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NYU Professor Teaches the Art of Writing (Ocean Vuong Interview)

By David Perell

Summary

Topics Covered

  • Metaphors Disrupt Mimetic Description
  • Workshops Prioritize Recognition Over Correction
  • Newspaper Style Tamed Literary Sentences
  • Estrangement Rescues Cliches Through Defamiliarization
  • Daring and Disobedience Fuel Innovation

Full Transcript

Ocean Vangu is on the show and he's a poet. He's a novelist. He's a professor

poet. He's a novelist. He's a professor at NYU. What he's really good at is just

at NYU. What he's really good at is just writing in this fresh and enchanted and imaginative way. He has this way of

imaginative way. He has this way of seeing and experiencing the world that's alive, that's filled with wonder. And if

you want to write pros that's lush, words that are vivid, stories that pulse with life, well then you're going to love this episode. You wouldn't believe it, but how I write costs a fortune to run. And it's thanks to Mercury that I

run. And it's thanks to Mercury that I can even do it. They're the sponsor of this episode in a banking platform that I've been using for the past four years to run my own business. When I started Howerite, I expected finances to be an

absolute nightmare. I got team members

absolute nightmare. I got team members in four different countries. I had

things to think about like currency exchange and taxes and expenses and I was just dreading it. But honestly,

banking has maybe been the easiest part.

I can't remember running into a single problem and it's because I've been using Mercury. I switched over from other more

Mercury. I switched over from other more traditional banks because Mercury is so welldesigned. It's easy to get started.

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It's easy to use while also feeling totally legit and secure. And Mercury

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provided by Choice Financial Group and Callum NA members FDIC.

All right, back to the episode.

Talking about awe, mystery, wonder. I

feel like that's so infused not just in the way that you write, but in the way that you see.

>> Yeah.

>> And it has to be like some sort of muscle or something that you're cultivating. Yeah.

cultivating. Yeah.

>> Well, I I like to think um metaphor is a great example of that because many my students say, "How do you write a good metaphor, professor?" And I said,

metaphor, professor?" And I said, >> "It's really about observation.

It's about looking at the world." And

sometimes a metaphor, a strong metaphor takes years to come to and the rest is arrangement and syntax. You'll get that.

you you'll find a way you'll draft your way through that metaphor from the Greek is a carryover, right?

>> So you have usually you have your tenor and your vehicle. So let's take a line from Isaac Babel, one of my favorite short story writers, Babel writing in the early 1920s

um during the Soviet Polish war in Red Calvary. Now you can describe a sunset

Calvary. Now you can describe a sunset in a mimetic way, which is often what the newspapers want, right? the

newspaper style um a red evening sunset along the hills. Fine. It's a useful descriptive but it's mimemetic. It's

only bringing it's it's mimicking the world. Right? This is from Aristotle's

world. Right? This is from Aristotle's idea of mimisis and poisesis.

>> But the metaphor is a disruption of that. It's asking the viewer to bring

that. It's asking the viewer to bring themselves into that scene. Right? So

Bible opens the Red Calvary with describing a sunset as the low red sun rolls across the hills as if beheaded. And when I read that, I

was like, that's a sentence the species never had yet.

So a red evening sunset. The species has that. He opened the door, walked into

that. He opened the door, walked into the room, and sat down. The species has that. But we have not had a sunset

that. But we have not had a sunset described like a beheading. And you

wouldn't need to know that Babel was a war correspondent at the time. That

context is embedded in the image. And

that image is so incredible because it does something no other art can do.

Right? Film can't replicate that sentiment. You can take a time-lapse uh

sentiment. You can take a time-lapse uh shot of a sunset, but it would not be indicative of the connotations of a beheading. And so the second clause that

beheading. And so the second clause that simile also changes alters the rate of the sunset. It's the speed of you can

the sunset. It's the speed of you can see the speed go move.

So now Babel has not just given us a mimemetic scene that the newspapers want. Right? So you'll never see, you

want. Right? So you'll never see, you know, New York City, you know, February 26, 202 um 26, Trump descends, you know,

Air Force One as the sun sets across Manhattan as a beheaded CNN. You never

read that, right? Um because it's silly.

While it's all about information, right?

So it's about efficacy. You you want an invisible style. So that was really

invisible style. So that was really important for the newspaper, but it's done incredible damage to a young writer's imagination because the

sentence has now been so timid. So in

your class, the way that you begin is not with criticism, but just allowing people to read and experience each other's work. And I was hearing you talk

other's work. And I was hearing you talk about it and you're like what you get from that is that you get really really really specific feedback that is like geared to the individual, geared to the

person. And I want to hear about why you

person. And I want to hear about why you do that and then what that means about sort of your relationship with the rules of writing if you know what I mean. M

well I think the the the idea there is recognition building um recognition in what's happening in the work because sometimes we think the workshop is a place where

correction is progress. So

unfortunately, you know, we bring a lot of um the culture into our creative practice. And the culture often says,

practice. And the culture often says, you know, you feed something into a machine or process and it should be better, right? But of course,

better, right? But of course, >> every writer who's done it for about a year will tell you that some workshops actually destroy the work, right? You

get too much feedback. It's all over the place. And sometimes you can draft

place. And sometimes you can draft beyond the the pinnacle of the work. And

so why does that happen? Right? That's

one one question that I'm always interested. Why is it that sometimes you

interested. Why is it that sometimes you get to you get draft one and it's just completely there and you're like, "Oh my goodness, poetry gods, writing gods,

thank you." That happens once every blue

thank you." That happens once every blue moon if you're even lucky.

>> And then sometimes you think you're writing this poem or you're writing this story and this novel and then you get to, you know, the the seventh, 20th,

28th draft and you're like, "Oh my goodness, it's not this at all. It's

this other thing. Why didn't I see this earlier? Why did I have to spend so much

earlier? Why did I have to spend so much time? And I think that moment is

time? And I think that moment is actually a moment of recognition. It's

like my goal is like how do we get that work to be present in the room rather than just constantly correcting lines, right? Because one of the the greatest

right? Because one of the the greatest dangers of being of a culture that fetishizes productivity is that you might have too much work, right? We all

have that friend who writes a a poem a day or all year or write a novel a month. And I know those folks and

month. And I know those folks and sometimes it's much harder to go back into a pile of rubble to salvage the

work than starting completely a new.

Right? So when you rec center recognition and you say, "Well, what is it? What are the tendencies here?" Because when you have a sentence,

here?" Because when you have a sentence, what you really have is consciousness filtered through syntax. And for every single person, it's different. Right? If

I said like, write a poem, um, write an OAD, which is a traditional poem that you write after the the morning after when you're leaving, right? You hook up with somebody and then you the OAD is

like the glorious morning or the melancholic, depending how it went. Um,

but if I said, write an OAD, every single student would have a different poem. And so we're naming the

poem. And so we're naming the tendencies. We're seeing the patterns.

tendencies. We're seeing the patterns.

Oh, you're a poet that's interested in trees. You're a poet that's interested

trees. You're a poet that's interested in your verbs um are in jammed, right?

