” “self-serving,” “reductive” and “tactics” and generally casting aspersions on my person and my motives, without engaging my ideas whatsoever. If I must be frank, I want to say I find your approach rather disappointing.

    I am on your side, since I do care about these issues very much; there’s nothing that says I must agree with you.

  883. Gentlemen, may I point out the elephant in this room? The whole problem with the open forum/poetry workshop concept is that there are no qualifications required to critique. Of what value is the opinion of a teenager to a fifty-eight year old man who was reading and writing poetry before they were ever born? Even worse, that of some snot-nosed twenty-eight year old know-it-all with an MFA but without enough life experience to actually understand what the poem is talking about.

    Now if Robert Bly, John Ashbery, Franz Wright or Charles Simic popped in now and then, it might be different, but if you’re serious about your poetry, what good is the advice of an amateur to an amateur?

    .
    The Problem With Poetry
    (apologies to Billy Collins)

    .
    The problem with poetry is the students,
    the academics and critics who study and read,
    measure and balance every word and line,
    vocabulary and rhyme against all ever written before.
    The judges and jurors who never did, never saw, never felt,
    who never understood
    what the poem was written for.

    .

  884. I can only say once more what I’ve been saying all along and going back to the essay. Poetry board critics can be killers of the poetry board poet. Maybe most of us poets should be killed off. I have to wonder, however, about the critics willing to take responsibility for the kill off.

    This is what it comes down to, my hyper-critical friends. Deal with it.

    Tere

  885. Clattery,

    Thanks for pointing to Billy Collins’ “Workshop.”

    This is exactly what I’m talking about. Snobs don’t like Collins, but I think he’s brilliant. Look what he does. He makes his poem ‘critic-proof’ by acting like a critic–in his poem. This is the secret that some get, and some don’t. This is where Plato triumphs over Aristotle. Aristotle describes the poem. Plato IS the poem. The super critc becomes the super poet. Collins dismantles his poem before our very eyes (and thus paradoxically builds it).

    Thomas

  886. Gary,

    Pope, Keats, Poe, to name a few, were children when they far surpassed their elders.

    Poetry was born when experience had almost crushed passion. Poetry is a revolution against learning and wisdom and experience and age. Poetry is an imp, not a sage.

    I agree that MFA punks are mostly pathetic, but the true prodigy is a blessed thing…

    Thomas

  887. Thomas:

    I am (or was) a child poet. Take a look at my first book ‘EVOLVING – Poems 1965-2005’. It is my poetry in chronological order from age 13 to 53. It doesn’t even include the stuff I wrote between ages 9 to 12. It was intended to be pedagogical by representing the evolution of a poet as he matured, in thought, experience and poetic style, over a 40 year period. (Get it…EVOLVING, evolution). 🙂 You can read the reviews on BarnesandNoble.com.

    My point is that…I DID EVOLVE! I took some poetry workshops back in the university. They were restricted to the students in that class, i.e., freshman through post-grad, as are all subjects in school.

    The open workshop environment does not restrict comment based on education, knowledge, experience or skill. It’s a free-for-all and I, personally, have found it counter-productive. For example, when one is experimenting with rhyme types like, say, identical rhyme, it’s not very helpful when someone tells you that you shouldn’t use the same word twice. Or when using slant or oblique rhyme to be told that the rhyme is a little off. Duh!

    If I hear “Show, don’t tell.” one more time, I think I’ll throw up!

    While I’m at it, I might as well note that the ‘expert’ forums are even worse! There, you even have to write exactly like the critics.

    Sincerely,

    Your “didactic epigrammatic Nature poet” pal,
    Gary

  888. Gary,

    I’m not defending workshops, per se. I’m not defending them at all, really. A bruised ego is real. Why not learn from Keats, for instance? He’ll never give you a nasty word.

    Essex

  889. Bruised egos do not result from monkeys throwing feces at you, just curiosity as to what motivates this behaviour.

    I have two poems I wrote about Keats. I will post them if I ever find a place to do it where nobody will fling…well, you know.

  890. Maybe Terreson will permit me to post these poems on the Delectable Mountains Forum tonight.

    (Assuming I get loaded enough, that is, but, hell…it is Friday)

  891. Thomas:

    I will post my Keats poems for you on Terreson’s site. The link is on post #549 on this thread. You will find them on the forum called ‘Chalkboard and Billboard’.

    Looks like we both got the ol’ smackdown from Martin Earl over at the Poetry Foundation blog, eh? I have also learned that they apparently have no qualms about censoring their responses. When I took Mr. Earl to task for his arrogant, condescending ‘ladder’ remark, they didn’t post it. Go figure.

    Terreson, I should add, has turned out to be the best of us. When we all ran for shelter from the storm, he stood fast against it. He is the victor of this rainy day.

    GBF

  892. Over at Delectable Mnts a member has posted a link to an article on giving and getting poetry criticism. Personally, I disagree with two points the article makes: that a poet should never defend a poem or, in my words, ‘talk back’ to the critic; and that the poet should always be grateful for the time a critter has taken on the poem. On the last point I have two problems: critics can, and often do, thrive on the chance to critique poetry, especially those critics who come with a personal agenda; and on most poetry boards, because of the required ratio of critiques to poems posted, motive can be something less than selfless, can simply involve the pro forma comment in order to post poetry.

    On the other hand I can respond to the writer’s suggested ethos in the matter and her approach. Pretty good stuff.

    http://web.mac.com/vickihinze/Vicki_Hinze_Author/My_Kitchen_Table_Blog/Entries/2008/9/25_HOW_TO_GIVE_AND_RECEIVE_A_CRITIQUE.html

    Tere

  893. I find it helpful when a poet defends a poem…it helps me as a reader. On the other count, I was raised to say thank you when someone has given me something…and someone’s time is a gift for sure…if a critic, whether you agree with them or not, has given you their time to respond to your poem, I do not see how a thank you is not in order. It can be followed by an explanation, a defense, but I can’t see why a thank you for comments given would hurt the poet in any way.

  894. Gary,

    I must have missed that ‘smackdown’ by Martin Earl. What thread was it? Thomas Brady is involved in so many. Harriet has been pretty good to me so far. I’ve got no complaints.

    There’s always going to be people who run away from arguments, (them’s the ones I can’t stand, not the ones who disagree with me)but I’ve been getting in some good licks on Harriet’s blog. They even let me flog with Poe, the author so many twits dislike.

    Can’t you just post your Keats poems here? I don’t feel like going on a Terreson site, frankly, after he had his freakout on Poets.net and left in a huff, saying he would never return. Nothing against Tere, I respect him, but I’m sticking to that principle.

    I don’t need ‘crit sites’ anyway. I’m too old for those; I’ve got my HS degree and all.

    Gary, you don’t don’t take crit sites seriously, do you? I imagine you are far too mature a poet to need workshop crits. I think poets like you who publish on those sites do it just to BE READ, or you’re angling to win some crit site prize, right? You don’t seriously go on there so someone can say, “I don’t like this, change this,” do you? Life is too short. Just show us your poems. I couldn’t care less what X or Y on some crit site thinks of them. Writing poems for a audience of Kalticas, for instance, would be my definition of hell.

    Thomas

  895. Thomas:

    I do not workshop. In fact, I addressed this very issue on Terreson’s site. He has some forums that are crit free. I don’t critique, either.

    I think you’ve got ol’ Tere all wrong. You will remember that the brouhaha at Poets.net began with Jack (Lola) who was beating up on Allan Cordle about the Foetry thing. In my opinion, Jennifer had every right to delete posts that crossed the line into potential legalities. Clattery did the same to me right here when I expressed my anger about Pirvaya a little too, um, exuberantly.

    The Poets.net thing is water under the bridge. One should never hold a grudge. Let bygones be bygones.

    The irony is that you WILL talk to Jack now. You have also communicated here with Tere and, ha ha, your nemesis Kaltica(Pirvaya) has posted in the very same Harriet thread as you under his real name.

    You don’t need to join Terreson’s board to view it. The Keats poems are on the ‘Chalkboard and Billboard’ forum (and dedicated to you, BTW). My rant about critiques is there too under the topic ‘On Becoming One With The Universe’. I also have a number of poems sprinkled about. No point in being sour and missing all the fun.

    Gary

  896. While I am flattered by the third person mention of my name, I want to keep the record straight. I did not stop participating on the board mentioned because posts were deleted. In the case of a spammer or a cyber stalker I have no difficulty with deleting an offending post. I left left off participating because posts got edited. While I may understand the site owner’s motives for actions taken, the editing of a member’s post is where I draw a line. On principle. Some may find it is too fine a point I draw. I don’t much care. Had the site owner deleted the posts, stating that they broadcasted personally identifying information (PII), that would have made sense.

    As for whether or not DM is a critique board, of its several fora there are only two operating in the range of what I prefer to think of as a poet to critic dialogue. I meant it above when I said I believe there are other ways of poets and poetry readers relating to each other. Funny, and to my surprise, how radical the notion seems to be to onliners.

    Tere

  897. If, as you state, only two poets are “operating in the range” of your expectations on DM, one would have to assume the other few who post there are not. How does that kind of assessment of your own board different from the other boards you are quick to criticize?

  898. Indeed he did, Gary. I was speaking of the two or three poets, at best, who participate regularly on the two fora that operate in the “range of expectations”. That leaves 12 other DM fora (and those who post on them) that do not operate in the range of his expectations.

  899. RE: #1111. It is as unclear to me who is being quoted here as it is clear to me that I am not.

    Anyway, anyone who can tell me that the poet to critic axis is the only legitimate axis between poet and poetry reader, please do speak up. I’ll listen to reason. In the meantime I’ll keep to the notion the sky is the limit, that there are other ways of configuring the relationship, that the poet to critic relationship is imbalanced on the boards in favor of the critic. That’s what I got. That’s what I know.

    Terreson

  900. I believe I was quoting you, Tere:

    “As to whether or not DM is a critique board, of its several fora there are only two operating in the range of what I prefer to think of as a poet to critic dialogue”.

    Why the hell do you think artists, musicians, less scholarly poets were posting initially on DM if not for the love of poetry, a desire for poet/artist/musician to critic dialogue that would encourage thought, more poemtry, more music, more art on the other twelve fora?

    Sorry several of us didn’t quite make the grade for you, Tere.

    Some of us are too old and too wise to your ways now to become window dressers for your lesser twelve fora.

  901. Clattery, I’ve been trying to figure out the best way to respond to PW Jones’ comments critical of Delectable Mnts’ philosophy. Everything considered they amount to a serpent’s hiss I choose to sidestep. Besides, experience has taught me that certain exchanges only escelate in terms of bitterness and rancor.

    But maybe we can turn the moment to something more productive.

    First, let’s assume I am wrong, that there is only one manner in which poets, writers, poetry readers and prose readers, and poets and writers who read poetry and writing, that there is only one manner in which they can all relate to each other, and that it is along the poet to critic axis. This seems to be what Essex, in all his avatars, figures to be true. Presumably PW Jones is of the same opinion. So what is it I am not getting? Why is it the only legitimate axis between writer and reader? Upthread somewhere Essex called the poet/critic relationship a secret love affair. I confess the comment rather put a blip on my radar, put me in mind of a relationship built on inequality. And as Lawrence famously said, ‘there can only be love between equals.’ So someone please tell me what I am clearly not getting. Why must I always come to a poem wearing my critical hat? Why can’t I sometimes come to a poem keeping within different parameters, keeping to a different spirit? Similarly, why must I limit myself to critics when posting or broadcasting a poem? The whole stance seems to say that, as poet, I must write for my critics. And that, as reader, my first job is to parse sense, syntax, and text. Is this what it all comes down to?

    Now let’s assume I am right. Let’s assume that, while legitimate and needed, the poet to critic axis is only one of several possibilities. I do not understand why the notion seems so dangerous to some, but I guess it is. Delectable Mnts has a bunch of different fora devoted to creative writing, each slightly different from the other, each nuanced, each with its own objective, and each (yes) constructed in favor of the poet or prosaist over the critic. Even the two critical fora emphasise a poet or writer and critic dialogue. They do not assume the critic, by virtue of his office, is always right. This strikes me as honest, much more honest than what is found on boards where critics are not allowed to be questioned.

    I don’t get it. People come to poetry for so many different reasons. Why isn’t there room for all?

    Tere

  902. Hi Tere,

    The big problem is the forums where critics take over as the only way to react to a poem. Critic-controlled, or critic-bowed-to forums are aberrations of the online medium as far as workshopping goes. And is not in itself necessarily constructive.

    But, imagine a forum where some critic-minded readers respond. It becomes one kind of feedback that the poet will receive, therefore, in that forum. Why not? As long as the forum doesn’t start making oppressive rules that keep the more worldly-minded poets out.

    Something this thread seems to have shown is there are poetry readers who simply cannot think outside the poet/crit box as a way to have a workshop forum. It is like discussing religion and politics with them. No matter what is said, they are too hardwired to think more broadly. Them being legitimate people, however, they too should be allowed into the forums.

    This does not mean that I agree with any rule that says a poet cannot engage in a pointed discussion with anyone who has given feedback. No. That in itself would be counter to inclusiveness. That inclusiveness increases the possibility that the poet will see how others will take their work.

    Often, when a critic blows a read, which is very common, it is because the poem needed simple workshopping that would allow for an easier grasp, or a better balance of points. So even if the critique proper is a misplaced communication in a workshop setting, the poet can have an opportunity to put on the reading glasses of that “critic”, and make changes accordingly.

    C.

  903. Points taken, Clattery. The common sense approach to practically everything is almost always the best.

    Tere

  904. Clattery and all, I may have a treat for you. Let me explain.

    Yesterday I was combing through the proceedings on a private poetry board, looking for something specific. I did not find it but I did come across a delightful post made by a poet on the subject of poetry criticism. (The thread was called “To Crit or Not To Crit – critting styles) The exchange goes back to Sept. of ’06, almost three years ago. The poster wrote under the screen name, Ms Parataxis. I’ve not seen Ms P in our environs for some while. So I contacted her, sent her a copy of the post, and asked her permission to bring it here. Permission granted. At her request I’ve done a little judicious editing with regards to personally identifying info.

    When I grow up this is the kind of close reader of poetry and poetry critic I want to be. Here is the post:

    ~~ I’m honored, truly, gents, by your confidence in my abilities. OK, shamelessly flattered. Guilty as charged.

    I thought I’d cut everyone some slack, earlier in the thread, when I said ‘keep it to the page’ … but Tere would like more. Which means: Get ready for the ramble. I’ve got little else between that and the ‘terse pronouncement.’ Here goes. Some narrative, ok?

    My first teacher, who shall remain nameless, but heretofore shall be referred to as ‘Sarge’ handled poems by virtue of their (let’s all bow in the direction of New Criticism) contract on the page. What does the poem set out to do, how does the poet handle the language. Poems are, according to him and how I misquote him: a combination of the subconscious freed to make associations whose time has come and an awareness of the limits of language: what it can carry, what it cannot. And then there’s Lakoff on the oh, what: logic of the metaphor. Sarge was not heavy handed in terms of revisions except to say “This isn’t working, here are a few suggestions, something along the lines of …” and then would wave in the general direction of the sort of improvement the poet might make, but in terms of the workings of the poem already established, not his preferences. He delighted in being surprised – still does.

    (I’ll share an earlier conversation with you that Sarge and I had where he said “P, you don’t know what the f*ck you’re doing with poetry, but you have an instinct for language. I can help you.” Boy howdy, did he; and he still does. A chief delight in my life is finally being able to write and read on a level that allows him to send me his work for my take.)

    Then there was X, a Stegner fellow, a self-proclaimed cocky little sh*t who felt perfectly free to cut and paste, suggest and re-write our work. To a certain extent and always with respect as well as imagination. He stunned us with what we didn’t know we could do. If you’re a grown-up, it’s nice to have someone point out to you where the poem is trying to be smarter than your own limitations.

    Two extremes in style, both of which I appreciated. Providing I kept my responses to criticism to (wait for it) what was on the page and not my sorry-a$$ed little ego. You know, I would occasionally think I had just re-written The Wasteland, only to find out, No, Girlie, you sure hadn’t. Surprise, surprise.

    I made a rule with my easily bruised ego at the time I first worked with Sarge: wait 24 hours before responding to a critique. Real-time workshops came along and I developed a sense of perspective, distance. I’ll never forget writing a real dog of a poem: the deadline came waaay before the poem was ready. We crtiqued poems anonymously. One of the participants in the workshop said “THIS is a P. Poem?!!” … and I had the biggest laugh: “Consider it an act of artistic sacrifice for your benefit: a stinky little learning vehicle for us all.” We had a good laugh and I got down to revising the thing. No use pretending – learning’s more fun than self-delusion, any day.

    Now fast forward to a certain Prof. Y who is absolutely the BEST close reader I have ever known. Ever ever ever. And what this man taught me about cadence, movement, juxtaposition, the workings of language within a work, well, Pfffft. Unreal. Unparalleled on Dickinson. Oh, shoot, anyone. Gifted, plain and simple.

    Yeah, so what? Each of these mentors has a different style. And from time to time, I channel someone who feels free to delve, cut, paste. I know many here don’t: but I try to keep my motives clean and point to areas where I think the poem is letting itself down, NOT ME. My rich interior life and I have this dialogue: are the tactics of the poem doing all they can to support its strategy? There is much I don’t pick up on the strategy of a particular piece, so I often, then, blow it on the tactics, but I’m learning.

    And no, I don’t often take on an entire poem. First of all, this is a sort of workshop, a collaborative effort, not my 10-page essay in fulfillment of an assignment. I address what hits me and it’s often the logic of language, how the image presents, where explication is unearned (within the poem, not it’s ‘right’ to exist or not) and cadence.

    In online groups I’ve learned, as we all have, who has preferences, who will or won’t be comfortable when you experiment, try something different, who won’t allow you a range, of both styles and scope. We all get to know one another pretty well after a little time. And hopefully, we’re as forgiving of others as we’d like them to be with us.

    This (board) is a good group of readers and writers. People who are FAR more well read than I (notice I don’t exactly jump in with the Hegel connections? Notice the dearth on oh … Goethe? There’s a reason for that, Folks… I’m way hecka behind in the Canon. I’m here to share and learn. Trying not to get caught in the act of comparing: I find that very thin ice on which to skate.

    MsP ~~

    There you all have it, Ms P’s post. Man, I love the thinking here, its freshness and its perspective. But mostly I love a certain stance assumed: that of the creative dialogue between poet and critic. Read what she says a couple of times. All the nuances of criticism, viewed as an art, are there. And I think Ms P is right about the New Critic attitude with its emphasis of a poem’s contract on the page and that it should be approached as such. After everything else has been said, it is the way to go.

    Tere

  905. Tere,

    You remind me of the girl in Yeats’ poem who doesn’t want to be loved for her yellow hair–if you are young and beautiful and have yellow hair, the boys are going to love you for your yellow hair, no matter how many high-minded protests you make.

    Likewise, when a poem is read by anyone for any purpose THE CRITICAL RESPONSE EXISTS AND WILL ALWAYS EXIST. A CRITIC is reading, and will always be the one reading your poem. Get over it.

    Now the Critic can LIKE your poem, but the CRITIC is the ONE who will like it or not like it. You can CALL this whatever you want, ‘the intelligent, sensitive poetry reader’ blah blah, but let’s not be coy, shall we? The most naive reader of poems is a CRITIC.

    There are only four kinds of CRITICS, the honest one and the dishonest one, the good one and the bad one, and in different shadings and combinations you get an infinite number of responses, ALL CRITICAL.

    Yes, the honest, good critic is the poet’s lover and this love is CRITICAL, and this criticism is LOVE, even if it razes the poem to the ground.

    As I have made clear, I support ALL types of critical strategies and the freedom of the poet to respond at will to critiques.

    It all seems pretty simple to me.

    Now, once you accept this, you can start to focus on the more important stuff, like how do I become a great poet/critic?

    Step one: immerse yourself in the greatness of the past and avoid, as much as possible, the ticky tacky moderns and the artsy-fartsy ignoramuses.

    Step two: You’re on your own!

    P.S.

    You say you did NOT object to ‘deleting’ of spam on poets.net, but you DID object to ‘editing’ of posts, but this is absurd and makes no sense, because the ‘editing’ which you refer to was simply part of the ‘deleting’ which you felt was OK: the offending parts were deleted; the non-offending parts were magnanimously kept, and this, and this only, is the ‘editing’ which you supposedly object to.

    Best,

    Essex

  906. My dear Essex, I mean this in the sweetest possible way, and speaking in the range of Lady Astor’s regard for Lord Winston. What I distrust the most about your position, vis a vis the poet to critic relationship, are the assumptions your arguments make. Principal of which is that the poet needs the critic. But you see? I view it differently. The poetry critic is nothing without the poet and her poetry. What else does he have to free range (I could have said scaveng) on? Whereas the poet will always make poetry, even after the end of days when certainly all critics will ascend to heaven.

    This is my stance. And whereas I can take from the critic, when he is more creative and more dynamic in his involvements, I honestly don’t need his atmosphere in order to breathe my poetry. To me it is axiomatic that he needs my atmosphere in order to breathe his crit. (I do love Wlly of Occam, don’t you? What a sharp razor he had.)

    About #1121. If you are offering me an OBE I refuse the knighthood. My reason is simple. I don’t believe in the empire.

    Tere

  907. Tere,

    You are avoiding the fact that poets need readers and all readers are critics, whether you want them to be, or not.

    To say critics NEED poets is not the point. This is like saying the sun needs plants. The sun shines, willy nilly. And people will read and have opinions about what they read, willy nilly. There is nothing about a poet, per se, that is valuable, unless that poet is already a critic and thus produces work that is critically (and poetically) valuable. There’s no split in quality, or meaning, only in task.

    Letters thrives with good poetry and good criticism. Your issue is a non-issue. You really should let it go.

    Essex

  908. About 1123. My dear Essex, are you actually saying that critics inhabit the sun? Of course you don’t mean that. But I think you just committed a Freudian slip, and you actually do mean that.

    This is where you and I stand on opposite sides of the Parisian barricade in the revolution of 1830 and then again in 1848.

    And do you really think this: “There is nothing about a poet, per se, that is valuable, unless that poet is already a critic and thus produces work that is critically (and poetically) valuable.” I can’t help but notice that in your equation critic is principal, poet put in parentheses, coming second I guess.

    It is not mete you should give so much away, Essex.

    Tere

  909. I’d like to share a personal experience in the odd chance that it may provide a little perspective on all of this. I do not utilize poetry forums or workshops. I am a blog animal and regularly hit all the usual places. One of my favorite blogs was called Poetry.net. The discussions there were wild and free, sometimes rough, but always intelligent and respectful. I think we argued about one poem by Emily Dickinson for almost three months. One day the blog turned into a ‘Forum’. It was meant, I suspect, to be the ‘anti-forum’, an unrestricted and uncensored version of Poets.org, at which some members had had a bad experience.

    At any rate, I kept posting my poems as usual, but the landscape had changed. It was a whole new environment, a ‘sea change’, if you will, and the sharks had moved in. My poetry was suddenly subjected to a brutal assault. But this particular site, remember, had no arbitrary restraints on poet/critic exchange. I vigorously defended my poems and discovered in so doing something of great importance, which I will here relate.

    The critics are full of shit! They missed references, literary, historical and scientific. They misunderstood words. They often failed to understand the very point of a poem. They were so focused on the minutiae of scansion and prosody that they couldn’t see the forest for the trees. When challenged, they were easily exposed as basically ignorant or silly (as when a poster here once referred to etymology as entomology. Big difference between word origins and bugs). A good critic may help a poet, but they must pass the test of competence and knowledge. But the bad ones can do much harm and so MUST be challenged and exposed as the frauds and pretenders, hiding in the cloak of anonymity, that they really are.

    Here is a new essay about criticism from the Poetry Foundation that may be of interest here and relevant to this discussion.

    http://www.poetryfoundation.org/journal/feature.html?id=186047

  910. For someone who claims to abhor critique on poetry boards, I find these posts of yours interesting, Tere:

    “S1 is fine and honest language. What follows comes across in the applique way, something less than honest. Last strophe, especially, comes across as false. Or maybe it comes across as too refined”.

    “This is one of those poems I see in the workshops I should very much like see to work. It says something big, but its own terms vitiate against it. Or so I think. Possibly the problem has to do with syntax”.

    “S2. Why not gag device? And why not choke effect? S3. Who else’s frail body is it if it is not the narrator’s own? S5 is pretty good, by the way, crosses over. Then there are the unfortunate word choices, unfortunate because they carry no weight. S6: interlude of life? S7: figure non-specific?

    Given more texture, less distancing, this poem could really work.
    I don’t want to be brutal here. But the poem is so cliche ridden.
    waves recede, headland of rock, means to happiness, firmament, scurry across beaches, occassional love affairs, sanguine waves, fraction of time, hovels.
    Sorry, but this is lazy language picked up from some book somewhere”.

    “Line rhythm comes through. Mostly it ends with a meditation on what life is, right? This is where the poem falls flat. What constitutes life for you may not make for life to me. Or to a Rhawanda villager. A Pakistani mother, an Iraqui street sweeper in harm’s way of a suicide bomber. It is better I think when poetry fleshes out in the damning, compromising particulars what makes for life and for death”.

    and the last, a crit with your classic signature, critique behavior….always bringing it back to you…let’s turn this poem/crit now into how much I know, how scholarly I am as a critic, not your poem, what you know or intended in the poem:

    “So I guess my objection to the poem’s execution has to do with the language means. And, again, that may only speak to my bias. Maybe you know the story of Rilke and Rodin. By the time the poet met and worked for the sculptor he was already an accomplished poet and well received by the public. But Rodin taught him a different way of handling his words, maybe as if words are chiselled out of marble. This is the sort of approach I am suggesting. Read Rilke’s poem, “The Panther”, and you’ll see what I mean”.

    Not saying the above is bad crit, the advice isn’t sound, but it is YOUR crit, Tere. So to say you don’t sanction critique, are never harsh in them is ludicrous. There’s no reason for a poet to post on a poetry critique forum unless the poet wants honest crit/feedback from a number of diverse readers/critics….some crit from scholars and some from those who are less scholarly but often see with keen and different eyes.

    Perhaps it depends on who one is writing to reach. Many of us ask only for a variety of feedback when we post but we do not ask to have our threads hijacked by the need of a critic…off on a personal tangent… using the thread to display/demonstrate his/her extensive knowledge of poetry, fine as it may be.

    There is a legitimate place for those exchanges to happen but they should be in PM or on a new discussion thread initiated by the poem ….

    imho.

    Pat

  911. I know of one Poetry Board exception….and I read it several times daily…but wouldn’t dare post on it…for me, it is there to learn and enjoy…Eratosphere…post there without knowing formal poetry and you’ll get creamed. But the guidelines are clear and there for all to see. By the time you comment enough to be able to post there, you’ll already know if you made the grade. : ) But, while I love reading there, learn from it…it is not a board to post on for me.

  912. Odysseas Elytis once said:

    “Every poet needs an audience of three, and since every poet has two good friends, the search is always for that perfect third reader.”

  913. It’s hard to believe this horse is still being beaten. Rus should change the title to:

    ‘Venting 301 – advanced woofing and wheezing about lit clubs and their memberships.’

    More people need to remember what Emerson said a long time ago .. “Society everywhere is in conspiracy against the manhood of every one of its members.”

    Especially true of a closed society of narcissists who think they’re the only ones with any abilities (pick any forum, any one at all).

    -blue

  914. Tere,

    I love your wistful romantic reference to poets v. critics on the barricades in France.

    But this is fantasy.

    There is no opposition.

    Friendship, or philia, is something else. One shouldn’t confuse this with poetry/criticism.

    Keats’ fame spread due to the attacks he received, as did Poe’s. Criticism, even when wrong, helps poetry.

    Shakespeare was a great poet because he was a great philosopher, etc. Poetry is philosophy by other means, and so is criticism, and poetry and criticism make each other better.

    Thomas

  915. Gary,

    You did experience some stupid criticism on poets.net, but you came out the stronger for it because you fought back, and because I defended you. If you had merely run away, you would have been the worse for it.

    Thomas

  916. Blue,

    Good quote by Emerson, and I know what you are saying, and I agree.

    I do want to point out, however, that Emerson never worked a day in his life and was himself coddled by the “society” he attacks. Emerson said extremely radical things to get attention, but he didn’t mean any of it. In his own life Emerson the was the opposite of a ‘manhood’ roaming outside of ‘society.’

    Thomas

  917. Blue,

    Good quote by Emerson, and I know what you are saying, and I agree.

    I do want to point out, however, that Emerson never worked a day in his life and was himself coddled by the “society” he attacks. Emerson said extremely radical things to get attention, but he didn’t mean any of it. In his own life Emerson was the opposite of a ‘manhood’ roaming outside of ‘society.’

    Apologies to those offended that I used a little ‘criticism’ on Emerson’s ‘poetry.’

    Thomas

  918. About #1127 which begins this way: “For someone who claims to abhor critique on poetry boards, I find these posts of yours interesting, Tere:”

    Someone will have to supply proof, perhaps a link to a post, where I categorically state I abhor poetry critique. With this said the rest of the post loses cogency. All I’ve said, what I firmly believe, is that the poet to critic axis is only one, certainly valuable in its own right, of many possible relationships. Nonetheless, I appreciate the opportunity to show off my scholarship. It might have been ’99 and it might have been ’98 when the late poet Stanley Kunitz was quoted as saying that contemporary poetry seems to be lacking in imagination; which is a strange thing to have to say about art. (a paraphrase) I rather feel the same way about anyone who can’t imagine other poet to reader relationships than the poet to critic axis. Simply lacking in imagination.

    About 1131. My dear Essex I refer you back to #1125. GBF says a big thing there, especially when he says “The critics are full of shit! They missed references, literary, historical and scientific. They misunderstood words. They often failed to understand the very point of a poem. They were so focused on the minutiae of scansion and prosody that they couldn’t see the forest for the trees. When challenged, they were easily exposed as basically ignorant or silly (as when a poster here once referred to etymology as entomology. Big difference between word origins and bugs). A good critic may help a poet, but they must pass the test of competence and knowledge. But the bad ones can do much harm and so MUST be challenged and exposed as the frauds and pretenders, hiding in the cloak of anonymity, that they really are.”

    I agree with GBF. I’ll take his stance a step further. It is the critic who has to prove himself equally as much as does the poet. The odd thing is that poets understand as much where critics don’t seem to get it. And once again I get to show off my scholarship. I got to figure Pound had proved himself to Eliot when Eliot allowed him to prune out the Wasteland poem’s undergrowth. I wonder how many online poetry critics bother to prove themselves.

    Tere

  919. Tere,

    A lousy critic is a lousy critic. You’ll get no argument from me there.

    I believe in separation of good and bad, but not poet and critic. That’s my thesis.

    You wouldn’t defend all poets, would you? Most are crap. Likewise, I am never going to defend all critics.

    Poets will be critics IN THEIR POETRY. Critics will be poets IN THEIR CRITICISM. The tasks are different. A poetical man is more valuable than any piece of writing. Plato hounding the poets in the way he did was the best thing for poetry. A poetical man will be able to write criticism or poetry and do both well. Shelley called Plato a poet with good reason. Circumstances may dictate that one or the other, or both, are pursued by the poetical man.

    Our age lacks great poet/critics. Vendler and Harold Bloom are impotent as poets and this calls suspicion on their criticism.

    The poetical and the critical combine in all sorts of powerful and interesting ways. A good joke is a result of this marriage, and of course any masterpiece, such as The Divine Comedy, which has an order that is so wonderful that it creates new audiences, has elements of criticism and poetry, the poetry creating the effusive music, the delicate image, the criticism sowing the judgments that bolster the narrative flow.

    Thomas

  920. .

    ‘Good critic’ is an oxymoron.

    “Lousy critic” is redundant.

    Those who can, do.
    Those who can’t, teach.

    Those who can, sing.
    Those who can’t, critique.

    .

  921. Poetry forums are a dead as eight track players. They are a thing of the past that have run their course of usefulness. Most if not all of the early defenders and creators of poetry forums have seen the folly of their way and have abandoned or disavowed them. That means a very few sad, lonely and talentlyless people flouder around on them looking for some other talewnless boob to offer them praise. A complete an utter waste of ban width.

  922. Jack,

    Back from Hollywood?

    I agree with you re: poetry forums.

    Show me the money. Show me the poetry.

    Who needs someone going, “Oh dear, I think if you remove this comma, your second stanza will be much stronger!”

    “Oh, thank you!”

    On the other hand, on-line approaches to publishing, reviewing, and honest talk about poems could certainly work.

    The university/MFA/contest/small press racket features as much lack of talent in slightly finer dress.

    The Harriet Poetry Blog is a fairly good model, with plenty of profs and published poets participating. Thomas Brady has made it a very lively place, recently. Gary gets in his digs, too. I suppose you’ve been banned from there?

    Essex

  923. About #1139. I should like to see the data quantifying the statement.

    In the mean time this is what I know through experience.

    Because of the boards I’ve encountered successful, vital, even sometimes, if infrequently, superlative poetry I would not have otherwise found due to the so-called po-biz racket.

    Because of the boards I’ve found vital poetry made throughout America and coming from other countries, mostly English speaking, that again I would not have found due to the skewed selection process attendent on print, press, and publisher agendas (both with small and larger publishers).

    Because of the boards I have found untainted, unspoiled, real, raw, singularly individual, perfectly crafted, and authentic voices that still again I would not have found.

    Because of the boards I have found poetry readers for whom poetry is a passion, even as necessary to them as eating and breathing, and who one more time I would not have found otherwise. This stands in direct and stark contrast to what I had found over a period of thirty years, and before finding the online poetry circuits.

    While my report may be taken as anecdotal, it remains that this has been my experience, which is something in the range of empirical proof.

    Jackman, I may be the system’s harshest critic, certainly when it comes to managers and members whose participation has less to do with poetry and more to do with their own egos. And I am about the harshest critic of poetry critics, those at least who time and time again show just how second-rate they are in their thinking and approach to poetry, anyone is likely to find. But my experience tells me your opinion is incorrect.

    The problem is not with the medium. And I am persuaded that the beauty of the medium will outlast those who, in effect and because of motives having nothing to do with a passion for poetry, run interference.

    Tere

  924. Tere,

    Not to pull professorial rank on you BUT…my opinion CANNOT be incorrect simply because reasonable difference upon which arguments are based do not have a final answer, thus an opinion cannot be incorrect. You may not agree with it which is ok, but it can never be incorrect.

    One of the first forums was started by a man named Jeff Bahr called QEDpoetry. Barh has abandoned this endeavor and so has Claudia Grinnel who once oversaw it. These days it sits there like a huge dark stone. That is simply an example of my opinion ..evidence.

    I think these places are the last bastion of the talentless cowards.

  925. I checked out Harriet. Looks good to me. I may post something there esoecially the baseball poetry thread.

    As far as Tom Brady goes, it is my opinion that people there apear to be militantly ignoring him. I presume for good reason.

  926. By the by, Hollywood can’t come soon enough for my new book. It is my udnerstanding that one of the huge book chains wants to give the new book a big roll-out. Good for me. Maybe I can get the “Soon to be a major motion picture” blurb on the cover. Time will tell.

  927. ATTENTION: The Real Jack C.

    The most recent post at Harriet, the Poetry Foundation blog (Google ‘harriet’), concerns baseball poetry. You need to post your incredible baseball poem over there and knock their socks off!

    (Oh…please don’t tell me you sacrificed your copyright for a one-time, flash-in-the-pan poetry magazine that was here today, gone tomorrow, just so you could justify your poetry and, therefore yourself, as a ‘recognized’ and ‘validified’ establishment poet. Oh, my.)

