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	<title>The Rumpus.net &#187; Camille Guthrie</title>
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		<title>The Rumpus at The Poetry Foundation</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Mar 2013 13:00:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Julie Morse</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>The Poetry Foundation has featured <a href="http://therumpus.net/2013/03/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-with-camille-guthrie/">The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie</a> on their <a href="http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2013/03/camille-guthries-articulated-lair-featured-in-the-rumpus/?utm_source=feedburner&#38;utm_medium=feed&#38;utm_campaign=Feed%3A+HarrietTheBlog+%28Harriet%3A+The+Blog%29">blog</a> this week!</p><p>Thanks, Poetry Foundation, we love you back!<br /><h3 class='related_post_title'>Related Posts:</h3><ul class='related_post'><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/03/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-with-camille-guthrie/' title='The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie'>The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/a-rumpus-book-clubs-update/' title='A Rumpus Book Clubs Update'>A Rumpus Book Clubs Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/why-i-chose-camille-guthries-articulated-lair-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/' title='Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s &#60;em&#62;Articulated Lair&#60;/em&#62; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club'>Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair</em> for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/12/a-rumpus-book-club-special-offerupdate/' title='A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update'>A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/11/stand-in-the-rubble-of-your-life-and-wait/' title='&#8220;Stand in the rubble of your life and wait&#8221;'>&#8220;Stand in the rubble of your life and wait&#8221;</a></li></ul></p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Poetry Foundation has featured <a href="http://therumpus.net/2013/03/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-with-camille-guthrie/">The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie</a> on their <a href="http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2013/03/camille-guthries-articulated-lair-featured-in-the-rumpus/?utm_source=feedburner&amp;utm_medium=feed&amp;utm_campaign=Feed%3A+HarrietTheBlog+%28Harriet%3A+The+Blog%29">blog</a> this week!</p><p>Thanks, Poetry Foundation, we love you back!<br /><h3 class='related_post_title'>Related Posts:</h3><ul class='related_post'><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/03/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-with-camille-guthrie/' title='The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie'>The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/a-rumpus-book-clubs-update/' title='A Rumpus Book Clubs Update'>A Rumpus Book Clubs Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/why-i-chose-camille-guthries-articulated-lair-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/' title='Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s &lt;em&gt;Articulated Lair&lt;/em&gt; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club'>Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair</em> for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/12/a-rumpus-book-club-special-offerupdate/' title='A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update'>A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/11/stand-in-the-rubble-of-your-life-and-wait/' title='&#8220;Stand in the rubble of your life and wait&#8221;'>&#8220;Stand in the rubble of your life and wait&#8221;</a></li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 15 Mar 2013 07:01:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Rumpus Book Club</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[<p><em>This is an edited transcript of the Poetry Book Club discussion with Camille Guthrie.<span id="more-111620"></span><!--more--> </em></p><p><em>Every month The Rumpus Poetry Book Club hosts a discussion online with the club members and the author, and we post an edited version online as an interview.</em></p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>This is an edited transcript of the Poetry Book Club discussion with Camille Guthrie.<span id="more-111620"></span><!--more--> </em></p><p><em>Every month The Rumpus Poetry Book Club hosts a discussion online with the club members and the author, and we post an edited version online as an interview. To learn how you can become a member of The Rumpus Poetry Book Club <a href="http://therumpus/net/bookclub">click here.</a></em></p><p><em>This Rumpus Poetry Book Club interview was edited by Brian Spears.</em></p><p style="text-align: center;">***</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>: </span>Well, here it is the top of the hour.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Thank you so much for inviting me.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> I foolishly read the book through twice without looking at the back cover (probably did when it arrived but not when I got to it). The poems only really clicked in context of the author&#8217;s note. In an homage would it have been a good choice to put that up front? Reading that and fifteen Google minutes later and the poems all fell perfectly into place.</p><p>/s/ Art Ignoramous</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: I assume you used Google to look at her artworks? Well, we did want to put &#8220;Poems for LB&#8221; on the cover, but it crowded the image too much. I&#8217;m glad it all fell into place in the end.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Absolutely.