Zero Ducats
Transcription
Zero Ducats
1 2 3 the late Maxwell Mednick (1981–2014) 4 5 ----------------------------Jan. 1st 12:01 AM 2013………………………..travis sehorn 9 Again, at the New Orleans Art Museum.……………… 10 9th Ward Moat…………………………………………………... 11 A Place in the Sun………………………....…james franco 12 “I email you in a cold dark sweat”…..maxwell mednick 19 Tap, Tap…………………………………....…..karen volkman 23 With Flood….………………carol guess & kelly magee 24 With Stone Lion….…………………………………………... 25 Blame Year………………….…………………..shane jones 26 The 1943 Minidoka Veil ….…………lawrence matsuda 31 The 1943 Concentration Camp Album….…………….. 33 With Damien in Blackhawk………........brent l. smith 35 Antarctica……………………..…...kristina marie darling 38 6 Landscape……………………………………………………….. 39 Find a Way to Leave.…………………..volatalistic phil 40 They Seem to Hate Me…………………………...……….. 44 From Hollow Bodies……..….…harold whit williams 47 From Hollow Bodies……….....scott alexander jones 48 Tuesday Afternoon in a Cage…....….raegan butcher Don’t Say a Word…..………………..……………………….. Scut…..…………………………………...…………………….... Snapshots…..…………………………................................ 64 65 66 69 Communication Failure……..………….…olivia parkes 71 Air Duct to Air Duct………..………………..…linh dinh 74 A Disappointed Bridge………….………matthew kaler 75 At the Mütter………………………………..erik anderson 76 Farewell…………………………….matteo delpho delfini 83 Crash……………………………………………........john grey 84 7 The Feuerzeig Video Covers Project #2: “Lisa Says” (Velvet Underground, Live, 1969 Version)…………………………chris stroffolino 85 Wastoid……………………………..……….mathias svalina 91 Never Better…………………..……kristine ong muslim 92 Sidewalk Class…………………..…………………………….. 93 Students Should Become Anarchists………………………….....……noam chomsky 94 Bells………..…………………………………..jamie stewart 101 Princess Tam Tam………..………………………………… 102 8 9 Travis SEHORN ---------------------------------------------ST JAN. 1 12:01 AM 2013 jailbait hung out the limo, it's new years in new orleans, it's a war zone and we're winning. the popo cower in the cruisers as the rockets fly under their wheels, making cops beautiful for the only time ever, on technicolor bonfire. the two-story bikes and the coked-up spindles up top waggling their legs to go. the crying, the wailing, the slobbery. it's a war and the first of accidental grace. so fast it cuts to slow-motion so play that fiddle and i'll recline to watch the world stop from a crumby foldout couch in no-mans land. 10 Travis SEHORN ---------------------------------------------AGAIN, AT THE NEW ORLEANS ART MUSEUM feeling sexual in a glass house flying above the bayou. it's all these nudes, everyone makes nude art. i paint dogs in the nude. swans of the swamp, nude too. having serious crisis days, oh god what have i done? one more trip to the art museum. to the store. to the bar. to the cemetery, past the school. over again and again, im just embarrassed to find the purpose of living. everyone still alive is. purpose of living, a bad joke. or something. 11 Travis SEHORN ---------------------------------------------9TH WARD MOAT many days i'm cut off. a canal between my abandoned home sweet home an' the world. and night under red beans and illuminati, kids bombin scrawl and this concrete bird bobbing its ancient head up to salute whatever moon exists and "ring ding a ding" flashes red. i'm happy, hoping i don't get mugged waiting for the road to exist in front of me again. 12 James FRANCO ---------------------------------------------A PLACE IN THE SUN 1 His leather jacket kicks it off so well, Under the opening credits—printed large— As he hitch-hikes on the side of the road; An indelible image that was Kerouac, Jack London, Tom Cruise, Matt Dillon, And my acting infancy. Now I watched the film with a part Irish, Part Cherokee beauty, with a cheekbone face And a long elvin body to match, slung In a cherry red G-string, and nothing else, bundled In a cloud of Chateau sheets. She remarking On the close-up beauty of young society Liz; I silently noting the deft reticence of Clift when caught In the woods: the leather, now with a Hawaiian shirt. 13 James FRANCO ---------------------------------------------A PLACE IN THE SUN 2 If each of the three had two movies that hold performances As defined and remarkable as God and Adam On the Sistine Ceiling, they would be East of Eden and Rebel For Dean; Streetcar and Waterfront for Brando; And fucking Monty’s would be From Here to Eternity And A Place in the Sun. There is something so perfect About the likeable murderer he crafted with George Stevens In Noirish black and white. A frightening, Striking attack on romance and finance from Dreiser. Dreiser, Dreiser, Theodore Dreiser, An abridged version of Dreiser, ready to kill With brevity and succinct plot accumulation. He was just a young man on the rise; can’t blame the boy For such a situation. I can understand. 14 James FRANCO ---------------------------------------------A PLACE IN THE SUN 3 Three perfect performances: a young man Swirling in his back-lot room, with “Vickers” Flashing in Neon out the window: his mind exposed; A young woman/angel, the actual Vickers, An apparition too good to be fucked— You can’t blame the hero for sinking ship, And jumping ship, when one ship was loaded With baby on board; and the Shelley Winters One, mama mia, what a performance. To play such a sniveling, wet rag With no holding back; I’m in love. Goes to show you, there is no hope For the ugly. All we want is Monty and Liz To love and love and love. But Shelley, I love you. 15 James FRANCO ---------------------------------------------A PLACE IN THE SUN 4 When Dean played in Steven’s Giant he was hoping For the intimate portrait Monty gave In A Place in the Sun, but instead got a man who shot And shot and shot, from every angle; the around The clock method, Dean called it. He was in Marfa hell. But Monty got to play in the intimate world Of Stevens, where a subtle half grin or a blank stare Registered like revelations. There is a little room for coincidence: randomly He runs into Shelley Winters in the movie theater; But all of that is just leading us to the situation We need for tragedy: a tough dilemma, with no easy way Out. There are beautiful settings and shots but they are all strung On the taught line of dramatic tension. 16 James FRANCO ---------------------------------------------A PLACE IN THE SUN 5 When asked I should say that A Place In the Sun is my favorite film, But I rarely do, I guess because I forget How effective the black and white And the wide shots that let the action play; And the very selective use of close ups, Saved primarily for hazy, angelic filter shots Of Angela Vickers—that’s Elizabeth Taylor— Beauty shots that establish her as the young man’s Objex of desire, establish his subjective lust. Not even Monty gets a close up in some of these scenes. Also, one close up towards the end, the scene When Monty’s caught, there’s a strange old man waiting in the woods, The shot feels most real of all: his scruffy face releasing cigarette smoke. 17 James FRANCO ---------------------------------------------A PLACE IN THE SUN 6 In the paradisal bed—with the sheets And the girl in the candy red string panties— I was haunted by the parallels Between Monty’s situation as George Eastman, And Monty’s situation as Monty and myself. (I love my life). But George wanted to rise: have money and have the girl. He convinced himself that he could love Shelley Winters before he knew He could have Elizabeth Taylor. I know I’ve done the same, Except I don’t try for the Liz Taylors anymore, if they come they come; But that’s how you do it, just share the bed with any old body, And most times they’ll be nice ones—especially if you’re a movie star. (I like how Liz comforted Monty in the film like she did in life.) 18 And don’t think love won’t exist: “I love you. I’ve loved you since the first Moment I saw you. I guess maybe I’ve even loved you before I saw you.” 19 Maxwell MEDNICK --------------------------------------------From: Maxwell Mednick Date: Thu, Aug 5, 2010 at 4:51 PM Subject: the gig for me is up To: Scott Alexander Jones I email you in a cold dark sweat with sunken skull eyes in an office cube so bright it might as well be on the sun or in a pure white Morgan Freeman plays wise god heaven. Now things are getting serious because I haven't slept more than four hours in two days. I got home yesterday fully expecting to sleep to whale music but my neighbors (a gentle sweet couple into death metal named Alex and Erica) were out having a cigarette and I told them to take my patio chairs and that I'm giving