On Kindness and
Hipness as They Relate to Cultural Production
By Gabriel Gudding
Part 1: Why Not to
Join a Literary Movement
There is a grammar
of feigned collectivity that is in fact a grammar of attention and power.
A school is
advertised as a group in affiliation, a group allied by mutually stimulative
aesthetics, when in fact a school is a contract for gathering and distributing
attention.
A school is defined
as a group who seeks to have its boasting done by others.
In short, certain
literary movements are ways of inviting little wars and little frames of wars.
Not to advocate
playing the island. There is a happy middle path between this and that:
collaboration, even genuine friendship; amity,conspiratio, affiliative
relation; kindness. These are qualities that replace the fear of not being
read. Certain literary groups arise out of an irrational fear at the inevitable
lack of regard. In short, this is about the fear of not being read.
This: ÒI am I
because my little dog knows me but, creatively speaking the little dog knowing
that you are you and your recognising that he knows, that is what destroys
creation. That is what makes school.Ó (G. Stein)
Poetry, in its most
common negative manifestation, can become a distorting aggregate of
purposefully limited emotional and intellectual responses to a cultural
Òfield,Ó the tendency of which is to draw listeners and readers away from an
alive and affiliative sense of interconnectivity and equanimity, toward a
feeling of ÒlackÓ--and into a reliance [see penultimate paragraph] on the
school or the schoolÕs poet.
The result being
that listeners and readers in effect hand their ability to feel and articulate
to a cultural proxy, the school, the school poet, an icon (whether that's
Ginsberg in yr estimation or some other delusive cultural actor or collection
of actors), or even to an abstraction as broad and ambiguous as a canon.
One sign of a group
invested with these distorting aggregates: the cultural actors in each group
promote their group as a group; they tend to be camera friendly and
interview-prone; members may begin availing themselves of the economies of
spectacle and the manufacture of scandal; the cultural actors isolate
themselves with others of their kind; these groups are not socially porous, and
are marked by socio-emotional boundaries that range from rage, snideness,
shunning, coolness, invitation. See the photographs of Larry Keenan.
Most writers
however renounce these kinds of groups. Poets in fact can be grouped along a
continuum: those of renunciation (Stein, Harryette Mullen, Whitman) and those
of arrogation (Ginsberg, R. Lowell, J. Berryman), the latter being more
inclined to think the poet a special being and, interestingly, more inclined to
form, join, or affiliate purposefully and strategically with high-capital
groups, as all such movements are in some way based on a poetics of lack and
othering, rather than a poetics of affiliation.
Stein: I am writing
for myself and strangers. This is the only way that I can do it. Everybody is a
real one to me, everybody is like some one else too to me. No one of them that
I know can want to know it and so I write for myself and strangers. (Selected
Writings of Gertrude Stein, ed. Carl Van Vechten, Random House (1946). The
Making of Americans (written 1903-1911), published 1925.)
Mullen: I write for
myself and others. An other is anyone who is not me. Anyone who is not me is
like me in some ways and unlike me in other ways. (ÒImagining the Unimagined
Reader: Writing to the Unborn and Including the ExcludedÓ)
As with liturgies
or poetry schools, a ÒhabitusÓ of poetry (of poetry as a felt system of power)
will consist of a few well-played vocabularies of emotional/conceptual Òmoves,Ó
which can serve much like a contract with an audience (and a school is its own
principle audience). Such groups tend to cease innovating, quickly developing a
shtick. These aggregates of emotional-conceptual moves (sometimes called poems)
operate, inside a habitus, as transactional games whose purpose is to serve as
scripts that can be reproduced as a means of acquiring (for the actor or
school) and distributing (for code-aware audiences) cultural capital. These are
often, for instance, variants of the nostalgia poem, the self-pity poem, the
rage poem, the revolution poem (the rage-nation poem), the name-drop poem.
Poetry in this way
can become, in the hands of some, a pathetically distorting force whose
function is to destroy affiliative and responsive citizenship in favor of a
self-conscious and reactive audienceship (self-conscious in the sense of aware
of own hipness). This can happen most especially when the habitus in which this
is occurring is invested with celebrity culture, which is a variant of the
economy of scandal and spectacle. So if celebrity culture arises from the
entraining of a felt supposition that ÒIÓ am not being enough, it continues
with the acknowledgement by celebrities, celebrity-aspirants, and
celebrity-culture supporters, that ÒothersÓ are not being enough--the pity is
that these others were once citizens and have become mere readers. All literary
movements tend toward celebrity culture.