You're you're in jamming on your verbs or your prepositions are on the the left margin. You seem to like to launch into

margin. You seem to like to launch into the next line. So recognizing patterns means you recognizing yourself. But

imagine, you know, uh, sending a a first draft and everyone pulls it apart with their dogmas, right? Because when you approaching the work a new, you often have dogmas that you picked up years

ago. And so you hear things like um, oh,

ago. And so you hear things like um, oh, a poem shouldn't be like this, a novel shouldn't be like that. But the problem with those rules is that anytime you ask

them why, after two or three wise, the whole argument usually falls apart. So I

think suspending that and building out the recognition to yourself, right? Who

am I as a writer? Why did I write this?

Because sometimes the consciousness, the subconscious brings out this work and we only half know it, right?

>> Half know it.

>> You only half know it. Sometimes the

line comes out and it's thrilling, but you don't really intellectualize it yet, right? We all had that moment. I'm sure

right? We all had that moment. I'm sure

you had as well. I'm like, "Wow, what is that?" Right? Early on in my career, I

that?" Right? Early on in my career, I would censor myself a lot when that happened. I said, gosh, I if I don't

happened. I said, gosh, I if I don't know it, that I'm not in control. That

that means I'm not really a writer I should be. So, I would censor I said,

should be. So, I would censor I said, let me pull back. Let me not let me put that on the back burner until I understand what I just wrote. But as the more I did it, the more I realized

I don't want to judge what comes through. You know, just you're like,

through. You know, just you're like, whoa, what where did that come from?

What does that even mean? But there's

something in me that says this is new, so I'll keep digging. You know, it reminds me of a Japanese botonist who was tasked to to find medicinal plants

in the rainforest.

And he had the record in his um university in his community for finding um the most medicinal plants.

And naturally people come to him and they said, "Well, why what's your trick? What's your what's the secret? how did you do this, you

the secret? how did you do this, you know, this landmark work? Um, and it's it's in a book called um The Method of Hope. And he says, "Well, I don't go

Hope. And he says, "Well, I don't go into the rainforest looking for what looks like medicine.

I simply look for anything that's new to me." And I hope that it's medicine.

me." And I hope that it's medicine.

>> Sometimes, often it's not. Sometimes

it's poison, right? Um, but as we know in pharmaceuticals, some poisons could be, you know, redesigned as medicine.

But he says, "I'm just looking for anything new. I'm not looking for what

anything new. I'm not looking for what came before me. I'm not looking for what looks like the other medicine, the other plant, the other species. I'm anything

that's new, I put in my bag." And I think that when we suspend critique, the students are more willing to just let the novelty of themsel come into the room. So, we're just putting things in

room. So, we're just putting things in the center, right? When we look at a poem or a short story, it's like I noticed this. I see this pattern. You

noticed this. I see this pattern. You

switch from past tense to present tense and this fifth paragraph. That's

interesting. Why is that? Let's just put it in. And then by the third or fourth

it in. And then by the third or fourth week when we know the tendencies of the writer, we can gear everything towards them. It happens so naturally and

them. It happens so naturally and seamlessly. And it's like relationships,

seamlessly. And it's like relationships, you know. You would never

you know. You would never >> That's what I was thinking of.

>> Yeah. You would never walk up to a stranger and say, "I have some fashion advice for you." right?

>> Do that in New York and you might, you know, end up in Belleview, you know, >> but but I think so just being close to someone and gearing it to them and getting to know and building that

recognition, not only good for the community in a workshop environment, but for yourself, you know, how do you get to that moment faster rather? Do you

really need 30 drafts, right, to get to the moment where you realize, oh, it wasn't about this at all. It's about

this other thing here.

Okay, so we're talking about how do you get your writing done? And if you're thinking about work and how you can be more productive there, well, I recommend a tool called Base Camp. Base Camp is a project management tool and it's

different from the other ones which are loud and noisy and cluttered. They have

feature bloat. Base Camp says, "No, no, no, no, no. We're going to keep things simple so that you can focus on what actually matters, which is just getting the work done." You know, now for us, Base Camp is a place where we can track what we're doing with how I write, when

episodes are being recorded, where we're recording them, the publishing day, all those sorts of things in one place for our entire team to look at. And I had the founder of Base Camp, Jason Freed,

he came on the show and I noticed that he really cares about writing. He cares

about manifestos. He cares about great copy. He cares about telling a great

copy. He cares about telling a great story. And him and his co-founder,

story. And him and his co-founder, they've written five books. And I can tell you that they bring the same care and attention to detail to their books as they do their software. So if you're

thinking about work and you're asking, hey, how can I be more productive? How

can I make my team more cohesive? Well,

then I recommend base camp. All right,

back to the episode.

Yeah, the big word that comes to me is novelty, surprise, pursuing it. Like in

what ways do you feel like you are pursuing novelty, freshness? And in what ways do you feel like there's a more kind of this like pursuit of

quality that's like more structured and refined and like actually less open to >> to stretching the boundaries?

>> Gosh, I I think it's really about it's always about stretching the boundaries, you know, because the boundaries are arbitrary. If you look at what's

arbitrary. If you look at what's historically good writing, it is historically variable. You know what we consider

variable. You know what we consider strong writing now in um first of all like in if you if you look at Chaucer like what is literature? We're getting

into like a really fundamental question.

What is literature? Well, literature is a relatively new fabrication in our species. It came the literature

species. It came the literature department, the English department came about the end of the 19th century. Um,

and so prior to that, if you ask Choser what is literature, he would say anything written. If you ask Shakespeare

anything written. If you ask Shakespeare what is literature, he would probably couldn't give you an answer, right?

Because I'm I'm literature is kind of a blueprint for for life. The poem was something used like a text message. It

was part of courtship, right? Um, so we formulated literature, you know, when we formulated institutions. And so it came as an

institutions. And so it came as an organizing principle as a way to gather literary work and organize it and study it. And so right away I think it's

it. And so right away I think it's important to kind of go back like is the Iliad a poem or a story? If you look at the the Banttom classics from the 50s

and 60s, they actually abandoned um Homer's original line breaks, right, to just read as a novel. It's an

interesting publication decision. They

had to make it cheap, right? But then

they they made a executive decision like we don't care for the poem part we just want the story part right um so I think it's important to go back to our species

foundation and realize that everything has been hybrid and we put these qualities on it and even the novel was not considered a serious literary

endeavor until the late 19th century before that it was considered feminine it was considered women's work >> like Jane Yeah, it was for entertainment for the

domestic men or serious thinkers only uh read the classics, poetry and non-fiction, right? And it wasn't until

non-fiction, right? And it wasn't until after the Civil War when a critic um DeForest I believe his name was in 1868

he first credited the term great American novel. And after the American

American novel. And after the American Civil War, it was a serious moment of moral crisis in the country. And

DeForest wrote an op-ed basically saying, "What book will bring us together? Will make a testament?" So for

together? Will make a testament?" So for the first time in American letters, the novel was seen as a serious moral endeavor. And then everything changed,

endeavor. And then everything changed, right? It was no longer women's

right? It was no longer women's entertainment fancy work and it became a kind of vehicle of national reckoning.

