Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 ‘Longing for perfection’: history and utopia in Louis Zukofsky
- 2 ‘Atlantis buried outside’: Muriel Rukeyser, myth and war
- 3 Slipping the cog: Charles Olson and Cold War history
- 4 Husky phlegm and spoken lonesomeness: poetry against the Vietnam War
- 5 ‘You can be the music yourself’: Amiri Baraka's attitudes, 1974–80
- 6 Figures of inward: Language poetry and the end of the avant-garde
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Slipping the cog: Charles Olson and Cold War history
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2017
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 ‘Longing for perfection’: history and utopia in Louis Zukofsky
- 2 ‘Atlantis buried outside’: Muriel Rukeyser, myth and war
- 3 Slipping the cog: Charles Olson and Cold War history
- 4 Husky phlegm and spoken lonesomeness: poetry against the Vietnam War
- 5 ‘You can be the music yourself’: Amiri Baraka's attitudes, 1974–80
- 6 Figures of inward: Language poetry and the end of the avant-garde
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
In a key episode of his legend, Charles Olson was born as a poet when he died as a political organiser. Beyond this, the relation between Olson's two careers has gone unspecified in narratives of his creative development. The clean break described in Tom Clark's detailed biography has been countered only by perverse portraits such as Robert von Hallberg's otherwise shrewd account, which presents the poet as an uncritical politically centrist defender of US imperialism, unreconstructed from his days as a New Dealer – a view that has persisted to the present day, as in Heriberto Yépez's less incisive Empire of Neomemory. All accounts either see Olson breaking from politics or continuing already established liberal-democratic convictions in the humanities. The key question regarding Olson, still, concerns what he considered himself to have left behind, and what aspects of the category ‘political organiser’ we might consider him to have pursued in poetry, prose and wider cultural practices where, famously, ‘the affairs of men remain a chief concern’. The argument of this chapter is that Olson abandoned what he called ‘the trick of politics’ being staged in an increasingly corporate and bureaucratic party-political system for a more meaningful sense of the political where his agency could register actively in a particular constituency. Explaining his decision to become a poet in a letter to Ruth Benedict, Olson makes such a motive clear from the outset:
I regret we are not city states here in this wide land. Differentiation, yes. But also the chance for a person like yourself or myself to be central to social action at the same time and because of one's creative work.
This early vision of polis, and of the role the poet might play in ‘social action’ from within it, gives us the germ of a concern that would occupy Olson throughout his writing career.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Crisis and the US Avant-GardePoetry and Real Politics, pp. 66 - 90Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2015