Larry Eigner Redux
Though their
influence may be waning, the name Black Mountain poets and the voices
associated with them - Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Robert Duncan - are still
familiar to most readers of twentieth
century literature. One member of this
group whose name rarely gets thrown into the mix is Larry Eigner. Thanks to the scholarship of Michael Davidson,
Eigner's name has been rescued from seeming oblivion and his work is now a
staple in disability literature courses.
Eigner, who had cerebral palsy, was not physically present at most
gatherings of the school of poetry with which he is associated, but his work
and associations place him squarely in the same room as the Black Mountain
pioneers. At the same time, Eigner had his own distinctive style, one which,
though it does not take cerebral palsy as a subject was, as Davidson has
demonstrated, profoundly influenced by his physical condition.
Fortunately
both for Eigner and for poetry readers generally, Eigner’s legacy is now being
given a boost by poet Jennifer Bartlett.
Bartlett is one of the co-editors of Beauty
is A Verb, an anthology of disability related poetry which includes among
its many offerings a sample of Eigner’s work, a selection from Davidson’s
classic essay “Missing Larry” and Bartlett’s own poetry, which shows affinities
with Eigner. Bartlett has embarked on
the process of writing a biography of Eigner and his work. Her first step has been the recent
publication of an essay “Anything has to be easy to be done” as a small
chapbook through the efforts of Brian Teare – no slouch of a poet himself – and
his Albion Press in Philadelphia. Teare takes on only a few carefully chosen
projects a year and Bartlett’s pamphlet is one of them.
In the
chapbook, Bartlett sets out the basics of Eigner’s background, his mentorship
by Cid Corman, poet Denise Levertov’s visceral reaction to Eigner’s physical
appearance, and intimations of the relationship between Eigner’s cerebral palsy
and his work. Bartlett ends her essay with the following paragraph:
What do I take from this? Though Eigner’s body
informed his work, it’s important for a critic not to read Eigner’s poems
through the lens of limitations she sees as intrinsic to disability, but which
Eigner himself did not experience. Rather than impose an imagined lens of
disability on Eigner’s work, Creeley and others take the opportunity to connect
it to his bodily existence. And like Eigner, we should focus on what is
possible. We should treat him as equal
while realizing that, by society’s standards, he wasn’t, and acknowledge that
through the content and form of Eigner’s work derived from his body, they were
not determined by it.
This is an
important point and in establishing it, Bartlett re-enforces the significance
of Eigner’s physical body to his work while holding up a caution sign against
attempts to impose current paradigms of disability on the minds of a writer no
longer living. It will be interesting to
see what she comes up with next.