DROWNING IN THE BUTTONS BOX
THE BOOK
..........................-
TENDER
BUTTONS
THE SUBBOOK ...................-
OBJECTS
THE SUBPOEM
...................-
CARELESS WATER: NUMBER 28
STANZAS..............................-
2
WORD COUNT......................- 89
THE
LEADER........................-
THE STEINY ROAD POET
CO-LLABORATORS..............-
MODPO STUDENTS/THE BUTTONS
GENRE..................................-
VIRTUAL OPERA
LOCATION............................- USA, UK, Australia, Philippines, S.
Africa, Canada.
TIME......................................-
ALL HOURS OF EARTH’S CLOCK
TONE.....................................-
OVERFLOWING
“…even
if we have biographical information and historical background and scientific
fact, it still doesn't prove any interpretation is even close? Does it? I'm
just going with whichever interpretation brings me most joy, frankly. And truth
be told, all of them do!!” Eleanor Smagarinsky
“Imperfection
and damage are to be valued. And highlighted in gold.” Peter Treanor
CARELESS WATER.
No cup is broken in more places and
mended, that is to say a plate is broken and mending does do that it shows that
culture is Japanese. It shows the whole element of angels and orders. It does
more to choosing and it does more to that ministering counting. It does, it
does change in more water.
Supposing a single piece is a hair
supposing more of them are orderly, does that show that strength, does that
show that joint, does that show that balloon famously. Does it.
A flood of ideas from The Button
Collective enriched the discussion of “Careless Water.” in a way that nearly
drowned the Steiny Road Poet by sheer volume and duration as she sifted through
the subject and method artifacts of the more than a weeklong study session.
Some of the topics included: the Biblical flood experienced by Noah, the 1910
flood of Paris, the breaking of the birth sac (as in her water broke and she went into labor), broken things like
pottery and the world we live in, wars (the American Civil War where dirigible balloons
were use by the Union to spy on the Confederates, Russian-Japanese War),
Japanese culture (reverence for cracked wabi-sabi objects,
Kintsugi—pottery
repair with gold filling, haiku, the unblemished skin of Geishas and the role
of the parasol, broken-looking Kanji characters, “The Great Wave of Kanagawa”—an
Ukiyo-e print by Hokusai, Mu—being without something), Jewish traditions and
stories (no hair cutting between Passover and Shavuot, a period of time called
Omer when the faithful shift from praying for rain to praying for dew
coinciding with the growth period for fruit), Christ symbology, angels (Jewish
and Christian), the female deer called doe
as seen in Biblical literature, skin, and always word play.
CUP/PLATEàCOUPLET: DISMANTLING DIS-ORDER
Steiny forecasted this
deluge with her opening statement about “Careless Water.”—“ While there are some familiar objects and actions in
‘Careless Water.’, a mysterious world order prevails.”
First to
comment was Allan Keeton:
“I love how
angels & orders are an element like water.
Maybe they
are the careless element.
A fifth
element like the ether.
One that is
mending the broken world.
Perhaps they
carelessly broke it first.
“Do we have
a Jewish wedding with the broken plates?
These plates
are then mending & that is a Japanese wedding.”
He followed
these thoughts with:
“We've also
have a single piece of broken cup/plate as a piece of hair
that is made
orderly (plated = braided) with more of them.
“One thinks
more hair, but the orders are with the angels & are elemental.
Counting =
ministering.
How many
angels fit on a single strand of hair?
“What is this
choosing & changing in more water?”
Peter Treanor
took up the broken dishes and conjectured:
“Cup/plate sounds
so like couplet, a piece of
broken couplet (couplet being ‘a pair of successive lines of verse, typically
rhyming and of the same length’) or cutlet
even and maybe cupcake. But I like a
piece of broken couplet. Breaking the old forms.”
And certainly
Stein was making it her business to revitalize the English language, which
meant breaking the old forms. However true to her fractured cubist approach, we
Buttons detected resonances of many kinds relating to broken things.