  928. Thank you Gary for the kidn words about the poem.

    I have posted that and another at Harriet…”Shakespeare in the Park” and “Sermon on the Mound.”

    I believe they are up there now.

    Interesting site.

  929. Harriet just changed their posting format to be more like this site: you post and voila! it’s there.

    Harriet was screening posts, so you’d wait almost a day sometimes before you’d see your post, but it’s just become more user=friendly, more democratic.

    I think what happened was that since Brady showed up, the site has become so popular, and there’s so many more posts, that they had to change the format to handle all the posts.

    Jack, I’m not being ignored on Harriet. It’s a good site with published authors, etc I’ll be nice to you, I promise. Let’s not ruin a good thing. It will not do either one of us any good to fight on Harriet. Agreed?

    Essex

  930. You have to behave somewhat respectably on Harriet. If not, the other posters will be sure to let you know you’re an idiot. (Look at Michael Robbins’ reply to ‘Kara’ in defense of Kent Johnson in the reply string to the feature article ‘Show your work’ by Matt Zapruder.

    HERE is where we come to fight. Hell, that’s the main reason I come here. After all, that’s why it’s so much fun, ain’t it?

  931. Gary,

    Brady’s been tangling with Michael Robbins quite a bit. Robbins is one of these highly pedantic moderns who hates Poe. Brady loves mixing it up with guys like that.

    Essex

  932. Jack,

    You da man.

    This just in:

    Unbelievable!

    March Madness Final Four Results

    Karl Shapiro “Interlude III”

    Louis Simpson “The People Next Door”

    Sylvia Plath “Daddy”

    Edna Millay “What Lips My Lips Have Kissed”

    Check Harriet “Is this the end for poetry?” for full story.

    Essex

  933. Is this site still running http://poetryinc.net/new/ and if so is anyone there talkinmg about me becaause if they are I’m whining to Jennifer. But it looks like the place is as dead as the mentality of the people who started it.

  934. #1157. This is such just stupid stuff, stupid enough to make me want to ask Clattery to close down the thread.

    Tere

  935. Gary, et al,

    Hey, don’t go blaming me or anyone else for what went on at Harriet. That crowd is useless to poetry and a disaster to Poetry and the Poetry Foundation’s reputation. First and foremost the entire upper echelon of that group are of a certain sexual persusion and it shows (not that there is anything wrong with that) but their notion that their ideas and perspective is readily accepted by everyone is foolishness. IT is the reason no one goes there. IT is the reason why Poetry (the magazine) is now thought of as a less than important publication. It is run as Harriet is, by people who really are not equipt to. I hope Barr responds to the letter since that place has done more to stifle poetry under the guise of love of poetry than any other site I have ever seen. It’s time that place become democratic or it can stay like it is a complete disaster and public burden to the poetry community. By the by, Mikey Red-Red Robbins is a complete dipshit. I know several of the people who work with him and some students and they say he’s the biggest dipshit they ever met. Poor thing has about as much talent as my doorknob.

  936. Oh yeah, I laughed like hell when one student said she has a story about how he once tried to pick up a friend of hers, she shot him down and he dropped her grade. He’s a real beauty. Sooner or later guys like that get dumped. He will.

    • Joe the Poet,

      On #1157.

      That’s the ultimate in hearsay. Someone told you at a party what someone told her about someone else. In fact you use a device that writers use to invite readership into a fanciful yarn. Not to be believed, but insulting nonetheless.

      On #1156,

      You add to the pee in the pool of online poetry by insinuating that a group of people with a certain mystery sexual persuasion have perceptions that would not be understood by a wider poetry audience.

      In both these instance, you have given examples of pee in the pool.

      Both of these examples will also keep others from joining in the discussion. Who would want to bother to take on such malarkey? Who would want to jump into the pee?

      C.

  937. Was it a voluntary departure? It would be interesting to know if Harriet is deleting comments.

  938. Gary,
    Here is the problem with Don Share (whom I now have the lowest disregard for especially as a poetry editor..he doens’t belonf nEAR poetry and he and his other little buddies have turned Poetry magazine into a laughing stock) Red Red Robbins and the others is that they ACTUALLY think THEY will be REMEMBERED in the anals (oopsI meant annals) of poetry history. What they don’t know and haven’t a clue about is they dream they will be remembered as another Black Mountain or Beat Poets. And because they are so self-indulgent and small minded they don’t realize that those schools of poetry were born not BECAUSE of people like them but INSPITE on. They werereactions to people like them. The money is on the fact that they won’t even be remembered for being the assholes they are now. Justcheck out some of these so-called sites. Check qedpoetry.com. The loud-mouthed guardians of poetry that were there are gone and forgotten and the site is a useless garbage heap whereno one posts ever. THAT is the fate that awaits Harriet. Or worse. They will become the luaghing stock of the poetry community. It’s being run like a high schoo newspaper complete with the HELP (which is what Share and these other bozos are…the HELP. prasing each other for being so wonderful. That is a rookie, uneducated inexperienced childish move. But THEY don’t get it. The number of people laughing at them far exceeds those participating. The number of posts generated by THEMSLEVES is growig while the number of new members are dwindling. They are a sad, pathetic reminder that there will always be dipshits out there who wish to corner the market on poetry and who always end up in the junk heap of history. Christ, Conway is more relevant and important than they are collectively. They are sad andpathetic. Yur books will live on. Their comments and circle jerk mentality will be long forgotten but they are too stupid to know it. I wouldn’t post there on a bet and neither will hundreds and hundres of others. They are pathetic clowns. And stupid. Look at henry Gould! The asshole actually said puns were feeble. Yeah tell it to Shakespeare you limp-dicked moron. Just plain stupid.

  939. I just received an email form Jenn Hawes,a good mutual freind and she says her post is being deleted because she told them that Conway was right. They are nothing but facists..the worse kind….thye pretend to be so sensitive. I’ll tell ya this much. I used to be pro-gay marriage but I’m not anymore.

  940. One of their freinds lost in a volcano? Yeah big outpouring of sympathy I see. LOL. They really don’t get it.

  941. I bet the place gets a rash of shit for using the site as a lost and found set. I mean the outpouring of concern appears to me to be minimal. If you don’t ahve much of a following that’s what happens.

  942. Is it humanly possible for Harriet to get any more boring and self-indulgent? What a cosmic bunch of rookies. Imagine congratulating each other in their blogges. Gag me with a spoon. How rookie is that? Honestly, they shouldn’t be allowed near that place. They are giving ti a bad reputation. What a disaster that place is.

  943. If anyone ever wants to know why Poetry is dead or dying take one look at the balderdash at the Poetry Foundation’s “Harriet” blog and you will know why. Pinheads discussing the most irrelevant hogwash for the purpose of hearing themselves piss it out their ears. N wonder the readership of poetry is at an all time low…this poison killed it.

  944. Joe,
    The Poetry Foundation should give out a free razor blade to anyone who subscribes to “Harriet,” so thye can slit their wrists and get it over with. This is mind numbing to the point of causing suicide rates to rise.

  945. The Post A Month Club now has a whooping 42 members and we are growing. Poets are welcome to join us and post away. Anything goes!

    How about posting some pooetry? I challenge each one of you hacks to write a good poem about poo – a pooem. 🙂

  946. You know, ClatterMachinery is a great name for a blog, but you should change the name of this discussion to Pee in the Peal of Peotry or something nifty like that. 🙂 See yuh in the funny papers poetry spammers.

  947. Hey, Jack. Long time no hear. Congratulations on the book. That’s great!

    Unfortunately, I’ve pretty much given up on Harriet since the new ‘Like/Dislike’ feature (have you seen it?). It’s more of a popularity contest now than a genuine discourse about poetry.

    In fact, I intend to abandon my entire ‘voice in the woods’ self-publishing independent poet crusade altogether.

    I have learned that the ‘anti-Po-biz’ people are complete hypocrites. They not only don’t buy (and therefore promote) those of us who intentionally self-published in order to at least try to create some general popularity outside of the ‘business’, but they also fawn on the ‘canonical’ and established poets as much, or even more, than the others. Rather than make a nobody outsider SOMEBODY, they just whine and pout and then turn around and buy an established somebody’s book anyway.

    I started my “crusade” as a devoted bibliophile, opposed even to the internet. I soon saw the error of my ways, though, and started using the web as a way to exhibit samples of my poetry in the hopes that someone would buy the books. No dice. Silly me. It wouldn’t be so bad and I could lick my wounds and go home if I hadn’t received almost exclusively positive comments about my poems. People like them, but they won’t buy the books BECAUSE it isn’t Po-biz. No prizes, awards or pub credits = worthless scum, good poetry or not.

    Yes, Jack, it looks like you were right after all. I will now be pursuing the standard routes to publication.

    Take care.
    Gary

    • Or it might be that they read the samples you made available and decided not to make the purchase for fear of reading more of the same.

  948. Tell Frank Wilson to learn something about poetry.
    Please post my boook news on Harriet. They’ll go nutty.

  949. Gary, thanks again.

    It’s amazing that much of what goes on atHarriet is what makes “POETRY” so inconsequential to most people these days.

    Honestly, if all or most of them were to go down at sea nobody would miss them or their interpretation of good poetry. Ho-hum.

    God I wonder how thye could even dare to crawl out in braoddaylight after expousing that clap-trap.

    They (a majority) wouldn’t know a good poem from a dung beetle.

  950. I recall laughing like hell whenever one of the dolts would tighten their spincters and begin howling about my spelling. Such sad dolts. Yeah andI guess RD decided to overlook all my bad spelling. LMAO. They just donj’t get it and never will. I doubt very much they’d pass the “of-publishable-quality” litmus test considering they think typing is writing. LOL. Goodfor them I’m glad there is a place for such meiocrety.

  951. I think it’s time to close off this thread. What started as a pretty decent look at what is wrong about poetry discussion forums has turned into a constant whining diatribe about a inconsequential blog maintained by one of the most myopic poetry organizations to ever hit the internet. Please, give it rest.

    -blue

  952. Actually, Beau Blue, from time to time I have thought the same; that this blog has run its course. How old is it by now? Over two years I think. And for the better part of a year the exchanges have mostly been in the range somewhere between silly and innane.

    But a week or so ago the Poetry Foundation’s Harriet’s Blog instituted its new protocol of encouraging members to anonymously, that’s anonymously, give a thumbs up or a thumb’s down vote to comments made in the course of a discussion. One participant objecting to the feature said it best when he said: where is the possibility of substantiative discussion now when such glibness is instituted?

    So I have changed my mind. Perhaps the discussion here has, in fact, run its course. But the problem of channeled, managed, vectored poetry discussions in which the conversational equivalent of the least common denominator has been reached through the gladitorial exercise of a thumbs up/thumbs down response to what anyone has to say I take quite seriously. I find the feature anti-intellectual and bound to force a certain homogeneity of thinking among poets online. Offend and you get a thumbs down. Please and you get a thumbs up. Anonymously.

    Perhaps it is time to switch perspectives and take on this new danger to the free commerce between poets in their own community. Changes did occur in the poetry board community because of this blog. I figure it was less because of my essay and more because of the conversations, the dialogue that got opened, and because of the many passionate people who spoke up, feeling free of censor to do so.

    I am seriously, viscerally concerned about something. Two years or so ago The Academy of American Poets through its online extension, poets.org, failed poets coming online looking for poetry and for poetry conversation. The managers went lock step and simply shut out independent voices. More insiduously perhaps, The Poetry Foundation has found a way for silencing poets too. I call it shunning by means of the proposition vote.

    This is not good. This has to be addressed.

    Terreson

  953. One more thought. I want this system to work. The two greatest problems facing the scene are these:

    managers manage too much; poets do not manage themselves enough.

    Terreson

  954. The Poetry Foundation is irrelevant. And its blog. The Academy of American Poets is irrelevant. And its forum. Both are regional organizations with fancy names and and a complete disregard for any writers outside their regions. They don’t consider either you or me as part of their communities, never have and never will. Which means? They’re completely useless to writers except within their extremely corrupt and self-serving areas.

    The only means you have of effecting change is to boycott the sales of the writers who belong to those organizations. Then, maybe they’ll die. That’s what they need to do. Until they do, I will think of them as dead already and will not buy anything they, or their members, have to sell.

    See how easy that works? Now, can people quit whining out loud about them? They’re not worth an iota of our time.

    -blue

  955. I disagree. It reminds me of the 200 and 2004 presidential election. Bush was able to control the airwaves because he had few people blogging against him. This is the same thing. If we keep silent then theirs is the only voice. If we continually tell them it’s bullshit then we have deluted their message.

  956. .
    Don’t You See?

    Doesn’t anyone see around us
    this unnatural lethargy, a nation almost
    hypnotized into digital complacency,
    the loss of all community?
    You look out for you. I’ll look out for me.
    It’s as though we all agreed at once
    to look away.

    Don’t you sense a certain general slow
    decrease in energy, some kind of
    supernatural invisibility?
    And so the greedy and ambitious men,
    disengaged from this reality,
    after twenty-thousand years still
    rule the Earth. Still make a mess.

    But if no challenge then no consequence,
    no task to overcome, reason to proceed.
    Then no victory or success.
    Does no one see this debilitating need?
    This desire to run away and hide?

    Being handed what you want is not a challenge,
    or finding it or stealing or having lied.
    Knowing you can’t have it but honestly
    obtaining, that is winning a hero’s rest.
    So how should we obtain, then,
    rise up to take this challenge?
    How do those without greed or blind ambition
    learn to care for what the greedy need,
    this evil then to best?
    How do those without need for dominance
    learn to fight and inflict violence?

    .
    Copyright 2009 – Tall Grass & High Waves, Gary B. Fitzgerald

  957. Well, Clattery and all, it was a lazy Sunday. For some reason the essay at the beginning of the blog was brought to mind. So I figured to go back and read the piece some, what?, fifteen months later. Always interesting, and a good exercise too, to read something you’ve written and pretty much forgotten about. I find I can still stand behind it, both its content and rhetoric.

    But then I started reading forward. I got as far as post 301, which is almost a third of the way through. This too proved to be a good exercise, in as much as I am reading with some degree of perspective, or out of the heat of the argument(s).

    Man, you sure know how to throw a party. The equanimity you personally show, while at the same time it is clear the degree of your passionate investment in on-line poetry, blows me away. And I’ve never forgotten how you brought to bear on the discussion your take on transactional analysis. That post especially opened my eyes. And it wasn’t just you. Arthur Durkee’s thinking also stands out. And then there are all of the normally quiet people who spoke up. To me this is a big thing. Quiet people feeling free enough to speak up. (Sometimes I think the more quiet a person is the more moral authority her few words carry.) And I still respect Dmehl for weighing in the way he did. Talk about entering the lion’s den! And he didn’t just weigh in. My sense is that he was honestly looking to engage in the discussion. But as I say I am only up to post 301, with more to think on to come.

    There is one post that gave me the involuntary chuckle. #204. It is where a participant brings over something a moderator says on Poets.org after she locked a thread critical of board practices:

    “In fact, I think I’ll lock this thread right now, just because I can, so there. If the Admins and my fellow mods decide I’ve flown off the handle too soon, they can fix it and that will be fine with me.

    You don’t like it? Read my new sig.

    Catherine
    Moderatrix
    Borg Queen Wannabe”

    Since no one has corrected this mod’s comments on the Poets.org board, one has to assume that this kind of domination, censorship is sanctioned by the Academy and the management of their board. That’s really sad.

    Pat

    Comment by Pat Jones — May 27, 2008 @ 5:10 am

    Man, I am chuckling again. But I am also feeling sorry for the moderator. Her sig, as she puts it, is now inscribed in cyberspace.

    I am remembering too how much banning on poetry boards was going on in the summer of ’08, indirectly because of this blog, because of complaints raised on the boards. And I am remembering how at least one board moderator resigned her position because of the issues raised and addressed. What amounted to behavior she chose not to be party to. The demonstration of honor is always impressive. And when I read the many exchanges from the perspective of a year later I am struck by something else. The polarization that occurs when one side of an argument shuts down, refusing the dialogue because admitting the dialogue is untenable, even dangerous.

    One more thing, Clattery. I am under no illusion that poetry board politics have changed, at least not for poetry board managers. They still carry on and business is business as usual. I hear tell, even, that Poets.org, the online arm of the Academy of American Poets, has gone private. But I do think things have changed for a bunch of people that entered into this discussion. I do think they look at poetry boards differently. And I think a certain degree of empowerment has been transacted. You’ve done a good thing here, man.

    What a study it all ultimately becomes.

    Tere

  958. Unbelievable. Absolutely unbelievable. Only, it is all so predictable, the consequences of shunning. The Poetry Foundation’s new like/dislike feature works this way. Someone agrees or disagrees with a comment made. Agreement earns the post a thumbs up. Disagreement earns it a thumbs down. With seven thumbs down clicks the post gets hidden from the screen. In order to access the post one has to click on a link. And it gets better. If someone comes along and gives the post a thumbs up and the total number of dislikes falls below seven the post gets resurrected, brought up and made visible again.

    The feature is not even a month old and already there is polarization, with people taking sides, and with a certain abusiveness of the function coming into play. Very thoughtful and reflective comments are getting dissed, rivalries and grudges are coming to the fore. And, as I pointed out above, the play is all performed anonymously. All of this coming from the Poetry Foundation.

    If I understand the situation correctly, and admittedly I am partially guessing, the feature was put into place because of three (I think) participants who tend to dominate discussions, even subverting all exchanges by turning them to their favorite topics. The irony is that the function has had no affect on the people it was intended to address. They simply drone on. Others, however, have been unintentionally consequenced.

    Unbelievable. I stand in awe of the mischief poetry fora managers can create.

    Terreson

    • You’re so two faced, Tere.

      You suck everything in sight on Harriet, ride your hobby horses roughshod over whatever, and couch it all in your silly, sensitive-guy style. Yet you dismiss Brady and the others as drones?

      Makes me want to puke in the pool. Makes me want to hold hands with Jack Conway!

  959. And now two posts have been deleted without the poster’s permission. In no way shape or form did the posts amount to hate speech, threats of violence, or the personal attack. Nor were they snarky. Deja vu all over again. Pee in the pool indeed.

    Terreson

  960. It’s shocking to me that Harriet, of all places, would allow itself to deteriorate this way.

    It looks like the staff and contributing writers are basically just writing to each other now.

  961. Indeed it is all shocking, Gary. I did some searching last weekend. Someone else I know who has been following Harriet proceedings did some earlier, more in-depth, internet searching. What I found backed up what she had already told me. A bunch of Harriet’s Poetry Foundation principals know each other through professional association. Yale, NYC, Harvard, and Vassar are a few of the provenances these people have sprung from. It is as if a New England consortium has found home and voice in Chicago. I am not much into conspiracy theories. But you got to wonder. Especially when, as you say, staff writers and contributing writers seem intent on speaking among themselves only.

    There is something else too. Last July a staff writer assured Harriet’s membership the annonymous like/dislike function could only be used once per post per voter. This is incorrect. Last weekend I ran a test. I voted against a post of mine. Twenty-four hours later I successfully voted against the same post again. In effect, Harriet management has created an opportunity for snarky behavior.

    Unbelievable. It is all unbelievable. Last year many of us found out Poets.Org to be pretty unsavory in its board management practices. This season some of us discover that Poetry Foundation is no better. Both organizations rather illustrate a point. Once a free wheeling movement gets institutionalized it runs the danger of rotting on the vine.

    Tere

  962. We can’t just give up, though, Tere. As I said on Harriet:

    “This was predicted long ago…that a group of groupthink bullies would take over.”

    We must persist!

    Did you see this post?

    “Travis Nichols, you get my last post here. Or maybe it’s my next to last. I’ve tried but I cannot abide by the institutionalized snarkiness of the Foundation’s like/dislike button.”

    – Terreson

    .
    Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
    Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
    The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
    The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
    The best lack all conviction, while the worst
    Are full of passionate intensity.

    And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
    Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?

    – William Butler Yeats

    +4
    Posted By: Gary B. Fitzgerald on August 10, 2009 at 7:07 pm

    .
    I would also refer you to post #1187, above.

    .

  963. Gary, you are not only my favorite Texan, you also belong to that class of best men Camus called a man of good faith. And I bet you’re hard wired that way.

    Yes, indeed, I saw your post quoting from the Yeats poem. The message came through. I also saw Kent Johnson’s post. He stated his objections to the blog’s new way succinctly, cogently. In my view there is no amount of reasoning that can successfully argue against what he said, which brings me to a key problem. Time and time again I’ve witnessed board management presented with the cogent argument against a feature or protocol and responding by only becoming more entrenched. It has been two months since the Poetry Foundation instituted, what I will call, its snark function that allows the anonymous thumbs down vote. It is still in place in spite of the fact one manager assured the readership it was only an experiment. I’ve also noticed a pattern. Pretty much the same people get a thumbs down and pretty much the same people get a thumbs up. In only one case have I seen a manager get a thumbs down. Then I’ve noticed that perfectly decent, reasoned, and thoughtful comments have received the thumbs down. I deduce that the function is getting used with a hidden agenda in mind, which is what I had predicted would happen.

    I have not given up. But I have changed my tactics. In effect I am grass roots networking. I have posted a notice here of the new practice, and elsewhere. I’ve also contacted individual poets I know privately. To a person they are appalled by the very notion of an anonymous vote. Like you they find the feature dishonorable and cowardly. I’ve noticed that many Foundation members have voted with their feet. I’ve also noted that people not familiar with the blog and its practices seem disinclined to discover the place. Grass roots, my man. I should have remembered the trick a long time ago.

    There is something else. By now I have taken on the management of six different poetry sites whose practices have caused mischief. The ensueing pyrotechnics have not been pleasant. And the results have been mixed. I haven’t given up, Gary. I’ve just changed tactics. I’ll say again what that ancient essay said. Metaphorically speaking a poetry site should be Montessori like. And it starts at the top.

    Sorry for the length of the post but I got one more thought, an association made by a member of Delectable Mountains when I reported on the Foundation’s new feature of the anonymous vote. She said it put her in mind of these current “manufactured mob demonstrations” in political town hall meetings, the purpose of which is disruption for its own sake. That is quite a leap. It startled me. And I figure she is right.

    So spread the word, man. The Poetry Foundation encourages snark behavior institutionally.

    Tere

  964. Harriet and the Poetry Foundation are useless and Poetry magazine, a once great institution is niw simply a laughing stock ..MAD amagazine edited by people who don’t even know how fucking stupid they appear to the rest of the world.

  965. Tommy Brady/Monday Love has not been my favorite kinda guy but by jesus he’s leagues ahead of these other small minded inept assholes who are killing poetry.

  966. The Harriet splogg (as opposed to blog) is officialloy renaming itself to the Poetry Clown Foundation. The cost of big shoes,which they can’t fill, is tax deduchtible. Poetry Clowns Unite we’re all laughijng at your smary msugness.

  967. Jack Conway I have nothing to do with your complaint or with your rhetoric. I fight my own battles in my own way.

    Terreson

  968. To my knowledge, I have had only one post on Harriet collapsed to invisibility (click to show comment) due to the ‘Thumbs down’ vote. At last count there were 14.

    This was my comment:

    “I never realized that there were so many angry poets out there.”

    Posted By: Gary B. Fitzgerald on August 7, 2009 at 11:56 am

    Watch out…don’t let the irony drip on your clean shirt.

    Jeez.

  969. Gary, I got two thoughts. Upthread you point to a certain inbred quality to the Foundation’s blog conversations. (#1194) If you haven’t already read the blog started by one Rebecca Wolff called “Austen, Marvin, Homeopathy, L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E.” Read all 93 comments. It seems pretty clear that the participants in the conversation form a kind of coterie. And notice all the thumbs up their comments garner. By way of contrast, notice the three posters who get the big thumbs down count, the same three Harriet has been trying to drive from the blog. How transparent it all becomes.

    Second thought, brought about by your post #1205. I did some scanning one night. The highest thumbs down count has to go to one Alan Cordle who weighed in at a whopping minus 66. There is absolutely nothing offensive or snarky in his comments. While direct he is polite, even circumspect. And I have to wonder. He is the same Foetry associated person who a few years ago exposed some kind of scandal involving Po Biz and poetry contests. Is it too extreme to think there is a hidden agenda involved in those negative votes? Fascinating. Absolutely fascinating.

    Tere

  970. Poor Teerson, your EGO proceeds you. I can’t see anywhere addressing you personally. Please take you gigantic and inflated (for no possible reason) efo and stuff it.i

  971. I doubt very much I would want you connected to MY complaint or rhetoric considering how little you’ve accomplished. So please get a grip. It’s NOT about you pal. It never was and never will be. It’s okay to show your ego to your mommy and friends, just don’t even dream of trying to toss your limp baggage around with me. I’m not impressed and never will be.

  972. Point taken, Jack Conway. The discussion is neither about me or you. It is about something larger. Thanks.

    Terreson

  973. Conway cracks me up. LOL. He hates Harriet but he rags on Terreson because he doesn’t like Harriet.

    I just haven’t figured out if he’s the funniest guy since George Carlin or completely insane.

  974. Man, I just got to say. If the Poetry Foundation’s Harriet blog was a small blog or a small poetry board the information wouldn’t be so discomfiting. But the Poetry Foundation is a big spot. It is national, at times international. Just like Poetry.org is or used to be before its discussion thread went private.

    Their anonymous like/dislike button-function has become so snarky. In spite of more than a few objections to the rule management both keeps to it and does not respond to the objections. Boy, does this sound familiar.

    Terreson

  975. It sure takes all the fun out of it, doesn’t it? And it’s kind of creepy knowing that there are people out there you don’t even know who hate everything you say.

    (and for no particular reason at all or, if there is one, you’ll never know because they can remain silent AND anonymous and still smack you down)

    Truly an ugly thing.

  976. The clowns at Harriet wouldn’t know good poetry if it bit them on the ass. Share and the other “WE WERE BROUGHT UP BY THERAPISTS” numbnuts will never get the adulation they so yearn for. Shit they can’t even get ONE book published by a REAL publisher. They are engaged in a circle jerk and the first one that comes will yell but they have NO bearing on poetry and for the most part NO ONE even knows they exists. Ask your self this: When’s the last time three people thought Annie Finch was even a poet? Duh? Get real. These are the same wingnuts who people mocked in high school and they still cna’t get over it. Call me when ONE of them EVER wins anything besides praise from eahc other. Gary, Godamn it — I hate everybody. Actually, I was recently told by a MAJOR book publisher (Not one of these Harriet wanna be publishers by the by) that I was a “pure delight to work with.” That’s because THEY are REAL publishers and not some bunch of ass grabbing mouth-breathers. And because I am a real working writer not another dipshit standing in the poetry pool thta is filled with pee. Share and his cronies have turned POETRY magazine into a fucking high school yearbook and a laughing stock of the real poetry community. What a bunch of dipshits. Barnes and Noble recommended my book. Anybody recommend any of these clowns books? Oops, they don’t have any.

  977. Hey, that pool smells like pee!

    Thomas Brady banned from Harriet.

    “We’re NOT going to ban someone just because they have their own opinions…we’re NOT going to ban someone just because they have their own opinions…ahh, what the hell, it’s a new month, ban ’em!”

  978. Just a quick note to let you all know that HARRIET (most likely Travis Nichols) has deleted my two recent comments criticizing him (politely) for excluding women and minorities from the Wave Books Poetry Bus Tour, which he managed. Now he is carrying on the tradition at HARRIET, banning older people and people living in “foreign” cultures. Both of my comments had green “thumbs up” + whatever positives (a totally stupid system). Does anyone know if his parents are still supporting him?

  979. No emails, no warnings, no complaints from anyone, anywhere, no communication from Harriet. No posts of mine have been deleted (that I know of).

    I simply can’t post to their blog. I write, hit ‘submit comment’ and it just returns to the site with a blank page.

    I spoke my mind, but I never insulted or abused anyone. I kidded now and then, expressed my opinion strongly, stayed on topic and was as civil as anyone else. I played by the rules.

    I guess I inadvertently stepped on an ego or two…

  980. Dear Sirs:

    Sorry but you are not one of the touchy-feely, granola eating, birkenstock wearing, I love my therapist, let’s use our soft voice in the house, baby on board fuck nuts that they are. THEY are killing poetry and in the end they are merely roadkill on the poetry highway. NOBODY (except themselves) takes them seriously or even gives a shit what they think. They are SOOOOO fucking far out of the mainstream of what is REALLY happening in poetry that no one has the heart mto tell them . Of course I did and do every chance I get. Don. Don Share? YOU fucked up one of the best poetry magazines in the country with your dumbass selectionjs and high school myearbook mentality. SOOOOO many people have dumped Poetry magazine because ofm thise asshole.

  981. Tom, Alan, Gary, Earl in the immortale words of the Bard, “Fuck’em if they can’t take a joke.”
    Hamlet
    Act IIII
    Scene 8

    Please think about how sad and pathetic the poor bastard appear to everyone else EXCEPT themselves. It is quite a circle jerk they got goinjg and when Share and the others finally finish fucking up Poetry, they will be fired and ridiculed. Ah shit let’s burn the bastards at thye stake.

  982. The following posts were just deleted by the management at Harriet:

    Posting the code of conduct made me laugh, particularly because the editors here violate it daily with “rules” which vary from person to person. The Foundation should bring in an outside speaker and give some of the editors a little workshop in cultural competency, ageism, classism, etc. I’m totally unsurprised that the “manager” of the Poetry Bus Tour — which only included minorities and women at some stops after poetry bloggers pointed out the problem — is one of the most problematic editors here. Or do I have the wrong Travis Nichols?

    POSTED BY: ALAN CORDLE ON AUGUST 26, 2009 AT 12:17 PM


    POSTED BY: TOM HARR ON AUGUST 26, 2009 AT 1:07 PM

    Thanks for the video. Does your Travis exclude women and minorities from the game?

    Because the Travis here at the Poetry Foundation singles out people living in “different” cultures and older people, who are trying to post and leaves their comments in “moderation” for days at a time or just deletes them completely.

    Perhaps he and the hipsters should get on the bus and drive back to wherever poetry can be white, male, young, and safe.

    POSTED BY: ALAN CORDLE ON AUGUST 27, 2009 AT 5:37 AM

    • I should have added that to cover up their tracks the Harriet management also deleted the post Alan was replying to. And what did that unacceptable comment say?

      It merely copied the Foundations Code of Conduct!

      Anybody got a copy?

  983. The following post is not only STILL UP on the same thread on Harriet but has garnered 8 Green votes:

    As for the continuing characterizations of my personal life, it is repulsive, and I am shocked that those responsible for this blog are allowing it to continue.

    Yes, the phrase “beneath contempt” comes to mind. But that’s blogging for you: no need to admit you’re wrong, ever, but plenty of stimulus to defend yr initial errors with a shrillness approaching hysteria.

    Meanwhile, those who love only the sounds of their own voices will crash around embarrassing themselves by, say, insisting upon the hoariest clichés in the third-wave feminist handbook (”rape is about power not sex”—as anyone in college in 1992 remembers, & as anyone awake & literate since then has learned to recognize for the pablum it is), or pronouncing judgment upon Spanish-language poetry while demonstrating their utter ignorance of basic Spanish grammar.

    The hits keep on coming on Harriet, an echo chamber for doddering Foetry refugees, actual bigots, & liberal pietists. Fun times!

    POSTED BY: ROBBINS ON AUGUST 28, 2009 AT 8:32 PM

    • The first sentence is a quote, and should have been in italics. Sorry.

      What’s so sickening about this post is the gap between what it says and what it does. It pretends moral outrage while trashing senior citizens, activists and liberals.

      Since the Comment got so many LIKES it must mean Harriet people like Robbins, a guy much favored by POETRY too — as he’ll tell you pretty quick.

      Harriet really does ban older people and people with libertarian views, so we’re talking pretty conservative — like Alan says, “white, male, young, and safe!”

  984. Want to hear more from Harriet’s Michael Robbins?

    If you didn’t think his buddy Travis Nichols’ school girls with penises was enough of a petard, try this one:

    (I mean, where are these guys from Harriet coming from, and whither the Poetry Foundation?!?)

    Yeah, North Korea is the country acting like a child on the world stage. Hillary Clinton had the ovaries to act like the arrogant spokesperson for official hypocrisy that she is. The rest of the world doesn’t know whether to laugh or cry when the United States — known for disregarding international law any time it feels like it, for invading any country it feels like at any time, for refusing to sign the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, for violating the Geneva Conventions — starts lecturing some other nation on how to be a good global citizen. Give me a break.

    Posted By: robbins on August 30, 2009 at 11:47 pm

  985. Not my style, but I do thank Henriette for blowing her top!

    My own feeling is that the Poetry Foundation is one of the greatest opportunities that has ever been offered to American poetry. Indeed, we must insist that it remains free of any outside manipulations, that it is is not connected to any school of poetry, university writing program, or vested interests, and that it does not employ anyone who uses it to acquire publishing credits, win prizes, or gain advancement in the field.

    It may be a small consideration, but it worries me very much that Harriet has adopted such a negative position toward Foetry. Foetry was an extraordinary phenomenon that helped American poetry to grow up and become accountable in the new bizarre world of what has to be called “poetry affluence.” Any poet free enough to think his or her own thoughts must acknowledge the debt we as a community owe to its efforts.

    One of the inescapable facts is that no editor or publisher caught by Foetry manipulating contest results ever admitted fault, what is more apologized — not even Jorie Graham, not even Jeffrey Levine or Bin Ramke. And how we would have respected them if they had — because we all had to learn that lesson.

    Another inescapable fact is that Alan Cordle never got taken to court — though boy did he suffer harrassment!

    The fact that Michael Robbins can be allowed to dismiss me, a 70 year old poet with very few credits, as a “doddering foetry refugee” is very worrying, and that he should get lots of green votes disgraceful. The fact that Harriet actually deleted those posts of Alan Cordle just above can only be described self-interested and regressive.

    That’s just Harriet, of course, but such prejudice does not sit well with the larger mission of the Poetry Foundation, and we should watch it. On the other hand, we’re ready to listen and learn, and the mistakes of the past 3 months are very minor (I don’t even qualify as a minor poet, by the way, just as an amateur!). We must insist that the Foundation takes Harriet in hand, reforms it, and offers it again spic and span to the wider community that loves poetry in America.

    Christopher Woodman

  986. Here’s the Poetry Foundation’s Mission Statement:

    “The Poetry Foundation, publisher of Poetry magazine, is an independent literary organization committed to a vigorous presence for poetry in our culture. It exists to discover and celebrate the best poetry and to place it before the largest possible audience.”

    As far as I know, I am banned from Harriet. I can’t post. I have received no communication from them, nor have I sent any messages to them. I’ve been banned on a whim.

    Since I’ve been gone, there’s been one discussion: a generic political discussion on North Korea.

    This seems to be a good example of what’s wrong with po-biz today. From what I have seen, Harriet is not “committed to a vigorous presence for poetry in our culture.”

    Harriet is committed to protecting turfs and territories. It is not trying to expand poetry’s role. It is protecting the careers of a few individuals: Michael Robbins, Kent Johnson, Don Share and Travis Nichols.

    The Foundation’s mission is a worthy one. A rising sea lifts all boats.

    If other voices are heard, this will help your voice. If your voice is heard, this will help mine.

    But some don’t see it that way. Some people think: if that person’s voice is heard, it will hurt me, it will hurt my career; so I’m going to do everything I can to silence that voice–even though that voice is the kind of voice that engenders a discussion that lifts all boats and helps to “create a vigorous presence for poetry in our culture.”

