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Showing posts with label cubism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cubism. Show all posts

Monday, December 21, 2015

Cooking with Tender Buttons Food: Breakfast. Stanzas 1-9. Discussion 1

THE BOOK ..........................-           TENDER BUTTONS
THE SUBBOOK ...................-           FOOD
THE SUBPOEM ...................-           Breakfast
WORD COUNT (Total)……...-           840
STANZA(S)............................-            22
—Stanzas 1-9                                       312
THE LEADER........................-           THE STEINY ROAD POET
CO-LLABORATORS.............-            MODPO STUDENTS/THE BUTTONS

“Breakfast.” is the third subpoem of Tender Buttons section 2 Food. Unlike “Roastbeef.” and “Mutton”, “Breakfast.” is not a food but a time of day to eat. While stanza 14 of “Breakfast.” (this stanza will be addressed in the next blogpost) mentions roast, meat does not play much of a role in this subpoem. However, the meeting of the minds comes into play as Stein addresses daily process, philosophical discourse, creativity, and literary concerns.

The Buttons Collective begins with the first nine stanzas of “Breakfast.”, which has a 312-word count, including the title. Among the topics addressed in this post are: breaking fast—exploring the title Breakfast; the various abuses of cheese; a shining breakfast and that sudden slice that changes everything; Cubism is not imitation; a loving tongue and cups; Gertrude Stein and fashion; party in Batteau-Lavoir; cocoanut, whale tongue and more fish; and finding the calm in clamour. This is a complicated set of stanzas and while much was seen, undoubtedly more exists in these words then have been commented on.

BREAKFAST.
A change, a final change includes potatoes. This is no authority for the abuse of cheese. What language can instruct any fellow.

A shining breakfast, a breakfast shining, no dispute, no practice, nothing, nothing at all.

A sudden slice changes the whole plate, it does so suddenly.

An imitation, more imitation, imitations succeed imitations.

Anything that is decent, anything that is present, a calm and a cook and more singularly still a shelter, all these show the need of clamor. What is the custom, the custom is in the centre.

What is a loving tongue and pepper and more fish than there is when tears many tears are necessary. The tongue and the salmon, there is not salmon when brown is a color, there is salmon when there is no meaning to an early morning being pleasanter. There is no salmon, there are no tea cups, there are the same kind of mushes as are used as stomachers by the eating hopes that makes eggs delicious. Drink is likely to stir a certain respect for an egg cup and more water melon than was ever eaten yesterday. Beer is neglected and cocoanut is famous. Coffee all coffee and a sample of soup all soup these are the choice of a baker. A white cup means a wedding. A wet cup means a vacation. A strong cup means an especial regulation. A single cup means a capital arrangement between the drawer and the place that is open.

Price a price is not in language, it is not in custom, it is not in praise.

A colored loss, why is there no leisure. If the persecution is so outrageous that nothing is solemn is there any occasion for persuasion.

A grey turn to a top and bottom, a silent pocketful of much heating, all the pliable succession of surrendering makes an ingenious joy.

“These stanzas seem like a big jump from talking about breakfast. But maybe she was talking about the paintings all along?” Emily W

The quest to become for Gertrude Stein was huge. She called it finding Gloire. She wanted the sunshine of genius, that light that shines on you so that others know you are special.” Karren Alenier 

BREAKING FAST

While the Buttons Collective did not begin by discussing what Stein’s title “Breakfast.” might indicate, the Steiny Road Poet [a.k.a. Karren Alenier] believes this is where the discussion should start. Peter Treanor had this to say but in relation to stanza 1:

Breakfast.
A change, a final change includes potatoes. This is no authority for the abuse of cheese. What language can instruct any fellow.

Breakfast seems to have a double meaning here. Breakfast the meal and breaking from that which is fast, or fixed (her old relationship with Leo or maybe the old use of language). Or an imperative, we need to break fast, meaning quickly. So breaking free and breaking free quickly. Maybe that is part of the rapid change that is happening. This meal for the new day/age dawning.”

Karren Alenier added:

“One more thought to add to the break fast meaning is that during Yom Kippur, Jews abstain from eating to atone for the year's sins they have committed. The meal taken at sundown of that holy day is called a break fast. The holiday is about a new beginning, it is about change in behavior and there is lots of instructional language offered in those prayers. Does this relate to cheese? well, maybe. The meal typically served is dairy.”

THE ABUSE OF CHEESE

What initially caught Alenier’s attention was the phrase abuse of cheese. She said:

“Join me in standing in the 21st century like a visitor to art gallery as I stand before this phrase: abuse of cheese. Here is another instance of how Stein's work reached into the future and our now.