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: I like searching in particular for the Spiders, as they seem to have invaded every museum in the world.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> What seemed remote at first came into perfect focus. I found the cells fascinating.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> Mark, I&#8217;m curious what, beyond your being a good student, brought you back for the second reading. There was much music in this book about the visual to me. Was it something along those lines that kept you going?</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Yes, a musicality. And a language puzzle I was intrigued enough by the execution of to solve.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: I&#8217;m also very drawn to the Cells, which she made in the 90s. They are about pain, she says, &#8220;Pain can begin at any point and turn in either direction.&#8221;</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> The interjections in Pink Days and Blue Days. What! Who! Will have to see if Camille has read that and been captured on the Intertubes.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> How long did it take you to put this book together, and were you working on other projects at the same time?</p><p><span style="color: #000000;"><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: </span>Brian, I started the poems in graduate school in 1996 in a reaction after seeing &#8220;The Locus of Memory&#8221; exhibit in Brooklyn in 1994. I worked on them on and off since then, but it was only until she died in 2010 that I realized I had a book.</p><p>In &#8220;Pink Days and Blue Days,&#8221; I wanted to respond to the form of the piece, which is a tall metal pole with swinging arms, from which hang linen dresses embroidered with her childhood names. And other relics and sculptures. The poem is a villanelle and contains language from other works of hers. Like &#8220;Who Where When Why What.&#8221;</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> And beautiful lines. &#8220;This operation forbids/nostalgia&#8217;s pink landscape&#8221; I could go on if I flipped through the book. I knew I was reading powerful poems, I was just lost at points without the context. I read formalism and think: Sonnets.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> Holy crap, I just realized that Des Moines has one of LB&#8217;s spiders. I&#8217;ve seen the sculpture hundreds of times&#8211;it&#8217;s in the middle of downtown&#8211;but I didn&#8217;t know it was a Bourgeois.</p><p><span style="color: #000000;"><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>:</span> Yay for Des Moines! Probably a cold Spider right now. The spiders represent her mother, as all the women were using needles in her childhood. Her parents had a tapestry atelier. Needles are about repair, for LB.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> http://www.desmoinesregister.com/pappajohn-sculpture-park<br />It&#8217;s an amazing piece in person.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> So does New Orleans, but I haven&#8217;t been over the see it yet. Was there something about the intersection of confessional poetry and confessional art that was part of this book?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Mark, I guess that&#8217;s an issue with ekphrastic poems because you can&#8217;t always have the artwork that is the subject in front of the reader. Maybe that&#8217;s why Keats&#8217;s urn was not one actual urn?</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> It was my own dumb fault for not reading to the end page or the back cover (lowers eyes) but still I thought a fair editorial question. That bit of knowledge fills the spaces on the page with light.</p><p><span style="color: #000000;"><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: </span>LB&#8217;s work is indeed very biographical, very much about deeply personal emotions and memories. I&#8217;m not a confessional poet at all; in fact, it&#8217;s always quite a surprise to me if private things emerge in a poem! But I did have a powerful reaction to her work and was drawn to some pieces in particular more than others. I noticed recently that in my book I write a lot about the artworks about mothers and sisters, when many of LB&#8217;s works are about her father. A real patriarch.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> It did seem to me that the fact that LB&#8217;s sculpture was so family-driven that the poems couldn&#8217;t help but reflect that in a way. When I returned to the book a second time, I did so with Google image search on (while others around me were sketching a model) and the poems opened up in a different way for me. Reading it both ways was enlightening.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Yes, and I did include some biographical information in the poems themselves: her sister was Henriette and had a stiff leg; she was born on Christmas Day by a river. But I didn&#8217;t want to be a biographer in the poems, I wanted the poems to be an enactment of what I experienced when I looked at her work, and how I interpreted what she said and wrote about her art.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> Camille G., that&#8217;s a really interesting point about Keats&#8217; urn being not a real one because you can&#8217;t always have art in front of a reader. But also, it seems that visual art AND poetry both grasp at what can&#8217;t quite be seen or articulated in the world, and ekphrastic work has this interesting difficulty of then having to describe a representation of a representation of that void.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Wonderfully said, Camille D. I&#8217;m teaching a course in Ekphrasis this term, and it seems to me that modern ekphrastic work is always very concerned with problems of representation, of the artist, and with self-revelation.