    This is not a personal gripe; it’s not about Thomas Brady being banned from Harriet; I’ll do fine without Harriet. It’s a little troubling that there was no reason behind the banning, but I’m not going dignify that issue with an argument. One can go on the site and look for oneself.

    I just want to be a witness to what I think is a common problem in poetry today. I do think there’s a correlation between the behavior of thin-skinned careerists walking on eggshells and protecting their turf and the fact that there’s so little public interest in poetry; I thought the Foundation, with its riches, might set a different example: let all voices be heard so that the public might glimpse poetry as an exciting conversation and not a small collection of turf-defending cliques.

    Does the Poetry Foundation’s Harriet Blog “exist to discover and celebrate the best poetry and to place it before the largest possible audience?”

    It seems to me it absolutely does not.

    Thanks for listening, Clattery.

  987. I have noticed a pattern to the anonymous votes on Harriet. The same people are ‘disliked’ no matter what they say and likewise those who are ‘liked’.

    I think we’ve uncovered a little coterie.

    I also did a little experiment. Some of my poems were voted into invisibility (click to show comment). I went back and voted them up so that they were visible again. The next day…gone again (by one vote). Hmmm. This went on a few days…here, gone, here, gone…all by one vote (thus, my “enemy” comment).

    Then I let it ride a while and, guess what, no votes at all. So I went back and voted me up and, BINGO, a single vote down (on just about every comment by GBF, no less.) Go figure.

    Now, consider the implications of this. With the ability to vote every 24 hours and two IP addresses, a single person in all of the cyberworld can decide what everyone else will or will not see. Apparently the Harriet staff has completely abandoned their editorial responsibilities and left the content of their own blog to the malicious rabble.

  988. Gary,

    I noticed how the Harriet coterie was exposed, as well–voting suspiciously reflected poster, not post.

    Popular threads cannot be faked.

    Invisible votes of approval or disapproval, however, can be.

    The chief reason for any site to use the ‘dislike/like’ feature is that it allows forum members to ‘police’ barbarians.
    It is not meant to delete reasonable, germane parts of a conversation.

    At Harriet, reasonable posts of Guest Writers defending their own posts were disappeared by Harriet’s system–this is how absurd the system became/is.

    The ‘dislike/like’ feature didn’t fight barbarians, it created them.

    The up/down function was never necessary in the first place.

    Harriet was becoming a more popular place this past spring, when I arrived, and it was civil, except for the occasional snipe from a sleepy Harriet bumpkin horrified that city folk were arriving.

    It’s pretty obvious that sleepy Harriet resented being ‘woken up,’ and its clique sprung into action in an effort to ‘manage’ the ‘problem’ of a more popular and open forum. They couldn’t appear to be a small-minded clique outright, so they cooked up a little scheme to protect themselves.

    I think what finally pushed the Harriet management over the edge was my humor in the face of their ridiculous machinations.

    One of my last exchanges was with a poster, John Oliver Simon. He called me a “loud bore” and I told him I didn’t think that was fair. We then had a pleasant exchange in which he explained modernisto and vanguardia a little bit to me, and in our debate regarding inevitable ‘progress’ or ‘change’ in literary fashion, he said the young need to rebel against their ‘stuffy’ elders. I said, ‘oh, so Sappho and Rimbaud and Byron’ are my ‘stuffy elders?’

    He never did reply.

    Now he doesn’t have to; fortunate for him, I guess.

    Thomas

  989. I hadn’t looked in at the forum at Poets.org since I voluntarily abandoned that site a year ago.

    I can’t believe how dead it is!

    And it’s the same people walking Poets.org’s empty discussion halls. How sad.

    And Harriet has one post today.

    Did they ban everyone?

    LOL

    Po-biz has sort of become this land of the undead; prizes are given, but no one cares, books are published, but only friends of the poet look at them, the major poetry blogs are like ghost towns…

  990. This may be my imagination, but it seems to me that the tide turned when the term ‘Foetry’ came up. Christopher first mentioned it and was suddenly persona non grata. Then others who came to his defense seemed to get on the ‘shit-list’ as well.

    Also, anyone who complained about or criticized the ‘Dislike/like’ feature ended up with a load of ‘thumbs down’. Watch out! Don’t let the irony drip on your clean shirt.

  991. You guys really bitch dontcha now, hey. Trav is a very close comrade doing fine work for agitating to a vigorous presence, poetry in ‘our’ culture. That’s Trav, Kent, Don and the guardian New Englanders dude. The rightful holders of the true American poetry flame that is thousands of years old. We may have lost it for a while, but when St. Ezra came a knocking on the door of Stone Cottage, yo, it was all made into our culture America.

    Get over it, these guys are doing great work, and now i have found here..ha ha ha ha foetry noetry, there can only be one stoic manning the gulag bunker door.

    • There are other ways of saying this. And I know, Jack C., that all you did was turn the dial up on John Daly’s post, which crossed a line of its own. I don’t want this thread to turn into a place where abuse is okay.

      Thanks.

      C.

  992. What worries me is how easily any cynical clique can exploit a crowd’s lust for victims in all human activities, and Coliseum-Harriet was no exception. When the clique started baying for my blood, even you, friend Gary, joined in the bashing, and had the honor of driving in the last nail in my coffin (you’ll remember). Even our good Terreson here on Clattery, indeed the leader of all of us who would clear up the fora poop, came in on the side of Travis Nichols when he first proposed the Like/Dislike function. Even in post #1192 just above Terreson falls in the trap and endorses the Harriet clique’s dismissal of Thomas Brady as boring:

    If I understand the situation correctly, and admittedly I am partially guessing, the feature was put into place because of three (I think) participants who tend to dominate discussions, even subverting all exchanges by turning them to their favorite topics. The irony is that the function has had no affect on the people it was intended to address. They simply drone on. Others, however, have been unintentionally consequenced.”

    Two things I want to say about this. The first is that Monday Love/Sawmygirl/TomWest/Thomas Brady and now the Earl of Essex has never “droned on” about anything in his life, just been clear, relevant, well-informed and, most importantly, funny. Tom made Harriet, Terreson, he created it almost single-handedly, and that sort of back-stabbing remark just pumps up the hounds at his heels.

    The second is that I don’t agree with Henriette’s assessment after the same post #1192, which I’d say is an even more pernicious sort of baying. She’s great both here and the way she went for Travis well below the belt on Harriet, but when she uses her gifts to savage Terreson she’s tearing our whole movement apart. She’s just a bitch in heat!

    Which is what I want to say. Let’s not be clever with each other (“just a bitch in heat???”) but learn to listen better and always build on what we hear.

    How can he say that, Gary may shout back. Christopher was so mean to me! Well, that’s the whole point, I’m saying this because I too have to learn to listen better and build on what even Gary has got (a whole lot!).

    So I’m sorry, Terreson and Gary — I’ll try not to be a sheriff any more — and it’s hard to say that!

    Christopher

  993. This is still raw for me. What follows is the last deletion I suffered on Harriet (I lost 15 other posts in the same coup, some of which had been “awaiting moderation” for 6 weeks).

    Desmond Swords, a well-known bard-show and blogger based in Dublin, reached out to me like this on Eileen Myles’ “Post on the Post” thread (it’s got -16 red votes, so you have to click to open it):

    Yeah Alan. It is a sad day when 70 year old highly intelligent and educated people with a very interesting and readable perspective on poetry and life, are excluded from here on the basis of..what exactly Trav?

    Why is Woodman frozen out of here?

    Because he is too clever, and makes highly non-offensive posts which piss off the paid staff doing it for money, hey Don Share, Trav Nicols?

    And now i will no doubt be put under moderation for daring to speak of it, hey money lovers?

    -16

    POSTED BY: DESMOND SWORDS ON AUGUST 27, 2009 AT 8:13 AM

    Here’s my Reply. It remained invisible for 3 days “awaiting moderation” and then was suddenly DELETED.

    I do appreciate the support, Desmond Swords and Alan Cordle, and I do hear your impatience. My own way would not have been the same. I would have hung in there for as long as it took. I would have hung in there until I persuaded the management that though my voice was an uncomfortable one nobody would ever need to be afraid of me. I would have shown that. Because take a look, I’ve always been consistent, and always spoken my very own truth without daggers or expletives. Indeed, I’ve never raised my voice, not once, and would never have done so.

    Now you’ve raised my voice for me in a sense, Desmond and Alan, and made it much more difficult for me to sound anything but shrill.

    All I can say is that we are not a party, these two guys and and myself (Oregon, Dublin and Thailand!), just share the same conviction that the Foundation is a public service endowed by a great woman with a vision that poetry was for humanity, and that everyone deserved to partake of the balm, to be healed.

    Now I suspect we’ll all be shut out.

    On the other hand, what an opportunity. Why can’t we rise above this and say, “Hey, poetry sans frontieres?” Why can’t we decide to form a sort of United Nations of Poetry, and make Harriet it’s Forum?

    I say we step back a few paces, laugh a bit, and start it all over again. Like Cathy, let’s have a poem you like. Let’s talk about poetry again!

    Christopher

    POSTED BY: CHRISTOPHER WOODMAN ON AUGUST 27, 2009 AT 10:27 AM

    And I still feel the same way, I still feel it’s not too late for Harriet to turn back and make a fresh start. Yes, it’s going to take some courage to come out and say, yes, we took a wrong turn, we tried to control things in a way that turned out to be bad for everybody, and we do apologize to the victims.

    But the alternative is much worse, not only to continue with a crippled Blog:Harriet but to stain the reputation of The Poetry Foundation.

    Christopher

  994. I was the first to bring attention to Louis Menand’s review in ‘The New Yorker’ of ‘The Program Era: The Rise of Creative Writing,’ the new book from Harvard U. Press, by Mark McGurl on the Harriet Blog.

    This book, which I have just purchased, is excellent; McGurl writes extremely well, and he also touches on the same issues (routinely dismissed by others) I have raised: John Crowe Ransom’s essay, “Criticism, Inc,” Allen Tate, the New Critics, etc, in discussing what McGurl calls the most important phenomenon in post war American Letters: the Creative Writing Industry.

    Louis Menand praised the book, and by bringing up the issue on Harriet, and discussing the coterie-ism of Modernism and the Creative Writing Industry, I made the ground fertile for Eileen Myles explosive essay, “Political Economy,” which began,

    “I’ve really taken my time having a go at Sean Patrick Hill’s review in Rain Taxi of State of the Union, the political anthology published by wave books. I know there’s been a tempest here about nepotism in the poetry world…”

    That “tempest” about “nepotism in the poetry world” we can blame on Thomas Brady.

    Harriet proved inadequate to the task of discussing Menand’s article and McGurl’s book–to be fair, no one’s had a chance to read the book, yet, and it is 35 bucks…I’m trying to be the first kid on my block to have read ‘The Program Era,’ and so far I’m really impressed by McGurl’s writing; his thesis–which I keep raising (because duh it’s important)–McGurl feels is critically important, and I’m ecstatic that he’s an excellent writer, because the theme is crucial, not just in an Alan Cordle ‘foetry’ sense, but in a literary sense, too, which Monday Love has been making the case for, and now, here is McGurl doing the same thing in a fantastic (so far) book.

    Eileen Myles took up ‘the issue’ in her own powerful way with her blockbuster ‘Political Economy’ post on Harriet, as the ‘independent’ Eliot Weinberger felt her wrath.

    The Menand review came up again, more recently, purely by accident, when “Poetry” editor Don Share responded to a personal anecdote by Rebecca Wolff. (Wolff is ALL personal anecdote…she was writing in her ‘Before I Left Truro’ post.)

    Don Share wrote the following:

    “This is from Luke Menand’s recent article on writing programs in ‘The New Yorker…’

    Thomas Brady responded, “’Use the Metaphysical Club, Luke!’ Isn’t it Louis Menand?”

    My harmless comment—Louis Menand is the author of the “Metaphysical Club”—which merely corrected Don Share’s error, elicited 8 ‘thumbs down’ votes, causing the comment to disappear.

    So Harriet can keep calling Louis Menand, “Luke,” I guess.

  995. I’m afraid that your accusations here about me are false, Mr. Woodman. I have reviewed the post reply threads in question. The only ire expressed by myself to you concerned my poems. You were treating the Harriet comment thread like it was a workshop forum and deconstructing my poems. My poems were MY comments relevant to the thread topic and/or conversation. They were not intended to be analyzed or judged by you (you will also notice that you were the only one who did, BTW).

    If you are referring to my observation about your numerous alias’s, my dear ‘Apricot’, etc. etc., then you got what you deserve. I believe is unfair to take on multiple personas in a place like Harriet. It is intended for serious, although (hopefully) comradely, debate, not the personal pissing matches found elsewhere. It is deceitful to pretend to be someone else supporting your own position. Not to mention taking whatever personal relationship being developed out of context by pretending to be a completely different person. It’s just plain dishonest.

    It is also unfair to condemn me as the one who “put the last nail in the coffin,”. First, you continued to post long after my comments and, secondly, because you pissed a whole lot of people off all by yourself. You didn’t need any help.

    Here, I believe, are the posts you refer to:

    .
    “’Perhaps I thought you’d written it for Thomas Brady because of the sense that the phrase “to Poe” was superfluous—which I still think it is.
    Good poem, though.’
    POSTED BY: CHRISTOPHER WOODMAN ON JULY 8, 2009 AT 6:59 PM

    Christopher:

    If you could just find it in your heart to refrain from commenting on my poems here, pro or con, we could be friends. As you pointed out to Nick earlier, this is not a critique forum. I choose my poems for the moment in the spirit of the exchange. They are all published and I don’t intend to revise them at this time anyway. Just like them or hate them for what they are and spare me your opinions. Besides, it’s the responsibility of the initial poster to determine if a post is appropriate or not. Thanks. Peace.

    Gary

    P.S. The “Poe” is not superfluous in either meaning or meter. Please, you write your poems and I’ll write mine. I’m not exactly what you’d call a ‘famous’ poet, but most people do enjoy my little constructions. Please stop raining on my parade.”
    Posted By: Gary B. Fitzgerald on July 8, 2009 at 8:03 pm

    .
    “Mr. Woodman, you are a classic and well-known prevaricator. You have been dishonest and disingenuous everywhere you’ve ever posted and most of us have figured it out by now. Why don’t you repost this crock of shit with attribution so people can reference these quotes in context and find out exactly who’s being negative? Your malicious and repetitive antics have grown tiresome, Woodman. Maybe it’s time to retire, old friend.
    I asked you nicely on another thread to stop picking on me. Apparently, you were disinclined to acquiesce.

    You should never poke sticks at lions, me bucko. We bite back!”
    Posted By: Gary B. Fitzgerald on July 12, 2009 at 7:32 pm

    And lastly, I was posting on Harriet for a year before I ever saw you or Tom Brady there, so I hardly think that “Tom made Harriet, Terreson, he created it almost single-handedly,”.

    That’s just downright ridiculous.

  996. Great stuff. It looks like I have also been slung out now, as the exact same thing as happened with Brady, also happened to me.

    I found this gaffe yesterday, and was immediately struck with a feeling of the bigger picture. It is the first time I’ve read Terreson as the lover of language s/he actually is. The post heading this 1000 plus commentary, articulated exactly what I had been thinking but could not express as eloquently. That the first emphasis on community cohesion, with poetry, poetry-related conversation, and the free exchange of ideas viewed as secondary.

    And then dipping in and out of the flow of talk, following the 9 month course, reading delightful insults, robust and in yer face, no holds barred, what struck me was not your differences – that Jack was effing and blinding at Brady – but similarites. You are all people who have had to leartn how to get along – and not get along – because you have been on baords yourself, just doing the plod and writing and in the absence of barring one another, just because of this or that, you have learnt to talk and not break it all off because of language composed in dead fucking strong, you cunting fucking twat-type language of the foulest bar room effer.

    It made me see, that you are where the action is, not Harriet. Without you lot to wage the campaign against stiffs and children playing silly games, the Harriet nambies – Harriet is dead as a dodo.

    If you are not there, the hey day is over, the comments down, the see-through quality of the first democratic proclomation of this or that being their aim; is proven to be all rubbish: platitudes of academics all brown-nosing and someone hit it right on the head in a post above, when you said – that these few bores actually beleive the rubbish they write and what they are doing, is canon fodder for NYSchool generation 29 or whatever it’s at.

    A lot of detail was filled in reading this screed, and another thing which immediately struck, was the language: the lingo of hinest talk, people not agreeing, saying so in the strongest possible terms and it hits me now as i write; that this is Democratic debate. Gary going mad, Jack calling Brady an idiot and then, after all his posturing, finding we are all on the same side anyway, admitting that Tom was the one taking it to them. Champion of the travelling minstrel-bards with their rig-up anywahere collapsable scene in the circus of contemporary poetry that is dead simple. We who write, learn, those who stay silent or trade ass-kissing one liners to their colleagues in the corporation, are left with only the blunest and most rudimentary of tools with which to exclude we who prove them fakes. A mouse and a mniddle class desire, underhanded strokes, and now, a focussed opposition, being the Scene, so far forward, only we know of it.

    Cheers

  997. Gary,

    I agree with you. Thomas Brady did not ‘make’ Harriet.

    What WAS Harriet like before my arrival?

    I see it’s dead now, though I love this comment which John Oliver Simon just posted:

    “I think the verb “to curate” in reference to the task of running a poetry reading series is insufferably pretentious.”

    Yes. The ‘poets’ are so bored with poetry these days, all they want to talk about is art museums (or politics).

    Thomas

  998. This won’t be the first time, Desmond Swords, that you and I have crossed them, but I must take issue with (and offense to) your comment: “Gary going mad”. What do you mean by that, exactly? I’m a writer, Mr. Swords, and I can affect any mood or personality I wish. Surely you don’t believe I was actually going to get on an airplane and fly to Boston just to punch Jack in the nose.

  999. Sorry Gary, going ‘mad’ means becoming passionate about things, that’s all.

    Yeah, funny about the curate thread. Don Share was originally a twelve or so word, comment number three, but as soon as he got only one red thumb, the comment disappeared altogether and now there’s no trace of it.

  1000. Hello ee.

    I went to the link and joined, and am just waiting on the administrator to click me in and I can deliver my thoughts on it.

    I have to say, now i have started gassing here, it srikes me how about 90% of the difficulties with commenting on Harriet, are removed. There, it was like taking it to the foe, but after Trav’s laughably transparent play from the far-right school of poetic politics – here feels much more democratic.

    Essentially we can speak here openly. Anyway, it occured to me, that with you reading the book (I forget the author) which articulates your own thinking on the lineage and effect the first moderns had per the Creative Writing and po-biz industry — that if you used the reviewing of this book, as a frame in which to formally present the argument you’ve spent the last year nailing; and sent it to sarah.crown@guardian.co.uk – the editor of the books blog: that she may very well publish it.

    If you wrote 800 words, dashed them off, it’s all legitimate and worth a punt, because the few uninspired individuals on wages for ruining Harriet by treating it as a high school rag; that is the gaffe they have as a template of never achievabnle success. They always have it in their ‘news’ links, and if you got a perch there ee, well, what a laugh it would be.

    And i say this because you are by far and away, the most powerful intellctual blog-voice i have read online, for presenting your argument.

    It doesn’t necessarliy mean your argument is right, just that you have the most effectively honed intellectual skills.

    Just a thought.

  1001. A funny story. A friend of mine works for a large corporation. In order to get a discount on health insurance, the company agreed to drug test all of their employees. When the test results came back they discovered that they would have to terminate most of their top level management and half of their engineering staff because they tested positive for pot. The company opted against the insurance discount.

    Likewise Harriet. They got rid of a nuisance or two, perhaps, but they also decimated their most valuable, funny, intelligent, erudite and entertaining voices. Be careful what you wish for.

  1002. Thanks, Des.

    I’ll happily fill you guys in on ‘The Program Era’ as I read it.

    McGurl has really impressed me so far, but often I find books great at the beginning and then they run out of steam…but we’ll see…

    What would I be writing for this Sarah Crown, a proposal for my book, a review of ‘The Program Era…’?

    Yea, Clattery’s better than Harriet. What’s funny on Harriet right now is ‘thumbs down’ are greeting the tiny remarks and sort of freaking people out…it makes the whole place look ridiculous…

    just watch, after banning the ‘troublemakers,’ Harriet will rescind the like/dislike function…or maybe Don Share is completely in love with getting + 12 every time he posts and won’t be able to give it up…

    Thomas

  1003. My advice would be to just write it, and send it to her. The blogs there are around 800 words, and not much in the way of real agitators on the outside in poetry. The last go was by a Faber silverback, David Harsent, who railed againts the appointment of Duffy as poet laureate, but wanting it both ways. Yo be a radical outsider traversing the backways and noir streets, whilst also being as establishment as it gets.

    His language is inventive, but the core of his argument weak.

    However, if you wrote about American po-biz through the prism of what may obstensibly turn out as a book review, or better, not even a review, but using the book as the key to legitimacy as per speaking the case: tracing the lineage and rise of the Creative Writing industry from a hundred years ago to now, and concentrate on Foetry and its reception, then get stuck into Cordle and Harriet and …just shooting ideas.

    You could pitch it to her first, whatever you think would work best, but i know she is well up for having her gaffe a place where poetry action happens, as evinced with the Padel Walcott hoo ha that kept the mainly female staffers on that rag, wetting their nickers for months, being so close to the action and goss.

    If you deliver a piece of writing which lays the whole rig bare, that’s the sort of gear they want.

    I had 150 bans from there, but still, their moderator caste, are all backroom and not involved in slapping themnselves on the back.

    Don Share, a one line comment taking off and disappeared just because he got ONE! red, indicates he is very shallow, if he was the one who had it took it off. It was only there less than a minute before it went. I was the one who voted it red, making sure to click the other two green, to give it a greater margin of difference, as an experiment, and it goes off immediately. Why?

    Who cares really, as reading this i have it clear, the scene their with a few New Englander frat boys.

  1004. I don’t like when Gary and Christopher fight; they’re two of my favorite people.

    Gary, you mentioned ‘foetry’ and how it may have turned the tide on Harriet; it probably is the source of Christopher’s woes on that site.

    It seems to KEEP COMING BACK to this letter Houlihan wrote to “Poets and Writers” attacking Foetry.com when P&W dared to write an article calling Foetry.com a consumer watchdog site–well, that’s what I always thought foetry.com was.

    Houlihan’s letter is public; I don’t see why it’s such a big deal when Christopher brings it up. I don’t understand why we can’t talk about this stuff. It’s truthful, it happened, it’s public. What’s the big deal? Why are millions of poets afraid to speak about some stuff concerning a few poets who did some things that were not quite right and who got caught? Why is the whole poetry world terrified to talk about issues that affect us all, and, if we talk about them honestly, can only make us better? Why should poetry-as-a-business intimidate poetry-as-poetry to such an extent that the interests of a handful can literally silence hundreds of thousands? Do we live in a democracy, or not? Is poetry a democratic art, or not? Hellooo.

    What I’m saying is pretty harmless. But if I wrote what I just wrote on poets.org or Harriet or the Poets & Writers blog site, I would be instantly banned. THIS is what’s creepy, more than any ‘foetry’ stuff that was done by Jorie Graham.

    That’s why Christopher is so freaked out, I think, and has become such a “troublemaker.” He’s been going through a WTF? moment ever since the Levine thing happened to him, and the response to what happened to him just fills him with ‘WTF?’

    So now it’s become this big ‘Cause’ and yet with an apology or two, this whole thing could be put behind us, and we could all move on with our new knowledge, taking all blurbs and contests, etc etc with a big grain of salt…

    Can’t we do that?

  1005. Hey, it just occured to me, that we can direct our own operations from here. If everyone clicks red on the Poetry coterie core man-mates in the gaffe there, we might get ’em on permanent reds, and do their heads in.

    ha ha ha, have a larf..

  1006. I think we need to be clear about something here. And I can say this because, unlike several people upthread, I have directly challenged the Poetry Foundation’s Harriet Blog’s new policy of the anonymous vote to like/dislike a post.

    Swords has not been banned from Harriet’s blog so far as I know. The same is true of Essex (Brady) and Gary. But their posts on many occassions, and after seven negative votes, can get hidden. Anyone can still click on their posts and see what they said.

    Personally, you bet I dissaprove of the Harriet way. But let’s be clear. To the best of my knowledge Swords has not been banned from Harriet’s. Nor has Essex (Brady). I think Conway has and for reasons he has made clear on this blog. His language tends to be violent.

    I am not defending the Poetry Foundation’s Harriet blog. On the other hand I feel some of the upthreaders are looking to turn this blog to their own selfish purposes.

    Terreson

  1007. What has been happening is, when i have finished a comment and hit send, exactly what happens to brady, nothing. The post does not appear and there is no reference to my sending anything. I have tried numerous times today and the exact same thing every time.

  1008. ee

    Gary is one of my favorite people too, and I just wrote him by e-mail 3 days ago to say it to him directly (also to compliment him on the wonderful NPR Radio interview he just did). I also tried to apologize to him for any misunderstandings that remained between us, and was sad at his response just above.

    I’ve got to learn to write such things more directly. I mean, I’ve just got to learn not to be funny!

    (Oh dear, I think I’ve gone and done it again!)

    Christopher

  1009. Tere,

    I think we all tried to persuade the Harriet management not to go for the terrible Like/Dislike buttons. Certainly I did, and I’m pleased that the last comment on the Like/Dislike thread remains undeleted — even though it’s by me.

    You can go here to read that whole thread — and as you do so you might ask yourself, “How could the Harriet management possibly have thought the voting system would work when it got this level of rejection right at the start?”

    http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2009/07/like-and-dislike/#comments

    If you have an opinion on my last comment on the thread you could still vote — at this moment it remains virgin, a sign of accord in itself, wouldn’t you say?

    Christopher

  1010. ee
    In reply to your good comment #1245 just above.

    Just yesterday I wrote a very well-known poet who I have gotten to know a little in person. I wanted the poet to know what had happened to Tom and myself on Harriet (the poet is also a big admirer of the Earl of Essex!) — and I forwarded something I had just written on the subject. And then I suddenly realized, my god, one of the people I criticize in the letter is professionally linked to this poet, so what am I doing? How can my argument be heard by this person if I criticize someone in their own orbit?

    And that’s the point I want to make, we’re ALL IN THAT ORBIT, so to speak — even me, a total outsider. Because yes, Your Lordship, I’ve been published in the Kenyon Review, I really have. I’m that comnpromised — and can you forgive me?

    Joke, because of course I’m enormously proud of it too. Way back in 1992 the editor at the time, Marilyn Hacker, chose to publish a long poem of mine. I sent it to her from a small boat where I was living alone in Europe without a single credit to my name, and that was the first poem I ever got published. And I was 52.

    “An apology or two,” yes, Tom, I agree, that’s all it takes — and my god I’ve got so many more to make myself than just two, even in this recent debacle!

    So why was it so hard for Jeffrey Levine to say “I’m sorry” for example? I wrote him 3 letters at the time of the scandal suggesting just that, and assuring him that if he did come clean he would become a great editor. He’s a good editor already, for sure, and a warm-hearted and sensitive human being — but refusing to accept a very bad moment for what it was, inflation combined with over-extension, continues to dog him.

    And Jorie Graham? Why did she have to say “No, Peter Sacks wasn’t my husband!” Yes, the marriage hadn’t yet happened, but it was just a few months away and surely the relationship was older than that. And Bin Ramke is still insisting on his innocence, and Joan Houlihan is defending him. (And you’re absolutely right, dear Tom, I’m still walking wounded, having been so personally abused in these scandals.)

    No, none of us knew before Foetry how detrimental cronyism could be to American poetry, none of us even suspected that. Indeed, we’re all and always, always tainted by our pasts — in my childhood in New Jersey in the 40s I was still taught that the “Indians” were “cruel” and “treacherous.” We’ve learned that lesson now at last, and EVERY American is culpable — and particularly me with 7 ancestors on the Mayflower!

    So what’s so hard about coming out and saying, “Yes I did that. I didn’t understand how important transparency was to our field at the time but now I do — you should all learn from my example.”

    That would make a really great Professor of Oratory and Rhetoric at Harvard, wouldn’t it? And boy would I support Tupelo’s fund raising activities!

    Of course it’s also about what has happened at Harriet, but the dust hasn’t yet settled on that one.

    Don Share and Catherine Halley understand, I feel sure, and how lucky we would all be if they would simply do something about it. And it wouldn’t be that hard either, not at all.

    I’d be the first back on board, and so grateful.

    Christopher

  1011. It looks like an entire post with all its comments was just removed from Harriet–the one that featured the discussion of the meaning of ‘curate.’ Is it really gone? Bizarre.

    Tere, how do you know Des and I are not banned?

    Good to see everybody here, by the way, and hear good, honest discussion. Nice.

    tune to ‘the crystal ship’ by the doors:

    Before I sink into my banishment,
    I’d like to make another rant,
    Another controversial rant,
    Another rant, another rant.

    O tell me where your freedom lies,
    Harriet is full of guys.
    Deliver me from reasons why
    You hate my posts!
    I’d rather fly.

    Harriet is being filled
    With Eileen Myles
    Who isn’t thrilled
    By Weinberger who doesn’t say
    How much they pay
    To live his day.

  1012. I have launched Scarriet, a new blog with excerpts from Harriet and open commenting for all. (You too, Jack — but be civil). I don’t have much time to spend on it myself, but hope those evicted from Harriet will find their voices.

    http://scarriet.wordpress.com/

  1013. What one of the non-banned may consider, is linking the Scarriet post, to the original article at Poetry, especially if Myles doesn’t garner many responses.

    I can also no longer vote red-green, so it looks like i am definitley out in the open on the undesirables undermensh list the little boys brigade made up.

  1014. Thanks, Al!

    I just replied to Eileen’s post on Harriet…er…Scarriet…LOL

    I’m sure she’ll be appreciative!

    Earl of XX

  1015. Friday night. The work week is over. I finally have a chance to read through the many (almost 100) posts. I will try to respond to a few of them, and I will try to be as succinct as possible.

    First, however, I got to thank for yet another time Clattery MacHinery for creating a space in which poets dissed on line can sound off. The man’s bigness kind of humbles me.

    My response(s) post by post:

    #1216. Mr. Cordle I am satisfied that your several posts have been removed from the Harriet blog. This is unconcionable. In terms of the rewrite of the record it is Orwellian. I have noted your few comments on the blog. When it comes to raising questions you have been far less incendiary than I have been. While I can’t prove it, this leads me to suspect their are people in the poetry industrial complex who have a grudge against you.

    #1217. Mr Brady says he has been banned from Harriet’s. If he cannot post on the blog I must think it is true. While I for one think Mr Brady has shown here just how boring he can be he should not have been banned because of his conversation. As Essex, he has never been banned here. Nor would I have banned him from my own small board. My trick has always been to read a poster’s first paragraph, skim if needed, go to closing paragraph. If the ideas are interesting I go back and dig them out. My sense is that Mr Brady got banned less because of the interminable lengths of his post and more because of his views. (Views I will add I think are whacky.)

    #1226. This is where Gary talks about the voting structure at Harriet’s. I was the first to point out that, in spite of being told otherwise, one person can vote more than once. I tried it. I did it. I voted twice on the same post. Both votes were counted. When I learned as much I lost all faith in the anonymous vote practice. It is fraudulent.

    #1230. Mr. Daly you need to be disabused of a notion. This blog is not a Foetry sponsored site. I mean no disrespect to Foetry and what it does. I admire what it is after. But this blog is independent, always has been. So I resent your characterization which pretty much amounts to a witch hunt tactic of guilt by association. So what exactly do you need to defend?

    #1232. Mr. Woodman, I stand by my comment. You and Mr. Brady are two of the most boring people I’ve encountered on line. Additionally you both have the bad grace of droning on without anything of value worth saying. With you two it is always the same note, again and again. But you shouldn’t have been banned. Just ignored. I do, however, have a problem with your post. It is when you call Henriette “a bitch in heat.” That really is offensive. In my eyes you just got disqualified forever. Henriette doesn’t have to like me or approve me. But she does have the right to speak what she thinks. Man, you have so disqualified yourself in the elder position you seem to need to establish for yourself.

    (By the way, Henriette, I am not two faced. I choose my battles carefully. I choose my allies judiciously. And, anyway, nobody at Harriet’s has challenged management as directly as I have. And nobody has directly said what I have said there: that an anonymous vote is made by a coward.)

    #1236. Yes, Mr. Swords. Maybe you get what some of us have gotten for awhile now. These sites are less here for the culture of poetry than they are for their own culture.

    #1253. Mr. Woodman, out of principle I don’t vote on a Harriet post. Did you vote?

    Finally, I get this. Cordle, Brady, Swords, Woodman, and Conway have all been banned from the Poetry Foundation. Has Henriette been banned? On this I am unclear. It is all wrong. Frankly I don’t much care for what I’ve seen of Brady, Woodman, or Conway. But when poetry gets into the banning business we are all screwed.

    Terreson

  1016. On Foetry vs. Jorie Graham, as one who has some interest in poetry competition, it is a great loss not to have Jorie available to judge. She has sworn off it. All I can hope to do someday is do coax her back into such service as only she can provide for present-day poetry, either that or hope someone else does, or that she comes around herself. I’ve read her, I’ve seen her speak on poetry, and it is a loss.

    C.

  1017. Scintillating discussions on Harriet since they banned all the ‘boring’ people…

    Matthew Zapruder: “Kent, stop calling me Matt.”

    LOL

  1018. Good point, C. — and ironically it’s not at all incompatible with what I just said above (#1254). Jorie Graham occupies one of the most prestigious positions in American poetry, and to have her unable to judge contests because she just might get attacked for it is absurd. She should be one of the leading judges, in fact, one of the voices with the most influence in the country?

    And why can’t Jorie Graham participate? Only because she still insists she never did anything wrong, and she did. She awarded the Georgia Contemporary Poetry Series Prize to the man she was just about to marry, and denied it — and I don’t mean the prize, I mean that Peter Sacks was just about to become her husband!

    I remember being very struck some time ago when Richard Howard expressed outrage that there should be complaints when he awarded prizes to his students. “But I’ve taught almost every poet in America,” was his argument, “and I really do know who is best.” That’s just a rough paraphrase, but the position is clear, and it’s the position Foetry has changed once and for all.

    All Jorie Graham would have to do to become eligible to judge again is to mention publicly somewhere, perhaps even just under her breath, that back in the Bin Ramke days there were ehtical considerations nobody had yet entertained. Among those considerations is a legal one, and that is that an undertaking to provide a certain level of judging for a fee has to be honored. Period. Also that like herself even the great Richard Howard has his persuasions, and if every poet worth reading in America gets the prize, every poet in America will sound just like him. Or her.

    To bad for Billy Collins, to bad for Sharon Olds. To bad for me — and I paid my $25.00 the year Peter Sacks won the prize.

    But I’d love to see Jorie Graham judge again when she’s ready, and I’ll donate gladly to the Tupelo Press matching fund when Jeffrey Levine admits that sending me a form letter pretending to be a personal critque was mean!

    Christopher

  1019. In ‘The Program Era’ Mark McGurl sings a love song to the institution, to the college system of post war American intellectual life and creative writing. He says a true history of the institution hasn’t been written yet because writers are too ‘close’ to this academic reality. McGurl wants to crush the romantic cliche of school as oppressive prison, and goes so far as to deride the street, or the Paris or New York cafe scene, as the place where writers really learn. He starts off with a interesting look at Nabakov, who taught for many years in the U.S. but never became a creative writing teacher, even as he taught at Cornell, one of the early creative writing program colleges. The two most important things are family and school, McGurl insists, and we leave one to go to the other. School has never had such a champion.

  1020. Hi Alan,

    I take that as good news. And technically, it isn’t a lie. It’s Jorie changing her mind. A lie would be if she judged and said she didn’t, or she didn’t judge and said she did. But it is good that she’s back serving the poetry community.

