Gadding about
My first travel article, Three Days in London, is now up at Gadling.com. Others on Paris and Cardiff are coming soon. Many thanks to Gina Misiroglu at Red Room for putting me in contact with the folks at Gadling.
Ron Silliman has caused a disturbance in the poetry force by closing the comment stream on his popular blog. The number of lunatics, narcissists and cyber-bullies were ultimately too much for Ron to handle. I stopped reading Silliman's blog ages ago because the comments section was the ultimate poetry bone killer. Poetry criticism often turned to personal attacks and just outright meanness. Yes, I could have just not read the comments, but that defeats the purpose of blogging. A blog is supposed to be informative and a conversation, at least in my opinion. If you run a blog and don't want comments, why not just have a static website?
Poet Jessica Smith has a great post about Silliman turning off his comment stream at her looktouchblog. If you read the comments on her post (92 and counting), you'll see some of the crazies who made Ron's comment stream so intolerable have decided to take Jessica to task for having an opinion that doesn't jive with their own. As William Shatner told the Star Trek geeks in that classic Saturday Night Live skit: Get a life, people.
Ron Silliman has caused a disturbance in the poetry force by closing the comment stream on his popular blog. The number of lunatics, narcissists and cyber-bullies were ultimately too much for Ron to handle. I stopped reading Silliman's blog ages ago because the comments section was the ultimate poetry bone killer. Poetry criticism often turned to personal attacks and just outright meanness. Yes, I could have just not read the comments, but that defeats the purpose of blogging. A blog is supposed to be informative and a conversation, at least in my opinion. If you run a blog and don't want comments, why not just have a static website?
Poet Jessica Smith has a great post about Silliman turning off his comment stream at her looktouchblog. If you read the comments on her post (92 and counting), you'll see some of the crazies who made Ron's comment stream so intolerable have decided to take Jessica to task for having an opinion that doesn't jive with their own. As William Shatner told the Star Trek geeks in that classic Saturday Night Live skit: Get a life, people.
Comments
Now that Ron has turned off comments, I guess that cements the fact that you'll never read it again -- since it can't possibly be a conversation.
That just doesn't seem sensible; it even seems a perfect example of the classic expression, at least to me.
And I assume you'll always believe different, but personal and mean remarks have always been a part of literary criticism, including for poetry. You mention the coments to the J. Smith post: I was very, very specific in there about what criticism has always included.
Best wish on your continued poetry work!
As for the crap posted in Ron's comment stream, if you want to consider some of those comments "literary criticism," be my guest, but I'll have to vehemently disagree.
I've been writing and having my work published for nearly 20 years, and I find as I grow older the endless criticism, arguments over what's "good and bad," who's won this or that prize, the contest lottery, the MFA culture -- it's all sucked a lot of the joy out of poetry and it's creation.
Call me jaded, but all the po'biz and circle jerk criticism does nothing but push poetry further back on the shelf.
[oops, error in my previous comment]
Hmmm. I'm glad you added the disclaimer. A blog can be whatever the hell it wants to be. At least I never got the rules but then I probably wasn't paying attention. I certainly don't write my blog to INFORM anybody about anything and quite frankly I stay away from didactic blogs including Ron's unless of course my name is mentioned.
My blog is a conversation only by accident and if I don't like the way the conversation is going I turn off the comments stream or delete comments on a whim. My blog is not supposed to be a conversation it's supposed to be where I go to practice writing.
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