Features • Spring 2026 - Fear
Gezi
Once again, a newborn cried for the first time. The bald scream carried her voice through crowds in a chestnut-smelling street, rousing the cats from their curbside sleep. The sound stretched farther on to the trees of Taksim as they shuddered with an intensity foreign to them. The cats knew of what was coming before us. They found Spirit in a corner of İstiklal, licked and nursed her. They were the ones who would tell her about the name of the street, about how long before it meant independence, it meant dismissal and rebellion. They told her, as she cried, that she was rebelling even now when she did not know the word for it. They were the ones who decided that the time was right and carried the newborn to a nearby park. The cats, from atop the branches of Gezi, all silent in their knowing, wanted to show Spirit the trees.
Poetry • Spring 2026 - Fear
There’s something to be said about those little birds inside the eggs, with the sticky baby down and bones melted tender. This morning, you call me soup-for-brains and I imagine a boy’s guts cupped inside the feathered belly on my plate—another boy pressed open like a drum, a membrane. I drink the brine from a jar of Koon Chun plums for breakfast. Practice, I say, and you call me Pussy for the first time all week. They say it doesn’t taste like anything. Just the salt of the duck and the blood-tang of marrow. But I forgot you’re tutoring Leah Wong at her place today, so I turn and face your black-feathered buzzcut. No time for a game behind the school with the Chus’ half-popped basketball, which yesterday I poked till it dimpled and likened it to one of her mom’s big fake ones, and you hit me. For a split-second I thought I saw your eyes turn milky and your spine go baby-bent, but I pulled up your T-shirt and you were still hairless as a girl, your skin opaque. So it’s dinnertime and Mom isn’t home yet and all I have is the chick in my egg. He’s just boiled awake, beak parting to call me Dumbass. Soft. My fingers turn to yellow protein in calcium dust, prying you into this wet, scalding kitchen. Walls gum-pink and beating; I take you where heat reigns.
Features • Spring 2026 - Fear
By no means is this a famous story. It takes place in Huntsville, Utah, a small town of under six-hundred residents, located in Ogden Valley on Pineview Reservoir. Surrounded by three ski resorts (Snowbasin, Powder Mountain, and Nordic Valley) there is no shortage of idyllic views, nor a shortage of seasoned skiers wishing to park amongst these idyllic views. This is observed by the abundance of Parking by Permit Only signs that prohibit parking west of 7300 E Street, made possible by the Huntsville Town Ordinance on April 19th, 2018.
Fiction • Spring 2026 - Fear
Big John stood near me with the electric blue above us, screaming out with its shine for everyone to drink it. Lines of neon stretched and twisted into a beauty of advertising brilliance. We were drinking it and the bottles were sweating and it made me feel good for the first time all day.
The fresh online pieces we experiment with outside of our print cycle. Formerly known as Blog.
From the Archives
Features • Winter 2015 - Possession
Last December, the artist Kara Walker delivered a lecture at Harvard on the subject of her latest piece: a 40-foot “sugar sphinx” with an exposed, puckering vulva and a face redolent of Aunt Jemima’s most minstrel days. Attendance was so high that even the overflow hall was packed to the brim. A month earlier, Hilton Als and Jamaica Kincaid had appeared in conversation at the Brattle Street Book Store to considerably less fanfare. The event in November was co-sponsored by The Harvard Book Store and the Advocate and focused on Als’ latest book, White Girls, which had just been released in paperback. All things considered, the talk was fairly well attended, with empty seats sprinkled only intermittently between audience members in parkas and pea coats, clutching ballpoints and Moleskines. Despite the availability of seats closer to the stage, I slid into a fuzzy velvet chair in the furthest corner of the last row—ringside for audience-watching.
Als read a brief excerpt from White Girls, and he and Kincaid perched on opposite ends of a small coffee table, quickly bowing into a discussion that touched on both of their writings, Als’ anxieties about his name forerunning his work, and the Solange-Jay Z elevator incident (at the time, Als messaged Kincaid, “this is what liquor and a tight wig will do to you”). Their conversation was jovial and relaxed—entirely uncorrupted by theatricality or literary pretense. I craned my neck in the back, regretting my choice of seat. Immediately before the question-and-answer segment, Kincaid squinted into the audience before her, knit her brow, and said, “You know, there are no black people here.”
A few perfunctory chuckles and thoughtful grunts followed, but there was mostly silence. Maybe three dark-skinned hands punctuated the otherwise still, white surface of the audience, waving to make their presence known. I couldn’t help but feel unsettled. Why had she gone and done that? What did it matter that we were an audience of almost uninterrupted white, scrutinizing the inner workings of two black artists in Obama’s America? Why the need to redefine our redefinition, meaning: why wasn’t Jamaica Kincaid content to just let us be a bunch of “uncolored” folks with a predilection for “colored” art?
In one of the essays contained within White Girls, Als calls upon us to wonder “what interests white editors (who constitute what we call Publishing) have in hiring a colored person to describe a [black person’s] life.” I won’t hazard a guess, but I doubt those interests include satisfying the desires of a market comprised mostly of other black people (in Cambridge, Massachusetts, a book talk boasting both Jamaica Kincaid and Hilton Als drew maybe four people of that demographic). As Colorlines noted back in May, the “overwhelming whiteness of black art” isn’t limited to literature. According to the National Endowment for the Arts, 80 percent of museum visitors are white. In reviewing the NEA’s 2008 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts, The American Alliance of Museums concluded that “between 1992 and 2008, the gap between the percentage of white and non-white Americans who visit art museums grew steadily.” This is decidedly symptomatic— in twenty-first century America, the art gallery, the museum, and perhaps even the bookstore are all becoming increasingly white spaces.
My initial reaction to Kincaid’s question was indicative, I think, of the culture in which I live—one where the very contemplation of blackness is often misconstrued as an unprovoked affront to whiteness. Of course Kincaid did not mean to suggest something inherently amiss in white audiences partaking in the consumption of “black art” (all that essentializing bullshit aside). The more salient question, however, is if we can really hope that such a climate doesn’t do something to art, its production, and its reception. Do we, as a culture, gaze at this dark-skinned artistry with a whiteness, demanding that it palletize and yield up to us all those essential parts of the “black American experience”? Or is that art just handed over, delivered to the same culture whose earliest act was to widen the nose and inflate the lips and plump up the ass of the Negro, just to fully establish how Other s/he was? Most importantly, how does a society still susceptible to the malady of white supremacy even allow for the creation of black art that isn’t built to be seized by white audiences, even though, in many ways, it is?
* * *
Looking at “A Subtlety,” Walker’s sugar sphinx, you couldn’t help but wonder what master, if any, she served. With her mammy features and enormous bare ass, she should have been one of those explicits in cultural history: like Betye Saar’s The Liberation of Aunt Jemima, or like Saartije Baartman, the Khoikhoi woman infamously rechristened “Hottentot Venus” by nineteenth century slave traders and then propped up on makeshift stages across Europe so that white men could ogle her abnormally protruding buttocks and extended labia minora. But when Walker came to Harvard in December 2014 to deliver a lecture entitled “Sweet Talk,” a record-breaking 1,000 people RSVP’d, in part due to the highly public extent to which many in the mammy sphinx’s audience misunderstood—or just disregarded—her explicitness.
In the summer of 2014, Walker was commissioned by Creative Time to create a public artwork in order to commemorate the leveling of the Domino Sugar Refinery in Brooklyn, a hulking, nightmare-capitalism fuck-you of a building that over its century-and-a-half of operation housed innumerable scores of black and brown “workers.” In addition to the mammy sphinx herself, this slave labor was called forth by Walker in the form of smaller, molasses-coated boys carrying oversized baskets. The piece was titled, in full, “A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby, an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant.”
The lecture in December was full of white people. I sat in front of two middle-aged female writers, one of whom was recreating the experience of beholding the sphinx to the other: “The whole place just smells of sugar and it’s almost like you were there at the time. And her back side was very…suggestive.”
“Of what?” her friend laughed.
To Walker’s credit, I have no doubt that this woman walked out of the lecture hall knowing exactly what the mammy sphinx’s multi-story backside meant to suggest. “Sweet Talk,” as the lecture was titled, took no prisoners. In detailing her arrival at the image of the sphinx, the sugar, and, of course, that blinding white vulva, Walker sped through a series of slides mostly depicting grotesque representations of blackness in American history. One especially potent image was a crude collage of a crouching, dark-skinned woman in full video-vixen form: fishnet tights, revealing lingerie, her ass tooted up seductively. Only, she was just half a woman. Most of her upper body had been carefully ripped away, the head of the Great Sphinx of Giza mounted in its place.
Walker initially turned down Creative Time’s proposal, but reconsidered after she became fascinated by the process of sugar refining, which she described as “dismantling darkness to create whiteness.” The procedure involves the application of high temperatures, immense pressure, and a variety of caustic compounds like phosphoric acid and calcium hydroxide. After the appropriate drying time, it yields not only purified white sugar, but also its darker, stickier counterpart—molasses. In many ways, that process mirrors one in early American culture described by Toni Morrison in her only work of literary criticism, entitled Playing in the Dark: Whiteness in the Literary Imagination. In it, Morrison embarks on a revisionist trek through American cultural history, using figures such as Poe and Melville to illustrate how white authors annexed susceptible black bodies for the purpose of their own self-exploration. By infusing into the black populace all that whiteness was not, Morrison holds that these New Worlders fashioned for themselves an identity surrogate—not unlike a photographic negative—that allowed them to probe the less savory cavities of their beings from a safe distance: “a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity not only to be born again, but to be born again in new clothes.”