    If it is a well-run contest, she’s only the judge. A judge should be blind whenever and however possible. The problem arises, though, that some poets will be known by their style. All you can do is the best you can do.

    C.

  1021. There is a particular dandification of langauge which allows for entry into the perspicacious zone of knowing nod and blinked grimace, as we promise what went on would never be repeated: Mark McGuiness – for example – who’s a poet few (if any) cells would clang and chime in recognition of – because he is not that stand-outish, in terms of blowing the top of your head off, when first encountering McGuiness’s poetry.

    He wrote to me, in his role as blog-ed of Magma, the ‘community’ bollocks; being accessable and a source for free and open exchanges of ideas and world-views – twice. Both times were unsolicited e mails he’d zinged in his capacity of web-ed moderator; patrolling the etiquette and making sure certain protocols are not breached.

    And it is at this point the first fork in the cognizance of reality enforced, back then in what beyond we never found, hey, blogosville americana, sur l’autobus de l’amour, journeying into the source of sophia, the ancient greek philosophy of wisdom through freindship – bejaysus chap, wot, wot, did the registering minority whim, to the maj steering: solidarity sur l’auto bus de l’amour mon ames – yeah?

  1022. I tiny bit more back to you, C. — Jorie Graham can’t judge as long as the establishment insists that Foetry was, in Travis Nichols’ memorable phrase, (Harriet, Aug 2008), a “sordid ghost.” Harriet echoes this dismissal at every opportunity — here’s the very first comment following Travis’ article, for example: “So many of the comments on Brown’s blog are of the ‘this is a horror story’ variety. No it ain’t. Getting fucking shot because you write poetry is a horror story. This is a boring soap opera.” (Michael Robbins)

    A boring soap opera, that’s what Jorie Graham is up against, and choosing your students is just such a soul-destroying and boring issue — “mind-numbing” she recently called it!).

    In fact denial is where Harriet’s at today, as essentially this is the issue. Are Michael Robbins. Kent what’s his name and Travis going to be allowed to have Harriet as their own private chat room (with a huge admiring audience suitable to their creds and their positions, and a budget), or is it going to be a place where I can speak too?

    And will I be boring?

    I got shut out not for doing a Jack Conway or tangling with a regulation or a moderator but because I had the audacity to say certain tastes in poetry were like a taste for bound feet, that bound feet did create an astonishingly rich and cultured environment but that the practise had a very sad effect on both the little girls crippled in their childhoods and on the men that adored them.

    C. — the biggest problem in the poetry establishment is what is invisible (when the XXXXXX got XXXXXX they kept their XXXXXX!).

    Christopher

    ~~~~

    Note: Edited by Clattery. Words leading to a disgusting thought replaced by XXXXXX.

    • Fair enough, Clattery, I can accept this but for the last XXXXXX which had no sexual suggestion whatsoever.

      Kept their “shoes on” is hardly offensive but very much to the point.

      If you want to delete this reply and put the last 2 words back in I would feel fine.

      And just to say that I admire enormously your work, and the fact that this is Comment #1271 is testament to Terreson’s genius. How lucky we are to able to bring Harriet here in the context!

      Christopher

  1023. What is all this sexual talk? It makes for bad metaphor, and there is just better ways of saying these things, if you want to be taken at all seriously. This isn’t a gentlemen’s club. We should not be talking to keep others away who have different sensibilities that ours. Many people, good people, people who ought to join in the discussion, will stop reading because of the foul language that has begun here this past week.

    There is nothing wrong with choosing your students, if your students are in a contest that you are judging. It would be unfair to not choose them if you thought their poetry was better, which you just might. And just as you cannot tell contest organizers who they can have for judges, you cannot disqualify students from competitions because they went to Harvard.

    C.

  1024. I think you’re being a little unfair here, C. I used the last image to try to put in perspective the dismissive image in the first paragraph.

    I think any woman reading this would have understood exactly what I meant.

    As to your point about students, that’s a fascinating suggestion — and I would agree if the student who won was indisputably the best. The problem is that to ensure this the whole question of favoritism has to be opened up as a real one, and the judges must be super-aware. Given that improvement I could easily agree with you.

    Christophjer

  1025. Hi Christopher,

    No poetry contest will ever be indisputable–unless there is no contest.

    The question of favoritism has been opened up. It will always exist. Almost every poetry competition has its share of disgruntled losers who know theirs were better, or onlookers who swear their choices were superior for very good, “indisputable” reasons.

    This exists in sports too. I’ve been to wrestling tournaments where referees have favored the hometown wrestlers, and you have to wonder whether it has to do with eating over their place and hugging the family after the tournament is over, or whether the familiarity they have with “their” wrestlers over the years simply blinds them to their unfairness. But, without these referees, there would be no tournaments. All we can do is ask everyone to keep their standards high, and then be both as forgiving, understanding, and thankful, as we can as biased onlookers.

    C.

  1026. You say that very well, C. I’m a great fan of European football (soccer) and admire the refs enormously. But are they sometimes swayed by the crowd (what a presence!) or by their personal allegiances? You bet.

    Me too, I would be influenced for sure if a student I had worked with for years and really believed in as a person as well as as a poet came across my desk in a competition that I knew would make or break his or her career. So I would prefer that didn’t happen.

    For me I would prefer to judge in a contest with a fair and conscientious screening process, and would oblige if I were asked to disqualify any competitor that I knew.

    Foetry too would be looking over my shoulder at that moment, and I would be grateful.

    Christopher

  1027. Go the this comment at Don Share’s blog, where he merely rehashes other writings, and Kent Johnnie is making a case for Chicago poets being the most closest America has to the original New York School –

    It is as if he has read joe the poet’s claim, that these jokers, because they’re ‘so self-indulgent and small minded, they don’t realize that those schools of poetry were born not BECAUSE of people like them but INSPITE of..’

  1028. I think what a lot of people don’t understand is that Foetry.com, and the whole ‘foetry’ spirit of anaylyzing poetry/po-biz, is not monolithic; it’s driven by consumer protection, consumer information, a sense of fair play, as well as a variety of philosophical and aesthetic concerns.

    Now, as with anything, individuals will interact with this spirit in various ways. Do selfishness and pettiness and schadenfreude come into play? Sure. Is it a 100% good guy/bad guy split? Of course not. Just as a Portuguese Man-of-War is made up of many organisms, Foetry.com was always the sum of many different individuals.

    I was one of those individuals, a.k.a. Monday Love, and I was always more interested in the more benign social and aesthetic ramifications of foetry. Also, the humor.

    I watched “Anchor Man” again last night, and I love that movie because it’s such a wonderful over-the-top satire of artificial and universal gravitas, as well as a satire of the grotesque aspect of the chauvinistic male, who we keep wishing out of existence, but who keeps bouncing back as strong as ever in all sorts of disguises.

    Should the gravitas of the ‘distinguished poet’ or the ‘distinguished scholar’ be satirized now and then? You’re damn right it should be.

    If Jorie Graham was a truly great poet and mind, if her ‘pee’ was not ‘pee,’ but a golden elixir, I would be more willing to excuse the shenanigans. If contemporary poetry and its accompanying scholarship were really something special, I would be more likely to give it a second chance. But it’s not.

    Jorie Graham has not the sort of philosophical mind which society cannot do without; the more self-advertising poet-students of hers (and others like her) are not saviors of our society.

    The foets have no right to play the ‘gravitas’ card, because they are supporting themselves and a system which is not doing society any good. And they are especially not so important that they cannot be questioned or satirized.

    Should the anti-foets be criticized in turn? Of course. The worst thing is when we put up walls and try to shut down discussion.

    Referees of sporting matches should be questioned and scrutinized by the fans at large. One should not hit an umpire during a game, etc. Of course not. But the game should not, in general, assume officials are always right.

    This is the sort of freedom which I’m talking about: we should never assume anyone or anything is beyond criticism (or assume that: oh yes, she can be criticized, but not by the likes of you’ –everyone should be allowed to be a critic)

    This is the first principle we should always heed–as we all march to the grave with our partial knowledge.

  1029. Des,

    I saw that, too. On the Poetry Foundation site, Kent Johnson responded to a review of Freddy Seidel by talking about his friend Michael Robbins. I don’t know which was more sickening, the transparency of the back-scratch or the back-scratch itself.

    Seidel’s work is weak; the young turks think he’s ‘cool’ and are all hoping to jump on the coat tails of the ‘next big thing.’ Sorry, guys. Seidel’s a put-on. That dog won’t hunt.

    Thomas

  1030. the new Thing by Stephen Burt, talking a young guy up, who is OK, but hardly the god Burt is trying to manufacture.

    Another site where the bores gather is, https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A0=poetryetc

    Poetry ECT

    The thing i am noticing is that the people who are jealous, are copying, or a bit behind naturally because they are not as intellectually competent as we who just spam all day.

    What they do, is ignore you, after having a short to-do trying to beat you in print and failing because of having a lower IQ, and then they imitate you, hoping no one will notice, which shows how thick they are.

    A guy called Jeffrey Side, who is the Mincey Robbins of some gawd forsaken academic shit-tip in Northern England, for whom Ez is top head and really, deluded as whatsiface MR Ra ra royal kings, we’re all queens of make-believe.

    I am wiorking up some very juicy satire i am going to polish right before firing it at the target/s, skeletonizing pretty well, for a European who outgrew the British scene, which is just like America: all academic back slapping so ingrained they are oblivious to their deficiencies as intellectual arties, and really, Trav and Mick, are just little kids who are not that clever.

  1031. Clattery, old bean, I remain focused on the problem of boards, and now blogs, behaving badly.

    http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2009/09/overheard-in-the-hallway-2/#comments

    The above link is to a short blog with, as of this writing, two brief comments. Both are mine. The first post compliments what the blogger is doing. This is the second time he has blogged on what he calls “Overheard in the Hallway.” My sense is that he is recording conversations overheard because he finds poetry in them. This is what I wanted to compliment him on. And to let him know I get his intentions.

    Last night I noticed my first comment had earned a negative vote. I commented again, wondering how someone could have disliked what I said and pointing out the snarkiness of the action. Again as of this writing comment one has garnered 3 negative votes, comment two has 4.

    I think it goes without saying no one could possibly take exception to my first comment. (Second comment would amount to a different sort of case as no one would take kindly to being called a snark.) So I think it is clear that the anonymous like/dislike function can be used, subverted actually, to a use that has nothing to do with conversation and everything to do with personality. If this is not a measure of pee in on line poetry’s pool I don’t know what is. It seems to me that the Poetry Foundation’s managers not only have sanctioned snarkiness, what amounts to some good old fashion shunning, they have taken bad behavior to a new depth.

    The story gets better. Out of curiousity I’ve done some fact finding, which is easy enough to do on line these days. I’ve searched out many of the blog’s main names. Staff members, guest bloggers and writers, and posters who more frequntly comment. Speaking as a poet I have never been in the company of so many writers who have earned their MFAs, PhDs, and who either teach in colleges and universities or who, in some other capacity, are associated with colleges and universities. It is all public information. Anyone can go to the Foundation’s site, choose a name and run it through a search engine.

    To be clear I have nothing against professional poets and writers, nor against poets who make a living in or through some academy setting. I say good on them. I’ll go to the company of poets where ever I can find them. What blows me away is that so many professional poets and writers and teachers of poetry and writing would allow their names to be associated with a site that, to say it again, sanctions snarkiness and group shunning. Where is the sense of honor?

    To say what I’ve said many times, the head is set to wag and wobble. The irony of it all is that, by report at least, the function was created to get rid of certain posters, some of whom are currently posting here. But now it is getting turned inward among competing factions. It is all so predictable.

    Terreson

  1032. I noticed your comments last night and voted red: immediately laughing out loud as i did so T.

    Not because i ‘disliked’ your comment, but as an exercise in guerilla blogging. I may be banned, bnut i can still exercise a mouse on the parts i as a reader am able to.

    The whole red and green is irrelevent: it never got to me too much, or at least, i tried to ignore it, as really, seven reds and you’re concealed, is only the number because that was the average to be concealing Tom, and so Trav chose this number for that reason, not because seven has some deeply significant part to play in any grand-design poetic Trav is working his head out on.

    That’s the truth, and the sooner people speak it for what it is, the more chance there is of creating some fizz.

    That gaffe has dropped dead since the obvious happened and the three people targetted for take-down, no longer appear. The only mistake they made, is it is so obvious, that we got taken out unfairly, as one day we were there, and the next – nada.

    Anyone with half a brain can see that Trav and Don – if he’s involved – showed their hands as petty hitlers. They are just a bit thick in thinking that no one will notice, that the record will nopt show it.

    I am clicking everyone on red, just to put out the red vibe and see how it affects, unless the margin between red and green cam be maximised, especially trav and don, who never appear now: duh ! i wonder why that is.

    Take the long view, i have at least, hopefully, another few years left before i die, and in the time between then and now, oh wot larks Terreson.

  1033. Harriet = Ph.D.s and M.F.A.s acting like children.

    Now John Oliver Simon has apologized for saying it was pretentious to use ‘curate’ to describe producing a poetry reading.

    Simon’s opinion was so hurtful, apparently, that THE ENTIRE POST WITH ALL ITS COMMENTS HAD TO BE REMOVED by Harriet.

    Who would be such a baby to REMOVE a entire post because of one witty negative remark?

    Since the ‘bad eggs’ were banned five days ago, Harriet’s had only two posts of interest: two apologies: Kent Johnson apologizing to Matthew Z. for calling him Matt, and now John Oliver Simon apologizing to the good people of Harriet for his “curate” remark–after it was DELETED.

    It’s only worth sealing off Rome if you have a Rome to protect.

    Just a little tip.

  1034. to the tune of: Sea of Love

    Do you remember your last post?

    That’s the one that I loved the most,

    I want to tell you

    I voted for you.

    Come with me

    To the sea

    Of…red

    Was it something that you said?

    Now you’re swimming in a sea of red

    I want to tell you

    I voted for you

    Come with me

    To the sea

    Of…..RED

  1035. There is plenty of opportunity to speak still, on other parts of the site. I stuck two up on Michael Hofmann’s piece on Frederick Seidel So Goddamn Glamorous, in which Kent makes the connection between Robbins and O’Hara and making sure to elevate Hofmann’s position in a pool he fancies as the one mirroring that which came before him: to the position of Seidel, in his earlier days when Lowell’s understudy.

    There is nothing about Seidel from KJ, apart from comparing him to the Thing school he is trying to spin up, like Burt the bore is his own favourite academic type of print-only winners behaving in the ranks of a wholly synthetic and cynical strand, of NY cool to be contemporary, in lines that will not last beyond fifty years, so dense in contemporary allusions and names of brands and bores few have heard of now, never mind when Now is dead and of interest only to the audience, who i am willing to bet my oeuvre on, will not consider Richols and Nobbins, with anything approaching seriousness; because they have nothing new to say now, as children of the system which does not seek out the best, does not place it in front of the ‘largest audience, as the mission statement suggests, are not leaders and who talk rubbish, very boringly.

  1036. Thanks, Clattery. That was fun.

    It is good to hear, Desmond Swords, that you can still access other areas at the Foundation, which I find interesting. It suggests the Foundation’s banning practice is not general, but only specific to Harriet’s blog. I should like to be the proverbial fly on the wall in the organization’s board room, so to speak.

    I confess I cannot understand Harriet’s managers. They strike me as unprofessional, even new to on line etiquette and protocol. Banning posters for hate speech, threats of violence, repeated personal attacks, pornographic language, and unwanted personally identifying information, this I get. On my own small board I would not hesitate to remove such an offender from the scene. But to ban posters because they are deemed boring, a nuisance, a cyber-space vandal, even a one trick pony, it makes no sense. The best solution for such posters is to ignore them, since, such subjective judgement calls come down to an affront to freedom of speech. Which is something every poet should take quite seriously.

    Terreson

  1037. An Open Letter to Travis Nichols, Board Member in Charge of Blog:Harriet,
    The Poetry Foundation

    Dear Travis Nichols,

    Blog:Harriet is an extremely important expression of the mission of the Poetry Foundation, a major organization to advance poetry all over the world. The Blog is there specifically to provide a forum for poets and lovers of poetry to express their views freely, regardless of what poetry school they come from, who they know, or whom they serve.

    You, Travis Nichols, have just presided over a very messy, introverted coup d’état on Harriet. Not only have you banned a whole group of enthusiastic and positive outsiders, you have protected insiders who have been negative for months, a group who were regularly trashing those who would expand the discourse. Furthermore, and this is really damaging to the Foundation’s reputation, one of your clique is being compared to John O’Hara in POETRY right now. Indeed, you have let Harriet be taken over by a clique who are specifically located in Chicago and want to become a celebrated new ‘Chicago School.’ And you want Harriet to be their own private bandwagon!

    This is disgraceful, and totally against the Foundation’s principles. Indeed, you should resign.

    I myself am one of the posters whom your friend Michael Robbins, the new O’Hara, regularly trashes, and you have done the same yourself, mocking me in public a number of times. Furthermore, way back at the end of May when I was just beginning, I had a whole post deleted, poof, just like that. I complained to the Webmaster and got a very nice letter back not from you but from the On-line Editor herself assuring me the deletion was just the mistake of an inexperienced monitor.

    The subject was already Foetry!

    The On-line Editor also assured me that I could repost what had been deleted, but because four days had past by then, and it was no longer relevant, I didn’t. When I finally did, I posted a much longer and more detailed Comment on the same matter, and was not only thanked by Martin Earl for it but he even bothered to go to my site, read a poem of my own, and to praise it (it was idiot simple and unprofessional, but still he liked it!).

    I think you, Travis Nichols, should have taken a page from Martin Earl’s book. As the editor in charge of Harriet you should be welcoming and tolerant, not engage in cyber-cleansing as you did.

    And those were the good old days, so good that they terrified you, Travis Nichols and Michael Robbins – yes, you felt you were losing control of the field!

    Well, THE FIELD’S NOT YOURS, I’m writing this letter to tell you. Indeed, it’s the biggest mission of Foetry of all to see to it that it isn’t yours, so no wonder you were so afraid right from the start. For opposing the insidious take-overs of poetry people like you is Foetry’s main mission. The Contest was just the tip of the iceberg right at the beginning — because the Contest was so visible it was possible for Alan Cordle to prove that influence was actually being peddled, even in poetry. Indeed, he always made it clear where he was headed, and still is.

    A revelation, influence peddling in poetry, but you still haven’t got it. That’s why you’ve gone to such lengths to hide it!

    Yes, resign, Travis Nichols. You must resign and hand over the management of Harriet to someone not in cahoots with anyone, someone who is large enough to rejoice in the Irish outrage of a Desmond Swords, in the genius fun and challenge of a Thomas Brady, and even in the stutterings of an old poetaster like me.

    We’re not better, just worth it as much as a Michael Robbins, and because we’re also funnier we’re healthier!

    Christopher Woodman

    • Just to say that Harriet punished me first but just as a shot over Tom’s bow. Indeed, they tried desperately hard to accomodate Desmond so as not to be distracted from the target.

      Nobody else was even close to their sights because nobody else bothered them!

      And imagine the folly of risking the whole of Harriet just to disable one voice!

      C.

  1038. For anyone who’s interested, you can learn more about Thomas Brady/Monday Love here:

    http://poetryinc.net/new/viewtopic.php?f=33&t=342&p=4264#p4264

    Unfortunately the membership function on this site is dysfunctional at the moment, but the techies are working to get it up and running again. Indeed, Poetryinc/new is just the first step in getting Poets.net back in circulation.

    The original Poets.net can also be viewed at: http://poetryinc.net/ . There’s a lot more of Monday Love there too, so you can assess what Harriet finds so threatening!

    Christopher

  1039. By Robbins’ beard, can we also ask that Stephen Burt never again write on poetry?

    Ode To A Wedgie

    by Stephen Burt

    I am Stephen Burt.

    That wedgie hurt.

    Poetry! It lifts me from the dirt!

    But oh–that wedgie hurt.

  1040. Are we ever going to find out why that post was removed on Harriet?

    That’s so embarrassing.

    This morning, in the very quiet halls of Harriet, an old friend of John Oliver Simon’s just wrote a little post saying what a great guy John Oliver Simon is.

    Yea, he is a great guy.

    I agree.

    John Oliver Simon made a post go poof and now he’s in big trouble.

    LOL

  1041. This is all pretty much standard operating procedure. Banning, post removal, even the like/dislike function, else where called the good/bad karma button, has been used before. It is tempting to speculate on whether or not Harriet’s managers have been advised on how to proceed or if it has all come to them spontaneously.

    Terreson

  1042. Hello.

    Please forgive for loosening off of several anonymous insults composed under assumed names – to Travis, who (it is my position) lacks ‘commitment to a vigorous presence for poetry’ at his place of work.

    He proves himself ill-equipped to ‘celebrate the best’ : in concert with what grinders are ventriliquising this junior monkey’s mind.

    There are three people here who were the object of a conspiracy to exclude (by dirty tricks), dreamt up by the very people charged with seeking out the best and celebrating them – in order to fulfill the aim of mission statement number one: ‘vigorous presence’, by discovery and celebration, as Ruth Lilly Harriet and Monroe want it to be.

    Monroe was obsessed by all things bardic Irish. If she was around now, there is a fair (50/50) chance I would have been sought out be her, and conferred one of the Lilly Fellowships.

    This is because her own poetic, was scrupulously arrived at after immersing her most serious side, into what excited her most as a poet. The bardic tradition. This was her love: finding out as much as she could, what the reality of the bardic curriculum was.

    So, along with talking me up in general and publishing, perhaps, one special edition on what it is i am doing, being not unlike herself in the respect of seeking filidh ways – closer connection to the crane bag – Monroe would not have reacted to me the same way as Nichols and those jerking his chain.

    July/Augist 09 Poetry, was a special edition on Flarf. When i brought to light the Write-Through form i have more or less made my own – and which has taken Flarf further than anyone – on bardic principles: all i get is slung off silently, in the dead of night, by they without reason other than green eyed jealousy and red hate, of others more eloquent and doing it for free. Talented people.

    Without a word, because Trav is a green mad puppet, being worked by [XXXXXX]. Hypnotised, in the joke shop.

    John Barr, your President, will not be happy all his hard work is being undone by several, virtually mute Staff Writers, not producing at the business end – poetry.

    The talent, the ‘best’ – as they have it – Travis and anon, are excluding ability when we appeared, right beneath their noses. In front of your eyes, the best smiths, skilled in many arts, that one can claim to seek. Hermes, Mercury and Lugus of Celtic myth. Right.

    “…the blog has become an agora where, with suitable noise and excitement, aesthetically diverse poets come to debate the art form.”

    John Barr the foundation President: latest from the top brass. He will not be happy with the silence and swapping of congratulatory one liners by the Staff ceo’s dreaming of being Seidel.

    The smart money is not on the Staff who say little, who are not at the cutting edge. Here’s where it’s at Trav, mate, messenger from the gods, Hermes not Lugh, you wooden nickle.

    ~~~~~

    Edited by Clattery. The XXXXXX was put in where there was unnecessary vulgarity, intended as insult.

  1043. There is at this point no excuse for the use of vulgarity that is taking place.

    I have already mentioned it up thread. I said that such language is used to keep others with different sensitivities from reading through. Those people include children who may happen onto this site because of the jump rope rhymes, and any others who just love poetry but not disgusting thoughts and vulgarity.

    Vulgarity is also used to insult people without making a point. It does not make for good argument, and in fact makes the other person necessarily look good in comparison, the vulgar person through such language falling into substandard territory.

    This site is not for the exclusive use of people who have been banned from other sites because of such behavior. Show respect for each and every person who may stop by, no matter what their sensitivities may be.

    C.

  1044. Thank you very Clatter mac H: particularly thoughtful and fundamentally consisent editorial force, for a present tense vigorousness that is the modo.

    Of and in this moment of the Now. thing Stevie B could swallow and steal as The idea to palm as Critic with the ear to a New Thing, that is the Now.

    Not a dull article authored by an uninteresting straw academic, puppet of the righty-boss ds.

    Share today, investigated claims originating in a pre- post-op watergate major, Lee Minors non-entity on set at the six times six times six million dollar, Mwen Show; doing it, (not) for money or love, but for a farce beyond reality, a human mind. God – perhaps – in either case – gods and goddesses woven within, who’ll rock, outpour and apportion in proper enobling form: myths here chief creators mouth in works of air, at a poetry foundation Here O merry band of winning bores.

    Ho ho ho, Santa Claus is coming
    skating through the stars
    on invisibile reindeer, dancing
    prancing and kicking into life

    cool dudes in a jungle and selling
    bagloads down the chube chip chimney: squeezing tight those hard-core good, good, goodies

    Rudolph brought to we who
    accomplished detachment
    and sight the island goddess
    of memory – with Honey Gob

    Ogma and Amergin the white Knee – who gift men fully, half or none

    knowledge of Eber and Eremon.

    The language of filidh bards, we wrote through centuries of peace, pax, as continual war was waged by all around us: free we walk, witness life in all extremes. Poor or rich, poacher and hare, a gamekeeper’s hound, four square-on plumb cuckoo calls from within, rights up in the eighth year (or not all all) some said. Mighty speaking, in the balance after
    Gaia all earth we thought
    s/he was a Woman, every Lady

    “..lake and mountain has its legend of the spirit-land, some holy traditions of a saint, or some historic memory of a.. hero who flourished in the old great days when..”

    Leanne Sidhe made love in us, who thought clear the Here re- It is not them but, us.

    Vatis R Nobbins

    Mick the Noh id ee ‘ot or wot: phwoar!

  1045. With all due respect to Mr Brady, Mr Woodman, and Mr Swords, you gentlemen have demonstrated over the last two days precisely why you got banned from the Poetry Foundation’s Harriet Blog.

    Should you have been banned? No. Should you have been placed on ignore? You bet the answer is yes.

    For me at least the issues here are all that matter.

    Terreson

  1046. Here’s another way to look at it.

    Every culture has it’s discourse, but one thing all cultures have in common is that if that discourse is what everybody shares it becomes invisible. If it weren’t invisible it would be a choice, a style, or an affectation.

    In Thailand where I live every child begins life with the understanding that it’s not appropriate to criticize anyone who’s older, that age bestows a sanctity on a person that’s inviolable. The famous smile is the result — and of course the childlike nature of the people, or apparently (be careful!).

    And this respect even extends to asking questions. Since teachers are revered in Thai culture, for example, students would never ask a question in class because that would imply the teacher had not taught the lesson properly. A question would imply there might be other answers, for example, which would cast doubt on the expertise and status of a superior.

    You can see where that goes!

    It’s already started now on Harriet, the refrain that Tom, Desmond and I talked 1.) too much and 2.) too often. The fact is we were all three very happy to accept a maximum of 500 words per comment and 5 comments per day, but the rule was never put in practice because some of the most respected members broke it all the time. Michael Robbins himself put up 9 posts in one day, yet Bill Knott was still not done replying to him with great passion and candor. Wonderful! Eliot Weinberger, Joan Houlihan, Martin Earl and Annie Finch and many others posted well over 500 words a time, and the site was much enriched by the depth and detail that that length contributed.

    I think we’ve already dealt with “boring” as grounds for banning someone, and I think what I’ve just said deals with length and frequency.

    Yet Tom and I and Desmond Swords did overstep a mark of some sort at Harriet, obviously — because we all three got banned. But what was it? What ‘fault’ did we share in our discourse, the three of us — so bizarrely different and not knowing each other personally at all? And why was it so difficult to say what that was — because I never even got a reply to my numerous demands from Travis Nichols for a clarification? Indeed, why have so many trumped up cases been brought against us?

    Something in the discourse we all share in our culture, I would say. Something that even our poetry culture tells us we must not suggest or question even if we do end up like Thailand with no challenges and no answers!

    Tom got the closest to saying what that was, I think — which is why the whole Like/Dislike apparatus was set up to trap him.

    Tom?

    Christopher

  1047. duh!

    I have just realised what it is you reffered to Clatterbrain hack M.

    [XXXX] is the ex-Rated hand up y’all in the triangle: Texas-Lousiana-Cajun aurality ID, in the four word string edited out because you deemed the snap-shot ventriliquist working a puppet, the puppeteer creating vulgarity in only the mind of y’all who censor the essentially comedic premise of a handrag speaking up for themself, inert rag, painted doll, shadow hinting at a simulacrum, far far away ersatz of derivotink anonymous composite from a mid-way anywheresville of contemporary America, wrapped tight, flaky, defined by flaw programme watermark in the A of aint it just plutonomy, a leaked Citebank document froths: one percent own ninety five percent of capital. Xan Brooks reports, from the Venice Film Festival – where Moore “..rolled into the Venice film festival like a conquering hero with his latest work, Capitalism: A Love Story.”

    Feted for making it resonate with a global audience, in Italy with the gods of Now: Clooney, Pitt, Tilda and the truth about Hugo Chávez, Stone’s new documentary: South of the Border, in which “you’ll get to hear a far different side of the “official” story.” Stone wrote.

    The film premiers tonight.

    Stone said the film came about after having difficulties getting his two previous documentaries on Castro, and Stone’s 1986 film Salvador, “about the US involvement with the death squads of El Salvador.”

  1048. All three “struggled to be distributed in North America” Stone said, and goes onto tell how he met Chavez and found him to be “not the man I’d read and heard about in the US media.”

    “Was Hugo Chávez really the anti–American force we’ve been told he is?” Stone asked, and discovered that “once we began our journey, we found ourselves going beyond Venezuela to several other countries, and interviewing seven presidents in the region, telling a larger and even more compelling story, which has now become South of the Border.”

    He believes Americans must question the “role of our media in demonising foreign leaders as our enemies” “the consequences of” which “can be brutal” “based on our experiences in Iraq.”

  1049. That’s it Chris.

    When the official Poetry Ireland organization started up their forum, the exact same thing as happened here, happened there – too much blather: a mass of theatrical drivel from one self-obsessed bore vomitting into the chat-gaffe, putting off the less windy and generally, presenting the moderation policy with challenges on how to live with, as per the mission statement, of inclusion and sharing a usual politeness with clear and simple rules.

    A word limit was set and now that site has a set of regular spammers at jam and riff, waffling about the whole shebang, from ditty to orphic hymns.

    But Trav and the organ-grinders, failed in every respect, from start to finish – a travesty of poor behaviour all round for what’s supposed to be – in their own words – ‘the best’.

    The best what?

    People who cannot speak of poetry if others disagree with their windy issues of being unable to write because of others: balderdash, the whole darn nine yards and further out the park. Lies, total fabrication. Great.

  1050. Christopher,

    What you wrote in #1297 says it very well. Thanks.

    You, Alan Cordle, Desmond Swords, and myself are soooo different–I was just thinking that the other day.

    Harriet mostly features polite, dull, po-biz careerist-types who bring very little to the table.

    These types are the ones who get most offended by unique, revolutionary voices, because next to all that color, they look gray.

    It’s why the general public has no interest in poetry in our times. At a glance, they see it’s gray.

    One can’t fake interest.

    Our po-biz denizen can travel the world and speak a thousand languages and run hundreds of poetry conferences and invite exiled poets from ‘exotic’ lands and interview them and set up offices in foreign countries, starve for poetry, live on the street, or get three MFAs, one from Harvard, one from Brown, and one from Iowa, publish a hundred books of poetry, have a million dollars and invest it in poetry, have a thousand poet friends, teach poetry and study poetry and run retreats, and write manifestos, but if one is DULL, people will finally not be interested in you, though they may never say it to your face.

    This is the horror that po-biz toadies and hacks wake up to every morning: “Even though no one says it, I’m a bore. The work that goes into figuring me out isn’t worth the effort. I’m a nullity. But as long as everyone is polite and no one hints at the fact that I’m a bore, I’ll be alright.”

    Well, of course, we all know it’s silly to live with this kind of fear, but many, many people DO, and many, many people in po-biz DO.

    But such fear is inane, and it is WHY, in most cases, our po-biz charlatan is boring in the first place.

    So what should the rest of us, who are unique, interesting, and friendly, do?

    Should those of us who have healthy egos walk about with plastic smiles on our faces and act as if everything is OK, just because the toadies and quacks are uptight? Should the good guys walk around on egg shells, careful not to offend the Michael Robbins and the Don Shares and the Travis Nichols’ of the world?

    You see, the toadies can sense this. The quacks can sense when they are around a Thomas Brady who MAY SAY SOMETHING that will make them look bad, no matter how polite and on-topic Thomas Brady is, because they can smell it, they can smell their own fear: ‘here is a unique voice that MAY embarrass me.’

    So I was banned from Harriet without a warning or a word, even though Harriet cannot point to a SINGLE POST of Thomas Brady’s that was offensive.

    I was banned because of a mere tickle of fear, without object. It was merely felt. It will never be known. It will never be articulated. It was a Wordsworthian shudder that will never transform itself into a poem. It was only the beating of a lily-livered heart.

    Thomas, earl of xxxxxx

  1051. “This is all pretty much standard operating procedure. Banning, post removal, even the like/dislike function, else where called the good/bad karma button, has been used before.”

    Exactly, Tere. Pee in the pool.

    Look at Harriet now: yellow and empty.

    The administrators banned the life out of it.

    I laughed in the face of the thumbs-downs. Others are not as confident in themselves.

    Just watch. Harriet is going to get rid of that function any day now. It was just a cynical tool and now its turned on its masters. Quite funny. They’ll have to get rid of it.

    I could have lived with it, but I don’t need a flattering environment with which to thrive; most do. I knew I would get more readers than others, even if it meant clicking to see my comments, which I’m sure was happening, and that was the final straw–the Harriet administrators saw I was being read, and I’m sure it enraged them.

    I like freedom. Most don’t. I love rules when I’m driving in my car, and a few rules when I’m discussing poetry–that’s OK, too. But if you’re going to ban people because they don’t bow down and scrape and flatter…well, poetry is not a tea party. If you want to have a tea party where everybody is polite and nobody disagrees about anything important, go ahead and have one. But don’t run a poetry BLOG and pretend you are interested in poetry, when you’re only interested in polite agreement.

    That’s why this ‘pee in the pool of on line poetry’ topic is so tricky.

    It’s a curve; it’s not a simple: polite = good, rude = bad.

    Thomas

  1052. Post #1282:

    “I noticed your comments last night and voted red: immediately laughing out loud as i did so T.

    Not because i ‘disliked’ your comment, but as an exercise in guerilla blogging. I may be banned, bnut i can still exercise a mouse on the parts i as a reader am able to.”

    Now what exactly makes this behavior any different, less snarky, than that of anyone else using the anonymous vote function?

    Terreson

  1053. Hello T.

    I’ve always maintained that the red-green ‘handy icons’ are, as I said to you on Harriet: irrelevant.

    I chuckle, because the way i see it, there is a fundamental difference of opinion on this between us. You ask is it not to snark by clicking red?

    I would say, yes, if you buy into the premise that Travis tried to set up as a serious one. Which was, that these ‘handy icons’ will help – not you the poster, us the community, but – ‘us’ who is Travis and one or two others, for the sole reason of getting rid of three people who the Staff at Harriet, the professional Writers, proved themseves incapable of speaking to, as anything other than snarks themselves.

    If you buy into Nichols sales spiel, that the ‘handy’ ‘dislike’ and ‘like’ function was for some love and peace goal Trav and his colleague/s have as the one and only motivating force for them turning up to work every day and earn their dollar: fair play – but i am inclined to be sceptical and hence, that’why i say they are irrelevent, because Travis is lying about why they were brought in.

    So, the next thing is: how do you deal with it?

