Michael Palmer (poet)

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Template:Short description Template:External links Template:Other people Template:Infobox writer Michael Palmer (born May 11, 1943) is an American poet and translator. He attended Harvard University, where he earned a BA in French and an MA in Comparative Literature.<ref>The Flower of Capital (1979) Template:Webarchive reprinted at the Poetry Foundation website where it is labeled 'a poetics essay'. Includes a brief bio sketch.</ref> He has worked extensively with Contemporary dance since the 1970s and has collaborated with many composers and visual artists. Palmer has lived in San Francisco since 1969.

Palmer is the 2006 recipient of the Wallace Stevens Award from the Academy of American Poets. This award recognizes outstanding and proven mastery in the art of poetry.Template:NoteTag<ref>Template:Webarchive accessed 30 Aug 2009</ref>

Beginnings

Michael Palmer began actively pursuing a career in poetry during the 1960s. Two events in the early sixties seem decisive to his development as a poet.

First, Palmer attended the Vancouver Poetry Conference in 1963. This July–August 1963 Poetry Conference in Vancouver, British Columbia spanned three weeks and involved about sixty people who had registered for a program of discussions, workshops, lectures, and readings designed by Warren Tallman and Robert Creeley as a summer course at the University of B.C.<ref name="slought.org">Fred Wah’s recordings of the 1963 Vancouver Poetry Conference Template:Webarchive, at Slought Foundation website</ref> There Palmer met writers and artists who would leave a mark on his own developing sense of a poetics, especially Robert Duncan, Robert Creeley, and Clark Coolidge, with whom he formed lifelong friendships. It was a landmark moment as Robert Creeley observed:

“The Vancouver Poetry Conference brought together for the first time, a decisive company of then disregarded poets such as Denise Levertov, Charles Olson, Allen Ginsberg, Robert Duncan, Margaret Avison, Philip Whalen... together with as yet unrecognised younger poets of that time, Michael Palmer, Clark Coolidge and many more.”<ref name="slought.org"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The second decisive event in Palmer’s early career as a poet began with the editing of the journal Joglars alongside fellow poet Clark Coolidge.<ref name="auto1">Template:Cite web</ref> Joglars (Providence, Rhode Island) numbered just three issues in all, published between 1964 and 1966, but it extended Palmer’s correspondence with fellow poets begun in Vancouver. The first issue appeared in Spring 1964 and included poems by Gary Snyder, Michael McClure, Fielding Dawson, Jonathan Williams, Lorine Niedecker, Robert Kelly, and Louis Zukofsky. Palmer published five of his own poems in the second number of Joglars, an issue that included work by Larry Eigner, Stan Brakhage, Russell Edson, and Jackson Mac Low.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

For those who attended the Vancouver Conference or learned about it later on, it was apparent that second-generation modernist poet Charles Olson was exerting a significant influence on the emerging generation of artists and poets (the so-called third-generation modernists) who came to prominence in the 1950s and 1960s, and included the New American poets. The latter poets, such as Robert Creeley, Robert Duncan, and Denise Levertov would have an impact on the new generation of artists emerging in the 1970s, which included Palmer.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Says Palmer:

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Work and recognition

Palmer is the author of fourteen full-length books of poetry, beginning in 1972 with Blake's Newton and most recently in 2021 with Little Elegies for Sister Satan. Other notable collections include Company of Moths (2005) (shortlisted for the 2006 Canadian Griffin Poetry Prize), The Promises of Glass (2000), At Passages (1996), Sun (1988), and Notes for Echo Lake (1981).

A prose work, The Danish Notebook, was published in 1999. In the spring of 2007, a chapbook, The Counter-Sky (with translations by Koichiro Yamauchi), was published by Meltemia Press of Japan, to coincide with the Tokyo Poetry and Dance Festival. Palmer’s work has appeared in literary magazines such as Boundary 2, Berkeley Poetry Review, Sulfur, Conjunctions, Grand Street and O-blek.

Palmer (center) at the 2009 Brooklyn Book Festival

Besides the 2006 Wallace Stevens Award, Michael Palmer's honors include two grants from the Literature Program of the National Endowment for the Arts. In 1989-90 he was a Guggenheim Fellow. During the years 1992–1994 he held a Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund Writer's Award. From 1999 to 2004, he served as a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. <ref name="auto1"/> In the spring of 2001 he received the Shelley Memorial Award from the Poetry Society of America.