And it also coincided with the newspaper, the rise of the newspaper. You know, the newspaper

newspaper. You know, the newspaper needed to be standardized after the civil war um because it was completely reckless. You know, newspaper reporting.

reckless. You know, newspaper reporting.

I mean, you would have crack journalists who would talk about troop deployments and meanwhile the soldiers particularly in Union camps would read newspapers and any schmuck can go out and say, "I think

Lee's over there across the hills." And

all of a sudden, it was a me, which is why it was a headache, you know. um for

those early Union generals because there was no standardization. Exclamation

marks were everywhere. It was kind of vibes, right? It was it was kind of like

vibes, right? It was it was kind of like this it was kind of beautiful but for for information delivery it was crazy.

>> Fake news on steroids.

>> It was fake news on steroids, right? And

the style was really wild. It was

>> it was um naturalistic at times whimsical, right? And after the Civil

whimsical, right? And after the Civil War alongside uh DeForest's call for the great American novel, newspapers sobered up and said, "We need to have a standard

practice."

practice." >> But what happened then was that the English sentence started to become tamed, right? It became efficient.

tamed, right? It became efficient.

It went for clarity.

it uh had to be um have enough brevity to make keep room for advertising.

And so you went in the newspaper >> in the newspaper. So you went from the Victorian sentence, Matthew Arnold, >> Whitman, Hawthorne, Melville, which is

more like a root system. It was just feeling because it began with oratory, right? Oratory was a way to win

right? Oratory was a way to win arguments in the 19th century. You have

Frederick Douglas, you had Thoro, all these folks going about giving sermons and speeches. And you have an audience that was still relatively

illiterate. And so the subordinate

illiterate. And so the subordinate clause, the long winded clause, delaying the independent clause kept your audience hooked. What is he really

audience hooked. What is he really saying? We got to keep paying attention.

saying? We got to keep paying attention.

Right? So he had language that looks similar to um legal speech, right? a lot

of subordinate clauses and it was momentous. It was perfect for oratory

momentous. It was perfect for oratory and naturally people wrote the same way they spoke.

>> Obviously this was later but is this like uh Church Hill like we shall fight on beaches, we shall fight in the fields, we shall never surrender at the end and everything that leads up to it is likeing

Exactly. In a like saying the same thing

Exactly. In a like saying the same thing over and over and like you're saying you're sort of delaying the punchline at the end. We shall never surrender.

the end. We shall never surrender.

>> Yep. And that comes from the Bible.

Whitman used picked up the King James Bible employed an AFA and it's perfect for politicians, right? Because you can build momentum. We will heal the working

build momentum. We will heal the working class. We will heal the racial divide.

class. We will heal the racial divide.

It's perfect for politicians because you can build momentum with the base, have an emotional pull, and it's performative. It's a spectacle of power

performative. It's a spectacle of power and yet never explain how you're going to do it. So, it's it's all the dopamine without the explanation. And so the the

the Victorian sentence worked this way, but it was very rich and metaphoric. And

so when we turn to the turn of the 20th century, the rise of the great American novel, the national novel, because other countries started to think about, well,

who what's our novel, right? It also

coincided with standardization for a commercial efficient sentence, >> right? It's probably not a coincidence

>> right? It's probably not a coincidence that Hemingway was a newspaper guy.

>> So was Steven Crane, Jack London, right?

uh Orwell the hallmarks of the 20th century sentence which we now considered good writing.

>> Sure.

>> Right. So that's my bone to pick with that is that there are wonderful ways to write but the culture in the 20th century has

settled on mostly one way. They've

allowed one way to prevail.

>> I'm guessing you don't write with Grammarly.

>> Well, it's interesting because there's a lot of talk about AI, right? But I and I said look you know AI is predictable.

It's its onset is predictable because long before AI we have always been homogenizing the sentence.

>> Yeah. I have a friend who uh he did an experiment. He said I'm going to take

experiment. He said I'm going to take this bit from Shakespeare >> and I'm going to put it in Microsoft Word.

>> Yeah.

>> And what does it give you? It gives you red and green squiggly lines.

>> Yeah. And he goes, "This software program is telling me not to write like Shakespeare. It is like saying do not do

Shakespeare. It is like saying do not do that. It's giving me auto suggestions.

that. It's giving me auto suggestions.

What is going on?"

>> And even in something like Microsoft Word, which is, >> you know, it seems so innocuous, right?

But like I don't know, maybe 600 million people write with it. Maybe more. Maybe

more than a billion people have used Microsoft Word.

>> And just with the spell check suggestions, it's like imposing a certain kind of form. Yeah,

>> that is the very antithesis of >> the person who people say might be the greatest playwright.

>> Yeah.

>> In the English language.

>> Y yeah 100%. So you know AI didn't have to be what it is today. We could have built it to have doubt to be exploratory

to have spiritual questions but instead we build it according to the corporate model. scaling, efficacy,

model. scaling, efficacy, >> standardization, >> standardization, homogenization, total consum consumption, colonization of ideas and material. And we think that's

just naturally good. That's just what so it's interesting that the corporate model is kind of like a de facto model of progress and we never built. But it's

interesting that like Claude I think they hired philosophers now to like advise Claude. It's interesting, you

advise Claude. It's interesting, you know, like the the liberal arts are coming back with this kind of technological advance. And so to go back

technological advance. And so to go back to the the sentence, I think the Victorian sentence was incredibly beautiful in the newspaper world. It was

a mess. And so unfortunately, unfortunately, poetry, I think writing was actually on its way to painting. You

know, Rambo's um season in hell, a hybrid text of pros poetry. And so there was a turn there was a kind of a fork between poetry followed painting and

pros followed the newspaper. And so we have a sentence that in you know if you look at any literary review you open any

book review they often prioritize the newspaper sentence which is the invisible presence of the author. Right?

We often say we don't like this work because the the author wouldn't get out of their own way or it's pretentious because there's too many metaphors or

what have you. And so we're asking the sentence to behave more like a butler, right? And this comes from the newspaper

right? And this comes from the newspaper model. There's plenty of of um works

model. There's plenty of of um works that are written beautifully from that.

But I'm advocating for a more Victorian style to come back and have a more freedom to strange the world.

>> The word that came to mind for me was right angles. Like a lot of writing

right angles. Like a lot of writing right now has right angles. It's sort of coarse and harsh and it's very sort of refined. It's almost like it's been

refined. It's almost like it's been written with the ruler.

>> And it's funny cuz you see in it'd be interesting to look at a study of paintings of how many right angles showed up in paintings. Like if you look at impressionism, there's no right angles in impressionism. And then if you

look at like Kandinsky, there's like some right angles because it's more sort of abstract. But then you get to like

of abstract. But then you get to like post World War II pa mandreon is like all right angles. And it's sort of like the right angleization of culture and of writing.

>> That's so that's great. That's really

great. And and technology had to do with that industrialization. We now created

that industrialization. We now created more. We we had this around 1920

more. We we had this around 1920 afterwards after World War I. We now are a species that can produce right angles almost perfectly. But then

almost perfectly. But then scientifically we now know that straight lines don't exist >> in nature.