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> And that&#8217;s a limitation of language as well&#8211;it can only ever approximate experience, so it has to do something a little different to be as potent.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> What are some of your ideas about other ways ekphrasis could be approached if not in this modern mode?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: There are so many ways to do it. Keats talks to the urn, then tells us what it says. I really couldn&#8217;t do that! I didn&#8217;t feel I was LB&#8217;s equal, so I didn&#8217;t want to presume. There are many ekphrastic poems which are really self-referential, like Rilke&#8217;s &#8220;Archaic Torso of Apollo.&#8221; I wanted to be in conversation with LB in the poems.</p><p>In traditional ekphrasis, it&#8217;s used as a descriptive moment to reflect upon the larger piece, like in the description of Achilles&#8217; shield in the Illiad. But modern modes, like in Ashbery&#8217;s &#8220;Self-Portrait of a Convex Mirror&#8221; end up being just as much about the poet&#8217;s mind.</p><p>There are also amazing poems like Robert Hayden&#8217;s <a href="http://allpoetry.com/poem/8502005-Monets_Waterlilies-by-Robert_Hayden">&#8220;Monet&#8217;s Waterlilies&#8221;</a> in which he&#8217;s describing his reaction to the beauty in the context of war.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> I love that Hayden poem!</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> I&#8217;ve found that on the few occasions I&#8217;ve tried to write ekphrastic poems, I get too caught up in the piece itself. I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;ve written a successful one yet.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: It is hard!</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> Closest I came was a poem about a piece of public art on a campus where I used to teach. A hurricane had knocked one of the pieces over, and when I mentioned it to an art professor, she hadn&#8217;t even noticed. The piece had been there so long that it was ignorable.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: That&#8217;s rather sad! It&#8217;s hard enough being an artist or poet.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> I felt like going down and signing my name on it, claiming it as a new piece, like I&#8217;d discovered a new planet or something.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Once I got past stupid, I found you were very much approaching the artist and the art (which seems inescapable in the artists&#8217; own context), not biographical but reflective.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Yes, I didn&#8217;t want to just describe what I saw. I wanted something more like an assemblage of what I thought and felt looking at her sculptures and drawings.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Emily</strong>:</span> I&#8217;m wondering, Camille, with the time you spent with these poems (15+ years, right?), how your dialogue with L.B. changed over time. Did your impressions of her work change dramatically as your life changed? Obviously, these aren&#8217;t impressions&#8230;</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> Were you actively thinking about what you DID NOT want to do when you wrote the poems, or was this reflection upon revision or compilation of the manuscript?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Emily, it did change. I wrote the first poems when I was right out of graduate school. I had moved to Brooklyn, had fallen in love, and was pretty overwhelmed by the city. The poems were a way to concentrate on one thing; a sort of artistic discipline. Then, I put it aside after publishing some poems in journals, thinking no one would publish such a specific manuscript. When I realized that my editor at Subpress would do it&#8211;thank you Beth Anderson!&#8211;I was a different person.</p><p>So, when I started I was looking to LB as a role model: how to be an artist, how to be bold, dedicated to one&#8217;s art, uncompromising, how to be a mother and teacher, too. When I had to revise, I added new poems about her later works that I had missed.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Emily</strong>:</span> Did this translate into major revisions of the early poems or what? Or would that not necessarily have to be the case?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: What didn&#8217;t I want to do in the poems? I didn&#8217;t want to be intimidated by her boldness. I wanted to pay tribute to her work and spirit, but I didn&#8217;t want to feel I had to cover everything in her life and career. I wanted to reflect her mischief, playfulness, and the very pained seriousness of her work.</p><p>I am an obsessive reviser. While some early poems stayed almost the same form, I did a lot of excising and moving around and word changing. It usually takes me five years to complete a book, but this was done in fits and starts over a long time. Assemblage, cutting and pasting, sketching, then poking around to get something just right.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Emily</strong>:</span> That sounds like sculpture!</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong></span>: Did you see things in your process of creation that mimicked LBs?</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> And you were doing other projects at the same time?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Yes! When in an angry mood, LB said she wanted to make sculptures: to chisel, carve, cut. When happy, she wanted to assemble, gather, draw. I wanted the poems to have a carved quality.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> I&#8217;m interested in the form the poems take. All that space between lines. The actual gaps that seem to reflect both your gaps in knowledge (or revelation) and the gappy-ness of much of LB&#8217;s work.