Ebony and Irony

White Trash Blues: Class Priv­i­lege vs. White Privilege

Jen­nifer Kesler has some good points in this post from the blog Blind Priv­i­lege (see below for her com­ments indent­ed after mine), and the com­ment stream is worth read­ing as well. I don't nec­es­sar­i­ly believe every­thing she believes, but a lot of it rang true for me. I grew up know­ing black peo­ple from TV, but nowhere else. When I was eleven or so, my great-aunt died and I found out I had cousins who were of mixed race. That was the first I'd heard of it: no one had ever men­tioned it before. So my moth­er and I (my father worked, of course) rode from Elmi­ra NY to Albany NY by bus for the funer­al, and even now I remem­ber it not being much fun. It was all stress all the time when we got there, as fam­i­ly secrets got blown up and out of pro­por­tion and I skat­ed around my just-told-about cousins' race as I knew I ought to, but my grand­fa­ther didn't. That's all I'll say about that.

Then my cousin David asked if he could take me around the city. My moth­er hesitated–she had been the one keep­ing the secret from me, after all–and then said yes. I'd like to say I wasn't ner­vous, but I was. I remem­ber strug­gling with what I knew was the right thing to do–I wasn't a Boy Scout for nothing–but stopped wor­ry­ing when I found out David and I read the same authors of what were then called 'men's fic­tion:' Mack Bolan, Eric Van Lust­bad­er, some oth­ers. We also shared the same pas­sion for mar­tial arts movies. We got into his car and drove around, where I was intro­duced to and talked with his friends, and he bought me pop and a can­dy bar. We came back. End of story.

The next black per­son I met was in high school, sev­er­al years later.

***

One oth­er rel­e­vant bit from my life. I noticed no class dis­tinc­tions when I was younger. I knew we didn't have much mon­ey, but I was almost proud of that, not envi­ous of oth­er kids who seemed to have more. We made it through life, the way oth­er peo­ple around us did. My dad worked con­struc­tion six or sev­en months every year for 60+ hours a week, then relaxed for the win­ter, able to live, albeit not ter­ri­bly well, on unem­ploy­ment com­pen­sa­tion dur­ing the win­ter. We had a big-ass gar­den, my broth­er and father kept us in veni­son dur­ing the sea­son and the win­ter, and often Dad would help butch­er cows in exchange for some of the meat. Dur­ing this trip my moth­er and I took to Albany, though, we were in a tough stretch. Dad didn't get called back to work for two years or so, and every­thing seemed tight. He and my moth­er picked apples, he picked up mechanic's work when he could, he even end­ed up doing these odd jobs for neigh­bors, jobs that usu­al­ly fell to me or my broth­er. I remem­ber dis­tinct­ly, when prod­ded to join the con­ver­sa­tion, that I said to my new­ly-met cousin Roy: "Do you know my entire out­fit cost a dol­lar at the Sal­va­tion Army?" Roy laughed uncer­tain­ly. My grand­par­ents, already drunk, laughed. My moth­er red­dened up, and after a bit, I fig­ured out I had said some­thing I shouldn't have. I shouldn't have men­tioned it because it was clear as we sat in their big house in the city drink­ing from fan­cy chi­na cups, that the way we lived was different.

***

This is the last bit of per­son­al stuff. This past year my 20-year high school reunion came up. With a new­born and an ill wife, I knew I wouldn't make it, but via Face­book and oth­er means I recon­nect­ed with some old class­mates, one of whom I spoke with on the phone, and after the usu­al exchanges–kids job family–I men­tioned the sub­ject mat­ter of my writing–rural, Appalachi­an, some­what depressing–and he lis­tened, fair­ly inter­est­ed, I guess, until I men­tioned my just-post-col­lege dis­cov­ery that some of the schol­ar­ship mon­ey I used to get through my under­grad career was mon­ey des­ig­nat­ed for "poor kids from the area." "I didn't know my fam­i­ly were part of a rur­al poor demo­graph­ic like that," I said. He said,"that's because nobody had any mon­ey where we grew up." I cog­i­tat­ed on that for days after I got off the phone, and that's where my fas­ci­na­tion begins. There's no end in sight.

