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Master Charge, BankAmericard, American Express OPEN FRIDAY NITE TILL 8:30 books & the arts Marianne Moore: Too cagey to catcF a magazine of essays and reviews Arthur Penn's "Little Big Man" More than just cowboys and Indians...........neal gabler Two views on Reich's "Greening of America" Reich's politics as a literary idea..... ..jim neubacher Reflections on Reich from prison ............... john sinclair Making a film in Ann Arbor Notes of a cinematographer who tried it.........freddy sweet Donald Hall's "Marianne Moore" A deceptive prey ....................... . john alien "Zinaida Hippius: An intellectual profile" A forgotten poetess ......................... ..ron vroon Pablo Casa Is' new five record collection Thoughts on the man and his work ............ john harvith Prof. Arthur Miller's "Assault on Privacy" Man's fate in the computer age ..............frank munger The folk music scene in Ann Arbor Last gasps of a dying art...................luke baldwin Herbie Hancock: Profile of a jazz musician Music for the people by one of them'.......... ron english Records: Biggs, Ormandy and the Czechs Notes on a collection of classics .............donald sosin Egbert's "Social Radicalism and the Arts" pg. 3 pg. 4 pg. 5 pg. 6 pg. 7 pg. 7 pg. 8 pg. 9 pg. 9 pg. 10 pg. 15 pg. 16 (Continued from Page 7) worth bothering about when-the contrary truth seems so obvious. In any case, Mr. Hall more or less comes to Miss Moore's de- fense by taking a semi-psy- choanalytical look at her re- current motifs and images with an aim toward showing the "animal" within the "cage". .I will talk about this metaphor in anmoment, but it is worth quoting from the book first. At about mid-point Mr. Hall states "If there is a theme that runs from first to last in Marianne Moore's poems, it is the theme of self-defense." In the last few pages he elaborates as follows: We . .. have wondered why there was such fear and from what source it came. I have suggested that it was the contents of the mind's dark side that threatened beneath the surface of the poetry. How to protect oneself from t h i s through imagination. Were the conflict the real story one can only imagine it would have been debilitative - a "house divided against itself." What I suspect is at fault in Mr. H a ll 's perception of Miss Moore'sm work- is a too- determined insistence on a dual- istic view, either of that work or of the world generally. That particular quality and potency of imagination which he sees Miss Moore wearing as armor against "the contents of the mind'sdark side" might perhaps better bercharacterized as a synthesizer, a bridge between two distinct though not oppos- ing modes of consciousness. There is something unduly Cal- vinistic in equating the non- rational province of conscious- ness with "the mind's dark side." It seems to me that M is s It is worth reading, even if it does nothing more than send one back to Miss Moore s poetry, a little more determined to revel, a little less eager to understand. JIJJ."J.Y.>"> : :LYL :ll . N S.L:Y!J SLL :: LLLCsiis:ss:Ii : .:":r: } :"::. ".sisie iagsis~ isim isim poetry." On p. 47, on the other hand, he states that "At no time do I feel Miss Moore's pre- sence more closely than when I am noticing the means she has taken to preserve her syllable count." The contradiction here is not so real as it is apparent, of course, but there remains a hint that even in this area of aesthetics Mr. Hall feels too keenly the conceptual dualism of style and content - leaning at times toward the one, at times toward the other. Again, it seems to me that Miss Moore is most present," most pleasurable, neither- when she is "losing control" in the rush of feeling nor whenhshe is exercising control in the deli- cate footwork of her syllabics. It is when she brings her theme and her form into perfect align- ment that she is most dazzling -- when she illustrates the es- sential unity of those distinct modes of being that we refer to as "form" and content". One thinks, for example, of a momentin a poem like "The Mind Is an Enchanting Thing." The poem has six stanzas of six lines each, the syllable count per line cut consistently through- out the six stanzas to the fol- lowing pattern: 6- 5 - 4 - 6 - 8 - 9. Consistently, that is, with one exception: in the fourth stanza Miss Moore offers one of several definitions of the mind by saying "it's conscientious in- consistency" - slyly increasing the syllable count of the last line in this one stanza from 9 to 10 ... which may be the most con- scientious inconsistency ever im- mortalized in print! There are minor problems in Mr. Hall's prose style from time to time. What is one to make of a sentence like this: "F r o m Sinclair Lewis to H. L. Menck- en, to the expatriates Eliot and Pound, America seemed s un k in materialism." One doubts if America