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Grunt & Groan: The New Fiction Anthology of Work & Sex
Various authors, Matt Firth & Max Macarri (eds.)
Boheme Press, 2002
ribsauce: a cd/anthology of words by women
Various authors, Taien Ng-Chan, Alex Boutros & Kaarla Sundrom (eds.)
Vehicule Press & Wired on Words, 2001
Sea Peach (book & CD)
by Catherine Kid (CD produced by Jack Beetz)
Conundrum Press & Wired on Words, 2002
Reviewed by Michael Bryson
It's been a good number of years since Moe Berg (with
TPOH) gave us the rock anthem "I'm an Adult Now." At the time,
I'm sure there weren't too many who asked: What next? Berg laid it out
pretty clearly in that song: "I guess it won't be long until I'm
sitting in a room with a bunch of people whose necks and backs are
aching and sight and hearings fading and who just can't seem to get it
up." The good news is, that horrible future has apparently yet to
come to pass. Berg is back - this time as a short story writer - with a
tale about a young adult with a particular habit: he jerks off under his
desk at work.
It fired so fast then slowed down so abruptly, like a
bouncing Ping-Pong ball in reverse. I waited a full minute, feigning
intense interest in the words and figures on my computer screen before
uncrossing my legs. I couldn't yet feel the wet shock; maybe the
Kleenex had stayed in place. ("Truth Serum")
Yikes! Grunt & Groan: The New Fiction Anthology of Work & Sex
contains 16 such tales from writers from Canada, the U.S. and the U.K.
As one might expect, the work integrates humour with the macabre, the
absurd, and the carnivalesque. This week (January 11), NOW
magazine in Toronto is running its annual "Sex survey." One of
the questions is: Have you ever had genital play at work? It's probably
fair to say: some have, some haven't, but everyone has thought about
it.
Grunt & Groan, however, claims to be
"not one of those anthologies." Matthew Firth in his Foreword
points out that "Grunt & Groan is the anthology of work
and sex, not the anthology of sex in the workplace." Hmm. A fine
bit of sophistry, that. What is true, is that Grunt & Groan
is solidly a Firth product. In an
interview with TDR, Firth spoke about his own work:
Most of my work looks at ordinary folks and
day-to-day life. I’m not interested in the extraordinary; characters
with deep travails and too much time on their hands to ruminate their
place in the cosmos. I write about folks in the here and now and the
common troubles that unite most of us: earning enough money to feed
ourselves, trying to satisfy our need for love/lust, occasionally
clashing with those around us. Nothing grander than this.
Nothing grand is probably an appropriate tone for a
book call Grunt & Groan. But it would be unfortunate if
readers missed the deeper and darker implications of both this anthology
and its attempt to provide space for a different kind of Canadian
literature. Hey, kids! Stop reading Atwood's Survival
and check this out!
ribsauce: a cd/anthology of words by women, a joint venture of
Vehicule Press and Wired on Words,
revives the debate about the need for anthologies by writers who all
share the same type of genitals. In her introduction, editor Taien
Ng-Chan admits to being ambivalent about an "anthology of words by
women," yet she concluded "we need many strategies," and
this anthology is one of them.
Many strategies for what? She doesn't say. She does
say: "I think we need new strategies beyond simple identity
politics." Great, but again: Where are we going with this? Then she
tells us: "in some disciplines of writing, especially theatre and
film, there are still very few women." Well, at least that's
something concrete: More women should write plays and film scripts. We
need many strategies. Apparently, publishing a book and a CD is one of
the strategies to get more women writing plays and film scripts.
Whatever.
The blurb on the cover says the project features
"some of Canada's best women writers and performance artists."
I must admit that I'm beyond ambivalent with that phrase "women
writers." I don't like it; I think it's insulting to the writers.
It reminds me too much of a similar phrase that was used in the 19th
century to dismiss female scribblers as amateurs. The January 2003 Harper's
contains an essay on how we need to move beyond identity politics
and reclaim the universalism of the Enlightenment. Yippee! How
commonsensical! (The essay also give heavy credit to the
post-colonialists, and others, for their vibrant - and relevant -
critiques of the failures of Western rationalism.... And yet, we need to
start with the assumption that we are all one. No other foundation
contains as much hope. To borrow from Ng-Chan: No other strategy
contains as much optimism.)
Back to the book. Like other anthologies of Canadian
women writers before it, ribsauce contains a wide mix of new and
interesting writing in Canada. The book includes the work of Emily
Pohl-Weary and Erin Mouré, for
example. And the CD includes Mary Elizabeth Grace and Zaffi Gousopoulos,
among others. On the whole, the collection left me cold. It's 2003, and
the easy repetition of feminist metaphors is a crime against art. They
have become clichés. Earlier generations of women artists fought hard
to be heard; they fought hard to a piece of the cultural landscape.
Today's young feminists are too often softly repeating tired patterns
and vague arguments. Yes, we need many strategies. But building a
highway of clichés isn't one of them.
Catherine Kidd's Sea Peach arrives in my hands
at the same time as Canada's newly appointed poet laureate, George
Bowering, has decided that attacking "spoken word artists"
is part of his job of promoting poetry. (As I understand it, Bowering's
argument is that poets ought to be dedicated first to language, while
spoken word artists are too often only dedicated to their ego.)
Personally, I think Bowering is more right than he is wrong; on the
other hand, I've seen some remarkable spoken word performances that I
thought were just wonderful.
Catherine Kidd is a spoken word artist, not a poet. On
the page, Kidd's work reads unevenly. Her work is largely narrative.
Some of it seems unfinished, though when I listened to one example on
the CD of something that I thought was just terrible on paper - well,
let's just say I appreciated it more, though it sounded a little bit to
me like kindergarten story time. Other pieces, like "A Big Fat
Hen," both read better on the page and treated me like an adult on
the CD.
Kidd's voice is highly self-conscious.
Readers/listeners will have the feeling they are, at times, following
Kidd through every step of her thought process. And yet, Kidd has the
ability to transport her audience into new landscapes, too. This is
probably the best that can be said of "spoken word." There is
an element of childhood story time in all spoken word performances, as
the art is pulling words off the page and back through time to a
pre-literate culture. Spoken word is campfire talk; sharing tales at the
end of the day that try to make sense of the big world around.
Ironically, perhaps, the book that comes with the Sea
Peach CD is a beautiful object all on its own. It contains
illustrations and photographs of Kidd performing. And it's just the
right size for grasping in one hand while you reach with the other for
your morning coffee.
Michael Bryson is the publisher/editor
of The Danforth Review.
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