>> Yeah. Yeah.

>> Even in even that frame, right? If you

go if you narrow it down to a molecular level.

>> Sure. Sure. Sure.

>> It's not real. It's an illusion. Right.

Right. So I think the trouble for a young writer, a novice writer to really innovate according to their terms, everything

from draft one to the publication process will hinder that for the novice writer right now in the in the 21st

century. And it begins with

century. And it begins with this illusion that well first of all if you're a young writer you're often told

something very um very familiar here are the models that you should look at the innovative daring masters Wolf Melville

Baldwin Junah Barnes Anne Carson and you're teaching them that in the syllabus and then and then the naive you know hopeful novelist writer does

that they read the books they create a matrix of their own that's weird and interesting the dichotomy is that the publishing world and it begins with

pedagogy too is actually very cynical because when they did the homework they do they make that that interesting work based on these one-of-a-kind one of one

writers the Shakespeare's right and they deliver it to the professor, they said, "Oh, who do you think you are?

You're not Melville."

And you bring it to the publisher, it's like, "Oh, this doesn't look like anything we published. We need a comp.

This doesn't look like it." But I'm like, then you're like, "Isn't that wasn't that the whole point?" So, while we build up this fantasy of innovation,

publishing because of commercial fear is actually very conservative.

>> Oh, 100%. I'm trying to make something in Hollywood right now and it's a documentary style thing.

>> Hollywood's even worse.

>> Hollywood's even worse. I mean, like when you think of how have movies changed, the one word that comes to mind is the sequel, right? We just have sequel after sequel after sequel.

>> And basically what you have is you have the stated preference is we're innovative. We're trying to push the

innovative. We're trying to push the boundaries. And Hollywood used to be the

boundaries. And Hollywood used to be the leader of culture, but now it lags culture. So it used to be that Hollywood

culture. So it used to be that Hollywood would actually take risks, invest in things, and then what they would make was the head of the snake. And now Hollywood is sort of the

snake. And now Hollywood is sort of the final >> the final checkpoint that you go through to basically say you've made it. It's

like you have to make it on Instagram, you have to make it on Twitter, you have to make it in your books, whatever. And

then you get Hollywood at the end. And

basically what they said to me was, "You're doing a documentaries. There's

only three kinds of what they call unscripted series that work. True crime,

music, and sports.

>> Anything outside of that, we're just not interested." And I understand it from a

interested." And I understand it from a business perspective. Like if you're

business perspective. Like if you're trying to basically get your ROI and whatnot, there's certain risks that if you're trying to basically have a structured risk profile, you're not willing to take. But when it comes to a

creative culture and pushing the boundaries and taking risks and stretching the imagination, >> it just it doesn't happen.

>> It isn't it gling, right? It's so

stunning, you know, and I think that's my I feel like my job is to preserve that sense of awe for the student so that they can keep that original matrix.

>> Does the word enchantment come to mind?

Like it feels like we live in a bit of a disenchanted world. Is that

disenchanted world. Is that >> Yeah, an arangement. So Bab strange >> Babel was writing at the same time as Victor Schlavski the Russian formalist

and his central idea by he says something really important one of my most one of my heroes so much of my thinking comes from Slavski's foundation and he says there's no such thing as

cliche and the the the biggest taboo in any writing workshop or any writer editor comments is this is cliche and the fe

the problem with cliche say is that we often see something like someone would say don't write about the rose. It's a

cliche flower. Don't write about grandmothers. God forbid you write about

grandmothers. God forbid you write about a grandmother in a kitchen. Right? And

so a student would say okay I don't I won't write I won't touch it. I won't

touch it. But then if you keep doing that you're not going to touch anything.

So you'll end up with a narrow scope of this neutral, fearful, timid thematic work that actually denies yourself the subject of the world because he's like, well,

grandmas do exist in kitchens though where they just now exiled from all literary work out of this fear and so but that does happen in the classroom.

Schlavki says it's not the grandmother, it's the idea of the grandmother in the kitchen. So now you have to estrange it.

kitchen. So now you have to estrange it.

It's up to you to rescue the grandmother in the kitchen into a different mode of thinking by aranging that mode. Similar

to how Babel rescued the sunset by making it strange through displacement.

>> Is that like making it feel fresh again >> by displacement? So like for example, take a flower.

>> Say you have say you have a rose, you put it in a bride's hair.

That's familiar cliche. It's it's there. You take the

cliche. It's it's there. You take the same rose, put it in Mike Tyson's ear, now you're somewhere else. So, it's not the rose's fault, right? So, instead of saying, "I will not write about a rose,"

it's about, "You need to reconsider the rose." Right? Take a look at Slavki says

rose." Right? Take a look at Slavki says it best here.

>> Okay, you read my mind. I was literally a second away from saying, "Pick up one of your books. I feel like that's a perfect time."

perfect time." >> Okay, look at this. He comes up with this idea of a strangement and he quotes Toltoy in one of Toltoy's diaries.

>> Okay.

>> And Toltoy says, "I was dusting in the room. Having come full circle, I

room. Having come full circle, I approached the sofa and could not remember if I had dusted it off or not.

I couldn't because these movements are routine and not conscious and I felt I never could remember it. So if I had cleaned the sofa but forgotten it that

is as if I was really cons unconscious.

It is as if it never happened at all. If

the whole of life of many people is lived unconsciously it is as if this life had never been.

Then Slovki commentsization eats up things clothes your wife and the fear of war. Credible

line. And so Shawi continues, "What we call art exists in order to give back the sensation of life, in order to make us feel things, in order to make the

stone stony. The goal of art is to

stone stony. The goal of art is to create the sensation of seeing and not merely recognizing things. The device of art is the ostania estrangement of

things and the comp complication of the form which increases the duration and complexity of perception as the process of perception is its own end in art and

must be prolonged. Art is the means to live through the making of a thing.

Babel reads sees this because they're contemporaries. They're they're working

contemporaries. They're they're working in St. Petersburg at the same time and

in St. Petersburg at the same time and he's like, "Oh, I can't just name it. I

have to resee it."

>> Yeah. There's um at the Met there's this room. So there's George Washington

room. So there's George Washington crossing the Delaware, sort of the famous painting in this room. But to the left there's this Albert Beerstat painting of the Matterhorn. It's this

beautiful sunset painting with these like pink orange hues. And I always think of that painting when I see a mountain. It's like whenever I'm in

mountain. It's like whenever I'm in nature, I want to see like Beerstat saw it, which is that seeing versus recognizing. So often I'm like, "Oh,

recognizing. So often I'm like, "Oh, it's a mountain." But no, Beerstat was really looking at it. It's the same thing with Monae and the water lilies.

Van Gogh with the way that he would paint flowers and stuff like that. Like

you look at Van Gogh and you're like, he was seeing not just the object itself, but the energy inside of those objects.

And it allows us to see the world fresh again.

