Showing posts with label Paige Clifton-Steele. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paige Clifton-Steele. Show all posts

Sunday, March 20, 2011

An Interview with Suzy McKee Charnas

I'm pleased to reprint here Paige Clifton-Steele's interview with Suzy McKee Charnas, which appears in the current issue of the Aqueduct Gazette.

 An Interview with Suzy McKee Charnas
by Paige Clifton-Steele

Suzy McKee Charnas’ Dorothea Dreams, first published in 1987, which is as intricate and ethical a work as her better-known Holdfast Trilogy, has been brought back to print under Aqueduct’s new Heirloom imprint. Set against the backdrop of invisibilized urban struggles over race and inequality and the isolated drama of Land Art, Dorothea Dreams is a drama that links people of many peripheries—people at the edges of populated space and the edges of public American consciousness—together in a graceful ghost story. Aqueduct goes into depth with Suzy about her writing, her characters, and her art. 

Aqueduct: Dorothea Dreams takes for its narrators two women whose position in society is precarious, counterposing the different kinds of exclusion and the different degrees to which the women (Dorothea the white elder and Bianca the Latina child) have the power to choose that position, and binds them by the common thread of male violence. What else connects these two characters, if anything?

Suzy: Ambition, however repressed or disguised; a degree of self-chosen invisibility; quick wits and flexibility in the face of exigency; strong willfulness; daring and intelligence. And probably a lot of other things that aren’t that clear to me.

Aqueduct: Dorothea Dreams takes up ideas of possession and escape to transform them into concepts that increasingly resemble one another. Dorothea herself is a woman artist whose life is possessed by the towering figures of the literal ghost who haunts her and her obsessive desert artwork. Both have a hold on her that she escapes by the end of the book, and yet both “escapes” are partial. There can be no total severance of Dorothea and her art, Dorothea and her ghost.

Suzy: Well, she escapes from the art because Roberto’s damage of it releases her—perfection is no longer possible, acceptance of the imperfect occurs, and with acceptance comes forward motion, instead of the stasis of the perfect.

As for the ghost, Dorothea takes it into and makes it part of herself—again, acceptance, not of the course of action urged on her by the ghost but of the fact that she has been that person in that situation making that choice, but that she is now a more advanced version of that person, making instead a braver choice, to mix in with chaotic and dangerous events instead of avoiding them, and take her chances with the consequences.

Aqueduct: Likewise, the character of Bianca cannot escape from the neighborhood she comes from. It’s striking that Bianca’s escape from her neighborhood becomes an intrusion on Dorothea’s escape from the New York art world, and that these events happen against the background of a history of shifting borders in the American West. Is “escape” a total fantasy in a world in which every piece of land is someone’s neighborhood, or can it be recast as a new way of negotiating neighborhood? Is our very idea of “escape” a politically charged one?

Suzy: The physical frontier in this country did in fact represent possibilities of escape from class boundaries and, often, lifelong poverty for both Spanish and Caucasian settlers, but usually at the expense of others (the Indians, imported slaves from Africa or exploited labor from China and Ireland). Add the fact that for many settlers of the west the constantly moving frontier provided a literal escape from established systems on the eastern coast, and you have a wildly fractionated and heavily charged palimpsest of “escape” facts, metaphors, and, of course, frustrations (“wherever you go, there you are”).

Aqueduct: Carolyn Ives Gilman, in Narrative Power, draws out some of the dangers of the tropes of novelistic narrative—its emphasis on the personal over the communal, the simple over the complex, conflict over consensus-building. In its very structure, Dorothea Dreams seems to argue (or at least entertain the possibility) that it’s possible to have it all: that the human interest story and the current events story can coexist. Can you talk about your attitude to storytelling? Is there any friction between the integrity of the characters you create and their suitability to illustrate the conflicts and connections that they do? Or is the unity of the political and the personal a perfect one in the storytelling? If the focus on a few characters necessarily reduces a giant story, how do you as author ensure an illuminating rather than reductive simplification?

