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02-06-2019, 04:43 PM
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Join Date: May 2013
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Mark,
Sorry, if that wasn't clear, I was trying to avoid going through quoting and responding that way. Perhaps that was a mistake.
To clarify (I hope!) I was replying to the following in your post:
"First, how would the editors know the ethnic identity of the person submitting the poem?"
I was trying to show that editors don't need to know the ethnic or other identity in order to exhibit a bias. I'd be interested to know if you agree.
"Don’t editors choose poetry based on its quality, first and foremost?"
I was trying to point out that even if they did, the notion of "quality" is not necessarily independent of the editor's education and life experience. Even if they pick what for them is the best poetry, doesn't mean that this won't skew their choices.
"Talking about class gets me onto the broader notion of ‘identity’ and the idea that a writer can ‘speak for’ a whole identity. I’m suspicious of the whole thing."
I agreed that a writer can't speak for a whole identity. I was assuming that you were connecting this the question of representation at the level of poets and editor. So I was qualifying my agreement by trying to point out that this, in itself, is not a reason not to have 'representatives' of those groups; I tried to say why I thought that it was still a good idea to have them even though they don't "speak for" or wholly represent the groups they're members of.
"So. I should really like the esteemed popular English playwright Willy Russell shouldn’t I? Of Educating Rita, Shirley Valentine and Our Day Out fame? He’s Northern (born in Lancashire, same as me), white working-class, largely self-taught in literary terms, he was a teacher in a working-class comprehensive school and writes about people wanting to better themselves and escape from their cultural deprivation. Why, he’s me! He’s my people! Yeah, well, I don’t like him."
So here, you suggest and discount the idea that people should like they're like and disagree with it. The Larkin poem spoke to you although he was a different social class from you. Again, I was agreeing but also trying to point out what doesn't follow from agreeing with this. Again I was connecting this -- probably not very clearly -- to the idea of representation in magazines of poets and editors.
Finally, I'm definitely not suggesting that all poetry editors are white, male, upperclass etc. It's a hypothetical situation I'm suggesting -- a thought experiment -- to show that it does matter a) who the editors are and b) who the poets are in terms of their social background, ethnicity etc. This was in response to you seeming to suggest that a) that editors choose the best poems irrespective of their own and the poets' identities, and b) there's a universality to poems that transcends race, class, gender etc.
Ah, well, maybe I should have spent less time writing it. It probably would have been clearer then!
best,
Matt
Last edited by Matt Q; 02-06-2019 at 05:47 PM.
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02-06-2019, 06:06 PM
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Join Date: May 2016
Location: Staffordshire, England
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Hi Matt,
Thanks. That is much clearer. I suppose I'll answer your one direct question as best as I can.
Quote:
'I was trying to show that editors don't need to know the ethnic or other identity in order to exhibit a bias. I'd be interested to know if you agree.'
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Well, we all have bias of course. In matters of art it's just another word for taste or opinion. So yes, a far broader diversity of factors that might influence those potential 'biases' would be healthy in the editorships of poetry world: editors of diverse ethnicity, class, gender and sexual orientation, even aesthetic proclivity towards particular styles: formal or free-verse etc. But I suppose I also like to think that the notion of 'quality', although difficult to define and ultimately subjective, has enough weight in reality for a good editor to make seeking it out, in all its elusiveness, a priority. Beyond considerations of what the poem is 'about' or who is being represented/spoken for/to: is it alive, mysterious, surprising, memorable, layered, do its pleasures stand up to re-reading? All that stuff.
Hey, I can only speak for myself and what I would do. My three favourite poets here might be Nemo, Mary and Walter. Why? Not sure. Well, I have my thoughts but they'd be too long-winded to go into here. Are they 'like me'? Not really. We're different ages, with me in the middle somewhere; we're from different countries; backgrounds; all three are gay and I'm not; I have no idea how they 'identify' in terms of race/religion; they have quite different styles and subjects. And when I read them, none of those things occur to me. It's just me and the poem and I think 'yes – quality'
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02-06-2019, 07:10 PM
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Ok, so maybe I should have inserted the word "systematic" before the word "bias".