them everything I own because they happen to exist in my vision cone. There were like Why? And I told them that I was traveling to New Zealand... and Alex visited New Zealand a few years ago for like 6 months and LOVED it and they invited me in to talk about it and I ended up smoking pot and drinking with them all day watching horror movies, eating, and 20 playing with their big orange cat named Dime Bag Darrell... I was so exhausted from the breakup and lack of sleep that I wasn't in reality anymore... the great apes dimmed into forgotten times. Everything dimmed. And after all that I was so wired up that I couldn't sleep well AT ALL and then I got this email this morning saying I was scheduled for a physical exam today... and then I remembered that Ashley begged me a while back to get a physical before I leave the country because I like to talk about death and other related topics of conversation which scared her... and so since it was free with my health insurance, I said why not? So I show up to work at 11:45 am... walk around. Talk to everyone. You know, give the impression that "I'm around." People are looking at me funny. I haven't showered. I am wearing jeans and last nights t-shirt that was stained with melted butter that looks exactly like Salt Cum Lake City, Utah. Then I go to the Kaiser office in downtown Mountain View to get this physical with Dr. Lou (pronounced Dr. Loo). She is like a 39-year-old serious Chinese woman with hazel eyes. And I thought it was going to be free but the lady at the front told me it was 25 bucks! So I was like, shit man, ok, here, and gave her the cash. 21 Then I get in the examination room and I'm in a hospital gown and I look up and there is Dr. Lou's MD diploma from The University of California at Davis... and she walks in and I just felt really rotten. She looked at me like what the fuck is this guy doing in here? I mean, I saw her ONCE before when I got my poison oak and she was totally cool then. Anyways, all the other patients in the waiting room were like these old fat crippled ladies on their last leg who really need to see the Dr... and here I am, this disturbed 30 year old diaper man who everyone would rather just be left on the street to die. And I tell her that I'm there because I want her to check my "gene replicating bio shell I find myself imprisoned in," and she doesn't laugh or smile, just gets right to work checking my blood pressure, and I quietly mutter "bio shell" and she tells me to be quiet because that will get my blood pressure up. And she asks me if I drink and I say yes. And she asks me what. And I tell her beer and wine and vodka and gin and tonic. And she asks me how much? And i tell her 25 beers a week and she tells me my liver can't be enjoying that and she asks me if I take "street drugs" and I stall uncomfortably for a second and say "just a little pot here and there and 22 very rarely cocaine and a little aspirin." And she didn't say anything. Just jotted it down. And I was inside my mind like "what the fuck am I doing here? I want to leave now." And she had me lay down on the exam table and she pressed a few times on my chest and looked at my feet (which I was squirming around trying to hide from her) because my big toe was sticking up out of my tattered black sock and she pretended she didn't see it. And then she asked if I every had any surgery and I told her I had two nose jobs and a circumcision which she didn't seem to find cute at all and she didn't do anything else. She just kind of got up and said, "You can pick up your results downstairs" and left. Like why the fuck was I naked under a hospital gown? What was I doing here? What brought me to this point? And I really felt like shit big time and I felt like I wasn't even a dignified animal corpse anymore. Just something for the world to forget. And the only warmth I got today was that on the elevator where I met an old lady who was very nice and suffering from some kind of terrible killer ulcers and I hugged her and left. Then I got in my car and left the hospital, and the radio told me the more I spend the more reward points I earn. 23 Karen VOLKMAN ---------------------------------------------TAP, TAP Tap, tap. The math’s complex. A smut on your cornstalk, a fracas, a fat plenitude: Christian fish. Differential, in sum. Spoke, spike, and strut groomed like the ruminant calf of crass seraphs. Asphodel, that greeny phallus, slats in its strows. Auricular gloze descanting auto-da-fes. Animal slaughters or fun by the pyres? Stare of Medusa salt scream at the supper. 24 Carol GUESS & Kelly MAGEE ---------------------------------------------WITH FLOOD Then the basement filled with water. We learned to live with it, as we lived with everything else. Maybe if I stopped wearing yellow and you stopped wearing blue. Our flooded house was across from a park. Sometimes it was also across from a truck. The truck was yours but the park was public: children on leash and dogs on display. Sometimes the curtains in our windows were yellow and sometimes the curtains in our windows were blue. The only green was the flood in our basement and the tornado sky, which was actually gray. When we imagined a family, we imagined a child. You wanted the child to come from your body. Instead, this flood; trouble rising to meet us. Green like your eyes and taller each day. 25 Carol GUESS & Kelly MAGEE ---------------------------------------------WITH STONE LION The mean girls started it. Dragged Becky into the girls’ bathroom and strapped a stone lion to her back. Left her lying sideways on subway tile, pregnant with statuary. Smoking and stalled I smelled their perfume. I unstrapped the lion, helped her straighten her dress. Without a word she fixed her hair and we walked into the lunchroom as if nothing had changed. 26 Shane JONES --------------------------------------------BLAME YEAR Blame the men who wear pig masks who run under the artificial sky when it’s turned to foreverforest. Blame the wires. Blame the canopies of endless static ads the child runs through. Blame the teacher who keeps gold tipped sais in her desk drawer. When the men who wear pig masks attempt to eat the artificial sky, breaking their wire molds, pushing further than what is allowed, blame them for the long slit in the sky that becomes The Giants zipper. Blame rain when it should be snow. Blame The Giant for opening his zipper and spilling out horses, clams, more wire, sea turtles, blue stars. Blame the New York Giants. Blame people who wash their flying cars for more than an hour. Blame anyone who washes a car. Blame crystals. Blame Billy Idol for choosing sea foam when it’s his turn at the dial for the artificial sky. Blame the wires fencing in your house connecting you to the sky. The men 27 wearing pig masks have stolen the gold tipped sais and are stabbing antiques called balloons. Blame the roads made of light and crystal that twist transparent through the sky. Blame the crinkle in your suit and the stale air in your helmet. Blame too many days eating egg salad. Blame Billy Idol for everything. Blame the hall of green books. Blame Yama the God of death for water worship for his always hungry water buffalo. Blame the feeding wire. Blame ham. When the planets civilians gather on the iron hill with spears they will be doused in wire. They will sleep in wire. They will fuck and make babies who will be born to wire. They will drive their cars into the sky and believe they are free and not connected by wire. Blame the year 2088. When the men who wear pig masks stab the last orange balloon the pig masks double in size. The iron hill trembles. Blame your mothers choice for the artificial sky: royal purple. Blame the men in pearl colored space suits patching up the sky, The Giants zipper, with syrup. Blame all sports played by men. Blame men. Blame The Rocket Hello 28 that navigates the planet. Sky shark. Blame all light you can’t feel. Blame your insides. Blame Wednesday. Blame chicken tenders. Blame craving an open floor plan. Blame the sky father. The men in pig masks are water boarding a water buffalo. Blame the stars pretending to be planets. The sky says: Where is Henry when you need him? The men who wear pig masks are making the sounds of horses as they approach residential houses. Blame the letter V. Blame laughing teenagers for choosing the sky color Orcs Pussy. Blame all floating ships who are not connected by wire, their exhaust the same color as their hulls. Blame mechanical birds. If you see Henry, tell him he is needed. Blame your boss. Blame your mother for wanting everything to be colored royal purple, even her wheelchair. Blame the creator of rockets. Blame the intern for losing The Rocket Hello. If a man in a pig mask could ride a rocket the villagers on the iron hill would dance. Stay away from your home. Blame your body for wanting a wire to insert itself in any hole it chooses. Blame the human back. Blame Sheila. 