Since he seems to explore the nature of language and its relation to human consciousness and perception, Palmer is often associated with the Language poets. Of this particular association, Palmer comments in an interview: Template:Quote

Themes and writing style

Introducing Palmer for a reading in 1996, Brighde Mullins noted that his poetics is both “situated yet active.” Likewise, Palmer himself speaks of the poem on the page as signaling a "site of passages": Template:Quote

Elsewhere, Palmer observes that "in our reading we have to rediscover the radical nature of the poem" and search for "the essential place of lyric poetry" as we delve "beneath it to its relationship with language".<ref name=jubilat/> Here Palmer confronts not only the problem of subjectivity and public address, but the specific agency of poetry and its relationship with the political: Template:Quote

If poetry and literature is, as Ezra Pound observed, "news that stays news,"<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> in his own work Palmer also wants to account for a subterranean or “counter-tradition”. He invokes the latter as a way to “think against” the prevailing doxa, and to have access to an 'alternative tradition' that slips under the radar of the Academy but exerts an underground influence.

And the poem, from its homeless home,
writes of blindsight and silence
from the poem "Night Gardening", Company of Moths (2005)

Palmer has repeatedly stated, in interviews and talks over the years, that the situation for the poet and/or the poem is parodoxical: a seeing which is blind, a "nothing you can see", an "active waiting", "purposive, sometimes a music", or a "nowhere" that is "now / here".<ref name="auto">Template:Cite journal</ref> For Palmer, poetry can "interrogate the radical and violent instability of our moment, asking where is the location of culture, where the site of self, selves, among others" (as Palmer has characterized the poetry of Myung Mi Kim).

Critical reception

Michael Palmer's poetry has been described variously as abstract, intimate, elegant, hermetic, allusive, personal, political, speculative, and inaccessible.<ref name=smallpresstraffic/><ref>East Bay Express's Events Column (November 29, 2006) Template:Webarchive</ref>Template:NoteTag

"How does the human break down so completely that the only alternative we have is to impose massive destruction and then...massive suffering among civilian populations?"
Michael Palmer<ref name=jubilat/>

While some reviewers or readers may value Palmer's work as an "extension of modernism",<ref name=smallpresstraffic>poetry reading at "Small Press Traffic", San Francisco Template:Webarchive introductory remarks made before his reading on December 10, 1999</ref> some criticize Palmer's work as discordant: an interruption of our composure (to invoke Robert Duncan's phrase).<ref>Robert Duncan, from his "Introduction" to Bending the Bow (New Directions, 1968)</ref>

As for the modernist project, its legacy is something Palmer both resists and embraces. Palmer is candid about the towering figures of early modernism, the great inventors of the period, those who MAKE IT NEW (i.e., Yeats, Eliot and Pound).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> But Palmer clearly states that there remains “something quite harrowing inscribed at the heart of modernism.”<ref name="jubilat+modernism"/>Template:NoteTag

Palmer’s concern is “to maintain or at least continue the search for an ethics of the I/Thou."<ref name="jubilat+modernism">JUBILAT | number 1 Template:Webarchive (see also article:modernism)</ref> The poet must suffer 'loss', embrace disturbance and paradox, agonizing over what cannot be accounted for. Palmer will admit into his work that "essential errancy of discovery in the poem" that would not be a “unified narrative explanation of the self,” but would allow for “cloaked meaning and necessary semantic indirection.”<ref name="jubilat+modernism"/>

Collaborations

Perhaps similar to Olson's and Duncan’s impact on their generation, Palmer's influence remains singular and palpable, if difficult to measure. For many decades now, Palmer has worked collaboratively in the fields of dance, translation, teaching, and the visual arts.

Palmer has published translations from French, Russian, and Brazilian Portuguese. He edited and helped translate Nothing The Sun Could Not Explain: Twenty Contemporary Brazilian Poets. With Michael Molnar and John High, Palmer helped edit and translate a volume of poetry by the Russian poet Alexei Parshchikov, Blue Vitriol (Avec Books, 1994). And he translated "Theory of Tables" (1994), a book written by Emmanuel Hocquard, a project that grew out of Hocquard's translations of Palmer's "Baudelaire Series" into French. Palmer has written many radio plays and works of criticism.