"If you blog about white priv­i­lege, you’re prob­a­bly sick to death of peo­ple play­ing the “white trash” card in your com­ments. Their argu­ment usu­al­ly goes some­thing like this: 

  • Being white didn’t give me all these priv­i­leges you’re talk­ing about.”
  • I know plen­ty of [minor­i­ty] peo­ple who are bet­ter off than I am.”
  • And the advanced ver­sion, which I’m guilty of using myself: “It’s real­ly more about class than it’s about race.”

I am “poor white trash”. I can relate to all of the state­ments above. I grew up look­ing the part of Aver­age White Girl, but mid­dle class white peo­ple always pegged me as “dif­fer­ent”. This left me vul­ner­a­ble to los­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties and even jobs to white peo­ple who “fit in” bet­ter. Also, after my fam­i­ly made its great escape from White Trash Hell into Mid­dle Class Pur­ga­to­ry, I learned to my sur­prise that there were black kids in the world who’d grown up with more mon­ey than I ever had. And so on, and so forth.

Here’s where the con­fu­sion comes in. Yes, I have a legit­i­mate griev­ance against the sys­tem. Yes, I’ve lost out on things because I didn’t have the $20 to invest or know the mag­ic social pass­word that would have marked me “nor­mal” (read: “mid­dle class, prefer­ably white”). And yes, it hurts when you don’t fit in with your own race because of your class, and you don’t fit in with your class because of your race. It’s hard to see priv­i­lege around that stuff, but the exam­ples are out there.

Wealth gets you a tick­et, but it doesn’t guar­an­tee you a seat 

One of the black kids I went to school with whose fam­i­ly was rich­er than mine? We dis­cov­ered we’d giv­en iden­ti­cal answers on a test, and she’d got­ten some of them marked wrong while I got 100%. When we exam­ined her oth­er papers, we real­ized the teacher had been doing this for some time: “giv­ing” the black girl a less­er grade. And one of the Jew­ish girls I knew whose fam­i­ly was rich­er than mine? When she was absent for a Jew­ish hol­i­day and missed a test, one of her teach­ers decid­ed to teach her a les­son by refus­ing to let her make up that test any­time but on a Sat­ur­day — the Jew­ish sab­bath. The teacher offered tru­ly pathet­ic excus­es why after school, dur­ing lunch and dur­ing the girl’s study peri­od wouldn’t work. Sun­day wouldn’t work because it was the teacher’s Chris­t­ian sab­bath! The girl’s moth­er had to call the prin­ci­pal and threat­en to bring the ACLU into it before she got a prop­er time slot to retake the test.

I’ve nev­er been pulled over for “look­ing like you’re out of your neigh­bor­hood” (unless you count the time I was lost in a snot­ty part of Bev­er­ly Hills in an Amer­i­can car, gasp!). I’m not near­ly as like­ly to get pulled over for traf­fic vio­la­tions as black or Lati­no peo­ple, even if they grew up with more mon­ey than I did. Tak­ing things a step fur­ther, I’ve nev­er felt pres­sured to join a gang just to sur­vive. I’ve nev­er wor­ried I’m going to get shot in my own neigh­bor­hood (and I’ve lived in some neigh­bor­hoods the white mid­dle class con­sid­ers “bad”)."

