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Kenneth Patchen

 
Biography: Kenneth Patchen

Kenneth Patchen (1911-1972) was a major American experimental poet and novelist influenced by Dadaism and Surrealism.

Kenneth Patchen's father was a steel worker in Youngstown and, later, in Warren, Ohio. As a young man Patchen followed his father's example and worked briefly in the mills, but, having decided to be a writer, he attended college, then travelled around the country, and, while supporting himself with odd jobs, spent what time he could developing his abilities with language. In 1934 he married Miriam Oikemus, to whom he would dedicate all of his nearly four dozen books, and two years later he published his first volume of poetry, Before the Brave.

Before the Brave showed Patchen's strong leftist political sensibility, formed in part by his youth in the steel towns and in part by his travels around the country during the Depression. Critics initially labelled him one of the leftist writers of the decade, but if he was a political poet (and in fact his intense political convictions remained with him throughout his life), he was a writer more strongly affected by the Dadaist and Surrealist movements. His response to these movements, however, was restrained. Patchen was no one's disciple, but the Dadaist and Surrealist influence can be felt in the free, whimsical associations characteristic of his work and in his determined lack of concern for traditional forms of literature.

Although Patchen liked to deny this influence, it can be seen clearly in, for example, the very title Aflame and Afun of Walking Faces, his series of prose pieces that retain the external characteristics of traditional fables but which revel in freewheeling Dadaist absurdities. In traditional fables, marvelous things happen - animals talk, snow falls in July, etc. - but these are justified by various conventions; the story, for example, may be an allegory, and the talking animals are supposed to be representations of human types, or the absurdities may be justified as ways of entertaining the reader while he is (although perhaps unaware of this) being taught a moral truth. But Patchen dispenses with the justifications and lets the fable take its own direction, no matter how absurd (and usually, at the same time, hilarious) that may be. The result is wonderful Dadaist nonsense.

Patchen shared with the Dadaists and Surrealists a dislike for the traditional moral and aesthetic objectives of literature. He did not make his work conform to preconceived literary patterns or expectations but was concerned rather with the way language can create or reflect subtle moods and emotional states, and his work was extremely experimental in seeking that end.

His political convictions, as noted earlier, remained with him, and The Journal of Albion Moonlight (1941), the prose work for which he is best known, has in its anti-war or pacifist emphasis a political dimension, but the real achievement here, as in all Patchen's major work, rests in the evocation of feeling and mood. The Journal of Albion Moonlight presents and sustains, like the work of Franz Kafka (to which it is clearly indebted), the sense of loss, fear, despondency, paranoia, and general emotional suffering. In other words, the book evokes, as no other book of its time did so well, the moods and emotions many Americans must have felt when they found themselves in the summer of 1940, when the book was written, on the brink of another military cataclysm.

Four years later Patchen published Memoirs of a Shy Pornographer (1945), a novel which evokes an entirely different set of emotions and moods. On the one hand, it satirizes popular culture - particularly the characters, plots, and language of popular movies, radio dramas, and novels - but Patchen's main achievement lies in sustaining a level of high burlesque, the hilarity of movies like screwball comedies (which, since very little is sacred in this book, he also satirizes). He followed Memoirs of a Shy Pornographer with Sleepers Awake (1946), a Dadaist collage of non sequiturs and startling associations, mixed together with experiments using different type faces. He had varied the use of type faces in some of his earlier work but never as exuberantly and creatively as in Sleepers Awake.

The range of Patchen's abilities can be clearly sensed in his poetry, which ranges from political polemic to love poems (Patchen was one of the great love poets of the century), occasional metaphysical complexities, and extravagant comedy. His poetry is marked by delightful verbal surprises and sudden twists of language. It assumes an extraordinary range of poetic forms, from prose poems to exquisitely-constructed songs.

Both the poetry and the prose are characterized by a sense of innocence, wonder, joy, and, above all, delight in playing with language. From time to time Patchen was deeply sentimental and melodramatic, yet what continues to astonish readers is that he succeeded in attempting such a vast range of fictional and poetic possibilities.

