Imagen del autor
4+ Obras 437 Miembros 5 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Barbara Mor ca. 1975, photo by Helen McKenna

Obras de Barbara Mor

Obras relacionadas

Sisters of the Earth: Women's Prose and Poetry About Nature (1991) — Contribuidor — 397 copias
Sinister Wisdom 21 (1982) — Contribuidor — 9 copias
Sinister Wisdom 18 (1981) — Contribuidor — 6 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1936-10-03
Fecha de fallecimiento
2015-01-24
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Educación
San Diego State University
Ocupaciones
poet

Miembros

Reseñas

I read this a few years ago and don't remember much about it. A note I made at the time said that some of the 'herstory' was probably a bit suspect but I thought there are some interesting ideas in it.
 
Denunciada
kitsune_reader | 3 reseñas más. | Nov 23, 2023 |
Difficult to read, as it felt like the author was writing frantically to get all of their thoughts down before someone took their pen away, but very interesting.
 
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LesliePoston | 3 reseñas más. | Dec 31, 2020 |
I have mixed feelings about this book. Sjoo injects her own personal animosity towards masculinity in general.
Calling her a man-hating feminist is not a stretch. She even blames the death of her son (killed by a car) on the "patriarchal technology of the automobile." She even suggests that the black plague was a "psychosomatic" symptom of the patriarchal Church's disdain for the flesh and material world. It's laughable, but her radical man-hating church-hating feminism has influenced the politics of the left today to the point where much of what is in this book isn't seen as radical anymore. That makes this book an important read if only for political history's sake. Also , if you can get past the brazen man-hating, this book manages to presents the Goddess and feminine archetypes in religion in a proper light using a lot of anthropology. This book could have been great had it not been so tainted by the author's hatred for all things masculine.… (más)
 
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Chickenman | 3 reseñas más. | Jan 12, 2019 |
“Six days later Dean was killed in an auto accident on his way to Salinas, giving rise to one of Hollywood’s greatest myths, and Mor was left at the beginning of a life disarticulating the “nauseous allegories” of America, picking apart the bleeding flesh and conflagrations that underlie our national fanfare.” – Edgar Garcia on The Blue Rental

Erudite, angry, chthonic, volcanic – the poetry of Barbara Mor (October 3, 1936 — January 24, 2015) erupts from the page, burning like a supernova, witnessing the underbelly of an American empire gone to seed, her cries into the void like King Lear shouting at the sea. The release of the Victory of sex & Metal (The Oliver Arts & Open Press) represents the most significant voice in American poetry. Mor embodied everything the United States worked hard to exclude, despite the constant incantations about equality, opportunity, and hard work. Mor existed on the fringes of society, her biography a litany of personal pain, disaster, and humiliation. She wrote a critically-acclaimed work of feminist scholarship, yet could barely get a mop job at the same university. Beyond the academic tome, she put out two slim volumes of poetry. (The first being The Blue Rental.)

the Victory of sex & Metal is a continuation (of sorts) to The Blue Rental. Mor works against the grain of contemporary poetry. This slim volume the opposite of the delicate, sensitive, yet emotionally inert tone of modern academic poetry. Her voice is angry, but also very, very smart. She mixes together personal confession with history, mythology, and geology. Scenes abruptly change from her observations on a city bus to discussing Norse mythology to looking back millions of years ago to ancient landscapes and charismatic megafauna. She is political, but not a narrow-gauge partisan. Her style is an idiosyncratic admixture of Ezra Pound, David Lynch, and Crazy Cat Lady. It is the American Master Narrative as re-imagined by Hieronymus Bosch. Being at the bottom of the socioeconomic food chain, she feels no need to pull her punches or obey the unspoken rituals and shibboleths of the middle-class. Not everyone will like what she has to say. But no one liked what Cassandra said either.

The poem's narrative follows the adventures and misadventures of Knife Boy and Mechanical Girl. Mor's hyper-caffeinated poetry approaches a kind of mysticism one sees in outsider art:

i think im wearing old levis brown baggy longsleevd
sweater no bra no cosmetics no jewelry after all it is hell
here im in hell but prefer not do not identify
black guy jonesing for a fuck behind me at busstop here
the goddess Hel queen of his darkness [black/white] we
share her bones bony necessity to serve ubiquity sensate
time she wallows in blood he wants it suck'd id drain
it all the red stuff unsanguind shadow disappears thus
down here magic throat otherwise fuckoff man fuck off
my skin crawls under masks and subterfuges refuges
in time we inhabit now in night essential to inhabit what
place findable alley garage cardboard box someone
dream sometimes beautiful or hit the CarlsJrBK allnite
booth 1 cup coffee eternal refills until dawn means it is
safe to close yr eyes somewhere park benches are 4 or
crosstown busrides for this 1 ride eternal refills when
drivers let it sometimes they want to talk flirt cute in
the moving emptiness sometimes they hate a whore
not open for bizness or drive into her as night splayd
out around their big machine