That white skin would get you a seat, if only you had a ticket 

My approach is to look at all the types of priv­i­lege that affect an indi­vid­ual. Take me, for exam­ple. I have white priv­i­lege and het­ero­sex­u­al priv­i­lege and able-bod­ied priv­i­lege work­ing for me; I have class priv­i­lege and male priv­i­lege work­ing against me. In the case of poor whites, the class priv­i­lege often takes more from them than the white priv­i­lege gives them
(i.e., the col­lege admis­sions board pre­fer my skin col­or, but if I can’t some­how pay tuition, I’m not get­ting in). In my per­son­al expe­ri­ence, white priv­i­lege may be a total bust, and I have the right to feel that way: I do not have the right to mud­dy a dis­cus­sion of white priv­i­lege with all my anti-priv­i­leges. But before I learned to sep­a­rate the types of priv­i­lege, I’m afraid I prob­a­bly did that once or twice. Not in the “minori­ties have it so easy” tone that marks one type of troll; I just couldn’t fig­ure out which part of this stuff I wasn’t getting."

Posted in class, Jennifer Kesler, privilege, white trash | Leave a comment

Redneck Gottdamn Rampage!

I played this game with all my spare time back in the mid-90s when com­put­er games were so much more fun than they are now. Its graph­ics are prim­i­tive, the plot is nonex­is­tent. It's a first-per­son shoot­er. I hate those kind of games, but this one holds a spe­cial place in my heart, and to hear that some­one patched it to work in XP and Vista just means I'm going to lose even more time with it. It ain't pret­ty, it's godaw­ful­ly non-pc, espe­cial­ly if you down­load the cuss pack, but so much fun. I should hate this game, but I can't. And now, you can play it too. Don't say you weren't warned, and don't say I nev­er gave you anything.

http://​www​.gog​.com/​e​n​/​g​a​m​e​c​a​r​d​/​r​e​d​n​e​c​k​_​r​a​m​p​a​g​e​_​c​o​l​l​e​c​t​ion

Posted in redneck rampage, vista, XP | Leave a comment

Bonding, by Jarrid Deaton


My father, an old slaugh­ter­house man, decid­ed to keep hens on our prop­er­ty around my twelfth birth­day. The coop was an unbal­anced struc­ture that sat close to the cold white bricks of the slaugh­ter­house and just down from our garage. One night, not long after trad­ing for some chick­ens with a hunter who want­ed his deer butchered, my father came stum­bling in my room yelling that he had some­thing great to show me, to get my boots on and fol­low him. I was half asleep as we slid across the wet grass and over to the old weath­er-worn coop—all boards and rust­ed metal—that held about four­teen hens. He shined a flash­light at the roof of the hen house and the beam uncov­ered six brown bats hang­ing from the wire that drooped from the ceil­ing. He reached around to his back and pulled out a .45 and start­ed shoot­ing before I could even fig­ure out what was going on. The bats explod­ed, noth­ing but a mist of blood and fur, and flopped to the floor mix­ing with the black and white chick­en shit. I start­ed cry­ing. My father shook me hard by the shoul­ders, told me to tough­en up. He asked me if I want­ed to get rabies. I sobbed, told him no, no I didn't.

The next morn­ing I had to clean the hen house. Over in the cor­ner, the ruined parts of a moth­er bat caught my atten­tion. A baby was attached to it, still alive. I could see the thing's tiny heart as it beat under its skin. I watched until it stopped. I put what was left of the moth­er and the baby in the creek then ran close to the garage and they float­ed away, pulled by the cur­rent down through the white waste suds from the slaugh­ter­house and out of sight.

Jar­rid Deaton lives and writes in east­ern Ken­tucky. He received his MFA in Writ­ing from Spald­ing Uni­ver­si­ty. His work has appeared or is forth­com­ing in Pear Noir! Zygote in My Cof­fee, Six Sen­tences, and elsewhere.

Posted in bonding, jarrid deaton, story | Leave a comment

Times I Nearly Died, non-fiction by Murray Dunlap

When I was born, with High­line Mem­brane Dis­ease. The doc­tors gave me even odds. My father was out hunt­ing, drunk.

When Scar­let Fever found me.

When the old dude who lived next door’s tree house gave way to one hun­dred feet of tree limbs, hit­ting and falling, then hit­ting again. My tor­so tan­gled in the rope swing, dan­gling six feet above the hard, root-filled dirt.