29 When the men in pig masks run through the residential streets Henry is waiting for them. The sky now is static green. Everyone on the iron hill moans. Their mouths open and they receive their wire. Cars fly on tracks of light and crystal, ribbons of road entwine the planet. Blame yourself. Blame microwaves for not being able to handle metal. Blame electricity. Blame the sun warming the artificial sky from behind, giving it that glowing backdrop no matter what the choice is. Someone picked Ostrich Eye. Blame the human face. Blame The Rocket Hello. Blame the countdown to forever sleep. Blame any type of force pressing down on you. Blame February. Blame your memory of the ocean. Blame garbage night. Blame the endless feed of fast food through your feeding wire. Blame all the buildings, their windows, their smoke, their circulating air, their disregard for your oxygen helmet. Blame people who only take baths. Blame your inability to leave the planet, to slap stars. Blame pig prayer. Blame poisoned fountains you can’t drink from. Blame the number zero. Henry is our hero. Behind the 30 artificial sky is the sun we’ve never seen. Turn the sky to sun please. Blame the subtraction of the word murder from our vocabulary. Everyone on the iron hill moans at the imitation sun glorious gold above their helmet heads, wired feet. Henry smashes the pig masks into walls of wire. He places their bodies in wired bird nest bags. He opens his mouth to the sky. Cars spewing light on a wire track. Don’t blame Henry. The Rocket Hello spews exhaust across the sky. Henry throws the bags at the artificial sky and it tears a hole reveling black sky. This is it. There are no past memories allowed inside your helmet head. Blame yourself. 31 Lawrence MATSUDA ---------------------------------------------THE 1943 MINIDOKA VEIL Auntie Shizuko lives with voices from beyond the veil: It is our destiny to be in hell that is purgatory where our spirits will be pulled slowly from our feet through silver cords, to wrap our bodies around a cross. Our bound feet will be the first to feel the fire. Odors like the stench of 10,000 cattle snorting in cages fume. Necks held tight between bars, muzzles in the feed. Blinded by the narrow passageways, they march heavily down the chute too trusting to suspect the hammer will fall now. 32 Glistening steel troughs in the latrine run red, yellow, and brown. The water cascades, stench flushes past all. Mother’s modesty lost, private functions on public display. She can not sit in full view, covers her head with a paper bag to guard what dignity remains. Nocturnal habits emerge— prehistoric survival patterns burn cycle shifts, internal clock sets midnight relief sessions— obsessive habit like a facial tick carted back to Seattle, remnant of a time when bathroom doors were luxuries. 33 Lawrence MATSUDA ---------------------------------------------- 1943 MINIDOKA CONCENTRATION CAMP ALBUM Cradled in a grim carpenter’s lap, a wide-eyed infant’s face appears on the Minidoka cabinet makers album page. Years later at a party, I heard the story of an elderly Japanese couple who pray for a child, cherish the baby, helplessly watch its last breath before this photo is taken. Is that a real infant’s face? Ghost? Or a black and white shadow cast between a carpenter’s suspenders? A button resembles an eye. 34 Temperatures drop, distortion bends a mirror reflection, my mind falls like Alice twisting down the rabbit hole. I push tingling fingers through a mist, touch something cool. The dead carpenter and child, no longer shadows on slick paper. In my closeness I know them. Their names, anxious to be heard rest like glowing embers on my tongue. 35 Brent L. SMITH --------------------------------------------WITH DAMIEN IN BLACKHAWK So, we're there in the casino, which is mostly empty except for a loud craps table on the other side of the massive game room, and I'm irritated. Some part of me hates to see other people winning. I'm distracted by the ubiquitous smell of cigarrette remains and stale perfume. Awful 70s color scheme. The browns and the yellows and the oranges mix in with the dated odors and so thank god we've both been snorting our nasal cavities all to hell. We sit at a blackjack table and I'm already losing. We both order whiskey on the rocks and Damien tips the waitress more than I do and the dealer smiles as I lose more hands and he attempts making quirky small talk about the weather and I tell him to shut the fuck up "Just deal the cards, man" and Damien is quietly laughing the entire time. He wins more hands than I do. I notice that: Damien doesn't count his chips; that my pack of Parliaments is empty; that I lock eyes with pretty girls who become empty seats, drift 36 in and then fade away; that I yell at the waitress to get me more cigarettes; that we walk from casino to casino and none of it seems to end; that all the walls of these Old West buildings have been gutted and fused and revamped; that it's all just one long building with different names for different casino rooms with different front doors; that we're gambling and coke rambling in a sick labyrinthine thing, little glassine bags in our fiddling hands under mirrors and chandeliers. "Pass that pinot grigio," Damien calls it. We sniff a lot and our eyes water making it hard to sit still at blackjack tables. A man follows us to each one. Matted hair long and black and grey, parted down the middle. He's a wiry man who never looks us in the eye and cries like a sick dog over every lost hand. "You guys think I could get some of that?" he'd ask, still not looking at us. We pretend not to see him. We finally ditch that wiry dog, he was bad karma, he'd lose hands then we'd lose hands. We meet two girls at the circular bar in the middle of the casino. The stale air, recycled, gets refreshed with fresh puffs, damp parliaments, deep drags, chemical 37 ghosts. I light their ends. They're possessed. Afternoon buzz. One is platinum blonde and has colorful tattoos that are beautiful. The other is a darker blonde and she has a diamond piercing on her left cheekbone matching her eyes. They work as waitresses in some restaurant in Estes Park I've never heard of. They're from Cheyenne, here just for the summer. "You left the middle of nowhere to arrive in the middle of nowhere," Damien spits passing them their shots of Fernet Branca. They laugh like people do when they're not listening. "Ew, what is this stuff?" "Just be lucky this dump even had this shit," Damien barks. "I like it," the other says, wincing. They do some blow with us and we laugh and fondle in a spacious handicap bathroom stall and later at a three-card poker table they ask if we want to go back to Estes Park with them for the night and we say sure and after they leave us to go back to the bathroom "Be right back!" Damien looks at me and gives a bored shrug and I shrug back and we leave going back to the car driving away. I look back for the wiry dog and he's not there. 38 Kristina Marie DARLING ---------------------------------------------ANTARCTICA When I mentioned the landscape, you were thinking of something else. All around us were figure skaters. The blades on their shoes etching circles into the ice below. For weeks we had been drifting apart. In each room of the house, I imagined frost accumulating on the furniture. An uncanny brightness in every window. Now we're standing at the edge of the lake. You keep telling me that you "need some more time." Your face darkening like a house buried in winter. So I sit down and try to carve a man from a block of ice. In every direction, the same snow-covered fields. 39 Kristina Marie DARLING ---------------------------------------------LANDSCAPE You kept mentioning the other women, the way they would lie on their backs in the grassy field. All around them were breadknives. The place settings for a picnic. But even before that we had been quarrelling. You told me, tilting your pretty head, how my pastoral elegy failed to move you. Now you're watching women stare at the sky. Someone's perfect clavicle showing through a white dress. The field doesn't seem to end. So I try and try to enter the landscape. I watch your perfect mouth, mouthing commands: threshold, delicious, melancholia. 