Patchen also wrote plays and essays, and he invented what he called "Picture Poems." In these, illustrations and language are brought together in a new format. They are not intended as comments on each other but as inseparably unified aspects of works of art. The "Picture Poems" involve the total fusion of two art forms. Patchen also attempted a fusion of music and literature in a highly regarded series of poetry readings he gave with jazz accompaniment in the late 1950s.

A reader encountering Patchen's work without any knowledge of his background might assume that he lived a robustly healthy life, but in fact nothing could be further from the truth. Patchen suffered from periods of great depression and from an acute spinal problem that kept him semi-paralyzed and in agony during much of the last 30 years of his life. His work involved the victory of his artistic imagination over extraordinary odds. The vast range of Patchen's achievement is all the more astonishing when one realizes the formidable physical and psychological barriers that he overcame in order to make it possible.

Further Reading

Essential books for a study of Patchen include Kenneth Patchen (1978) by Larry R. Smith; Kenneth Patchen and American Mysticism (1984) by Raymond Nelson; and Kenneth Patchen: A Collection of Essays (1977), edited by Richard G. Morgan, which collects important essays by, among others, William Carlos Williams, Babette Deutsch, Kenneth Rexroth, John Ciardi, Henry Miller, Jonathan Williams, and David Gascoyne. Reminiscences together with celebrations of Patchen's achievement can be found in Alan Clodd's Tribute to Kenneth Patchen (1977).

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Kenneth Patchen
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Patchen, Kenneth, 1911-72, American poet and novelist, b. Niles, Ohio. His writings, characterized by complete freedom of form, embrace genres as diverse as satire, fantasy, and metaphysical love poetry. His early verse-Before the Brave (1936) and First Will & Testament (1939)-places him with the social protest writers of the '30s. Among his many later collections are Red Wine & Yellow Hair (1949), Because It Is (1960), and Hallelujah Anyway (1967). During the 1950s he initiated the practice of reading poetry to a jazz accompaniment. His prose works include The Journal of Albion Moonlight (1941) and the satirical Memoirs of a Shy Pornographer (1945). Many of his works are illustrated by his own drawings.
Works: Works by Kenneth Patchen
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(1911-1972)

1936Before the Brave. The poet's debut volume shows the influence of W. H. Auden and Kenneth Fearing but also an original, experimental style derived in part from techniques traceable from his work as an abstract expressionist painter.
1939First Will and Testament. Patchen's second collection is self-described as "the legacy of a poet who speaks for a generation which was born in one war and seems destined to perish in another."
1941The Journal of Albion Moonlight. Patchen's first novel is a powerful, stream-of-consciousness antiwar drama that would later serve the Beats as a manifesto for rebellion and social protest.
1942The Dark Kingdom and The Teeth of the Lion. Patchen's two volumes are filled with private symbols, mixing eroticism, spirituality, and social criticism. They cause New York Times reviewer P. M. Jack to declare Patchen "one of the poets whom historians will turn to for intelligence about the year 1942."
1943Cloth of the Tempest. Patchen's poetic reflections on the atrocities of war help make him one of the most popular poets on college campuses during World War II. His other volumes of the decade are An Astonished Eye Looks Out of the Air (1945), Sleepers Awake (1946), Panels for the Walls of Heaven (1947), Red Wine and Yellow Hair, and If You Love Someone (1949).
1945The Memoirs of a Shy Pornographer. This experimental, satirical novel traces the rise of a sensitive young writer whose risqué book, ironically, becomes a notorious sensation.
1948See You in the Morning. Patchen's novel concerns a love affair between a maid at a summer resort and a dying man.
1957Hurrah for Anything. Jazz influence is evident in this collection of poems, with each verse forming a kind of jazz riff, accompanied by a drawing by the author. Patchen also publishes an enlarged edition of his Selected Poems and a volume of prose poems, Here Together.

