Question #1) In issue #3 of Double Room,
Ron Silliman suggests that it is erroneous to assume “that a signature feature of
the prose poem is its brevity.” He calls this misguided
assumption, Jacob’s
fallacy, and he further argues that considering the differences
between the prose poem and the flash fiction is “like trying
to identify the border between, say, Korean & Portuguese,
similar insofar as each is a language.” Do you agree with
Silliman’s assessment? In contrast, Ava Chin suggests that
she wrote flash fiction during a period when she was extremely
overworked: “their jarring method and brevity, their element
of surprise, lent themselves well to my shortened yet heightened
attention span.” Chin seems to suggest that the brevity
aided and enabled a new kind of invention for her. Do you think
that prose poetry and flash fiction do have some kind of compression
or brevity as a related characteristic? When you write in this
form, the pp/ff, do you place any space or length restrictions
on yourself?
While the prose poem is typically brief, Ron Silliman is nonetheless
correct in his rejection of brevity as a defining element of the
genre. (I would add Ashbery's Three Poems and Fabio Morabito's
Toolbox to his list of longer prose poetry.) But I question any
clear distinction between the prose poem and flash fiction. If
we look at some of the masters of the prose poem (Bertrand, Baudelaire,
Rimbaud, Jacob, Michaux, Edson, Simic) we find pieces that are
language-rich, metaphysically provocative, Orphic (read: poetic)
and others that are character-centered, action-driven, dialogue-based
(read: fictive). Some carry all or some combination of these and
other elements. Typically side by side in the same collection.
With this in mind it seems that whatever prompts us to dub this
one flash fiction and that one prose poem is ultimately subordinate
to a more profound and shared ground of being. Along the same lines,
Milan Kundera argues that the short story and the novel are ontologically
identical, differing only in length. Also, because the term flash
fiction feels so trendy, it's difficult to grant it its own autonomous
genre-status. If any distinction is needed, I'd say flash fiction
is the prose poem in drag.
But are Aesop's fables or Pascal's Pensees prose poems? Could
a koan be a prose poem? What about the single Associated Press
paragraphs that summarize the action in each round of a prize fight?
None of these were composed as prose poems. Is authorial intention
necessary?
Ava Chin seems to be on to something with her notion of "jarring
method" and "element of surprise." Convincing
too is Michael Benedikt's "...there is a shorter distance
from the unconscious to The Prose Poem, than from the unconscious
to most poems in verse." I would add that because the prose
poem is necessarily paragraphic, it is wedded to the visual in
a way that most poetry (save the concrete poem) is not. For this
reason, it's hard to imagine recognizing prose poems as prose
poems with any precision using only one's ear. So for a prose
poem to fully actualize in the world it must be reified by the
eye (on page or screen) or by the mind (introduced to an audience
as such before being recited or read aloud).
But I see prose poems finally as shirking certain
certainties. They seem
closer to the mysterious spherules recently discovered in the Martian
topsoil.
Dubbed "blueberries" we have little knowledge of what
they are or how they
formed. I see tattoos on the page. High-resolution hieroglyphs
of mind.
Bio:
Hoag Holmgren's short stories and prose poems have appeared in
StoryQuarterly, Denver Quarterly, Quarter
After Eight, Mid-American
Review, In Posse Review, and are forthcoming in divide. His short
film Route '33 was an official selection at the 2004 ROADance
Film Festival and the Festival International de Biarritz. Selected
stills
can be viewed in DrunkenBoat # 6 (DrunkenBoat.com). He lives in
Nederland, Colorado.
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