40 Volatalistic PHIL --------------------------------------------FIND A WAY TO LEAVE They sat together, all huddled around the evening’s meal, trying to stay warm. “They say it’s the coldest place on Earth,” Broc said to the others. “I heard that it’s because Hell finally froze over and that’s why it’s so cold,” said Tom. Out of the shadows came a bitter old spud, he hobbled over to the rest of the group. “You youngin’s don’t know squat. This, this cold here, now—this is nothing,” Old Papa said. “You should be where I’ve been or go where I have gone. I have gone to the great depths of this place and the further you explore, the colder it gets. It gets so cold that you think you are going to freeze to death. I lost a lot of good comrades that way, and so many of them are still frozen in the ice, as we speak. So please, spare me the dramatics.” Old Papa told them, as he prepared his spot next to the meal. “What is for dinner tonight anyhow,” Broc asked. 41 “I’m not sure, I think it’s supposed to be a casserole tonight,” said Tom. “Well whatever it is, it smells awful!” said Old Papa. “Hey, whatever happened with that one passerby we had about three weeks ago?” Tom asked. “Oh, you didn’t hear?” Broc asked. “Old Papa found him. Tell the story Old Papa.” “Alright you two don’t go having any nightmares. What I am about to tell you can’t be untold.” Old Papa began to dramatically tell his story. “It was an evening like this, just as common as could be, and then this tall feller comes along, asking where he could find a place to cool down and rest. He said he’d been at the market all day and it must have been 100 degrees. So I told him where he could go to get some shade and relax, and I never saw him again after that, not that day at least. Well about a week ago, I was doing some more excavating and I came across him, he was frozen rock solid. He had ventured too far, and froze. That 42 wasn’t the worst part of it though…he was missing his head!” Old Papa said. “Missing his head?!” Tom shouted in fear. “Yep, I reckon it was cut clean off. Whoever had done it, done it real good alright,” said Old Papa. “We have to get out of here! We have to find a way to leave this place!” Tom shouted and continued to panic. “Pipe down!” said Old Papa. “Shh, someone is coming near, I can hear them in the distance!” he said, trying to get Tom to be quiet. The door opened, and in came a hand reaching for the orange juice. On its way to the orange juice, it pushed aside the evening’s dinner, an old potato (Papa), a stalk of broccoli (Broc) and a Tomato (Tom). 43 (from Flash Fiction 40+1: New Mexican Bread Aisle) 44 Volatalistic PHIL --------------------------------------------THEY SEEM TO HATE ME I’m not allowed to eat. All of the food in the house always seems to belong to someone else. It’s hard enough trying to live alone, so as a result of everything, I live with my family. I don’t understand why it is such a big deal for me to be able to eat every now and then. It seems like whenever I go to eat something, someone is always watching for me, like they are afraid that I will eat their food. There is so much food, would it really be such a big deal if I helped myself to such a small portion. Such a small portion can’t be missed and it will help keep me alive. I think that it’s unfair that they sometimes get fast food or other good food and eat it around me, without giving or offering me any. I can’t reason with them though, because it’s as if I do not exist. I know that they know I am here, I exist and live here, but they seem to hate me. It’s like nothing I do is accepted. Trying to talk with or reason with them only leaves them becoming hostile and setting up traps for me. Everything always 45 seems like a trap. It’s as if they do it on purpose just so they will have something to complain about. I’ll give you an example, the other day when I was hungry, I went into the kitchen to help myself to a sandwich, but I couldn’t find any bread, I guess we ran out. But I found some peanut butter, but I know that if I ate that, then there would be hell to pay. I just don’t understand why they like to leave food out, if they’re only doing it to try and hurt me. 46 (from Flash Fiction 40+1: New Mexican Bread Aisle) 47 Harold Whit WILLIAMS ---------------------------------------------from HOLLOW BODIES Dear Scott, just this morning those tulip trees behind The Bataclan building show off frostbitten flowers, Browned & brittle, snowing down in spring showers. O! I’ve always admired Nature not giving two shits About anything. & myself? I’m too easily attached, Tenderhearted, weak-kneed. I can’t help but want everything In its place: the wren in his hedge, thunderstorms, sunrise. How quiet the conversations that matter most, how loud This silence of others. Now that I think of it, Scott, Don’t even read this. Let it be a meadow of unmarked snow, A pond without ripples, a tiny blossom frozen in my heart. 48 Scott Alexander JONES ---------------------------------------------from HOLLOW BODIES Me, I’ve always hated rivers for being Just as likely to swallow euphoric spring Breakers manacled with jeans as spit us out Onto oxbows like newborn otters trembling— I vacillate between the cardinals filling me with awe In the garden outside my window, icicles in the eaves & feeling awful that floods will send us inland & turn us into cannibals. I don’t have enough Stalin Or Jesus in me to join Greenpeace. Or maybe I’m just lazy. When morning cuts thru Bloody Kansas oaks & I set my coffee on a tombstone To tie my shoes & a ladybug flutters In the tiny undergrowth, I get that feeling Someone’s watching me & for a second I forget I believe in nothing. 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 Raegan BUTCHER ---------------------------------------------TUESDAY AFTERNOON IN A CAGE my celly lifts weights is a Reverend of the Universal Life Church and has a pierced nipple he walks in calls me a freak laughs turns the boom box up louder says CRANK THIS! i tell him it’s loud enough in here he laughs this is how time passes. 65 Raegan BUTCHER ---------------------------------------------DON’T SAY A WORD i’m locked in an 8 x 10 cell with a pig of a man who farts chainsmokes and wipes his boogers on the walls he outweighs me by at least 150 lbs so i don’t complain 66 Raegan BUTCHER ---------------------------------------------SCUT i don’t know how many hours of my life i’ve spent cleaning up after other people. when you don’t have any skills and you need $$$ you either work in fast food or become a janitor. i’ve cleaned office buildings, restaurants, hardware stores, horse stables, grocery stores, prison work camps and visiting rooms. my friends always seemed to have jobs 67 that were somehow more bearable; they worked in record shops or vintage clothing stores or their parents had their own businesses and they worked for them. i always ended up as a janitor. in prison that term is never used; instead you are a porter. i am not sure why; i thought a porter was a guy who helped people get on trains or something. all thru my teens and twenties, right up until i got arrested i worked crappy little jobs with low pay and zero prestige; let’s face it, scrubbing toilets isn’t 68 a sexy occupation. it seemed that whenever i found a job that paid well i was laid off within a few months. i’ve never been laid off from a job that only paid minimum wage. i had to quit those jobs, only to be forced to find other, similar jobs after a few months of starving and sleeping on people’s couches. it wasn’t much of a life but it was what i did. 69 Raegan BUTCHER ---------------------------------------------SNAPSHOTS having my abscessed ear-drum lanced when i was 5 being punched in the mouth in the 4th grade drinking vodka and orange juice and skipping school using money stolen from a church to buy tickets to see The Clash rolling a pick-up truck when i was a sophomore quitting all those minimum wage jobs without collecting my last paycheck wandering the streets of Seattle in a 2nd hand suit and sleeping in the park 70 being arrested for drunk and disorderly conduct watching my girlfriend give birth to my daughter and cutting the umbilical cord seeing myself on a movie screen for the first time being put in a mental hospital on my 27th birthday finding out my friend had been murdered finding a woman’s wallet and using the money in it to buy heroin being arrested for armed robbery being sentenced to 8 years in prison looking out the bus window at Walla Walla and seeing a guard holding an automatic rifle 71 Olivia PARKS --------------------------------------------COMMUNICATION FAILURE The perpetual hoarseness: like speaking through sand. In the first few weeks Peter drank more water, tried to swallow it down. Then it became difficult to swallow. A doctor, invulnerable in his white coat, diagnosed him with cancer of the larynx. He cut a neat black hole in Peter’s neck and gave him a handheld electrolarynx to speak with. Peter took some time off, and quit smoking. Facing himself in the bathroom mirror Peter murmurs, “Darling.” A tinny voice answers, “D-a-r-ling.” He spits out, “Liar.” The throat croaks, “L-i-ar.” He gasps, “I’m sorry.” The voice apologizes but it is an empty sound, robotic and inflectionless, without timbre or conviction. Standing naked in his bare feet and clasping the device to his neck, Peter tries injections of venom, humor, innuendo, and tenderness. His reflection speaks as if its teeth are chewing it apart. On the 214 Peter listens to the lilt of the town. People talk to each other, to their telephones, to 72 themselves. They speak thoughtlessly or with purpose, but Peter does not mind what they say. The voices are ripe as fruit that is easy to peel. He detects the flatness of exhaustion and a faint note of rising hysteria. Behind him, a man is skipping a smoothly rehearsed deception like a stone. At the front a woman with a pram boards humming to her child, the child screams. A group of school-kids chatter like monkeys and throw their wild eyes at him. Peter alights at the usual corner. Mrs. Carter is waiting by the grass with her turgid, invariably cross pekingese. A green light blinks at its neck, as if confirming that the dog is on. It is wearing a shock collar. Peter looks down at the short body cringing and waggling in inarticulate fervor. The dog begins to bark. The sun glares and the white animal slips out of focus, vibrating on the curb like a noise. Peter raises his hand to his empty throat for the first time all day and barks Rawff Rawff rawff rawff rwaff. At this the dog grows frenzied, ejecting one strangulated rejoinder after another. Peter cries Rawrf rawrf rwarf rawff rwarff. Parting her combed cotton lawn curtains, his neighbor Helen sees him 73 standing in the street barking at Mrs. Carter’s dog, sees him fold like a ribbon and meet the ground. After the funeral, Helen remembered the incident with the dog and asked Mrs. Carter: what was Peter trying to communicate, doing a thing like that? Maybe it was the difference between what he meant to say and how he said it that killed him. 74 Linh DINH ---------------------------------------------AIR DUCT TO AIR DUCT To kiss is to threaten To eat someone without Actually chewing and swallowing. It is also to wed digestive tracts, Meaning the ultimate expression Of intimacy, no less than Having two assholes welded Together, otherwise Known as marriage. 75 Matthew KALER ---------------------------------------------A DISAPPOINTED BRIDGE Wine-drunk Steve rosily fingered Dawn. 76 Erik ANDERSON --------------------------------------------AT THE Mü TTER Among the most prominent displays at the Mütter Museum in Philadelphia is a wall of skulls collected by the Austrian anatomist Joseph Hyrtl. Printed beneath them are names, nationalities, occupations, and, when known, dates and causes of death—much of which appears to have been originally written on the skulls themselves. Taken together, they evoke a rich tapestry: soldiers, murderers, rope-walkers, boatmen, brewers, couriers, prostitutes, fruit vendors, reformers, and thieves; Catholics, cretins, Protestants, Muslims, and gypsies; suicides, alcoholics; those with dysentery, pneumonia, smallpox, and cholera. The museum, though small, is overwhelming, and after recently spending an hour there I couldn’t look any longer. I had grown tired of the body, of thinking of the body as a stock of specimens and samples that, taken together, form another sort of body. Of knowledge, yes, but the kind that, paradoxically, takes apart—cars, stereos, and the 77 invisible architecture of the program into which I’m typing these words. It is the body as seen through the microscope, the x-ray, the knife. Several years ago I was referred to a plastic surgeon. I had been beaten up pretty badly and needed work done on my nose. The procedure went off without a hitch. Scheduled in the late afternoon, I arrived around lunch, had my rights read to me by an anesthesiologist, and woke up an hour later with a small cast on my face. Other than the broken cheekbone, which the surgeon failed to diagnose, I don’t have any lasting complaints. My nose still tacks a bit to the left, but this isn’t entirely the surgeon’s fault. A few weeks earlier, I had walked into an unassuming suburban building, tucked out of the way so as to attract little attention. The receptionists were masters of discretion, never keeping anyone waiting for more than a few minutes. They had even devised an apparatus for their clipboards that hid the name of whoever had signed in ahead of you. I found this cloak and 78 dagger business fairly strange, but once I was alone in the consultation room the poster on the back of the door confirmed my suspicions: it showed a series of illustrated breasts in a variety of shapes and sizes. I realized the only other patients I had seen were women. My surgeon was a boob doctor. Anatomical collections like the Mütter are, in part, relics from the 19th century, a time when collecting samples of all kinds of life—human, plant, and animal—reached a fever pitch. Though it would be unthinkable for a surgeon to maintain a personal stash of human body parts today, plastic surgery may be one extension of the practice. Once it became possible to take the body apart, that is, it became necessary to put it back together. It seems inevitable that someone would have figured out that it could be reassembled in more pleasing combinations. Likewise, it seems inevitable that modern genetics will lead to certain codes being removed from the program altogether. Throughout history and across cultures we have modified our bodies, but while there must be something psychologically and aesthetically pleasing 79 in a tattoo or a piercing, there is dysfunction in a bound foot or corset. To modify is not always to empower, in other words, but what does one say to a man undergoing a vaginoplasty, a woman seeking a bilateral salgino-oophorectomy? Can a line be drawn between not feeling at home in your own skin and wishing your breasts were bigger? I wonder about this modular approach to the body, about its origins and effects. I find the idea of a prefabricated breast or a nose assembled on site somewhat disturbing, as though one had the agency to choose one’s body, as though the DNA got it wrong. It would seem we have a deep discomfort with being bodies, and so think of them selectively, disconnectedly—as so many components to be upgraded, old files to be deleted. The idea being, I suppose, that a better body awaits. Opposite the Mütter’s wall of skulls are examples of early obstetrical instruments: primitive forceps reminiscent of salad servers and other crude objects for scraping one body from another. In the lower level of the museum are bottled babies, preserved fetuses, a dried colon over eight feet long, and a jar 80 full of epileptic brains. The Mütter is also home to several books bound in human skin. The practice appears to have once been part of the punishment for murderers: the records of the legal proceedings against William Corder and John Horwood, both Brits, were bound in their own skin. But the books may also be an apt metaphor for the ways culture is inscribed on the body, how it encodes itself from the circumcised penis to the piercings in one’s ears, from the tattoos on one’s arms to the surgical scars on one’s face. How strange it is that to be a body is also to be a thought body—one that wears a culture’s thinking. Stranger yet that for those of us who have the luxury (or is it burden?) not to labor physically, there is also the unspoken understanding that our bodies are not our work, which we take to be a product of our minds, detached from those bodies. Ironically, it may be just this that makes the Mütter possible. Though the surgeon’s hands hold the scalpel that cuts the skin, it’s what he knows that incises. More importantly, it is not his body, but a body—even if it’s your body—on which he operates. While this permits marvels, it is also the beginning 81 of the abominable body, the body that alternately demands and defies its display. I don’t know how to proceed in the face of such detachment, how to navigate