Wikipedia: Kenneth Patchen
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Kenneth Patchen
Born December 13, 1911 (1911-12-13)
Niles, Ohio
Died January 8, 1972 (1972-01-09)
Palo Alto, California

Kenneth Patchen (December 13, 1911 - January 8, 1972) was an American poet and novelist. Though he denied any direct connection, Patchen's work and ideas regarding the role of artists paralleled those of the Dadaists, the Beats, and Surrealists. Patchen's ambitious body of work also foreshadowed literary art-forms ranging from reading poetry to jazz accompaniment to his late experiments with visual poetry (which he called his "picture poems").[1]

Contents

Life

Patchen was born in Niles, Ohio. His father made his living in the nearby steel mills of Youngstown, Ohio. Those mills would later be referenced in poems like "The Orange Bears" and "May I Ask You A Question, Mr. Youngstown Sheet & Tube?".[2] A major tragedy occurred in Patchen's childhood when his younger sister, Kathleen, was struck and killed by an automobile in 1926. Her death deeply affected him, and he would later pay tribute to her in a poem entitled, "In Memory of Kathleen."[3]

He first began to develop his interest in literature and poetry while he was in high school, and the New York Times published his first poem while he was still in college. He attended Alexander Meiklejohn's Experimental College in Madison, Wisconsin for one year, starting in 1929. He then left school and traveled across the country, working itinerant jobs in places like Arkansas, Louisiana, and Georgia[4].

Next, Patchen moved to the East Coast, living in places like New York City and Boston. While he was in Boston, in 1933, he met Miriam Oikemus at a friend's Christmas party. At the time, Miriam was a college freshman at Massachusetts State College in Amherst. But the two kept in touch, and Patchen started sending her the first of many love poems. They soon fell in love and decided to get married. First Patchen took her to meet his parents in Youngstown, Ohio, then they got married on June 28, 1934 in nearby Sharon, Pennsylvania. [5]

During the 1930s the couple moved frequently between New York City's Greenwich Village and California, as Patchen struggled to make a living as a writer. However, despite his constant struggle, his strong relationship with Miriam supported him and would continue to support him through the hardships that plagued him for most of his adult life.

Indeed, a second major tragedy occurred in Patchen's life in 1937 when he suffered a permanent spinal injury while trying to fix a friend's car. This injury caused him an extreme amount of pain and required multiple surgeries. Although the first two surgeries seemed to help with some of his pain, a botched third surgery ended up leaving him in considerable pain and disabling him for life.

In Patchen's final years, he and his wife moved to a modest house in Palo Alto, California, where Patchen created many of his distinctive painted poems (which he painted while he was confined to his bed). He died in Palo Alto on January 8, 1972.

Throughout his life-time, he was a fervent pacifist (as he made clear in much of his work) and was against U.S. involvement in World War II. This controversial view, coupled with his immobilization, kept him from ever achieving wide recognition or success outside of a cult following.

Career

Patchen's early books of poetry were his most political and caused him to be championed, early on, as a Proletariat Poet. This title, which Patchen rejected, never stuck, since his work varied widely in subject, style, and form. As his career progressed, Patchen continued to push himself into more and more experimental styles and forms, developing, along with writers like Langston Hughes and Kenneth Rexroth, what came to be known as jazz poetry. He also experimented with his child-like "painted poems," many of which are collected in the book What Shall We Do Without Us.

His first book, Before The Brave, was published by Random House in 1936. But after a falling-out with Random House, Patchen signed on with James Laughlin at New Directions Press and started a relationship that would last throughout the remainder of his career. Patchen and Laughlin also became good friends.[6]

During the course of his career, Patchen tried his hand at writing experimental novels such as The Journal of Albion Moonlight and The Memoirs of A Shy Pornographer, as well as the radio play The City Wears A Slouch Hat.

Patchen's Collected Poems was first published in 1968.

One of Patchen's biggest literary supporters was the novelist Henry Miller who wrote a long essay on Patchen, entitled Patchen: Man of Anger and Light in 1946.[7] Patchen also had a close, life-long friendship with the poet E.E. Cummings that began when they were both living in Greenwich Village in the 40's.[8] Later, in the 1950s, Patchen became a major influence on the younger Beat poets like Allen Ginsberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Dick McBride[9] and many other young writers who visited Patchen when they were in California, participating in the West Coast literary scene.

Musical collaborations and recordings

In 1942 Patchen collaborated with the composer John Cage on the radio play The City Wears A Slouch Hat.

In the 1950s, Patchen collaborated with Charles Mingus, reading his poetry with Mingus' jazz combo. Unfortunately, no known recording of their collaboration exists.

