On May 17th, the PSA held an event at Cooper Union in New
York City called "Beyond Tribute: Anne Sexton Revisited." The participants
included Betsy Andrews, Eileen Myles, Chris Stroffolino, Robert Clawson, Marie Howe, and
David Trinidad. J.D. McClatchy moderated and introduced the evening. The speakers presented complex, troubling, and often exhilarating relationships with Anne Sexton, each one trying to claim a space from which to relate to this difficult and sometimes baffling poet. What came out most strongly that night was the difficulty each one had in separating Anne Sexton's life from her work from her
reputation, or even deciding if the desire for this separation was the proper reaction to have. There is a push and pull between almost any artist's life and work, and a desire on
the part of many readers to reconcile them, to see a coherent pattern uniting the two. What became clear that night in May was how much Anne Sexton complicates this urge, and how willing many people are to try anyway.
This Fall, Crossroads presents three reactions to that evening, from David Trinidad,
who spoke at the event, and from Lois Ames and Maggie Nelson, who were in attendance. The title of this forum, "Anne Sexton: The Life vs. the Work" is meant to be challenging, to make one wonder, as Maggie Nelson does, whether "a choice can or must be made between the two."
Anne Sexton:
An Actress in Her Own
Autobiographical Play
David Trinidad
For me, the fine line between Anne Sexton's life and work has always been a large part of her appeal. When I first read her poems in the mid-seventies (just a few months, I'd later learn, after her suicide), I immediately responded to their intimacy, their emphasis on personal experience, and to the way Sexton seemed, in service to broader though equally
personal themes (death, madness, religious faith, love), to put her entire being on the line. I understood, if only
instinctively, what courage that had taken. By the time I
discovered Sexton, her work was widely accepted and praised (thanks, largely, to the women's movement), and was on the verge of being adopted by academia. Still, the shock waves of Sexton's daring could be felt. Much was made of her
affiliation with Confessional Poetry; as a disciple of Robert Lowell, we were told, she had helped shatter the
conservativeness of post-World War II verse. It has since
been documented that the boldness of Sexton's work directly influenced the poems
in Lowell's Life Studies and Sylvia Plath's Ariel. Sexton is more vulnerable than Lowell, less
allegorical than Plath. She pulls you into her kitchen, her car; places you right beside her as she's ferried away from a tryst:
. . . I have ripped my hand
from your hand as I said I would
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
and I am on the top deck now
holding my wallet, my cigarettes
and my car keys
at 2 o'clock on a Tuesday
in August of 1960.1
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"Concrete examples give a verisimilitude," she said. And:
"I want [readers] to feel as if they were touching me."2
That intimate.
In the decades since Sexton's death,
autobiographical poetry has become less and less fashionable; young writers are encouraged to jettison the "I," to encode personal experience in a fragmented or elliptical style. Sexton's popularity, naturally, has suffered in such a climate. It's all right to read Sexton when you're young (i.e., when you don't know any better), but she's someone to be
outgrown, like Allen Ginsberg or Charles Bukowski or (god forbid) Kahlil Gibran. Her "issues" may seem too made-for-TV-movie to some: nervous breakdown, suicide attempt, adultery, incest. And while poems like "In Celebration of My Uterus" and "Menstruation at Forty" will always make some readers squirm, it's possible that a poem like "The Abortion," written at a time when abortion wasn't even talked about, could be used as pro-life propaganda in our current culture. A scary thought.
My own struggle with Anne Sexton, for twenty years now, has not been about her
subject matter (she is the one who taught me that you can write a poem about
anything), but about the blatant deterioration of her talent. Sexton's Complete
Poems appeared in 1981, edited by her daughter/literary executor Linda Gray Sexton.
This volume includes the eight books Anne Sexton sent to press during
her lifetime, as well as one hundred and thirty pages of posthumously published poems.
