April 7: Open-Mic Poetry at Skivies, 7pm
April 9: Talk with ME online interview, 10am; Mythology and Movies at TSCPL, 7pm
April 15: Open-Mic Poetry and Poetry Reading at TSCPL, 7pm
April 18: Cellar Poetry Series at Weston Wine
Dennis Etzel Jr.
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
Table
I In the Communities
Retirement Communities, Centers for Safety and Empowerment
II By Yourself
"you"
III With Others
Pass the paper
IV Advanced Prompts
Topeka Somatic
Retirement Communities, Centers for Safety and Empowerment
II By Yourself
"you"
III With Others
Pass the paper
IV Advanced Prompts
Topeka Somatic
Interview from 2012, interviewed by with Tracie Inman
Hi,
Dennis!
Thank
you so much for agreeing to this interview with me. Also, thank you for the
information you have given me already. I almost feel like you answered
questions without having to be asked, which I think is awesome. One thing I
find interesting is your style of writing since it completely diverts away from
traditional poetry full of meter and rhyme. It’s as if you truly enjoy coloring
outside of the lines. What draws you to
writing more in collages and in an experimental fashion rather than in standard
poetry structures?
Awesome
question, as I often ask that myself? My overall answer is tied to my love for
the unexpected, how poetry shifts into unknown places. Actually, I started
writing in traditional forms—sonnets, rhythms, etc.—and examined confessional
poetry. As time went by, I looked for ways to push my writing into other
territories. I went back to school, to Washburn, to continue looking for ways
of writing free verse and examining lyrical poetry. At Kansas State, my thesis
was around the lyrical “I” and searching for an answer for post-confessional
poetry that could be published. Eventually, at KU, I discovered the
experimental mode would be the best in conveying my story—my mode—with hopes
that I don’t have to write my memoir anymore. (This leads into your third
question.)
Who or what
influences your writing the most?
Li-Young
Lee definitely was an important influence in the beginning. I went to two
different writing conferences where he led the poetry workshop. I love his
pacing, his voice, as well as his trying to figure out the role of poetry in
the true scheme of life. He sees “poems as descendants of God,” and his ideas
still blow me away.
Rachel
Zucker was also a huge influence, as she is successful in the confessional
mode, while using semi-experimental methods. She is also a doula, and her
collaborative work with Arielle Greenberg in Home / Birth truly took my head off, in the Dickinsonian way. She’s
also a wonderful person to meet, as well as Lyn Hejinian.
Lyn
Hejinian’s book My Life, as well as
all of her writing, showed me how a prose poem “works,” and the conceptualism
behind it inspired me to write my latest project: My Secret Wars of 1984.
Joseph
Harrington also played a big role in that as my mentor from KU. He introduced
me to the ideas of collage, experimentation, flarf, etc. He also led a Ronald
Johnson Reading Group, which sent me into thinking about the project.
You mentioned that
you have an MA and a Graduate Certificate in Women and Gender Studies from
Kansas State University as well as an MFA from The University of Kansas. Can
you explain the reason for the choice to receive a degree/certificate in Women
and Gender Studies?
It
was incredible to learn that K-State offered the certificate, which required a
number of classes flagged for women and gender studies, as well as the capstone
which focused on the history of it. Women and Gender Studies is the only
academic (if not societal, too?) subject examining and “trying to figure out”
why there is violence, racism, sexism, “homophobia” (I don’t like that word),
etc. in the contexts of a historically male-dominated society. My father was
abusive towards my mother and me, I comforted friends who were girls on the
playground, and, still today, am honored to have friends console in me about
their past experiences with physical, verbal, and sexual assault.
Another
aspect of my life that led to feminism is about my mother. A little while after
her divorce, she said, “I don’t think I like men.” I said, “I don’t either.”
She went further to say in a relationship way. Sondra moved in a couple more
years later, and she became my second mother. In a way, I pursued the
Certificate to honor my two moms.
Finally,
I am also interested in how masculinity is constructs, as I’ve never felt
“masculine.” Women and Gender Studies also examines masculinity. In short, all
of these things look at how power, access to information, access to money, and
history has shifted to one side of a binary system based on sex, race, etc.
Likewise, men have an invested interest in becoming feminists if they believe
women have the right to vote, have a bank account, choose to have children,
choose any occupation and have the same pay men do. This also includes men
fighting against the objectification of women, violence towards women, etc.
When I look at ads for Dr. Pepper Ten and Hardee’s, aimed to promote
stereotypical, misogynist ideals in order to sell their products, I know there
is a true need for feminism.
However,
it’s like my wife asked me when we first met, “How do you define feminism? How
can you be feminist male?”
I
could go on.
You will be
introducing a brand new writing course in Fall 2012 at Washburn University
where you and your students “will explore and write in a current hybrid
approach of writing, combining memoir, poetry, image, fiction, non-fiction, appropriation,
collaboration, the political, and Google/conceptual writing.” That’s an awesome
mouthful! Can all of that be done effectively in one semester? What made you
want to take on such an exciting but very full idea for a class?
Can
this be done in a semester? Heck, no! *smile* I’ve designed the class into four
different projects, I call them. These are the start to larger projects—which
could become book-length collections. As time is limited, as well as the
approaches could be new, I feel it is important for a student to discover what
“mode” she or he feels most drawn to for whatever writing subject. However, I
am requiring more from the Graduate students, asking them to think about their
book and pursue it during the semester.
