i The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, October 16, 2008 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, October 16, 2008 - 38 Contemplating the lost art of letter writing He was a poet with a his- tory of manic episodes, "very handsome and handsome in an almost old-fash- ioned poetic way," as she would later describe him upon their first meeting; she was a fellow writer, a few KIMBERLY years older CHOU than him, an on-and-off-again alcoholic who . asked him to write an epitaph for her, "the loneliest person who ever lived." For much of their decades- long friendship, he was in love with her (and once almost pro- posed), and she was mostly in love with other women. But amid marriages and hospitalizations, if one thing remained constant in Robert Lowell's and Elizabeth Bishop's relationship, it was let- ters. Farrar, Straus & Giroux has published "Words in Air: The Complete Correspondence between Elizabeth Bishop and Robert Lowell," edited by Thomas Travisano with Saskia Hamilton. The book consists of 458 letters, more than 300 of them previously unpublished. To quote critic Christopher Benfey's review in The New Republic, it's a chronicle that's "part long- distance romance, part artistic collaboration, part AA meeting." A clever way to describe it, and fitting, too: In "Words on Air" you can read critiques of each other's work, advice and confessions of more difficult times (such as Lowell's manic episodes), as well as more light- hearted correspondence (like Bishop's letter on buying "speedy looking cars that I can drive very slowly."). For old romantics, the letters that will likely be most memorable are those in which the two talk of what never hap- pened. "I do think free will is sewn into everything we do; you can't cross a street, light a cigarette, drop saccharine in your coffee without really doing it," Lowell awrote in a letter to Bishop 10 years after they met. "Yet the possibl allowsi there m though me abo asking might h towerir that mi In ar admitt Low "Water when h ming a: early or was the that Bis taph. We migh to th the v us. Will it missi and late volume saved i gone? E are real love be and Bis how do say to e May dialogu and ins "How u Tec qi th wr and hov me mes not. Wi ful, we unlimit sages); punche able to in thev Hambu e alternatives that life zones more easily than handwrit- us are very few, often ing does. But we sacrifice the sust be none. I've never deliberation and deeper thought t there was any choice for built into the process of compo- ut writing poetry.... But sition because of the change in you (to marry me) is the self-revision - you cannot press save been for me, the one "DELETE" when you write in ng change, the other life pen. And what about the sus- ght have been had." pense that usually accompanies sother letter, Bishop the wait for a package or letter, ed she would have said yes. once you know it's on its way; or ell wrote the poem even the sense of surprise? It's an about an afternoon unmatched feeling, to receive a e and Bishop went swim- "Greetings from ..." postcard and nd talked on a slab of rock, know the sender cared enough to n in their friendship. It remember your address. day, according to Benfey, Plus, asa method of wooing, shop requested her epi- letter-writing has a long history: Napoleon and Josephine, Simone wished our two souls de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sar- st return like gulls tre, Carrie Bradshaw and Mr. e rock. In the end, Big in that hackneyed "Sex and water was too cold for the City" movie. Sartre believed seduction and writing were Google keep our electron- rooted in the same intellectual ives like this, to be found process; with that thought, per- er bound in 800-page haps there is hope yet for texting. s (or at least starred and Nigerian entrepreneur Femi n a folder), long after we're Emmanuel, recently profiled by Even with love stories that BBC, has sold thousands of cop- lly more than anything, ies of his book series "Touching tween friends (as Lowell's the Heart Through Unforget- hop's turned out to be), table Text Messages." The books, we preserve the words we available in four volumes, help ach other? lovers with pre-written messages be we establish the same such as this one: e now through e-mails "I swear, I will make sure I tant messages and Skype. give you HIV. H is for.Happiness vonderfulyou are, Dear, and joy forever with an I: Incom- parable love that will never V: Vanish until death do us part. I hnology can't love you." 0.7It's not quite the same as souls uite capture returningto roost like gulls. I only hope that, one day, elec- e romance of tronic correspondence between poetic partners will be recovered ritten letters. through text-filtering for words like "love," "senses in turmoil" and "Remind me - what's that Bishop villanelle again?"-Until w won4erful that you leave then, I'll continue to pen Face- sages on AIM..." Maybe book messages and quick e-mails ith a text message (thank- out of convenience, keeping the are, those of us with idea of letter-writing in the back ted international mes- of my mind until I finally go out and a few scattered key and choose the right envelopes, s with T9-word we are stationery and postage stamps. send thoughts anywhere And then I'll write, hoping world. Across town, to the recipient writes back - or irg, somewhere in Brazil. responds with a text. The State Theater shows an old classic every Saturday at midnight. STATE From Page 1B (1980) and the exemplary "Rocky Horror." But the actual criteria for a midnight movie has never been truly clarified. Samantha Etters, one of the co- presidents of M-Flicks, a student group funded by the University Activities Center that sets up free screenings of popular films around campus, seemed hesitant to define the term. Concerning "Donnie Darko," a State Theater staple, Etters said, "It's very unique I guess. A lot of movies with a cult following are ... not always to the point. It taps into that weird human questioning. Personally, I didn't understand that movie." But whether they're actually understood or not, these films continue to find audiences thanks to theaters like the State. "It's an excellent idea to show lesser known films," said Andy Rasmussen, the other co-presi- dent of M-Flicks. "It started off as the only way to show them. The theaters wouldn't normally show something like 'Pink Flamingos,' but they could show it during