The master’s new clothes obscured his lust, his fear of freedom, his yearning for civilization on civilization’s edge, but in order to give him cover, the slaves were stripped bare. In the creation of white American identity, their dark bodies were disfigured, drenched in sticky linguistic trickery, and wrung until they oozed dark gold. Morrison dubbed the result—this byproduct of whiteness, this distinctly American construction—the “Africanist presence.”
It is the specter of this presence that artists like Walker wrestle with to this day. Like the best of ghosts, it hides in plain sight, such as in the stock stereotypes of black females that it has produced and manically reiterated since this country’s inception (including the Jezebel, the mammy, the mad black woman, and many others). Throughout American history, the abuses of the specter and the stereotypes it engenders have sent a byproduct-people scrambling for dignity and reification, perhaps through countercultural outgrowths, perhaps through rosy, pre-colonial recollection, perhaps through coerced identity reconstruction. Ask the exalted phantom to paint for you a portrait of the “black American woman” and it will in no time yield something quite similar to that aforementioned collage—and, more dangerously, it will do so with a straight face.
* * *
Now re-encounter the Marvelous Sugar Baby. What can we say about her, this 40-foot daughter of the Africanist presence? Do we call her hideous? I hope so. Do we call her beautiful? We would be lying if we said she wasn’t. Is she dignified? Subjugated? I imagine that one would assume a position similar to her sphinxly one—low to the ground, ass up, neck craned—if a giant’s thumb were pressing down on one’s back from above. Still, who can deny the whispers of grandiosity and humanity that her iconic form breathed into the space?
But now behold the twentysomethings smiling for selfies in front of her backside. Behold what Nicholas Powers, a SUNY professor who wrote an op-ed entitled “Why I Yelled at the Kara Walker Exhibit,” claimed that he saw: “a balding white father, posing with his son next to one of the boy statues, his arms folded across his chest ‘gangsta’ style as the mother took a photo.” It hurts—the giant naked stereotype presiding over the room, the smaller, attendant stereotypes peppered throughout, the heavily-white audience members posing for pictures in front of it all. It hurts, and in viewing it, you must wonder, just as Walker admitted during “Sweet Time” that she often does, “Whether I am enabling or critiquing.”
The Marvelous Sugar Baby exhibit became extremely divisive when the white gaze entered the space. What happened was it overtook the entire event. It immediately became clear to those who were paying attention that the piece was in desperate need of reclamation. I assume that’s what Powers was attempting to do when, after witnessing the aforementioned brazen shows of ignorance, he yelled, and then wrote an article about yelling, “You are recreating the very racism this art is supposed to critique!” I know that’s what a group of black New York City artists and art lovers were doing when they donned all white and distributed educational materials to the attendees, collectively calling themselves, “The Kara Walker Experience: WE ARE HERE.” Even the artist herself cast her hat in on this act of repossession, deploying a camera crew to film the audience interacting with the piece on its last day of exhibition. Walker instructed them to focus on black and brown visitors—essentially giving the mammy sphinx eyes of her own, an oppositional gaze, a way of staring right back.
* * *
The problematics that played out on the exaggerated stage of the Domino Sugar Refinery present themselves in subtler ways in the creation and reception of black artwork all over this country. In the same article about yelling in the sugar sphinx exhibition, Nicholas Powers skewered Walker and Creative Time for not foreseeing the firestorm that they would set off, asking, “What do you expect will happen if you put a giant sculpture of a nude black woman, as a Mammy no less, in a public space?” Powers’ frustration is rooted in his thwarted expectation of something that’s perhaps best described as a heightened version of Du Bois’ “double consciousness,” a state of mind capable of foresight in addition to double-vision. Not at all uncommon among critiques such as this, his disappointed incredulity illustrates the extraordinary intersection of pressures under which the black American artist must labor. As artists they must be creative and wide-thinking, as nonwhites they must be pacifying and non-confrontational, and as one of the few “outstanding negroes” invited to “the great cocktail party of the white man’s world” (as James Baldwin put it), they’d better not further fuck it up for the rest of us. Most of the critiques leveled at Kara Walker and other envelope-pushing black artists like her come from other black artists and critics who are wary of just how much can be fucked up at a cocktail party. In 1999, Betye Saar, legendary black artist and active opponent of Walker’s, said this: “I felt the work of Kara Walker was sort of revolting and negative and a form of betrayal to the slaves, particularly women and children; that it was basically for the amusement and the investment of the white art establishment.”
But perhaps we could assuage these pressures if we could carve out a space, separate from the cocktail party, separate from that intersection of self-censorship, where black artists could have room to just create. It’s a wish that transcends both space and time for marginalized communities, one that was perhaps most famously articulated by Virginia Woolf in 1929. However, 54 years later, the black writer (can we now see why no black writer would desire this title?) Alice Walker took issue with Woolf’s assertion that in order to write her best fiction, a woman must have “a room of her own.” “What then,” asked Walker, “are we to make of Phillis Wheatley, a slave, who owned not even herself?” Walker held, controversially, that by necessitating the “room” as the place for female writers, Woolf erases the work, lived experiences, and gall of those who have no access to it.
In regards to black art in this nation, it seems that we need to dream like Virginia Woolf but think like Alice Walker. The room is what we must work toward, but waiting until its walls are raised in order to do the things that will make its construction possible amounts to quite a catch-22. How can we hope to carve out a safe space for the unmolested creativity of marginalized groups without first engaging in some painful exorcism—of the Africanist presence from the depths of literature, of racialized violence from our own history? And if art is not a tool afforded to us in the pursuit of bringing darkness to light (remember, the mammy sphinx was cast in blinding white, not molasses), then how do we even go about doing it?
And yet, massive stereotypes placed in gentrified Brooklyn have a potential for immense damage, especially when Woolf’s walls aren’t there to shield us from them (and them from us). The scores of black artists and critics who have censured Walker will understandably warn us about the dangers of trifling with racial typographies in order to deconstruct them. “Fire with fire,” they would say.
During the question-and-answer segment of “Sweet Talk,” a young woman asked, to much applause, if Walker thought that historically damaging images could be reclaimed, and if so, how she perceived her role in rearticulating them. Walker replied that in producing her work, she always envisioned that she was forming “a mercenary, counter-terrorism squad of you and me.”
As Kara Walker, WE ARE HERE, and even Nicholas Powers showed us, our best hope of repossessing black art is to give it eyes, a vision of its own to confront and challenge the privileged, assumption-riddled gazes of the culture in which it acts. Theirs is that “mercenary, counter-terrorism” work of education, conversation, and re-articulation—work that allows the piece to read the people. When the sugar sphinx gawked back, she was brilliant and senseless, inappropriate and thoroughly needed—and like the most deft of teachers, and artworks, she did not linger unnecessarily; in her final lesson, she descended back into nothingness, reminding us that though she could be seen, touched and even smelled, she was, by nature, unreal.
Fiction • Winter 2023
Jack’s mother stood in the kitchen, smoking a cigarette wedged between the prongs of a plastic fork—she didn’t like her hands to smell—as Jack helped his father move out. His father was wearing bermuda shorts and flip-flops, both of which were recent developments. His mom was wearing a light pink bathrobe which was not a recent development but an old one, as he rarely saw her in anything else.
Features • Fall 2019
True love is a conceptual shape: two facts swoop by each other, before asymptotically diverging. One line follows from the obvious thought: *I love you with such certainty that it could only have been preordained*. The other follows from the reply: *But clearly, when we run through the sequence of events that wound us together, every moment is full of choices that could so nearly have been otherwise*. Although, in narrating our shared history, we might feel the need to plot the convergence of necessity and choice, such a reconciliation would be false. These facts never rationally meet: their truth is in the tension that holds the strands apart, yet within the same image.
The purpose of a concept is to enumerate and then to savor the distance between thought and reality. Slowly, we try to bring the two together, by imagining that reality comported itself identically to our concepts. Because our concepts remain imperfect, so too do our actions. Whatever folly results offers us a recommendation for a revision of our concepts. We adjust them, and try again. New mistakes continue to be made, of course; accuracy remains distant. Yet our hope in the project persists.
In the case of certain concepts, we have taken that distance and made it internal to the concept itself. These are the concepts that are hardest to describe, because in their effort to name the real, they have taken on the very reality of the distance between experience and reason. In doing so, they forfeit a sense of cohesion, but gain access to a poetic logic: they mimic the shape of thought itself.
Love is one of these concepts. The distance between the arcs of the inevitable and the chosen contains love’s power. It is the mutual commitment to sustaining this tension that animates our bond.
Speech takes a similar form. When I speak, I am trying to form the exact string of words that holds the thing I believe. At the same time, however, I am searching after a shared language with you — I am trying to communicate. So often, the right thing feels as though it’s about to pop out of my mouth, but then I wonder if it will make sense to you, and the way you think, and the image crumbles. On the other hand, when I concede fully to your language, I have lost the images that were possible in mine. Both honesty and communication are necessary, yet they refuse to complement each other.