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: I don&#8217;t know if my process mimicked hers. I just know that I tend to assemble the vocabularies I want for a poem, then I experimentally put the lines together; I often draw what I want on the page; then there is a long process of revising. I know that LB would sometimes wreck a piece if she was frustrated or angry with it! I am drawn to her way of drawing and writing; she called them &#8220;thought feathers&#8221;&#8211;a way to get things down on paper to make yourself feel better.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Thanks CD, I had the same Q.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Brian, I was writing other books at the time. I finished my first book, <em>The Master Thief</em> then.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> Draw what you want on the page, as in an image that the lines then suggest later on?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Oh yes, I really wanted a lot of white space on the page. I was reading a lot of Paul Celan&#8217;s late work when I started the project. His poems are so dense, so many neologisms and compounds, and the white space lets all of the possible sounds and meanings echo.</p><p>As to the gaps in LB&#8217;s work, I think all of her work demands an immediate emotional response! And I did want a sense that the poems were &#8220;a thing made&#8221; as William Carlos Williams said. A thing made of words.</p><p>What I meant by drawing is that sometimes I sketch the shape of the poem. This doesn&#8217;t mean much if I&#8217;m writing a sestina, of course, but for this book, it was important to get a visual grip on the page. I was influenced by Barbara Guest and Anne-Marie Albiach, although they use the page much more expansively.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> At the end of many of the pieces there is a final stanza that reads almost like an Asian answer to Rilke&#8217;s or Auden&#8217;s Noble Sentiment, something less abstract that pulls the poem together like a cinch. Was that a conscious mimesis of traditional ekphrasis made your own, or just plain good writing?</p><p>Perhaps an example (starts flipping pages)</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> “Janus Fleuri” maybe? &#8220;You choose enactment / &amp; its difficulties / &amp; delight in it&#8221;</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> That and “Three Marble Spheres, Portrait.” &#8220;Beating the long wing / of necessity / up from clouds and caverns / Rebounding.”</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: That&#8217;s interesting. I guess I would say that I am mistrustful of myself being an authority on LB&#8217;s work, so I wouldn&#8217;t want to make a move like Auden when he tells us what the Old Masters knew. I started the poems as a young woman poet with a lot of humility.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> That&#8217;s interesting, because I always imagine young poets as full of, well, anything but humility.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Brian, were you full of bluster?! I was pretty full of nervousness. Still am.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> I certainly had my share, though I also feel certain that I wasn&#8217;t the worst of my cohort. I&#8217;ve gotten way more humble in the face of other work since then.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Brian, I have long trolled the coffee houses and bars of New Orleans with my lamp and if I find a humble, virginal or wise poet I will let you know.</p><p>Young poet (to clarify)</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Yes, at times I do use &#8220;you&#8221; to address LB, the maker. Again, I was going for a conversational tone.</p><p>&#8220;Rebounding&#8221; is LB&#8217;s word from one of her pieces. She was such a master of language, so witty in French and English, and I wanted her to have the last word.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> By the way, I don&#8217;t know if I liked &#8220;Janus Fleuri&#8221; more before or after I saw the image of the piece, but I know I was changed by seeing it.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: &#8220;Janus Fleuri&#8221; is an intense piece! She is always up to something naughty and transforming with bodies.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> Yeah, the description said those were thighs coming out of the sides, but I&#8217;m not so sure.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> Camille G., speaking of humility, what was it like to share this work with her estate, or what did you have to do in order to get permission for the art work?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: It was wonderful! The LB Studio has been incredibly generous. Wendy Williams let me use the images in an early reading, for journal publications, and for the book. It&#8217;s very rare, I think. I&#8217;ve been astonished.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> &#8220;Portrait&#8221; is, to me, a perfect way to end the collection. Just a marvelous piece all the way around.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Thank you, Brian! I admit to giving her some heroism in the first and last poems, but I think she earned it.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> That hammer swinging through dusted air floes&#8230;I just want to smack something myself after reading that.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> “Bold she arose arranging” is as fine an epitaph as any artist could ask for.</p><p><span style="color: #000000;"><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: </span>That&#8217;s really nice, Mark. I love to think of her handling a hammer!</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> Yes, Mark, that&#8217;s a good point. The epigraphs in this book were so intriguing to me. I found myself copying a lot of LBs words into my quotes file.