When my father took me hunt­ing, drunk, and shot a hole through the hood of our truck. When my father took me anywhere.

When my broth­er threw a brick at my head in ambush. His aim was very good.

When I learned to dri­ve. When I learned to drink. When I learned to com­bine them.

When I intro­duced my girl­friend to my father. When my father met her moth­er. When my father mar­ried her moth­er. When that girl said, “Let’s keep dating.”

When I was jog­ging, then hit by a car, and my body flipped up onto the hood. My face pressed to the glass, inch­es from the driver’s face. When the dri­ver slammed on the brakes, cat­a­pult­ing me off the hood and into the street. I nev­er found my radio.

When I learned my col­lege dor­mi­to­ry would be coed. When I looked in the mir­ror, naked, and thought about what that meant.

When the red­neck shot me with a blow-gun and all I could think of was poi­son. When my moth­er arrived at the hos­pi­tal with her shirt on back­wards and inside out. When we got home and a man I didn’t know sat at the kitchen table, smok­ing cigarettes.

When my broth­er mar­ried and moved away. When he and his wife let me hold their first-born child.

When the boat ran in reverse, and no one knew it but me, waltz­ing with pro­peller blades in six feet of water.

When I free climbed a 100 foot pitch, in hik­ing boots, because I couldn’t lis­ten to that girl say one more word.

When I climbed the Grand Teton, and the rope wasn’t long enough. I start­ed up the pitch, not yet on Belay, with 5,000 feet of expo­sure. When the guide final­ly made the top, clipped in, and turned around smil­ing. He laughed. My fin­ger­tips bled.

When I quit climbing.

When I quit that girl.

When I for­gave my dying alco­holic father, and he looked at me and asked, “For what?” When, at the funer­al, my father’s best friend squint­ed and asked me, “Why couldn’t you have been a team play­er?” and I smelled whiskey on his breath.

When I asked the new girl to mar­ry me, guess­ing I had even odds.

When she said “Of course.” Fran­tic, I asked, “Does that mean yes?”

When she said, “Yes. That means yes.”

When we drank a few bot­tles of wine, after the mar­riage, and we dis­cussed mov­ing to Mobile.

When she said, “Well, we both have par­ents there.” When I said, “and the ocean and the Bay is so close.” I looked at our dog and asked, “What do you think, girl? Should we move?” When she, of course, said nothing.

In the morn­ing, I want­ed to take all our recy­cling to the cen­ter so there would be room for that evening’s guests.

I made it exact­ly one half mile before I eased through a green light and a man on the right side of the inter­sec­tion decid­ed he could make it if he gunned it. So he made it up to 40mph before he hit me. When it was a sol­id hit, push­ing me into the next lane and get­ting hit by an SUV, mind­ing its own business.

The worst part is that I knew the peo­ple in the SUV and worse still was hav­ing known their eldest son, who killed him­self. I thought about it for months after­wards, “Why them, and for God’s sake, why me?”

They are the nicest peo­ple, and I nev­er even remem­ber hit­ting the brakes. In fact, I don’t remem­ber a soli­tary thing. Every­thing I know has been told to me. Some­times, when I look at the pic­tures, some­one with car-knowl­edge will be sure to say, “No way any­one sur­vived that wreck!” I sheep­ish­ly raise my hand and tell them, “Well I did.”

When then they say, “You are one lucky motherfucker.”

I try to think of that state­ment when I’m either get­ting in or out of the wheel­chair and not feel­ing very lucky.

So after that I was told the old high school was keep­ing my job secure for me. My wife had start­ed her fundrais­ing job for the school while I was recovering.

When I felt like a char­i­ty case.

When I went to ther­a­py 5 days a week and tried to get myself bet­ter. When it was no use. When I decid­ed I should try myself.

So I thought as an act of inde­pen­dence, I should clean myself up with­out help. I got my hands clean and was wash­ing my face before I fell. I had got­ten blur­ry vision in the wreck which was wors­ened by the soap get­ting in my eyes.