But conversation is more difficult than love. Maintaining the necessary tension between the constitutive facts of speech is often exhausting, because conversation stands on delicate promises. By breaking eye contact one time too many, you have stated that you no longer care to work towards the other person’s thoughts. They are left speaking to themselves. After a number of these interactions I find myself fatigued, and I go home.
In my sophomore year I joined the college radio station, where I worked in the classical music department. Its anonymity was half of the appeal: I was given an open space to think out loud without worrying about any particular audience: I can’t picture a college radio listener, and I can’t tell if they switched the dial. I did, however, know they were out there because people would call in, sometimes twice in the same show, to tell me how nice it was to hear someone caring for the music they loved.
My first show — “on Tuesday nights, 6 to 8” — was an intellectual survey of Arnold Schoenberg and his students, Alban Berg and Anton Webern. Known as the Second Viennese School, they styled themselves as descendants of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, if not in musical style then certainly in seriousness. I had spent the summer doing a research project on listening cultures around the turn of the 20th-century, and through Schoenberg’s arch inattentiveness towards his audiences I became caught up in the arc of his thought.
When I first started, I would tinker with my weekly scripts for hours to get the intonation just right for each syllable. I think I used the word “posture” three times over the course of the first few shows: *decadent, late-romantic posture* ... *recessive posture* ... *struck a posture that called the attention of the listener without imposing*. Slowly, I fell into bad habits. After a couple weeks, I was hurriedly writing my lines while broadcasting the piece I was going to comment on. This gave my sentences a certain performative fervor, although my delivery became less confident.
By the fourth week, I was so engrossed in the music that I failed to write anything at all. As the record spun to my left, I tilted my head forward and let the microphone rest in the nook between my nose and upper lip, the plasticky smell of the red foam cover dulled by a trace of mildew. On that particular week, I had lots to say: we had finally gotten to the first of Schoenberg’s operas, *Erwartung*, and it was my belief that Schoenberg’s worldview was most fulsomely disclosed in his operatic experiments. But the Google doc displayed on my laptop browser was empty, save for a list of quotes. I don’t remember the sound of whichever choral song was so distracting to me, just the sense of gentle focus that a needle extracts from vinyl.
The record faded out, I listed the artists printed on the sleeve, and started reading from my computer.
>*You are listening to WHRB Cambridge, 95.3 FM, and streaming online at WHRB.org.*<br>
<br>
*A few lines before we begin:*<br>
*––ich allein in den dumpfen Schatten*<br>
*(I am alone in the heavy shadows)*<br>
*––eingeklemmt?… Nein es ist was gekrochen… und hier auch… wer rührt mich an? Fort… nur weiter, um Gotteswillen*<br>
*(trapped? … No, something crawled… and here too… who touches me? Go… keep moving, for God’s sake)*<br>
*––aber du bist nicht gekommen*<br>
*(but you never did come)*<br>
*––alle Farben der Welt brachen aus deinen Augen*<br>
*(all the colors of the world broke free from your eyes)*<br>
*––dein Blut tropft noch jetzt mit leisem Schlag… dein Blut ist noch lebendig*<br>
*(your blood still drips with a gentle beat… your blood is still alive)*<br>
*––ich suchte*<br>
*(I sought)*<br>
<br>
*And so here is Arnold Schoenberg’s first opera, Erwartung, or Expectation, opus number seventeen, here performed by Soprano Janis Martin and the BBC Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Pierre Boulez. This comes to us on a Sony compact disc.*
The first minutes of the opera jump between flashes of warmth, light fingers pressing briefly into cold skin. Slowly, the space of the music reaches a stable temperature, an equilibrium that can sound alternately cantankerous and dull.
I immediately wished I had said something more useful. When I had collected the quotes, I intended to use them as part of a plot synopsis that I would improvise. Recently, with no one there to watch me, I had found that ideas were turning into sentences at exactly the rate of speech, a skill I had never mastered elsewhere. But for some reason, confronted by this music, I couldn't find the words that were meant to come in between the quotations. So I found myself wondering what I would have liked to have said, had I the ability to reverse time. I could have pitched the opera from the ether, perhaps, a secret story in an opaque world:
>A woman staggers around the dark woods. In the moonless night, it is impossible for her to orient herself. She grazes against tree trunks and dead branches, asking each one: is it you? But nothing ever replies.<br>
<br>
She has a faint recollection. She had come from somewhere safer, a little enclosure bursting with green and red. Under her arm, she carries a bouquet that she picked from the floral beds.<br>
<br>
Finally, she finds what she is looking for, but it is too late: the man is dead. She screams at him, tears running down her cheeks. She feels the blood as it drips down his abdomen: some spiritual energy still beats.<br>
<br>
This is expectation, Schoenberg’s Expectation, or *Erwartung*, opus number seventeen …
I have always been confused by the way music is changed through explanation. Why is it that, if I put my head down to read the program notes during a Mozart piano concerto, the music is so much brighter and more moving when I look back to the soloist? These notes offer details that might illuminate the music’s internal organization, but isn't structure meant to strike us with its own power? What is power if it needs to be explained before it can be felt?
When I’m writing for broadcast, I’m always aware of the distance between emotional and intellectual intelligibility. My Schoenberg show was interested in exposing the truth that this art holds in a way that made the recordings themselves come to life. But the underlying assumption of all aesthetic interpretation is the reverse: that the feelings we get from great art signal its truth content. Only after its impact has ricocheted across our chest do we feel the need to analyze the origins of the experience. If, in telling you the formal meaning of this or that piano sonata before you’ve heard it, I change the feelings you get from the sounds, aren’t I cheating?
Woozy reflections like these are, of course, the currency of the WHRB studio, the fluorescent-lit basement of a freshman dorm staffed 24/7 by undergraduates. As the second scene of the opera began to trickle out of the speakers, I found myself admiring the various artifacts of thought: the little erotic illustrations that rock DJs had drawn in pen on the walls, the block-letter stickers reading GOD that were stuck on the broken clock, the notebooks left open on the couch so thoroughly stained by sweat and food passed from one mouth to the next that no adult would dare sit on it. I thought back to the moment before I hit play. Had I not been so concerned with the nature of my role, maybe I would have mustered an interpretive account about the meaning of the opera. Everyone I read seems to think the *Erwartung* is a psychodrama about the baseless nature of desire. But the bodies are too present, I think, and the way the woman relates to them is all wrong. She just wants to be close to somebody, to find the space for something intimate and rich. I imagined myself spinning something like this:
>Frankly, I find it difficult to speak about Schoenberg’s operas, because they present themselves so overtly as autobiographical ruminations, and there’s a certain shame, I think, in reverting to the biographical register of interpretation. The cliché that describes ruptured thematic material in late Beethoven as if it’s nothing but a symbol for the composer’s loss of hearing and subsequent despair rightly strikes us as vapid. But in Schoenberg, narcissistic recluse that he was, the characters he put on a stage could only ever be the voices in his head. Maybe this is the only responsible way for us to talk about the modern composer: when the myth of the composer as genius, endowed with the subconscious gift of aesthetic truth, is no longer viable, we are forced to see that the composer is compelled to write music by personal commitments which will doubtlessly make themselves apparent in the music itself. <br>
<br>
*Oh–– unser Garten* … <br>
*Oh–– our garden* … <br>
<br>
It seems important to note that there are two gardens in *Erwartung*, Schoenberg’s first opera, from 1909. The first is the one from which the opera’s sole unnamed Soprano escapes. It is enclosed by a high wall — stone, we could imagine, an oasis jetting out the back of a Cotswold home, full of roses and vines. We are led to believe that the woman grew up here, sheltered among the flowers that she would water with her mother on summer evenings, peering through little holes in the wall to catch a glimpse at the outside world when nobody was looking. This can be our fiction — the text doesn’t tell us much about the garden, except that the woman fell in love with a man who came to visit her there. He wanted her to leave to the garden to meet him in the forest, so as night fell she ventured outside for the first time.<br>
<br>
In the darkness she finds outside, the only information she can gather about the identity of the objects around her is their silence: they are not the man she seeks. Otherwise, the forest presents itself to her in its outlines. “There a black object dances, a thousand hands — don’t be foolish, it is the shadows.” She can sense the surface of things, see their silhouettes and touch their edges, but never apprehend their identity, except to know what they are not.<br>
<br>
I think the garden gestures towards a useful duality here. For people like my mother, gardens are the places in which they tended to life, felt responsible for the care of little seedlings, and, in time, found gratification in the relationships they had built with the plants. For people like me, however, who couldn’t tell a daffodil from a daisy, a garden represents pure sensory information that is difficult to make sense of. Sometimes a smell will catch me off guard, or a particular arrangement of colors will stand out, but I will always have trouble caring about these patches of cultivated earth because the organisms that make them up, their identities, interactions, and needs, are concealed from me.<br>
<br>
In this second sense, the dark woods are a garden too. When the woman sings that infamous, mournful line, she refers to two tragedies: that she has left the comfortable, enclosed garden for good — *Oh—— our garden, that we left* — and that the place she escaped to was not a forest filled with old secrets and new possibilities, but another sort of garden, an expanse that she could sense but not comprehend — *Oh—— our garden, that you’ve led me to*.<br>