The Larry Keenan
photography website is a great example of the emptiness of ÒenoughÓ making.
Part 2: Why is
Kindness Not Hip?
I guess IÕm trying
to talk about a kind of affiliation that in part works through a purposeful
arrogation of group stature and contains a particular and peculiar emotional
signature -- a kind of groupiness that's not really affiliative. One based more
on a group being Òhiply-not-thatÓ and less Òus-happily-all.Ó Is the latter
yoked to an ideal, and the former to a brand?
These are
purposefully goofy, stark categories -- utilitarian abstractions whose purpose is
heuristic: kind of like how setting an east opposite to a west will allow
someone to receive directions to a place they might like to see.
So we get yoked to
one another through friends, networks, editors, or by anthologies or magazines,
blogs, presses, reading series, universities.
We get labeled by
reviewers or journalists, we get read this way, that way. Put into that group,
category, or this one. We grow affiliated. We grow unaffiliated.
My point is there
is a constant level of given flux, a tao if you will of hello/goodbye. And if
kindness is the ability to live in that flux with equanimity, I'm inspired by
those writers who seem to exercise a thoroughgoing kindness and empathy, at
least as it arises in their writings. This is why I have so admired the work of
Michael McClure, Joanne Kyger, Tom Raworth. Whether they self-identify as
belonging to a defined group is immaterial, I guess. My sense is, and perhaps
I'm completely off, empathic writers tend to be more renunciative and less
arrogating, and as such less inclined to groupiness per se--but if groupiness
inheres in them is it the "us-happy-all" class?
The Lucipo group,
eg, is a very warm and kind group. It is "us-happy-all."
The historian and
sociologist Ivan Illich remarked on an interesting distinction in his study of
the early church. He called the first effect, when a group gathers together,
conspiratio: it is when a group has an almost benjaminic (sorry, walter) aura,
in which the members retain the capacity to be surprised by one another and
their world. The effort however to ÒfixÓ that aura in place can lead to a
brittleness Illich calls conjuratio: the attempt to conjure an aura feared to
be lost or soon to be lost, to recapture and formalize, the attempt to find it
again, codify it, and cast it into a law. The former is characterized by a
kindness in its members, the latter by a hardness.
The difference,
according to Illich, is that those groups invested with conspiratio work at retaining
the capacity to be surprised by one another and their world -- the essential
condition of kindness; whereas the conjuratio group tries to regulate its
boundaries in an effort to keep what it has already lost or fears as lost. It
swings away from affiliation and surprise and is marked by disassociation and
hipness.
So I suppose in
poetry terms, a group in conjuratio resorts to a tiny conceptual/emotional
vocabulary (its code) -- which in its aesthetic manifestation is known as a
shtick? Its ethical manifestation is probably known as hipness. Is hipness
associated with shtickness?
It's interesting to
me how hipness isn't really kind -- despite its being a species of apparent
affiliation. Hipness is an apparent social glue, but is in fact marked more by
disassociation than affiliation, and as such it is just a more extroverted form
of possessive individualism. It functions as above, I think.
In any case it is
lovely to meet someone working in an overtly hipness-prone
("aesthetic") field who cherishes kindness.
O renounce this
hipness. We are here trying to be happy. Most of us get confused while doing
so. This is perhaps the chief source of confusion going: the confusion that
results from trying to be happy. It arises because we define happiness as an
association with the liked and a disassociation from the disliked. This is a
harmful definition of happiness, though, because we are inevitably going to be
separated from that which we like and love, and inevitably associated with that
which we dislike. It is precisely there that crankiness occurs, conjuratio
occurs, hipness occurs, shtick occurs. O retain this capacity to be surprised
-- even when the lollipop is gone. Your lollipop, as with mine, is here for a
time then gone.
In any case, three
things in human life, said Henry James, are important. The first is to be kind,
the second is to be kind, and the third is to be kind. I'm not sure he said
much about, or thought much of, being hip.