WABI-SABI—LOVING
IMPERFECTION
In whip smart
reaction, Mark Synder offered these two associations that connected things
Japanese with broken pottery and broken world:
“Japanese
concept of wabi-sabi imperfections
that make something special, like the cracks in your favorite coffee mug that
mark it as yours. It is a fundamental concept in the tea ceremony.
“There is a
Zen parable from Japan about a university professor that goes to a master to
learn about Zen. The master invites him to tea. The Master pours the tea,
and continues to pour as he overflows the cup, spilling it all over the floor.
“Finally
unable to stand it, the professor shouts "Stop! The cup is full!
No more will go in!"
“The master
replied ‘How can I teach you Zen unless you first empty your cup?’”
How’s that for
careless water and the possible vessel into which the Zen master poured that
water? Certainly that overflowing cup is a much smaller version of the Biblical flood that Noah endured or the flood that happened in Paris in 1910, the year that Gertrude and Alice married and their joy overflowed without public outlets to contain it.
water? Certainly that overflowing cup is a much smaller version of the Biblical flood that Noah endured or the flood that happened in Paris in 1910, the year that Gertrude and Alice married and their joy overflowed without public outlets to contain it.
VARIATIONS ON THE FLOATING WORLD
But before
visiting the topic of the first big flood, Eleanor Smagarinsky referenced “The
Great wave off Kanagawa,” an Ukiyo-e color woodcut print by Japanese artist
Hokusai. The Edo period print was published between 1830 to 1833. Undoubtedly,
Stein and her artist friends Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse who collected
Japanese prints knew this image well. It not only depicts careless (carefree)
water but also has the small phallic outcropping in the background of Mount
Fuji.
Dave Green’s
segue into flood read, “If we're going to think along religious lines, probably
the earliest occurrence of CARELESS WATER would be The Flood, which almost
broke the world. And of course there was counting involved, two of each kind of
animal.”
So there was
Noah choosing and ministering counting.
Eleanor also
brought up the Tower of Babel which came about after the flood and which
demonstrated a new kind of arrogance against G-d. So G-d punished mankind by
splitting them up into seventy different nations and tribes, each speaking a
different language. In relation to “Careless Water.”, Eleanor said,
“And now,
here we are, in ModPo,
gathered from all parts of the world (well...some, at least). And even though
we all communicate in English, Stein is teaching us a new language. She's
breaking and mending our language after the careless water has passed. We
minister to each other, we count our numbers, our days, our ways of
interpretation. We come together and then apart, we are single and joint and
strong and we show probably more than we think, and we certainly become proud,
puffed with false air like a balloon, imagining ourselves to be oh so famous.
And yet, lurking in the background, is that culture that is Japanese, that
culture which has no use for us and our infantile alphabet and our adamant belief
in finding the solutions to poems that were never meant to be questions in the
first place. Not one question mark. Does it.”
THE NOISY
BROKEN WORLDS OF WAR
Briefly
Steiny will say about the war topics that they relate to the concept of a
broken world. Stein had a keen interest in the Civil War which she brushed up
against as a child living in Baltimore and which has a much stronger
association in the Tender Buttons
subpoem “A
Chair.”. In Stein’s memoir Wars I
Have Seen, she wrote, "The Russian-Japanese war I remember that one
very well too." However, this war where Japan and Russia made a deal with
each other to break apart Manchuria and Mongolia with part going to Japan and
part to Russia had no further play in Wars
I Have Seen and is bare hint in “Careless Water.”.
HAIKU &
SUI
Peter explored
an association about writing as it relates to the Japanese poetic form haiku.
His discussion was not suggesting that Stein was using this form but only to
approaches Stein might be wrestling with relative to writing.
“And so cups
and plates or couplets that are broken and mended and there's Japanese culture.
Elements and order and angels (or angles) and counting. And change in fluidity.
Well where is it pointing, it's pointing east and to Haiku to me.
“The
essence of haiku is "cutting" (kiru).[1] This is often represented by the juxtaposition of
two images or ideas and a kireji ("cutting word") between them,[2] a kind of verbal punctuation mark which signals the moment of
separation and colors the manner in which the juxtaposed elements are
related.