“Cheese in our time refers to a recreational drug made from heroin and over-the-counter cold medicines, etc. I also found a satirical statement about how modern consumption of cheese, the food, has been become an all out addiction.

“Now back to stanza 1 of "Breakfast."—the key word here is change. The French are aficionados of cheese so there seems to be some caution issued here where potatoes, a staple of eating in Western culture, represent ordinary behavior. This is then followed with a statement or rather a question about what language can inform any person? Next I'm going to look at the definition of cheese.”

cheese 1
 (chēz)
n.
1.
a. A solid food prepared from the pressed curd of milk, often seasoned and aged.
b. A molded mass of this substance.
2. Something resembling this substance in shape or consistency.

“Let's not forget that the TB Food section starts with Roastbeef, which points to cows and milk, the main substance of cheese.”

cheese 2
 (chēz)
tr.v. cheesedchees·ingchees·es Slang
To stop.
Phrasal Verb:
cheese off Chiefly British Slang
To anger or irritate: The footballers were cheesed off by the referee's decision that cost them the game.
Idiom:
cheese it Slang
1. To look out. Often used in the imperative.
2. To get away fast; get going. Often used in the imperative.

“Could Stein be telling us she will no longer take abuse for her decision to change her life in radical ways—giving up a lucrative profession (as a medical doctor) and marrying a woman instead of a man?”

cheese 3
 (chēz)
n. Slang
An important person.

“Is Stein the cheese here?”


cheese
 (tʃiːz)
n
1. (Cookery) the curd of milk separated from the whey and variously prepared as a food
2. (Cookery) a mass or complete cake of this substance
3. (Cookery) any of various substances of similar consistency, etc.: lemon cheese.
4. big cheese an important person
5. as alike as chalk and cheese as different as chalk and cheese See chalk6

“I'm particularly interested in this definition where cheese is described as a cake. In the Food section, cake is used 11 times. In "Breakfast.", cake is used three times in stanza 15.

“Words related to cheese from the Urban Dictionary:
sex, food, penis, dick, money, vagina, ass.”

Emily W responded:

“A change makes me think about the change in the process of making cheese. The milk is curdled by an acidic substance. Cheese used to be very handy because it was a dense energy source that was easily transported and didn't spoil so quickly as milk.

“Abusing cheese is such an odd thing to say. (I didn't know it referred to a drug nowadays!) It must be something else that is being abused that cheese represents? Or is abusing cheese—taking too much of it? Or not eating it so it grows moldy—wasting food might be considered abusive.”

Alenier answered:

“I like your description of cheese making and it is a portable food once milk is transformed into those cakes called cheese.

“I agree that abuse of cheese is odd.

“I'm thinking, however, these lines refer to Stein as the cheese—the big cheese--the important person. Whatever the change is, and she says it is final, includes something that is a mundane staple (potatoes). Forgive me, Alice, but Gertrude could be referring to the change in daily living that includes marriage to ABT and loss of GS's brother Leo from their lives. The change also involves the importance of language (Stein’s writing) in GS & ABT's lives. This will instruct audience (any fellow).”

Treanor said:

“The potatoes at breakfast make me think of hash browns and latkes. (Both are also referred to as cakes.)

“Cheese is typically taken for breakfast in France with bread and ham. So cheese and potato at the breakfast table could be seen as a meeting/clash of cultural norms maybe. Maybe the final change in the cultural landscape (of writing) will involve the US ingredient of hash browns to the cultural table that previously was solely European in flavour, with cheese that is now cheesy.

Authority is interesting, authority as in ‘power to do so’ but also refers to author, writer, composer. An author ity, the ability to write cheesily perhaps. 
And what language can instruct any body? with all this author-ly authority you would think of a written language perhaps, but that would mean the person would have to be able to read, so I would think more of music or images (the language of painting, visual representation) as the language that could instruct any fellow. If fellow is indeed a person. And not any (who) fell low. Maybe the bible or some other holy text is one that could instruct if one has fell low.

Final is strange, a final change, it sounds so...well…final. What change is final? Only death springs to mind.”

Alenier responded,

“I guess Stein's selection of the word final is very emotional. I'm thinking of it as a hard-and-fast decision and not so much death.”

Emily W asked:

“If she is referring to herself then as the ‘cheese,’ is she also taking on the role of the instructor in language too?”

Treanor offered:

“Yes Karren maybe final change is referring to something she has been labouring over, but has finally come to a decision about.