When I got dizzy and fell. I tried to stop my fall by grab­bing a hand tow­el. It slowed me down but then my weight kicked in and the tow­el bar came fly­ing out of the wall.

When I hit the floor, butt–first. When I real­ized I was okay and grabbed the side of the counter-top. When I pulled myself up to a stand­ing posi­tion and grabbed the now fall­en hand tow­el to wipe my face. When I real­ized how far back the wheel­chair had become and knew I couldn’t make it.

When I got myself back down on the floor and crawled to the wheelchair.

When I thought, as I was pulling myself up to the seat, “Why is my life like this?”

When I decid­ed, “Back to therapy.”

Then I thought about Shane. He had been my best friend. Shane, as usu­al, was out kayak­ing. It was a freak acci­dent. He just want­ed to shake the leaves out of his hair.

So Shane, like always, wig­gled his hips and flipped the kayak over. So far, so good. Then when he had fin­ished an under­wa­ter shake and tried to flip back to the sur­face, he real­ized that his kayak was stuck between a fall­en tree and a rock.

When he couldn’t get the rest of the turn done. He stared up at the sur­face and tried every­thing he could think of. But he was where he was and not able to get the kayak free, he final­ly couldn’t stand it and took a breath.

What that real­ly meant was suck­ing a large amount of water into his lungs. I’m sure that at that moment, he thought about his wife Ali­son and if she would be okay? Then he drowned.

When Ali­son told me the news.

When my broth­er told me that the name of his lit­tle girl, who was in my arms, was Alli­son. I smiled and looked up and said “All right Shane, she is fine. Don’t need to wor­ry about her.”

When­ev­er I see Alli­son and she smiles and says, “Hi Uncle Mur­ray, let’s have some fun!”

When, on some days, it brings tears to my eyes.

When on most days, it makes me smile.


Mur­ray Dunlap’s
fic­tion has appeared in the Vir­ginia Quar­ter­ly Review, Post Road, Night Train, New Delta Review, Red Moun­tain Review, Silent Voic­es and Smoke­long Quar­ter­ly and oth­ers. His sto­ries have been twice nom­i­nat­ed to the Push­cart Prize and to Best New Amer­i­can Voic­es, and his first book, Alaba­ma, was a final­ist for the Mau­rice Prize in Fic­tion. After very near­ly being killed in a ter­ri­ble car wreck, the writer uses this site to vent: http://​www​.mur​ray​dun​lap​.com/.







Posted in murray dunlap, non-fiction, time i nearly died | 14 Comments

Points To Consider: White Trash or Not?


One can hope this woman is employ­ing irony. Let's look at why women might label them­selves this way:

  • They want to get laid, eas­i­ly (but does any woman –white trash or no–need to employ any­thing to do that?)
  • They want to show that they are not, in fact, as easy as their cloth­ing might, uh, imply. Note that the mes­sage is repeat­ed, in case you didn't get it, or quite under­stand, the first time you gazed into her chestal area and noticed words.
  • Or is it a case of increduli­ty and miss­ing punc­tu­a­tion? As in 'fuck ME, I'm white trash?!?'

I have known women who might describe them­selves as white trash or red­neck, or might believe oth­ers think of them in that way, but not a one of them would have ever worn a shirt such as this. Maybe 'I'm with Stu­pid–>' or 'Baby Down Below' or 'Ewe's Not Fat, Ewe's Fluffy,' but noth­ing so egre­gious as this. In oth­er words, they would think they were too classy, or they actu­al­ly were. And they were right.