Cutting and breaking and sticking together and mending in a
Japanese fashion
“Traditional
haiku consist of 17 on (also known as morae), in three phrases of 5, 7 and 5 on respectively.[3]
Counting and (ad)ministering the rules of the form.”
When Eleanor
asked for clarification as to how haiku related to Tender Buttons, Peter replied:
“Eleanor!
No, no haiku in the form there, but I am wondering if she is referring to the
form. I would imagine if she set out to do a haiku the first thing she would do
would be to make it completely unrecognizable as a haiku! She seems hell bent
on breaking the rules of traditional writing, so I don’t think she would
suddenly roll over and obey the rules of Haiku or I would be surprised and
disappointed if she did! But there is something of the enigmatic, nonlinear
reading and ‘chopped up-ness’ of haiku that may have appealed to her and seems
similar in some ways to how she writes. Just a vague hunch with no real or
strong argument to back it up here and probably miles off the mark.”
Bringing up
writing form also brought out form as it pertains to the natural world for
Eleanor:
Water
水 Sui or mizu,
meaning "Water,"
represents the fluid, flowing, formless things in the world. Outside of the
obvious example of rivers and the lake, plants are also categorized under sui,
as they adapt to their environment, growing and changing according to the
direction of the sun and the changing seasons. Blood and other bodily fluids
are represented by sui, as are mental or emotional tendencies
towards adaptation and change. Sui can be associated with
emotion, defensiveness, adaptability, flexibility, suppleness, and magnetism.
Dave said,
“I'm getting the feeling that she [Stein] is talking about solid objects that
also have a feeling of fluidity to them because you can see cracks and imperfections
in them but yet the objects hold together. And there's something mystical about
that combination of the solid and the fluid, hence the connection to the angels
and orders. The cracked cup and plate somehow take on some of the
characteristics of the careless water when immersed in it. The world is not as
sharply divided into solids, liquids, gases as one may think at first. Even
solid objects can have sui. They have strength, they show joints
(cracks), but can also have some of the lightness of air, like balloons. The
‘perfect solid’ is actually more of an illusion and the ‘imperfect solid’ is
closer to the truth of how the universe is made.”
HORSE HAIR
RAKU OR MORE WABI SABI
Mary Armour,
thinking about the cracked glazes of raku pots and the Japanese tea ceremony,
quoted this from Wikipedia:
It is raku’s unpredictable results and intense color
that attract modern potters. These patterns and color result from the harsh
cooling process and the amount of oxygen that is allowed to reach the pottery.
Depending on what effect the artist wants, the pottery is either instantly
cooled in water, cooled slowly in the open air, or placed in a barrel filled
with combustible material, such as newspaper, covered, and allowed to smoke.
Water immediately cools the pottery, stopping the chemical reactions of the
glaze and fixing the colors. The combustible material results in smoke, which
stains the unglazed portions of the pottery black. The amount of oxygen that is
allowed during the firing and cooling process affects the resulting color of
the glaze and the amount of crackle.
Unlike traditional Japanese raku, which is mainly
hand built bowls of modest design, western raku tends to be vibrant in color,
and comes in many shapes and sizes. Western raku can be anything from an
elegant vase, to an eccentric abstract sculpture. Although some do hand build,
most western potters use throwing wheels while creating their raku piece.
Western culture has even created a new sub branch of raku called horse hair raku. These
pieces are often white with squiggly black lines and smoke-like smudges. These
effects are created by placing horse hair, feathers, or even sugar on the
pottery as it is removed from the kiln and still extremely hot.
[insert image of raku pot.]
The water cooling process
points to the title “Careless Water.” and the insertion of horse hair into the
raku glaze fits with: a single piece is a hair supposing more of them are
orderly, does that show that strength, does that show that joint. Eleanor remarked, “This
takes Mark's discovery [wabi-sabi
imperfections] a step further by bringing that ‘single piece of hair’ into the
design. As I follow what the two of you are developing, I feel as if I'm
watching the potter at work, and then the tea ceremony taking place. A quite
different "cup
& saucer" and fabulous meta. How remarkable!”