the body and the demands imposed upon it, either from within or without, but at times I become intensely aware of my own embodiment—as I did inside the Mütter. I felt the flexing of my muscles from my toes through my ass (first one side, then the other), and when I left the building, I could almost sense the planet sensing me—the grass, the sidewalk, the hidden curvature of the earth. An elaborate choreography was taking place: I walked past and around other bodies, as though in orbit. I thought of bees and of ants, how a colony or hive is also a form of thinking, and as I moved through the city the life of our species struck me just then as an elaborate thought, so beyond any one body’s ability to excise it. Some years after my own surgery, I had a student come into my office. She was writing about the time when, at fifteen, her mother encouraged her to get a 82 nose job. It was too big, her mother said, too Jewish. Her mother was planning to get her breasts done, as her own mother had before her, so she had no problem correcting what she saw as her daughter’s deformity. The student decided against the operation for a number of reasons, not least of which was her suspicion that her face would, in her words, be molded into the shape of a lie. But what had ultimately decided the matter for her, she said, was when she asked her mother whether she would be getting a car for her sixteenth birthday. No, her mother responded, you’ll be getting a nose. It was fitting, I suppose, that her essay didn’t adhere to any models, but in the absence of familiar patterns the problem was apparent. We discussed at length what shape she should give it, but of course the real question was, given her own embodiment, What form should her thinking take? 83 Matteo Delpho DELFINI ---------------------------------------------FAREWELL Young pregnant women dance on the sidewalks Their shining and alive atmospheres join together Stories of a life never lived That weave together That rise & rip up On the road Where I’m not running because I have run out of batteries & she has her new little horse & together with the ghosts I catch sight of the new amphetaminic horizon The angels’ wings are pitched with tar & my aura is in the shitter. (translated from Italian by Laura Covelli) 84 John GREY ---------------------------------------------CRASH I crashed in his apartment slept on the floor for days he kept encouraging me to leave but I had no place else so I said let's make this easier for both of us why don't I take the bed and you the floor for days for months even and I'll keep encouraging you to leave but you have no other place to the point where I'm so sick of living with you in this cramped little space that despite the comfort of my bed I leave we only need do this until September that's when I start school 85 Chris STROFFOLINO --------------------------------------------THE FEUERZEIG VIDEO COVERS PROJECT #2: “LISA SAYS” (VELVET UNDERGROUND, LIVE, 1969 VERSION) Why am I so shy? Oh tell me why am I so shy? You know good times they just seem to pass me by. Oh, why am I so shy? There are certain songs you hear when you’re 18 that you can immediately relate to, but are convinced that someday, somehow, you’ll learn to outgrow when you ‘grow up,’ and “Lisa Says,” particularly this version of “Lisa Says,” is one of them. When I was 18, I could immediately relate to this introverted persona-- so obviously a Pisces (“made up of mostly water,” as he puts it in “The Ocean,” another song from these sessions), but I probably believed it was a situational mood song more than a salient identity song—not just because of Reed’s later music, or the “rock and roll animal” persona he never felt 86 comfortable with, but because even in 1969, he was on stage singing a song about being so shy. There’s a difference between being shy, and being shy about admitting your shyness in public in a heartfelt, yet artful, way. “Lisa Says,” in contrast to most pop songs, is not shy about admitting its embarrassing shyness. In the process, the song becomes an introvert anthem! In the original meaning of “introvert,” it’s not a judgmental term as “shyness” often is, but a descriptive term that means “inwardly directed.” This can be evidenced in a tendency to be “always staring at the sky” (as Lisa puts it). But it can also be social, and lead to a deeper, more profound, kiss than what the extroverted “Good Time Charlie,” able to live in the so-called present, is capable of--and Reed, as a Pisces Introspective Hero, helped me embrace it, at least for the record. Looking back on his early songs in 1975, Reed writes: Passion--REALISM--realism was the key. The records were letters. Real letters from me to certain 87 other people. Who had and still have basically, no music, be it verbal or instrumental to listen to. The record, rather than the live performance, is the key that brings people together (especially in this increasingly fragmented society). It’s not just a not “finished product,” but a highly personalized ‘form letter’—written for certain other “inwardly directed” people. In the “internet era,” when the contemplative medium of letter writing has become supplanted by a glut of tweets and transient “kiss” of texts, it’s easy to forget it was standard to write a letter, and wait a few weeks for a response. This may have lacked the “immediate gratification” of electronic culture, but certainly allowed the words to sink in, for both the writer and reader. Reed’s emphasis on the record emphasizes the intimate relationship that happens between the recording studio and the solitary listener. Like most VU fans, I first discovered them through records. Part of this was due to necessity— living in a small town where none of my favorite bands played, and no ‘underage clubs’ that I was aware of, made me value recorded music over the 88 live show (and in some ways the medium of recorded music—for better or worse-- may have a lot to do with why so many of us are so shy; as if the record is where it’s happening more than the ‘actual present,’). Only later, did that lure me to see Reed in live performance: just because you’re an introvert, doesn’t mean you can’t rock. After all, shyness is also a professional workaholic stance: some people like to go out dancing/ and other people they have to work---just watch me now! (as one version of the “cool” rocker “Sweet Jane” puts it). That may also explain the dark sunglasses, and why Reed abandoned the version of the song that emphasizes the lyrics about the shyness--but for those who find Lou Reed usually to be “too cool” (if not quite as ‘cool’ as Leonard Cohen), “Lisa Says” may be one of his most honest songs. The recording is the art that can compensate for “failure” in the social present. I experienced this first hand, when I recorded “Lisa Says” for Jeff Feuerzeig’s “Piano Van Sessions.” As I sat in a Ford Econoline with a piano in it, rehearsing the song, I peered through the little sliver of light and saw 89 pedestrians who “are dancing and having such fun” (“Afterhours”). You could say I’m bringing music to the masses, or at least random people who would never hear such a song in a smokeless bar, but I’m wearing my “game face,” paying more attention to practicing the song for the recording than to the pedestrians in the immediate social moment. The future is more present than the present; the record is more social than the live performance. I feel isolated by the transient “kiss” of the present the “street musician” is supposed to thrive on. I feel shy, but—equally—I can understand why Lisa would say, “You treat everybody so cruel!” It may not be my intention, but by the time I realize I came off cruel when she flirted, she’s gone (first thought, worst thought)! I didn’t outgrow it--even if I thought I did for a while with my lady by my side for all those years. But the recording, by contrast, gives me hope, and it makes me glad to hear that many others consider “Lisa Says,” their favorite cover song video Jeff Feuerzeig and I have made. The responses I’ve received from people all over the world may be cold, “wire mesh mother” comfort in the present—but 90 they keep coming in long after “the night like this” in which I was offered a transient kiss has passed, as if it might eventually compensate for the affliction, and allow me, like Lou, to make a virtue of something I can’t change. But enough about Lou and myself; what about Lisa? Of all the “says” women (or trannies), Caroline, Candy and Stephanie (and even the Lisa on the VU version of this song), Lisa is the most forward; she’s