I
wanted to take these ideas on because of how rich they have made my experience
of writing. I’m so passionate about it all. Also, I love Washburn and want to
see students successful in writing—in life. I thrive off of community, and I’m
designing the class with that notion of community. Overall, I am teaching the
class as if this is the class I ever wanted to teach. Of course, that is
idealistic, and all of the creative writing courses should be a Gen Ed
requirement in my view—alongside all of the different modes of Art.
With
all that said, I want to make the best of the time we have during the semester.
You’re a husband,
father, professor, writer, not to mention the magazines you work for—when do
you find the time to write? Where do you go to find that personal writing
space?
I
pull a William Stafford by waking up at 5:30 on mornings I go into work. Since
my first class begins at 9, I have time for creativity when the brain has that
censor turned off—the part of us that says we can’t write this or shouldn’t
write that.
Also,
I carry around notecards to jot things down on. Things come to me in small
doses. It’s important to get them all down ASAP.
My
wife is an understanding woman! We take turns giving each other “free time,”
because raising children is challenging. There is not time to write with
children around, as the focus should
be on them. However, I know Stephen King typed out Carrie while holding his child. I guess it can be done.
My
favorite writing places involve coffeehouses. Even in my Washburn office, there
is too much distraction. I like taking a stack of books, notecards, and a pen
to Blue Planet Café. It’s easy for me to sit down with that mission, that goal
to write, as I’ve already paid for coffee, I’m there in the moment, relaxed, and
ready to write. Sometime I tell myself I will be able to write at a certain
time—especially when I have two or three hours available.
How do you
approach the blank page?
Maybe
that last part answers the question. I tell the blank page I will visit at six
in the morning, or at Blue Planet Café or Flying Monkey. For me, writing comes
easiest without the anxiety, so I make my appointment. I show up. I put my ego
aside, just as Li-Young Lee describes, knowing I am not going to write any kind
of masterpiece. I approach it with fun.
You already
explained the idea and thought process behind “My Secret Wars of 1984” but what
about “Site Fidelity”? It’s not written
in the boxed way much of the writings from the previous project were written.
From what I know of your writing, I would say that this is a bit more out of
your comfort zone. Am I wrong? Do you find comfort in any style of writing you
do?
Actually,
I wrote “Site Fidelity” six years ago. It was part of my writing style then—a
lyrical, eco-feminist style, I think. I’m trying to find new approaches to
writing so the lyrical sense isn’t as obvious. I think I try to get out of my
comfort zone whenever I write. It seems that the comfort in writing will just
lead to writing the same poem in a different way. Or maybe that is what I’m
doing?
And finally, what
would you want your epitaph to say?
He
loved.
Saturday, March 7, 2015
About Starting a Small Press
Someone on facebook asked where they should submit a chapbook, which led to a discussion about starting a small press. I would like to share that here.
I've stepped down from Managing Editor to regular editor--and hope to finish one book and stop a while. I still get the itch to start my own press to publish the kind of stuff I love reading that doesn't get the audience. At the same time, yes--there are a lot of time and unseen struggles.
Many of the issues aren't around the publishing, but writers who believe it is the small press' job to sell their books. However, books aren't sold that way. It really takes the writer's commitment to doing readings, getting exposure, and buying copies directly from the publisher. In fact, --- Press now cannot spend any money for publishing. The poet has to pay--like self-publishing with the "-----" logo.
I like what Geoffrey Gatza writes toward the bottom of this page: http://www.blazevox.org/index.php/faqs/
It really is about the misunderstanding writers and poets have of what it is like to be published by an independent or small press.
I would say, even with the time one puts in to a press, the worst part is the conflict and demands from someone published. Not everyone, but just those few people. It just leaves bad vibes, and it goes against what I love about the community writing creates.
I think what BlazeVOX has is great--to put it out there. The worst one is, "I have an emergency order! How can you get me my books?" I try to be kind in saying, "Why not stock up your books for an emergency?"
Thursday, March 5, 2015
My TSCPL Checkouts
326 ABO The
abolitionists _TSCPL 0
978.102 CAM African American Topeka _TSCPL
0
305.42 EIC Revolutionary heart : the life of Clarina
Nichols and the pioneering crusade for women's rights _TSCPL
0
978.1 COX Blacks in Topeka, Kansas, 1865-1915 : a
social history _TSCPL 0
978.1 OER Bleeding borders : race, gender, and violence
in pre-Civil War Kansas _TSCPL 0
978.1 PAI Exodusters : Black migration to Kansas after
Reconstruction _TSCPL 0
ROBINSON Governor Charles Robinson of Kansas _TSCPL
0
372.4 MCG
Growing a reader from birth : your child's path from language to
literacy _TSCPL 1
DVD-AD DRAMA
HAML Hamlet _TSCPL
3
372.21 TOU
How children succeed : grit, curiosity, and the hidden power of
character _TSCPL 1
811.54 LOW Mélange Block _TSCPL
0
978.163 OAK Oakland's first one hundred years, &
ghost towns of Shawnee County
_TSCPL 0
822.33 SHA Shakespeare uncovered. Series 2 _TSCPL
3
978.163 HOO Topeka
_TSCPL 0
978.163 BIR Topeka : an illustrated history of the Kansas
capital _TSCPL 0
322.42 KLA Klansville U.S.A. _TSCPL
3/26/2015 0
Monday, March 2, 2015
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