Suzy: Look, you don’t ensure anything in this enterprise. People tend to look at finished work and read into it a great deal more pre-planning and control than actually existed in the process of envisioning and then executing. For me as an author, at any rate, I may choose a character to “stand” for an element of the story (Roberto as angry teenaged male belonging to a particular group of people with a long history and a particular vulnerability to exploitation by a stronger, richer group). But once he opens his mouth and speaks, Roberto comes to life for me. He doesn’t “take over,” as some authors will say of characters whom they wish to exalt in the eyes of others, but every word that he speaks (and dialog goes onto the page as dictation) asserts a kind of autonomy for him as he develops his own inner life.

This is true for all the characters who move beyond spear-carrier status to that of principal or comprimario part in the opera that develops from their interplay. I provide a rough framework within which they write their story. Sometimes I see something irresistible, and I reach in and tweak things to go a certain way, on the road to what I am beginning to discern as an appropriate ending for this story (or at least a stopping place). If the characters go along with it, if they fall in with the new pattern without resistance, that’s the way we go. If they drop dead on the page, I regroup and find another way, maybe to the same conclusion, maybe not.

Once they’ve spoken and made choices for themselves, they acquire an internal consistency of their own that stands, for them, in the place that what we think of as “integrity” or “coherence” stands for a real human being. The author who tries to force that integrity into a pre-determined pattern or direction risks killing a story dead. 

Characters develop their own personalities and politics. As an author, you mess with them at your peril.

Aqueduct: Where does this internal consistency come from? 

Suzy: I think it comes from the wisdom that the author’s unconscious has gathered from living in the world. Without that, it’s plastic toy soldiers and of no real interest to me as either writer or reader.

I write to discover what I know/think/feel about some things: my characters teach me this. My job is to accept what they open to me, and explore and develop it by making room for the characters to be what they are.

Aqueduct: One of the novel’s particular strengths seems to be its insistence on the reality of unseen connections, such as between Revolutionary France and (then) contemporary US, or between communities made disparate by gulfs of space and wealth. The ghost story at the heart of the book makes, at some level, these connections concrete and present to the intuition. What else would be lost if this book were not a ghost story? What is gained by its being one?

Suzy: Part of what would be lost is simply my own understanding of the way the world works and how history exists and persists. I take a very long view, both backward and forward (one of my best courses in college was in geology: let that stuff in, and your mind is blown permanently into dimensions of time that the dominant American culture in particular is terrified of and rejects, which I take to be one reason that my work isn’t of “best-seller” quality).

A ghost story, in the sense that you see it in Dorothea, is actually a story of the persistent influences of the past, and of our attitudes toward and relationships to the fact that there has been a past and will be a future in which we ourselves will become part of the past. There is also, in my mind, a powerful connection between the influences of the past and the arts of the present, because I am of the opinion that we do in fact reincarnate many times, and in some lifetimes we draw on our past experiences to deepen and enrich the art that we bring to the present. 

Without the ghost, that deep past full of anxious echoes wouldn’t exist to ground the story in the larger flow of time that I believe we all inhabit, sometimes knowingly, sometimes not.

I also believe that our connections to the past, both personal and cultural, are vital and full of power. Without the ghost in this story, Dorothea would be adrift, as so many modern people are (or feel) adrift and unattached, careening toward unimaginable futures without direction or any feeling of agency.

Without the ghost to react to and against, Dorothea would not fully understand the power and depth of her choices in the present.

Aqueduct: Ghosts traditionally appear as reminders of tragedy not properly resolved—while resolution is the function of the memorial. Dorothea Dreams grapples with tragedy: whether it is tragedies we as a society choose not to memorialize (the encroachment into communities of color) or those we choose to memorialize, whose enormity resists our understanding (the French Revolutionary slaughterbench), we have traffic with ghosts, perhaps, because there are some tragedies that we cannot make memorial for. Can you talk about the function of memory and tragedy in your book? How is the ghost related to Dorothea’s art? How is Dorothea’s art related to the/her past?

Suzy: The ghost brings with him a small, frightened perception of one of the great tragedies (and adventures) of history: the Revolution in France of 1789 and the decades of reaction that followed that series of events. He tried to withhold himself from the great flood of emotions and events that those decades embodied in Europe. He withdrew, and circumscribed himself, making himself small and frightened, and a ready tool of administrative control.