Near Mans­field, Penn­syl­va­nia, twen­ty years or so ago, I imbibed at a place called Put­nam Park. Just out­side of town, it had the major dis­ad­van­tage of being a pop­u­lar water­ing hole with locals and stu­dents alike.This led, of course, the the town­ie-stu­dent bat­tle­ground every small-town col­lege expe­ri­ences. It got ugly some­times. When my friends and I came in, hav­ing dri­ven an Econo­line van with no attached seats four or five miles out of town the wrong way down a one-way street –we were already half in the bag drink­ing Miller from a gal­lon milk jug–we met up with some, shall we say, unruly and restive natives glow­er­ing at us from under the brims of their hats. Now, I was a large man, even then, and my com­padres, a tall in shape bass play­er named Mike,and his some­what small­er but fierce girl­friend Leslie, were not par­tic­u­lar­ly wor­ried about a chilly recep­tion. We were mel­low, and we came to hear the band, and kept to our­selves. No problem.

How­ev­er, what I had failed to con­sid­er was this: my sis­ter and broth­er-in-law drank here too, on nights the col­lege stu­dents didn't come. I had heard well-sub­stan­ti­at­ed rumors about my brother-in-law's rep­u­ta­tion in this place, with peo­ple not know­ing who I was or what fam­i­lies I was attached to, who my peo­ple were. He was red-head­ed and occa­sion­al­ly ill-tempered,and more than a lit­tle cocky, which descrip­tion also fit me, though I'm sort of more brown-head­ed. Any­way, I knew some peo­ple there,and nod­ded to them in the way you do to peo­ple you know but don't gen­er­al­ly speak to, drank my rum and cokes, and had a good time. Until I got talk­ing. To a woman, some­what old­er and more well-worn than I was. You can see where this might lead.

We spoke, we got on famous­ly, she pulled me into the small bath­room to neck a lit­tle. I was will­ing to go along, and chewed the spot above her shoulder's rose tat­too for some time. She said, "hon­ey, what's your name?" as she messed around at the front of my jeans. I said my name, and she said "Sweet Jesus, I know your ma and dad,"and pushed me into the sink and left me hang­ing. Now I tried, with all the liquorous pas­sion and rhetoric that drunk and smart-assed 19-year olds can muster to get back to where we had been, her breath a sweet fun­nel of cig­a­rette and vod­ka that I can still taste, but noth­ing doing. She shut me off cold. I under­stood, sort of. I decid­ed to have anoth­er drink.

I sat at the bar for a bit, and some guys play­ing pool began look­ing me over. I think now I'd call it a glow­er. My imag­i­na­tion then was near­ly unbound­ed, and I could see all kinds of dis­as­ter hap­pen­ing, now that my friends had dis­ap­peared. I chose to hit the pay phone and call the fam­i­ly clos­est to me in dis­tance, my sis­ter. I called col­lect, at rough­ly some time in the ear­ly AM, and she came to get me in their blue Fire­bird. I was hap­py to get out. Now, in a dra­mat­ic sto­ry meant to illus­trate how red­neck women oper­ate, she might have tried to kick my dumb ass herself,or those guys in the bar might have been sent by my para­mour-of-the-moment to knock me around a lit­tle, maybe shove me under a truck to loosen my hang­over. But none of that hap­pened. The sit­u­a­tion hinged on maybes and unspo­ken rules and the sheer bril­liance of my trust in the fact that in the world I come from–yes, some red­necks might be involved–people are gen­er­al­ly good to one anoth­er and thought­ful, and don't want to be fuck­ups or to screw the son of their friends, and sis­ters don't want to beat their dumb­fuck broth­ers over the head with their own idiocy–all of this exact­ly oppo­site of the white trash/redneck stereotype.

So let's hope the woman in the pic­ture is cul­ti­vat­ing her sense of irony. Cer­tain­ly, no actu­al white trash woman would wear that shirt. Only the pretenders.

Posted in mansfield, putnam park, redneck, white trash | 1 Comment

The Map of Your World


This tells you every­thing you need to know. No kidding.

I real­ly am going to con­cen­trate more on this fine place I've dug for myself, soon. In the inter­im, I've dis­cov­ered that gas and oil leas­es in my home coun­ty, Brad­ford Coun­ty in Penn­syl­va­nia, has seen a huge uptick in gas and oil leas­es in the last few years, with plans to use injec­tion well meth­ods in which the poi­soned waste-water is allowed to drain back into the ground…hmm. Hope you like a lit­tle crap in your water, folks. And trucks on your back­roads break­ing shit down.