    I found my own way, ended up not caring, seeing it was all a con, and just having a gas by seeing how this colour and number combination, affects others (like you) to the extent you take it seriously. That if you get a red, it upsets you, that someone who is an idiot to begin with. If a person clicks seriously on the red, genuinely expressing a ‘dislike’ of what you say, when what you say is inoffenive and very interesting and readable – and if we get narked by it: it merely shows we need to believe in ourself more and care less about what others who are jealous, think of our writing.

    In the greater scheme of life: the scale in which real poems stand alone and no amount of red or green, can change – we are all alone, and to reach the poetry within us and bring it out in print, means speaking who we really are.

    The problem with po-biz, is too few get beyond a strategic networking stage in which honesty of opinion – Criticism, is traded for an amount: the number of ‘green’ participants who will say, or ‘click’ they ‘like’ what we write, for the sole purpose of us returning the same.

    That’s my theory anyway. And there is nothing wrong with that: it’s just that the current contemporary state of play, has radically changed the old ways of doing po-biz, which has effectively removed the mechanisms used to keep any opposing view, the ‘red’ ‘dislike’ what we are saying.

    Before the WWW, a cultural phenomenom such as Foetry, would not have happened, because Cordle’s writings would have had to be printed in a hard-copy publication, in order to be heard in the first place – by a very few people who buy poetry mags.

    It would have been very minor, because the weight of opinion in the small caste who choose to believe their life and poetry are one and the same – would be to dismiss Cordle as a troublemaker with an unfounded grudge against the community whose entire existence was based on a skewed premise. That what constituted the poetry Community, collective, gang, mob, mass: poets per se, are those who appear in hard-copy print-publications, with one’s worth and reputation as a verbal artist, (with the odd exception) measured by the ‘credits’ and appearances in the various poetry rags, on a sliding scale of prestige and reputation within the – now – ever more defunct cliques of poets tied to one another by where they met, personal contact, live scenes, where you publish, and all the rest of it.

    This system works fine, only when anyone we don’t want to read, stays unpublished. They might know they are talking sense, and we might feel the wind up us when we hear what they say; but if what they say is never broadcast, we do not have to worry one iota, because they are just a loon ranting in an empty phone booth, talking to themself.

    But now, this model is defunct as people like Cordle, can just speak online and, irony of ironies, garfner ten times more of an audience for going against the, some say, shallow, superficial online etiquette, that is more about acquiring as many fwends as will slate that hollow thirst for having 1 million myspace pals that the superstar rockers get – than wanting to hoke deeper into poetry, per se.

    So, the thumbs up and down, especially being such low numbers, who really cares. I mean, this is the lowest form of show-biz, and we should keep an overiding sense of perspective, which needs humour to leaven out the sad reality that being a poet, for the majority of them, involves a fan-base of less than triple figures.

    Most poetry readings by even the greats, apart from Heaney, Muldoon and a few others, are attended by, often far, less than 100 people. That’s the bottom line.

  1054. oops, syntactic errata

    If we get a red, for writing innoffensive, interesting, original and readable text, and it it upsets us, that someone who is an idiot to begin with, doesn’t like us: that is interesting, and shows we do not recognise the truth of our writing. The power it can have. Not in the exterior, superficial ‘i think you’re fab’ shitck of one-line facebook fwends strategicvally liking us because our fame is higher than theirs; but in the effect it has in the Reader’s mind.

    You can tell when your writing has worked online: when the flow stops and there is a pause before someone else comes in. I left one the other day on Harriet and it stopped the conversation for a full day and more; and i knew, everyone had read it and thought – whatever. It worked. And that faith, knowing you are the one person who is right, in a room full of ninety nine others all agreeing they are, ignoring yo – because to acknowledge your truth means questioning their own, often tortuously laboured for way of being a poet, lots of pain involved getting there, to wherever the poet attains: that faith in oneself, is all we need to become a poet.

    We exist as poets ‘in our own esteem’ says the main man, Mossbawn magus, Ballaghy bard, Derry laureate who is the person most in po-biz would like to claim as a freind.

    Take no notice of ’em.

  1055. Tere,
    Here’s another way of answering your challenge to Desmond Swords in #1305. He called his spraying Red indiscriminately at Harriet “an exercise in guerilla blogging” while you felt it was just snarky. And indeed it would have been just snarky if the situation had been pukka to begin with.

    That’s a Hindi term from the British Raj still current in the U.K. today, and means right or proper. It originally meant ripe in the sense of good to eat. Like a mango.

    The situation at Harriet changed dramatically when the management introduced a control function specifically aimed at eliminating one poster, Thomas Brady, who was not considered pukka.

    Here in the U.S.A. not so long ago, when the soda fountain management introduced a control function to prevent one race from sitting down at the counter, it was inevitable that the counter would have people sitting down all over the place out of protest. More than just not pukka or snarky, this behavior was financially inconvenient and ruined the soda fountain’s business. So the cops were called in and the sitters were jailed, clearing the space for business as usual.

    I think you, Tere, were the first poster here who commented on the new Like/Dislike function on Harriet, and indeed you got it spot on. That was comment #1183, and you posted it way back on July 22nd, the very day Travis Nichols shut me away for having sat down at his soda fountain to protest a policy that was designed to exclude that pariah (from the Raj too, an “Untouchable!”), Thomas Brady. You wrote, “I find the feature anti-intellectual and bound to force a certain homogeneity of thinking among poets online.”

    If you wanted to go over the top and pull a Christopher, you could have substituted my skin-color analogy for your “homogenity of thinking.”

    And that would be my defense for any of us who have helped to bring Harriet to its knees. It would also be my argument to you, Tere, that you should not continue to participate there. You just lend it legitimacy.

    I’d also like to be very clear that in my view the Poetry Foundation is not a Raj at all, and I have no other target for my wrath other than Travis Nichols’ mangement at Harriet. On the other hand, if there are indications that his brand of parochialism is spreading, dealing with it now once and for all would be a huge blessing for us all, as the Foundation is so important to poetry.

    Christopher

  1056. “Finally, I get this. Cordle, Brady, Swords, Woodman, and Conway have all been banned from the Poetry Foundation. Has Henriette been banned? On this I am unclear. It is all wrong. Frankly I don’t much care for what I’ve seen of Brady, Woodman, or Conway. But when poetry gets into the banning business we are all screwed.

    Terreson”

    LMAO…..Oh really? The feeling is mutual but since I have credentials up the wazoo, I don’t really care what you thinkin Terry. But I do think you missed the whole point. YOU think it’s somehow about YOU. Duh, it isn’t pal. It’s about ME. You just don’t get it. No wonder they banned you. At least I get banned for telling people to take a flying fork. You get banned because you’re insignificant. I mean what’s up with that?

  1057. Conway of angelic honey tongue in the jacks, Ter gat clattering mac MT mind y’all shebong on and on about: human warmth, wit, wisdom and special, incredibly treasured tat, trinket for blathering, poetry – up in arms. Nobody cares, (or belongs) anywhere but their very own public Here. Ear of the world, apprehend a sound pouring into clones, out sleeping with fishes, supporting twin ribboned galactic domes – in which intelligence flits, soul-jah see, making it concrete, vis a vis poetry per se – yeah – square-on plumb and being whatever it is.

    I have read your stuff there T, and also noticed

  1058. A new challenger for laurels?

    What i detect there, is a silence before the outbreak of absurdity.

    Such a one and then another one will engage in polite snark, offering little in the way of genuine scholarship or original knowledge: now the only gravity that gaffe ever had, is no longer making Harriet happen as the only reality it knew.

    A lot of academic contendors will enter the ring, hinting of much and delivering nothing of interest over the short run it will take them to expend what hand they think they are holding about poetry per se.

    Contestants who who feel they’re suited to speak in the tenor, form, argot and jargon, the spam-language and cod-philosophic con that Travis Nichols instigated as a strategy to rid the blog he is paid to make a success, of the most successfull person there for putting forward cogent starting points and comprehensive arguments on contemporary poetry.

    The game’s up. We won. The rest is just conversation between academics, born on campus to professor parents, believing they are somehow born a ‘best’ poet, only if one’s folks taught on the production lines spamming through the flow of average, middle mass America.

    A fallacy which explains the delusion of most bore there: sharing the identikit day to day ambition articulating itself earnestly as somehow worth hearing. As though keys and coda of Poetry, some are nearer to discovering, because we have a paid audience of undergraduates, in whose interesst it is to ‘like’ us (to our face).

    Honest talk. How much?

    Try buying that. It is easy to spot, because it flows and does not exhibit one important sign dishonest talk does: the one track focussing on, not our own well of ghosts within we have to sing with – but the other mind speaking freely, stuff we want to say but feel we never could because we cannot speak much as ourselves, only as the people we are trying to present to the audience online: friends, reds and greens, a mass mindset that is very difficult to break into lucidity from if you have been writing for 8 years and are still unhappy.

    If writing makes a person feel crap, full of hate and jealousy: it is the wrong route for someone seeking happiness via the act of poetry.

  1059. About #1309. Actually, Mr Conway, I’ve not been banned. At least not as of earlier today (Sunday). But here is something to take your mind off things.

    http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap090905.html

    About #1306. Anyone who doesn’t take seriously poetry and the exchanges between poets I don’t get.

    Last note and incited by #1308. I’ve met all kinds of people who’ve subverted poetry to their own ends, from sexual predators to ideologues to egomaniacs to poetry board managers to ambitious MFAs. I distance myself from them all. In my view there are very few activities that distinguish a human animal from other animals. Poetry is one.

    So I’ll keep to this on line fight without turning to the likes of Woodman, Brady, Swords, or Conway whose motives I question anyway.

    Terreson

  1060. Tere,
    Yes, you have “distanced yourself from them all,” and I think everybody who values this site respects you enormously for it, and has gained from your inimitable way of writing about it too. “The Pee in the Pool” has become a sort of Bible for us all.

    Which makes me question all the more why you feel you want to continue at Harriet under the present circumstances? Indeed, in every post recently you have knocked Harriet’s management as against everything you stand for, and I agree. In fact, I would say it has been far more ham-fisted than anything you ever experienced at Poets.org, for example — yet you contiunue to affirm that management by participating as if nothing had happened!

    Is the difference just that you can’t stand those that have taken a stance against Harriet, as you’ve just said above? Or that you want to show the world that you’re better than they are? I hope it’s not the latter, because if it is it would indicate that you’re in it not to do good but to be the leader.

    Which would be such a waste, because you are the leader already and don’t have anything more to prove.

    I’d also like to say that this whole situation has been a terrible strain on me personally. I don’t enjoy surfing the web as such at all, and at the moment go only to Harriet, Clattery and Poets.net — and of course have a look at whatever comes up on this thread (I loved that nova!). Indeed, I originally came on-line only after I got that famous “template letter” back in 2006, and boy did that set me on fire. As it is I will consider I’m finished when Joan Houlihan, Travis Nichols and a few others finally come out and admit that activism like mine has done poetry a whole lot of good.

    That’s all I need — not a perfect world, just one where sensitive poetry people are able to get a bit beyond self-interest and denial.

    The same would apply to you, dear Tere, because I’m really much easier to deal with than you think. When you come out and dismiss me, saying you question my motives, for example, I feel you’re just supporting Joan Houlihan’s argument.

    I’m a loser, Joan Houlihan says, and all my protests are just sour grapes. No, she affirms, there’s nothing wrong whatsoever with awarding the prize to your husband, colleague, student or baby-sitter when you’re one of America’s greatest poets or publishers or editors.

    So is that you’re case against me? That I shouldn’t protest Travis Nichols’ regime on Harriet because he’s providing us with such a great space to talk about poetry on? Is it because the participants who continue there are so fair and such sensitive poets? Do they fill you with insight and special affinities?

    Christopher

  1061. The theatre that is Here, it is full of hot air and really, at the end of life, what’s there but to say – we tried to be heard above the din of others less eloquent to name their God.

    Great photo, very deep space.

  1062. And Tere, just to clear the air if it needs it, I do apologize to you for the rough words I once spoke to you way back in June on Harriet (I’m sure you will remember), That was uncalled for, and I certainly learned a lesson.

    We’re colleagues in the battle against unethical board management, and mustn’t weaken our message with needless internecine strife.

    I hope you can accept that sorry. I mean it.

    Christopher

  1063. Terreson,

    I want to second what Christopher has said. You do have a ‘stand above the fray’ presence which should be admired by everyone. You have a ‘this is what really matters, folks’ vision we can all gain from.

    I sense that’s what we’re all trying to do at this moment: OK, what really matters?

    A moment of silence to reflect on that, please.

    I’m thinking good thoughts about all of you.

    Thomas

  1064. Gary,

    Thanks for that link.

    The “Chicago School” is making its move!

    What, exactly, is the “Chicago School?”

    Kent Johnson admits it has no distinguishing characteristics.

    By Kent Johnson’s own admission, it is a mere list of names–which include friends of Kent Johnson, like Michael Robbins.

    Kent Johnson (who lives in Illinois) mentions something about Chicago “taverns.”

    Iowa, according to Johnson, is not a “school,” but a “career” and “Boston has fallen into the sea.”

    Kent Johnson also says something about Stephen Burt becoming the next Helen Vendler. I suppose he says this because both Vendler and Burt both know Lucie Brock-Broido? And why would anyone want to be the next Helen Vendler? To annoint the next Jorie Graham? What critical formulations has Vendler given the world? I suppose this means that Stephen Burt will soon have magic powers and be able to convince us all that the “Chicago School” is the Next One True School, and the “Chicago School” will change poetry forever. Yes, that must be it.

    Thomas

  1065. I suspect you may be getting a bit nervous, C., that a hi-jack is in process. But what Tom is talking about is precisely the same management abuse as Terreson exposed in “The Pool,” only on a much higher level. He’s not talking about Moderators or even Administrators anymore, but how the whole management structure in the Business of Poetry is in essence a Ponzi scheme. Huge profits are being made somewhere, my god, just look at Jorie Graham and Helen Vendler, so if I invest my two cents in Robbins or Johnson I may be able to get in on the gravy train too. We’re all infected in a Ponzi scheme, and we’re all suckers!

    And when I say that I don’t mean at all that Jorie Graham or Helen Vendler don’t deserve their positions, anymore than Bernard Madoff didn’t have a whole lot of investment expertise which helped him to acquire all those beautiful mansions and that glamorous life. He did that, he was brilliant, eminently successful, and almost certainly a financial wizard, perhaps even the best!

    What follows is also not a parallel. Jorie Graham and Helen Vendler did not encourage anyone to invest in their reputations — which remain wholly intact. We made the choice to throw all that money at them of our own free will, just as we put money on Kent Johnson and Michael Robbins in the hope that we can rise up there like the cream along with them.

    In other words, even though the whole poetry edifice is a bubble and has already collapsed, we still invest in it!

    On on-line poetry sites we invest in the Mods and Admins too, we give them the power and suck up to them to give us the sense we belong in there too. In my very short cyber life I saw this happen so many times, but I had never heard it so well described as by Terreson, how the Mods and Admins become monsters — like Bernard Madoff!

    Christopher

    • HI Christopher,

      What I’ve been detecting at the hi-jack level is the exclusivity of the hi-jack, how what takes place among the present group keeps out others, versus inviting dialogue. This was done through foul language, but there are other ways too, such as the insistent establishment of a political side, such as the banner that Jorie Graham face is on, rallying cries. It’s not quite flaming. But hi-jacking, yes, that would be the word.

      C.

      • Fair enough, C. — I hear you and will refrain from mentioning Jorie Graham again. But as far as foul language is concened, that’s a new one for me, never having been brought up for that one before. But I shall try to be even more careful.

        This is a great site, and a real service to poetry. So I shall abide by your guidelines.

        Christopher

  1066. I still don’t like the way I put that, because it has nothing to do with the quality of Jorie Graham’s poetry, and I personally get great pleasure from Helen Vendler, who certainly makes criticism fly. It’s just that I have been hurt so peronally so many times by Jorie Graham’s very poor ethical sense. Yes, I’m a ponzi too, I admit it, as I invested $25.00 twelve times in the Georgia Contemporary Poetry Series over the years, for example, only to find out that sometimes the slush pile never even got read!

    And were my books better than those that won? That’s not the point — I put my life and soul in what I submitted to Georgia, and the fact Jorie Graham had so little respect for other poets in the pursuit of her own personal entrenchment leaves me no respect for her as a person, or a poet, whatsoever.

    That’s better.

    Christopher

  1067. A surprising and, yes, even refreshing dialogue is now taking place on the Harriet topic right here http://alancordle.com/blog/?p=3704

    So C., we’re trying to keep our hats separate, we really are. But if you want to see the whole head you’ve got to straddle the two shoulders as well.

    Christopher

  1068. Here the ear be heard woodie, sur l’autobus de l’amour en littérature: for a bore who cares onboard, about where the plough we’re routing’s gonna end up, when in a chamber of relationships only those detained know: suited and wearing mufflers, gloves, hoods – you know

    like

    chained to concrete

    poetry

    posts

    at the Poetry Society Forum

    ~

    Feel free to break the silence in an empty room at the Society Forum. It is a year old, with the cumulative total posts, being close to zero.

    I created it toward the end of last summer: part of a poetic practise, that came about after a Slough poet in London, Niall O’Sullivan, was (i thought) unfairly singled out, as a sacrificial offering to the ego of an administrator controlling the panes of the one poetry forum in a kingdom, that people volunteer to perform in: as the ones not here but elsewhere where they go head to head in the who knows most about poetry games which make me chuckle. Happy – you know?

    As much intellectual exchange happening in it, as there is when Forrest Gump’s candy box got discarded by Tom Hanks, high at the top of a leaning tower in Niles, deep into an immediate outward space before it became litter and exhibit number 99, at the supreme court of poetic fair play: on the tip of Slievemore – madness and reality separated by the sidhe of who we are, sailing a container run on air, intelligence at the helm, steering life through what time spools out, denouement and untying at the port of a psychopomp sea horse riding us across to a land of the everliving spiritual airs, where silence is: sounding ineffable words within, a chamber of soul we are at: that.

    Poetry Cafe

    • [Below this bracketed comment is a copy of a post made on 9/9/2009 at 12:20pm. But, it will not stay in its place for some reason, so I will delete it. The WordPress software keeps it as the last post in the thread. Note that people are referring to the out of place post. This is it:]

      It’s alright to bring up Jorie Graham and Helen Vendler as such, to discuss what they’ve done in poetry. It’s more the polarization, the us-versus-them march. I’m not sure such polarities exist as such. Jorie Graham and Helen Vendler certainly have dedicated their lives to poetry, so those of us with a modicum of such dedication share with them.

      Not that they would, but we should consider that at all times, they should feel okay about commenting in the thread themselves. There should be room for Jorie to come in and say, “That’s not how it is.” Otherwise, there is no dialogue, just political beat-the-enemy-up rallies, pee if you will, with lines that outsiders would not want to cross.

      C.

  1069. Why couldn’t Jorie Graham do that, C? I don’t understand what Tom or I have said that precludes that.

    On Alan Cordle’s site Michael Robbins has just come in, and after a brief exchange we found a wonderful solution — and everybody feels so much lighter. Also, I had nothing bad to say about Helen Vendler at all, just praise for her, and I also made it clear Jorie Graham’s credentials were not at all in dispute. Just as Terreson discusses very openly his disappintment with Colin Ward/Kaltica’s behavior on Poets.org, and at very great length, Colin Ward himself still seems to have felt free to come in to defend his position. So why not Jorie Graham?

    Joan Houlihan herself has come on-line to discuss differences with me on a number of occasions, the last time quite recently on Harriet. So why couldn’t the same thing happen here?

    I do respect you, C., but I don’t quite see what you’re getting at. If it’s the persuasiveness of our arguments, or the clarity of the cases we present, there’s nothing much we can do about that but just stop. On the other hand, Terreson made his cases in great detail, and I’d say they were indisputable too. Should he also back off?

    Or Oliver Stone, or Michael Moore?

    Christopher

  1070. I think professors Graham and Vendler would be more likely to come here if we didn’t over-flatter them. They’re just people like us. They’re not gods. They’ll not dare speak, if they think we expect profundities. There are no idols in po-biz. It’s a small, plain place.

  1071. To note, comment #1328 was made before comments #1325-1327. I don’t know how they got inverted either. [Edited in, and now I refer to #1329. It’s as if it is staying at the end of the thread for some reason.]

    Hi Christopher,

    No clear and persuasive case has been made. I have to throw it back and say that something is clear to you and you have been persuaded.

    I’m not completely sure why the Jorie Graham challenge is being brought up in the manner that it is. It seems more as a prop, especially in the context of the foul language. It’s like saying, “If you like to swear and put down the poetry establishment, Jorie Graham, for instance, then we’re here to do that.

    The cases of Colin Ward and others were ongoing when they were brought up. The solution was to come here and discuss the matters when they could not be discussed so freely at a different forum.

    The issues at Harriet are ongoing, but I do not have the connection between that blog and Jorie Graham. So this gets political, as if we were all at a park at were holding up placards with Karl Marx’s picture on it, swearing all the while. It’s not conducive to discourse.

    But I have to say, that in responding to you, when you made such an assumption that is had to do with the clarity of your case and the persuasiveness of your argument, I felt that the discussion was manipulative. I never indicated any such thing. That was made up, and I was propped up to accept what you would wish my intentions had been. Who wants to argue this way? It’s a method if closing off either through alienation or an exhaustive tangent leading nowhere.

    C.

  1072. Perhaps the banning issue is becoming a bit more clear, here, Clattery. The individuals in question, as Terreson earlier pointed out, did at Harriet exactly what they have done here: commandeer every thread and literally bury them under an endless stream of posts and words. When people objected, they responded in their own defense with yet another sixteen-thousand word post. This is known as ‘unclear on the concept’.

  1073. pssst! Dodger, it’s only words.

    Smile an everlasting smile, a smile can bring you
    near to me.
    Don’t ever let me find you gone, cause that would
    bring a tear to me.
    This world has lost its glory, let’s start a brand
    new story now, my love.
    Right now, there’ll be no other time and I can show
    you how, my love.

    Talk in everlasting words, and dedicate them all to
    me.
    And I will give you all my life, I’m here if you
    should call to me.
    You think that I don’t even mean a single word I
    say.
    It’s only words, and words are all I have, to take
    your heart away

  1074. Clattery, old bean, this is in response to post #1320.

    To start off again the way I sometimes do, let me be clear about something. So far as the po-biz hunt involving Graham, Houlihan, Cordle, and all the others, I categorically do not have a dog in the chase. I could care less about the affair that some still seem to have the need to scratch open like a wound they do not want to see healed. To be really honest, I think any poet who takes a poetry contest seriously owns a poor, if not beknighted, soul. As one British reporter summarizing the case that led to the so-called Jori Graham rule said, poetry contests in America amount to a business, and a profitable one at that. Any fool that enters a contest that requires a fee of admission is missing the point of business for profit. Then there is this. Graham gets taken to task by Foetry for forwarding her students. While her one mistake involving someone with whom she was in a relationship was plain stupid, any poet who puts forward her students is simply demonstrating an age old practice called patronage. Given how little profit there in fact is in poetry, without patronage the pickings would be even slimmer. On the other hand, and in my view, Foetry’s main driver back then acted equally as stupidly, even dishonorably, by working anonymously. My code is this: if you cannot sign your name to what you do don’t do it.

    As for the hi-jacking here, that is precisely what has happened. Nor is this the first time the two principals involved have done as much. By my reckoning it is the third time, at least. The blog was not committed to problems in po-biz. The blog was committed to problems encountered on line. Perhaps a different direction will now be pursued. I am willing to listen, but only if I can listen to both sides. I have heard the foetry supported side so many times now, and always to the same self-aggrandizing end, I kind of gloss over the arguments, such as they are, that get presented.

    One last thing about post #1320. Its author says: “But what Tom is talking about is precisely the same management abuse as Terreson exposed in “The Pool,” only on a much higher level.”

    Can’t anyone else see just how this sentence trivializes on line poetry and minimalizes on line poets? Rather than chasing down poetry contest scandals the author might get a peek into what is more vibrantly going down these days by chasing on line, usually unvetted, poets, than what is happening in poetry’s Madison Squares. This is what matters, for me at least.

    Terreson

  1075. “pssst! Dodger, it’s only words.”

    “only” words have changed the history of our world:

    Siddhartha, Jesus, Mohammed, Lao-tzu, Plato, Socrates, Shakespeare, Hitler, Churchill, Lincoln, Kennedy, Martin Luther King.

    “only words”, indeed.

    .

  1076. Yeah Terreson y’all should put up a new post that will break the possible negative spell that a 1331 comment thread can collapse into and slowly seize as the page gets – by far – one of the largest, most vibrant, honest refreshing screeds of conversational intelligence – in contemporary poetry.

    The chances of an IT seizure due to the weight of deposits, bode in threads of this size and simple complexities which proove to any eye, in this age and the ages to come – we were the ones closest to the Real Poetry School.

    ~

    Start a new thread, in a light hearted vein and lets move on. Travis Nichols is a nonentity writing about his favourite martini. That says it all.

  1077. Anonymous work, anonymous heroes, anonymous writing, has a long and noble history.

    I have no idea who ‘terreson’ is or who ‘clattery machinery’ is, and why does it matter in this format? People who use their real names on Harriet, or here…so what if they use their real names, or fake names…I couldn’t care less. I care what they SAY in THIS MEDIUM, and in THIS MEDIUM it makes no difference what your ‘name’ is; it matters how good a writer you are.

    You can criminally violate another person’s privacy whether that other person has a fake name or a real name, but in both cases it is WRONG, and the person who uses a fake name is not doing anyone any harm simply because they use a fake name. It is the people who want to sniff out superficial and private half-truths about other people who are obsessed with ‘real names’ as opposed to ‘fake names.’ Anonymous is actually a more noble path, all things being equal.

    I’m sick and tired of this false virtue which keeps harping on ‘anonymous’ as something terrible. In this on line format you don’t know me and I don’t know you–is that so terrible? Why don’t you have a little camera recording yourself, if you hate ‘anonymous’ so much? Come on, let’s see EVERYTHING about you! Don’t like that, do you? Didn’t think so. We ALL enjoy a certain degree of anonymity. It’s called civilization. Ever heard of it?

    And what is the rot about ‘hijacking?’ I’m very sorry, but look, for God’s sake, we’re grown-ups and we can read fast. If you don’t like what someone has written, SKIP OVER IT. Why don’t we start burning books? Because, you know, there’s WAY too many books in the world. All those many, many books HURT you and me, right? Because if there were NOT so many books, you and I could write a book and it wouldn’t have to compete with so many OTHER books…now isn’t that right? If there were only 5 books in the world, instead of 5 billion, that would be great, because we’d have a much better chance of having our book read, now, wouldn’t we? The world’s books are hijacking OUR book, right? So let’s start burning books, there’s TOO MANY OF THEM.

    And we HAVE been on topic: Harriet, last time I checked, is on line poetry site.

    If you want to celebrate on line poets and poetry, GO AHEAD, no one’s stopping you. I always listen, and I SHOW I’m listening BECAUSE I RESPOND–oh, but that’s using TOO MANY WORDS. So I better NOT respond! Do you see where your logic leads?

    Hijack?

    I’m sorry, but that’s a stinking lie.

    If you can’t post until others shut up, then YOU are not interested in having a conversation. The problem is with YOU, not others who happen to be posting in this or that amount.

  1078. Me too, C, and I agree that feels better.

    Not quite to the heart of the matter, but I’m fascinated by what Essex says about anonymity. The irony is, of course, that whoever Essex is he’s not anonymous at all. We all know him so well, and one of the reasons we read him with so much respect, or at least I do, is that he always is who he says he is when he writes. Indeed, what’s his name Tom Graves would be the sock puppet if Monday Love ever tried to use him in Thomas Brady’s place!

    That’s only partly a joke too. It’s the whole thing about WHO SPEAKS — the Buddha is great on that. In fact, knowing you’re NOT who speaks is, in the Buddha’s teaching, the way through to the truest voice, i.e. the one that never lies. Some of you may remember that I posted a poem about that way back on Poets.net when someone accused me of “inflation” (the worst insult in Jungian terms there is!) — I put the poem up on my website again just recently because our struggles with Harriet brought it to mind. It’s called “To Those From Whom All Blessings Flow,” and boy, that’s a title!

    A great artist never lies despite how many disguises he puts on, but a deaf, self-obsessed preacher gets fried!

    Christopher

  1079. I have written under countless psuedonyms: through choice until 100 or so later, i reached some solid ground and was speaking pretty much in the voice i choose to believe is – not – me, but enhanced by happiness and tranquility of space.

    I began life online with a blog of me – Swords, when a recently released graduate with head full of mist and mass of contradiction, bumbling into the second half. Onstage all my life and the only thing to show for it: a blase attitude to life, all come day go day, god send Sunday.

    Luckily, when I returned to education after 20 years sabbatical, the tough years felt behind me. Tough as in, my dream of appearing as who i am via the medium of show business, were confined to staring into the mirrored bar, and all of dream within me, happening in only the Conceptual Theatre of our mind – unrecorded by us in print. Never spoken, the truth of flight our winged dream can take us to the summit of escape by, when getting carried away in the Imagination, which has no law – as Clonakilty poet Dave Lordan wrote.

    So, for me, just being here is good enough: everything else is a winning laurel seat of fawning minds, because – why not?

    There is a lot of hogwash gets talked in the name of what verbal Art is, isn’t might be and most definitley is, not, Brilliant – proof the imagination is working well, is writing well, getting one’s point across and – that’s it.

    Targeting one bore at the foundation with a schizophrenic for his idol: says it all – doesn’t it?

    After graudating and coming to Ireland to carry on the scholarship, setting up a blog and quickly running into the first challenge, after I had put some poems up on the swords’ blog and writing surf and run on blogs about the place, realising that the writing style had morphed and was a further development of what I had been doing under formal trainee conditions for the previous three years. Remember, i was a student, mature, dickhead who left it late to learn. Some stuff was a crazee comic i called Scalljah, and in quick succession, after a year or two – Ovid Yeats.

    These two names were my Monday Love and Brady, and it was eight or so months after joining the guardian books blog which was then six months live – after being banned from another board and it appearing as if by magic, the bigger stage – that i was first banned, and started the process of speaking in a hundred names: each one – depending on the period – immediately banned; unless i disguised myself as a genereic blog voice and managing a few weeks (even months) at running out through it on the spin.

    With the guardian, you do not need to activate by e mail, your poster account: just register with any (made up) e mail address, and two minutes later, you are back in the ring, aware most of all that your voice has been told it is unwelcome and you are not to be tolerated, whatsoever!

    I plodded on, but over the next 12 months and more, some periods of tolerance, short intense weeks long bursts of being hunted and sqaushed: guardian blog enemy number one (or two) for a fair run of many months accrued on the lam, as a pretender, anonymous to most but not the regular posters – and it was all denueded with Frderick Seidel intervening via face-book and Trav putting in a good word with the dons and oligarchs in the poetry mafia inc, who wrote that song about being relevent to neither few, nor many.

    Now i am speaking ju

  1080. oops, that line hanging there is an offcut of the above experiment i was unaware of until reading back the blacther i’d cobbled, just as a happy person knowing about the myth of two poets and a theft of legs and feet that ran to a foundation ledge, leapt and was never spoken of again.

    Harriet sucks now the first pause is over and we have seen who’s got what. wow, very underwhelmed with…one, two, several stunned po-biz wannabee’s all our bro’s y’all.

  1081. Harriet update:

    A quick glance reveals that over the last couple of days the top word count on Harriet is:

    1. Joan Houlihan
    2. John Oliver Simon
    3. Joel Brouwer (Harriet writer)
    4. Margo B.

    Almost 60% belongs to these four.

    You guys have been warned!

    (Banning will ensue if you can’t shut up!)

  1082. About post #1335. It turns out on the Poetry Foundation that the author of the post has, in fact, favorably reviewed the poetry of his wife and it was done under a pseudonym. But yet the author regularly campaigns against po-biz corruption. I hope the author can understand why I do not take him seriously anymore when he complains. He is party to the problem. He is fundamentally no different from the po-biz corruptions he complains about. Just as both Cordle and Woodman are no different. They are not looking to change a system. They are looking to center themselves in the system.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2005/jul/04/news.comment

    These boys have such an agenda it makes me sick. They don’t care about poetry. They care about themselves. They sure as heck don’t care about on line poets.

    Tere

  1083. Tere,

    My wife’s not a po-biz player; she got a few poems accepted in a friend’s magazine (Fulcrum) and in passing I said her poems were better than most of the others in the magazine; I was not writing a review or a blurb, or taking people’s money; I was just having a conversation on a blog site and forgot for a moment that I was the oracle, Monday Love. The Fulcrum editor was upset because I wasn’t being nice to his magazine and made a big deal about it–even though he published my wife’s poems, and then wouldn’t allow her to the issue’s reading, because it was such a big ‘controversy.’ You are making way too much of it, Tere. Perspective, my good friend, perspective!

    Why did you quote that ‘Guardian’ piece? It makes Foetry.com look heroic and significant.

    Thomas

  1084. I think I’ll excuse myself from this discussion as the wife in the article cited is somebody I agreed not to talk about.

    I’m also grateful to Clattery for making this space available to us, and to try to discuss in what way post #1341 was “about” post #1335 would take us way off target!

    But what I’d really like to add I’ve already said as best I could in post #1315 — sentiments that I was pleased were seconded by Tom in #1316.

    I wish we could somehow get beyond this, but then history is not on our side, I’m afraid. In numerous independence movements all over the world, for example, when the objectives have finally been achieved the brave guerillas very often turn against one another. That is a sub-theme in Max Ophuls’ magnificent documentary about the German occupation of France, “The Sorrow and the Pity,” and I’ve just done the voice-overs for a film about the Naga people in northeastern India. They finally achieved freedom from India after five decades of bloody struggle only to fall at each other’s throats. Even though they’ve been Christian since 1803, embracing all those values, they’re still head-hunters at heart, and their real pride lies not in peace but in conflict. They love fighting far more than they love each other!

    Christopher

    Christopher

  1085. To get us back on track, and hopefully to attract more than the 8 posters who have shown an interest in the topic so far this week, I’d like to get us all to go back and reread Terreson’s seminal article, and to look at how closely what we’re talking about here parallels what he says right from the start.

    In his opening paragraph Terreson writes:

    “Boards and rooms tend to place first emphasis on community cohesion, with poetry, poetry-related conversation, and the free exchange of ideas viewed as secondary. It is interesting to view a poem allowed in the name of free speech that expresses violence, threats of violence, bigotry, and sexism. Then to notice how the exchange of views in heated debate is closely monitored by moderators, often admonished, sometimes deleted from a forum as inflammatory. The contradiction is interesting. What it signifies is that a particular board’s community cohesion, and its culture, is an animal in its own right and takes precedence over the artistic project(s). The mantra frequently expressed is: ’be nice.’ The suspicion, however, is that what actually matters, and in top down fashion, is the board’s culture and not the poetry or the exchange over ideas concerning poetry. So the question becomes: does such a culture falsify the poetry experience? Does it tell the online poet, say, that parenthetical bitch language in a poem is okay, whereas honesty in critical discussion is not? My sense is that the free exchange of ideas is viewed as dangerous to community, but that poetry is not, since, it honestly doesn’t matter.”

    That’s extremely well-expressed, and the questions it raises profound. I’d say the last sentence is genius, how it delineates the most crucial of all the on-line poetry paradoxes.