Dorothea has also withdrawn, trying to find her own artistic authenticity as opposed to her commercial identity.

Her contact with the chaotic energy of the Cantu family and its circumstances opens a window for her to make a different choice, and she does: she rejects the ghost’s self-protective contraction into self and system, and chooses instead to openly defend the exploited and to give her creativity up to the world to enjoy and learn from—to expand back into and re-engage with the world, both through concrete action to protect the Cantu kids from the wrath of the law and through opening her artwork to the gaze of the art world. 

What she remembers is that once, in another life, she made the opposite choice. That is what the ghost brings: that awareness.

What she chooses is to honor memory, and then move on, into new, riskier, more challenging territory.

Aqueduct: There’s an interesting moment near the end where Dorothea’s daughter accuses her of an essentially maternal weakness. (“Today, she suggested point blank that I see in Roberto something of my younger son in his more wayward, draft-dodging days.”) How do you see the significance of Dorothea’s role as a mother, especially with regard to death and sentimentality as her old friend and lover advances toward death? Does it speak to any generational split between women that you were seeing at the time?

Suzy: There was and is a generational divide among women about what a woman is and should be, and Dorothea has recoiled from this so far, devoting herself to something she’s seen as gender-neutral—her art. Her daughter, an active feminist of the time, has challenged Dorothea to go beyond this minimal position, to claim her rightful place as someone who challenges masculine power simply by being the powerful creative person she is.

Dorothea, strengthened by taking action in the matter of the Cantus, steps up to the plate, and can now move forward into her daughter’s more activist world of feminist resistance. Time, of course, has altered this dynamic drastically. In our debased and deeply reactionary present, Dorothea’s daughter’s children, should she have them, would be showing their female autonomy by fellating their male schoolmates in the hallways in order to be “popular” among their peers and putting up YouTube clips of themselves in poses and activities perfectly appropriate to the Playboy “bunnies” of the past as a way of demonstrating how ”free” they are. 

And, as a matter of course, objecting strenuously to the term “feminist” to describe themselves. 

It should be understood, by now, that what we do, we do for ourselves and our own peers; our female posterity will do “their own thing,” and it’s very likely to be their grandmothers’ “thing” and a direct repudiation of all that we hoped and fought for, for them.

Aqueduct: Ricky Maulders, Dorothea’s dying friend, is something of a reverse Orpheus. He steps briefly away from his own death in order to retrieve Dorothea from a life lived in the artificial absence of death that her privileged seclusion has become. Is he successful?

Suzy: I think probably yes. The power of death and dying is great, and I think we underestimate it out of fear. Ricky brings the world to Dorothea in a different way than Robert and Blanca bring it, but because he doesn’t reject the inevitability of his own impending death what he brings is very effective. There is nothing in this world that can’t be turned to positive effect, if the will to do this is strong enough. He brings her his courage, and she finds the strength in herself to recognize her own and begin to use it. Love doesn’t just give: it also accepts gifts.

Aqueduct: What is the relationship of the land to the politics of the book? What draws you to the desert New Mexico setting?

Suzy: The land is the place where the politics plays itself out, but when the politics are done and gone, the land will still be here and will recreate itself as a functioning part of the ecology of the future. We make the land part of our politics, but this is only a dream of the feverish human consciousness, a fantasy of dramatic meaning.

For me, the power of the setting is its age, its endurance through past time and into future time, and its impassive presence upon which we perform our ridiculous little dances of pride and possessiveness. I love the evident age of this landscape, with no luxuriant green disguise: just the bones of the planet, right out in the open, scoured and devoured by wind and water. 

It puts us in our place.



Thursday, February 10, 2011

Seattle's Feminist Science Fiction Book Club

A great good friend of Aqueduct Press, Paige Clifton-Steele, has organized a feminist science fiction book club that meets in Seattle once a month. Here's the latest from Paige on what they're up to:

The Feminist Science Fiction Book Club exists to promote the fiction of women and transpeople with a particular focus on explicitly feminist works--and that's taking for granted that feminist means queer, anti-racist,anti-cissexist, anti-imperialist, and anti ableism, and some other antis I'm probably forgetting too. Not everybody's at the same level. We're interested in reading a variety of works, because it pushes the conversation and because it's fun.