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>:</span> She was a master of the aphorism. Like, &#8220;Self-expression is sacred and fatal. It&#8217;s a necessity.&#8221;</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> And &#8220;Fillette&#8221; as well. I think I could just list the poems I loved in this collection. &#8220;accurate as the entrails of a rabbit / mischievous as a monkey coat.&#8221; Wow!</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Or, &#8220;Every day you have to abandon your past or accept it and then if you cannot accept it, you become a sculptor.&#8221; Or poet.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> I read epigraph when Mark said epitaph, but, as Lucille Clifton would say, &#8220;the epi-things can crucial.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: That monkey coat! She wore it in the famous Robert Mapplethorpe photo of her, holding &#8220;Fillette.&#8221; I really wanted to get at her irony and humor in that poem.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Either reading&#8230;</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> &#8220;Every day you have to abandon your past or accept it and then if you cannot accept it, you become a sculptor.&#8221; Wow.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> Do you do any sculpting yourself, even as a hobby?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: No, I&#8217;m not very artistic. I&#8217;m not even crafty. Living here in the country, I&#8217;m surrounded by incredibly artful crafty people, and artists, but not me. But I love looking at art. What I miss most about living in NYC is the museums.</p><p>I know, Camille D, I used to turn to LB for self-help. Like, &#8220;Pain is the ransom of formalism.&#8221;</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> There is an element of repetition here. You (and LB) go back to the same titles or the same sort of ideas, the same bundle of words. Cell I, Cell II, Cell III etc. What was that like working through so much repetition?</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Do you take that Pain is line to suggest Bourgeois wanted to be recognized formalistically and not as the mother of &#8220;confessional art&#8221;? (Admittedly looking at her work online I don&#8217;t see where that&#8217;s even a rational question, but the line puzzled me)</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Yes, the Cells were a long series for her. I was so pulled into them; they are very meditative spaces. She often used repetition. One of my favorite drawings of hers is called &#8220;Je t&#8217;aime,&#8221; in which she drew that sentence more than 300 times. It becomes a plea, a demand, a prayer, a song. I think I&#8217;m also drawn to repetition and the same obsessive subjects.</p><p>I take it as LB saying that the Beauty one creates is never far from pain. So many of her works were about loneliness, despair, rage, but their formal qualities and demands were calming to her, strategies for reparation, survival, reconciliation, which she said is the most beautiful thing in life.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> Who are you reading right now?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Right now, I&#8217;m reading for my class on Ekphrasis. Ovid, Homer, Virgil, Keats, Ashbery, Browning.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> Have you ever thrown in Merrill&#8217;s &#8220;Self Portrait in Tyvek Windbreaker&#8221; to go along with Ashbery&#8217;s poem?</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Camille D, my work has a lot of repetition. I just got over a phase when I was writing a lot of sestinas. I like how forms give you a chance to mull over the same things and themes.</p><p>I haven&#8217;t, Brian. That&#8217;s a great idea.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> And for you ekphrasis becomes a form. A fence, and also a field.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> I think the two poems mesh together so wonderfully, especially given the way you&#8217;re using them as ekphrastic poems.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> An open field, I should say.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: The open field! Lovely.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Beyond the barbed wire, another and another.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> Here we are at the one hour mark. The time always seems to fly so quickly.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Ekphrasis can be a battle for dominance between the image and word, but for me, I hoped it would not be so.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Brian S</strong>:</span> Thanks so much for joining us tonight Camille G. And thanks for such a great book.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Thank you so much for this talk, everyone!</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Mark Folse</strong>:</span> Thanks for joining us.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Thanks, Mark, for your insights.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> Thank you, Camille G, for the book and your answers. Thank you, Rumpus club members, for your questions.</p><p><strong>Camille Guthrie</strong>: Thanks, Emily, too!</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Emily</strong>:</span> Yes, thanks. And thanks for letting me hang with y&#8217;all.</p><p><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Camille Dungy</strong>:</span> Good night, everyone. Stay warm.</p><p>***</p><p><a href="http://therumpus.net/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/" target="_blank"><img class="size-full wp-image-111962 alignnone" alt="bookclub" src="http://therumpus.