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![]() Cully's First Book Offers New Intimacies To Old Estrangements By David Penn The New Intimacy, by Barbara Cully (Penguin Books). Paper, $14.95. ALMOST 20 YEARS ago, poet Robert Pinsky took his generation to task for what he believed was their excessive, abstract lyricism. He was speaking of the then-current orthodoxy, a poetry Pinsky considered little more than warmed-over, Beat-era lyrics--touched up with a little lysergic acid-inspired surrealism. Pinsky encouraged what he called the "prose virtues"--a rather puritanical set of benchmarks that placed clarity and exposition over randomness and music, the "hip static" of Beat and post-Beat writing.
For a while, particularly during the '80s, this style was heralded by editors and publishers as "the new narrative"--a poetry that, for their bottom line, looked so much like prose that, well, maybe it would sell like prose. And if you think I'm just being cynical, recall that this new narrative--embryonic in the '70s and bursting into life in the '80s--came of age during a time when young writers like Tama Janowitz, Bret Easton Ellis, and Jay MacInery were plotting a bold new course for contemporary American fiction. It's no surprise that publishers of poetry, continuing to suffer from "prose envy," were quick to champion a version of poetry cast in the image of their obsession. What makes Barbara Cully's The New Intimacy such a joy, then, is that from the first page on it's poetry that looks, feels, and sounds like poetry. These are not diary entries broken up into bits, nor a re-associated list of the banality of her purse. Here is language itself at work, simultaneously layering image onto meaning onto image in a fashion beyond fiction or even the best cinema. It's a flight unique to poetry: Several versions/(doves caught in the frescoed reeds)/vie for ascendance/Adam's tent as tentative negotiation between the sea and the sky/as opulent casino/as the machete of his nomadic heart embossed on the [blank]-teenth century grandeur of the city (from "Museum Frieze"). Be forewarned: This is the poetry your mother warned you about. You won't find the performance-oriented wailings of Maggie Estep or Lydia Lunch; but Cully's is a poetry no less subversive at every level. The New Intimacy, selected by Carolyn Forche for the 1996 National Poetry Series, shares many of Forche's fin de millenaire ("end of the millennium") concerns. But by far, The New Intimacy spends most of its time in the psychological (and physiological) states of longing and remembrance. In this, The New Intimacy spins with the sort of millennial vertigo we might expect at the end of one thousand years and the beginning of another. And while many of the poems soar across the page with a liberty unique to poetry, the apprehension Cully prepares us for is a difficult one: one in which divisions between nations, cultures, genders, the self, become malleable, more capable of giving way to more accurate--though no less beautiful or bizarre--renderings of ourselves. To know what it is to make love as a man and as a woman is special knowledge, he said/In the open trees, there is no one o'clock, there is no two o'clock/Soon the body itself disappears as a distinct kingdom, (from "Nureyev").
While randomness itself is not necessarily a problem, what the poet does to pull the randomness together can be. Often, for American poets, the evocation of Europe seems to suffice. And true enough, the following stanza introduces--straight off the Lufthansa--"Rembrandt," "Raphael," "Mediterranean water," and "Roman tonic."
But these are minor gripes. In a literary climate in which the
boundaries of sense are rarely pushed and the limits of language
hardly ever tested, Cully's first book is at once a stark and
refreshing collection; one that's less devoted to telling us what
we see now, and more committed to the challenges of what
we'll see next.
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