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Online Interviews With Gwendolyn Brooks Essay Research

Online Interviews With Gwendolyn Brooks Essay, Research Paper


from "An Interview with Gwendlyn Brooks" in Artful Dodge


When in Bloomington this February (1979), Brooks discussed her poetry with The


Artful Dodge while driving to the Ramada Inn after a day of reading and speaking. Amid


the traffic noises of Saturday night Bloomington she spoke of the direction of her poetry


is taking at present, a direction which promises yet more vital and direct poetry.


Steve Cape: Having heard you read several times, the readings seem a lot different from


the poems as they come off when I’m reading them from a book. Does the idea of oral poetry


seem more immediate or real to you than printed or written poetry?


Brooks: No. In fact, you might be surprised to know I have a visual appreciation for


poetry myself. I’d rather ready anybody’s work than listen to it. I can get something out


of listening, but you can’t pick up everything. But what I try to do in reciting is to


give whoever is listening an impression of how I felt when I wrote the piece. I try to


paint the poem on the air.


SC: Is there any use of mythology in your poems, any myths that you work from or play


with in the poems?


Brooks: No. I never really investigated mythology. My daughter enjoyed so much reading Bulfinch’s


Mythology, which we always had in the house but which I never read myself. I’m sure


though that there are African myths or their counterparts that much could be done with,


but I have not tried that.


SC: How would you describe your process of composition, or a poem coming into being?


Brooks: When I’m excited about something or moved by something, I take notes on it


immediately so I won’t forget or loose my inspiration.


SC: Gary Snyder when he was here last fall said the same thing, that when he got an


initial phrase or an idea, no matter when it was–if it was two in the morning–that he’d


write it down (Brooks: oh, yes) and then go to fill it out later. Does that seem like a


familiar approach?


Brooks: I’m always taking notes, and then when I have time and can recapture the mood,


I start (as I was telling the students this afternoon) forging a first draft, and that’s


what it is, real forging. And I try to use words that say what I want to say–not what one


of our very famous European poets has said. This is very difficult because all of us


American poets have been thoroughly brainwashed into believing that what has already been


published is it!


SC: In the short manual on black poetry writing that you wrote, [Gwendolyn Brooks,


Keorapetse Kgositsile, Haki R. Madhubuti (Don L.Lee), Dudley Randall, Black Poetry


Writing, Detroit: Broadside Press, 1975] you comment on poetry being a transient


thing and it serving an immediate purpose more than a person intentionally trying to write


for posterity or for something that will be permanent.


Brooks: That does not express what I have been doing; whatever I said to that effect


was about those black poets in the late sixties, some of whom, not all but some of whom


felt that black poetry shouldn’t be written with an eye to posterity billions and


trillions of years from now. They felt, some of them, that if they wrote a poem that


worked for black people today, it would have served its purpose, and if it died after the


poem had done what the poet wanted it to feel–again not all–feel that they do want to be


read thousands of years from now. I’m afraid that I’m weak enough to think that it would


be very nice if somebody could get some nourishment or healing or just plain rich pleasure


out of poems I’m writing today.


SC: Another thing from Black Poetry Writi

ng that I’d like to get a comment on.


You broke black poetry down into three stages, a first stage that was a statement of


condition, and then moving to a poetry of integration, and then the present poetry being


more an assertive, positive, individualistic thing.


Brooks: I was describing my own three stages of creativity. One, I call my


"express myself" stage, because I was writing about anything and everything in


my environment just because I wanted to express myself–flailing about. And second, my


"integration flavoring" stage when I wrote a lot of poems which I hoped would


bring black people and white people and all people together, and they didn’t seem to be


doing that (laughter) in great numbers at any rate, and a third stage governed by that


little credo that some of the Black poets had in the late sixties, "Black poetry is


poetry written by blacks, about blacks, and to black," and then, I’m trying very


seriously now to create for myself, develop for myself a kind of poem that will be


immediately accessible and interesting, immediately interesting, to all manner of blacks,


not just college students though they’re included too. That kind of poem will feature


song, will be songlike, and yet still properly called poetry.


SC: Is that where you–?


Brooks: Are now.


SC: What about the future of black poetry in America, do you see any trends which you


think are going to be developed?


Brooks: I believe that events will dictate what turns black poetry takes next. A lot of


black poetry is being written now that seems to be interior poetry, poetry that goes


deeper into the interior to explore, but I believe that the writing concern will be coming


back outdoors just as soon as some things become blatantly obvious. A lot of stuff is


happening now that I believe will involve us all, and the poets, their writing, will


reflect what they’re experiencing, just as it did in the late 60’s.


SC: What would a few of these things be?


Brooks: Well, I’m sure your imagination can help you there–when you look at the


headlines and you listen to television, and you hear our various leaders urging Carter to


get over there and drop a few bombs (laughter).


SC: Everything getting more conservative….


Brooks: Well, I think that is what has been happening, but Conservatism can


go–look, I’m no sociologist but at least I think I can say this–Conservatism goes just


so far and then there’s a reaction against it, wouldn’t you agree to that? At least that’s


what’s been happening so far and I don’t expect the future to be much different. I do know


that the people, the blacks on the African continent, don’t seem inclined to lie down.


They’re getting fiercer and fiercer, and more and more interested in protecting


themselves. I don’t expect that to have a reverse. If you just let your imagination so


you’ll see that we’re in for some very lively poetry.


*The Editors at Artful Dodge debated for quite a while on whether to present


the full text of these interviews on our web page, or to give only brief taste of each


interview, hoping that you would send us$5.00 for a back issue in order to finish it.


Luckily, we decided to err on the side of literature. But, if you enjoy these interviews


and would like to have a part in supporting us so that we can continue to publish new


interviews just as fascinating, not to mention intriguing new poetry and fiction, please


subscribe or order a back issue by sending $5.00 to the same address. Thank you for


supporting us and helping us continue our mission to publish fresh, illuminatingwork.


—The Editors


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