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/bookclub.gif" width="600" height="120" /></a><br /><h3 class='related_post_title'>Related Posts:</h3><ul class='related_post'><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/why-i-chose-camille-guthries-articulated-lair-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/' title='Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s &lt;em&gt;Articulated Lair&lt;/em&gt; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club'>Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair</em> for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/01/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-29-camille-guthrie/' title='The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat 29 &#8211; Camille Guthrie'>The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat 29 &#8211; Camille Guthrie</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/05/why-i-chose-gregory-orrs-river-inside-the-river-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/' title='Why I Chose Gregory Orr&#8217;s &lt;em&gt;River Inside the River&lt;/em&gt; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club'>Why I Chose Gregory Orr&#8217;s <em>River Inside the River</em> for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/a-rumpus-book-clubs-update/' title='A Rumpus Book Clubs Update'>A Rumpus Book Clubs Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/12/a-rumpus-book-club-special-offerupdate/' title='A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update'>A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update</a></li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Rumpus Book Clubs Update</title>
		<link>http://therumpus.net/2013/01/a-rumpus-book-clubs-update/</link>
		<comments>http://therumpus.net/2013/01/a-rumpus-book-clubs-update/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 16 Jan 2013 20:30:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brian Spears</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Club Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Camille Guthrie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Emily Rapp]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[george saunders]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kate Greenstreet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lynn Xu]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Matthew Spektor]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rowan Ricardo Phillips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rumpus Book Club]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rumpus Poetry Book Club]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[t cooper]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://therumpus.net/?p=109963</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>The Book Clubs are rocking right now with this month&#8217;s selections, George Saunders&#8217;s <em>Tenth of December</em> and Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair</em>, but there&#8217;s some great stuff on the horizon. <span id="more-109963"></span></p><p>We&#8217;re pleased to announce that our February selection for the Rumpus Book Club is Emily Rapp&#8217;s <em>The Still Point of the Turning World</em>.</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Book Clubs are rocking right now with this month&#8217;s selections, George Saunders&#8217;s <em>Tenth of December</em> and Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair</em>, but there&#8217;s some great stuff on the horizon. <span id="more-109963"></span></p><p>We&#8217;re pleased to announce that our February selection for the Rumpus Book Club is Emily Rapp&#8217;s <em>The Still Point of the Turning World</em>. <em><a href="http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-1-59420-512-5">Publishers Weekly</a></em> had this to say about it.</p><p style="padding-left: 30px;">Her elegant, restrained work flows with reflections and excerpts from writers and poets like Mary Shelley, Pablo Neruda, and Sylvia Plath, as well as supporters who helped her during the difficult unraveling of her son&#8217;s condition. Writing about Ronan allowed her to claim the sorrow and truly look at her son the way he was. Her narrative does not follow Ronan as far as his death, but gleans lessons from Buddhism and elsewhere in order that Rapp could &#8220;walk through this fire without being consumed by it.&#8221;</p><p>The Poetry Book Club will be reading Kate Greenstreet&#8217;s <em>Young Tambling</em>, which Greenstreet describes as &#8220;an experimental memoir.&#8221; The Ahsahta Press website says this about <em>Young Tambling</em>:</p><p style="padding-left: 30px;">Greenstreet does not dabble in teleological platitudes: the lives crosscutting these poems are not singular but plural and sublime, full of sacrifice and empathy for the lost. In Young Tambling, a life’s meaning is born of its poet’s song, and a memory cannot reveal its truth until it finds its ballad.</p><p>We&#8217;re also excited to announce that our March selection for the Book Club will be Matthew Spektor&#8217;s <em>American Dream Machine</em>, out from Tin House on April 9 (that&#8217;s right&#8211;members get the book a month before anyone else does). And our Poetry Book Club selection will be Lynn Xu&#8217;s <em>Debts and Lessons</em>, out from Omnidawn Books April 1.</p><p>In other book club news, T Cooper, author of November selection <em>Real Man Adventures</em> is on tour right now. He&#8217;s in Nashville <a href="http://www.t-cooper.com/news-events/">tomorrow and Asheville on Saturday</a> with special guests Peg Hambright (at both shows) and Clay Aiken in Asheville. Check the website for future dates in Los Angeles and San Francisco.</p><p>Coldfront Mag is <a href="http://coldfrontmag.com/news/top-40-poetry-books-of-2012-40-31">currently listing their 40 best books of poetry</a> from 2013. They&#8217;ve only released numbers 21-40 so far, but it&#8217;s nice to see Rumpus Poetry Book Club selectee <em>The Ground</em> by Rowan Ricardo Phillips come in at number 33. We expect to see other books we&#8217;ve read appear in the top 20.