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While the score of the half-hour-opera situates our ear within the second garden, it is clear that the enclosed first garden would have been filled with the achingly soulful sounds of late romantic music, the style that was taught to Schoenberg by his teacher and father-in-law Alexander Zemlinsky. It is the sound world we associate with the dripping, lyrical music of composers like Richard Strauss, the final installations in a method of tonal maneuvering — known as diatonicism or, more colloquially, as tonality — that had been developing continuously for no fewer than four centuries. As we’ve heard in recent weeks, much of the young Schoenberg’s fame came from his works that participate in the twilight of that period of common practice; the *Verklärte Nacht* from two weeks ago, a conventionally tonal work written for string sextet in 1899 when Schoenberg was 25 and living in Vienna, remains his most frequently performed work. To his teachers, he seemed to be the heir to the great tradition of high bourgeois art music: he adored Mozart and Mahler, Brahms and Wagner, and his musical voice seemed strong enough to sustain their commitments into the modern age.<br>
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By 1908, however, Schoenberg had identified the ideological spirit at the core of the old diatonic system: namely that, particularly in the most decadent of its romantic postures, it professed to offer an emotive rejoinder to the universalizing claims of enlightenment reason and the technological revolutions it set in motion. The passionate outpourings of Schoenberg’s teachers were not bastions of true virtue against a corrupted world. Instead, their music engaged in an increasingly futile battle against the elements of human nature that the levers of the machine, the centralized powers of the nation-state, and the replicating imperatives of 20th century capitalism were making apparent.<br>
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As the distance between modern experience and the available diatonic formations widened, it became clear to Schoenberg that despite its claims to the contrary, musical language had never grasped some higher truth of nature. Instead, it had always been a tool devised by mere people for a purpose.<br>
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So Schoenberg broke into a mode of composition that he called free atonality. This is the music we hear in the *Erwartung*, the music of freedom, of the outside. Just like in the Second String Quartet that we heard last week, the rules that had dominated pitch relationships for centuries are entirely forgotten; instead, each interval imparts its precise meaning in its shape. A diminished seventh doesn't carry meaning because we anticipate it to resolve in any particular direction, as the rules of music within the diatonic system dictated. Instead, the diminished seventh is exactly what it sounds like in any given moment, nothing more. Like the wooded world as it appears to the Soprano in the woods, the musical scene that surrounds her is fashioned of pure contour.<br>
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The project of free atonality was emancipatory: it sought to redeem the interval as such by freeing it from its entanglements. When the Soprano sings of the “Flowers for him,” the bouquet she brought from the old garden to the promised meeting, she hopes to save the best of her old, confined life, and bring it into her new, free one. This opera’s hope isn’t to be found in the buoyant almost-melodies that animate Schoenberg’s early masterpieces. Instead, it lies in the incompleteness of the musical phrases that recur whenever the woman brushes up against the shadows of the dark night. Each time, she believes she found something, and we believe that some inner logic will reveal itself in the music. But it never does.<br>
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The free-atonal years were emotionally troubling ones for Schoenberg. Forced to leave Vienna for Berlin to earn a living, the musical and social traditions he had absorbed in the Austrian capital were upended in the younger, openly commercial city in the north. A parallel conflict played out internally. Schoenberg wrote at length to his friend and protege Alban Berg about the compositional malaise that consumed him. In the 16 years between the first atonal string quartet in 1908 and the first serialized Five Piano Pieces in 1924 he averaged fewer than one work per year, many of which were miniature in scale. Years go by in their correspondence filled with complaints that, for various reasons, Schoenberg could not muster the energy or the will to write. During this period, he took on few new students and lost touch with just about all his friends, mainly relying on his two star pupils from the prior decade to manage his affairs. In short, Schoenberg was experiencing a crisis of meaning.<br>
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But this music he was creating, like *Erwartung*, was not entirely emptied of meaning. Instead, it answered directly to the whims of Schoenberg’s own subconscious, as he described it in his journals. While the music outlines a non-language that could not be made semiotically legible, it does follow certain patterns and create particular effects that resonate with Schoenberg’s persona.<br>
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Therefore, the music was emotionally intelligible only to those who knew Schoenberg personally, those who understood the life that acted as referent. In response to the 1911 premiere of the early free atonal choral work, *Friede auf Erden* or *Peace on Earth*, Berg wrote to Schoenberg:<br>
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*It’s impossible to tell you what a profound and joyous impression the work made on me: only you can speak of peace on earth, you who have known all its torments. But we who went through them with you can understand your longing for it. Which is how I explain to myself why this work will never have a so-called public success or failure… all of that is nothing for the masses, who after all long only for their petty but overrated passions to be stirred, or want to fancy they hear them where they do not exist. That’s impossible with this chorus––and so they’re mystified, and applaud out of a sense of shame.*<br>
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Under Berg’s noxious elitism, we hear him explaining that Schoenberg’s free music, the music we hear in *Erwartung* as well, can only do what art is meant to do for his closest personal circle: the people that came with him from the walled garden to the dark forest.<br>
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In the concluding scene of the *Erwartung*, when the Soprano finally finds the limp body of the man she had been searching for, she cries out:<br>
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*Don’t be dead, my lover … how dreadfully cold are your eyes… you never did come.*<br>
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The promise of freedom, the love that the woman hoped to find in the open expanse of the night, was false. Schoenberg felt his own life deadened by the new approach to personal expression he had assumed as he realized that, in its attempts to portray pure personal truth, it precluded connection with any new audience. What does this realization amount to? The realization that, in life as in art, freedom and meaning are opposing pursuits. Or, put simply, freedom is just an excuse to do unmeaningful things.<br>
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But there remained a shimmer of hope. Schoenberg’s original insight, that the rules of composition were nothing more than human creations and therefore unnecessary, was a precursor to the realization that allowed all of modern thought to collapse: that every human system is socially constructed, and dependent upon closed ideological frameworks. This, perhaps, offers the chance to build something new. As the Soprano inspects the body of her lover, she notes, *how your blood still drips with a gentle beat; your blood is still alive* …<br>
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And so here is Arnold Schoenberg’s *Erwartung*, or *Expectation*, Opus number seventeen, here performed by Soprano Janis Martin and the BBC Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Pierre Boulez. This comes to us on a Sony compact disc.<br>
With the end of the opera’s brief third scene comes a shift. The given shapes of the long groped-after world, represented in the sympathetic music material as pure disorder, are exchanged for a new purity in the opening lines of the fourth scene, the purity of the promise. From my swiveling leather stool, I could clearly hear when the soprano stumbled upon the path that would eventually lead her towards the opened body, and the music responds with anticipation. Chords grow faster and more jarring, as it begins to seem as though some resolution might be found. The pure promise of the appointed end, sustained by a conflict empty of characters, is the underlying force of romantic music, the sum of a scorned yet still valiant humanism. As rising chords snap and dissipate again into disorder, the music rehearses the tragic history of ideological purity. External ideology is cast off: the ideology of givenness and its truth content. Then humane ideology: the ideology of hope.
There are at least two ways to explain why I feel so compelled to talk about sound, or hear others do so. On one hand, maybe digesting words about music makes us feel more invested, so we become more open to the impact of musical shapes as they hit us. The meaning of any given phrase was always there, but, like a muffled telephone call, was indecipherable until we realized that there was a voice to listen for, not just static and the sound of rain. Or, maybe sound only ever reaches us as shape––that is, maybe sound has no voice––but for it to be music we must be called to process it in a certain way, one that calls us to invest a bit of our thinking within it. In music schools, a constant refrain is the “power of the phrase,” the arcing line of intention that makes a promise: the return to a home chord, a little cathartic release. Maybe we enjoy these sound objects because we believe its lines are the outlines of something full, something we’ve trained ourselves to value. This is why it's so hard to make old music go away: because the images and memories we attach to it aren’t parasites on the body of the sound: they are the music itself.
I heard a shuffling sound, one hand rubbing against the door as the other turned the knob and Lucy’s head popped out. She smiled as she spread out on the sofa at the back of the studio, feet hanging off the armrest. Where are you living this summer? she asked. I told her, and then she told me where she was living, and we realized that we would be very close. She reached her hand behind the couch to pull out the station’s communal penguin head and lowered it over her face. We laughed, and she told me about the worst class she had ever been to. It’s called A Deep History of the Arts of the Secret, she said, which is obviously the best title a course has ever had, and it’s in comp lit, but the teacher makes me want to pull my teeth out and fill my ears with them. Lucy’s words were slightly murky, coming from inside the huge head.