    I experienced this paradox most painfully on the Harriet thread which followed the excellent article by Joel Brouwer entitled, “KEEP THE SPOT SORE!” (a really good read!). http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2009/07/keep-the-spot-sore/#comments Toward the beginning of the discussion Thomas Brady made a hard point, and by that time he was already being hounded by the MFA mob egged on by the management. I came in on Tom’s behalf, making it clear that although I didn’t agree completely with what he said, and it doesn’t matter what it was, if you read his comments sensitively his hammer blows could always in the end become creative. Indeed, in what I hoped would be read as a hilarious paradox that might defuse the tension, I compared Tom’s hammer blows to cow pats — how I did that doesn’t matter either (you can go and look).

    Well, all hell broke loose, and even Travis Nichols, the Harriet Administrator, no less, waded into the argument, blaming my “cowpatty hammers,” as he christened them, and not the hounds for the fray. “Be nice!” he essentially commanded us in Terreson’s memorable phrase. “Keep the air in the room nice so we can all breathe freely together!”

    Well, what a paradox!

    Because Robinson Jeffers, the subject of the thread, was great simply because he never was ‘nice,’ preferred high mountain air where you could hardly breathe at all, and refused to accept anything just nice. Indeed, Robinson Jeffers simply couldn’t have cared less what the community thought, or ever tried to modify his behavior to placate it. That’s precisely why Joel Brouwer called his article, “Keep the Spot Sore,” and why I encouraged the community to accept certain kinds of ‘hammer blows’ as creative, even if they initially hurt. Even ‘cow pats,’ I joked, given a bit of time, could become fertile!

    In one of my last posts on Harriet before I was placed “on moderation” (meaning all my subsequent posts were censored, if they appeared at all), I wrote:

    ”The irony of you all rolling out your guns to defend a small room is that America is a wilderness still, and your praise for Robinson Jeffers might suggest you still had a taste for discomfort, and were willing to wear your hairshirts too.

    I said it earlier on this thread like this: ‘One is so lucky to grow up in one Faith, and be fulfilled within a single tradition. Nothing could bring greater happiness than that. Yet the unexamined life is not worth living, and nothing brings greater unhappiness than smashing the tribe and its idols.’

    Which he did.

    One Faith is a small room too, and providing you let no air in you can breathe in your own comfort zone. But the cold icy blast from the uninhabited mountains will blow your comfort away. People will say things you don’t want to hear, for example, perhaps even at a length you find unacceptable. God forbid, cow pats and hammers may suddenly become relevant, and the discourse of the cross resumed.”

    ~

    I think this discussion about what happened on Harriet is precisely on target — yes, let’s look at what’s happening on the most important on-line poetry site in America! “My sense is that the free exchange of ideas is viewed as dangerous to community,” says Tereson, “but that poetry is not, since it honestly doesn’t matter.” And that’s precisely where the Poetry Foundation’s Harriet is at – because on Harriet evidently poetry doesn’t matter!

    (And right now, while I’m writing this, they’re talking about martinis!)

    Christopher

  1086. Tere writes,

    “These boys have such an agenda it makes me sick. They don’t care about poetry. They care about themselves. They sure as heck don’t care about on line poets.”

    This is really unfair. We all have our ‘agendas.’ People would say you, Tere, have your ‘pee in the pool’ agenda. What’s wrong with an agenda?

    And since when did Foetry.com’s concern for fairness and justice translate into ‘they don’t care about poetry???’

    How do you know we ‘don’t care about poetry?’ What gives you the right to say that? We’re crazy about poetry. Here’s Monday Love fitting right into one of the loveliest ‘on line poetry sites’ on the web (see comments):

    http://rhubarbissusan.blogspot.com/2005/03/under-aspect-of-summer-storms-joanna.html

    ‘Songs, post foetry,’ on the archived Foetry.com is up to 71,000 plus hits.

    http://foetry.com/forum/index.php?topic=47.0

    What is an ‘on line poet’ anyway?

    I certainly qualify as one.

    So what exactly are you talking about, Tere?

    Thomas

  1087. Tere,

    Is there some kind of official organization of on line poets, the AOLP, or something? If not, maybe you should start it up.

    Then again, the on line distinction is becoming more and more blurred within po-biz, too, I would think.

    Thomas

  1088. Consumer warning: this post will amount to some length.

    I had a hard day today, Friday, the 11th of Sept. I had 29 honey bee queens to inseminate using an instrument (II), with queens and instrument under a microscope. I am still just learning the art (art it is) and so I am like a journeyman. As journeyman I am the runner. Maybe I am still just an apprentice. I am the runner. I collect the drones from their colonies. I retrieve the queens from the queen banks in which they are kept. I instruct the tech., who is accomplished in the art of II, how many microliters of semen each queen gets (today there were 29) and I record the data: queen number, mother source, drone source, semen amount. These queens are genetically important. They have been selectively bred for desirable, disease and parasite resistant, characteristics. And I made these queens, propogated them, grafted them from their mother sources.

    This is pretty much my frame of reference when I come to these discussions about on line poetry practices, good and bad, and about questions of po-biz practices, good and bad. Mendel is my patron saint five days a week. In my payday world life amounts to maintaining lines of genetically engineered honey bees resitant to this or that disease or parasite. And death amounts to losing the last progeny of such lines. It is serious business, especially now when a planet of 7 billion human type animals needs every pollinating insect it can get its hand on.

    Why poets, on line poets, po-biz poets, poetry boards, poetry blogs, poetry managers, poetry editors don’t take their business as seriously I don’t get. I think they don’t understand how close is the back slash relationship between life and death. Poetry is a life form just like any other life form. I am certain of this. As such it is subject to rules of morphology. It gets birthed, it grows, it maturates, it grows old, and it dies (becomes classic and becomes imitated which is a form of death).

    I guess I’ve been checking into on line poetry for ten years. So many poets I’ve seen dissed, many of them women. So many voices I’ve seen silenced by inbreeders as I had to counter forty years ago. And let’s be honest. The older poet, man or woman, amounts to the Freudian super-ego telling the youngster what she can or can not do, what she can or cannot think. And you bet. Lesbian poets are as guilty as are macho poets as are formalists. Ideology, no matter its stamp, is such a killer of poetry’s morphology. Ideology is inbred, so to speak.

    It has always been the sensational side of my essay posters have responded to, that between management and poets. But the on line poetry’s side is much closer to me, that of poet to poet. To the extent that poetry boards and blogs run interference I say shame on them. And they do.

    So much inbreeding. That is the killer of poetry boards and blogs.

    Terreson

  1089. That’s beautiful, Tere — and I’ll read it a number of times to get all that those extraordinary images suggest. Thanks!

    But you confuse me, because even with an inspiring background like that you write about Desmond, Essex and myself, “These boys have such an agenda it makes me sick. They don’t care about poetry. They care about themselves. They sure as heck don’t care about on line poets.”

    First of all, Desmond Swords has nothing whatever to do with Foetry, and indeed has e-mailed me to find out what it is (I’m trying to reply and may post what I finally come up with right here!). No, Tere, Desmond Swords is a blogger who poets, I think you could say, a board-bard that transcends the criteria, someone who elevates on-line language to high art. And I’d say we’re extremely lucky to have him.

    As Desmond admits himself, his house manners used to be terrible — indeed, I hate to think about it. I mean, he got banned over 100 times! I don’t know how you feel about him, C, — I do hope you’re willing to let him live so near the edge even now. I myself find it thrilling!

    In fact, Desmond modified his behavior of his own free will on Harriet, with some very big encouragement from me, I so liked him from the start. Indeed, I couldn’t bear the way he was treated on one thread — not by the management but by a group of U.K. women (wholly Orphic!!!)!!! After 2 months Desmond had become a scintillating presence on Harriet, and the only unacceptable tick he couldn’t get under control was his obvious affection for Thomas Brady and me. So he got the chop when we did — there was obviously no other cause.

    If anyone needs any more proof that on Harriet there’s no serious interest in poetry, just look how they man-handled the Irish digital-daimon who manifested among them, Desmond Swords!

    As to Foetry, Tere, it doesn’t exist as a movement any more than The Pee in the Pool does, and indeed I can think of only 2 names that are immediately associated with it, Alan Cordle and Monday Love. I myself am a very late-comer, and was always just a colorful victim of the abuses they were exposing, that’s all. I’m an amateur, and a fool even, I know — I mean, imagine, even in my 60s I had so much hope in my poetry I could get hurt when it was abused. I had no readers at all, and knew no publishers or editors, yet even when I paid $25.00 my work wasn’t read, and when I paid $35.00 I got a zerox asking me for even more!

    I don’t know if you intended it that way, but I heard what you said about older people. ” The older poet, man or woman, amounts to the Freudian super-ego telling the youngster what she can or can not do, what she can or cannot think.” The irony is that. although I’m 70, I’m a staunch opponent of the super-ego everywhere I go, and got chucked out of Harriet precisely because I messed with the Freudian status quo!

    So what’s my agenda, Tere? Why do I make you so sick?

    I suspect it may be because I once took you up on your willingness to post new poems on-line for help, and questioned you about your motives. But you have to see that challenge in its context. I was someone who didn’t even know people did that. Far from having an agenda, I was a 68 year old poet who didn’t know on-line poetry boards existed! So what a challenge? What an opportunity for you to rethink why it was so important to you, and to modern American poetry?

    Also to consider how difficult it may be to make that argument to someone who never touched a computer keyboard until well into his 50s! Or how about to never? How about explaining that to Ovid or Shakespeare, or even to Auden?

    Christopher

  1090. “(becomes classic and becomes imitated which is a form of death).”

    Nice post on bees, Tere; I, myself, believe ‘becomes classic and becomes imitated’ is a form of life.

    [Just checked Harriet. Not much life there.]

    I would think that having a subtle understanding of bee life, you might have more understanding of humans and poets.

    There’s a new wind blowing, and it emerged from Foetry, or foetics, and it’s now being manifested in other places, and this new way of thinkinig about poetry doesn’t get absorbed so much by text and language or anything narrow or small, but instead it looks at how poetry is produced, how it exists in the world.

    I was banned from Harriet, not because I was rude, but because I was speaking this truth a little bit too much.

    Mark McGurl, in his new book, ‘The Program Era’ is on the scent, and he mentions the things I was talking about on Harriet–how the New Critics took over the academy, for instance.

    James Wood, the critic, told me a couple of days ago that Eric Bennett, a doctoral student in English at Harvard, is doing research on the Iowa Writer’s Workshop and the C.I.A.

    Having received this rather startling information, I found this on the web:

    “Eric Dean Bennett, English, Harvard University

    Paul Engle: Creative Writing Cold Warrior

    For two decades following World War Two, five graduate programs in creative writing existed at universities in the U.S. In the 1960s, almost fifty new programs were founded—astonishingly, over half of them by graduates of the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Histories of creative writing programs give due deference to Iowa, but tend to emphasize the internal story—a wave of growth under the GI Bill and a later one following the baby boom; the institutionalization of the New Criticism that transformed literary studies; and the new willingness, under the New Criticism, to include the artist in the academy. Memoirs and reminiscences ascribe to the movement a spontaneous and self-evident logic.

    This paper places the emergence of creative writing programs in the context of the Cold War and its ideological and cultural campaigns. At the center of Iowa’s early prosperity and influence was Paul Engle, the Workshop’s most influential director, a mediocre poet and unrivalled fundraiser. Engle’s success promoting the workshop depended heavily on the political language he used in pitches to foundations, corporations, and conservative businessmen. The vast majority of Iowa’s funding came from outside sources; important donors were also sponsoring the C.I.A.’s Congress for Cultural Freedom in Western Europe. The paper makes use of evidence from unpublished letters and documents from the Paul Engle Papers at the University of Iowa, as well as more familiar texts in the history of the discipline.”

    I’m going to look into this, for certain.

    The Foetry to end all Foetry?

    There’s a new storm brewing out there, and Foetry was the seed.

    Thomas

  1091. I was recently banned by Harriet, the Poetry Foundation blog for ‘posting too often’ or something like that–I never found out, was never told, was never warned.

    I was never rude or abusive; I think it was simply because I ragged on Pound and the Modernists too much, I really think it was because of that, and this gets into the whole Foetry/clique criticism issue, though on Harriet I was only talking about dead people.

    Posters were slandering each other on Harriet when I was on there, but they weren’t banned–I was.

    I wonder how long I would have lasted on Harriet if I had chatted on about the CIA and the Iowa Writing Workshop?

    I did know Paul Engle, and I’d love to talk to Eric Bennett about his project. I’m sure the controversy of his project will cause a lot of people to refuse to listen, and that would be a shame.

    I do think a whole new era, a whole new way of looking at writing and creativity is growing out of the foetry theme–the focus is not on the text or the language, but on the whole process of reputation, validation, canon-making, etc. It fits in with modernist, post-modernist projects, but goes beyond it, while being more practical and concrete, as well.

    I wrote an essay for another web site which sums up my thesis on modernism and the academy–and I really do believe it is the content of this theme, even in its form of polite rhetoric, which got me BANNED from Harriet.

    Permit me to post a portion of it:

    A dirty limerick has more poetry in it than a typical pretentious piece of poetry by Jorie Graham.

    The whole issue of judging, ranking, grading poetry is confused in the following way: what do the King James Bible, haiku, Jorie Graham, and WC Williams and his red wheel barrow, have in common?

    They don’t rhyme.

    Shelley, Burns, Keats, Byron, and Dante, do rhyme. Their poetry is closer to the dirty limerick than the previous examples.

    The confusion, then, exploited by the ‘free verse’ modernists in the first half of the 20th century, is based on a false comparison between Poetry and Verse.

    Poetry and Verse are two entirely different things, not only by precise definition, but in people’s minds.

    Verse is a musical skill.

    Poetry is a setting.

    The King James Bible is safe in church, in that setting–but a dirty limerick is not.

    Therefore, a person thinks of poetry as something they can say in church, and so poetry that does not rhyme earns a validation it doesn’t deserve.

    Scholars have often wondered why the Bible doesn’t rhyme–my guess is that the authors of the sacred texts wanted to avoid anything suggesting the dirty limerick.

    Poetry and verse should not be compared. The comparison itself is bogus.

    Shelley, Bob Dylan, Keats, Vivaldi, Dante, Millay and Mozart contain splendid, popular music.

    WC Williams, haiku, and Jorie Graham, not so much.

    The scale here is from spritely to solemn.

    The dirty limerick is on one end of the scale, and the haiku is on the other–both are different, both are worthy, but because jangling Shelley is closer to the diry limerick and rhymeless WC Williams is closer to the haiku, academic pedantry over the last 50 years (the university being the new church) prefers, 9 times out of 10, the latter to the former.

    One final footnote:

    This, I believe, is why the (mostly) unworthy modernist poets so quickly acheived academic validation. They never appealed to the public, that’s why they published in tiny magazines or little reviews which folded after two issues; they never had a large readership UNTIL they discovered college subsidy, until they managed to get into the academy and onto an English Major’s syllabus.

    “Understanding Poetry” (first published in the late 30s and in subsequent new editions) by two New Critics, Robert Penn Warren and Cleanth Brooks–two guys at the center of Pound and Allen Tate and T.S. Eliot and WC Williams and John Crowe Ransom’s Modernism clique–was THE textbook that greeted all the returning GIs who flooded the universities, on the GI Bill, after WW II, and that textbook featured Williams and Pound as ‘masters’ and openly rebuked–you guessed it–the poems of Shelley and Poe. So the subtle brainwashing of American poetry began; Verse (poetry) in a kind of magic trick, was taken away from the public and given over to the academy.

    (Lovers of verse did find a certain revenge, of course, in the immense popularity of song–and today the public is still indifferent to poetry.)

    Thomas

  1092. Clattery, old bean, I woke up this morning, Saturday, prepared to apologize for #1341. But I needed to go to work to treat with queens who had emerged overnight in the incubator. Timing is everything in this queen making business. My twenty queens needed to get put in a queen bank where worker girls will look after them. I am so damn lucky. So many Americans have jobs that fracture them. And I have had many of those kinds of jobs too. But this job of honey bee husbandry centers me, gives me perspective, helps me sort between real/unreal.

    Getting back home, reading subsequent posts, I am settled that my post was right. Woodman and Brady do have agendas, agendas that have nothing to do with the vitality of on line poetry. I want the old days back when there were fewer board and blog managers needing to set a tone and fewer agenda setters needing to repeat, repeat, repeat a program.

    Terreson

  1093. Thanks for the apology part, Tere, and I do think you’re lucky to have such a job. But it is a complicated agenda, bee-propogation, isn’t it, getting the timing just right and all those tiny little wonders to do what you want them to do in just the right place?

    Some agendas are creative, some are time-consuming, some are dangerous, and some take a lot of courage. Like Healthcare at the moment in America, or breast-feeding in those countries that got blitzed by the big powdered-milk corporations like Thailand.

    I kept bees for years in England and Scotland — just 5 or 6 hives, but I so loved them it was as if I were caring for a whole nation. Also, that was enough to provide us with honey from our own flowers, mostly heather (in England I lived on the Ashdown Forest between the Pooh bridge and Stone Cottage), and there was lots of heather. Ditto Dumfriesshire, of course.

    I wish those bees would teach you a lesson in kindness, Tere, they’re so generous. Yes, Tom most certainly has an agenda, and his last two posts bring that out in quite surprising ways, and in some detail. You might have had the kindness to listen.

    I have no agenda but poetry. If you want to say my interest in poetry has nothing to do with on-line poetry, you’d be right in the sense that I have never written poetry on-line in my life, or used an on-line board for critical feedback. If this is an agenda, then my life is an agenda because I got to the age of 54 without a computer on my desk, and went on-line for the first time in my life at 67.

    It’s an odd sort of reasoning, yours, and as you and I have been talking about poetry together quite passionately for 2 full years now, it’s a bit disingenuous. On the other hand, if you think any active poet who is not posting his or her poems on-line for criticism has an agenda, well, you’ll have to live with that limitation. I’m afraid. Indeed, some people might even call it an agenda.

    Christopher

  1094. About #1352. I did not apologize for my early comments. I am settled that Woodman, Brady, and Swords have personal agendas having nothing to do with this particular blog’s agenda. They don’t care about the issue.

    Terreson

  1095. Tere,
    I tried to get us to look at that accusation way back in comment #1344, and Tom added to it in #1345. You never responded — and then after a day with the bees were back in denial.

    Tom posted comments #1349 and 1350 in an effort to clarify what Foetry, or ‘Foetics,’ as he calls it, means to him, and how it relates to On-line Board Management. His position got him banned from Harriet, he feels sure, and obviously what he says isn’t exactly welcome here either.

    Do you think your attitude toward his so-called ‘agenda’ is anything like Harriet’s, Tere?

    Do you think your attitude has anything to do with the on-line status quo?

    A lot of people found the talk about asbestos “boring” in the beginning, and even more so about “tobacco.” Ditto climate change. Talk that challenges our basic assumptions is always hard to hear, and when we don’t want to hear it we turn off to it — and if it doesn’t turn off easily we dismiss it as oh so repetitious and boring.

    That new Harvard study Tom talks about is undeniably relevant to “The Pee in the Pool of On-line Poetry.” Indeed, I have no doubt what you are BOTH saying, you, Terreson, and Eric Dean Bennet, is part of a reassessment of the whole phenomenon of workshop poetry that within a decade will be openly discussed by everybody.

    But obviously it’s still not discussable here.

    Christopher

  1096. Tere,

    You almost sound like you think you’re better than us because you work with bees. I keep waiting for you to turn this bee project into food for thought, into a meatphor that sheds light on our discussion, but it never comes. Perhaps you’re saving it for a poem that will later be critiqued on line somewhere. But why not use it now? That’s what I do. Those who ‘save’ themselves for later are usually disappointed. It turns out Woodman has worked with bees. Woodman’s done a lot of incredible things in his life, and he never brags about it, never uses it to condescend to others. But you see, Woodman wants to talk about poetry–in every aspect. Fancy that! As do I.

    That’s our ‘agenda.’

    Thomas

  1097. About #1355. Presumably the metaphor drawn was slipped in too subtly for some. What was it my post said about inbreeding?

    T

  1098. Tere,

    ‘Inbreeding’ as it applies to what, exactly?

    Also this Camus you quoted on Harriet today (you, Gary and John Oliver Simon seem to be the only ones bothering with Harriet, and Gary, the only one getting votes of approval):

    “In order to dominate collective passions they must, in fact, be lived through and experienced, at least relatively. At the same time he experiences them, the artist is devoured by them. The result is that our period is rather the period of journalism than that of the work of art. The exercise of these passions, finally, entails far greater chances of death than in a period of love and ambition, in that the only way of living collective passions is to be willing to die for them and by their hand.”

    This passage makes no sense.

    “Dominate collective passions”???

    “than in a period of love and ambition…” ???

    “…the only way of living collective passions is to be willing to die for them and by their hand.”????

    What sort of person would pretend to understand pretentious rubbish like this?

    The context, I understand, is 9/11, and Billy Collins said poetry cannot understand something like 9/11 and you put forth the Camus as a counter–but Camus is saying the same thing as Collins (in a more hyperbolic manner) right here: “At the same time he experiences them, the artist is devoured by them.”

    Events which combine immense public mystery and horror cannot be rendered artistically. This is one of those truisms that cannot really be proved, one way or the other, to anyone’s satisfaction, for what is a puzzle to one person may signal a solution to another.

    But there have been, and always will be, experiences we expect the journalist to cover, and doubt whether the poet can, just as there are intimate subjects fit for the poet that would surprise us if the journalist investigated them.

    Thomas

    • Good points, Tom. And yes, I agree the Camus is not only pretentious but scrambled!

      Camus is extremely hard to translate, French being such a torturous language anyway (thrilling if you’re thrilled by linguistic gymnastics!). The passage was obviously botched.

      But what really interests me is your point that some public events just cannot be rendered artistically, and I would include in those 9/11, certainly, but also the tsunami here where I live, and Michael Jackson’s death.

      What all three events have in common is physical circumstances that are already so totally, off-the-wall metaphorical that you end up rendering too literally if you try to write poetry about them. Poetry will never be able to compete with the photographs of the towers coming down, for example, or with the lack of photos of the wall of water carrying individual people 3 kms inland over the tree tops, or with the unspeakable, appalling realities of the last 2 hours of Michael Jackson’s life.

      There are some things you cheapen if you try to deepen!

      And there are some things you deepen if you know just how to cheapen, like those “intimate subjects” you have in mind.

      Or bees.

      Christopher

  1099. “(…seem to be the only ones bothering with Harriet, and Gary the only one getting votes of approval)”

    Check again, me bucko.

    I am not approved. I have a Gremlin, a demon, who counters me vote for vote. Isn’t that strange?

    “Who knows what shadows lurk in the hearts of men (and women)?

  1100. WHAT WE ARE DOING HERE

    With your permission, dear Clattery — a little background:

    I joined the Foetry movement, if there can be said to be one, after the Poets & Writers Editor, Kevin Larimer, refused to publish my answer to a letter from Joan Houlihan he published in the Nov 2007 issue, a letter in which she defended Jeffrey Levine and Bin Ramke. In that letter Joan Houlihan claimed that Foetry was no “whistle-blower,” as Larimer had suggested in an article, but just a bunch of angry “losers” who demonstrated a “willful misunderstanding of the process of editing and publishing poetry in America.”

    What Joan Houlihan left out in that letter, of course, was the fact that Jeffrey Levine was not only her partner in the very successful Colrain Manuscript Conferences, but that he was also just about to publish her new book. As to Bin Ramke, he gets pulled into Joan Houlihan’s orbit because Jeffrey Levine was also just about to publish the first book of Jorie Graham’s 22 year old daughter, just graduated from Harvard. Jorie Graham, of course, had worked with Bin Ramke at Georgia, and was so compromised by it she had given her name to the new regulation that seeks to limit conflicts of interest in poetry contests. It seems her bright, young daughter hadn’t even written the book when Levine commissioned it, and had no publishing record to speak of. In other words, the daughter was just ‘Old-Money’ in the sense of ‘Royalty!’ (She may be a great poet in the making, and I do wish her well, but her debut was most unfortunately under the shadow of her mother!)

    So Joan Houlihan’s whole letter is about Jeffrey Levine’s reputation, her partner and publisher, and is designed specifically to protect her own interests.

    I subsequently got banned from both Pw.org and Poets.org for talking about these matters — established poets and critics also have friends in high places. Indeed, Jeffrey Levine had just short-listed the On-line Editor at the Academy of American Poetry for an important Tupelo prize at the very moment I was being booted out of Poets.org.

    I like Tom’s word ‘Foetics’ for what we’re doing now better than ‘Foetry’ — because basically it’s a certain kind of social awareness, and has very little to do with contests anymore. ‘Foetics’ is a way of looking at the impact of financial and sociological changes on American poetry, and I don’t mean just the distribution of poetry and the training of poets, on-line or whatever, but on its styles and fashions as well. Very wide, very vague — and very threatening to those who would like ‘Poetry’ still to be a High Art, and ‘Poet’ still a High Calling. Today in America it’s neither, and along with Terreson on this worthy site that is hosting us, Tom Graves, Alan Cordle and myself are among the very few trying consciously to reclaim it.

    I do hope that helps — I do hope that helps to build bridges.

    I want to be clear that nobody mentioned in this whole post has done anything illegal, and certainly Joan Houlihan and Jorie Graham are among the most illustrious figures in modern American poetry. That’s why I feel so strongly they should pay more attention to the behavior they model.

    I wish they were our allies!

    Christopher

  1101. Gary, Tere, and others, who can’t understand why you get negative votes on even the most neutral remarks you make on Harriet, while guys like Noah Freed get positives on everything they post,

    The following may throw some light on the issue:

    It is enlightening to revisit that Harriet thread, the CONTEST thread of Eileen Myles. This was back when Harriet was alive, in July, and not dead, as it is now, in September. (Brady and Swords were banned Sept. 1)

    On the CONTEST thread on Harriet, back in July, THIS post, by Michael Robbins, earned THREE PLUS votes:

    “At first I thought this said, “The last time I judged a contest, they sent me a big pie,” & I was, like, mmm, pie …”

    –Michael Robbins

    Compare Robbins’ comment to mine, below, which earned 12 negative comments and was disappeared:

    “As an old foetry.com pro, here’s my reflective take on the contest controversy:

    In 99 cases out of 100, to read even a single poem, in a fresh state of mind, in a good mood, we find ourselves enjoying the act of reading itself, alive to the steps the poem is taking, and yet when we finish the poem, we are not really certain whether the steps, which we did enjoy, did lead to a result in our minds such that we can say with certainty that the poem managed to score high enough (for lack of a better term) in comparison to the million or so poems we have read in our lives.

    The odds of any new poem, on any given day, asserting itself so that we know: this is ‘it,’ are probably a million to one.

    No wonder we have numerous public examples where judges announce smoothly that nothing pleases them and ask to see manuscripts which have not even been submitted (Auden, Merwin, in the Yale Younger, etc)

    After reading a dozen poems or so, enthusiasm will automatically flag; we have no idea, at that point, if we are really pleased or not, for the effort to give the poem the attention it deserves has long since faded, and we begin to blame the poems themselves for not keeping us enthusiastic, when in fact, a natural limit is at fault. If there is the slightest pre-disposition to like or dislike a particular manuscript, here the prejudice will quickly manifest itself at a thousand times its normal strength; here the judge should simply stop reading.

    But the judge cannot stop reading; a deadline looms.

    In addition, there is the added issue that contemporary poems tend to plead their case in terms which are vague, winding, complex, insidious, moral, amoral, loquacious, prosaic, coyly humorous, and even coyly matter-of-fact or banal, so that ‘judging’ finds itself in a carefully constructed hall-of-mirrors which intentionally mocks the whole idea of judgment itself.

    Ashbery said once that he sought to write the critic-proof poem—and this contemporary issue, as far as I know, has never been properly examined; for how does one examine a thing which is judgment-proof? In as much as Ashbery and his numerous followers have succeeded, judgment is dead, and when judgment is dead, so, of course, is the contest.

    In discussing the uncomfortable subject of contest cheating it needs to be acknowledged right away that cheating overcomes a very immense problem.”

    —Thomas Brady

    This is pretty strong proof to me that some form of bad faith ‘ballot stuffing’ by an insidious and cowardly coterie was going on behind the scenes at Harriet.

    Otherwise, why would Robbins’ smarmy, unfunny and off-topic remark get 3 positive votes, while Brady’s on-topic, interesting post (whether one agrees specifically with its points or not) get a minus 12?

    The minus 12 for Brady might simply indicate disagreement on the part of a number of readers–this is fine, and I never complained of this; I carried on with good humor in the face of negative votes.

    However, the fact that Robbins–who openly and crassly rebuked Brady as soon as Brady showed up on Harriet (and the good Robbins has since apologized for his behavior towards Brady, on THIS thread) earned 3 POSITIVE votes for his off-topic, unfunny offense on Harriet’s thread and Brady earned 12 NEGATIVE votes for his on-topic, thoughtful post, on the same Harriet thread, must give one pause.

    This must especially give one pause in light of the fact that Brady, one month later, was BANNED from Harriet without a warning, simply for making thoughtful, on-topic posts similar to the one quoted, and, we might add here, also BANNED, were Woodman and Swords, not for offense or abuse, but simply for making Harriet a lively and more democratic place, even as they were generally greeted with negative votes from the same voters (we must assume) who gave Robbins 3 POSITIVE votes for his off-topic ‘pie’ remark.

    Brady, Woodman, and Swords were happy to dwell in Travis Nichols’ thumbs up/down universe, and even said good things about that system in a thoughtful, good-natured way; in other words, these three didn’t gripe or muck up the site with off-topic, woe-is-me complaints; they kept doing what they love to do–talk poetry.

    Travis Nichols was happy–posts that Harriet ‘readers’ didn’t like were voted down and disappeared–and Brady, Woodman, and Swords were happy, because they could keep posting on poetry.

    Apparently not.

    Travis Nichols was STILL not happy.

    He BANNED Woodman, Brady and Swords.

    Now Harriet is dead.

    If what I am describing in my comments here has any validity at all, the trustees and managers of the Poetry Foundation should be ashamed, embarrassed, and outraged.

    I hope they are.

    And I hope the rest of us wake up and smell the coffee and realize that Foetry.com was merely ‘outing’ the insidious, anti-social, counter-productive, coterie-ism which dominates, like an unthinking virus, po-biz.

    Thomas

  1102. About #s 1360 and 1361. I see that the pattern is getting repeated for the second, third, or fourth time. The posters exhaust a board, site, or blog with their fixed notions, then they move on, looking for new territory.

    I said above the posters should not have been banned from Poetry Foundation’s Harriet’s Blog. But they were not banned for challenging management or poets or a system. They were banned for tedium.

    Terreson

  1103. #1363

    That’s all you’ve got?

    A petty insult?

    I hope you can rise above this garbage and talk like a human being.

    Pffft.

    If you want “tedium,” check out Harriet now:

    A post removed without explanation.

    “I’m sorry I called you Matt.”

    “Read my new book.”

    “jeeeez zzzzzzzzzz”

    “Tere, you’re such a grouch!”

    A grouch?

    Our Terreson?

    Never!

    LOL

  1104. I think you may have missed comment #1354, Tere.

    If you ignore what other people say then you will just go round and round in your own head. That can sometimes lead to a sense of tedium.

    ~

    I heard exactly the same arguments levelled at the anti-Vietnam War protesters in the 60s when they were first getting started, and the Japanese press finds Greenpeace very boring even today. “They just go on and on about whales, and we’re just doing research to protect them!”

    I mean, can you imagine, wasting all that time going on and on about whales, or dolphins?”

    And farmers block the roads with sheep in some parts of the world, and real manure gets flung in parliament. Can you imagine the tedium?

    And what about those anti-globalization loonies in Seattle for meaningless bother?

    Have you ever listened to the Blues, Tere, or Rap? Are you bored with the tedium, when it’s all in just a few words and mainly on just one note?

    Christopher

  1105. But why, then, Tere, are you and I also voted into oblivion on Harriet for our insightful, intelligent, clever and non-offensive comments? We have no association with ‘Foetry’.

    Those mentioned above may have gone a little overboard, but surely you recognize a pattern at Harriet, don’t you?

    What should we conclude? Shall we be suspicious and paranoid and accuse the management or maybe it’s no more than than a peanut gallery of ‘sheeple’ who want to be in with the ‘in’ crowd?

    I made a humorous comment regarding Eileen Myles’ apparent dislike of punctuation and paragraphs. I thought she might find it funny. I didn’t actually criticize her writing, as you did, but I was ‘disappeared’ with ‘Dislike’ votes in less than an hour. I take that very personally. It hurt!

    Yes, I have my enemies, I guess, but there aren’t enough people out there who even know my positions and opinions to garner that many negative votes.

    You tell me. Go figure.

  1106. Thank you for that, Gary — those are sensible questions, and I do hope Tere will try to address them. As it is, I think his stance is suspect, even a bit hypocritical — and that’s sad when applied to someone who has done so much good through his own fearless activism.

    Here’s a real exchange that took place on Eileen Myles CONTEST thread on Blog:Harriet. All Tom’s posts are closed down by -11 Red Votes, and say (Click to show comment), as do mine.

    Terreson and John Oliver Simon are both blessed with generous Greens, and remain open.

    I think the dialogue speaks for itself — and needless to say, we’re looking for:
    a.) tedium in the content;
    b.) honesty in the content
    c.) honesty and/or tedium in the voting.

    from Blog:Harriet, Eileen Myles CONTEST thread, July 31st, 2009
    http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2009/07/contest/#comment-21198

    (click to show comment)
    I dare any poet: write a poem alluding to Mozart’s music that’s better than Mozart’s music.

    Interviewer: I’ve heard it said that you’ve been influenced by Mozart.


    Poet: Yes. Poet X made me realize how important Mozart could be to my poetry—


    Interviewer: OK, you can shut up now.


    Poet: Alright.

    Mozart, Mozart

    Mozart, why don’t you drop by Ashbery’s this evening,

    Oh, say, eight o’clock, for drinks?

    We’re going to listen to some Schoenberg,

    O’hara’s got something crazy going in the blender;

    There might be some pot and oh, yea,

    Bring Salieri.

    Vote recorded. Thank you.
    -10
    POSTED BY: THOMAS BRADY ON JULY 31, 2009 AT 2:06 PM

    ~

    Better than Mozart’s music is a very high bar and tilting at it is a fool’s game. Sulfur, I love it.

    Here’s a humble and serious Mozart poem, however, from an Argentine poet, Alberto Szpunberg (born 1940). My English translation follows the Spanish. It was published by Nimrod, more than 25 years ago. I met the poet once, at a reading in Buenos Aires, and pronounced his last name correctly, in Spanish, which he said was a rare occasion.

    Interesting (untranslatable) that he addresses Mozart as Usted rarther than Tú. The usual caveats about Harriets long-line line-breaks.

    Carta a Mozart
    [omitted, a wonderful 336 word poem in Spanish]

    Letter to Mozart
    [omitted, an equally wonderful 359 word translation into English]

    +1
    POSTED BY: JOHN OLIVER SIMON ON JULY 31, 2009 AT 4:12 PM

    ~

    (click to show comment)
    john,
    Jesus! Spanish is a beautiful language. English sounds like shit next to it.

    Of the translation, I love the opening, but then I feel Szpunberg belabors too many quotidian notions that begin to cheapen the whole thing. But in Spanish, I really don’t care what the poet is saying….

    My own idea inspired me to attempt a Mozart poem…

    Wolfgang

    Hearing Mozart’s music, my heart

    Slows down.

    At the Adagio I start

    To feel my heart almost die,

    My heart, that beat fast,

    Slows,
    I almost cry,

    Not sentimentally for the past,

    Not dying for some other heart,

    But for Herr Mozart’s perfect, sacred art,

    Sweeter than Albinoni,

    Sweeter than song, although,

    A sigh is only a fart,

    As lovers of Mozart know.

