Harp & Altar
POETRY
Cynthia Arrieu-King is an assistant professor of creative writing at Stockton College. Her book People Are Tiny  in Paintings of China will be published by Octopus Books in 2010.

Ana BoΕΎičević was born in Zagreb, Croatia, in 1977. She emigrated to New York in 1997. Stars of the Night Commute (Tarpaulin Sky Press, 2009) is her first book of poems. Her fifth chapbook, Depth Hoar, will be published by Cinematheque Press in 2010. With Amy King, she co-curates the Stain of Poetry reading series in Brooklyn. She works at the Center for the Humanities of the Graduate Center, CUNY, and lives in Huntington, N.Y.

 

Edmond Caldwell writes fiction and drama, and lives in Boston. His work has appeared in DIAGRAM, SmokeLong Quarterly, Word Riot, 3:AM Magazine, Sein und Werden, among others, and his short play, “The Liquidation of the Cohn Estate,” was produced in the 2009 Boston Theater Marathon. “Return to the Chateau” is a chapter from his novel-in-stories, Human Wishes.

 

Susan Daitch is the author of two novels, L.C. (Lannan Foundation Selection and NEA Heritage Award) and The Colorist, and a collection of short stories, Storytown. Her work has appeared in Conjunctions, The Brooklyn Rail, Bomb, Ploughshares, Failbetter, Tin House, McSweeney’s, The Pushcart Prize Anthology, and The Norton Anthology of Postmodern American Fiction. Her novel The Dreyfus Book will be published by City Lights later this year. She can be found at www.susandaitch.com.

 

Luca Dipierro is a writer, visual artist, and filmmaker born in Italy and living in Brooklyn. His short stories have been published in New York Tyrant, Lamination Colony, Gigantic, Everyday Genius, No Colony, and elsewhere. His latest films are the documentaries I Will Smash You and 60 Writers/60 Places, and the full-length cut-out animation Dieci Teste. His art has been exhibited in galleries in the U.S. and Italy. Luca’s website is www.lucadipierro.com. For some biscotti go to blackbiscotti.blogspot.com. His life is based on a true story.

 

Brandon Downing’s books include Lake Antiquity (Fence, 2009), Dark Brandon (Faux Press, 2005), and The Shirt Weapon (Germ, 2002). Dark Brandon: Eternal Classics was released on DVD in 2007.  Photographic work can be seen at www.brandondowning.org, while recent video projects can be found at www.youtube.com/user/bdown68.

 

Farrah Field’s poems have appeared or are forthcoming in many publications, including Mississippi Review, Typo, Pool, La Petite Zine, Ekleksographia, Effing Magazine, and Ploughshares. Rising, her first book of poems, won Four Way Books’ 2007 Levis Prize. She lives in Brooklyn and blogs at adultish.blogspot.com.

 

Craig Foltz is a multimedia artist and writer whose work has appeared in Chicago Review, Octopus, Ninth Letter, and others. His first book of poetry, The States, is out from Ugly Duckling Presse. He currently lives and works on the slopes of a dormant volcano in New Zealand. Critical Focus? Depends. Mist? Well, of course. More info: www.craigfoltz.com.

 

A.D. Jameson is a writer, video artist, teacher, and performer. His fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in Denver Quarterly, Fiction International, The Brooklyn Rail, Mississippi Review Online, elimae, Caketrain, PANK, Mad Hatters’ Review, Action, Yes, and elsewhere. He has two books forthcoming later this year: a novel, Giant Slugs, from Lawrence & Gibson, and a prose collection, Amazing Adult Fantasy, from Mutable Sound. In his spare time he contributes to the group literary blog Big Other.

 

Matthew Kirkpatrick’s writing has appeared recently or is forthcoming in Conjunctions, PANK, Action, Yes, and Hobart, among other journals. He lives in Salt Lake City where he is working on a PhD in literature and creative writing. He co-edits Barrelhouse and can be found on the internet at www.mattkirkpatrick.com.

 

Matthew Klane is co-editor and founder of Flim Forum Press. His book is B______ Meditations (Stockport Flats, 2008). Recent work can be found online at Absent, Open Letters Monthly, Otoliths, and Word For/Word. He currently lives and writes in Iowa City.

 

Patrick Morrissey’s poems have appeared in Denver Quarterly, Colorado Review, New American Writing, Typo, and Tarpaulin Sky, and his chapbook Transparency was published by Cannibal Books in 2009. His critical writing has previously appeared in Harp & Altar. He lives in New York.

 

Michael Newton’s gallery reviews appear regularly in Harp & Altar.

 

Michael O’Brien is the author of Sleeping & Waking (Flood Editions, 2007) and Sills: Selected Poems 1960-1999 (Salt Publishing, 2009). He lives in New York.

 

Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi received her MFA in fiction from Brown University. Her work is forthcoming or can be found in Sleepingfish, Paul Revere’s Horse, Xcp: Cross Cultural Poetics, Encyclopedia Vol. 2 (F-K), and State of the Union: 50 Political Poems (Wave Books, 2008). She lives in Providence and teaches literature and creative writing at Rhode Island School of Design.