“It does seem that the final decision, which includes potatoes, does not give the authority to abuse cheese (the old). So the new doesn’t contain the authority to abuse the old, established, matured, solidified cheese. Is she saying that new ways don’t need to trash the old? She’s writing a new way but still sees the older ways as tasty, solid and flavorsome. She'd just like some new tastes as well, some tubers from the new world to add to the meal.”

Answering both Emily W and Peter Treanor, Alenier responded:

“Emily, Bingo! I think you hit the nail head on! Yes, I think Stein would be insinuating that she is that important person who would lead the instruction of language. instruction of language is one of the important themes of TB.

“Pete, I think you are on to something important—aspects of what is habitual (old) support what is groundbreaking (new). It's like the partnership of GS & ABT.”

Teri Rife added this abuse of cheese:

“Check out "The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction," said to the the first long-lived cheap (two-penny) periodical in Britain, published from 1822 to 1847. Here's a link to a section describing how cheese is made from potatoes in Thuringia and Saxony:  https://books.google.com/books?id=50EFAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA431&lpg=PA431&dq=potatoes+and+cheese+in+literatu...                                                         
“Looks like this periodical was a source of instruction (weird though it appears to be), along with amusement for any fellow.”  

Here Steiny will pause to say that whatever the abuse of cheese meant to Stein, it was important to her and may have been a popular term during her time to disparage literary work. Stein uses the word cheese again in stanza 10 which will be discussed in the next blogpost. In Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein, a collection of experimental prose and word portraits written by Stein between 1909 and 1912, she wrote this line that begins with cheese:


To lie in the cheese, to smile in the butter, to lengthen in the rain, to sit in the flour all that makes a model stronger, there is no strangeness where there is more useful color, a description has not every mission.

A SHINING BREAKFAST & SUDDEN SLICE

While Emily W and Claudia Schumann pondered what a shining breakfast might mean, Peter Treanor suggested:

A shining breakfast, a breakfast shining, no dispute, no practice, nothing, nothing at all. “I thought of eggs, fried, sunny side up, shining away, bright, yellow and glistening. A big yellow orb like the sun.”

Moving on to stanza 3, Schumann added:

A sudden slice changes the whole plate, it does so suddenly.
A sudden slice could mean an interruption. Like on Sundays, I enjoy the quiet of morning not having to rush out to work or some place else. But while I'm enjoying my breakfast—the phone rings (a sudden slice).”

THE SLICE THAT SUDDENLY CHANGES EVERYTHING

Taking the discussion to the philosophic plane, Alenier addressed stanzas 2 through 5:

A shining breakfast, a breakfast shining, no dispute, no practice, nothing, nothing at all.

A sudden slice changes the whole plate, it does so suddenly.

An imitation, more imitation, imitations succeed imitations. 

Anything that is decent, anything that is present, a calm and a cook and more singularly still a shelter, all these show the need of clamor. What is the custom, the custom is in the centre.

“In my thinking, these 4 stanzas belong together. There is a quality about them that seems philosophic.

“Stanza 1—no dispute, no practice, nothing, nothing at all. Taken all together, Stein moves around the word shining in a cubist manifestation. She is examining. Breakfast connotes a beginning but also a change (fed after a long hiatus where one eats after abstention.)

“Stanza 2—we see a part (slice) versus entirety (whole) and there is the word change.

“Stanza 3—seems judgmental as well as declension: one intimation, more intimations and one quantity of imitations trumping another. It's some kind of philosophic argument.

“Stanza 4—there some kind of moral argument being presented in this stanza. It has to do with how to live and it dwells on what is habitual (custom).

Emily W responded:
“Breakfast is a habit for most people, not just to eat it, but even what they eat. Our habits are conveniences that make it easy to be able to think about something else.

Karren, I've been thinking and thinking about what you said about breaking habits and getting into the chaos of life. Of course, not all habits are bad, they make life easier in many ways, and some are good. But I also think that there is a habit that is ‘being me,’ i.e., I might call it finding my style (artistically, speaking) and this is what I want to develop, so it is unique and recognizable. And at the same time, I want to develop it (break/add habits). There are many approaches, learn something new, get a new perspective, talk to someone interesting, etc. etc. Maybe one might call it ‘adding a slice’ that suddenly changes everything.

“GS talks about imitation here, and I believe that is our habit, we imitate, we soak up what we see, what we hear. The challenge is to take that imitation and rework it, add a new layer to it, that is, add our style over it, so it becomes something more than just a pure imitation.”

Treanor jumped in with:

Custom is a form of personal, social or societal habit. What is the custom, the custom is in the centre. Habit (custom) is central it seems.”