>> 100%. And even like someone like Hemingway, you know, that laconic style, if you do it now, because I'm not even

arguing for maximalist sentences. I'm

I'm I'm arguing for idiosyncrasy and strangeness. And even early Hemingway

strangeness. And even early Hemingway was very strange. You don't see that style anymore. And if you did early

style anymore. And if you did early Hemingway now, three or four word sentences, an editor would say, "This is too conspicuous." you know it's it's too

too conspicuous." you know it's it's too felt right so even that is now cut off so you have this newspaper sentence that

is invisible it is inoffensive it is mimemetic right he walked into the room and sat down the >> the sunset you know glows through the

evening fine but that's a mimemetic sentence pois for Aristotle is the moment of process it's a moment in between what's known. It's a moment. So

you have a rose, >> then you have the bud.

>> Those are two mimemetic moments because they have names. They're nominal. The

rose is a thing. The bud is a thing.

However, there are infinite moments between the bud and the rose. When the

rose tears open on its way to the final rose, when the bud bursts, all of that is still part of life. That's pois. And

Haidiger goes on to call this the threshold moment.

What is the moment be when the rose becomes a rose? Where is the threshold?

And that to me is where so much poetry and wonder, enchantment, and estrangement comes in. But we're taught to ignore that because it has no definition.

>> Yeah. You know what I'm thinking of?

Have you done any like video editing in like Adobe Premiere or anything like that?

>> No. Basically what happens is you look at a timeline and you're sort of zoomed out and then what happens is you zoom in, you zoom in and then Premiere will show you the individual frames almost

like you know that famous horse painting that showed like the galloping and how there was a big debate does the horse do all four legs get off of the ground or is one always on the ground? This was a debate for years.

>> And then what we did was through photography we're able to basically slow down time and freeze frames, right? And

what I'm hearing from you is basically a lot of the way that you can basically enhance your perception is to somehow look and look and look and observe and

sort of see how deliberate change can be like in the blossoming of a rose or something like that. It's about

perception. It's about slowing down. I I

think like 80% of writing is looking and thinking. the the last part is syntax.

thinking. the the last part is syntax.

>> What is looking and think how does that actually manifest itself?

>> Taking a walk. I mean I I imagine for me like for example there's another metaphor by Richard Syen. He's

describing stars and he says the stars out there tonight, little boats rode out too far. And

what's stunning about that is that the tenor is stars, the vehicle are boats.

And the correspondence is what you know metaphors speak. So how how close is the

metaphors speak. So how how close is the correspondence is so thrilling because you he's taken something that is a monolithic example of storytelling and

culture. Stars, we look to the stars to

culture. Stars, we look to the stars to navigate. They are the foundation of our

navigate. They are the foundation of our storytelling.

>> Dreams, >> Orion's belt, right? universes and he's reduced it to something completely almost like a monk painting. Some you've

seen a monk composition, loneliness, loss, being too late. The modifier wrote out too far. Stunning there too. And you

don't need to know that this is in the book Crush, which is about queer loss and and desire in the '9s in the wake of the AIDS epidemic. And you don't need to

know that, but it's embedded into that position, that subject position of a a historical person named Richard Syiken, who is a, you know, a social worker

while he's writing these books. Um,

looking out and feeling that sense of loss and sadness, upending this monolithic, um, symbol that stars are supposed to be and giving us an alternative something. again that

alternative something. again that sentence I checked our species never had that yet.

So my my teacher Ben Learner I hope he doesn't mind me saying this. I was in undergrad in his in his office hours one day. I gave him a poem. He's like this

day. I gave him a poem. He's like this is this is fine. Um but I'll show you I'm going to do something. I'm going to show you I'm going to show you what we're after here.

And he turns around and he types on his lap on his computer. He's typing into Google and he says, "You see that line you

wrote? It's a decent line. Come on. Come

wrote? It's a decent line. Come on. Come

here. 300,000 people beat you to it."

>> O, that's a punch in the face.

>> Sorry, Ben. I mean this in all with all love. Um,

love. Um, >> but that was such an incredible moment of education, right? I I don't think that's um you know to me

he raised the bar right there. He said,

"Oh, we're out here to write sentences the species has never encountered."

>> Right?

>> Not only that we're out here to do that, but that it's possible in this lifetime because one's education is also filled

with awe in the wrong way where the can the cananan is often given to us with too much awe. We are asked to be too aruck by the canonical.

>> Yes. Like everything in a museum is going to be great. Everything in a library is the best thing ever written.

>> So you feel like that achievement is beyond your lifetime. So again, it's inongruent. We worship the past, but

inongruent. We worship the past, but when a student starts to do that, we condemn them and we work with cynicism and fear. And what Ben did was the

and fear. And what Ben did was the opposite. As a teacher up until that

opposite. As a teacher up until that point, a lot of teachers said to me, "No, no, who do you think you are? This

is pretentious. You're just a kid. What

are you doing?" I'm like, "Well, I I did what you told me to do. I read the the grades and I'm trying to do what they did." But Ben was like, "Go higher. You

did." But Ben was like, "Go higher. You

have something in you to you're able to say for the first time." And when I realized that because some but sometimes you do need sentences like he walked into the room and sat down. need that

scaffolding to get you to >> the great pois moments. The question

there is, are you satisfied with what the dictionary has given you? That's the

central question of a right. Are you

satisfied calling it a red sunset >> or you call it >> a low red, you know, the low red sun rolling over the hills as if beheaded?

>> Is it stars or is it boats rode out too far? And moments like this is where the human being steps in

and creates something closer to the thumbrint. You and I each have one

thumbrint. You and I each have one thumbrint. No one else has it. What I'm

thumbrint. No one else has it. What I'm

interested in in writing is not so much how to hook somebody, how to hook a reader, but how to stay with a reader.

Because all our workshops, all of our writing seminars are built about capturing and possession, keeping a reader eyeballs, keeping things. But I'm

interested I'm actually more interested in being haunted. You know, there there are like >> there's a poem by Robert Browning, meeting at night. I can't for the life of me remember it. I read it 20 years

ago as a high school student. To this

day, I still think about that poem.

Every other day I think about it. It's

about a lover meeting a lover at night.

It's describing the boats moving through the eddies, crossing little farms, knocking on a window, hearing the match exhaust itself and then light up and

then the the gas of the lover recognizing each other through the window pane and it has no pronouns. So,

as a little gay boy in Hartford, Connecticut, I thought it was about two boys, you know, meeting each other secretly. Who knows what Robert Browning

secretly. Who knows what Robert Browning meant, right? Um but the power of that

meant, right? Um but the power of that is that that poem is downloaded into me.

So I think syntax although I said 80% of writing is perception looking that 20% is everything because that is like the spike protein. It is like the

spike protein. It is like the downloading mechanism and how we resonate with work or how work stains us is dependent on the syntactic clause as

it's built.

>> One of the things that keeps coming back we were talking about cliche earlier.

Yeah.

>> And then these things that you read or you watch, you listen to that really stick with you, that really live with you. You know, I think of Goodwill

you. You know, I think of Goodwill Hunting, Matt Damon, is this like punk kid, you know, he's all about reading books, reading books. I know everything.