 

Alejandra Pizarnik was born in Buenos Aires in 1936. She studied philosophy and literature at the University of Buenos Aires and later pursued interests in painting and religion. Her books include the poetry collections Works and Nights, Extraction of the Stone of Folly, and The Musical Inferno, as well as the prose work The Bloody Countess. In 1969 she was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship, and in 1971 a Fulbright scholarship. She died in 1972 of a drug overdose.

 

Brett Price is an editor of Forklift, Ohio: A Journal of Poetry, Cooking, and Light Industrial Safety and the author of Trouble With Mapping (Flying Guillotine, 2008), a chapbook. He lives and writes in Brooklyn.

 

Jason Stumpf is the author of A Cloud of Witnesses (forthcoming from Quale Press). He is also the translator of Aurora by Pura Lopez-Colome and The moon ain’t nothing but a broken dish by Luis Felipe Fabre. He is on the faculty of the Walnut Hill School for the Arts.

 

Jared White’s chapbook Yellowcake was included in the hand-sewn anthology Narwhal from Cannibal Books. He has recently published in Coconut, Laurel Review, and Boog City, with other work forthcoming in Action, Yes. His essays have appeared in past issues of Harp & Altar, as well as Open Letters Monthly, and he blogs irregularly at jaredswhite.blogspot.com. He lives in Brooklyn near two bridges.

 


 
Nostalgia
Susan Daitch

1. A Cure for Nostalgia

There may have been a peak in their numbers beginning with the start of the Industrial Revolution winding down some time after the advent of the computer. I’m talking about a tribe of people who were obsessed with not leaving well enough alone, who couldn’t turn their backs on a crippled appliance or mechanical device. All can be resurrected as something else. These were people who took apart watches, radios, engines requiring combustible fuels, washing machines, blenders and stereos. There was nothing that couldn’t be broken down to its constituent parts which would then be sorted and streamed into meaningful employment in the service of some other gadget. Members of this tribe were the kind of person who couldn’t keep still, who turned gear shafts and car parts over and over fitting them into this contraption or that, even if it meant execution was carried out with Rube Goldberg-like efficiency. My father was such a person, and I grew up in such a household. A tape recorder became a dark room timer in which my father’s voice would say agitate for however many minutes followed by a certain amount of music, a turntable became the foundation of a zoetrope, paper film strips fit into removable brackets, the detached screen door became part of a box-shaped snake house when some were caught in the back yard.

An antecedent of steampunk, the aesthetic of both groups may involve grommets, gears, wing nuts, and moving parts to be visible. Though steampunkers chose varnished wood and claw feet over the streamlined modernism of the post-Atomic age, this was not a requirement for those who prefer to dispense with a certain amount of fuss and just get the job done. We felt right at home in the world of Artemis Gordon’s gizmos in The Wild, Wild West, though the mechanical transformations we lived with were constructed with Bauhausian form=function theory in mind.

There is also an element of longing in this process, that nothing is ever entirely let go of. Nabokov wrote that a speck he removed from his eye when a child in Saint Petersburg still exists somewhere. The Rule of the Nabokovian Eye Speck insures that every single molecule is recycled whether you’re cognizant of its regeneration or not. Identities are in a continual state of flux, electric mixers power a skiff, motorcycle helmets buffer a trampoline, a bicycle pump becomes a long flashlight. The process continues to the point where identity is completely hybridized. In this way, little is lost. It’s an optimistic re-shuffling, a rebirth.

Just when 1972 or 1984 seems irretrievably lost, you have a piece of it still with you, or so you hope. Sometimes the broken Leica remains immovable on a shelf, a roll of black and white film still wound inside it. If you snap open the back, images exposed to the light will disappear forever. The idea that the eye speck is now part of someone else’s fingernail might be an optimistic image or an irredeemably cheerless thought.

In a shop window in Berlin I saw a super-8 projector of molded aqua plastic. A sign read that it was a vintage machine but was working perfectly, and listed the cost in euros. In the basement of my mother’s house is a box of super-8 films, home movies, many turned into glutinous or hardened hockey-pucks, but any that might still be viable could be shown on such a projector as this. Somewhere in the pile of home movies lies coiled footage of one of my sisters bringing the snake house into school for show and tell. My father had to go with her, and as he slid the screen door lid, and lifted the snakes out of their box, all the boys leaned forward and all the girls leaned back.