Our first 2 books were Slow River by Nicola Griffith and "The Heat Death of the Universe" by Pamela Zoline. Next month our book is Nalo Hopkinson's Brown Girl in the Ring.

We meet the second Tuesday of every month in Pilot Books, on 219 Broadway E, Seattle WA. That location is up a flight of stairs with no option of an elevator. For March, that's the 8th. Come meet the people who are also reading this stuff. Or check us out on facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_183478185000016 (I'm pretty sure you have to be logged in)

Paige Clifton-Steele




Tuesday, December 21, 2010

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2010, pt. 23: Paige Clifton-Steele

Pleasures of 2010
by Paige Clifton-Steele

It's been a phenomenally good reading year. I dropped out of college and moved to Seattle where I began to read at a pace unmatched since the last time I dropped out of college. My dear friend, Abbey Mei Otis, was at Clarion West this summer and I read as many of her stories as she would let me, some of which are now available on Strange Horizons and Tor.com (http://www.tor.com/stories/2010/12/sweetheart). She writes lucent, ferociously ethical science fiction that’s been breaking my heart since I first read it in 12th grade.

Another friend, a poet met in a Seattle library over a volume of My Vocabulary Did This to Me: The Collected Works of Jack Spicer, soon had me reading Jean Genet (Our Lady of the Flowers), Urs Allemann (Babyfucker), Maggie Nelson (Bluets), and Roberto Bolano (Antwerp)—some of the best books I’ve read this year. His own poetry is decadent, funny, disobedient, queer, cool, salacious. Some of it’s published, some isn’t. Read him if you find him--that's Leon Baham.

I adored Mad in Pursuit, Violette Leduc’s memoir of Paris at a certain time—the Paris of Colette and Simone de Bouvoir and Jean Genet and Cocteau. Though actually, it’s the Paris of Violette Leduc’s fevered interior, composed of pain and huge needs. Is she more in pain than most people, or are most memoirs shamming?

Somewhere I remember seeing Eileen Myles talk about the influence of Violette Leduc: Inferno (a poet’s novel), by Eileen Myles, an astonishingly good book, owes Leduc something in its rhythms and the kind of permission it gives itself to drift, to arrange memory in response to the way memory arranges itself.

More memoir! I liked Michael de Larrabeiti’s French Leave: A Love Affair with France. De Larrabeiti is a Brit in love with the land across the channel, who at one point followed a group of Provencal shepherds on the transhumance—the long journey on foot across the alps to sell the sheep, and collecting a (separately published) volume of Provencal stories.

I loved Helen Merrick’s The Secret Feminist Cabal: A History of Science Fiction Feminisms and I owe to Merrick the discovery of Christine Brooke-Rose (Out)  and Pamela Zoline (The Heat Death of the Universe and Other Stories). I read a lot of feminist SF in this year, out of Aqueduct, Nightshade, PM Press, Ballantine: I enjoyed, Eleanor Arnason’s Mammoths of the Plain, Suzy Charnas’ Dorothea Dreams, Gwyneth Jones’ Bold as Love and The Universe of Things, and Nicola Griffith’s Slow River.

I read two scientific cautionary tales: Anatomy of a Controvery: The Trashing of Margaret Mead, by Paul Shankman and Rebecca Skloot’s The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks—and though one is an academic press and the other is a popular bestseller, both are stories deserving of a wide readership. Letters, Summer 1926: Maria Tsvetaeva, Boris Pasternak, and Rainer Maria Rilke was so intense and so personal that it sometimes felt prurient. (This was also the year I finally liked Rilke—another gift from my poet friend.) I’m about halfway through The Stones of Aran: Labyrinths, by Tim Robinson, a huge Proustian piece of literature-of-place.