She and I had been close the summer before: a project about Keats had brought her to the same Library I had been working in. I had struggled to recognize the figurative precision of the english language until she read to me from *To Autumn*. It suddenly struck me that I might have failed to find the words for this opera because the real reasons I cared for it so deeply were explicitly personal, but that I felt classical radio to be an improper stage for my confessions. Maybe I wanted to give my own story with the *Erwartung*, when it came into my life around the time as Lucy:
>I grew up playing Schoenberg; his Five Orchestral Pieces cycled through repertoire lists a couple times in my youth orchestras, and a chamber music ensemble of mine was assigned to play the Wind Quintet for a month or so. It was tough music to line up; the clarinetists next to me never quite found the necessary rhythmic groove, and there were very exposed and very quiet sextuplets in my bassoon part that I struggled to place. I didn’t come to love this music until doing research work last summer in the university special collections. <br>
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That I would have ended up at a university at all was never assured. In fact, my parents and I had decided when I was 14 that I would go to a music conservatory after high school, to train in the narrow art of winning orchestral bassoon jobs. This would have taken me to one of the tiny — often fewer than 300-student — institutions that train the next generation of sub-virtuosi to play Haydn and Dvorak. At any of these schools, I would have been surrounded by a familiar social network. The community of overachieving high school musicians becomes tight among those who are most committed, especially the people who see themselves as primarily orchestral players. We all cycled through the same constellation of fancy institutes and festivals during the summers, returning to our local youth orchestras or pre-college programs to gossip about the bleach blonde Californian oboist at Interlochen who played on thick European reeds, or the lanky bassist at Tanglewood who had hooked up with the conductor’s daughter on the roof of the concert shed. Everyone knew everyone, everyone loved the same music, and everyone developed that same pit in their stomach about their future job prospects as we all started to notice the preponderance of teaching assistants who were no longer in their twenties, but had been taking professional auditions every month since their second year in school. <br>
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In the end, though, I chose to go to an academic school so I could meet people. To recede into the pocket of the music world seemed extravagantly lazy. When I first heard *Erwartung* last August, a month I spent reflecting on my freshman year, I realized that, although I had met many people in college, the experience was not as I anticipated. People meet and disperse, webs of oblique connection extending across campus. When I pass men whose names I remember at parties, there is an expectation that we will do some sort of handshake which, bizarrely, no one ever teaches. We curl our fingers around each others' for just a second, then let go. <br>
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In an open social space, creating connection requires a force of character that is fundamentally presumptuous: it requires the assumption that, among all these people we are free to know, you might want to settle into something confining with me. Last year, I eventually made my way back towards some of the musicians I had known peripherally in high school who had also ended up here. But their reasons for being at a university were different: they wanted a place to quietly work, so they could avoid the professional insecurity of the music world. I ended up spending a lot of time in the library. *Erwartung*, in its hypostatization of disconnection, made good sense. And so here is Arnold Schoenberg’s *Erwartung*, or *Expectation*, Opus number seventeen... <br>
Lucy had momentarily broken the seal of my stupor, but then I started thinking about the shows to come. That week, I was writing an essay about Schoenberg’s two pupils, Berg and Webern, ostensibly for a class but also to help me formalize an image. Having come to terms with the failure of pure freedom, Schoenberg created a new systematization of composition known as the twelve-tone method. He hoped to animate his expressions with a framework that people could learn to trust just the same way they fell in love with the old diatonic system, only this one, he promised, was better. But I believe that the best way to understand it is through the way it incorporates the insights of Schoenberg’s students, whom Schoenberg himself looked to for inspiration in the 1920s. The experiments they had undertaken with different styles of expression during their mentor’s fallow years had proven fruitful. From this vantage I hoped that listeners could hear the twelve-tone method, Schoenberg’s eventual attempt to breathe life into that body of bleeding atonality, with an ear to the opposing conceptions of meaning which constitute it. It’s a strange arrangement: opposites are combined through a process that appears highly technical, but the exact point at which they integrate remains inexplicable.
I wondered what I would say about the two, when I introduced their music on the show the next week. Perhaps I would need to veil any technical analysis in an affective scene. Even without context, something about Lucy would be appropriate:
>You just heard Alban Berg’s Lyric Suite, here performed by the Pro Arte Quartet. That performance came to us on a Phillips compact disc. In this, Berg’s most famous piece of chamber music, allegedly a work about his passionate love affair with a young woman, you can hear what I want to call a high-friction system of meaning: that is to say, a system of import and that privileges the action. It begins with the assumption that it is fundamentally difficult to do things, that there is a grating difficulty in managing everyday life, of pushing through. Thus, doing anything is immensely meaningful, and the actor is only meaningful secondarily, insofar as they did the action. We hear this friction in the effort pull apart little motivic bits, the tugging and ripping that defines the string lines, and the joyous, if fleeting, moments of reconciliation, as the effort of pulling apart these little themes, and in this case, the heaving pain of acting while under the intoxicating influence of love, is exalted.<br>
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In the mature works of Anton Webern, which we heard earlier in the hour, we are confronted with an entirely opposite system of meaning: high-density meaning. “The music seemed to send little cells of sound into space, where they expanded and took on a whole new quality and dimension of their own.” These are the words of Yves Gaucher, the great Candaian painter of color fields, upon first hearing a concert of Webern’s music. That cellular quality, that sense of an interior pull with multiple loci, speaks to an understanding of both objects and subjects that assigns them their own gravity, and therefore value. What matters, for Webern, isn't that acting is inhibited by friction, but that things and people themselves are essentially dense, heavy, difficult to tip over. The world that Webern sketches in sound engenders a sense of awe in the self-referential integrity of everything. Thus, things in themselves are meaningful, and actions undertaken to change or develop them are only meaningful secondarily.<br>
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Schoenberg’s twelve-tone system itself is built up from fixed tone rows, or sets that contain each of the 12 possible notes laid out in a particular order without repetition. This creates little units of meaning, each note intelligible internally in relation to the 11 other notes of the row. These rows are then played around with, transposed and turned every which way, but the sanctity of the initial intervals is always preserved, in their purest forms, as is the integrity of the unit. Dissonance remains emancipated, but its meaning is re-systematized. This interior sanctity comes straight from Webern. But every so often, this structure is torn apart. Schoenberg explains that he follows his instinct above form when they are in disagreement, and in those instants there is an ecstasy in feeling the fabric of the tone row torn apart from every-which-way. This is the intrusion of Berg’s high friction meaning. The two are held in opposition, yet together. On that note, here are the Fünf Klavierstücke, or Five Piano Pieces of 1924, performed by Glenn Gould on a Phillips compact disc.<br>
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You just heard the Funf Klavierstücke, or Five Piano Pieces of 1924…<br>
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I think the five pieces lumber under the weight of their new structure, but then suddenly a sense of almost magical power seems to emerge. I allow them to have an organizing power over my memories. Schoenberg considered the set somewhat bulky even when he published; ever since last summer, I’ve liked it.<br>
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No. 1, Sehr Langsam (Very Slow)<br>
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The first piece has always felt particularly vocal to me. Strings of pitches don't push up or down, and the range is notably restrained for this sort of piano writing. The animating pressure is on how the miniature gestures push forward, or hold back. The way the melodic line grows in warmth as it moves towards a point then recedes, to pose a question that is less clear, reminds me of a voice from last summer. I was lucky to have been doing research around a small group. Advising us was a woman named Emilie, a punk-rock librarian with enormous tattoos just under the sleeves of her black sweater. When she spoke, there was always a wildness behind her words, but just before the energy of the sentence ran out she would pause slightly, and stare at me, as if to ask me what her thought had made me wild about. Slowly, I assumed some of her tone and some of her hope.<br>
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No. 2, Sehr rasch (Very fast)<br>
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This is music about edges, in some sense. The way the pianist’s fingers are asked to prod at the notes resembles the way a young child might poke a turtle, wishing for it to emerge from its shell. But almost immediately, the motions slow down, and become more careful. I think that, to our detriment, touch is typically cast as the buffoonish sense. The first time I sat down with artifacts (a collection of 19th century program books) in the research library, I wanted to figure out what the weight and texture of the objects could tell me about what it might be like to read from them, but it took awhile to remember how to be perceptive with my fingers. I looked across at Lucy, who seemed to be equally befuddled. She smiled and pushed her papers towards me, and, with her watching, I leafed lightly through the pages.<br>
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No. 3, Langsam (Slow)<br>
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The glassy surface of this piece conjures images of the Charles River for me. In the warm breeze of a summer night, the flat water shimmers, bookended by the two fully illuminated stone bridges. Walking along the North bank, I would talk with Lucy and Nicola and the others before we slept, musing about the tarot readings that Emilie had guided. Sometimes, it seems that only the mystical could account for a thing as strange as community.<br>
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No. 4, Schwungvoll (Spirited)<br>
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There was a moment when it seemed like Lucy, Nicola and I were going to take over directing the research program for the next year. Emilie was not the only anarchist in that library. It was hoped that, in future years, we would be best positioned to help conjure the sort of community for others that we had made for ourselves. We sat up together for twenty hours to write a proposal, which ended up including the word “crystal” four times.<br>
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Emilie sent us the manifesto that had founded the research program. Here, we saw the serendipity of each meeting codified, plans for every interaction. Behind the magic, a system. We wrote more, about funding and about institutional relationships.<br>
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Writing together is difficult. In this piece, the passing of sound from one hand to the other is as precise as it is loving.<br>
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No. 5, Walzer (Waltz)<br>
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All good things end with a dance. Tom was doing research nearby, but he had entered into our fold. When we danced I could only notice the soft tips of his fingers and the spindly ends of the white flowers on his shirt. This waltz almost tickles, but it doesn’t dislodge your composure. It guides you into something so softly that it cannot be escaped. This is not a sex scene: we just cared.<br>
By this point, the opera had become difficult to follow. The soprano cried out various questions, accompanied by popping brass sounds. With each burst, the form of the opera is pantomimed in a millisecond. Presence followed by absence. But there is an affectionate manner in the way lips buzz together behind a trumpet mouthpiece, a loose coordination that proves capable of producing a unified sound. Each lip has a feel for the other that requires no rational consideration. A gentle intimacy, if well hidden, is possible amid severity.