THE EROTIC
ASPECT OF BROKEN VESSELS
The matter
of pottery also brought up this from Eleanor: “I've been putting off making
this reference to Kabbalah, because I don't really think it's what Stein is
doing here. But anyway, here is something about ‘shevirat kelim’—‘the breaking
of the vessels.’
Steiny
jumped to say that bringing up the breaking of the vessels for this subpoem is
as meaningful as it is for “Glazed
Glitter.” which talks about breakages
in Japanese and things chosen.
What intrigued Steiny about her shevirat kelim reference was:
“There is
also a decided erotic aspect to the Breaking of the Vessels. The
vessels, as described by Luria's most important disciple, Chayyim Vital, are
envisioned as being located in the womb of the feminine Partzuf,
the Cosmic Mother, an expression of the age-old symbol of the feminine as vessel, receptacle and container.
Further, the shattering of these vessels brings about a state of affairs in
which the masculine and feminine aspects of the cosmos, which had hitherto been
in a face to face sexual conjunction,
turn their backs upon one another and become completely disjoined. The chaos brought about by the Shevirah (breakage) leads to an erotic alienation,
a condition that can only be remedied through a rejoining of opposites through
a renewed coniunctio of the sexes. At the same time, like the
water that breaks signaling the birth of a new human life, the Breaking of the
Vessels also heralds a new birth, that of a new personal and world order to be
completed by man in the process of Tikkun [repair].”
CHRIST THE
CUP, GOD THE SAUCER
From the
Christian vantage point, Tamboura Gaskins offered these remarks that ties in
broken world and vessels:
“Careless Baptism. This is an indictment on
Christianity. The water represents a baptism by holy water.
The careless-ness is a criticism of how loosely Christian principles are
applied.”
No
cup is broken in more places and mended, that is to say a plate is broken and
mending does do that it shows that culture is Japanese.
“Here, we
have a scene from The Last Supper. The cup is the Holy Grail that
represents the blood of Christ, and the plate is the vessel on which the
bread, or body of Christ, is carried. Again, there is an indictment or
criticism of the many factions that Christianity has broken into—Catholicism,
Lutheranism, Baptist, Methodist, etc. Christianity, the cup and
the plate, keeps breaking in more places in an effort to fix or mend
what’s wrong with it. And all this breaking and mending goes to show you
that Christianity is all together foreign, or Japanese.”
Eleanor
quoting Claudia
Schumann in the discussion of “A New Cup and Saucer.” [Thread 8] answered
Tamboura,
“Tamboura,
my gut feeling is that you're on to something here!
“Interestingly,
Claudia made a comment in Thread 8 about the Christian connection to cup. It intrigued me at the time, and
I've been pondering it ever since:
This all
brought to my mind another possible meaning for cup. In the story of Jesus
before he was crucified and had a last supper with the disciples. When he
shared the cup of wine with them he said, ‘Drink this, this represents my blood
shed for you.’ The cup is very symbolic in Christianity. I see in my mind that
cup represents Jesus and the saucer represents God holding Jesus and presenting
him to us.
“A cup and
saucer, a plate, water & blood, breaking and mending, and of course—the
table, that table on which all the objects are (supposedly? possibly?) placed.
Christian imagery is all-pervasive in art, it would be remarkable if it was NOT
used by Stein in some way, don't you reckon?”
Tamboura
answered, “GS is saying that Christianity is hurting her relationship with AT
with its criticism of homosexuality. She believes that the Christian
church enthusiastically, or zealously, is against homosexuality (and it
is). Here, a new cup and saucer represents same sex unions, more
specifically GS's union with AT. It's new because it is different
from the old doctrine, or ribbon...yes, Adam's rib comes to mind.”
Moreover,
Tamboura added
“In addition
to baptismal waters, there is an allusion to the resurrection of Jesus Christ—“
No
cup is broken in more places and mended, that is to say a plate is broken and
mending...
“Here,
the cup and plate are broken in many places as was Christ's body during
the crucifixion. He was nailed to a cross through his hands and
feet. A crown of thorns was placed on his head, and a spear punctured his
side. He was so broken on Crucifixion Day that he died, but He
rose on Resurrection Day completely mended and whole.
