CAConrad Interview: Rituals for Poetry

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2018
  • The award-winning American poet CAConrad here shares the moving story of how, following the brutal murder of his boyfriend and the subsequent indifference of the police, writing poetry conceived from rituals became healing: “I believed that I could do a ritual for poems, that could drag me out of that depression.”
    Despite the overwhelming evidence, the police refused to investigate his boyfriend’s death as a homicide, which sent CAConrad into a downward spiral. The notes from the rituals that he did in order to get through - such as sitting in the autumn wood and watching the leaves fall all at once - became part of the poetry of ‘While Standing in Line for Death’ (2017): “Just honouring the fact that to think, every single day while you’re alive, that you’re going to die, and to do that in order to appreciate the day better.” CAConrad wants to live a life without any regrets, and he feels that the rituals help him “regain his standing on the ground.”
    “The language that comes out for such a ritual is ecstatic.” CAConrad writes fast, not thinking about what he’s writing but rather trusting his body’s presence in the space: “If I catch myself following a thread or a full sentence, I write faster because I want to get ahead of that. That internal editor is invaluable later on for shaping the poems, but it gets in the way of the wrong notes.” Only around 1-2 percent of the content of his notes from the ritual is used, and he feels that the language of his poems are essentially “the notes that are beyond thinking, that magical cruising altitude that I get into it with.” In continuation of this, he feels that doing rituals - ranging from blowing “queer bubbles” for kids on a street corner in North Carolina to introducing an incarcerated monkey to a free monkey through crystals - is creating a space that puts him in “the extreme present.”
    CAConrad (b. 1966) is an American writer. His work includes ‘Deviant Propulsion’ (2006), ‘Advanced Elvis Course’ (2009), ‘The Book of Frank’ (2010), ‘A Beautiful Marsupial Afternoon: New (Soma)tics (2012) and ‘While Standing in Line for Death’ (2017). CAConrad has received fellowships from e.g. Banff, Ucross, RADAR and the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. Apart from writing he also teaches his (Soma)tic Poetics method, which is “a poetry that investigates the seemingly infinite space between body and spirit by using nearly any possible thing around or of the body to channel the body out and/or in toward spirit with deliberate and sustained concentration.”
    CAConrad was interviewed by Kasper Bech Dyg at the Louisiana Literature festival at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark in August 2018. In the video, CAConrad reads poetry from ‘While Standing in Line for Death’ (2017).
    Camera: Klaus Elmer
    Produced and edited by: Kasper Bech Dyg
    Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2018
    Supported by Nordea-fonden
    FOLLOW US HERE!
    Website: channel.louisiana.dk
    Facebook: / louisianachannel
    Instagram: / louisianachannel
    Twitter: / louisianachann
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 14

  • @KneedleKnees
    @KneedleKnees 4 роки тому +12

    there's a lot to respect about CA Conrad. They live in the realm of, and bring back the concept of, the poet as a mystic, yet writes incredible, post-modern lyric poems. Their poems are deeply personal, yet refuse to disengage from political and ecological discourse. And, like W.S. Merwin, they FORCE one to engage their poetry as a sound/musical structure, rather than a mere literary one, through the rejection of punctuation, which forces the reader to speak aloud the poems to understand the pauses, stops, and breaths. Whatever you might say about CA, you can't say they aren't unique.

  • @juliaraiz5519
    @juliaraiz5519 4 роки тому +4

    I love you, CA Conrad!

  • @bebop54
    @bebop54 5 років тому +3

    very moving ....
    often times , great creative work is born from great pain ....

  • @warriorclown1
    @warriorclown1 5 років тому +6

    Listening to this somehow helped me. I guess I had some healing to do also.

  • @e.valverde9769
    @e.valverde9769 3 роки тому +1

    beautiful poetry :)

  • @vb1462
    @vb1462 5 років тому +9

    I'm pretty sure you misgendered them throughout this entire description. CAConrad uses they/them pronouns.

    • @vb1462
      @vb1462 5 років тому +5

      @@thelouisianachannel Ok, I'm not going to speak for them, but I felt like saying something because I found it surprising to seem them referred to as he/him, as I haven't heard anyone refer to them as he/him elsewhere.

    • @polypus74
      @polypus74 Рік тому

      First world problems really must be difficult to live through

    • @revjaybird2
      @revjaybird2 Рік тому

      Nobody cares. He should probably reconsider luring children with bubbles, then telling their parents the bubbles are making them queer. It's a perfectly natural response to want to keep your children away from some weird dude obviously trying to luring children to him. Of course, parents would be repulsed by such a thing. This is literally the queer version of a van with free candy painted on the side. After a story about being predatory to children, the poem starts, "I was naked on a mountain top". Um, yeah, dude.... stay the hell away from children.
      WTF is wrong with you. I don't care but stay away from children.

  • @tellygacitua239
    @tellygacitua239 Рік тому +1

    🐯💗✨🦊🙏🏼

  • @evangilchrestfilms
    @evangilchrestfilms 3 роки тому

    8:05. 5:08

  • @yodalibre
    @yodalibre 3 роки тому

    (@8:04)-@9:18 grown up