I don't know enough about it yet, but I don't trust that any­one will do the right thing any­more. Here's an arti­cle from the Wyalus­ing Rock­et-Couri­er for more:

It seems it is only a mat­ter of time, and not all that much time at that, before there are injec­tion wells in Brad­ford Coun­ty. That was one of the points made Tues­day night at Towan­da High School by a pan­el of experts on the process. The oth­er point, expressed over and over again, is that this deep under­ground dis­pos­al of gas pro­duc­tion wastewater—where hun­dreds of thou­sands of gal­lons of water are uti­lized at each gas well site for drilling and fracturing—is seem­ing­ly safe with mul­ti­ple pro­tec­tions in place to ensure drink­ing water is not tainted.

Posted in bad water, bullshit, gas, maps, oil | Leave a comment

Submissions and Et Cetera

I hope the long silence doesn't pre­vent you all from sub­mit­ting. I'm back on the stick now and look­ing for mate­r­i­al, and all pre­vi­ous sub­mis­sions have been cleared (thank you very much for sending).

I'm off now to catch up at the Night Train.

Posted in back on the stick, night train, submissions | Leave a comment

Appalachia's Agony


Gakked from Jim Tom­lin­son on Face­book. Let's hope Pres­i­dent Oba­ma notices.

The long­stand­ing dis­grace of moun­tain­top min­ing is now square­ly in Pres­i­dent Obama’s hands. 

A recent court deci­sion has giv­en the green light to as many as 90 moun­tain­top min­ing projects in Appalachia’s coal-rich hills, which in turn could destroy more than 200 miles of val­leys and streams on top of the 1,200 miles that have already been oblit­er­at­ed. The right course for the admin­is­tra­tion is clear: stop the projects until the under­ly­ing reg­u­la­tions are revised so as to end the prac­tice altogether.

And buy Jim's new col­lec­tion of sto­ries, Noth­ing Like an Ocean. You won't be disappointed.

Posted in Appalachia, jim tomlinson, mountaintop mining, nothing like an ocean | Leave a comment

Get On the Bus

The Affrilachi­an poets are off on anoth­er bus tour of Cen­tral and South­ern Appalachia, bring­ing poems every­where they go. Too bad they're not mak­ing the trip far­ther into Yan­kee territory.

The Affrilachi­an Poets: A His­to­ry of the Word

What’s In a Name?

In 1991, Frank X Walk­er learned he did not exist.

That year, a read­ing in Lex­ing­ton, Ken­tucky, fea­tured four authors from the blue­grass state and poet Nikky Finney. Dubbed “The Best of South­ern Writ­ing,” the read­ing changed the course of Walker’s life. The orig­i­nal title of the event, “The Best of Appalachi­an Writ­ing,” had been altered to accom­mo­date Finney, a South Car­oli­na native. Finney, who is African-Amer­i­can, was the sole voice of col­or in the lineup. 

There are so many good poets out there; I despair of ever catch­ing up. I know and enjoy the work of Frank X. Walk­er, Nik­ki Finney and Crys­tal Wilkin­son, and am look­ing for­ward to read­ing more of these poets when my stacks get less intimidating.

I should men­tion I learned of this through Travis Nichols' post on Har­ri­et, which is a love­ly place to find dis­course on all kinds of poems and poets. It seems strange to me that his post has exact­ly no com­ments, when most any­thing on any obscure or tired sub­ject gets a few experts in line to quib­ble or aug­ment. This post has been up for a few days, and no one's showed. Make of that what you will.

Posted in affrilachian poets, crystal wilkinson, frank x. walker, harriet, nikki finney | 1 Comment

Not Dead Yet

I'm slow­ly get­ting back to things. Rough hol­i­day season.

Here's the Pedestal's inter­view with Ron Rash.

Posted in interview, pedestal, ron rash | 1 Comment