Lucy asked me what I was working on that week, and I told her about my essay. I pulled out my computer: to prepare for my show on Schoenberg’s final opera, I had already condensed the paper’s final argument into a draft of a broadcast, so I read it aloud to her as she ran her finger up and down the side of the couch:
>In grappling with the composition of *Moses und Aron*, his unfinished 1932 opera, Schoenberg believed he had revealed his attempts to create structure to be futile. The text, written by the composer himself, relates the story of the two brothers as described in Exodus. As Moses leaves the Israelites for Mount Sinai, where he will receive the ten commandments, Aaron stays behind in the Egyptian desert to maintain order. To inspire his community, which remained uncaptivated by the power of the new faceless monotheism, Aaron institutes the cult of the golden calf, an idol to serve as a proxy for the true monotheistic transcendence. When Moses returns, he is aghast. Why has direct faith given way to corporeal approximation? Aaron sings to Moses that he has *bowed to necessity*. Moses responds, in his disenchanted shouts, *Must I falsify the idea*? The one God is *unthinkable*, according to Moses, and His power cannot be communicated. Attempts to enunciate God in semiotic discourse necessitate His representation as an idea as opposed to the pure Name, the immanent fact of the divine.<br>
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The opera narrates Schoenberg’s newest commitment: that the final normative truth could never be communicated, neither through speech nor, more importantly, through the inherently representational high bourgeois artwork. So then what was he communicating in his new language? A cordoned off, insular truth — mere ideology if introduced in the real world. Something dependent on circumstance. The real world cannot accommodate the preconditions of, for example, both the high-friction and high-density meaning systems, but because Schoenberg’s artwork does, we are reminded that its claims to truth content cannot map cleanly onto the real world. And anyway, the twelve-tone system was never emotionally intelligible to many more listeners than the freely atonal works. Those with technical knowledge grasped it; those without were still left “applauding out of shame.” In a rationalized society, unintelligible is synonymous with unfeelable.<br>
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So Schoenberg could no longer tie up the ribbon around his work, the final act that would seal it off from any public. He left it unfinished. This inaugurated a series of overtly publicly-facing works, emulating the sounds of Hollywood and the stage, in the style of his adopted American culture.<br>
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For Theodor Adorno, former composition student of Berg’s and the most famous interpreter of Schoenberg, the opera’s incompleteness reminds us of sacred art’s impossibility in a secular world. But he hated the music that followed, which he believed to be a capitulation to the degraded and fetishistic ears of the general public. When he assessed Schoenberg’s career as a whole, Adorno — a thinker from the highest cusp of modernism as it teetered toward the midcentury — believed that the attempts of the twelve-tone system to unify truth into one structure was false from the start, as “unity is a watchword for ideology.” Any attempt to replicate a unity which does not exist in the fallen world is a capitulation to the structures of social domination. It is power that imposes the original lie of unity, the lie that our world is fully rational, fully comprehensible as a whole if we were to simply think hard enough. Instead, Adorno wants us to see the world with an eye for parataxis, so that we might understand it as a collection of individuated, self-referential units of intelligibility.<br>
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Schoenberg comes to a similar conclusion of his own music from a more practical angle. As Schoenberg realized, unity has a bound: it must follow unworldly laws, as worldly laws do not yield pure unity. Nothing can; even the totalizing language of mathematics requires an axiomatic basis, an unworldly, constructed system. The trouble with those bounds is that they require an intellectual understanding of the otherwise-language in use, which by definition is not naturally intelligible. It requires a trained audience, an audience of insiders. Only to them is the apprehension of a grandiose, hopeful performance of unity — which often masquerades as transcendence — feelable.<br>
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What I want to say is that these assessments of insularity were both ahead of and behind their time. Ahead of their time because the uncovering of ideology within aesthetic experience was among the insights that allowed post-modern thinking to undermine enlightenment philosophy’s late theological aspiration to immobile truth. As it became clear that there is no sort of experience that could offer direct connection with the Name, then the opportunity for metaphysical thought began to wither.<br>
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But they stood resolutely behind their time because they assessed insularity as if its lack of metaphysical content made it disposable, as a true modernist would have. Released from the theological inheritance we understand thought to be a concept-creating enterprise, one that only finds truth in relation to the usefulness of the ideas it conjures out of an immanent world. Therefore, calling a particular concept or social structure a relic of ideology is unnecessary, because they all are. There is just one test: how useful is this concept?<br>
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So here, I want to offer up the concept of enclosure as the key to a contemporary understanding of social life. If we accept that all structures of meaning are unrelated to any absolute normative truth — be it natural, material, or divine — then we must foster conditions for communities and groups to create their own systems of meaning because, assuming no new monotheism takes hold, many possible structures of significance will emerge. For this to occur, we must enable groups of people to create confining relationships with each other, relationships sustained by insular systems of meaning. Insularity allows us to be with one another. The alternative, I guess, would be to dispense with the concept of enclosure as another barrier between us and absolute freedom, as Adorno and Schoenberg might advise. Then, we would have won for ourselves the hollow promise of pure freedom: the freedom to yell into the ether “is it you?” and receive silence in response.
The intensity of the opera was beginning to die away. Reading this script aloud, something had begun to trouble me. The issue with telling this story is that, having illustrated Schoenberg’s trajectory, it begins to feel inevitable. He leaves an enclosure for freedom, then devises a new enclosure for himself,then escapes that one too. It might seem pertinent to note, at this point, that in the very last years of his life Schoenberg turned back to religion not for its intellectual resources but as a practicing Jew, perhaps a final attempt to integrate himself into a pocket of coherency.
Lucy listened almost too carefully, looking down only once to answer a text. She had taken the penguin off. I wonder if she thinks my stance is naive. I want to argue that there’s some moment of enclosure we can hold on to, a closed ideological view that, nevertheless, fulfills us. I want to believe that there might be a social apparatus that we could sustain.
When I shed my radio persona, that voice so eager to fill dead air with ever nimbler analyses, it seems to me that perhaps the most useful part of Schoenberg’s story is the way he acts out a new way of life, one that slips into and out of various enclosures continuously, freedom and structure receding into each other as each reveal their inadequacy.
As the music rushed breathlessly to a close, Lucy looked up from her phone to ask me what I was going to say on air, and I told her that I probably wouldn’t say much. Enthusiastically she suggested that we get lunch at some point, maybe get the cohort back together and then she left.
Fiction • Fall 2019
Late in their resignation, the ones who are driven rarely sleep. Eventually, it is said, the long hushed noise of the road lulls them into a kind of perpetually half-awake state, where translucent dreams arrive and depart as something in between thought and phenomenon. Even on the precarious turns of a mountain road, where the edge of the car is almost flush with the edge of the cliff; even on the long straightaways of eastern Montana, where you can still encounter gas stations by the long asphalt straightaways; even in the gridded clog of the streets in southern Detroit, you can find these half-dreaming passengers, head against the window, looking but no longer seeing, moving but no longer traveling, breathing but no longer speaking. The NIH, in fact, nowadays classifies this as an addiction. I don’t remember the name they gave it. Nobody really uses it. I think we’d all prefer to believe that the ones who are driven aren’t sick or diseased or crazy or anything like that—just trying to get somewhere, but haven’t figured out where that somewhere is yet. I asked a friend of mine the other day: How are they different than any one of us? And then he said, Listen to yourself. Enough. Enough of that. This friend is tired of me talking and asking about these cases. Obsession is the word he uses. You’ve been obsessed with these cases ever since your mother passed, he tells me. It’s just an interest, I tell him back. She was interested in all this too. And I want tell him, Let me alone, fuck off, but I know that’s just my angry streak. He’d helped out a lot with her, especially toward the end.