Though fascinating as Sexton documents, the latter are shockingly sloppy and full of
over-the-top, bad-trip imagery. This, coupled with the fact that the last three books
she did publish (The Book of Folly, The Death Notebooks, and That Awful Rowing
Toward God) saw an obvious decline in quality, has made it difficult to come to grips with her complete body of work. It also
didn't help that, after her death, her former mentor Robert Lowell wrote that her writing had become "meager and exaggerated." I jokingly refer to Sexton's late period as "Bad Anne." How else to reconcile such slipshod lines as "I flee. I flee. / I block my ears and eat salami" with her amazing early metaphors ("leaves . . . born in their own green blood / like the hands of mermaids") and admissions ("Once I was
beautiful. Now I am myself")? It's too painful to think of
her simply as a brilliant poet who got bad. And too easy, somehow, to blame it on pills, alcohol, insanity, fame. Better, I recently decided, to think of her as a genius with demons, writing to beat the clock.
In a high school drama class, I had the realization that although I wanted to be onstage, I did not want to play a characterI wanted to be up there as myself. Eventually
poetry made it possible for me to do just that. Or perhaps I should say Sexton made it possible. "I am an actress in my own autobiographical play," she once said about poetry
readings. What wonderful permission she gave me, to write my own life! (Of course Sexton also said that "poetic truth is not necessarily autobiographical," that one should tell almost the whole story. Poems will force you to lie, or at the very least alter facts.) Looking back, I can see that I also must have been deeply touched by the sense of otherness in Sexton. Here was a suburban housewife confessing her strangeness, declaring herself "a possessed witch," and finding in her
failure as a Stepford wife her identity as an artist. This undoubtedly inspired me, as a young gay man, to set down my own feelings and experiences outside the norm. (It was nice, too, that Sexton told an interviewer: "Homosexuality is all right with me.") It strikes me there must be a very real need, in our increasingly conservative culture, for the poetry of Anne Sexton. Her life waits, like Dickinson's loaded gun or Kafka's "ax for the frozen sea," for those who require it.
Anne Sexton Re-Collected
Lois Ames
The Poetry Society of America's event of 17 May 2001, "Beyond Tribute: Anne Sexton Revisited," was extremely poignant. I left the evening extraordinarily touched, exhilaratedand bemused, wishing I could convey to the younger poets, who had measured themselves against Anne Sexton, the woman whom I had known. The poets, each in turn, wrestled with, and attempted to bring to earth Anne Sextonconstructed in part from what they had heard, read, imagined, and elicited from the workthe woman they had needed to create in order to be poets themselves. It was an evening of personal and professional confession in the most elegant sense of the word. I was reminded of what Anne's closest friend, the poet Maxine Kumin, had often said, "she gave as good as she got."
Today, twenty-seven years after Anne's death, her close friends find it impossible to come together without
reminiscing in painful loss, joyful humor, and loving
exasperation. How to convey to the world of poets the delightful, wonderfully funny, generous, warm, kind,
psychologically astute person Anne Sexton wasand
remains for us?
Can I possibly give a full-length portrait of the poet and woman I knew? She gave unstintingly to her students and to young poets in person, on the telephone, and by letter. She was generous in her friendships and demanded much from them. She loved her children deeply and inconsistently, and, sadly, they suffered so much as a consequence. She lived in a violent marriage yet tried to find nurture, love, and
support within itand outside. But when she chose to divorce, her world fell apart. I believeunequivocally
that she was a victim of incest, sexual abuse, familial
neglect, spousal abuse, and a family pattern of alcoholism and suicide. Yet she longed to be free of her demons
and struggled daily in every way she knew to be well,
to be strong.
Anne in life had garnered a stream of accolades and rewards for her work:
publication of many books, crowded readings at high fees, a professorship at
Boston University, creation of an opera produced by the Minnesota Opera Company
from her book Transformations, performance of her poetry by a rock group,
Anne Sexton and Her Kind, successful development and production of her play Mercy Street to sold out audiences at the American Place Theatre in New York City, several honorary degrees and an honorary Phi Beta Kappa from Harvard, nomination for the National Book Award, the Pulitzer Prize, a Ford Foundation grant,
a Guggenheim, election as a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in Great Britain, a traveling fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and appointment as a Radcliffe Scholar. Not surprisingly, she also accrued
equally strong criticism and whispered condemnation for flamboyance, theatrical and defiant behavior, for mental
illness and attempted suicide, for her beauty and sexuality, and for speaking the unspeakable in an age of rectitude in
the bastion of repression known as cold roast Boston.