Moe Asch of Folkways Records made some recordings of Patchen reading his poetry and excerpts from one of his novels. These recordings were released as Kenneth Patchen Reads with Jazz in Canada (1959), Selected Poems of Kenneth Patchen (1960), and Kenneth Patchen Reads His Love Poems (released 1961).[10] From Albion Moonlight was recorded later at Patchen's home but not released until 1972 by Folkways.

The Jazz in Canada album was recorded in Vancouver and was recorded the same week as a live performance done for CBC Radio. The LP was also released on Folkways and included a mimeographed pamphlet featuring poems and the jazz musicians credits. The group playing on the recording was the Allan Neil Quartet. It was released on CD by the label Locust Music in 2004.

On January 21, 2008, El Records released a recording entitled Rebel Poets in America that includes classic poetry readings with jazz accompaniment by both Kenneth Patchen and Lawrence Ferlinghetti, including Patchen classics like "The Murder of Two Men by a Young Kid Wearing Lemon Colored Gloves" and "I Went To The City." These Patchen recordings were made in collaboration with the musician Allyn Ferguson who composed and arranged jazz accompaniment for each individual poem and also led the jazz ensemble.

Many of his poems have been set to music by David Bedford. Others who have also set Patchen's work to music include: saxophonist Peter Brötzmann, with his solo album entitled 14 love poems + 10 more released on the FMP label; composer Kyle Gann has set his voice reading a text to music (see below) and violinist Carla Kihlstedt set a text on the "Patchen" track of her solo Tzadik release Two Foot Yard.

The song "What Shall we do Without Us" by American avant-rock band Sleepytime Gorilla Museum uses text by Patchen.

Bibliography

  • Before the Brave, 1936
  • First Will and Testament, 1939
  • The Journal of Albion Moonlight, 1941
  • The Dark Kingdom, 1942
  • The Teeth Of The Lion, 1942
  • Cloth of the Tempest, 1943
  • The Memoirs of a Shy Pornographer, 1945
  • An Astonished Eye Looks Out of the Air, 1946
  • Outlaw of the Lowest Planet, 1946
  • The Selected Poems of Kenneth Patchen, 1946
  • Sleepers Awake, 1946
  • Panels for the Walls of Heaven, 1946
  • Pictures of Life and Death, 1946
  • They Keep Riding Down All the Time, 1946
  • CCCLXXIV Poems, 1948
  • Red Wine and Yellow Hair, 1949
  • Fables and Other Little Tales, 1953
  • Poems of Humor and Protest, 1954
  • Hurrah for Anything, 1957
  • When We Were Here Together, 1957
  • The Love Poems of Kenneth Patchen, 1960
  • Because It Is, 1960
  • Hallelujah Anyway, 1966
  • But Even So, 1968
  • Aflame and Afun of Walking Faces, 1970
  • Wonderings, 1971
  • In Quest of Candlelighters, 1972
  • The Argument of Innocence, 1976
  • Patchen's Lost Plays, 1977
  • Still Another Pelican in the Breadbox, 1980
  • What Shall We Do Without Us, 1984
  • We Meet, 2008
  • The Walking-Away World, 2008

External links

References

  1. ^ Patchen, Kenneth, "Painted and Silkscreened Poems." 1976. [1]
  2. ^ Patchen, Kenneth. "The Orange Bears." [2]
  3. ^ Smith, Larry. Kenneth Patchen: Rebel Poet in America. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press, 2000. 12, 16.
  4. ^ Smith, Larry. Kenneth Patchen: Rebel Poet in America. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press, 2000. 36, 57.
  5. ^ Smith, Larry. Kenneth Patchen: Rebel Poet in America. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press, 2000. 67-81.
  6. ^ Smith, Larry. Kenneth Patchen: Rebel Poet in America. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press, 2000. 90, 119.
  7. ^ Miller, Henry. "Patchen: Man of Anger and Light." 1946 [3]
  8. ^ Smith, Larry. Kenneth Patchen: Rebel Poet in America. Huron, Ohio: Bottom Dog Press, 2000. 146.
  9. ^ McBride, D: Cometh With Clouds (Memory: Allen Ginsberg) Cherry Valley Editions, 1982 ISBN 0916156516
  10. ^ Patchen, Kenneth. Folkways Recordings. 1959-1961. [4]

 
 

 

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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Kenneth Patchen" Read more