I heard of one pair of teenage boys who left to be driven together. They had met each other in high school, I was told, in geography class. But they were in the East Texas where this kind of thing is still looked down upon, even still. Apparently, the second boy’s mother caught them together in the basement one day when she came home early. It’s said that there was no real fighting, but the second boy could tell that something had severed in the house. His mother didn’t speak to him for three days; when she did, the fury in her voice was businesslike, controlled. Five nights after the garage incident, the boys decided they would leave, but for how long, they didn’t know. In the middle of the night, they removed the two front seats in the car, squeezed in a small mattress diagonally, and loaded up the canned food and energy bars they had bought earlier that day after school with the first boy’s parents’ credit card. They plugged in Denver, CO to the console. No specific address. A few days after they left, the parents appeared on television, and they said, The only thing we know is that they’re headed to Denver. They’ve turned off location tracking. Please look out for a dark green Tsukuba. We need your help, anybody. Please. Dylan, Ari, if you’re hearing this, please, please come home. We miss you. We love you. Please, come home. Before that, the night they left, when they were trying to sleep, pressed together on the floor of the car, Dylan whispered, Ari, Ari, do you hear that? Ari stirred. What? Ari, do you hear that? What are you talking about? But the car began to slow and exited the highway. Nothing, said Dylan. The car eased into a charging station. They got out to stretch. Did you sleep? asked Dylan. Cicadas swelled; the city was hours behind. No, said Ari. Not really. Dylan turned to Ari. God, Ari. What are we doing? he asked. Ari didn’t answer. Instead, he said, I love you, and Dylan said, I love you, too, and took his hand. A clear bing came from the car, and they got back in, and the door slid back into place with a snug click. They kept going for many days. They blew through Denver. They didn’t turn around until they reached Calgary. By the end, they weren’t speaking — just looking out of opposite windows, quiet and breathing low, more than tired, that first hushed thrill of unbridled privacy having long given way to the resigned trance of the unspooling road. They had forgotten that they had programmed home as their destination until they pulled into the driveway, when the second boy’s mother opened the front door and ran to the car and started knocking frantically on the window. Other parents weren’t so lucky — something similar happened again only a few months later, but the kids never came back. Their car ran out of power somewhere near Death Valley during a snowstorm, and they starved to death half a continent from home.
Because these cars require nothing from their passengers, and because passengers will often just sleep through the night while the cars take them to where they need to go all on their own, and because the cars will soundlessly ease themselves into charging stations when their battery is low, and because the early Tsukuba doors would automatically unlock as the car shifted into park to begin the charging, there was, for a time, a certain kind of larcenist who would just wait at charging stations all night to wait for those cars that no one got out of when docked. People — especially if they were drunk — would often just sleep through the charging, and so these thieves could walk up to a car, quietly open the door, and take whatever they could see while their victims slept. Before the public caught on to this, and before Tsukuba updated the OS to fix the automatic unlocking, it is said that one of these people — one person told me her name was Kendra, another told me it was Kerry — saw a dark brown Tsukuba A8, which was the most expensive model on the market at the time, pull into the station she was scoping. When nobody got out of it, she walked over to it like it was her own, and looked into the window to see a silhouette of just one person in the back seat with his head lolled back in the headrest. She opened the door as quietly as she could and quickly slid her hand into his pocket for the bulge of his wallet. Something smelled horrible. There was a laptop on the ground, and she took that too. As she retracted her hand, though, she looked up and saw that his eyes were open. She was so shocked that she froze in place. She expected him to start yelling, to grab her. But he did nothing — just stayed there, breathing slowly, looking up at the ceiling of the car. She had heard of people being so tired that they fall asleep with their eyes open; she figured that’s what was going on here. But as she reached for the door to close it, the man turned his head to her, and said, Do you know where I am? The way he said it reminded Kendra or Kerry of her father in his worst years, right there toward the end, when nothing tracked. A soft bing came from the car; it was finished charging. You’re right outside of Steamboat Springs, she told him.
She wanted to leave with the wallet and laptop or put them back. But she held onto them and stood there, and it would take her hours to understand why she did that, even with the man awake and looking at her. It struck her when another promising-looking target pulled into a charging port: he was the one to close the door, his wallet and laptop in her hands. He reached out and slid the door shut, empty-eyed, totally apathetic. At the time, she hadn’t even realized the exchange that had occurred, his tacit approval of her theft, almost like a payment for her telling him where he was. She had turned and left before she could see him drift back up onto the highway.
It’s said that the house was empty when Jade decided. The air conditioning vent in the kitchen was rattling, and Katherine’s dog was snoring on the porch in the back. The dog was a constant reminder of Katherine’s absence; she didn’t come home for Christmas, nor for Thanksgiving before that, so Jade hasn’t seen her daughter since the summer. Her husband, Jim, was on a business trip, which was a new thing for his job; some might be inclined to put quotation marks around the phrase. Perhaps it was for that reason Jade decided it was time. She went upstairs and packed a backpack — three shirts, two pairs of underwear, a toiletries kit, Nabokov’s Lolita (she read the beginning of it in college, and thought this would be a better time than ever to finish it), and a notebook with three pens. She walked out into the thick lowcountry air, got into her A3 crossover, and announced her destination to the OS.
She planned to fill up the notebook by the time she got to Seattle. There, she would buy another notebook, and another book to read, assuming she’d finished the Nabokov, and then turn around. It was just something she needed to do. “This is just something I need to do,” she wrote in her notebook, marring the clean white of the first page. She had wanted to be a writer — had wanted to since before she and Jim had gotten married. Of course, it just got easier and easier for things to get in the way, until eventually she would go days without even thinking about it. But something happened two days before: as Jim was packing for his business trip, the morning light came through the window just right and fell directly on one of his three bathing suits folded on the bed by the suitcase (even though he had told her the trip was in Scranton, PA), and the polyester smoothness of the pale blue seemed to seemed to interact with the sunlight in such a way as to transform it. This was, she felt, one of those strange, small confluences of emotion and material that had compelled her to write in college. And so, there, at that moment, she felt that old compulsion return. Moments after her husband left for the airport, it was decided. She’d write the next On the Road. Or the next South and West. The next great American road novel could be written like none of the others had been written: that is, while the author is actually on the road, driving. Or maybe, if it wasn’t a novel, she thought, it could be a magazine feature, a long-form exposé about the rumors of the people who went crazy in these cars.
She wrote steadily for the first two days. This was when she was staying in hotels at night. On the third night, though, she was behind schedule, and decided to spend the night in the car. It was when she jolted awake near midnight, rocketing through the night in the automated rush, that she first made contact with a kind of eeriness that was new to her. She had remembered doing the same thing as a child on a road trip with her mother — she had had a dream about falling or something, and jolted awake, and her mom had said, Whoa, Jaders — nightmare? She’d been driving the car. She was always the driver. But Jade, slumping in the Tsukuba, felt more alone than she felt at home when Jim was gone and the dog was outside. As she tried to understand why that was, she looked out and saw the gray horizon unfurling against the dark indigo sky, and it hit her: she was, more than she had ever been, nowhere. Absolutely nowhere. Moving with no one at the wheel, the only human consciousness in the car having fallen asleep, now awake in the moving dark, something unknown taking her from one place to another, and perhaps another beyond that: she was nowhere. She switched on the light above and wrote down “NON-SPACE” in her notebook and underlined it three times.
But when the dawn invaded the cabin of the car and she opened her eyes the next morning, the noise of the tire’s traffic over the asphalt right on the line between silence and sound, she opened her notebook and looked hard at the underlined phrase, unable to remember what she meant.
There was a time before all of this ambulomiania stuff started happening, or at least before people started noticing it — a brief time when the Tsukuba A-Line was cause for celebration. It lasted about a year. The main thing was that accidents started tapering off, but generally folks that could remember the Jetsons felt like they were living in the future. My mother was one of those that remembered the Jetsons. In the final months, when it was pretty much all she could do to stay inside bed-bound and watch television, she’d even watch Tsukuba press releases. She’d turn the volume up such that I could even hear it outside the house. Maybe she felt at least some connection to the world watching these press releases — instead of her soaps or the news (fires, massacre, catastrophe), I think she felt like this was some evidence that the world may even be getting better. When I was a teenager, she had a brother who died in a car accident back out in California, where they’re from. He was drunk. Between his Chevy and a sequoia, the sequoia won. Even so, my mother loved sequoias. We don’t have them in southern Montana.
In those final months with my mother, she’d be inside for so long, so, so long, just watching television. In the kitchen window on the west side of the house you could see the Medicine Bow ridge, and every once in a while a distant light cruising up the switchbacked road up and over the top. Some nights, I would wake up in the early morning hours and just stand above the sink, watching. I’d do this until I would hear my mother stir, and then I’d go into her room, trying to breathe through my mouth, to empty the bedpan or, increasingly, to lift her out and change the sheets. By then, she could barely speak. The air in the room felt like an obscene, heavy cloud. She needed her medication every four hours — I’d drop the small colorful pills into the gape of her dark mouth that looked, in those days, like it was perpetually on the edge of a yawn.