</p><p>Why wouldn&#8217;t you want to be a member of one or both of these book clubs? <a href="http://therumpus.net/bookclub/">Click here to join.</a><br /><h3 class='related_post_title'>Related Posts:</h3><ul class='related_post'><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/12/a-rumpus-book-club-special-offerupdate/' title='A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update'>A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/05/what-others-are-saying-about-what-were-reading-a-book-clubs-update/' title='What Others Are Saying About What We&#8217;re Reading: A Book Clubs Update'>What Others Are Saying About What We&#8217;re Reading: A Book Clubs Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/03/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-with-camille-guthrie/' title='The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie'>The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/03/the-rumpus-book-club-discussion-with-emily-rapp/' title='The Rumpus Book Club Discussion with Emily Rapp'>The Rumpus Book Club Discussion with Emily Rapp</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/why-i-chose-camille-guthries-articulated-lair-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/' title='Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s &lt;em&gt;Articulated Lair&lt;/em&gt; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club'>Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair</em> for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a></li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s Articulated Lair for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</title>
		<link>http://therumpus.net/2013/01/why-i-chose-camille-guthries-articulated-lair-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 11 Jan 2013 21:00:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Camille T. Dungy</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Club Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rumpus original]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Camille Dungy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Camille Guthrie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rumpus Poetry Book Club]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://therumpus.net/?p=109592</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<em>These poems are not traps, but safe spaces with doors inside them.</em>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Rumpus Poetry Book Club Board Member Camille Dungy discusses why she chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s </em>Articulated Lair <em>for January&#8217;s <a href="http://therumpus.net/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/">Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a>.</em></p><p style="text-align: center;">***</p><p>To introduce her author note, Camille Guthrie quotes Louise Bourgeois, the artist at the center of her book. &#8220;You can stand anything,&#8221; says Bourgeois, &#8220;if you write it down. My complaint about language is that it is perfect, indispensable, but not enough. It doesn&#8217;t say everything.&#8221; Indeed, language does not, cannot, say everything. Too often in ekphrastic and biographically-based poetry, the poet tries to say everything, to tell us all there is to tell about an artist&#8217;s life and work. Rather than standing as independent works of art, such poems come to resemble the dullest of obituaries. They might contain elaborate descriptions of a thing, but the descriptions are not the least bit vivid. Too often, these dense poems end up not giving me &#8220;enough.&#8221; I have no such complaint about Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair: Poems for Louise Bourgeois</em>.</p><p>One of the things I admire most about <em>Articulated Lair</em> is that Guthrie does not require her poems to tell us all there is to know about Bourgeois or her oeuvre. She does not ask language to say everything. In fact, Guthrie seems to revel in gaps and silences, the nuances occasioned by what cannot or will not be directly articulated. Guthrie creates poetry within these gaps. She builds her poems around them. She emboldens my ear as it &#8220;imagines/ the tenor of the unsaid&#8221; (Cell IV), and she guides me as I begin to perceive Bourgeois in a new light.</p><p>These poems are not traps, but safe spaces with doors inside them. Just the way Bourgeois liked her lairs. Their very construction reveals what we need to know. Guthrie&#8217;s poems are simultaneously airy (due in part to the relatively short lines and the abundance of white space) and steely (due to the multi-dimensional heft of the words Guthrie employs). The opening lines of the poem Fillette begin thus: &#8220;Reality I want/ not rigid like a grid/ and not limp, but / accurate as the entrails of a rabbit/ mischievous as a monkey coat.&#8221; In <em>Articulated Lair: Poems for Louise Bourgeois</em>, Guthrie has created a new reality which manages to express both Bourgeois&#8217; vision and her own. As Thomas Sayers Ellis says in the jacket copy, &#8220;<em>Articulated Lair</em> is wiser and wider than a retrospective.&#8221; These poems have more legs than one of Bourgeois&#8217; spiders and, too, they are a marvel to behold.<br /><h3 class='related_post_title'>Related Posts:</h3><ul class='related_post'><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/05/why-i-chose-gregory-orrs-river-inside-the-river-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/' title='Why I Chose Gregory Orr&#8217;s &lt;em&gt;River Inside the River&lt;/em&gt; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club'>Why I Chose Gregory Orr&#8217;s <em>River Inside the River</em> for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/11/why-i-chose-cleopatra-mathiss-book-of-dog-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/' title='Why I Chose Cleopatra Mathis&#8217;s &#8220;Book of Dog&#8221; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club'>Why I Chose Cleopatra Mathis&#8217;s &#8220;Book of Dog&#8221; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/03/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-with-camille-guthrie/' title='The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie'>The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/11/book-of-dog-by-cleopatra-mathis/' title='&#8220;Book of Dog&#8221; by Cleopatra Mathis'>&#8220;Book of Dog&#8221; by Cleopatra Mathis</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/09/the-daily-beast-loves-the-rumpus-book-club/' title='The Daily Beast Loves The Rumpus Book Club '>The Daily Beast Loves The Rumpus Book Club </a></li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A Rumpus Book Club Special Offer/Update</title>
