Proust Questionnaire: 17 questions with Marjorie Perloff
By Yeow Kai Chai
Her formidable reputation precedes her: Marjorie Perloff is one of America's most revered critical analysts of modern poetry. Over the past few decades, her advocacy of authors who are often dismissed as obtuse, leftfield or difficult has advanced intelligent discussion about literature and the state of pedagogy. Linking various fields of poetry, inter-media and the visual arts, her many books and essays have been landmarks in changing people's mindsets about modernist and postmodernist writings. She ranges widely from modernist greats like Eliot, Yeats and Pound to the Black Mountain Poets, the New York Poets, the Beats, the Language Poets and finally to the many-splintered 21st-century poetics and yet, as critic Frank Kermode aptly puts it, she is fun to read. Poet and academic Peter Barry considers Perloff "a theorist whose work has maintained its distinctiveness in the face of the rapid homogenisation of literary criticism and theory
We need her distinctive voice more than ever." Her latest book, Unoriginal Genius: Poetry by Other Means in the New Century (2010), zeroes in on the phenomenon of contemporary poets who remix and recycle expressions in an age of information overload. A professor emerita of English at Stanford University, she is currently scholar-in-residence at the University of Southern California. 1) What are you reading right now? But so far as new American things go, I just read Rae Armantrout's excellent new Just Saying and Aldon Nielsen's witty and moving book of poems A Brand New Beggar, Craig Dworkin's The Crystal Text (his riff on Clark Coolidge's book by that title), John Wilkinson's Reckitt's Blue. 2) If you were a famous literary character in a novel, play or poem, what would you be and why? 3) What is the greatest misconception about you? 4) Name one living writer and one dead writer you most identify with, and tell us why. Dead: Ludwig Wittgenstein the most brilliant mind I know; I try to get inside it even if I can't. 5) Do you believe in writer's block? If so, how do you overcome it? 6) What qualities do you most admire in a writer? 7) What is one trait you most deplore in writing or writers? 8) Can you recite your favourite line from a literary work or a piece of advice from a writer? 9) Complete this sentence: Few people know this, but I... 10) You're a fan of OuLiPo which generates texts using procedural devices as it provides discipline. Is discipline lacking in much of what's being published today, and if so, why do you think that is so? Most of what passes for poetry today is not poetry at all just lines arbitrarily arranged in some sequence with extra words and boring sentiments. 11) What is your favourite word, and what is your least favourite one? Unfavourite word: "like" used as connective. 12) You've said we live in a technological age, and that the digital media has revolutionised writing and publishing. How technologically savvy are you? 13) What object is indispensable to you when you write? 14) What is the best time of the day for writing? 15) If you have a last supper, which three literary figures, real or fictional, would you invite to the soiree, and why? Proust had a kind of X-ray vision and I would like to sit next to him at dinner just as he sat next to the model for the Duchesse de Guermantes. Stein could be nasty to her dinner companions but she too saw exactly what was going on. And Beckett...well, he was the most profound of the three and sitting next to him at dinner would be a revelation! 16) What would you write in your own "letter to a young literary critic"? 17) What would you write on your own tombstone? _____
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