Thursday, December 11, 2008
Fina Paper Mulitmedia
Music
Music by Tom Waits
Art
Literature
A poem I wrote:
Another shit poem from shit city.
Contemplating the lights of San Francisco in theoretical jolts
hoping for the the accumulation of funds to one day say
"hey man I'm happy cos look what I got!"
Losing it in plastics and tasteless consumption.
I question whether or not I'm trampling about in Ginsburgh's bald head
all the while, they blame it on the poor for the consequences of the rich and powerful.
The bald eagles.
So let's Howl at the night in the solitude of our rooms.
Hoping that maybe we'll hear each other in the lonesome cold, beyond the distance.
Cos, honey, I've already lost the house, the car, the picket fence, the grass grown at Home Depot that i'll be damned to let anyone step on!, and all I need is that embrace.
The touch that turns crimsoned eyed demons into howlin' slobberin' puppy dogs.
AND JUST FOR FUN:
Friday, December 5, 2008
Final Assignment: Hollow City and Tripmaster Monkey
Similarly, Maxine Kingston Hong, in Trip Master Monkey, depicts a struggling artist who exudes the kind of antiestablishment beat spirit discussed in Solnit’s books. Working in a 9-to-5 job in which he advises customers to avoid purchasing the products he is responsible for selling, Wittman represents the age of beat, free spirit, drug experimenting type of lifestyle that Solnit depicts as being pushed out of San Francisco.
While differing in style, Both authors focus on place and spaces within regard to the subjects they choose to focus on, who share a similar calling within the city. Both authors depict the post beat lifestyle of San Franciscan artists. A life style that is difficult and often times at a standing conflict with the imperial capitalist society that seems to be enveloping their once beatified city.
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Web Site references
Quick synopsis of Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco.
http://www.exploratorium.edu/history/palace/index.html
Historical Movies as well as a little more in depth look at the exploratorium in the P.O.F.A
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108174/
Imdb is a popular source for dissecting the essence of films: Who was in the film, who produced, and when, how, etc...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Kerouac_Alley
Wikipedia's take on the famous Alley as well as an interesting look at the history.
http://www.eclipse.co.uk/~sl5763/panama.htm
Historical Look at the construction of the Panama Canal.
http://www.questiaschool.com/PM.qst?a=o&docId=9634907
A textual look at the relationship between The United States and Latin America. This is of interest because it addresses the Panama Canal and the nature of the relationship that lead to it's development.
Youtube.com
Good place to find scenes from the film as well as things relevant the S.F.s Contado and Imperial Roots.
"So I Married an Axe Murderer" and Gray Brechin's imperial depictions.
In continuing with Gray Brechin’s imperial study of San Francisco, The Palace of Fine Arts is a of particular interest. The Palace is located in the Marina District of San Francisco, California and was constructed in 1915 for the Panama Pacific Exposition. The Exposition was for the purpose of celebrating the completion of the Panama Canal and was supposed to serve a symbolic representation of the city‘s recovery from the earth quake of 1906. A Canal that was constructed ostensibly for the purposes of U.S. economic growth. The Palace was designed by Bernard Maybeck who modeled his construction after Roman and Greek Architecture. Among many others like it, The Palace of Fine Arts through it’s construction and historical relevancy, provides a unique perspective into the cities complicated link to manifest destiny and to the construction of an imperial city.
Beyond comedic entertainment, the film also represents the rich history of San Francisco past the typical tourist cliché’s and into the real streets and cultures themselves. Conveniently enough, the lead character is a beat poet and performs a comedic homage to the beat culture in San Francisco.
The coffee house in which he performs his on Jack Kerouac Blvd. and when he honeymoons with his new wife, he departs to a place in which he claims many Beat Poets frequented located in the outskirts of town in the woods. Other characters also represent the spirit of Beat Culture and San Franciscan ideals. Parodied through the lead characters father also play by Mike Meyers we see a comedic representation of the paranoia of large industry and corporate influence as mentioned in Brechin’s book.
With that I'll finish this post with a scene in which the late-great Phil Hartman plays a guard/tour guide at Alcatraz who does not take lightly to those who are not focused on the cliche tourist experience. As he says, "Now, what some of the other tour guides won't tell you.." I can not help but think about the reality depict in "Alcatraz in Not an Island". While this is purely a comedic film without any obvious intent towards a satirical representation of the imperialist nature of San Francisco, the scenes much like in the one posted below, cannot help but remind informed individuals as to the historical links in the film and in Gray Brechin's book.
Monday, October 20, 2008
The Secret Relationship: Gray Brechin and Brautigan.
As Gray Brechin puts it early on the text, “Thousands of men armed with such simple weapons initiated an arms race against the earth that devastated the Sierra Nevada and the Central Valley (32-33)”. As the gold rush initiated, so began the process and mining and industrialization on the earth of San Francisco, and so the begot the destruction of the natural earth revered by characters like those in Trout Fishing in America. Moreover, as Brechin articulates, the earth became section off and sold in pieces, “ By rendering nature into the abstract and interchangeable units of the marketplace, the ‘Change succeeded in dividing and distancing it, as a slaughterhouse rendered the carcasses of animals into precise units of tinned meat (38)”. This fact is addressed and responded to throughout Brautigan’s text. Specifically, in the previously mentioned section the main character ventures into a store in which he hears of a lake for sale. When he meets with a sales person he learns that the lake is sold per measurement and that the surrounding wild life and scenery is sold separately, though most all the animals have been sold already. Without Brechin’s text or a vivid understanding of the historical development of San Francisco, the text is either taken literally or the obvious metaphor is lost without a frame of reference. From Brechin, we understand that Brautigain is referring the new stream of industrialization that has been introduced and that, metaphorically, that which natural has been seized, sectioned off, and sold.