		<link>http://therumpus.net/2012/12/a-rumpus-book-club-special-offerupdate/</link>
		<comments>http://therumpus.net/2012/12/a-rumpus-book-club-special-offerupdate/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 Dec 2012 19:00:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Rumpus Book Club</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Club Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Camille Guthrie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dana Goodyear]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[george saunders]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Manuel Gonzales]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rumpus Book Club]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rumpus Poetry Book Club]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://therumpus.net/?p=109011</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Let&#8217;s say that some months we wind up with an extra copy or two of our Book Club or Poetry Book Club selections. And let&#8217;s also say that, after a while, those extra copies start to take up a little space.</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Let&#8217;s say that some months we wind up with an extra copy or two of our Book Club or Poetry Book Club selections. And let&#8217;s also say that, after a while, those extra copies start to take up a little space. And let&#8217;s further say that we want to clear out some of that space in order to make room for future extra books. How might we go about doing that?</p><p>Well, we might start giving away a free copy of one of those past selections to anyone who signs up for the <a href="http://therumpus.net/bookclub/">Rumpus Book Club or Poetry Book Club</a>. (If you sign up for both, I&#8217;ll send you two free books!) This is only while supplies last.</p><p>This month, the fiction club is reading Manuel Gonzales&#8217;s <em>The Miniature Wife</em>, and new subscribers will start with that book. We&#8217;ll be chatting with Manuel about his book on January 2, so there&#8217;s still plenty of time to get the book, get in on the discussion, and talk with the author. (Plus, free book!)</p><p>And in January, we&#8217;ll be reading the latest George Saunders collection, <em>Tenth of December</em>. As with every Rumpus Book Club selection, you&#8217;ll get your copy before anyone else does.</p><p>On the poetry side, we&#8217;re reading Dana Goodyear&#8217;s <em>The Oracle of Hollywood Boulevard</em> right now, and we&#8217;ll be chatting with her on January 3. New subscribers also have time to get the book and get in on the chat. (Plus, free book!) </p><p>And in January, we&#8217;ll be reading Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair</em>, out from Subpress. As with the Rumpus Book Club, you&#8217;ll get new collections of poetry before anyone else does, and have a chance to chat with the author about her work. </p><p>And you can also give these subscriptions as a gift. So send some literature your friends&#8217; way, and get a bonus book while you&#8217;re at it.<br /><h3 class='related_post_title'>Related Posts:</h3><ul class='related_post'><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/a-rumpus-book-clubs-update/' title='A Rumpus Book Clubs Update'>A Rumpus Book Clubs Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/05/what-others-are-saying-about-what-were-reading-a-book-clubs-update/' title='What Others Are Saying About What We&#8217;re Reading: A Book Clubs Update'>What Others Are Saying About What We&#8217;re Reading: A Book Clubs Update</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/03/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-with-camille-guthrie/' title='The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie'>The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat with Camille Guthrie</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/why-i-chose-camille-guthries-articulated-lair-for-the-rumpus-poetry-book-club/' title='Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s &lt;em&gt;Articulated Lair&lt;/em&gt; for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club'>Why I Chose Camille Guthrie&#8217;s <em>Articulated Lair</em> for the Rumpus Poetry Book Club</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2013/01/the-rumpus-book-club-conversation-with-manuel-gonzales/' title='The Rumpus Book Club Conversation with Manuel Gonzales'>The Rumpus Book Club Conversation with Manuel Gonzales</a></li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Protected: The Rumpus Poetry Book Club Chat 29 &#8211; Camille Guthrie</title>
		<link>http://therumpus.net/2012/01/the-rumpus-poetry-book-club-chat-29-camille-guthrie/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Feb 2012 01:00:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>The Rumpus Book Club</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Book Club Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Camille Guthrie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rumpus Poetry Book Club]]></category>

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