Taking another tack, Rife offered:

“I've been thinking about the possibility that this fast we're breaking might be not a food fast (Gertrude would flip those words and make us think that she predicted the rise of McDonald's) but rather a fast from companionship--Gertrude's from Alice and Alice from Gertrude's. When I read the book of selected love notes from Gertrude to Alice, I was given to understand that it was Gertrude's custom to stay up far past Alice's bedtime to write. So, Gertrude would leave a love note for Alice to find when she got up in the morning, to keep the connection until they were together again.

“All that having been said, I'm seeing quiet daily routine each morning in need of a shake-up. Quietude: ‘...no dispute, no practice, nothing, nothing at all.’ (There are all those unusual commas signifying the breath, as we saw in Objects.) and ‘...a calm and a cook and more singularly still a shelter...’ Is this Alice moving about the house while Gertrude is still sleeping? Then, boom, it's show time. Gertrude's up! We break our fast from one another with an actual or metaphorical shining breakfast.

“I'm still thinking about the imitations upon imitations. Is Alice typing what Gertrude wrote during the night previous?”

CUBISM IS NOT IMITATIVE ART

After an exchange between Emily W and Teri Rife about creativity, Verse 39 of the Tao Te Ching, repetition, and the ability to remember what we learn, Rife said,

“Yes, perhaps imitating goes with the instructing. And though I brought up ‘endlessly repeating’ from the Tao Te Ching verse because of the cadence of the words, there's a difference between repeating and imitating, I think. It may be that ‘An imitation, more imitation, imitations succeed imitations.’ has something to do with the old ways of writing, the old ways of making art and music versus the new. I looked around for a quote from Guillaume Apollinaire we discussed previously in Objects that mentions imitation. Here it is:”

The difference between Cubism and earlier painting is that it is not an imitative art, but a conceptual art, which reaches up to the heights of creation.

When depicting conceived-reality or created-reality, the painter can obtain a three-dimensional effect, can, so to speak, cubify. He could not do that by just representing seen-reality, unless he resorted to trompe-l'oeil, with foreshortening or perspective, which would distort the quality of the conceived or created form.

Scientific Cubism is one of the pure tendencies. It is the art of painting new compositions with elements taken not from reality as it is seen, but reality as it is known.

“Everyone is aware of this inner reality. One does not have to be educated to conceive of a round shape, for example.

“The geometrical appearance which so struck those who saw the first scientific canvases resulted from the fact that essential reality was there depicted with great purity, with contingent visual and anecdotal elements eliminated from the work."

Alenier responded,

“Teri, that's an important point about imitating being old school. It makes me think of the saying ‘imitation is highest form of flattery.’ Well in this context, we Xperience 2 dimensions (flat-ery) versus 3 (cubism)!”

Monday, August 31, 2015

Cooking with Tender Buttons Food: Roastbeef. Stanzas 18-21. Discussion 5


THE BOOK ..........................-           TENDER BUTTONS
THE SUBBOOK ...................-           FOOD
THE SUBPOEM ..................-            Roastbeef
WORD COUNT (Total)……..-           1757
STANZA(S)............................-           37
THE LEADER........................-           THE STEINY ROAD POET
CO-LLABORATORS.............-            MODPO STUDENTS/THE BUTTONS

Here are “Roastbeef.” stanzas 18 through 21 with a 161-word count. Among the topics addressed in this post are: the bones of contention between Gertrude Stein and her brother Leo, kitchen items or natural elements that stand in for Alice Toklas, kind as stand in for gender, Stein’s gaming and cubism, what comes in fours (e.g. winds and humors) and the four Passover questions, Apollinaire’s and Stein’s interest in the fourth dimension, and the gematria of four which points to door.


The time when there are four choices and there are four choices in a difference, the time when there are four choices there is a kind and there is a kind. There is a kind. There is a kind. Supposing there is a bone, there is a bone. Supposing there are bones. There are bones. When there are bones there is no supposing there are bones. There are bones and there is that consuming. The kindly way to feel separating is to have a space between. This shows a likeness.

Hope in gates, hope in spoons, hope in doors, hope in tables, no hope in daintiness and determination. Hope in dates.

Tin is not a can and a stove is hardly. Tin is not necessary and neither is a stretcher. Tin is never narrow and thick.

Color is in coal. Coal is outlasting roasting and a spoonful, a whole spoon that is full is not spilling. Coal any coal is copper.