“And because
Christ died, was broken in more places, and rose again mended,
once you are baptized in the waters, you are saved from sin, the
ultimate brokenness, and can realize everlasting life by
periodically drinking from the cup and eating from the plate, which is an act
of perpetual mending. This You Do in Remembrance of Me—or
so the Christian doctrine teaches.”
PLATELETS
& COUPLETS—POEMS, THE LIFEBLOOD
Peter joined
the exchange and thinking out loud applied his deconstructive logic but all the
same wondered if the
"Caressing water [a variation on careless water and water referring to
religious baptism] could be BLOOD. This is a cup of my blood, blood is
made up of platelets. And haemoglobin, what is globin? goblet? Cup,
maybe, comes from globule-in globule
being a drop of liquid, so it does feel like a cup. A cup of iron (haem) a goblet. It is being constantly
renewed, it is responsible for the constant mending and replenishment of the
body, it ministers to it. Serious orders can be written in blood to convey how
serious they are. And counting of the blood or a blood count, may or may not
have been part of medical knowledge by then, but who wants to let temporal
accuracy get in the way of a good analogy. And blood is water, mostly but it is
changed water and changes in water. And do red blood cells look a bit like
balloons?
“And if they
were a hair, or a fibre or fibrin and
many of then were orderly they form a mesh and cause bleeding to stop, and
mending to begin coagulation.
Life blood
The blood of
Christ
Caressing
water
“Platelets
and couplets, poems as the life-blood.”
TEMPORARY
ANGELS AND MORE
Mary ties
together more of the Christian symbology within and from the world that
Gertrude Stein drew substance.
“I'm
thinking of how in the medieval theology of Duns Scotus and Aquinas (how
many angels on the head of a pin?) angels were placed in hierarchies of orders
and seraphic choirs.
“Pseudo-Dionysius
(On the Celestial Hierarchy) drew on passages from the New Testament to
develop a schema of three Hierarchies, Spheres or Triads of angels, with each
Hierarchy containing three Orders or Choirs. Although both authors drew on the
New Testament, the Biblical canon is relatively silent on the subject. These
hierarchies are highly speculative. As ever, much of so-called orthodox
Catholic theology is indebted to the esoteric and older suppressed hermetic
traditions that go back to Marcion and the Greeks as well as Jewish
angelology of Midrashic literature.
“Angels are
ministering bodies, helping with the work of atonement (the mending) and we
might read something of the Eucharistic transubstantiation rite here too. Water
and wine become the Blood of Christ, as Word becomes flesh. There's numerology
too, the significance of counting.”
It
shows the whole element of angels and orders. It does more to choosing and it
does more to that ministering counting. It does, it does change in more water.
“I'm
picking up here of course on what Claudia and Tamboura were mentioning.
Liturgical and theological overtones of some kind or another are frequent
in Stein, what we are to make of them is tricky.
“Historically,
it seems to me that before the 1960s, before Vatican II in any case, there
were no deconstructionist critiques of patriarchal Christianity or Catholicism
as we would know such critiques today. Catholicism was in one way, very much an
affair of the Roman curia and very Italian, obscure and 'foreign'. In one way.
But France was also the 'eldest daughter of the Church' and intensely
affected by centuries of Catholic symbolism, authority and abuses
(Cardinal Richelieu, anyone?) as well as by a well-established anti-clericalism.
So in France 1912 and going into WWI we have famous literary converts Paul
Claudel, Andre Gide and Charles Péguy. There is a huge and popular cult
around two women saints: Teresa of Avila and Therese of Lisieux,
rich, nuanced and contradictory images. And always foregrounded in the
conscience of everyone is the Dreyfus affair.
“GS is democratic
to her core, American and New World, assimilationist, secular, more inclined to
the Protestant than the Catholic, more inclined in some ways to the sciences (photography!
hot air balloons! automobiles!). BUT she absorbs what is in the air, what is
sensuous, embodied, erotic, aesthetic, mysterious. She thought about the
converso Teresa of Avila in Spain, she is intrigued by
sacramental symbolism. She is receptive and lets the Unconscious play
out as it will.”