a midnight screening. Often times the classic midnight movies are the films you wouldn't normally see ina theater." Even so, the number of people the midnight screenings will attract is always in question. As Milks described it, select- ing which films to show is like "throwing things on the wall and seeing what sticks." Sometimes the movies bomb, sometimes not. Milks was shocked, for example, by how well "Shaun of the Dead" (2004) was received when it was shown during a midnight screen- ing. ("I knew it was popular, but I didn't know it was that popular," he said.) On the other hand, the screening of "Ali" (2001), Michael Mann's biopic of boxer Muham- mad Ali, drew an audience of 3 people. Sometimes the staff of the State Theater encounters other prob- lems. Milks's biggest disappoint- ment is that he didn't get to show "The Boondock Saints," the 1999 crime film starring Willem Dafoe ("Spider-Man"). According to the studio that distributed the film, all of the 35 mm prints had been melted - a major problem, as the State Theater can only show 35 mm versions. Other films initially selected for midnight screenings that fell through the cracks due to various reasons include John Carpenter's "Escape from New York" (1981) and John Woo's "Hard-Boiled" (1992). On the other hand, Milks was happy he was able to show Akira Kurosawa's . samurai clas- sic "Yojimbo" (1961), noting that "classic cinema has just as much a place asa cult movie." And perhaps that's the greatest aspect of this tradition: Through its screening of midnight movies every Saturday night, the State Theater has helped to strengthen the culture of film-watching on campus. As Milks illustrated, midnight movies aren't just about showing weird and obscure films so that people can laugh at them; they're also about introducing for- gotten classics to those who may not have even heard of them. "(Ann Arbor) is a place where there are a lot of different people that like a lot of different thiugs," Etters said. "So I think it's a great place for them to be showingmov- ies like that." Maybe that is the reason why the State Theater has survived for so long. With the convenience of near- instantaneous communication, there isa closeness gained; images and voices transcend time Chou wants you to write her a love letter. -mail her yours at kimherch dumichedu. FINE ARTS k ErIW Roethke remembered By PRIYA BALI Daily Arts Writer "What we need is more people who specialize in the impossible," Theodore Roethke once wrote. For the Pulitzer Prize- A Celebration winning poeto and University of Theodore alum, this may Roethke have meant stretching the OCt.17 at boundaries 10 a.m. of 20th cen- At the Rackham tury American Ampitheatre poetry.Receiv-, ing wide acclaim in his own time, his work still holds cause for revisiting. And with the recent centenary of his birth, there is no more appropriate time than now to acknowledge his achieve- ments. Tomorrow, faculty and students will gather in Rackham Amphitheatre to discuss his life and creative works. Planningfortheeventbeganlast year when English Prof. Laurence Goldstein teamed up with Creative Writing Lecturer Keith Taylor and decided to honor Roethke. Camille Paglia, columnist for Slate.com and author of "Break, Blow, Burn" which discusses Roethke's poetry, will deliver the keynote address. As a controversialist, Paglia has written on popular, political and literary cultures since the 1990s when she first stepped into the public sphere. Paglia will also participate in the panel discussion with Tay- lor, Creative Writing Prof. Laura Kasischke and English Assistant Prof. Gillian White. William Bolcom, a Grammy- winning composer and a School of Music, Theatre and Dance professor, is a former student of Roethke. Bolcom will discuss the influence of Roethke on his own music and play various composi- tions set to Roethke's poetry. The event will conclude with readings of Roet and fact Unlik Roethke Romant on natur he ofte nature fatherm Roethke ral worl confessi ment w: whichm and di poetryi its subje well. H St fa to t poems,1 poems,I nursery. hke's work by students were paying attention to litera- ulty. ture from all over the world, and :e the poets of his time, those things would not have been e borrowed from the available in Saginaw," Taylor ic era's tendency to focus said. re. As a native of Saginaw, As Roethke grew older, he n reflected on the local began to suffer from manic of his home where his depression. His mental illness is naintained a greenhouse. reflected in many internal poems e's outlook on the natu- of the late '40s and early '50s. d is often combined with These poems later influenced ional poetry's involve- confessional poets like Sylvia ith the spiritual world, Plath, making it possible for oth- sakes it especially unique ers to discuss personal issues in fficult to classify. His their work. isn't only diversified in Before returning to Ann Arbor ect matter but in form as in the 1960s, Roethke taught at e experimented with lyric Michigan State University, Penn- sylvania State University and the University of Washington. "There is a regional impor- tudents and tance for something like this to remind people that real work can culty gather be done no matter wherethey are; they don't have to go elsewhere or pay tribute to abandon things," Taylor said. The transcendence of Roeth- ragic poet. ke's poetry across geographical boundaries and time is evidence of this. Tomorrow's event will be a chance to experience just how love poems and children's far his poetry has entered the frequently incorporating larger cultural world and how rhymes. grounded it has remained locally. "It is intensely moving, for one, and very skilled," White said. "It draws on a mix of influences to explore personal material and to describe and honor the natural world." "His work explores the uncon- scious and scenes of childhood to achieve an expressive poetry that marks a self's effort to connect to forces larger than the self or its local conditions," she said. As an undergraduate and grad- uate student at the University in the late 1920s and early '30s, one may see Ann Arbor as the place in which Roethke's evolvement as a poet took place. "When Roethke came to Ann Arbor, he met people from all over the word and people who Thursday, Nov.20 IBRESLIN 8:00 PIVISTUDENT EVENTS CENTER Online: breslincenter.com / Phone: 1-800-968-BRES Campusconsciousness.org I ofarevolution.com