He has participated in multiple collaborations with a wide range of painters. These include the German painter Gerhard Richter, Italian painter Sandro Chia and French painter Micaëla Henich.<ref>Collector's Items for fans and adversaries Template:Webarchive</ref> Template:NoteTag

Dance

Since the 1970s, Palmer has collaborated on over a dozen dance works with Margaret Jenkins and her Dance Company. Early dance scenarios in which Palmer participated include Interferences, 1975; Equal Time, 1976; No One but Whitington, 1978; Red, Yellow, Blue, 1980, Straight Words, 1980; Versions by Turns, 1980; Cortland Set, 1982; and First Figure, 1984.<ref>"Biography - Palmer, Michael (1943-)" Contemporary Authors Online (biography) - 2006, Gale Reference Team, Publisher: Thomson Gale</ref> A noteworthy example of a Jenkins/Palmer collaboration might be The Gates (Far Away Near), an evening-length dance work in which Palmer worked with not only Ms. Jenkins, but also Paul Dresher and Rinde Eckert. This was performed in September 1993 in the San Francisco Bay Area and in July 1994 at New York's Lincoln Center.

Another recent collaboration with Jenkins resulted in "Danger Orange", a 45-minute outdoor site-specific performance, presented in October 2004 before the presidential elections. The color orange metaphorically references the national alert systems that are in place that evoke the sense of danger.[see also:Homeland Security Advisory System]

Painters and visual artists

Similar to his friendship with Robert Duncan and the painter Jess Collins, Palmer's work with painter Irving Petlin is important.

Palmer has also worked with painter and visual artist Augusta Talbot, and curated her exhibition at the CUE Art Foundation (March 17 -April 23, 2005)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Talbot, in turn, provided the cover art for Palmer’s collection The Company of Moths (2005) and for Thread (2006). When asked how collaboration has pushed or shaped the boundaries of his work, Palmer responded:

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These are not one-off collaborations for Palmer: they are on-going. It may be that friendship via collaboration becomes part of what Jack Spicer terms a "composition of the real.” And that might articulate a place for, and even spaces where, both the "poetic imaginary" is constituted and a possible social space is envisioned.

Bibliography

Poetry

  • Plan of the City of O, Barn Dreams Press (Boston, Massachusetts), 1971.
  • Blake's Newton, Black Sparrow Press (Santa Barbara, California), 1972.
  • C's Songs, Sand Dollar Books (Berkeley, California), 1973.
  • Six Poems, Black Sparrow Press (Santa Barbara, California), 1973.
  • The Circular Gates, Black Sparrow Press (Santa Barbara, California), 1974.
  • (Translator, with Geoffrey Young) Vicente Huidobro, Relativity of Spring: 13 Poems, Sand Dollar Books (Berkeley, California), 1976.
  • Without Music, Black Sparrow Press (Santa Barbara, California), 1977.
  • Alogon, Tuumba Press (Berkeley, California), 1980.
  • Notes for Echo Lake, North Point Press (Berkeley, California), 1981.
  • (Translator) Alain Tanner and John Berger, Jonah Who Will Be 25 in the Year 2000, North Atlantic Books (Berkeley, California), 1983.
  • First Figure, North Point Press (Berkeley, California), 1984.
  • Sun, North Point Press (Berkeley, California), 1988.
  • At Passages, New Directions (New York, New York), 1995.
  • The Lion Bridge: Selected Poems, 1972-1995, New Directions (New York, New York), 1998.
  • The Promises of Glass, New Directions (New York, New York), 2000.
  • Codes Appearing: Poems, 1979-1988, New Directions (New York, New York), 2001. Notes for Echo Lake, First Figure, and Sun together in one volume. Template:ISBN
  • (With Régis Bonvicino) Cadenciando-um-ning, um samba, para o outro: poemas, traduções, diálogos, Atelieì Editorial (Cotia, Brazil), 2001.
  • Company of Moths, New Directions (New York, New York), 2005. Template:ISBN
  • Aygi Cycle , Druksel (Ghent, Belgium), 2009 (chapbook with 10 new poems, inspired by the Russian poet Gennadiy Aygi.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
  • (With Jan Lauwereyns) Truths of Stone, Druksel (Ghent, Belgium), 2010.
  • Thread, New Directions (New York, New York), 2011. Template:ISBN
  • The Laughter of the Sphinx, New Directions (New York, New York), 2016. Template:ISBN Template:NoteTag<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • Little Elegies for Sister Satan. New Directions (New York, New York), 2021. Template:ISBN

Other

  • Idem 1-4 (radio plays), 1979.
  • (Editor) Code of Signals: Recent Writings in Poetics, North Atlantic Books (Berkeley, California), 1983.<ref name="auto"/>
  • The Danish Notebook, Avec Books (Penngrove, California), 1999 — prose/memoir
  • Active Boundaries: Selected Essays and Talks, New Directions (New York, New York), 2008. Template:ISBN

Palmer sites and exhibits

Poems

Selected essays and talks

Interviews with Palmer

Others on Palmer

Notes

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References

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