At first blush, the poetry seems amateurish, the misspelling, the sentence fragments, and the unfocused imagery. (Hence the previous insinuation about Mor's style as Crazy Cat Lady.) The Crazy Cat Lady is a pop culture archetype, but also can be a neighbor, a fellow citizen, we would prefer not to think about. The insanity (however defined), the loneliness, and sharing domestic space with a horde of half-feral cats aren't characteristics that make the thinkpiece-reading populace comfortable. Mor makes us uncomfortable and that's her value. Modern conversation has taken the word “problematic” and used it as a shorthand, either to short-circuit a conversation (“Your views are problematic.”) or miss the point entirely (yourfaveisproblematic.com still hasn't figured out what satire is).

The above passage smashes together a casual racism (black guy jonesing for sex) and a depressing setting (hanging around in Carl Jr's or Burger King drinking coffee all night). Her depiction of African-Americans is problematic. So, what are you going to do about it? No, seriously. Barbara Mor charged poetry pokes the sternum of the armchair Social Justice Warrior. Because she lacks any kind of practical power or socioeconomic clout, she is hyper-sensitive to everyday injustices. In an interview with Adam Engel at the end of the book, she hits the nail on the head:

The Left, long contemptuous of “religion,” ineptly confronts the giant psychophysical social surges and erotic convulsions of Jihad and Holy War. Liberals and Leftists are afraid to confront “God” – except with the dry disdain that characterizes believers in secular rather than metaphysical Solutions. Turning chickenshit into formula. PC became a strategy for avoiding Root confrontation: a way to parade as Radical while not “offending” anyone.

A generation of earnest young politicians was educated to think you can solve a problem by correctly labeling it: Thats racist! Thats sexist! Thats religiously intolerant!

Well, yeah, duh. so what else at the root?

Mor wants to get down to the root. The Left remains adept at constructing linguistic edifices and cataloging injustices. But this becomes fatuous window-dressing because of discomfort and unease when it comes to acquiring power. Social justice can only be implemented when your guys are in power. The Tea Party gets it. Trump supporters get it. Bernie Sanders supporters get it. Why doesn't Occupy Wall Street get it? The recent flap about Madeleine Albright's dingbat statement about women supporting Bernie Sanders is the latest example of the Left losing sight of The Big Picture. Distasteful as this sounds, justice can only occur through the acquisition of POWER. Without real POWER, you're wasting your time.

Mor was attuned to the fact that America is no longer an empire. Look at the infrastructure, the school system, and the unmitigated disaster that we call a healthcare system. She understood the consequences of genuflecting towards the idols of “No new taxes” and the Right's perverted melding of Church and State. While occupying the Far Left of the political dial, Mor understood the Hobbesian, Social Darwinist realities of this neoliberal capitalist hellscape. She saw everyday what those on both the Left and Right chose to ignore, downplay, or euphemize away. Or as Mor says,

this is the caffeinesweat of gods
they run like flutteredfilm thru our eyes as they feastd
once in greatHalls some tossd bones in a dumpsite are
their names nothing utters and they still act &they
still hunger in their gross machinery they outstrip
the movie why am i concerned it wonders as agony
inevitable a recycling of myth or minerals food&drink
of the same gods (we are) &they cannot eat w/out
ghosts of the eaten multiplied in shadows hunched in
audiences of shadows who still watch them 24/7 in
some empty skullTheater auras of stale nicotine
how we pass the time

Mor is the prick of conscience that we wish would go away. The images haunt us with their David Lynch-esque dreaminess, teetering between cheeseball Americana and surreal nightmare.

Her poetry is ferocious, disturbing, alienating, typographically eccentric, and angry. She recalls a time when Poetry was a fist. With mass shootings, crumbling streets, and corporations “moving to Ireland” (for tax purposes), perhaps it is high time to confront the problems of this hollowed-out empire with fists and fury. Mor's nauseous allegories of empire deserve an answer.

http://driftlessareareview.com/2016/02/15/critical-appraisals-nauseating-allegor...
… (más)
 
Denunciada
kswolff | Feb 17, 2016 |

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Obras
4
También por
3
Miembros
437
Popularidad
#55,995
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
5
Favorito
1

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