was sunk in material- ism from Lewis to Mencken the way it might be from sea to shining sea, but that does seem to be the sense of the construc- tion. The real difficulty in coming to grips with Miss Moore, of course, is Miss Moore herself. She is simply too cagey an ani- mal to be trapped into any easy semi-psychoanalytical, s e m i - biographical, semi-aesthetic bag. She eludes even the most loving of efforts to grasp, to hold, to penetrate her. Marianne Moore: The Cage and the Animal leav- es most of the final and many of the intermediate w o r d s still to be said. It is nonetheless worth the reading, even if it does nothing more than send one back to Miss Moore's poetry a little more determined to revel, 171 : NEW AND USED-C for the best dec see DICK HOL UM LAW STUDENT WHO DOESN'T LIK a A 0: H H ti in a b a s5 @r si ti4 b i is at bf to a 5Y Henderson Ford Sales 3480 Jackson Rd. Ann Arbor This limited work may be a catalyst .. norm wilson NEAL GABLER is a senior in political science who has been The Daily's chief film critic for two years FREDDY SWEET is a graduate student in camp lit and a teaching fellow "in the Residential College JOHN ALLEN teaches a course on film in the RC and is a grad in American Studies RON VROON is a grad in Russian Litera- ture and specializes in 20th Century poetry JOHN HARVITH is a second year law student RON ENGLISH teaches creative writing at Eastern and is a jazz guitarist active in the Detroit scene JOHN SINCLAIR, chairman of the White Panther Party, is currently in Wayne County Jail awaiting trial in the CIA bombing case and serving time on a 9%Z-10 year dope rap JIM NEUBACHER is the former editorial page editor of The Daily FRANK MUNGER has a law degree from the 'U' and is currently a doctoral can- didate in sociology LUKE BALDWIN is a folk singer who has played in Ann Arbor and Saratoga DONALD SOSIN is a sophomore -in the School of Music NORM WILSON, a grad student in comp lit, is currently teaching in the Humanities Dept. of the Engineering College. unnamed danger has been the obsessive theme of much of Miss Moore's poetry and a variety of armor has been tried. Yet all the time imag- ination, functioning as image- maker, has been the ultimate armor. At this point Mr. Hall's own images begin to be troublesome. Putting an animal in a cage is certainly a form of self-defense. Putting oneself in a cage through which the animal can- not penetrate is also a form of self-defense. Either way, how- ever, there is some loss of free- dom, some sense of victor and vanquished. To put on armor against oneself, especially against that part of oneself from which flows the vitality and gutsiness of one's poetry, is to be sadly and stultifyingly schizoid. At no point does Mr. Hall suggest that Miss Moore's poetry has suffered from such a split, of course; on the con- trary he seems to see in this conflict the dynamic of her work. What an analysis of the split does, however, is to de- tract attention of the rational and non-rational, the transcen- dence of a potential conflict Moore's peculiar vitality~'is not merely the achievement of some sort of equilibrium between the dark and the wall-litsides of the mind but the more dazzling feat of finding and expressing the complementariness of those two modes of psychic activity better characterized as the rational and non-rational. Her poetry constitutes a territory wherein the wolf and the lamb, the leop- ard and the kid, are not kept at bay or in their separate though adjacent enclosures but where- in they lie down together and dwell in dynamic unity. When it comes to Miss Moore's technique, Mr. Hall is more conscious of this synthesizing power of her imagination. He goes so far as to state that "In Miss Moore's poetry, form is synonymous with content." This seems to me both unchal- lengable and the truest measure of her accomplishment as a great poet. Even here, however, there are some problems in Mr. Hall's book. On p. 14 he states that "It is these moments when control is lost, these eruptions of feel- ing, that are for me the great- est pleasure in Marianne Moore's . How about a Benares c' with oi IMPORTED to complimr India Ar 3 30 Maynard I. p Books and the Arts is published by The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, Michigan. The book reviews were edited by Robert Conrow, the arts reviews by Anita Crone. Layout and editorial assistance by Jim Neubacher. Photographic assist- ance by Jim Judkis and Sara Krulwich. Cover photo by Magdalene Sinclair Liquor Capitol Market O D e V Y d 0 . ,,. . ".,,; ,°o Wines Beer Complete Groceries NOW FEATURING starring ... _Andre Previn Ella Fitzgerald Vladimir Ash ken Duke Ellington Sexton Ehrling Pinchas Zukermc Judy Collins Andre Watts Royal Winnipeg Ludwig van Bee Thelonious Mon Erroll Garner Carlos Montoya John Sebastian B.B. 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