charmingly making the first move: “On a night like this, it’d be so nice if you gave me a kiss.” She’s not just kissing the guy; she’s using words to get him to do it. And all her rebukes, that might seem nags to someone else, are not really judgmental; she’s just trying to get him to kiss her! When I got into Shakespeare years later, I realize she’s kind of like the Shakespearean comic heroine (Beatrice, Rosalind, Portia, etc.) in that. I could easily fall for Lisa, and probably have a few times; sometimes she’s a tease, but sometimes she’s genuine! She has to tease to please. —Chris Stroffolino, March 2013 91 Mathias SVALINA --------------------------------------------WASTOID My lover has a body of ashes. He sits in a windowless room & tries not to move. When I am with him I must hold my breath & sweat layers my arms. He is so still, he is a zoo of stillness & all of the animals are ferocious. I am a labyrinth of faces, each holding its breath, each turning blue, talking to & answering itself without breath. Christ, I am tired. I am all the colors in a painting of the moon. 92 Kristine Ong MUSLIM ---------------------------------------------NEVER BETTER Hunger crystallizes with us inside its glass belly Soon, the glass will melt. The marble kitchen slab where it rests will turn transparent. Inevitably, we will wake up swaddled in thawed glass walls. The walls are warmer this time of the year. Touch them. The resistance is only temporary. Wait for your hand to pass through. Feel the groaning, the slow ticking. 93 Kristine Ong MUSLIM ---------------------------------------------SIDEWALK CLASS The vendor proffers a sample. He sells screaming bottles at two dollars a dozen. The tiny bottles are glazed, are frosted with care, are red around the rim. “Kids love them,” he says. “Just squeeze the neck of the bottle and hear it scream. Wanna try?” 94 Noam CHOMSKY --------------------------------------------STUDENTS SHOULD BECOME ANARCHISTS Appropriated interview from June 14, 2011 Interviewer: Do you believe the world is better today than 40 or 50 years ago? Chomsky: Obviously! Walk along the open fields here at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Half of the students are women; a third belongs to an ethnic minority. People are dressed more casually and are engaged for all possible things. This place was very different when I came here 50 years ago. Then you saw white men, formally dressed and only interested in their own work. You could see the same development in Germany and all over the world. Interviewer: But are students more political? Today’s generation is often reproached for being disinterested in the world. 95 Chomsky: I think that reproach is false. The period of high politicization at the universities was very short—from 1968 to 1970. Before that, students were apolitical. Consider the Vietnam War, one of the greatest crimes since the Second World War. Four or five years went by until some form of visible protest stirred in the US. That quickly ebbed away in the 1970s. The mood was very different before the Iraq war. To my knowledge, the Iraq war was the first war in history where there were demonstrations before it began. My students missed the lectures to demonstrate. That would never have happened 50 years ago. The protests did not prevent the war but limited it. The US was never able to do in Iraq a fraction of what it had done in Vietnam. Interviewer: Were those protests only a straw fire? Chomsky: No. The politicization today is much greater than in the 1950s. Forms of lasting activism developed that enabled many of our battles to be won. For example, there was a continuous progress in women’s rights. If I had asked my grandmother 96 whether she was oppressed, she wouldn’t have known what I was talking about. My mother said: "I am oppressed but I don’t know what to do!" My daughter would shout to me after such a question: “Our world is more human!” Interviewer: progress? Do you believe in historical Chomsky: Progress is slow but dramatic over long time horizons. Think of the abolition of slavery or the development of freedom of expression. Rights are not simply bestowed. People who joined forces and banded together realized them. Still progress is not a linear development. There are also times of backward steps. Interviewer: If there are times of progress and times of backward steps, will the world be better in 50 years than today? Chomsky: What will be in 50 years depends strongly on what the young generation does today. Two great dangers threaten the existence of the world: our relation to the environment and the danger that starts from nuclear weapons. If we do 97 not champion environmental protection more vigorously today, we could be mired in a grave environmental crisis in 50 years, let alone the risks of nuclear weapons. The terrible catastrophe of Fukushima reminds us that the non-military use of nuclear power is fraught with extreme risks. We cannot ignore this under any circumstances! Interviewer: In 60 years students of today will be as old as you. What must they do to look back on their life with satisfaction? Chomsky: Naturally they could say they lived contentedly with friends, children, and fun. But to really lead a fulfilled and satisfying life, they should recognize problems and contribute to solving them. If they cannot look back at 80 and say "I have accomplished something," then their life will not have succeeded. Interviewer: At 82, are you satisfied with what you achieved? Chomsky: Being satisfied is impossible. My life has too many dimensions, family, profession, politics, and several others. In some areas I am 98 satisfied but not in others. The problems of this world are quite great. Inequality in the US is at the level of the 1920s and the economy still has tremendous influence in our society. I cannot be satisfied! Interviewer: Political engagement like yours is rare among scholars. Are you sometimes furious at the "servants of power" as you say or at professor colleagues who only concentrate on their academic work? Chomsky: I consider it immoral to be a supporter of a power system. However that does not mean that I am furious at anyone. Scholars per se do not have deeper political insights than other persons and are not morally superior to others. But they are obligated to help politicians seek and find the truth. Interviewer: That sounds like you are becoming mild in old age. Chomsky: No. My views and attitudes have not changed in the course of the decades. I still believe what I believed as a teenager. Interviewer: Is that good—to still believe what 99 you believed almost 70 years ago? Chomsky: Yes, when fundamental principles are involved. Obviously I have changed my opinions in many questions—but my ideals are the same! Interviewer: You often say you are an anarchist. What do you mean by that? Chomsky: Anarchists try to identify power structures. They urge those exercising power to justify themselves. This justification does not succeed most of the time. Then anarchists work at unmasking and mastering the structures, whether they involve patriarchal families, a Mafia international system, or the private tyrannies of the economy, the corporation. Interviewer: What was the key experience that made you an anarchist? Chomsky: There was none. When I was twelve years old, I began to go to secondhand bookshops. Many of them were run by anarchists who came from Spain. Therefore it seemed very natural to me to be an anarchist. 