And then there's that great park bench scene >> where Robin Williams sits him down, just starts talking to him, and you could say, "Hey, you know what? What you read in a book is just an abstraction of reality. You actually need to experience

reality. You actually need to experience the real thing." Like that's a good sentence, but and there's a good point there, but you know, halfway through it, he says, "If I ask you about love, you'd

probably quote me a sonnet." But you've never looked at a woman and been totally vulnerable, known someone who could level you with their eyes, who could rescue you from the depths of hell, feeling like God put an angel on earth

just for you. And you're like, "Whoa, whoa, whoa." that just added power to

whoa, whoa." that just added power to this thing where 10 seconds ago it was like that just sort of

recognition and now I'm really seeing it.

>> Yeah. Yeah. And it takes daring to write that what you just said. It takes a kind of daringness to go to to break out of that that kind of mimetic mode. And I

think say the sentences look at the examples we had the psychon line the babble line you know um Barrett's poem that scene if a student usually writes that and

someone would come along and say this is pretentious this is self-absorbed you know this is too but I thought why not would you want Cora McCarthy to be any

less self-absorbed in such right do you want Tony Morrison to be less self-absorbed less uh you know uh um indulgent in their maneuvers. I mean

that's what we come I I came the first artistic practice that I encountered was skate culture uh DIY punk shows and um what's called one mixtapz which is

street ball was like these early 2000s >> and one like the basketball part.

>> Yeah and one mixtape. Yeah they had mixtapz. So what's interesting about one

mixtapz. So what's interesting about one was that >> it was never about winning the game. It

was about the beauty of deception, crossing people, doing tricks. It was

performance. It was like Harlem Globe Trotters.

>> Yeah, that's right. It was kind of a street ball type thing. It wasn't NBA.

>> Yeah. And you would go and they would play games, but no one kept score. And

if they did, it wasn't about that. It

was about a communal celebration of the beauty of the body with deception.

>> And I think writing is very similar because we're working with a linear art.

And anytime you're working with a linear art in film, uh, uh, the sentence is a linear technology. It starts and it ends

linear technology. It starts and it ends and it picks up again. Some cultures go up and down, left and right, what have you. So when you're working with a

you. So when you're working with a linear art, what you at the most fundamental mode, you're either satisfying or denying a reader's expectations through pattern. That's it.

There's many way there's thousands of ways to go about it.

>> Through music.

>> Yes. Absolutely. That's exactly it. and

you talk to any DJ, you know, when do you drop the beat? When when they want to or when you deny it, right? That sort

of um sort of what I call like literary edging is like part of >> but that's what it is, right? It's that

do you satisfy expectation or deny? See

similar in the film. Oh, he's going to do it. He's going to do that. And then

do it. He's going to do that. And then

you everything leads up to that moment and then it doesn't happen right >> and then delight happens. Surprise,

arangement. Now you're not just looking at the the scene, you're looking at what's behind you. Say, "Wait, this director has thought ahead of me. Now I

need to pay more close attention." So

there's >> they know what I want better than I do.

>> Yeah. There's an exhilaration embedded into that linearity. And so and one mixtape were very similar. This the the part in a in a skate video cuz I would I

would take videos of my friends doing skate parts to send to the local skate shop for them to get sponsored. And

sponsorship means just free boards and t-shirts, you know, it was very humble endeavor but >> to me like that performance and self-indulgence was so powerful and and

so celebrated. So I was really surprised

so celebrated. So I was really surprised when I went into the literary world which has this sort of like upper middle class decorum where you're not supposed

to do that. you're supposed to perform a kind of this kind of self- eraser of that crystalline um newspaper sentence. So a student who

wants to write with estrangement and again I want I want to say you don't have to incredible work has been done without it. Girtu Stein I mean Stein's

without it. Girtu Stein I mean Stein's interesting because she inspired Hemingway's sentence. He went to Paris

Hemingway's sentence. He went to Paris saw what she was doing. She was not inspired by the newspaper but medical writing. She was a medical student. So

writing. She was a medical student. So

the medical community was also at the same time trying to standardize their practice right. So non nonsense short

practice right. So non nonsense short mimetic informative sentences. So Stein

used that to write three lives it you know and also like Ddian Capot you know that kind of non-fiction fiction it blended everything it was also viable.

So it's not the fault of these writers they need to get paid. They need to get paid by Vogue by Mary Cla by Time magazine. So that style started to

magazine. So that style started to infect pros writing. So that's what I mean when before AI we've been already homogenizing >> of course >> the the sentence. I mean, look at architecture, right? You used to have

architecture, right? You used to have all of these styles. Yeah. These all

these regional styles, right? You go to Sudan.

>> Yeah.

>> You go to China, you go to Japan, you go to England, you go to France. Like all

these different styles, different kinds of stone, different shapes of roofs, different kind of brick work, whatever it is, right? And now you look at downtowns, no matter where you are, and

you just close your eyes and you imagine a new skyscraper that was built 10 years ago in Tokyo, in Seoul, in London, in Santiago, Chile, in New York City. What

do you think of? You think of glass.

>> Yeah.

>> Right angles, skyscraper, the same everywhere.

>> And the same thing is happening in architecture. It's happening in writing

architecture. It's happening in writing where you get this global >> standardization, homogenization, and it's this copy and paste thing. Yeah.

>> And there's an entire systemized apparatus that is working to basically create a kind of claustrophobia in terms of what we make.

>> The factory is upon us.

>> Yeah.

>> Even when we say I'm not a I'm not a I'm not on Wall Street. I'm not in corporate America.

>> But you know our country is so embedded with commercialization that it happens even sometimes without us knowing. Even

the word workshop, >> it's a metaphor of production.

>> It's a workshop. Right?

>> Let me clean up this sentence. Let me

tighten this line. Let me polish.

>> Yeah.

>> So we have this fantasy that we are producing something efficacy as related to progress in goodness

quality. Efficacity.

quality. Efficacity.

And that's the fantasy of of the of the assembly line. And the editor also would

assembly line. And the editor also would know that oh it's easier to edit if I get everybody to sound like each other.

Even news magazines have house styles, you know, the New Yorker has one, the New York Times all have one. And it's

it's important for them because they're newspapers. They don't you don't want a

newspapers. They don't you don't want a a a really stylistic presence when you're reading about a flood in Chile, right? You know what I mean? Like you

right? You know what I mean? Like you

don't want the authoral presence there.

You don't want an impressionistic take on like a a mass shooting, you know? And

even with the New Yorker, in so far as there is a literary style, you pick up the New Yorker for that literary style, but then all the writers who write for the New Yorker do have to conform to that.

>> Yes. I speak from from experience, right? Um I I work and and they're be

right? Um I I work and and they're be they're lovely. I mean, the New Yorker

they're lovely. I mean, the New Yorker gave me, you know, like one thing about I'll say, it's important to say is that they published me out of the slush and I

never cuz I sent into the slush and I thought there's no way they're reading the slush, you know, but to their credit, they're really out there looking at the culture, you know, like from from

and that's a long legacy from from, you know, prior to that from William Maxwell, you know, all the way back to the founders. Um, but it's interesting.

the founders. Um, but it's interesting.