In death the very real value of Anne's work and
life and relationships has been muddied and confused by
controversy, sensational revelations, and exaggeration of
the importance of the influence of her relatively brief
association and sparse correspondence with Robert Lowell and Sylvia Plath.
She was more than a suicidal poet. She was more than a confessional poet. Her work was iconoclastic. She broke ground. She plowed fields. And she scattered the seed for much that was to come.
Anne wrote about the complications of being female at a time when the rule was that "nice girls don't talk about sex," and the women of Massachusetts were still begging their doctors for sound advice on safe birth control. Yet,
she switched a flashlight into dark corners and rattled the bones in every family's closet, to write about abortion,
menstruation, masturbation, heterosexual and lesbian love affairs, adultery, incest, child abuse, and addiction, in spite of taboos. Today, as these topics are matter-of-factly discussed in the school, the media, the market, and the church, one must stop to remember that Anne's courage and fortitude and poetic sensibility were at the beginning of the tidal wave.
Anne refused to be a conventional housewife and repeatedly stated that
she could not be a "cookie momma," but put energy and time
(beyond work and family, friends and students) into vital social issues.
Anne was a strong advocate of women's rights, civil rights, and
opposed the war in Vietnam. Her Phi Beta Kappa poem at Harvard, which she
read on 11 June, 1968, a few days after Robert Kennedy was assassinated and
two months after the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr., was a vigorous
anti-war poem. She signed a petition published in the New York Times by a group of prominent women declaring that they had had abortions and demanding the right for all American women. Although an ardent liberal, Anne was a capitalist; she believed that the love of money and what it could buy was no sin, and that everyonewomen and poets includeddeserved ample pay for good work. She firmly encouraged and supported everyone she knew in pursuing the same goal for themselves.
In turn, when Anne felt she had been cheated,
she set about to redress those wrongs. When she came to realize that her love-affair-gone-sour had really been
psychotherapeutic sexual abuse by her psychiatrist, she
wanted to denounce him at his public lecture at Human Resources Institute of Boston, partly for revenge, partly to protect other women, and also to alert the psychiatric
community. I dissuaded her, fearing that she would suffer calumny and that The American Psychiatric Association would not have the stamina nor the courage to pursue the case. To date, so far as I know, they have not.
She was one of four American poetsand one of the few womeninvited by Ted Hughes to the now famous convocation of poets in London at The Poetry International
of 1967. She gave a stunning reading of "The Double Image" sandwiched between those of Pablo Neruda and W.H. Auden, an evening in The Queen Elizabeth Hall that those who were there will never forget.
She was a sturdy friend and loving teacher. She spoke to the strength and character in the people she loved and to the insight and gifts in the poets she taught. Her
passionate intent was to evoke the deep clean center in each person she encountered and to hold to a maturity and clarity in every exchange. She drew sustenance from the community of poets and generously declared that we are all writing
the same song.
Such was her legacy.
The ending speech I wrote for her play Mercy Street is the only reply to her critics and the only epitaph I can give her. The heroine of the play, Daisy (Anne's father gave her the childhood nickname as he sang to her the old song "Daisy give me your answer true."), lies dead on the stage as the priest/psychiatrist intones over her body:
Daisy, you have been brought forth
from a stiff-necked people.
The zeal of your house
doth eat you up.
O Daisy, O Daughter of Jerusalem,
there is an enormous hunger in Zion!
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A Note on Anne Sexton and
Her Critical Legacy
Maggie Nelson
I didn't read
Anne Sexton until I was in college in the early 1990s, when first-person,
autobiographical, female voices were everywhere, and the rap for being "disgustingly
fixated on the female body" (as a critic once said about Sexton) had shifted onto
figures in other realmsKaren Finley, Anita Hill, Courtney Love, etc. Soon after reading her, I chose to write my undergraduate thesis on her and Plath; it didn't take long to become horrified at how little had been written about their work that didn't make use of a tired,
simplistic, and often misogynistic mode of biographical and pseudo-psychological
interpretation (i.e., "We suggest Plath was a modern Electra. Her unnatural
love for her father. . .caused her subsequent hatred of all men, a hatred we shall
document by examining the four collections of poems and the novel."