    -11
    POSTED BY: THOMAS BRADY ON JULY 31, 2009 AT 8:15 PM

    ~

    Upthread a poster says this:

    “Christopher,
    Following your advice, I came across this old thread on Foetry:
    “Fulcrum’s Self-Love Includes Monday Love”
    http://foetry.com/forum/index.php?topic=840.0

    According to night_owl, one of the posters in the thread, Monday Love wrote a review in which he praised his wife’s poems without mentioning she was his wife. I don’t know if there is any truth to the claim, and there is a difference in degree between judging a contest and writing a review. If the claim is true, however, and I hope it isn’t, it makes me wonder if Thomas Brady is the best person to comment on the topic of “Judging Poetry and Integrity.”

    I damn near missed the information and the link, it getting buried in the exchange. Could this really be true?

    Terreson
    +4
    POSTED BY: TERRESON ON JULY 31, 2009 AT 9:19 PM

    ~

    (click to show comment)
    For those of you who don’t know who he is, Terreson is the Moderator who resigned from the Poets.org Forum as a protest against what he saw as major flaws in the management of Poetry Forums in general. He pioneered poetry activism, in that sense, and is the author of “The Pee in the Pool of On-line Poetry” at Clattery MacHinery, a text which has become one of the touchstones for the movement he started.

    -11
    POSTED BY: CHRISTOPHER WOODMAN ON JULY 31, 2009 AT 10:40 PM

    ~

    Please allow the correction. Mr Woodman says:
    “For those of you who don’t know who he is, Terreson is the Moderator who resigned from the Poets.org Forum as a protest against what he saw as major flaws in the management of Poetry Forums in general. He pioneered poetry activism, in that sense, and is the author of “The Pee in the Pool of On-line Poetry” at Clattery MacHinery, a text which has become one of the touchstones for the movement he started.”

    While it is true I dropped my membership with Poets.org for the reason mentioned, I was not a moderator on the forum. It was another poetry board, and again for the same reason, from which I stepped down as moderator. A pioneer? Thanks but I don’t think so. Many people have spoken up. Sadly, many more have voted with their feet.

    Terreson

    POSTED BY: TERRESON ON AUGUST 1, 2009 AT 12:24 PM

  1107. I think Tere’s jealous because he typically garners 6 negative votes on harriet while I get 12.

    It’s interesting how prickly and thin-skinned democracy is. As Gary said, his good-natured remark on Eileen Myles’ lack of paragraphs was quickly buried in red.

    When the banal staus quo is upheld by a few, that’s expected; when a mob votes FOR the banal status quo, however, that’s when you start to think of jack boots, and it gets kind of creepy.

    Though I don’t know if there’s enough voters on Harriet for us to really speak in terms of a mob, or a democracy. I rather think it’s cynical ‘ballot stuffing’ by a few people.

    We have to decide when ‘group behavior’ can be termed as such; how many do we need? Five? A dozen? Fifty? A hundred? Ten thousand? A million?

    I see that Harriet, which is still pretty dead, is getting almost all negative votes. If there’s many interested readers, and the ‘will of the people’ was to remove Woodman, Swords, and Brady, strange how Harriet now seems displeased with those still allowed to post. Are people getting tired of John Oliver Simon, who posts a great deal? Do people really think Tere’s a “grouch?” Do people want the old excitement back? What do you guys think?

    Christopher, thanks for resurrecting my Mozart poem–I must say that sigh/fart trope is so perfectly Mozart; I AM a bit of a genius, aren’t I? It must be hard for some people to handle that…people need their idols to be in the proper place…they often need to be told who and what they should admire…people get anxious when things just fall where they may…Gary comes out of the blue and posts a beautiful poem on the internet…and people react with fear and trepidation…am I supposed to LIKE this poem…? It’s not published in a beautiful book…did this go through the proper channels…nobody TOLD me to like it….oh…dear…!

    (Is this clear, accessible, no-nonsense analysis boring you, Tere?)

    Thomas

  1108. Thomas said:

    “Gary comes out of the blue and posts a beautiful poem on the internet…and people react with fear and trepidation…am I supposed to LIKE this poem…? It’s not published in a beautiful book.”

    Actually, all the poems I’ve posted on the internet ARE in beautiful books. You should check out the cover art. Click on my name and follow the links.

    Gary

  1109. Hi Gary,

    Those are beautiful books. What I meant to say, and what I should have said, is: did Helen Vendler or Stephen Burt say we should read them? Have they won a contest, an academic prize? Have they been blurbed by Jorie Graham? Have you been published in ‘The New Yorker?’ Are you part of “The Chicago School?”

    Reputations need to be MADE, and the ingredients are not necessarily good poems…

    Do you get my drift?

    Thomas

  1110. “Did you catch my recent comments re: the “Chicago School” on Digital Emunction?”

    Gary, I did.

    You da man. Brilliant! VERY well done! That needed saying, and you did so with a light touch.

    I attempted to post something, but apparently it was too snarky, so the editor of the site rejected it. Maybe I’ll post it, here. It’s quite mild, so it won’t give offense, except to fanatical partisans of the…ahem…Chicago School…

    WAIT THIS JUST IN…

    I just posted on Baird’s site a quick little note…

    “Boston has the frog pond.
    Chicago has…wind.”

    And I just received an angry email from Bobby Baird, bascially yelling at me, and threatening to ban me forever from his site.

    LOL

    Thomas

  1111. Well, yes, Tom, that’s true, except for the yelling part. But for future reference, should any of you need it, the comment policy for DE clearly states that I can and may, at my sole discretion and whim, block comments that are “dumb, obnoxious or offensive.” If you don’t like those rules, you can play in someone else’s sandbox.

    Oh, and just for the record, here’s what I said to Tom exactly:

    Honestly, Tom, what’s the deal? Do you want me to ban you from DE outright? Would that satisfy your persecution complex? I’d really prefer not to, but it’s just boring for everyone involved to watch you act like a petulant teenager. It’s evident from what you’ve written here and elsewhere that you have nothing but contempt for the people who write for my blog, so why get involved? Just to prove that you have thumb fit for sticking in another’s eye?

  1112. All bow to Bobby’s whim!

    He just sent me another email, complaining that he has to moderate all posts by “you and your clattery friends” for fear that we’ll post something terribly obnoxious or offensive.

    Bobby Baird, keeping the world free of impurities!

    Chicago will rue the day it messed with Boston… LOL

  1113. Thomas and Christopher,

    If you were banned from Harriet’s blog for overposting and hijacking threads, it doesn’t surprise me in the least. It’s what you are doing here, now. Fun times for you I guess but boring as hell for the rest of us, especially those of us who have seen this pattern a time or two or three before.

  1114. BTW, what makes you boring as hell is the fact that you are both in love with the sound of your own voices. You aren’t interested in dialogue. All you are interested in is a soapbox from which to pontificate. You’ve got a few sandboxes set up for you to play in, why don’t you post there? Oh, because no one would be interested enough to go there to read and respond. Neither one of you is as clever, courageous, entertaining, original or brilliant as you think you are. You’re both tediously narcissistic though. I’ll give you that.

  1115. Question for Bobby Baird:

    I recently posted the following on digital emunction in response to a comment by Robert Archambeau that referred to me. Apparently, it was declined:

    “’I’ve never heard of Gary B. Fitzgerald, either, but I don’t assume this means he’s not an interesting poet, witty banterer over cocktail wieners, or excellent middleweight boxer.’

    First of all, Mr. Archambeau, you certainly have heard of me because we have exchanged comments elsewhere. I even posted a poem in response to one of your observations.

    Secondly, regarding Boston, count your poets, son.

    Third, this to Mr. Klein, I have no objections to a slugfest, but it won’t be with Fitzpatrick. The Irish stick together.

    And lastly…shut up, Robbins.

    :-)”

    According to Thomas, Bobby, you said:

    “…the comment policy for DE clearly states that I can and may, at my sole discretion and whim, block comments that are “dumb, obnoxious or offensive.” If you don’t like those rules, you can play in someone else’s sandbox.”

    Do you really believe that my comment above was any of those things? Are you aware that Michael Robbins and I have been exchanging comments about this or that for over a year on various posts on Harriet? Did you not see my smiley face? Have you no sense of humor, man? Of your own volition and judgment you have deprived Archambeau of a personal response to his remark, Klein and Robbins of a little smile and stolen from me yet another smidgen of self-esteem. You have taken it upon yourself to decide what these people will or will not see or appreciate yet you have no idea whatsoever about any personal relationships (of which you are unaware) that may already exist.

    Never in my life would I have imagined that poets, of all people, would be such ruthless defenders of censorship. To paraphrase Braveheart: “If you are a poet, then I am ashamed to call myself one.”

    Gary B. Fitzgerald

  1116. Dear Mr. Baird:

    Well, I see that you posted your ‘comment policy’ here yourself.

    One has to wonder, how on Earth can any one person determine what might be “dumb, obnoxious or offensive” to another individual. That’s a little silly, isn’t it?

    Perhaps you shouldn’t have a ‘public’ blog, but a membership-only private club so those of equivalent sensibilities who might concur on the definition of “dumb, obnoxious or offensive” and so be offended could protect themselves from such insults to their intelligence.

    Meanwhile, the rest of the world is still out here. God forbid that Ginsberg, Pound or Blake were around to comment on the internet.

    Gary

  1117. Gary,

    After your witty remarks which put the ‘Chicago School’ in its place, I chimed in with a good natured, ‘Boston has a frog pond and Chicago has…wind’ and Mr. Baird not only censored this teeny comment, he had the audacity to send me hectoring emails telling me I was “wasting HIS time.”

    Mr. Baird also said he couldn’t “trust” that “my clattery friends” would not cover his site with “obnoxious” and “offensive” comments.

    Save Mr. Baird from insightful wit!

    Your comments on that site were a much-needed breath of fresh air. The air was getting awful thick.

    Humorless, paranoid, censorious, pretentious, thin-skinned, toadies and hacks with their little coteries are trying to ruin poetry AND THEY WILL BE MOCKED FOR DOING SO.

    Gary Fitzgerald, bend thy head.

    Here is thy laurel crown.

    Thomas

  1118. Gary just said: “Never in my life would I have imagined that poets, of all people, would be such ruthless defenders of censorship.

    Below is the first paragraph from Terreson’s article, “The Pee in the Pool of On-Line Poetry,” that has so inspired this place where we’re meeting. I’ve emphasized a few sentences:

    “Boards and rooms tend to place first emphasis on community cohesion, with poetry, poetry-related conversation, and the free exchange of ideas viewed as secondary. It is interesting to view a poem allowed in the name of free speech that expresses violence, threats of violence, bigotry, and sexism. Then to notice how the exchange of views in heated debate is closely monitored by moderators, often admonished, sometimes deleted from a forum as inflammatory. The contradiction is interesting. What it signifies is that a particular board’s community cohesion, and its culture, is an animal in its own right and takes precedence over the artistic project(s). The mantra frequently expressed is: ’be nice.’ The suspicion, however, is that what actually matters, and in top down fashion, is the board’s culture and not the poetry or the exchange over ideas concerning poetry.So the question becomes: does such a culture falsify the poetry experience? Does it tell the online poet, say, that parenthetical bitch language in a poem is okay, whereas honesty in critical discussion is not? My sense is that the free exchange of ideas is viewed as dangerous to community, but that poetry is not, since, it honestly doesn’t matter.”

    [Thanks for that, Terreson and, of course, Clattery.]

    ~

    My view is that there are too many dogs under the table and too big a diner at the trough above them. No wonder such nasty dogfights take place when the scraps are so few!

    What I would suggest is we all climb out from under the table, look up for a moment to see the animal for what it is, and then go out and hunt.

    Christopher

  1119. oh yea, Indy, I “hijacked” threads on Harriet. That’s why I was banned. Mm mmm. Oh, those poor threads! I still have some in my pocket. You wanna buy one?

    You have the nerve to come on here and say, without any evidence or proof, that I ‘hijacked threads’ and ‘overposted’ and I’m ‘not interested in dialogue.’ These are unsubstantiated lies and fabricated slurs and you should be ashamed of yourself for writing them.

    You talk of dialogue? You greet me with non-specific INSULT and YOU speak of DIALOGUE?

    Who are you to write that? Who are you? What have you written? What have you done for poetry?

    [no poster was insulted in the making of this post]

  1120. Foetics is the study of petty moral corruption and how this petty moral corruption in turn corrupts the aesthetic faculty. (It also corrupts university faculty. And ph.d. students, especially in and around CHICAGO).

    Foetry.com discovered moral corruption first, and then, aesthetic corruption, and the two are mutually interdependent. It is difficult to tell which is more corrupt.

    Foetics is now entering a new and dynamic phase…

    WE INVADE CHICAGO!!!!!

    BOSTON–ARE YOU READY???

    Does anyone remember the news station brawl in ‘Anchor Man?’ This might look something like that….

    Has anyone seen these stories where people who win millions in the lottery quickly lose it all and have their lives destroyed?

    Perhaps this is what’s going to happen to the Poetry Foundation. The avants hate ‘Poetry’ because it’s too middlebrow, the middlebrows hate it because it’s too avant…it’s trying to be loved by everyone and everyone hates it…trying to please everyone, it pleases no one…I can see it there, boozing away its fortune in despair…’Nobody loves me! They all want to use me! The ungrateful wretches! I wish I were poor again! I don’t know who I am! I’m expected to bring poetry to the world, but it’s hopeless…I think I’ll build some fancy hotels…my blog is a mess, I can’t even keep up with clattery machinery…what’s the point…nobody really cares about poetry…they just want to see their name in print…ehhhhhhhhhhhh’

  1121. The reality is in your own words in #1384 just above, Tere, yet you set your smaller feelings above them. Indeed, you end up as just another ‘Mr Nice’ defending your on-line territory!

    But I remember another you, the one that duscussed Pablo Neruda’s Nobel Prize speech and then, during the discussion that followed, your exquisite 1982 poem, “Your Wet Breeze.”

    “Towards the Splendid City” http://poetryinc.net/new/viewtopic.php?f=12&t=278

    I wrote the last comment on that thread myself, and addressed the Terreson I knew then. This is what I said to you:

    “This is a beautifully finished, complete, well-balanced work of art–my comments are not intended as a “critique” on the poem, what is more suggestions for its improvement. They are a natural part of the discussion that the poem is illuminating–the poem has elicited these words from me and I am bringing them back toward you for discussion. In other words, by talking about details in Terreson’s 1982 poem, “Your Wet Breeze,” I am probing the discourse, opening up the field.

    That’s how poets ought to talk with each other, it seems to me, because that’s how poems talk to poets.”

    That’s also how dogs hunt – because of course digs are only disgusting when they get too close to the animal in their masters!

    And I’m not just talking about you when I say that, Tere, this whole affair at Blog:Harriet has not always brought out the best in me either — and of course Neruda himself was famous for his petulance, and some of his political posturing was just plain ridiculous. Yet we will love him forever – perhaps even the more for ihis blemishes.

    You know how to hunt so well, Tere, as does any beekeeper. How I wish you could get back on the scent.

    Christopher

  1122. Yet another reply declined by ‘digital emunction’, and this one in defense of my ownself. Talk about your level playing field.

    “’To One Who Knows Us Not
    And is our dig¬nity now imper¬iled
    By the hard, cold eye of one Fitzger¬ald,
    Who divests him¬self of any¬thing witty,
    To under¬write clichés like “second city”?
    Let his igno¬rance of us be a sign:
    None but the radi¬ant enter our shrine.”

    – Arlo Flom’

    Jeez…I hope this isn’t representative of the poetry of the ‘Chicago School’. Hardly “radiant”. Must be a fairly boring shrine.”

    I honestly don’t understand what is happening here. Adam Fieled can flame Kent Johnson like nobody’s business, accuse him of plagiarism, but my innocuous comments about the imaginary ‘Chicago School’ are anathema and rejected. If a poster actually mentions your name, doesn’t one have the right to defend oneself in the same venue? I was raised in a nation where free speech was the norm. Am I that out of touch? Am I that old? Have things changed that much? Are these people really that ignorant? This is downright unconstitutional (and un-American).

    Considering the obviously ad hominem post I was responding to, one must wonder about the (subjective) definition of “dumb, obnoxious and offensive”.

    WTF?

  1123. Cynicism is a always a monolith, Gary, as there’s nothing to divide if you’re just out for yourself at all costs!

    It’s easier for the NeoCons to forge alliances, for example, because they firmly believe that all people with social convictions are dangerous. “Socialist,” shouts Sarah Palin, and everybody falls in behind her. “Liberal pietists” pipes up a regular on Harriet, and Tom, Desmond and myself are tarred, feathered, and ridden out of town.

    “Boring,” says Indy, and the crowd’s thumbs are down even without reading us. “Hi-jacking” is the next accusation, it always is, even when we’re the ones who keep the discussion on target –as we always did on Harriet (have a look at it now, rudderless!).

    And “narcissism?” That was an old Joe McCarthy and Roy Cohn tar brush, and any subsequent eloquence on the part of the accused, even humility, even simplicity itself, was cited as proof of the victim’s duplicity and self-absorption.

    Christopher

  1124. This post bears repeating. #1385.

    “oh yea, Indy, I “hijacked” threads on Harriet. That’s why I was banned. Mm mmm. Oh, those poor threads! I still have some in my pocket. You wanna buy one?

    You have the nerve to come on here and say, without any evidence or proof, that I ‘hijacked threads’ and ‘overposted’ and I’m ‘not interested in dialogue.’ These are unsubstantiated lies and fabricated slurs and you should be ashamed of yourself for writing them.

    You talk of dialogue? You greet me with non-specific INSULT and YOU speak of DIALOGUE?

    Who are you to write that? Who are you? What have you written? What have you done for poetry?

    [no poster was insulted in the making of this post]”

    Now let’s read the post again with attention given to the angry tone.

    “oh yea, Indy, I “hijacked” threads on Harriet. That’s why I was banned. Mm mmm. Oh, those poor threads! I still have some in my pocket. You wanna buy one?

    You have the nerve to come on here and say, without any evidence or proof, that I ‘hijacked threads’ and ‘overposted’ and I’m ‘not interested in dialogue.’ These are unsubstantiated lies and fabricated slurs and you should be ashamed of yourself for writing them.

    You talk of dialogue? You greet me with non-specific INSULT and YOU speak of DIALOGUE?

    Who are you to write that? Who are you? What have you written? What have you done for poetry?

    [no poster was insulted in the making of this post]”

    This is precisely why I keep my distance from Brady/Essex/Monday Love/West.

    Terreson

  1125. I don’t know if one is allowed to repeat oneself, but I’d love to repost #1384. On the other hand, why don’t you just go back and read it, it’s so positive?

    But I will repost the last sentence to #1388 — that says it much better:

    “You know how to hunt so well, Tere, as does any beekeeper. How I wish you could get back on the scent.”

    Christopher

  1126. And Tere, to help you get back on the scent (how bees do love doing that too, as do their keepers!), I’d like to make an apology.

    As I said just above, the recent problems on Harriet haven’t always brought out the best in me, and I allowed one such lapse to hurt you. When I first came on Clattery I used the pseudonym ‘Henriette,’ and she was really very nasty — I won’t repeat what Christopher Woodman called her or I’ll get in trouble with Clattery!

    I got the idea from the ‘Henriette’ that appeared a number of times on Harriet, and in particular on the Travis Nichols’ thread called “Square School Girl Blows Geek Minds” http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2009/07/square-school-girl-blows-geek-minds/ I suspect she is connected with the U.K. group that came in on one of Annie Finch’s threads, as she’s obviously a pretty fierce feminist!

    I was furious with Travis Nichols at the time, who had repeatedly abused me, and thought it would be amusing to try to use Henriette’s style to get back at him on Clattery. I was also a bit upset at that point that you, Tere, hadn’t withdrawn from Harriet in solidarity with Tom, Desmond and myself, and let ‘Henriette’ take some cheap-shots at you ifor the nonce.

    And how I regretted that immediately, and if you go back and look you’ll see that I tried to apologize — which got me in Clattery’s bad books, of course (quite rightly!).

    What a mess — what a shadow! (Boy, I’ll never do that again!!!)

    What I hadn’t realized is that of course you could tell immediately ‘Henriette’ was me, because you could see my IP plain as day — I’m new to computers and it never occurred to me a poster was so visible until a friend pointed it out to me!

    So, dear Tere — I got a big lesson out of that, and if you’re getting back at me for that indiscretion I hope my public apology will do.

    I felt it was satire at the time — looking back I can see it was just plain destructive.

    If there’s any other loose ends, let me know and I’ll do my best to put them straight pronto.

    Christopher

  1127. Gary,

    Adam was OK because he was essentially taking this ‘chicago school’ thing seriously; you were not, and you, I’m afraid, are now considered my “clattery friend” (Bobby Baird’s own words in his email to me). You’ve been tarred with the brush of Monday Love. Sorry about that.

    Open discussion is not what it’s about these days. It’s about cliques and turf–in the most ugly sort of way. One can’t be a citizen of poetry anymore; one must be a citizen of the Poetry Foundation or the Chicago School, etc etc.

    Thomas

  1128. Let me just quickly defend myself against Indy’s accusations against me here on Clattery; may I?

    Indy speaks as if he/she works behind the scenes at Harriet and knows exactly why I was banned, or else he/she is just giving into mob mentality and throwing generic slurs around:

    Indy says I ‘hijacked threads’ and ‘overposted’ on Harriet. These are lies.

    Here are the facts.

    1. Typically, 8-10 threads would be open for discussion on Harriet during my time there. I would post in 2 of them; the remaining 6-8 I would not go in. The ones I did NOT post in would get about 10 comments–that’s it. The ones I would post in would get 150-250 comments.

    2. Harriet set up a ‘reply’ function, specifically so that ANY poster could reply off-topic to a poster, instead of the post, per se, if they wished, in ANY thread, and most posters utilized this function; so Harriet condoned off-topic digressions in threads, which, as a matter of course, happen all the time, as anyone knows. So ‘hijacking’ was, in effect, allowed, and done by nearly everyone. Threads were not hijacked. Bill Knott may have come close once, but no one seemed too upset, because Bill Knott is well…Bill Knott.

    3. There was ‘talk’ and ‘talk’ only, of limiting the number of posts and the length of posts, per poster, but this policy was never implemented, and I never got an communication about watching this limit. Instead, the thumbs up/thumbs down function was put in place, and after seven minus votes, one’s post became hidden. This was upsetting to many posters, and I carried on under its dubious effects without complaint.

    4. Again, NEVER were ANY of my posts deleted, or cited. I was NEVER warned for misbehavior, or for anything at all. No specific complaints were ever conveyed to me by Harriet management.

    5. Back in March, I posted a ‘March Madness’ bracket with 64 famous 20th century American poems, and ran a ‘playoffs.’ NOT ONE Harriet poster responded. I copied my efforts in another non-poetry site, and someone responded right away, highlighting their choices for favorites and a winner.

    6. On Septemer 1, I went to post and found I could not. That’s all I know.

    7. During my time on Harriet, one rather prominent poet was accused of libeling another rather well-known writer, right on Harriet itself. Management did nothing. I once wrote a post in Spanish. Kent Johnson accused me of ‘quasi-racism.’ I asked for an apology. Nothing ever came of this. Which is fine, because I don’t like to cause trouble. I believe in letting sleeping dogs lie. I never sent a private message to any Harriet poster or to any member of Harriet management.

    8. Since I was banned, the site is in shambles. A entire post (and all its comments) was removed without comment when John Oliver Simon made a remark which was apparently offensive to the author of the post. A post by Eileen Myles, made in late August had one comment, mine. No one else responded. Many posts have zero, or very few comments. Since the banning, conversations wither and die. The highlight of one thread was Matthew Zapruder telling Kent Johnson, “Stop calling me Matt!”

    9. The Poetry Foundation’s stated mission is to EXPAND an interest in poetry in a general way. I was writing, and have always written, in the spirit of that mission. The actions of Harriet management, I would argue, have actually hindered that mission.

    Indy greeting me with these unprovoked accusations right here on Clattery, is part of the same old problem.

  1129. The thing is, the main offenders seem to be phd students, living in a bubble, taking what they do oh soo seriously. Baird and Nichols, youngish guys who pay lip se4rvice to free speech: as long as you agree and say how great they are, that is there idea of free speech.

    I know Share is out of all the politics – or seems to be – as he published a quite close to the bone comment from me on his blog, indicating that he is not invloved with the Nichol’s debacle.

    The young neo-con poetry enforcers, betray the conditioning of their culture, in that they blatantly play dirty, citing being boring, or ‘dumb’ as a reason for not publishing you on their blog.

    In essence, Nichols is running Harriet like Baird is his gulag, showing the real ‘dumb’ side of American anti-poetic intelligence in the process.

  1130. Arf Venison has no bite and I never listen to his bark. His yes vote for Indy is one more cowardly yip in the barnyard…

  1131. Oh, Baird did publish my bon mot on his site, after all.

    Was that so hard, Bobby? Was it really necessary to send me emails complaining of my “clattery friends” and using the s. word?

    I didn’t ask for your emails.

    Does the ‘Chicago School’ really take itself so seriously?

    And Kent Johnson telling us exactly how far he lives from Chicago…??? LOL

    Most appalling to me in Kent Johnson’s piece was Kent’s link to Baird, writing:

    “I don’t think anyone would dis­pute that Stephen Burt is far and away the best critic work­ing the mode today, and anyone inter­ested in the cut-and-brand style of crit­i­cism prob­a­bly already knows that he has an essay in the new Boston Review on what he’s call­ing “the New Thing.” (I’m guess­ing–hoping–that’s a bit of know­ing self-​parody.) Burt describes it this way:

    ‘The poets of the New Thing observe scenes and people (not only, but also, them­selves) with a self-​subordinating con­ci­sion, so much so that the term “min­i­mal­ism” comes up in dis­cus­sions of their work, though the false analo­gies to ear­lier move­ments can make the term mis­lead­ing. The poets of the New Thing eschew sar­casm and tread lightly with ironies, and when they seem hard to pin down, it is because they leave space for inter­pre­ta­tions to fit.’”

    –end of Johnson quoting Baird quoting Burt quote

    Anyone who says: “I don’t think anyone would dispute that Stephen Burt is far and away the best critic working the mode today…” is not to be trusted.

    Burt’s criticism is the generic ‘whitman! long line! democracy! williams! short line! experimenter!’ type; nothing at all interesting, and this ‘New Thing’ movement is pure billingsgate. “observes scenes and people” [oh yea, that’s ‘new’] “with a self-subordinating concision” [typical b.s. academic rhetoric] etc etc

  1132. Harriet is deader than ever.

    Indy and Arf, why don’t you go over there and liven things up? Start a ‘dialogue’ or somethin.

    The unspoken issue here, in this whole discussion, is that you have people who do nothing but complain about others posting too much, when the REAL issue is, for them, the complainers, is that they (the complainers) have very little to say, are insecure in their own abilities to converse intelligently, and so they carp and lash out enviously against those who CAN truly write/talk about poetry with ease…

    The problem, quite often, is not with those few who ‘over post,’ but the many who are envious and tongue-tied.

  1133. Thomas,

    I didn’t say you were banned for hijacking threads, I said, “If you were banned from Harriet’s blog for overposting and hijacking threads, it doesn’t surprise me in the least.”

    My opinion regarding your lack of interest in dialogue is based on my interactions with you on several boards and my observation of you in action on several others.

    I apologize for not expressing myself in more tactfully. Would it have made a difference if I had?

  1134. I don’t work behind the scenes at Harriet’s, nor do I know anyone who does. My opinion is an educated guess, based on observation and speculation. My opinion is my own and has nothing to do with mob mentality or throwing around generic slurs.

    I am sorry that you feel my comments were unprovoked. I am not envious of you, nor am I tongue-tied. The fact that you think so is, IMO, part of the same old problem.

  1135. Also, Thomas, in post 1350 you wrote: “I was recently banned by Harriet, the Poetry Foundation blog for ‘posting too often’ or something like that–I never found out, was never told, was never warned.”

    What made you suspect the banning was the result of “posting too often”? Hold that thought.

  1136. And “narcissism?” That was an old Joe McCarthy and Roy Cohn tar brush, and any subsequent eloquence on the part of the accused, even humility, even simplicity itself, was cited as proof of the victim’s duplicity and self-absorption.

    Yeah, there is nothing narcissistic about posting under one user name and then coming in with another user name and praising yourself. I suspected Henriette was you, Christopher. It’s an MO I’ve seen you use a few times before. I’m glad you apologized to Tere. It’s a start.

  1137. I don’t understand the logic of that at all, Indy.

    Also if you go back and look you’ll see that when I replied to ‘Henriette’ (#1221-1223) in the very next post (#1224) and then in more detail a few posts later (#1232), I scolded her both for what she had said and for how she had said it.

    Here’s what I actually wrote (#1232):

    “I don’t agree with Henriette’s assessment after the same post #1192 [this ‘Reply’ was made on the same date as #1221], which I’d say is an even more pernicious sort of baying. She’s great both here and the way she went for Travis well below the belt on Harriet, but when she uses her gifts to savage Terreson she’s tearing our whole movement apart. She’s just a XXXXXXXX! [self-censored]

    Which is what I want to say. Let’s not be clever with each other (”just a XXXXXXX?”) but learn to listen better and always build on what we hear.

    In the last sentence I’m clearly mocking my own beastly put down of ‘Henriette,’ so I’ve really covered my own XXXXXXXX [self-censored — yay, a triple!]!

    ~

    I say we put that one to rest, as it does become boring to keep saying that what is boring is so boring. And also you’re much less boring when you talk about what I actually said as in your last post, Indy — puts some bite in the discourse.

    Christopher

  1138. Clattery, old bean, as you know I administer to a small board, teeny tiny is more like it. The members have known each other for some few years now. I have two reasons for mentioning the board.

    First reason. Our exchanges are punctuated by a few days, a week, sometimes a month. While I should like to see the member list doubled, maybe trebled (it is that small), I’ve come to appreciate something. When a member speaks up I know the thought behind the expression is considered and that she or he has reason for speaking up, usually from her gut. To me at least, this makes the exchange meaningful, real. Upthread a couple of posters have seen the need to predicate their worth on the amount of board (blog) traffic. They seem to think on line exchanges predicated on the hour, or by the hour, gives them worth. What is that classic line? ‘Morther, morther, she cried. Her appetite was insatiable.’ For me the amount of verbiage is not a measure of the conversation’s value.

    Second reason. Of course my board has its rules and protocol. Here is something from its standards:

    “~Everyone who participates on online chat boards is familiar enough with cyber vandals, snarks, spammers whose purpose is to disrupt conversation, in brief, to taliban about. The most effective means of treating with such disruption is to ignore it, not respond in any fashion. Cyber vandals thrive on attention, the more negative the better. Obviously if terms of engagement are violated the situation gets addressed. But members can take ownership of the situation by simply ignoring the chance attention getter.”

    I think there is a certain amount of insight to the comment having to do with on line people who actually thrive on the negative comment. And I will go so far as to say such participants are spammers and cyber vandals. Whatever the motive their need for the negative attention kills conversation.

    Now for something else. About #1394. That Mr. Woodman and Henriette are the same person comes as news to me. Here I have no avenue to anyone’s IP address. This is Clattery’s blog. I am a poster only. My comment upthread about Mr. Woodman’s violent language toward “Henriette” were honest and honestly outraged he would talk to a woman like that. I guess I made an assumption. I guess I missed the satire. I guess I still find Mr. Woodman’s language disturbing, if not violent. (so much more satire.)

    One last item. Both here and at the Poetry Foundation I have questioned and criticized the shunning protocol. Mostly because it reduces converastion to its least common denominator. While I don’t think anyone should be banned from a board or blog except for instances of hate speech, pornography, and expressions of violence against a member, I am not about to take up Woodman’s or Brady’s cause. In my view they are both spammers. I cannot get more categorical than this.

    Terreson

  1139. As to #1407, you’re not reading well there either, Indy.

    Tom said he suspected he was banned “for ‘posting too often’ or something like that – I never found out, was never told, was never warned.” The punctuation and word choice make it obvious this is ‘hearsay,’ and there was certainly a lot of that going on at the time — who were you on Harriet, by the way, Indy? Because it was posters just like you that kept muttering that distraction, obviously having nothing else to say.

    Annie Finch, Martin Earl, Camille Dungy, Don Share, Eileen Myles, Joel Brouwer, Matthew Zapruder and many other well-known participants on Blog:Harriet not only responded to Tom as equals everyday, but praised him repeatedly for his humor, breadth of knowledge, and insight. Indeed, I know from a very reliable source that Thomas Brady was being actively considered as a ‘Contributing Writer’ at the time, and had not Travis Nichols and his coterie felt threatened by him he would have been by now!

    (And still may be — I would say that would be the very best way forward for Blog:Harriet…)

    The coterie-management idea brings us back to the “Pee in the Pool of On-line Poetry,” squarely — #1384 might be a good place to get back on track.

    Christopher

  1140. I hear you, Tere — and just hope you will give me a chance to prove I’m no spammer.

    If we could get away from the put-downs and dismissals to the main meal on the table, we wouldn’t have to snap and snarl over the scraps in the dark

    C.

  1141. Risking Clattery’s disapproval with a 3rd post in a row, I’d also like to say that I do understand some of your discomfort, Tere. Your article is about “on-line poetry” quite specifically, that is about poetry boards, poetry workshops on the net, and poetry in cyber space in general. Tom and I came here because we had had such a bad experience on one of the most conspicuous poetry boards in America, Blog:Harriet, but yes, it was an experience of poetry board management, not of on-line poetry per se. Most certainly that’s a difference.

    But it’s also a compliment to you and Clattery that we did come here, that we felt this was the place to air our grievances, that you would understand and be sympathetic. I still feel that ought to be true, and now that some of the dust (and dog hairs!) have settled, maybe we could do some profitable work together.

    So here’s hoping that my post #1384 might actually be a starting point. For example, I’d like to look at Tom’s idea of “aesthetic corruption,” and to see to what extent problems in on-line poetry board management are not also to do with the sort of turf that’s more often described as a ‘lawn.’ So is it also about schools then, Tere? Is it about cosa nostra?

    Christopher

  1142. Tere,

    I don’t need your “support” in the “cause.” You’ve said a thousand times now that you don’t “support” Brady & Woodman. Good for you. We get it. I’ve always thought of you as a lone wolf. Carry on with your bad self.

    Tere, you wrote in #1410 just above:

    “Our exchanges are punctuated by a few days, a week, sometimes a month. While I should like to see the member list doubled, maybe trebled (it is that small), I’ve come to appreciate something. When a member speaks up I know the thought behind the expression is considered and that she or he has reason for speaking up, usually from her gut. To me at least, this makes the exchange meaningful, real.”

    Are you actually saying that if there is a month between posts, this automatically signifies that those posts are coming from the “gut?” Sorry, I just can’t be beholden to such “logic.”

    Hey, I like to sit by a quiet river with the best of them.

    But life’s short, you know?

    Don’t judge comments how fast they come.

    Thomas

  1143. sorry–

    ‘Don’t judge comments on how fast they come.’

    Indy,

    So you don’t work at Harriet, you didn’t read Thomas Brady on Harriet…you just come out of the blue and attack without specifics. I feel that’s poor form, that’s all. If you’re OK with that, I guess there’s nothing else I can say, though of course if you want to talk about something specific, I’m here.

    Thomas

  1144. Clattery:

    I have an idea. You should start a thread called ‘Hyde Park Soap Box’ where anyone could go and vent about any (poetry related) issue they might have. No ‘hijacking’ could occur and nobody would ever be offended. You can’t go “off topic” if there isn’t one.