Leslie Scalapino died this year, which got me reading New Time. Leslie Scalapino’s project is, at least partially, to make a writing that is of the body; something that is as much, as visibly a bodily output as motion. She likes words that are both spatial states and states of being: depression. She writes poems that read like the scaffolding of the brain, so evocatively suggestive of what they encapsulate that it seems you could know the most simple structure of being simply by looking through them.

I was utterly seduced by Lisa Robertson’s glossolalic Magenta Soul Whip, which concerns itself with consciousness, language, and food. The only poetry I liked better than hers was Rae Armantrout: a LANGUAGE-associated poet who has received a lot of “mainstream” poetic attention lately, especially since her 2010 Pulitzer win. And it’s sad that it took that to get me reading her—her work pays to the strange intersections of cognitive processes, commercial language, and verbal tics. Her most recent collection Versed is written while Armantrout is living with (I won’t say battling) cancer, and while the book has been talked about as influenced by her disease, I’m not convinced she’s doing anything significantly different than she was doing before her cancer (The Pretext), and before the widespread attention. But I do think that cancer is a subject that accrues to itself a lot of sentimental, self-help inflected language—and Armantrout’s scientific precision, her obsessive and restless observations, her indifference to the dross of much contemporary lyric—makes her a better writer on the subject than most.

I liked Ben Lerner’s latest, celebrated Angle of Yaw. I liked the otherworldly penny-dreadful poetry of Vera and Linus, by Jesse Ball and Thordis Bjornsdottir. I liked the serious, high lyricism of Leonard Schwartz’s Ear and Ethos. I liked the fucked up queerness of The Dream Police, by Dennis Cooper. I liked the lyric-of-discomfort of Rob Halpern’s Disaster Suites. I liked the found language of Rachel Zolf in the personal epic Masque and in Human Resources. I liked CA Conrad’s sadfaced grossout grandiloquent burlesquing The Book of Frank, and I also liked Brenda Iijima’s loopy, liminal If Not Metaphoric, Carolyn Knox’ tightly controlled, beautifully wrought Nine Worthies, and the book Darren Waterston  that collects that painter’s work with the poems of Amy Gerstler. 

I loved Nox, by Anne Carson. Nox is Carson’s elegy for the brother she barely knew. A translator of the classics, she approaches the loss as she has approached translating ancient, fragmented documents. Where is she to locate meaning? How to fill in the gaps? How to live with the unbreachable silence that separates her from the source?

In fiction, I read and enjoyed And Chaos Died by Joanna Russ, A Room with a View by E.M. Forster, Middlemarch by George Eliot, I, Claudius by Robert Graves, Redemption in Indigo by Karen Lord, and Lady into Fox by David Garnett. 


Concrete Island--my first J.G. Ballard!--gave me a taste for more. I liked Eileen Myles’ earlier memoir/novel, Cool for You.. I was faintly disappointed in Kij Johnson’s The Fox Woman, Jack Vance’s The Blue World, Martin Duberman’s Emma Goldman: An Epic Drama, Amy Gerstler’s Crown of Weeds, and Buchi Emeta’s Kehinde (these are all authors I otherwise adore.)

I loved Virginia Woolf’s The Waves so much I can hardly talk about it.

I liked Kathy Acker’s Bodies of Work, the only essay collection I read this year. I dipped into the short stories of 2009 Nobel winner Herta Muller—I didn’t read much, but enough to be surprised at how much I liked them. I also kept returning to the short fiction of Carol Emshwiller, whose heady, bizarre fabulations seem like they must have fit uneasily with short fiction when she started writing. I’m not sure they fare any better now. Early in the year I read Chimamanda Adichie’s much-hyped novel about the Biafran War, Half of a Yellow Sun. It’s much like her short stories: thoughtful, accomplished works that, to my mind, seem to lack something—some intensity, some willingness to mold the form around the content. This deficiency is more striking in the novel than in the short stories, I feel, there is nothing productive about the friction between the immaculately structured book and the cataclysm it tries to contain.

I was lucky enough to see several performances, with two different casts, of Kenneth Gaburo's experimental composition for seven "virtuoso speakers"...a piece I describe differently every time to try to tell people what it is. Which is, perhaps, the point: as it certainly dramatizes...the unstable relation between text, meaning, and sound.


