In a Landscape of Having to Repeat
Martha
Ronk
Omnidawn Publishing, 2004 ($14.95)
As much as a photograph is a small, square façade encapsulating
the time and space of an event, Martha Ronk’s sixth full-length
book, In a Landscape of Having to Repeat, is a series of lyrical
visions unfolding the everyday; a weave of approximations bringing
to light the ethereal fixity of memory and language. In her effort
to filter the history behind images generated by photography, film,
and television, Ronk forms a gradual sensitivity to objects while
at the same time enabling a sublime graduation from the modern memory’s
screen-hypnotized habits. Ronk’s qualified awe for the TV schedule
and for the film reminding her of a childhood haircut, though her
relationship to these images grows in complexity with each repetition,
includes an loose commentary about the effect of the passive gaze
on memory, “…that deciding how the other must feel /
and the image showing up directly on the screen.” In asking
herself how memory would function without routine images, including
the “picture” on the surface of the word itself, the
poet creates a prosaic heightening of repetitive events that would
otherwise be taken for granted or forgotten. The epigraph from Stanley
Cavell is a fitting catalyst for Ronk’s amplification of “gone” routine: “The
everyday is what we cannot but aspire to, since it appears to
us as lost to us.”
Though less dense than Ronk’s earlier Eye
Trouble (1998) and
Why/Why Not (2003), the poems from the first section of In
a Landscape of Having to Repeat navigate the presence of absence, insisting that
rain is present even on a sunny day because at any moment we might
access a mental image of grayness, wetness, weather. The buried memory
of a childhood home is part of the future of self-perception because
it exists, in the mental chasm, as experience. In the poem “In
a Landscape of Having to Repeat” she writes,
The underlying cause is as absent as rain.
Yet one remembers rain even in its absence and an attendant quiet.
If illusion descends or the very word you’ve been looking for…
…When it is raining it is raining for all time and then it isn’t
Despite the danger of associating the everyday
with boredom and forgetting, Ronk manages to dissolve these
subjective extensions
somewhere outside the world of the book; her trademark syntactic
nuances create tonal diversity and force us to reconsider our
own expectations in ways that are transgressive and often uncertain.
While rejecting the way time and images tend to schedule daily
experiences best left as approximations, Ronk rifles through
art history and through her own history for useful ways of explaining
how the quotidian varies with each repetition. For example, the
poem “Trying” relies on a repetition of the signifier “trying,” yet
is rhetorically imprecise; the “expanse of gray” allows
for an inexact subject, as the word itself has multiple meanings.
Trying to find out what one thinks is approximate
at best, trying on one thing and then another
or trying to think of what to say
as in up the Oregon Coast or in a fine spray of mist.
Trying is not something anyone can do, he says
so we go for a walk in the fog as it happens
a coincidence not to do with trying.
The morning’s simply overcast for the third day in a row.
Anyone can add the blue of a distant sea.
Anyone can color in the sky.
But the expanse of gray extends beyond what else there is to
say.
There is no exertion here; the poems are
as day-dreamy and effortless as routine, while familiar words
and images transcend ordinary
terrain in favor of Ronk’s hypnotic sublimity. That is,
the sublime, which for Ronk is a kind of urgent attention to
beauty and the recognition of beauty via language, emerges as
repetition and as a tenuous kind of attention to images – either
linguistic or actual. Alongside the recognition of gray areas,
precision itself becomes a repetition, a reminder of scheduled
time. For example, in “The Approximate Form of Beauty” she
writes:
You taste like grass, he said.
It was precisely 2:45
A quarter of an hour becomes an arc, a repeated habit, the fixity of fixed ideas.
And in “(Donne, Meditation IV),” grass returns to balance the lack of fixity within questioning:
…what bit of haze in the ear were
you
looking for, eyes left and in a tis-true
sort of scatter, sunk so low,
apologetic to the universe writ large
who’d even devote a momentary cry when
even a dog knows his grass recovers him.
The “repeat” for Ronk becomes
a way to preserve time, to locate lessons from the past in
a poetic future more
delicate, in many cases, than the dreams and screens from which
they stem. In the first section, Ronk blurs beauty so that it
haunts the space of memory, re-evaluating time before it haunts
again. For the poet, beauty is an investment, both in life and
in art. Using Eva Hesse as a culminating subject, Ronk seems
to emphasize the tension between time and art and how each has
an element, like beauty, that is consuming and, often, encompassing.
The second section of In a landscape of having
to repeat, “In
the Vicinity,” relocates the everyday as a series of dreams
in the vicinity of objects. Films, childhood craft projects,
dreams, and photos are records of perception and can be turned
off and on with regularity while “[time is] brought down
to size, framed and re-colored.” This series of prose poems,
again, presents the everyday as a set of appearances recovered
from an uncertain, but ironically fruitful, void. Her objective
approximations approach familiar conceptual vicinities such as 7-Eleven, Honda, and PBS, yet each commercial signifier is soaked
in surreal narrative “seeing” so that the signs become
almost unrecognizable. In the poem “Near the Art Gallery” she
writes,
Near the plate glass windows near the art gallery, I saw a man
walking about aimlessly. He went hither and thither. He held
his fingers in a rectangle in front of his eyes and thereby came
to know what he knew.
In “Screen Memory,” Ronk quotes Freud’s The
Psychopathology of Everyday Life; “The indifferent memories
of childhood owe their existence to a process of displacement…” as
way to support her assessment that “[t]he movie screen
obliterates memory. We are lost in the eternal present.” For
the poet, art replaces history in the sense that artifice may
be regulated mechanically the same way memories are brought about
by thinking, then are secluded again by less immediate forms
of perception: “When you click on the remote the whole
picture comes alive, disappears, comes back, and history is a
present moment in which we float.”
The third and final section of the book, a long
poem, was originally published as the chapbook Quotidian. To
close the poetic landscape,
Ronk conjures memory through archiving a list of segments about
the intangible familiarity of time and distance.
Birds and coffee. What can indefinite mean.
He says ritual has taken over history.
It has altered anything we might think to say…
…I keep thinking it must be solid
as if what I thought about
didn’t count.
Then I thought about how I had spent the day trying to
read about dissolution
and how it had taken the whole day.
The achievement of Ronk’s new book has to do with its
rhetorical opaqueness in a world of memory indistinguishable
from influential rituals. Reflexive approximations are recorded
in the landscape of the book while the book itself is a record
of time-free slippages as they appear in the realm of the daily.
For Ronk, the risk of forgetting everyday beauty is as dangerous
as the possible permanence in the notion of “gone.”
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