  1145. Po-biz today needs LESS ‘frowning “stay on-topic!”‘ and MORE Byron.

    Most epic poets plunge ‘in medias res,’
    (Horace makes this the heroic turnpike road),
    And then your hero tells, whene’er you please,
    What went before–by way of episode,
    While seated after dinner at his ease,
    Beside his mistress in some soft abode,
    Palace, or garden, paradise, or cavern,
    Which serves the happy couple for a tavern.

    That is the usual method, but not mine–
    My way is to begin with the beginning;
    The regularity of my design
    Forbids all wandering as the worst of sinning,
    And therefore I shall open with a line
    (Although it cost me half an hour in spinning),
    Narrating somewhat of Don Juan’s father,
    And also of his mother, if you’d rather.

  1146. Post #1414:

    “Tere,

    I don’t need your “support” in the “cause.” You’ve said a thousand times now that you don’t “support” Brady & Woodman. Good for you. We get it. I’ve always thought of you as a lone wolf. Carry on with your bad self.

    Tere, you wrote in #1410 just above:

    “Our exchanges are punctuated by a few days, a week, sometimes a month. While I should like to see the member list doubled, maybe trebled (it is that small), I’ve come to appreciate something. When a member speaks up I know the thought behind the expression is considered and that she or he has reason for speaking up, usually from her gut. To me at least, this makes the exchange meaningful, real.”

    Are you actually saying that if there is a month between posts, this automatically signifies that those posts are coming from the “gut?” Sorry, I just can’t be beholden to such “logic.”

    Hey, I like to sit by a quiet river with the best of them.

    But life’s short, you know?

    Don’t judge comments how fast they come.

    Thomas”

    This is yet another reason why I distrust Mr. Brady’s online motives. He puts down a board’s medium in order to exhalt his own incessant on line chatter. I am right. Mr. Brady is a spammer. And I am right a second time. The one real online exchange is more valuable than the thirty faux exchanges, often made for the sake of disputation only.

    I’ve realized this about poetry spammers. They are not interested in conversation, dialogue, or the exchange. It is only their fixed ideas they look to promote. I wish I had covered this in the essay. The behavior is actually more damaging to on line poetry than management practices.

    Terreson

  1147. Oh dear Tere, still so angry and mean.

    But you should be very careful, because the dynamics of that reply, and particularly that hammering on that one particular word, are extremely demeaning, and place you in a very unhealthy tradition. You know very well what a spammer is, just as Joe McCarthy knew very well what a commie was, and Roy Cohn a homosexual (love the word!), but by harping on just those two smears they wrecked whole lives.

    So in what sense did Joe McCarthy know “what a commie was?” Well, he knew that in the post-Depression years most of America’s best intellectuals were very interested in the Communist Movement, studied it, talked about it, believed in it, and in some cases actually signed up. He knew very well that almost everybody he put on the carpet in the House un-American Activities Committee fell into that category, and that by harping on THE WORD the atmosphere would condemn them, las if he’d said WITCH. And boy did it ever, and what a lot of damage was done.

    Ditto Roy Cohn — the ironies there are even more sickening, of course, even more cruel and distorted. Because which one of us can throw the first stone when it comes to sexual matters ? Certainly not me. And yes, I’m still very much a Socialist too, and hugely proud that Norman Thomas was my cousin.

    So there you are calling Tom a spammer, you, a compulsive poster who can’t resist any on-line temptation to bash or snark or just get another one up on someone. Everybody admires you, Tere, you’re such a force, but everybody also knows you write way too much and too often, and are not to be trusted either, your barb is too sharp and your whip too long. I didn’t follow all the discussions on Poets.org, but a lot of your supporters were bewildered by the hard-line you took at the time, and your refusal to be graceful. Many people wanted you to stay to help, and you resigned to be sure that everybody could see you were, da dah, Terreson!

    You’re still a genius, Tere. You’re still a huge force for the good. But you’re also way too much.

    And so is Tom, in a sense, though he has a sweetness and patience you’re missing. Could you have continued posting many times every day for 2 months on Harriet only to see every word you spoke buried under an avalanche of red votes as he did? You’re upset when you get just two or three Dislikes, and complain bitterly too — Tom got 10 or 15 for every single comment he posted, all of which were shut out of sight. For months on end!

    Yet Tom never retaliated, he never snapped back or pulled a punch or resorted to smear tactics. Not once.

    That’s why they had to ban him, of course — the Like/Dislike Thumbs Down treatment simply didn’t work on someone so confident and patient. Yet you’ve just had a few tiny tomatoes and you’re out of there!

    Finally, any of us with gifts are troubled by them, and of course you write too much at times, as do I. But Tom also has a literary-historical mission that is far larger than yours, and it’s one that the establishment finds extremely unsettling. So yes, he does push too hard at times, but show me the reformer that doesn’t? Also show me the reformer as passionate that remains always in such a good mood and so funny?

    For you to use smear tactics on Tom is disgraceful.

    Christopher

  1148. There is no point to any of this, except to make indy’s points. It is like indy says, boring as hell. Nothing is getting accomplished. Lot’s of words, lot’s of pee, that no one in their right mind would want to wade through. With this last post, for instance, I don’t feel I know anyone any better than before, but apparently it was meant to characterize people for some reason, to make some sort of argument that never went anywhere.

    C.

  1149. “He puts down a board’s medium in order to exhalt his own incessant on line chatter.”

    –Tere

    Still parading falsehoods and insults, my good friend?

    I questioned your “logic” of monthly postings as inherently worthy; I did NOT “put down a board’s medium.”

    I can see you typing red-faced with rage, unable to write reasonably; calling me a “spammer” will not make it so.

    You are in spam mode, not I.

    People can read; they *know.*

    You can be articulate, but I don’t know what’s happening to you, now. I suggest leaving off. I sincerely fear for your health, since you’re so angry.

    Take it easy, OK? I mean it.

    Thomas

  1150. AD, have you read Plato’s rendering of Socrates The Phaedrus dialogue?

    It is an interesting text, in which Socrates runs into Phaedrus, as Phaedrus is returning from the home of Lysias, who has just given a speech on love. Lysias was one of the most famous Greek rhetoricians in the time of Plato, circa middle 4C BC.

    It is one of the classic ancient texts and articulates the priciple of poetry being a gift of madness from the various gods.

    Horace also has a saying: ‘that man is either mad or speaking poetry’

    ~

    The deeper reaches of poetry, are not really suited for exploration by people like Trav and his pals, who see it as an adjunct of showbiz, rather than a calling ungoverned by rules and regs made up by people whose intellectual complexity and depth runs to putting Hitler moustaches on their black president: the sort of logic Trav displays.

  1151. Hey Dodger,

    Do you go to Va. Tech? Did someone (your parents?) make you take that course?

    “obsessive thinking about what is
    happening on the Internet…”

    Been doing this much since you came here last?

    LOL

  1152. So Clattery, old bean, posts 1419 and 1421 remind me of a story I still find amusing. I think I’ve told it before but maybe it bears repeating.

    You remember how the fur started flying soon after you put up my essay. Well, there was this one guy, a TCP mod. I sort of knew, who one day emailed me. Because of the essay he expressed grave concern for my sanity. He ended his letter by assuring me he was qualified in talking about things such as mental health, being, as he was, an MD. I can’t remember how but subsequently I learned the gentleman was a retired urologist. Guess you could call him a pee expert who could read the water (swirls? smells? specific gravity?) and diagnose mental illness.

    Anyway, of course you are right. This particular conversational vector has entered the silly sphere. I see no point in responding to the several charges put against me, my character, my emotional state, my sanity. Deja vu all over again.

    One more thing maybe. While I do not think Woodman, Brady, or Swords should have been banned from Harriet’s, I am essentially disturbed by the Swords case. His banning speaks more to style or preference than it speaks to content or message. I for one tended to skip over his posts. They often amounted to a thicket of thoughts a reader could quickly get lost in. But that was (is) his way. That was (is) his syntactical style of thinking. His banning was particularly unjust. This brings shame only on the Poetry Foundation. He was not a spammer there. He did not fixate on himself or on a circumscribed set of ideas. His tongue just wagged and took the lead too much. The banning of Mr. Swords I think bothers me the most, particularly speaks against the case of too much management.

    Tere

  1153. I don’t see anything “silly” here, Tere, I see in miniature exactly what Desmond Swords meant when he posted that video. And what you see there is not funny at all, because it’s how crowd bashings get started, hysteria building up to ‘taking the law into one’s own hand,’ then tarring and feathering, and then, close your eyes, lynchings. And we’re poets, for God’s sake!

    Because, Clattery and Tere, there was no “feedback” from Indy where all this began, just blanket dismissal out of nowhere, like a mole — a good internet metaphor, that one. “Feedback” is an audio metaphor, and involves one communication morphing into another separate communication, a “reply,” we call it when its helpful, though it can be incomprehensible too. In the audio world, feedback is usually a painful distraction, because it replies with exactly the same tone and volume but is all scrambled up, and totally disrupts the message.

    There has been no “feedback” from Indy and the Artful Dodger on this thread, Clattery, unless you call what those protesters on Desmond’s video clip are giving to Barack Obama feedback. No, Indy and AD are doing a Joe Wilson, pure and simple, and the sole effect Joe Wilson was looking for was to whip up contrary emotions that would bury anything cogent Obama might have to say.

    And that’s called heckling.

    What bothers me is that you, CM, the Administrator of Clattery MacHinery, a site dedicated to cleaning up Poetry Board Management, have come in to say that heckling has more content than the speech that active members are trying to deliver from the podium. And that’s precisely why Desmond posted that clip — to illustrate what happens when heckling becomes acceptable content.

    I know wading in like this will ruin my chances of going on here at Clattery, but I’m so disappointed in Clattery MacHinery I doubt I could continue here anyway.

    Christopher Woodman

  1154. What I left out is your role in all this, Tere, and without saying it I’ve left out a most important part of the picture. Because this thread is uniquely yours, the author of “The Pee in the Pool of On-Line Poetry,’ and although I believe you when you say you have nothing to do with the adminstration of the site, you are the most important voice on it. You are the ‘moderator’ in the best sense of the word, the one who makes the calls, so to speak, the one who defines the parameters when posters don’t understand what you meant in the first place.

    Fair enough, and I do respect that. I respect your article and always listen to your interpretations of it — because of course the whole topic is developing. Indeed, that’s precsiely why Tom, Desmond and myself are here, and what an irony!

    But now you’re doing your Joe Wilson too, Tere, and each time you write a note to “Clattery old bean,” your hammering a nail in my coffin (another metaphor to add to what the crowd does just above!).

    And you shouldn’t. You should be large enough to accept a hand when its held it out to you instead of sneering at it. Because I’ve been waving an olive branch on Clattery in every word I’ve written way back to post #1344, and you’ve been studiously ignoring it. Indeed, you’ve been pouring oil on the fire.

    Bad. Looks bad, feels bad, means bad. Destructive.

    Christopher

  1155. Hi Christopher,

    Indy gave clear feedback. I urged you to accept it via e-mail, when you asked me. You instead want to say that it isn’t feedback? What? Such an argument is going to get tedious and boring, proving indy is right on track.

    C.

  1156. There ought to be one rule of on-line etiquette–just one.

    If you think another poster is ‘boring;’ don’t be rude and say so; instead YOU write something that is NOT ‘boring.’

    That’s it.

    1. Don’t be boring. Saying someone else is boring, is boring. Instead, be interesting yourself.

    Clattery, maybe you are friends with this Indy person off the blog; I don’t know. Perhaps you and Tere know each other off the blog; and I was discussing with Woodman and Swords privately that there are any number of psychological and prideful reasons why Tere/Clattery might resent the Foetry.com gang, and I use the term ‘gang’ very loosely, but you know what I mean.

    Anyway, you and Tere are beloved for your ‘freedom-loving,’ ‘anti-banning’ philosophy, and so sure, let Indy–or whoever–come on here and say anything they want. But Indy did violate THE rule–if I may be allowed to call it that: Indy, without charm, or wit, or example, insulted me. Indy did not provide a psychological or philosophical basis for the charge, or provide any details; there was no attempt to relate the charge to ‘pee in the pool’ or anything else; the motive was solely ‘get Thomas Brady,’ and ‘make Thomas Brady look bad’ and again, if Indy wants to do that, Indy can, but is this the example we want to set?

  1157. I’d say nutshell, Clattery. That’s it in a nutshell.

    No more, “You lie!” From now on we insist upon a more truthful, revitalized, fresh and lively vision of what has been said. Then we’ll know exactly what’s indisputable, and interesting, and really True and well-said.

    No more “boring” or “tedium.” From now on it’s “Here’s what’s interesting. Here’s what’s really well said!”

    O.K?

    Christopher

  1158. Well, Clattery, about #1427. It looks like I am wrong. I just linked to the UTube video in #1425. To say the least I find the association drawn between a blog administrator and the video’s images of hatefulness disturbing. I had thought better of Mr. Swords. This does nothing to further dialogue. Everything to impede it. This is not the level of exchange I wish to be party to. This is as rancourous as you, Indy and me getting told we are doing a Joe Wilson. Cyber vandalism is the term that comes to mind for the behavior on display here.

    I know from past experience that Messrs Brady and Woodman will eventually tire of Clattery’s blog, all the sooner with the less attention shown them.

    I’ve never asked this before but I would sure like to see #1427 go away. It is now embarrassing.

    Terreson

  1159. “I’ve never asked this before but I would sure like to see #1427 go away. It is now embarrassing.”

    Tere, #1427 is your post–that was you waxing nostalgic on the retired urologist who questioned your sanity.

    Swords’ linking Travis with a generic, unplesant, political youtube was out-of-bounds in my opinion, too–I agree with you, and I wrote Swords to ask him about it yesterday.

    You mean #1425, don’t you?

    Now, Alan Cordle was familiar with, and pointed out, a political lapse by Mr. Nichols as director of a poetry bus (which excluded all who were not young white males) and since this was 1) factual and 2) a po-biz issue and 3) relevant to Mr. Nichols’ actions on Harriet, Mr. Cordle’s post, I thought, unlike Swords’ post, was relevant.

    Harriet–with Mr. Nichols in control, proceeded to censor Cordle’s information.

    This information may have been embarrassing for Mr. Nichols, but freedom of speech, as everyone knows, is not ‘freedom of speech except when it happens to embarrass someone in a relevant manner.’

    The key word is relevant. My praising my wife’s poems without disclosing she was my wife is also relevant; it was relevant in the opinion of Harriet management, for they did not censor this information, and Harriet did the right thing, I believe, permitting that point to be raised, even if it caused embarrassment. It was relevant.

    Once you start burying relevant truths in the name of protecting people, you begin to turn verdure into a graveyard.

    The actions of people will always be imperfect, and the actions of people are what we are talking about here, whether its poetry, whether its on line politics, or pee in the pool. The pee is human, and the rules need to apply to everyone.

    Thomas

  1160. On the other hand, Swords was spot on in his reply to Dodger’s question about poets and the insane, by bringing up the example of Plato.

    Dodger then linked a bit of university psycho-babble attempting to codify ‘internet use’ as pathology. If one has a strong urge to participate in internet dialogue, this is no different than having a strong urge to play the violin, or to write poetry, or to write Socratic dialogues. The sort of generic psychology linked by Dodger is nothing more than puritanism in a modern guise; it perfectly exemplifies the sort of shallow, status quo spirit which finds Thomas Brady and Christopher Woodman dangerous, the jealousy of the pragmatic and bland towards the truthful and passionate.

  1161. Clattery, to forestall any confusion I explicitly refer to #1427. Asking that someone else’s post be made to disapear is not my way.

    Terreson

  1162. @#1431, which says this:

    But Indy did violate THE rule–if I may be allowed to call it that: Indy, without charm, or wit, or example, insulted me. Indy did not provide a psychological or philosophical basis for the charge, or provide any details; there was no attempt to relate the charge to ‘pee in the pool’ or anything else; the motive was solely ‘get Thomas Brady,’ and ‘make Thomas Brady look bad’ and again, if Indy wants to do that, Indy can, but is this the example we want to set?

    Don’t take indy’s feedback so personally. It’s straight talk.

    It would have been tedious and boring if indy had tried to get into any psychological basis of the situation. It is not up to the person giving feedback to be concerned about the psychology of the one to receive it, unless there’s a sense that a suicide or something hurtful will take place for telling someone like it is.

    My concern at this point is how much of this thread to delete, or whether I keep it all here for people and posterity to see just how badly a hijacking damages conversation. I may lean to the latter, so that others can see what takes place, and decide for themselves how to handle it if and when it happens at their blogs and forums. Deleting and banning is not a bad idea, though.

    The case has been made that the thumbs up and down baloney at Harriet is a bad thing. And the treatment of hijackers, if that’s why you were banned (as indy put it), weighs in as a good thing. Indy’s argument holds true still, the case getting hammered home, post after tedious post.

    C.

  1163. My apologies to indy for inadvertently deleting the post that followed mine directly above. My intention was to stop the conversation from there.

    So indy, if you recall what you said, please post it.

    Christopher, you began your post that followed saying something about it taking a while for people, including me, to catch on. Wrong. I have been on this each day.

    This hijacking is stopping here. There is no need to prolong it any further, to make any more examples of how-to. We all know now that it is possible for anyone who feels there is nothing better to do, to argue each minuscule point ad infinitum, resulting in a boring hijacking.

    It’s over now. We can all breathe easier.

    C.

  1164. I found indy’s comment in my e-mail. Here it is:

    It wasn’t the content of his comment that made Joe Wilson a
    heckler; it was where and when he chose to make the remark. Wilson
    was free to take to the floor of Congress and say Obama was lying
    about this or that; he just wasn’t free to do it while the
    President was addressing a joint session of Congress. If Wilson made
    his comment during a regular session, other members would then be
    free to refute his statement and correct the record.

    “Indy, without charm, or wit, or example, insulted me”

    I thought there were one or two moments of wit in my posts, and they
    were brief, but perhaps wit, like beauty, is in the eye of the
    beholder. I did give you an example though: “here, now.”

    “the motive was solely ‘get Thomas Brady,’ and ‘make Thomas
    Brady look bad’ and again”

    My motive wasn’t to make you look bad but to point out to you why,
    IMO, you do look bad and how you, perhaps unwittingly, do a
    disservice to the ideas you are promoting and the causes you are
    championing.

    “I was discussing with Woodman and Swords privately that there are
    any number of psychological and prideful reasons why Tere/Clattery
    might resent the Foetry.com gang”

    My comments had nothing to do with foetry. I know very little about foetry.

    “it perfectly exemplifies the sort of shallow, status quo spirit
    which finds Thomas Brady and Christopher Woodman dangerous, the
    jealousy of the pragmatic and bland towards the truthful and
    passionate.”

    I don’t find either one of you dangerous. Nope, not jealous.

    Whether you see my comments as feedback or insults depends in large
    part on what you do with them. If you continue to chalk them up to
    jealousy, fear and animosity, you will mostly likely repeat the
    pattern you have experienced at Poets & Writers, poets.org,
    Harriet’s blog, and now here, elsewhere. “Wherever you go, there
    you are.”

  1165. harriet: still dead.

    They can cut and paste; they can link.

    They seem unable to have conversations.

    Now Terreson of ‘pee in the pool’ fame, (’pee’ a kind of foetry.com lite–very, very lite) is single-handedly attempting to breathe life into the poetry foundation blog, but unsuccessfully, alas.

    Someone named Tonya has given us one of these typical ’stream-of-consciousness-quote this-quote that-what-does-it-all-mean?’ pieces of gibberish which has made Terreson all excited: ‘This is great! I want to see more…gibberish.’

    A poster named Wendy aptly ends the comments (a total of 4) with “Does meaning have to make ’sense?’” This harriet comment stream is bound to take off in the days to come. uh…not.

    The ‘Keats movie’ post on Harriet, now in its third day, has one post.

    The single post–by Terreson–asks, ‘if anybody from filmdom is here…’ and suggests other stories for films, that he, Terreson, is certain would make great films. Uh…Terreson, old bean, no one from filmdom is on Harriet…NO ONE is on Harriet.

    harriet has nothing to say about Keats (who is keats?) or the film, which has been getting good reviews…

    but if you’re looking for film ideas…

    Terreson… on Harriet… is your man.

    Good thing Travis Nichols is at the controls on Harriet, though.

    Travis, the Harriet chief, will keep the Keats thread (with its single comment) safe, and free from pee.

    Mr. Nichols is there to make sure no one “hijacks” the Keats thread.

    Thank goodness!

  1166. My apologies, Clattery, for losing my temper. Chalk it up to the cumulative effect, which is still no excuse. I should heed my own advise and simply ignore these gentlemen.

    Terreson

  1167. Clattery, this is for the record. Higher math escapes me but I remember how to count.

    http://alancordle.com/blog/?p=3704&cpage=1#comment-4951

    The text of my post says:

    ‘Between 1 Sep and today, 20 Sep, 229 posts were made on the blog, Clattery MaChinery’s ‘Pee in the Pool.’ Brady, using various names, posted 60 times. Woodman (aka Henriette) posted 52 times. The combined total is 112 posts. This is 5 shy of half the total posts in 19 days.

    I call this kind of on line behavior spamming, especially since the combined total amounts to little of substance. And I call the motivation hijacking. Add to this the insults meted out by the two posters, by Woodman in particular, I commend the blog’s owner for his tolerance.

    (For the record this poster weighed in at 24 posts in the same time period.)

    Can there be any wonder why boards and blogs have come to shudder when they see Messrs Brady and Woodman coming?’

    I’ve always thought undue attention has been given to the portion of my essay devoted to bad management practices. I don’t know. Maybe the topic is sexy or something. I’ve always thought that the greater concern is with posters showing bad faith. Lousy critics operating in the compensatory fashion, spammers, hijackers, and cyber vandals. And I remember something Clattery said maybe a year ago. He gave the problem(s) facing poetry boards a degree of historical perspective. From memory, he said the draconian reaction of poetry boards (and blogs) was brought about by the cyber vandal problem that entered into the scene. This makes sense to me.

    So here is the confounding question. How does a poetry board (and blog) negotiate between the two extremes? Too much management is a killer, especially, since, at their core all artists are a bit of the anarachist. And in the best sense. On the other hand cyber vandals are killers of conversation too. And that is the thing, isn’t it? Every poet comes on line looking for real conversation with other poetry minded people. How the hell to keep it vital, keep it alive? Anybody got any answers or silver bullets in their pockets?

    I guess I need to revise my post count for the last 19 days from 24 to 25.

    Terreson

  1168. Hi Desmond,

    We are done with their tedious, argumentative posts here, just as we have been done with the foul language they were using earlier. The last few weeks of posts are a good enough example of how such flamers can take over a thread. They went in two offensive stages. The first was the use of foul language, language they would be comfortable with, but that many onlookers would be repulsed by. The second significant phase was to be argumentative to absurdity, to become repulsive to anyone who wanted to conjure the energy to respond to them.

    C.

  1169. Tom was christened “Thomas Brady” by Indy too, do you remember, Indy when he went by the name of Pirvaya?

    LOL I am not now and never have been the poster formerly known as Pirvaya.

  1170. I just said that just to see if you were following, and sure enough you are, just like Pirvaya and Alf Venison.

    So Terreson, what was this you were saying about Indy being “good people?”

    How would we know?

    Or is he/she going to tell us now as I did immediately after my indiscretion with ‘Henriette?’

    So who are you, Indy? And if you don’t want to say, keep quiet on Clattery or you’ll get scolded for lying.

    Christopher

  1171. So Clattery, recent events here incite me to go back to the original question: are poetry boards good for poetry? As mentioned upthread maybe too much attention has been spent on management practices and not enough on the deleterious effect of participants on line poetry. Specifically I have in mind cyber vandals, spammers, bad critics (critics reading from a preconceived template), and cliques that get formed then dominate a board. For further discussion would such a more narrowly focused essay interest you?

    By the way, Desmond Swords, #1443 addresses the wrong person. I don’t have a problem with that the particular posts got deleted. In fact, one of my more angry posts got deleted too. Clattery’s action makes sense to me. But this is Clattery MacHinery’s blog. Not mine. Back in the spring of ’08 he took on the essay when no one else on line would. Since then he has taken on the ensueing discussions.

    One more thing. It is now getting broadcasted on the Alan Cordle’s blog that dozens of posts from the last two days here have been deleted. This is a lie put out by one Mr. Woodman. Less than ten posts got deleted and, in my opinion, for good reason.

    I’ll be so glad when this blog has finally skipped off the Woodman/Brady radar screen. Then we can get back to business.

    Terreson

    • Specifically I have in mind cyber vandals, spammers, bad critics (critics reading from a preconceived template), and cliques that get formed then dominate a board. For further discussion would such a more narrowly focused essay interest you?

      Sounds like a good idea. Surely, we would have to brace ourselves once again. On the other hand, it would bring a certain balance.

  1172. I think this is worth a post.

    Well, Clattery, once again you and I have come under personal attack, along with a bunch of people at the Harriet blog. Only this time it is from the otherside. Two sites have been created for visitors here of recent memory. Not that I recommend it but here are the links. It actually makes for an interesting case study.

    http://alancordle.com/blog/?p=3704

    http://scarriet.wordpress.com/

    The second site kind of causes a queasiness. The purpose strikes me as an odd form of cyber stalking. As for the first site I tried once to bring conversation around to the issues involved but I gave up.

    While I remain against the practice of banning, except for such actions as hate speech, personal attacks, and threats of violence, I sure understand why blogs and boards tire of what, in my view, amounts to cyber vandalism. Then again I guess slander is a kind of personal attack, which is something I’ve needed to come to.

    Tere

  1173. Hi Terreson,

    They should have blogs all to themselves. Great. They can knock themselves out, and make stuff up about anyone they want.

    I allowed them a fine run here, and they used it to their self-ruination. It was more than they should have been given to whatever points they thought were important. The fault was that most people reading would get exhausted by the tedium. And there, I told them to stop, after they pushed their limits as they tried pushing buttons, and they continued. I’m having nothing to do with their argumentativeness, and I won’t have it here any longer.

    I don’t want to change them, but they can’t be pissing here any longer. And this way, like those other boards and blogs, I don’t have to read their pissy points every day, or think I have some responsibility for displaying it. My life is certainly better now, with the time freed up.

    They made their points. It’s here for posterity. Your essay once again did overtime.

    C.

  1174. About #1452. Well, sir, yours now belongs to a long line of blogs and boards which has had to treat with the gentlemen. Every place I know of has shown forebearance and patience. Every place I know of has ended up either escorting the gentlemen from the scene or discouraging their participation.

    Their attacks on you are particularly perturbing. I know you to be an honest broker. And, in spite of much criticism, you’ve stood by the essay looking to open up a certain conversation. As for their attacks on me I know where I stand. Everybody whose followed the discussion knows where I stand. And, yes, I too am glad they have a place of their own and a platform from which they can broadcast their notions.

    By the way, I am slowly working up to that second essay. I especially want to elaborate on something discussed in the course of this conversation, which is the (frequently) imbalanced relationship between critic and poet. And I want to treat with the kind of cyber vandalism we’ve just witnessed. The first can kill poetry. The second invariably kills conversation.

    About #1453. Thank you Elizabeth. But better yet, what is your take on both the information and on your own experiences?

    Tere

  1175. Clattery, upthread I brought attention to a practice employed on the Poetry Foundation’s blog, Harriets: the blog. It involves the anonymous voting for or against any post made in response to a blog’s feature article. Its effects have been pernicious. Here is a link to a current blog:

    http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2009/12/can-experimental-poetry-save-the-earth/#comment-26689

    The blog has brought back to mind the Foundation’s practice of allowing people to anonymously vote for or against a post. So that there is a public record of my response I paste here just what I think of the practice. In my view it is a sham and it falsifies the exchange between poets:

    ~ Travis Nichols, if there was another avenue for bringing up an unpleasant, and compromising, topic I would take it. As best as I can figure no such avenue is to be found in the grid of Harriet’s streets. Ya’ll have made yourselves pretty much unreachable. Your blog on the poetry and positions of one John Kinsella employs a rather pointed, and in the case of the blog unfortunate, phrase: the personal in the political you say. I figure the personal political always starts at home. When it doesn’t there tends to crop up what Hegel called the world historical irony. By this he meant to bring attention to certain contradictions between the ideal and the historical record. Christianity has its contradictions between the morality of Jesus Christ and the historical workings of the Church. So does Democracy. So did Communism.

    When I see a minus sign preceding my name I tend to get a negative view of myself. My inclination is to cancel out the vote with a plus vote of my own. It works as a neutralizing effect. Then sometimes to test the Harriet system, and after waiting some hours, I vote in the positive a second time. My immediately preceding post now has two “likes,” both of which are mine. To further test the system I gave the person, Rachel’s, post a “like” vote. Then a second. As of this writing two of the four positive votes are mine.

    Do with the information what you will. And not just you, but all of the Harriet staff. I don’t much care. This voting system to which the blog seems to be inordinately attached is a sham. It is a lie. It can be manipulated, which means it means nothing. I’ll say it again. The personal political starts at home, starts in the home.

    For Harriet’s to extoll the virtues of an environmentalist poet while, at the same time, setting up a system that falsifies the exchange between poets and poetry readers I call a contradiction between values and practice: a world historical irony on a small, immediate, scale.

    Terreson

    Posted By: Terreson on December 6, 2009 at 7:01 pm
    Reply ~

    This poetry board and poetry blog shit has got to stop. What tends to get generated by management.

    Tere

  1176. I, too, have been subjected to the ‘shunning’ experience at Harriet. It is difficult for many poets to have their work criticized or, worse, ignored, but to have even one’s opinions and simple comments in what is supposedly an open and public discussion denounced (‘disliked’), is egregious indeed. What is so terrible about this is that, even though the management instituted the policy, it is one’s fellow writers who control this mechanism. It is as though Harriet has deferred to mob rule.

    I was recently asked why one of my comments on Harriet went from plus ten to minus ten in a matter of minutes. Here is my reply:

    “I believe there is someone on Harriet who has made it a crusade to collapse all of my comments. I suspect either XXXX or my old friend XXXX. I know this because I have been experimenting. If my comment is collapsed (minus seven votes = invisibility), I can vote it back into view. If I let it remain collapsed, nothing happens, even for days, but if I go in and vote it up, it goes back down within hours. No other posts are ever touched…just mine. This is true even on older posts. Old posts are closed for comments but you can still vote.

    I have also learned that if I shut down and restart my computer I can then vote again. On several occasions I have has a ‘voting’ war with an unknown person. For every ‘like’ vote I clicked, a ‘dislike’ soon followed. This is how I know it is not just random voting but intentional. If it wasn’t personal, who else would be waiting to ambush a comment on a two-month old post? Pretty weird, eh?

    It’s really kind of creepy to think that someone I don’t even know has such animosity towards me that they would expend this much time and effort just trying to hide my comments on Harriet. I thought about complaining to the administrators, but you know how much good that will do. I just try to avoid Harriet these days, which was obviously my antagonist’s intent.

    As I explore more and more of the poetry blogosphere, I have noticed that the same old names come up. I believe that some of these individuals see the poetry blogs as their own personal space and resent any ‘newcomers’ who might actually disagree with or even criticize their view. A tragic thing, indeed. It seems that the last place one would expect to find such mean people is one where poets gather. I have learned from my internet experience, though, just how naïve this view is. Poets are, in fact, the nastiest people on Earth, at least the latest crop. There are so few opportunities for poets these days, and most of those simply trying to impress each other, that they are like a pack of hungry dogs with but a few small scraps between them.

    Well, maybe things haven’t really changed so much. Here is an excerpt from a letter written to a newspaper in 1821 by a friend of John Keats:

    “…It will be remembered that Keats received some rough and brutal usage from the Reviews about two years since; particularly from the Quarterly, and from a Northern one; which, in the opinion of every gentlemanly and feeling mind, has rendered itself infamous from its coarse pandarism to the depraved appetites of gossips and scandal-mongers. To what extent the treatment he received from those writers operated upon his mind I cannot say; for Keats had a noble – a proud – and an undaunted heart; but he was very young, only one and twenty. He had all the enthusiasm of the youthful poet burning in him – he thought to take the great world by the hand, and hold its attention while he unburthened the overflowings of an aspiring and ardent imagination; and his beautiful recasting of “The Pot of Basil” proves that he would have done so had he lived. But his ardour was met by the torpedo touch of one whose “Blood is very snow-broth;” and the exuberant fancies of a young and almost ungovernable fancy were dragged forward by another, and exhibited in gross and wanton caricature. It is truly painful to see the yearnings of an eager and trusting mind thus held up to the fiend-like laugh of a brutal mob, upon the pikes and bayonets of literary mercenaries.”

  1177. GBF, I saw how your posts were treated on the Poetry Foundation’s blog. They were not inflammatory. They tended to the humorous. They were pretty innocuous. I am guessing your sin was to speak and think independently.

    Over the last ten years I’ve observed some pretty strange behavior on some few online poetry boards and poetry blogs. The Poetry Foundation’s management sanctioned shunning of posters by other posters on its blog is up there with the strangest of the strangest.

    I’ve tried to live with the blog’s sanctioned and institutionalized practice of shunning, what has been in place for a good six months by now. I’ve done so because, from time to time, guest bloggers have interested me. I find I cannot. And it finally comes to me that any guest blogger is equally as responsible, by virtue of their (paid) involvement, as is management for the bad behavior. All of us wage earners have to dance with the devil, from time to time, simply in order to pay the bills. But not when it comes to poetry; at least not for me.

    Tere

  1178. Clattery, something occurs to me tonight and suddenly. The Poetry Foundation’s blog practice of collective, anonymous shunning (the like/dislike feature) is what brings it back to mind. Maybe you remember how the essay that started this blog ended off. It involved an interview with Robert Bly. The essay ended off this way:

    ~ As the system stands I think it possible it is not just a failure, but a betrayal of the instinct for poetry. Back in 1991 Robert Bly put together a collection of essays on American poetry: “American Poetry: Wildness and Domesticity.” The collection includes an interview with Bly, conducted by Wayne Dodd. From the interview:

    “Dodd: ‘It may also be that poets will be afraid to risk doing the really different thing, that might seem to be profoundly true to them nonetheless, for fear of being accused of peeing on the floor.’

    Bly: ‘Oh, indeed! That’s right! I’m sure that the reviewers of Pound’s early work, which had a lot of freaky originality, accused him constantly of being poorly house-trained. What would originality look like today? . . . It’s possible that originality comes when the man or woman disobeys the collective. The cause of tameness is fear. The collective says: “If you do your training well and become a nice boy or girl we will love you.” We want that. So a terrible fear comes. It is a fear that we will lose the love of the collective. I have felt that intensely. What the collective offers is not even love, that is what is so horrible, but a kind of absence of loneliness. Its companionship is ambiguous, like mother love.’” ~

    Yep. It isn’t only Poetry Foundation’s blog nurturing this sort of environment. Other blogs and boards too.

    Terreson

  1179. I got the news a couple of days ago from a friend and fellow poet. The Poetry Foundation’s blog, Harriet’s, has disabled its function allowing the anonymous shunning. No more thumbs up or down votes on posts. I say good on the blog’s managers.

    Today I got a report from another friend and fellow poet. If I understand her correctly it seems a few well established (entrenched?) poetry boards are also reconsidering certain, in my view draconian, management practices, looking for approaches between poets and readers and critics allowing for more latitude, certainly less institutionaled snarkiness. I say good on them too.

    It all speaks to the, more or less, ongoing conversation here. And to something Clattery brought up over a year ago: the transactional analysis of how poets, readers, critics, and board and blog managers relate to each other. And I say good on Clattery also.

    Thanks, old bean.

    Tere

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