We again see the parallel between the two texts when we examine references to fish, which seems inescapable in Brautigan’s text given the name, Trout Fishing in America. Brechin articulates that, “…Hydraulicking had proved itself a great advance in land disturbance…the Yuba River, reported one observer, ‘once contained trout, but now I imagine a catfish would die in it (50)”. Brautigan also refers to the poor conditions of rivers and the fish within them subversively in a scene where a couple begin to have sex in a river when suddenly many dead fish carcasses rise up from under water and touch the semen of the man. Alone this imagery seems necromantic or at the very least, depending on your taste, disturbing. However, with Brechin in mind we see that Brautigan is in fact alluding to the conditions of rivers and animal life within them. We also see, upon closer consideration, that the fish breaking the floating semen is not merely sexual imagery, but a metaphor for natures interaction and death with the motivational essence of the men of the time, manifest destiny.
My point is simple, but a little more complex than merely drawing parallels between the two texts. What I mean to say, by drawing these comparisons, is that the two are deeply interrelated. Even more so, I mean to say that Brautigan’s work is subversively working to depict the destruction of nature at the hands of man within the formerly natural San Francisco. Alone, at least in my uninformed mind, it can be difficult to pick up on what Trout Fishing in America really aims at. At times, it seems merely like a devout man searching for trout. However, with Brechin as a guide, the subversive nature of the text becomes all too clear.
Friday, October 10, 2008
Response to Ferlinghetti's "In The Golden Gate Park That Day
Lawrence Ferlinghetti’s poetry in “San Francisco Poems” has been regarded by some people in lecture as cliché, or lacking the kind of unique poetically profound style found in let’s say Ginsberg, though at times he has also regarded in the same light. I mention this because at times it appears to me that these opinions may perhaps have been formed by overly critical or perhaps even obtuse perspectives deriving from pressures of academia or a staunch pretentiousness found in some Literature majors. Whatever the case may be, these minds tend to over look the overall motivation and process of the construction of these poems and misperceive it as a lack of skill or poetic device. For Ferlinghetti specifically, his rejection of the title “Beat” and his desire to write accessible poetry can overshadow the elaborate profoundness of his work for some. One poem in particular that has great poetic merit in my opinion is, as the title of this blog alludes to, “In Golden Gate Park That Day…”.
Now, I admit I may be reading too much into what may turn out to be a simple poem. But let the first Lit. Major who has not committed the same sin cast the first stone. This poem presents a real perspective of a couple on a typical outing with emphasis on the female perspective. A perspective that can be overlooked in Ginsberg, for example, and at times Brautigan, who exude the kind of male description of sex and to a certain degree, love. On the contrary, from Ferlinghetti we receive the critical moment in which we find the calm rosy picture of a couple’s outing to the park obstructed by real human emotion relayed by fitting imagery.
yet fingering the old flute
which nobody played
and finally looking over
at him
without any particular expression
except a certain awful look
of terrible depression
Noticeably, in this poem there are lines that are common and could be regarded by some as cliché. For instance, in the first set of lines Ferlinghetti reiterates the line “the meadow of the world”. However, whatever arguments made towards calling this poem cliché are sufficiently countered when presented with the final lines quoted above. Here we see virile imagery that alludes to many things without specifically calling them out. For instance, the flute which nobody plays alludes to the fact that perhaps the statement of visibly bringing a flute to the park is for mere aesthetics and part of a false artistry. Surely, we’ve all seen friends and strangers with expensive guitars that only serve the purpose of decoration. Secondly, the women’s “awful look of terrible depression” reveals much more than what one who less familiar would associate with Beat. In this instance, we see real emotion and, arguable, a breakdown of the beat utopia and the patriarchal structure of relationships that can also rear its head in the most leftist of movements. We see, like at times in Brautigan, the visceral side of the life style, but from a female perspective. We see the companion who may be a fraud and the other, who seems to be longing from something more than the life style and what could be interpreted as a subordinate role. Ferlinghetti presents this in an altogether subversive and artistic manner.
Typically we find a deep dedication to artistry, a rejection of the capitalist consumerism, and the stride towards a certain ideal utopia. In contrast, Ferlinghetti presents us with something completely in opposition; he presents us with the reality in the scope of a simple trip to the park. In this simple trip he reveals much more about the nature of relationships, gender, and how these discourses in the setting of the San Francisco liberal movement interact. How then could one make the argument that these poems are altogether cliché?
My point is simply that Ferlinghetti allots more to the discussion than simple clichés and typical representations of Beat culture. While Ginsberg certainly presents us with virile emotion and expressions of human nature and disdain, he does it from an arguably academic poetically experienced language, essentially eliminating the common person from understanding or empathizing with his words. Ferlinghetti merges the two while not relinquishing a certain profoundness about the realities of the culture we are currently studying. Brautigan, as I had mentioned earlier, does the same but from a limited scope and one in which the common person may have trouble associating with. Is it not entirely unique then, when presented with these well regarded poetically fashioned poets, for another poet to emerge and use language that preserves his profundity while simultaneously reaching a larger audience? In my opinion, his adamant denial of introduction in the Beat genre is for a specific reason, and in poems like “In Golden Gate Park That Day…” one can make a sufficient argument that he expresses this rejection.