Though I saw almost no theater this year, the Erickson Theater’s production of Breaking the Code, Hugh Whitemore’s 1986 play about the career of Alan Turing, was flawlessly done. Turing was, of course, the cryptanalyst who helped to break the Enigma code and create computer science, and who was persecuted by the British government for homosexuality. Sad, earnest, and deft in its politics, the play also avoids pillaging its own science for ham-handed metaphors and themes.

A couple of summers ago I was briefly obsessed by The Path, a game out of independent video game studio Tale of Tales, based on Little Red Riding Hood with music by Jarboe (!), which explored female adolescent vulnerability in a world that becomes, ultimately, the psychospiritual landscape of nine different girls. I’m in the middle of their newest offering—Fatale--based on Oscar Wilde’s Salome. Fatale resembles traditional game play even less than The Path did—it’s poetic, I find, in its insistence on the entertainment value of contemplation, redoubling interpreting, lingering, rummaging. The best movie I saw this year Du Levande. You, the Living, by Swedish dirrector Roy Andersson. An existential comedy that, strangely enough, also fits the description “living tableau”.

I read Matthew Cheney’s blog, themumpsimus.com, and Strange Horizons when I could.

FINAL ACCOUNT:

Number of books thrown across the room in disgust: 2
Number of books read while drunk: ???
Number of colleges dropped out of: 1
Number of Marxist reading groups dropped out of: 1
Number of books my grandma sent me: 2
Fees at the Seattle Public Library System: $21.55


Paige Clifton-Steele is a poet who lives in Seattle, works in the mental health industry, and runs a feminist science fiction book club. She is also the editor of the Aqueduct Gazette.  




Tuesday, May 18, 2010

The Aqueduct Gazette: the Spring 2010 issue

The online edition of the Spring 2010 Aqueduct Gazette is now available as a PDF download here. In this issue,

*Nisi Shawl, in "Written on the Water," considers how differently she now reads the books that were a big influence on her life. She notes
Rereading is always, to me, rewriting. As I reread the texts I love, those that are dear to me, their words spill away from me into new meanings, filling up the fresh impressions I have left on the world by making my way through it. The hollow places and questions and emptinesses I have come upon in my continuing explorations open to receive thoughts that were always waiting to occur.
*Issue editor Paige Clifton-Steele interviews Helen Merrick, asking her questions such as "In the beginning of your book [The Secret Feminist Cabal], you immediately identify yourself as a fan among fans. Do you think it's important that works like this should be written by people who claim that title?" and "Donna Haraway cautions against viewing the cyborg as a product of technophilia, specifically, 'for example, those who relegate the cyborg to an odd, attenuated kind of technophilic euphoria.' But I think a lot of people come to sf in childhood, and embrace it prior to any understanding, out of something that looks a lot like a technophilic ("gee-whiz!") impulse. Is there some contradiction buried here? Can that impulse be trusted to serve greater purposes sometimes?" She also asks Helen to talk about her experience as a Tiptree juror.

*Paige Clifton-Steele, in "Henrietta's Afterlife: Octavia Butler and the HeLa Cell Culture," reads Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Cycle by way of the case of Henrietta Lacks, an African American woman from whose cervical cancer cells originated the first immortal cell tissue line, HeLa:
Long after her death, her extracted cancer cells continued to divide. They are still dividing in hundreds of labs all over the world. Henrietta Lacks became, in death, "the first immortal human cells ever grown in a laboratory."

Those cells, in turn, were reproduced on a massive scale during the search for a polio vaccine, and have since figured in the development of treatments for countless diseases and the answers to other scientific questions. However, white doctors took the cells from Lacks without her knowledge, and her children have had no say in how they were used....

....Lacks' son consented to an autopsy based on the suggestion that any results might medically benefit her descendants. Since then the world over has seen the benefit of HeLa; she has a wealth of spiritual descendants. It's her real descendants for whom the benefits have been scarce. Most of them live without health insurance. None of them have ever been included in the profits that are made off of HeLa cells....
*And of course the issue offers plenty of news about Aqueduct Press books, current and forthcoming.