 

2. Letters of Transit

Before he disappeared in the desert of Utah, Everett Ruess carved “Nemo 1934” on a canyon wall. He was twenty years old, a romantic traveling alone in the southwest; journals, poetry and a paint set among his camping gear. Nemo was an alias he used, and there have been several interpretations of what the name might have meant to him. Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea was one of his favorite books, and perhaps he saw similarities between the expanses of desert and ocean floor. Captain Nemo, both Hindu and Muslim, a man who, as he patrolled the oceans in his submarine, was wracked by longing for his lost family killed under the British Raj. Every gesture of rescue, every time a sea creature was salvaged or lifeline tossed to a slave, reminded him of those he couldn’t save, and launched him into melancholia, playing his submarine organ to giant squid and horseshoe crabs. A second possible reference was to the pseudonym Odysseus used when trapped in the cave of the Cyclops. He called himself, Nemo, No One in Latin, a trick name, a name of erasure, an ‘ain’t nobody here but us chickens’ kind of trick, and it worked on the Cyclops. Odysseus and his surviving men escaped becoming the kind of dinner guests who never leave. The cartoon somnambulist of Nemo In Slumberland, was the most contemporaneously well known No One in the year of both Ruess’ and Windsor McKay’s deaths. That Nemo could shut his eyes and travel further than Ruess, Odysseus, and Verne’s Captain could ever imagine. Eventually, even the inscriptions, carved beneath a pictograph, are long gone, but years later another Nemo signature was found on the mud wall of Anasazi granary in Grand Gulch, though it was a place Ruess was not known to have traveled.

 

There are people who vanish and disappear, but there are others, like Elvis, who are sighted in unlikely places, sometimes slightly transformed, shadows of their former selves, but still somehow recognizable. Like Ruess, Arthur Cravan—boxer, Dadaist, anarchistic showman—used several alias and forged papers, including the name of his uncle, Oscar Wilde, though he and Wilde never met. His real name was Fabien Avenarius Lloyd, and he could count Duchamp, Man Ray, Picabia and Breton among his admirers. If Cravan’s life could be mapped by an animated line it would track a Dadaist journey of false trails and performances half way around the world. Making his way from France to New York in order to avoid being drafted, he continued to spin tales and live the life of a bohemian until the United States entered World War I. Still intent on avoiding conscription, Cravan then fled to Mexico where he met and married the beautiful Mina Loy. They lived in great poverty, finally arranging to go to Argentina, but without adequate funds to travel together. It must have seemed logical to the two impoverished Dadaists that Mina book passage on a ship while Arthur followed her in a sailboat. He never arrived and was presumed lost in the Pacific, but sightings of him continued for many years in New York and Paris. A man going by the name Dorian Hope was suspected to have been Cravan, or Cravan was suspected of being Hope, a wandering poet who sold or claimed to sell papers belonging to Oscar Wilde, which turned out to be forgeries. Another theory suggests that B. Travan, author of The Treasure of Sierra Madre and himself a fomenter of a spiral of pseudonyms, was really Arthur Cravan.

There is an exhibit in the American Museum of Natural History which projects a film of the earth’s surface over a hemisphere suspended from the ceiling. A voice over talks about shifting tectonic plates and what you would see if all the major bodies of water suddenly evaporated: the Atlantic Ridge, the volcanic vents in the Pacific, mountain ranges and deep valleys heretofore unmapped. If this were to happen and to be a survivable event, people could drive out across what had been ocean basins, park the car, go for a stroll, and find all kinds of things. Double-hulled Polynesian catamarans, Spanish galleons loaded with gold from the New World, Arthur Cravan’s humble craft, and Captain Nemo’s broken submarine, complete with organ, library, art gallery, pictures of his murdered family. All damaged goods, no doubt about it, and mere shadows of their former selves, but still worth collecting before the waters wash over once again.

 

3. Time Machine

A time machine which goes backward could be made of old keyboards, film cameras, windows made of Viewmasters welded to binoculars, waffled walls of Styrofoam burger suitcases insulate the control room, receivers snipped from heavy black dial phones go into service as door handles, piles of cloth-covered electrical cords are wound around cat posts or cut into tasseled curtain pulls, levers and buttons made from typewriter keys, numbers and letters attached to long metal stems are, therefore, already coded and labeled. Going backwards doesn’t require, one guesses, consideration as to how to survive the kinds of elements that are life and death issues when you travel forwards into space. No worries about air pressure, absence of gravity, extremes in temperature. No need for in flight magazines, movies, or unlimited choice of channels, but there is a problem regarding the animated map that shows your journey. One model, the designer suggests, is the film shown in reverse: people jump backwards, grow younger and younger, finally disappearing, buildings and trees melt or are torn down, the earth’s plates shift in unsettling shrugs. But he doesn’t know where to train his lens. There are countless choices, and a multitude of possibilities, as many parallel universes in the past as there are in the future. This is a problem that stymies him. He can’t get it right and yells at his assistant that too much is expected from him in the theory department, and no one has eyes in the back of their head. The assistant silently slips circular cards into a Viewmaster and clicks through scenes of American monuments and landmarks: Mount Rushmore, the Statue of Liberty, the Grand Canyon. He’s old to be an assistant, older even than his boss, but that’s the plateau he’s landed on, and there probably won’t be any catapulting to a higher mesa any time soon. The images remind him of a summer road trip his family once took across the country before air conditioning was common in cars, and they drank Tang, the drink of astronauts, mixed with tap water when it was available. As hot as it had been, he wouldn’t mind going back to those weeks, a moment when ‘are we there yet?’ was an answerable question, and happy illusions—the flat earth was the center of the universe—were comfortably in place.