3). The whole gist of my thesis, then, was to focus on the action of their poetry and avoid biography entirely -
I wanted to avoid the traps of pathologizing the poets,
apologizing for them, venerating or trashing their
contributions to literature and/or feminism, and so on.
Thus at the recent PSA tribute, as I listened to many different
writers struggled to identify with or differentiate themselves from
the figure of Sexton, or argue that her work does, indeed, have some
literary merit (kind of a weird theme at a tribute), or simply grapple
with the difficult woman they knew or imagined knowing, I felt initially
depressed about how the terms of the critical scene surrounding Sexton
haven't changed all that much. Even the title of this forum
"The Life Vs. The Work" agitates me: "versus,"
after all, means against or as an alternative to - as
if "real life" can be pitted against poetic project, or as
if a choice can or must be made between the two. The formulation is a
close relative of the whole subjectivity-vs.-objectivity debate, which,
needless to say, has figured women on the losing end for years. Though I
personally find these terms to be pretty much exhausted, it's important
to note, as Susan Sontag once did re: the form-vs.-content debate, that
although most critics would deny such a split in theory, "in practice,
the old antithesis lives on, virtually unassailed."4
It makes me feel better to remember something Shoshana Felman once wrote:
"The critical intepretation . . . not only elucidates the text, but
also reproduces it dramatically, unwittingly participates in it."5 Perhaps
one of Sexton's greatest gifts will be that of continually laying bare the
intensity of this phenomenon - really putting it into overdrive. Her poems
put a weird pressure on us to stake out our relation to them: you might feel
compelled to say, "I'm not a woman like that," as Eileen
Myles did at the Tribute; others might share James Dickey's embarrassment:
"One feels tempted to drop [Sexton's poems] furtively in the nearest
ashcan, rather than to be caught with them in the presence
of so much naked suffering."6 The point is that it's virtually impossible to talk about Sexton's work without becoming implicated in the problems she addresses, be they those of sexuality (i.e., the pleasures and pitfalls of heterosexuality, homosexuality, masturbation, exhibitionism, incest, etc.);
psychoanalysis and the costs of "the civilizing process"; love and hate for one's parents, children, lovers, and friends; the cruelty and seductions of fairytales and myths; the drive toward a crazed religiosity; and so on.
My disinterest in Sexton's life was, I think, a
worthwhile inversion, but ultimately it was a pose and a phase. Now I'm more
inclined to say that OF COURSE we should allow ourselves to indulge in as wide a range of
fantasies about and identifications with her as possible. It can be a lot of fun
albeit "cruel, sadistic, and funny" fun, as Sexton once said
of Transformations, her re-telling of the Grimms' fairy tales. That said,
the actual details of Sexton's suffering (or whatever we presume to know of them)
still strike me as a sort of red herring. I find it more interesting to read her as
"the performance artist of intimacy," as Jacqueline Rose once put it,
simply because there's so much to learn from her about the different ways the
personal can function in a poem. I don't mean to invoke here the whole "the-truth-is-in-the-mask" idea; rather, as Sexton once explained, "I'm hunting for the truth. It might be a kind of poetic truth, and not just a factual one, because behind
everything that happens to you, there is another truth,
a secret life."7 Though many people, consciously or
unconsciously, resist treating Sexton as an intellectual (a fact that has something to do with her high school education and early self-image as "a buried self" who only knew how to "diaper babies and make white sauce"), her incessant drive to uncover "another truth" has everything to do with the
cycle described by Wittgenstein: "When you bump against
the limits of your own honesty it is as though your thoughts get into a whirlpool, an
infinite regress: You can say what you like, it takes you no further."8 Sexton's poetry is fixated on this language-game: she was, I think, both totally seduced by the Oedipal narrative of discovering "the awful truth," and totally aware of the impossibility of such a venture.
What keeps her work annoying and exciting is that she
tethered this conundrum to her "rank" version of female
sexuality, thus she always ended up offending someone; as Mona Van Duyn once complained, "[Sexton's poems] have little to do with believable love, having none of love's
privacy . . . they have as little to do with believable sexuality
as an act of intercourse performed onstage for an audience."9 But what is believable love, or believable sexuality, anyway?
I think were better off letting such questions remain open.
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