I I wrote a piece for them and I kind of was like, "Wow, I didn't know. I don't

doesn't feel like me." But but it's still like my ideas, but it was really ed informative to see how they were cutting for efficacy cuz this was early on in like 2018. I was writing for them

and I learned a lot working with the editor. It's like, oh, this is what this

editor. It's like, oh, this is what this is how what clarity can look like. So,

it was important to learn, >> but it did feel like, oh, that is a house style, but that's also a brand.

they have, you know, readers who expect that. You don't want a kind of a diverse

that. You don't want a kind of a diverse cast of voices because it feels like you're not reading the product. So, it's

hard to keep that, too. There's an army of copy editors and style editors that keep that intact. Do you feel like poetry is a kind of experimental testing ground for you? Right. Like, we're

talking about pushing the boundaries and then you have a poem like Notebook Fragments, which is >> a unique form, a unique style. It's

like, okay, I'm going to go experiment in poetry >> and then I can bring that into the novel later on.

>> 100%. And I think it's not a coincidence that particularly in in the 19th century, there was no onlogical vocational distinction between poet and

novelist. You know, look at Melville

novelist. You know, look at Melville wrote both, Wittman did, you know, Dickinson wrote incredible letters. she

saw that as similar to some of her styles in her letters particular the master letters um has the same proity as some of her poems as well. Um, you think of Thomas Hardy, right, who saw himself

primarily as a poet, even though canonically we receive him as a novelist. Um, James Baldwin wrote poems

novelist. Um, James Baldwin wrote poems quite seriously. And and I think why

quite seriously. And and I think why poetry is a wonderful laboratory for the sentence.

>> Great word. Yeah, man. That's so good.

>> You don't have to tend to anything else but language itself. You don't have to do plot. You don't have to have a

do plot. You don't have to have a character. And when that is out that

character. And when that is out that that obligation is foregone, you then get to focus on

transforming the sentence toward into a kind of elsewhere arrangement, right?

And similarly, you know, interesting like the one of the most um daring moments because my my thinking is that in

fiction and non-fiction, the sentence in the 20th and 21st century is quite timid because of everything we said, right?

And and often time it's not even the author's fault that the editor would then kind of force them to it. If you

want to get published, go through this process. And so it's a homogenization

process. And so it's a homogenization process. But there's two places where

process. But there's two places where that doesn't happen in its poetry and nature writing. Huh? So in nature

nature writing. Huh? So in nature writing, mimisis would collapse everything because we already know we already see it. So if you're just describing

a meadow, you just say, "Oh, there's a there's a there's a sunny meadow, right?

Well, we've seen photos of that. We can

see it oursel. Why am I reading someone else telling me what I've already seen?"

>> Yeah. So the power of nature writing and why it is closest to poetry and pro you know pois and and estrangement

is that at the at the foundation of it's really bringing the the subjective view of the writer onto nature into a kind of synthesis. Right? So when we're reading

synthesis. Right? So when we're reading really strong nature writing, we're reading Robert McFarland, seeing it through the filter of Robert McFarland, through that sentence. And that's the

delight. Oh, I never saw a meadow that

delight. Oh, I never saw a meadow that way. And one of my favorites, JA Baker,

way. And one of my favorites, JA Baker, does the same thing, right? Just look at this sentence where he's describing mud.

All day the low clouds lay above the marshes and thin rain drifted in from the sea. That's a mimemetic sentence,

the sea. That's a mimemetic sentence, right? You can see that anywhere clear.

right? You can see that anywhere clear.

Then >> mud was deep in the lanes and along the seaw wall. Thick ochre mud like paint.

seaw wall. Thick ochre mud like paint.

Oozing gluttonous mud that seemed to sprout on the marsh like fungus. Octopus

mud that clutched and clung and squatchched and sucked. Slippery mud.

Smooth, treacherous as oil. Mud stagnant

mud. Evil mud in the clothes, in the hair, in the eyes. Mud to the bone. On

the east coast in winter, above or below the tide line, man walks in water or in mud. There is no dry land. Mud is

mud. There is no dry land. Mud is

another element. One comes to love it, to be like a waiting bird, happy only at the edges of the world, where land and water meet, where there is no shade and

nowhere for fear to hide.

We're not talking about mud anymore.

We're not talking about trees.

So Baker's interiority has leeched because he's allowed it. The

dam has broken. The dam of mimisis has broken and he's allowed that inity to come out. And I will never look at mud

come out. And I will never look at mud the same.

>> Right?

>> Mud evil, >> right?

>> Where no fear can hide. I'm like, what are we talking? And of course, we don't need to know that Baker was chronically ill while writing this book, right?

And so a moment like that, if he just said, if he just kept on the mimemetic mode and just said

>> thick ochre mud, oozing gluttonous mud, octopus mud, >> so many different kinds of mud. It's

like when you look at a crayon, it has all the different colors of blue.

>> Doesn't it make you want to laugh? Like

it the delight >> delight. Yeah.

>> delight. Yeah.

>> Of watching an artist discover. You know

what word we haven't had here that I think is a really important kind of energy to inject into this? It's just

fun. Yeah. Like it's like the crayons.

Like Crayola has all the different colors of blue. There's like sky blue.

There's like marine blue. There's all

these different blues. And you what do they do beyond just make you smile and it's the smile? Yeah. Childlike. And it

just opens you up to the majesty, the wonder, the subtlety, the grander of this world.

>> Yeah.

>> And fun. It's like you have it inside of you, but once you get away from the fun, you stop seeing it.

>> Right. Right. And and sometime the novel >> and the non-fiction article has an assignment, right? The plot is an

assignment, right? The plot is an assignment. The investigative work is an

assignment. The investigative work is an assignment. So it it takes over these

assignment. So it it takes over these sort of tangential explor explorations.

So when nature writing doesn't have that plotted assignment. So you can do

plotted assignment. So you can do something very close to poetry. When you

take the assignment out, you get language. But I'm convinced that you can

language. But I'm convinced that you can bring this into anything with an assignment, right? I think you should

assignment, right? I think you should write. I wouldn't be so mad if CNN

write. I wouldn't be so mad if CNN wrote, you know, the president descended Air Force One um as the sun set as if beheaded. um that might be truer to the

beheaded. um that might be truer to the ethos of where we're at. Look at you know it's funny you said crayons because look at what Schlowski says later on in

one description for instance Tulsoy does not say birch but quote a big curlyheaded tree with a luminously white

trunk and branches. He writes again later tools writes in his diary Anderson's fairy tale about the clothes the goal of literature is to make people

understand things so that they believe the child crazy right but there's so much there because he's basically saying somewhere along the way we have lost we

have lost faith in children in the in the childlike way because of language definition is the enemy of imagination The paradox is that we work with material that is

defined.

>> Yeah. Well, it's funny because whenever I use a dictionary, I use a specific one which is Webster's 1913 dictionary.

>> It rocks.

>> Yeah.

>> And one of the things you realize is a really good definition can expand >> Yeah.

