The next poem in Dragonfly is a transition poem. The two previous poems focus on family in conjunction with pop culture. Starting with this poem we get a series of poems that deal with childhood. This poem focuses specifically on Asian American childhood in San Francisco in the '60s. I've written about this in the blog before: last year, I posted a short story on this very topic titled "Manny's Climb"; when that story had been published in the book Growing Up Filipino: Stories for Young Adults, it had appeared with a preface that explains what happened: during the '60s and '70s, teenagers who were neither white nor black had to choose one or the other of those identities in order to survive on the streets. That's the way it was in San Francisco, certainly, and I would hazard a guess that that happened in many locales. What I saw happening with Asian American kids in particular — both girls and boys — is that they would oftentimes teeter-totter back and forth between passing as white and passing as black. Page 20 Page 21 Here are a couple of images that will illustrate a bit of the fashion spirit of that time. On the left we see typical African American fashions from around 1970. This is how an Asian American teenager putting on blackness would have dressed. As did I during the time described in the poem. On the right is an image of African musicians wearing the dashiki. Not gold as in my poem above but other bright colors . . . the man in the center sports a mainly red one while around him are white dashikis, orange, yellow, etc. From about 1968 on, people in the African American civil rights movement wore dashikis as an Afrocentric statement; this fashion filtered down to common folk, and Asian American youth who were, again, "putting on blackness" followed suit. Bad pun, sorry. Because of the realities of my growing up during that time, I was fluent in Black English (again as a survival practice). A linguistic fluency that also came in very handy during my US Army service from 1972 to 1975. When I use this poem at readings, in fact, I perform the latter part of the poem, the italicized portion, in Black English. There's also an interesting story connected to the closing part of this poem. I wrote this text as a freestanding poem in a beginning poetry writing class with the poet Belle Randall at Stanford University in 1971 or 1972. Then, in probably 1986 or thereabouts, when I was working on my MFA in poetry with Yusef Komunyakaa, I resurrected it, as something that really spoke to my childhood experience, and inserted it into this poem, so that the opening section (the romanized portion) serves as contextualization for the ending section. I sprinkled the latter around the page in order to differentiate it from the part in standard English and to give a sense of its performative quality. Okay, that's all for today. I'd love to hear what you think of this poem or whatever; please comment below. Thanks. Ingat. The image on the left is borrowed from the website PastReunited.com. No attribution of photographer there. I'll be glad to give credit or remove this image if the creator contacts me. If you click on the photo, you'll be taken to PastReunited.com; this specific image is about 14 screenloads down that page.
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9 hours ago
9 comments:
Dug this. Resonated to much of it. Moskowitz
Mosk, thanks. Are you and I about the same age? Where did you grow up?
Love all these words, beautiful, beautiful words. Great illustration of how we are funneled into groups where perhaps none of us belong. My favorite place to be as a kid was on the basketball court where I was part of a team, nothing cultural or ethnic about it, just a place I loved to be. Off the court was a different story... This is where "Soft steal like Walt "Clyde" Frazier, a Meadow Lark hook from half court" brought me. Really enjoyed the "performance" at the end. I would love to hear it read aloud. Perhaps on Mosk's audio poetry site??? Mosk, what's the web address? I'll look for it ...
Ah, yes, http://www.virtualpoetryreading.com/ :)
This is awesome. The process of development and individuation is always fascinating and you have a highly original take on a well-travelled theme. I love we're getting your notes and photos along with these! I agree I'd love to hear you read it.
I did an experimental piece today I thought you might get a kick out of, one of my rare humor poems, where I transcribe my actual conversation with Cleverbot. If you have the time it's very short http://chromapoesy.com/2012/05/10/turing-test/. I'd love hear your response. I was inspired by a prompt on machines but also your erasure poem as Cleverbot responds based on millions of conversations it has had with humans. In a way it is simply another blend of selection, randomness, and the 'poetry' of others.
Andrea, thanks. I almost recorded it to put up on the blog. I'll try to do it tomorrow or Saturday. About basketball ... always loved it, especially being on a team. For some reason when you're playing on a team the air in a gym feels colder. Was it the uniform, maybe? Don't play b-ball much anymore; my left acl is half-blown.
Cool, Anna. I'll come look at it. Did you ever see the book of poems called "The Policeman's Beard Is Half Constructed"?
I hope you do! Make sure you let me know when you record it. :) LOL! Yes the air did feel colder - the uniform or the nervous sweat maybe. ;) Your comment made me revisit our PAD sports prompt. It could use some work, but I posted it on my blog anyway if you're interested.
http://circletheblock.blogspot.com/2012/05/write-sports-poem.html
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