Ron Silliman (born 5 August
1946 in Pasco,
Washington
) is a
contemporary American poet. He has
written and edited over 30 books, and has had his poetry and
criticism translated into 12 languages. Between 1979 and 2004,
Silliman wrote a single
poem,
The
Alphabet. He has now begun writing a new poem,
Universe, the first section of which appears to be called
Revelator.
Silliman sees his poetry as being part of a single poem or
lifework, which he calls
Ketjak.
Ketjak is also the name of the first poem of
The Age
of Huts. If and when completed, the entire work will consist
of
The Age of Huts (1974–1980),
Tjanting
(1979–1981),
The Alphabet (1979–2004), and
Universe (2005-).
Silliman writes a popular and controversial
weblog:
Silliman's Blog devoted to contemporary poetry
and poetics. Debuting on August 29, 2002 to little fanfare and
without expectations of an audience, Silliman's Blog received its
2,000,000th visit on January 19, 2009. Less than a full year later,
on November 26, 2009, it received its 2,500,000th visit.
Life
In the
1960s, Silliman attended Merritt College
, San Francisco State University
and the University of
California, Berkeley
, but left without attaining a degree.
He has
subsequently taught in the Graduate Writing Program at San
Francisco State University, at the University of
California at San Diego
, at New
College of California and, in shorter stints, at Naropa
University
and Brown
University
.
Silliman has worked as a political organizer, a
lobbyist, an
ethnographer, a newspaper editor, a director of
development, and as the executive editor of the
Socialist Review . While in San
Francisco, he served on numerous community boards including the
1980 Census Oversight Committee, the Arson Task Force of the San
Francisco Fire Department, and the State Department of Health's
Task Force on Health Conditions in Locale Detention Facilities.
After living in the San Francisco Bay Area for over 40 years,
Silliman moved to Chester County, Pennsylvania in 1995 where he
resides with his wife Krishna and two sons, Colin and Jesse.
Silliman works as a
market analyst in the
computer industry.
Silliman was a 2003 Literary fellow of the
National Endowment for the
Arts & a 2002 Fellow of the Pennsylvania Arts Council as
well as a Pew Fellow in the Arts in 1998. Silliman is one of the
poets memorialized in Berkeley's
Addison Anthology, a walk containing
plaques recognizing poets and authors in his home town.
Language Poetry and Critical Writing
While Silliman has come to be associated with the
Language poets, he came of age under the sign
of
Donald Allen's
New American Poetry (1960) . Silliman
was first published in Berkeley, in 1965. In the 1960s he was
published by journals associated with what he calls the
School of Quietude, such as
Poetry
Northwest, TriQuarterly, Southern Review and
Poetry. Silliman found such early acceptance to be a sign
of the lack of standards or rigor characteristic of that literary
tendency and began looking for alternatives.
Silliman edited a newsletter,
Tottels (1970-81), that was
one of the early venues for
Language
Poetry. However, it was "The Dwelling Place," a feature of nine
poets that Silliman did for
Alcheringa in 1975 that
Silliman himself describes as his "first attempt to write about
language poetry".
In 1976 & '77, he co-curated a reading
series with Tom Mandel, at the
Grand Piano, a coffee house in San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury
, continuing a series originally founded by Barrett Watten. This series was
followed by one at the Tassajara Bakery, co-curated with
Bob Perelman, and a series combining poets with
performance artists at
The
Farm, co-curated with Jill Scott.
Silliman's mature critical writing dates to the early/mid-1970s
when he was asked to discuss his thinking about the role of
reference in poetry, leading to the essay "Disappearance of the
Author, Appearance of the World," which first appeared in the
journal
Art Con. Soon thereafter he edited a special issue
of the magazine
Margins devoted to the work of poet
Clark Coolidge and began to give
talks and contribute essays on a regular basis thereafter. As was
mentioned above, Silliman was influenced by (and subsequently has
written extensively on) the "New American Poetry", referring to the
poets who first appeared in Donald Allen's groundbreaking anthology
The New
American Poetry 1945–1960. Today, those same (but then
relatively unknown) poets included in this anthology are now
recognizable or precedent figures in the current cultural
landscape.
In 1986, Silliman's anthology,
In the American Tree, one
of the foremost collections of American language poetry, was
published by the
National
Poetry Foundation.
Bibliography
- 1970's
- Crow (1971)
- Mohawk (1973)
- Nox (1974)
- Ketjak (San Francisco: This
Press, 1978)
- Sitting Up, Standing, Taking Steps (1978)
- 1980's
- Legend (1980, with Bruce
Andrews, Charles Bernstein,
Ray DiPalma, Steve McCaffery)
- Tjanting (1981; new edition from
Salt
Publishing
,
2002)
- BART (1982)
- ABC (1983)
- Paradise (1985)
- The Age of Huts (1986)
- In the American Tree: Language, Realism, Thought
(National Poetry
Foundation, 1986; second edition, 2001: anthology)
- Lit (1987)
- The New Sentence ( 1987, criticism)
- What (1988)
- 1990's
- 2000's
- Sunset Debris (2002, ubu ebook) from The Age of
Huts
- 2197 (2004, ubu ebook) from The Age of Huts
- Woundwood (2004)
- Under Albany (Salt Publishing
, 2004: memoir)
- The Chinese Notebook (2004, ubu ebook) from The Age of
Huts
- (contributor)The Grand Piano: An Experiment In Collective
Autobiography (with Bob Perelman,
Barrett Watten, Steve Benson, Carla Harryman, Tom Mandel, Rae
Armantrout, Kit Robinson, Lyn Hejinian, and Ted
Pearson) (Mode A/This Press, 2007: ISBN 978-0-9790198-0-X)
- The Age of Huts ( ) (University of California Press,
2007)
- The Alphabet (University of Alabama Press, 2008)
References
External links
- Poem by Silliman at Milk Magazine
- Ron Silliman on Poets.org Silliman's biography, and
text of his poems "Albany" and "What"
- Ron Silliman page at Modern American Poetry
with online poems, articles, interviews
- Silliman's Blog A weblog focused on contemporary
poetry and poetics.
- Silliman at UbuWEB, online books
- Interview with The Argotist Online
- "Torque" & The New Sentence
Silliman discusses background & conception of his influential
"manifesto" The New Sentence
- Ron Silliman, making poetry, unmaking rules
review of The Age of Huts ( ) by Andrew Ervin, at
philly.com, June 24, 2007
- The
Grand Piano website devoted to the 10 volumes of "Collective
Autobiography" by 10 of the so-called "West Coast" group of
Language poets, including Silliman, which began serial publication
in November 2006.