Among the many
responses to what Mary offered was commentary on Jewish angels. Eleanor said,
“Yes, lots of Jewish angels but it's not common knowledge I guess. Here's a
general wiki link,
and here's one which discusses the Orthodox Jewish
view of angels.” Dave selected various passes from Eleanor’s links
to emphasize and make comment on:
The
Hebrew word for angel is malach,
which means messenger, for the angels are G‑d's messengers to perform various
missions.
“That
immediately made me think of ‘Malachite.’ [the 33rd subpoem of “Objects” in Tender Buttons].”
Some
angels are created for one specific task, and upon the task's completion cease
to exist.
“Wow,
temporary angels.”
"Notwithstanding
the great spiritual level of the angels, the holiness of the Jewish soul
supersedes that of the angel...This reflects itself in that fact that angels
are one-dimensional: each angels has one specific form of Divine service. The
human soul, on the other hand, serves G‑d in many different ways, expressing
itself through love, awe, etc."
To this quote
Dave says “most interesting” but Steiny suspects Gertrude Stein is working up
to something psychologically big within the larger context of Tender Buttons.
SKIN, DO VERSUS
MU, FEMALE DEER
Steiny will
draw this deluge of ideas to a gradual end with this shower of verbal play:
From Eleanor on skin:
CARELESS
WATER
CARESS WATER
CARESS WHAT?
HER!
SKIN is the
object - largest organ of the human body.
Perspiration
is a type of careless water.
Skin breaks
and repairs itself endlessly.
It's a
vessel containing the entire body.
It changes
in water (wrinkles) but it's FULL of water, so it expands like a balloon!!
That's how skin cells work, isn't it? Bloated. Also, the skin of the stomach
expanding as the amniotic fluid fills the sac inside, as that wee baby grows.
Or just a really good meal expanding the skin of the belly. Or anything sexual,
nuf said. Water / blood.
Imperfections
of the skin are like the Japanese concept Mark mentioned...wabi sabi (if I
remember correctly). Which is so lovely, as our skin is like the clay in the
potter's hand, and our imperfections are perfect.
HAIR. One hair
or "more of them are orderly."
From Peter on the verb does:
9 does's in
all, repeat repeat repeat, there's an awful lot of doing or does's
"it
does", "it does" are placed together.
3 "does
that show's" at the end are topped off by a "does it."
I looked up do,
so many possibilities I fell off my meditation mat, so much in such a small
word, very Zen / or Japanese felt like Mu, in that it is a small
word for a huge concept and strangely they sound very similar. Much Ado About
Mu perhaps.
From Tamboura on the noun does:
doe
/doʊ/ Show Spelled [doh] Show IPA
noun, plural
does ( especially collectively ) doe.
the female
of the deer, antelope, goat, rabbit, and certain other animals.
does ==> female deer ==> female
dears
…does
that show that strength…
…does
are strong
…does
that show that joint,
… does
are communal
…does
that show that balloon famously.
…
pregnant does, perhaps?
Does
it.
Does
are it. They are the best.
While Tamboura
thought she was moving away from religion, Eleanor was reminded of the Old
Testament passage in “Song of Songs”: "I adjure you, O daughters of
Jerusalem, by the gazelles or the does
of the field, that you not stir up or awaken love until it pleases."
Very quickly
this talk of does turned into a singing lesson on "tonic solfa." So
therefore the Steiny Road Poet fades away with an image of Gertrude Stein
singing do-re-mi in a shower of careless water. For now, that, does it.
3 comments:
This was a truly joyful collaboration.
I'm posting this comment from Eleanor Smagarinsky that came after this blogpost was published:
"...there is a very strong connection between menses and water in Jewish tradition: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mikveh
"Also this section of the rules of the Mikveh seems to fit with the "CARELESS WATER." 'Even the very end of a single hair above the surface (or a single hair in her mouth) invalidates the Tviloh [immersion in the water].'"
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