I have a friend who told me that once his car had been in an accident when he was out east. He was in Buffalo, NY, and he’d just closed out a bar. So he’s there, waiting on his car to pick him up, trying not to sway on the curb, and he sees his car turn onto his street from the left. But then, on the right, another car turns onto the street, and accelerates, right down the middle of the road. Before he can do anything — not that he would have been able to, anyway — the two cars collide in a violent, sobering bang. He said that he hadn’t known before that you can actually taste a car accident, like if someone placed a watch battery right on your tongue like a mint. He’s stunned in the cold for a few seconds before he realizes what happened. He runs over to the other car because he knows nobody was in his, and starts calling out, Hey, hey, are you okay? Hello? The front hood of the other car is folded up; both cars are totaled. The windshield on the other car is completely blown out, but the windows are all still in the doors, shattered into cobwebs, so he can’t see in. He continues to call, but hears nothing from inside the car. He’s getting more and more worried, so he decides to punch one of the windows in. He wraps his jacket around his fist and punches. He tries to look in, but it’s dark, and he still can’t see anything. He calls again; when he listens close this time, he can hear some low wheezing. He doesn’t know what to do. He presses the crash signal button on his key fob as quickly as he could, so an ambulance and the police should be there soon. He tries to talk to whatever was wheezing, but before long it stops, and all he can hear is something dripping. When they come, they have him stand off to the side, shivering and feeling the adrenaline wrestling the alcohol in his blood. A police officer walks up to him. Strangest thing, the officer says to him. Wasn’t anybody in the car. My friend says, What do you mean? And the police officer says, There was nobody in there. In the other car. Unless they ran off. No, my friend says, I’ve been here since it happened. Nobody got out of that car. But I heard breathing in there, Officer. I swear, someone was breathing in there. The police officer sighs and looks at him. Well, yeah, he says. There was a dog in there. What? Yeah, just a dog. A dog? No people? Yep. Just the dog. Jesus Christ. Have you ever seen this before? my friend asks him. No, the officer says. Never. The ambulance leaves and a tow truck comes, with someone that was actually driving. The tow truck driver ends up giving my friend a ride home. That night, my friend will have a dream that he’s in a thirty-story office building that seemed totally empty; he’ll go from floor to floor looking for someone, anyone. When he gets to the top floor, people will be working in cubicles, all focusing. When he steps out of the elevator, though, the building will tip over and fall into the street in a splash of concrete and rebar. And while they’re all on the ground, he’ll see hundreds and hundreds of dogs ambling toward them from down the street, noses to the ground, nightmare-skinny, sniffing.
The Cheyenne Chronicle ran an article about it. The title of the article was “Safe or Strange? Driverless Cars Cause Nationwide Controversy.” Let me show you a part of it:
Last year’s thaw uncovered enough missing Tsukubas (and passengers) in such western states as Montana, Wyoming, and South Dakota that the U.S. Department of Transportation has announced that they are commencing an official enquiry into driverless car industry, and especially the Tsukuba A series. The increase in disappearances has caused some in the community, especially local radio show personality Buck Weems, to wonder about foul play. When we reached out to him for comment, he said, “I think the evidence is showing that something’s going on with the computer system in the cars. I think the evidence is showing that. I don’t want to point fingers, but stuff like this doesn’t just happen. We have the documents, folks.” When pressed about these “documents,” Weems denied further comment.
“We promise that these cases have nothing to do with a bug or otherwise. We have seen too many voices in the media jumping to conclusions,” says Tsukuba spokesperson Ronald Atkins. “The data from our OS clearly show that, each time someone has gone missing, they themselves have instructed the navigation system, and the vehicles ran out of battery on the route toward the destination that the operators themselves set. Why they would set these coordinates is not a question for Tsukuba to answer.” He added: “What we do know, however, is that these instances do not come close to offsetting the decrease in car accidents.”
The American Psychological Association believes that it is a question for them to answer. Recently, the APA published a report entitled “Ambulomania: A National Crisis,” which detailed a psychological theory as to the strange phenomenon. Spokesperson Amy Halperin says, “We are inclined to call this kind of behavior addictive. As such, we believe we can treat it as an addiction. There is still much work to be done on what exactly these individuals are addicted to; however, as you can see in the report, we believe we have made significant headway on that front.” The APA diagnosis shows that the vast majority of cases involved middle upper middle individuals with a sometimes statistically significant family history of depression, anxiety, alcoholism, neurosis, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, bulimia, dysmorphia, affluenza, hypochondria, high blood
That’s enough. You get the idea.
I met one of them. Sort of. I was repairing a fence on the west side of my property. The divots had grown soft in the months of weather. It was time. It was just after sunrise, and I was digging a splinter out of my finger as I saw a car slow to a stop about half a mile up the road. The blue light in the center of the bumper was blinking, which meant it ran out of power before it was able to reach the nearest charging station. For a second, I was sure it was the one, so I put my shovel down and ran over to the vehicle. The road probably hadn’t been serviced since it was made, so it was cracked and uneven, and this car didn’t look like the kind that could handle this easily. The sky was smeared with the beginning of the day way off to my right; with the sunrise’s reflection, I couldn’t see into the window. I knocked and didn’t hear anything. I tried the door — it was unlocked. When it opened, I saw a mother holding her child. The mother had this blank stare fixed on the windshield ahead of her. Ma’am? I said. It took her a few seconds to turn her head to look up at me, and when she did, she had this kind of wonder in her face. Ma’am, I said, it looks like your car is out of juice. Oh, she said, coming to. Um, yes. Oh, fuck. Where am I. Where the. Am I? You’re about an hour away from Laramie, Ma’am, I said. She didn’t say anything. She just looked at the sunrise behind me and started crying. Here, Ma’am, I said, let me go grab my truck. My battery’s full. I’ll help you out, so you can at least get to Laramie. You’ll be alright, I said, if you can just get to Laramie.
She looked, actually, a little like the one I am wondering about. Besides her age and the baby. The one I am looking for would be much older and alone in the car. And these days I’m thinking it’s pretty much certain that she’d no longer be breathing.
I’ve been pretty well off since the workman’s comp claim from a couple years ago, so I bought the baseline Tsukuba model almost a year ago. Three months later, in early September, I brought my mother out to the car. For a second, I thought selfishly, so selfishly, that perhaps I should be the one to go. But I fought that impulse, and I set my mother, light enough to carry now, down in the backseat. She looked up at me. Where are we going? she managed to ask me, and then coughed. I could hear the fluid in her chest. I touched her shoulder bone, leaned into the car, turned my face to the console, and spoke to the OS, McKinleyville, California. And then, after that, Anchorage, Alaska. And I looked at my mother. Just tell it to come back when you get there. She looked at me, confused. I don’t know how to do that. I sighed and leaned back into the car. Turn back around and come back here after I reach Anchorage, I told the OS. And then, for reasons I am still trying to work out, I added, And turn off location tracking. I closed the door and watched as it started toward Medicine Bow.
She would go through the ridge, and then farther west the long rolling Ashley National Forest just before Salt Lake, and then through the wide flat impossible plains of north Nevada. I made sure to roll the front windows down so she could taste the air. After the car disappeared I went back inside to call whoever I could think of — the friend that had been helping me take care of her, the few members of extended family still alive or in touch — to tell them that she had passed. The funeral, of course, was closed-casket, which folks wondered about.
After she left, I didn’t sleep for three days. Which also means I was never really awake during that time. I thought about her on the road, mostly sleeping, probably, but watching the passing mountains saw up into the sky, letting them slip her into hypnosis.
That was six months ago. I don’t know what happened. The drive to the coast shouldn’t have taken more than two days, but there was weather after she left. Maybe she made it all the way to McKinleyville and then maybe even to Anchorage. Her medication is still by her bed. Maybe the car just slipped off the road into some snowpack. That’s the one I think about. What will happen with the thaw? Will the car, somehow, blink back on in the spring, when the snow melts and drains down into whatever valley gouges the land where she ended up? Will some metal heart beat back to life to return her body to my house? Frozen remains thawing in the automatic climate control? Tires flat from the cruel ground? Will I run to the car and break the windows, yelling, Mother, Mother, I am so sorry, Lord, I am so, so sorry? Forgive me, Christ, please?
I’ve taken to spending evenings on the porch, watching Medicine Bow, wondering.
Poetry • Winter 2020 - Feast
smooth doorknob face - and chest full of time bombs - spot of ultimate explosion far
but miraculously not - beyond my amateur reach - am i the shortbread - or the not shortbread
of the binary - you made in your sleep - strange strange cookie - what does efficiency
have to do with - your mouth like something - made to be plucked - if i could bake anything
into this melting feeling - it would be air - one sure handful - of yeast //
// this is the future - last saturday
couldn’t portend - last tuesday stuck pins in - last nightmare broke into - less like day than
matins - song - you sing in your waking - but sleeping you rupture - my only - i move toward your
meteor shower - of language - like big mouths for bits - of popcorn - that old party trick
my poor reflex - rejects - the saving grace of palms //
// i like you unwaxed - i like you illegible - can’t
see the bus - but hear it arriving - footsteps outside the door - heavy as fingers - children
climbing a trunk - slim leaves yellow - your dark tangling hair - piles of autumn colors
trembling - ready to burst - can you imagine - back against the grass - red and orange and red
and yellow butterflies - god did that - folded secrets - out of air - darling? your ears - close
enough to toss a new coin in - watch it go down
around - around - around - did you ever do that - at the zoo?
Poetry • Winter 2019 - Double
“They ate their own children.”
—Yang Jisheng, on The Great Famine
In an hour it will be summer
A time to admire wild things
But all our sparrows are shot
Left in heaps of rotting trash
So in the dark where no one is
Awake I dig their bones back
Let you slurp on chicken stew
Pretend I still remember truth
As I skin these bodies one after
Another In the morning I say
They are visiting your mother
Gifting us silence And dinner
Is now gray water rice a long
Minute of constant lies saying
Words that will be thrown out
Set on fire hoping a few stray
Feathers fall on my skin keep
Me warm and safe as the soil
Burns then maybe I will grab
Hold you tight succumb to the
Terrible But I taught you how
To run away when the smoke
Grows closer To always look
Up Write down what I forgot.