100 Interviewer: anarchists? Should all students become Chomsky: Yes. Students should challenge authorities and join a long anarchist tradition. Interviewer: "Challenge authorities"—a liberal or a moderate leftist could accept that invitation. Chomsky: As soon as one identifies challenges and overcomes illegitimate power, he or she is an anarchist. Most people are anarchists. What they call themselves doesn’t matter to me. Interviewer: Who or what must challenge today’s student generation? Chomsky: This world is full of suffering, distress, violence, and catastrophes. Students must decide: does something concern you or not? I say: look around, analyze the problems, ask yourself what you can do and set out on the work! 101 Jamie STEWART ---------------------------------------------BELLS ants in the rice, ants in the seaweed ants in the kimchi a worm in my stool we lived together for months, we both burst with shaking rage drunk and nude on the steps, a cross drawn on her chin we both look away, cupcake on a piece of cake goodbye haunted house, chuck bo buck banana fanna fo fuck i see it and i have no right to see it, i don’t even know what it is blood paid with blood, sit on my lap, it might be the last time we ever feel love 102 Jamie STEWART ---------------------------------------------PRINCESS TAM TAM its turning from day to dark Armageddon what made you think life was special when I look at you there is at least one life that is special We don’t need to live to love Everyone has failed us and we have failed everyone We don’t need to live to love Between you and me, soon this will all be gone And to spare us kisses in the flood I stand before, a piece of paper in my hand A vow of double suicide The end of the world is avoidable Our fire escape is 5 floors above the street We can sit and watch Los Angeles burning Turn around, holding hands then lean over backwards This is the quiet we’ve promised one another This is the love we’ve always dreamt of 103 104 Fri, Feb 28, 2014 at 3:37 PM Scott, We are heading out to the coast now. I am going to work on the drawings from there. I have all my art supplies with me! Perfect day out. I just want you to know that I now call all the contributors to ZD4 my dick-nose children, and I actually feel real human mom-child love for them, which, I assume, is something like how Nanny felt toward Gonzo. It's called sympathy, Scott. Maxwell Mednick 105 Erik Anderson is the author of the book of lyric essays, The Poetics of Trespass (Otis Books/Seismicity Editions, 2010). Currently, he teaches at Franklin & Marshall College and lives in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Poet, singer, actor, ex-convict & cult figure Raegan Butcher’s first poetry collection, End of the World Graffiti, appeared in 1991. 5 years later, he was convicted of armed robbery and spent 7 years in prison, composing the poems that would appear in the poetry book, Stone Hotel, published by the anarchist collective, CrimethInc in 2003. 2 years later, living in Cuernavaca, Mexico, he produced a 2nd book of poetry, Rusty String Quartet, again with CrimethInc. He is the also the author of screenplays and novels, including Siege of Station 19 and The Chupacabra Chronicles. 106 Noam Chomsky (b. 1928) is an American linguist, philosopher, cognitive scientist, logician, political commentator, activist, and anarchist. He is Professor Emeritus at MIT, where he’s taught for over 50 years. Laura Covelli is an Italian teacher, translator, and interpreter. Kristina Marie Darling is the author of 12 books, including Melancholia (An Essay) (Ravenna Press, 2012), Petrarchan (BlazeVOX Books, 2013), and (with Carol Guess) X Marks the Dress: A Registry (Gold Wake Press, forthcoming in 2014). Matteo Delpho Delfini is an Italian poet who works as a social worker in northern Italy, 1 hour south of Milan. He published his first collection of poetry book titled Nullamore last year. 107 Born in Vietnam in 1963, Linh Dinh came to the US in 1975. He’s the author of 2 books of stories, Fake House (2000) and Blood and Soap (2004), 5 of poems, All Around What Empties Out (2003), American Tatts (2005), Borderless Bodies (2006), Jam Alerts (2007), and Some Kind of Cheese Orgy (2009), and a novel, Love Like Hate (2010). He’s been anthologized in Best American Poetry, Great American Prose Poems from Poe to the Present, Postmodern American Poetry, and Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion. James Franco is an actor, director, author, and visual artist. His film appearances include Milk, Pineapple Express, Howl, and 127 Hours, which earned him an Academy Award nomination. He is the author of Palo Alto, and his writing has appeared in Esquire, Vanity Fair, N+1, the Wall Street Journal, and McSweeney’s. Franco’s art has been exhibited throughout the world, including the Museum of Contemporary Art in LA, the Museum of Contemporary Art’s PS1 in New York, the Clocktower Gallery in New York, and the Peres Projects in Berlin. 108 John Grey is an Australian-born poet. Recently published in The Lyric, Vallum and the science fiction anthology, The Kennedy Curse with work upcoming in Bryant Literary Magazine, Natural Bridge, Southern California Review, and The Pedestal. Carol Guess is the author of numerous books, including Tinderbox Lawn and Doll Studies: Forensics. Follow her here: www.carolguess.blogspot.com Scott Alexander Jones is a PhD dropout who’s lived in Portland, Austin, Seattle, Montana, and Wellington, NZ. He’s got three poetry collections: Elsewhere (Black Lawrence Press, 2014), Carpe Demons (Unsolicited Press, 2014), and That Finger on Your Temple is the Barrel of My Raygun (Bedouin Books, 2015), as well as a chapbook, One Day There Will Be Nothing to Show That We Were Shane Jones is the author of Light Boxes, The Failure Six, A Cake Appeared, and Daniel Fights a Hurricane. He lives in Albany, NY. 109 Matthew Kaler was born and raised in Missoula, MT. He has lived on the Isle of Malta in the Mediterranean, The Balearic Islands of Spain, and Oahu of Hawaii. Kelly Magee’s first book, Body Language, won the Katherine Ann Porter Prize for Short Fiction. Her writing has appeared in Crazyhorse, The Kenyon Review, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Passages North, Literary Mama, and others. She teaches creative writing at Western Washington University. You can find her at kellyelizabethmagee.com. Lawrence Matsuda was born in the Minidoka, Idaho Concentration Camp during WWII. He and his family were among the approximately 120,000 Japanese Americans and Japanese held without due process for 3 years or more. Matsuda has a PhD from the University of Washington and was: a secondary teacher, university counselor, state level administrator, school principal, assistant superintendent, educational consultant, and visiting professor at Seattle U. In July of 2010, his poetry book, A Cold Wind from Idaho was published by Black Lawrence Press. 110 Maxwell Mednick is a piece of shit. Kristine Ong Muslim is the author of several books most recently We Bury the Landscape (Queen’s Ferry Press, 2012) and Grim Series (Popcorn Press, 2012). Her work has appeared in Arsenic Lobster Poetry Journal, Painted Bride Quarterly, and The State. You can find her at: http://kristinemuslim.weebly.com. Olivia Parkes was born in London but grew up in Los Angeles. She studied art at Wesleyan University and currently works as a painter and writer in Berlin. Travis Sehorn has toured 3 plays nationally with The Missoula Oblongata and works with other theater projects, most recently in a mansion in New Jersey and soon an adaptation of The Forbidden Zone. Travis also does film, including Morning Dew, a futuristic animal apocalypse film made in London and toured throughout Europe in 2010. Travis has recorded 11 full albums. Travis refuses to pay rent. 111 Brent L. Smith was born and raised in LA. He did undergraduate work at Humboldt State and received an MFA from the Jack Kerouac School. Upon returning to LA, he mopped the floors of Harvard & Stone, a Hollywood bar as notorious as it is industrial. He writes transgressive prose, and screenplays and music video treatments for Realm Films. Jamie Stewart (b. 1978, Los Angeles) plays in the bands Xiu Xiu and Sal Mineo and has also composed music for dance and published 3 volumes of haiku. Before becoming homeless in 2012 due to disability and unemployment, Chris Strofollino had worked as a college professor for over 20 years, published 7 books of poetry & ath critical study of Shakespeare’s 12 Night. Mathias Svalina is the author of five chapbooks, five collaboratively written chapbooks, and one book, Destruction Myths. He teaches writing and literature in Denver. 112 His name is Volatalistic Phil and he was born in 1985. He is from Albuquerque, NM. He is a recovering alcoholic/addict who has an interest in people and the community around him. He enjoys taking part in experiences that can help enrich his own life as well as the lives of those around him. He’s currently in school, working on his poor man’s PhD (six associate degrees). Karen Volkman is the author of three books of poetry, Crash’s Law, Spar, and Nomina, and a chapbook, One might. Poems from her new manuscript, Whereso, have appeared in New American Writing, Denver Quarterly, A Public Space, Black Warrior Review, and other journals. She teaches at the University of Montana in Missoula. Harold Whit Williams is guitarist for the critically acclaimed rock band Cotton Mather. His newest poetry collection, Backmasking, is winner of the 2013 Robert Phillips Poetry Chapbook Prize from Texas Review Press, and his poems have appeared in numerous literary journals. He lives in Austin, Texas.