“What are spoons? Could Stein be playing with words and meaning Spoonerisms?” Peter Treanor

THE BONE OF CONTENTION BETWEEN GERTRUDE AND LEO

To continue with the theme of hidden relationships that began with earlier stanzas of “Roastbeef.”, the Steiny Road Poet offers that stanza 18 with its seven repetitions of the word bone, might be pointing to the notion of bone of contention. Here’s what Peter Treanor had to say:

“I was wondering if Stein is using bone and bones in the sense of a disagreement/argument, as in ‘I’ve got a bone to pick with you.’

“Is she saying there are four choices in a difference (disagreement)? There are bones of contention that are all consuming. The best way to separate is to have some space?

“This seems to point to a row and separation from Leo, all those kinds in there, kind=alike and kin.”

THE OBJECTS THAT STAND IN FOR ALICE

While Gertrude’s failing relationship with her brother Leo may be hidden in how she presents this subject in the text of Tender Buttons, the actual hidden relationship is her marriage to Alice Toklas.  Stanzas 19 through 21 might be pointing to Toklas, who, in other discussions, particularly those about the subpoems of section 1 “Objects”, has been associated with objects in the kitchen, such as what Stein offers in these “Roastbeef.” stanzas, as spoons, tables and stove but also as the element copper.

On the subject of copper and other elements mentioned stanzas 20 and 21, here’s what Karren Alenier [a.k.a. Steiny] had to say in the ModPo discussion forum:

“I'm thinking that the burning embers of coal look like copper in color. Copper is a stand in for Toklas who is Stein's spiritual home & the bread maker.

“I think tin is also a stand in for Toklas. Tin has 10 stable isotopes which puts it above all other elements in the periodic table. It is silvery in appearance.
Isotope means at its semantic roots in the same place (in the periodic table).
That’s why I think it points to Alice. It also has a relationship with copper.”

STEIN’S KIND

Steiny thinks it is imperative now to address in stanza 18 Stein’s repetition of kind (four times) with the additional kindly that follows up. Steiny’s theory as developed in thinking about the use of kind in section 1 “Objects” starting with the opening subpoem “A carafe, that is a blind glass.” is that gender can be substituted for the word kind. In this case, the overpowering repetition of there is a kind means that Stein is extremely concerned with and adamant about her own gender identification. That also plays into there is a bone, which might be slang for penis. Again Stein identifying as the male partner in her marriage with Toklas relates to a hidden relationship. In the contention with Leo, he is opposed to the marriage fearing that his sister will bring shame on herself.

The repetition of kind is also amplified by the other meanings of kind (a class of, type of, agreeable, loving) as well as the root word kin (family) as Treanor points out. All of these meanings showing a likeness or similarity, resemblance, relatedness. 


There are also more abstract ways of appreciating these stanzas and some of the following comments relate to gaming, art, and ways of thinking.

Emily W commented,

“Are the four choices the face of the cube?  and the four other choices on the opposite face?”

“What I notice is that everything is concrete, solid, there in the world, except hope, except daintiness and determination, which have no hope.  I'm puzzled by ‘dates.’  Are they the food or outings?”

Alenier answered,

“Surprisingly, in the studies last year of ‘Objects,’ there were various kinds of games encountered, especially card games. What has promise is not always a sure thing. Chance comes into play.

“Maybe hope in dates is pointing to hope inundates. [Steiny asks could this be a potential Spoonerism?] There seems to be a surge of this emotional state of hope but some of these items, like gates and doors, seem to be hindrances.

“I like your idea that the four choices might be a cube. Could be dice, no? I think gamblers call dice bones. I'm going to look.”

Here Steiny stops to appreciate Emily W’s comment about seeing the four faces of a cube and how this relates to Gertrude Stein being influenced by Pablo Picasso’s new style of art that came to be known as cubism. Now back to discussion forum comments being made by Alenier:



Emily W also commented, “If you count daintiness and determination as one, then there are 6 things, perfect for dice. But there is still hope in solid things not in daintiness and determination.” 

Intrigued by this kind of game, Alenier offered:

Hope in gates, hope in spoons, hope in doors, hope in tables, no hope in daintiness and determination. Hope in dates.
“Ok, so the face of the dice show: gates, spoons, doors, tables, dates, and daintiness/determination.

“Or the face of the dice show: gates, spoons, doors, tables, daintiness, and determination with a surge of hope (not dates). It’s a little bit different game.

“So what happens if you roll gates--something obstructs you from winning as does doors. Rolling doors seems worse than gates because doors are a bigger obstruction because you usually can't see through it. Spoons seem positive, that surely you would receive something. If you roll daintiness that must be rewarding. The root meaning of dainty is excellent and worthy. But what would determination get you, an opportunity to barter?”