Anyhow, that brings me back to my thought experiment. If quality is the determining factor in what gets published and conceptions of quality are independent of the various categories we are slotted into, then it seems like it wouldn't matter if all editors were white, male, able-bodied, heterosexual and upper-class. (Or if all editors were black, female, disabled, lesbian, and working class). We'd end up with pretty much the same poems being published and no systematic distortions.
I guess that's just not something that seems likely to me. But maybe that's a bias on my part.
And if it is, I'll put it down to my age, education, nationality, social class, (dis)abilities and life experience, of course
-Matt
Last edited by Matt Q; 02-06-2019 at 07:13 PM.
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02-06-2019, 08:51 PM
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Location: San Diego, CA, USA
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I appreciate all the time and energy and thought that's going into wrestling with these issues.
The word "quality," like "merit," implies that there are objective and universal ways of measuring something that I think is actually--to some degree, at least--in the eye of the beholder. Beholders, by definition, have different perspectives. Someone who hasn't read much poetry, and hasn't yet encountered certain clichés a bazillion times yet, will be more impressed by a poem containing such clichés than a jaded old fart like myself will be.
We tend to support venues whose editors behold things more or less like we do ourselves. We like to be able to trust the taste of the editors of certain venues to recognize the quality of poems that appeal to our own sensibilities.
If a subscriber's definition of quality is significantly narrower than the editor's, the subscriber gets frustrated and doesn't renew.
In contrast, when an editor's definition of quality is significantly narrower than the subscribers', the subscribers might not even notice, because most readers will have no idea of what they might be missing when anything unusual gets cut as substandard.
Last edited by Julie Steiner; 02-06-2019 at 08:59 PM.
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02-07-2019, 05:55 PM
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Hey Matt,
I do accept that as a white, heterosexual, able-bodied man I can view the world unthinkingly through that lens. It is easy in this position to make pretty sounding platitudes about how we're all the same under the skin and more unites than divides us. But the world is made for me; however rough it sometimes feels, I (we) should remember that. What's that old proverb? 'If you want to know what water is like, don't ask a fish'. What I post on these threads is instinctive and inevitably comes from my own biases, though that's true of all of us I suppose. But I'm constantly rethinking and questioning my own biases, and disagreeing with the self that I was 30 minutes earlier and that's why I get genuinely upset, with myself, that I've been misunderstood, or naive, or insensitive or what have you. And these are complex and nuanced issues, I don't think that can be denied. But people of good faith should keep talking to each other and fighting for some real version of equality. We seem to be in a very divisive moment where the internet, and political shifts to the right, are facilitating people's desire to retreat into tribes, where a new national sport seems to be the gleeful creation of a cartoon version of 'identity politics' and 'social justice warriors' set up to be viciously mocked by people immersed in their own hideous and dangerous form of identity politics. I see it in the kids I teach: they had to do spoken presentations recently for their GCSEs and two of the boys did 'The Snowflake Generation' and (honestly) 'Is 3rd wave feminism ruining the country?'. God, it was depressing and kind of frightening. They're 14. I thought back to similar projects from my schooldays; they'd be on 'fly fishing' and 'Dungeons and Dragons'. Anyway, I concede that no doubt there is bias in the publishing world. It's everywhere isn't it, it's the water we swim in. I probably do have a tendency to see it as cleaner than it is, but I am working on it and working on ways to clean it up rather than denying the dirt. I did like Dave's essay though.
Julie - time and energy, yes. Hopefully not entirely pointless. I'm definitely bowing out now. Going to think about Jim's thread instead.
Cheers.
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02-08-2019, 01:24 PM
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Location: Taipei
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Don't be too apologetic, Mark. The article, to my mind, tries its best not to make this political. I'm fairly left wing and I really can't be anything else, esp given my family history. The true audience here is the working poet.
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