>> your sense of what a word can be. And

they have beautiful etmologies and these lush vivid descriptions. Like take a word like solitude.

>> Yeah.

>> Now if you look up solitude on Google, it'll be like a kind of loneliness. It's

not what solitude is. Solitude is this sense of melancholy, this sort of internal reflection, maybe a little bit of like a hint of sadness or whatever it is right?

>> And yeah, I think so much of modern definition does restrict, but sometimes it can really expand. And I think that's what's going on with that mud. It's the

muddy of the mud of this, the mud of that, the mud of this, the mud of that.

And all of a sudden, by describing mud, you've just like exploded the sense of possibility >> in mud.

>> Yeah. And that's why the OED is so important for every writer.

>> What's OED?

>> The Oxford English dictionary. It's a

English of of etmologies. So you have one definition that say, "Oh, it comes from the French, which means XYZ, which was taken from the Latin, which meant that." So you're like, "Oh, wow. We are

that." So you're like, "Oh, wow. We are

it's a it's um almost like um a family tree of definition from the >> one of my favorite ones is the word passion.

>> Yeah. Yeah, you hear passion. Ah, so

passion. It's energy, fire, intensity.

It's kind of this like radiant with sort of excite excitement.

>> But the word passion comes from suffering like the passion of the Christ >> and like to almost be crucified by the thing that you're giving yourself to.

>> And when you think of passionate p like what are you passionate about? It's not

it doesn't need to be what are you excited about? It's like what are you

excited about? It's like what are you willing to suffer for? M

>> same word completely different meanings >> once you follow the etmology.

>> Yeah. And you can't unsee it. Right.

>> And and so I think like we're talking about poetry as a laboratory. Um I think anything could be a laboratory if you trust that you can return to the assignment. So the question then is how

assignment. So the question then is how do you take that laboratory of poetry of nature writing into a novel? It's like

you you give yourself permission to have a experimental moment knowing that you can return. And you know, McCarthy does

can return. And you know, McCarthy does this really well, right? He allows this sort of wild tangents in metaphor.

>> Cormarmac.

>> Yeah. Cormarmac. And he comes back, he says, "Well, I know I'm going to keep telling the story, but it's really hard, you know, for a young writer to write

that way now." Because I think editors will kind of call that. And I was really lucky because I I start as a poet and I was really fortunate, you know, my editor just passed this week and got off.

>> Yeah.

>> And I was fortunate because I I was trying to sell the novel and I got I met 11 publishers, editors, and you know, they it's interesting. They all I was lucky

it's interesting. They all I was lucky they all wanted it, but they all had like caveats. They all had that. They're

like caveats. They all had that. They're

all like we Okay, but this is a very um you know, a baroque style. our readers

and even some I I keep thinking about this which annoys me to no end but there was a moment where one of the editors said what about the reader in the Midwest

and I said how elitist you know like what about them they have a nervous system they have read everything probably you and I have read right what do you mean what we have to dumb it down

for people in a large part of this what are we talking about here right but I'm like it was such a wonderful education because I saw how cynical it is, right?

You you you you have that kid who's like praying playing with the crayons does this the the the equivalence with the crayons in writing when they become a writer and then you get to that moment

the final boss, right? And the final boss is saying, "What about people in the Midwest?" I'm like, "Have you been

the Midwest?" I'm like, "Have you been there? What about them?" Like, "Why are

there? What about them?" Like, "Why are we talking about them as if they're remedial?" Right?

remedial?" Right?

And I was lucky enough to go with someone who just saw what I was coming after. But of course, she's edited

after. But of course, she's edited Pinchin. She's edited Mary Oliver, you

Pinchin. She's edited Mary Oliver, you know, and God off. So I was really lucky too, right? So like there's a historical

too, right? So like there's a historical background of how I was able to write on my terms. And this is where we get into a phenomenon that the theorist Yuri

Lotman calls. He said that all literary

Lotman calls. He said that all literary works are read on the matrix of two temporal lines.

A synchronic reading and a diarronic reading.

>> Synchronic and >> diiocronic.

>> And it it brings us to this phenomenon.

>> What does it what do those words mean?

>> A synchronic reading is reading in time in a contemporary space. A diiacronic

reading is reading a work through time.

So for example, let's let's use Shakespeare.

We do not have access to a synchronic reading of Shakespeare anymore because Shakespeare's plays were written for the stage. So a synchronic experience of

stage. So a synchronic experience of Shakespeare would have to be going to the Globe Theater, buying a ticket and then experiencing it that way. That's

watching it unfold in time.

>> Yes. Right. Not as literature as we know it. Again, literature as we know it

it. Again, literature as we know it didn't exist in Shakespeare's time. So

Lotman says when we read Shakespeare we're reading it dironically because we're reading not only just the text but we're reading everything written about Shakespeare the raification the cultural

shift all the essays all the thinking the canananization which is why we tolerate the archaic language the dies and the dows if you and I wrote earnestly thigh and thou in our next books >> be like what are you doing

>> like what the we want what are you doing this is obnoxious right and because when a reader picks up Shakespeare there's a diiacronic kind of suspension right that happens

like oh I'm reading tr I'm reading I understand that there's a dironic layering whereas you and I would read each other synchronically but this is really interesting when you

think about publishing industry so a very common thing with you know magnetic writing like that that kind of clean you know style that we're talking

about is that a very common experience that I've talked to with readers and I've had it myself is that you read a book. Say a big magazine tells you at

book. Say a big magazine tells you at the end of the year, these are the most important books to read if you're like a intellectual being on top of your game, right? This is what you should do if you

right? This is what you should do if you want to be, you know, on the in.

And you read the book and then you think, I mean, this is a lovely book, but I feel like I read this before.

Like, didn't I read this last year?

Didn't the same magazine tell me to read a book similar to this? and you're like, "Didn't I read this book written in this style when I was in high school five years ago? And why am I reading the same

years ago? And why am I reading the same book?"

book?" >> So, it's a different book, but it's the same book.

>> It's the same book. And so,

>> it's no wonder that readers have this fatigue and mistrust and readership is going down because they're like, I'm being pumped into the system

>> of false valuation when I know better.

>> What's happening there? What's happened

is that publishing works synchronically.

It's in seasons. A book is published in a spring season, a fall season, and then it's collected within the year. That's a

synchronic existence. At the end of the year, you have a a similar amount of books. Say all these writers, the young

books. Say all these writers, the young writers coming through and they're edited out. All of their idiosyncrasies,

edited out. All of their idiosyncrasies, all of their estrangement, all their wonder, enchantment edited out. And they

all have the same thing. And they feel good. They feel I'm making progress,

good. They feel I'm making progress, right? My editor loves it. My agent

right? My editor loves it. My agent

loves it. and they even get it published and even the reviewers love it, right?

Because or there's like there's an obligatory praise when if it's not offensive, then we just kind of say,

"Great, cool." Now, there's 30 or 40 of

"Great, cool." Now, there's 30 or 40 of them that look like that. At the end of the year, because of the the the rule of scarcity, only a few of those 30 get

picked to be the one. They all similar they all sound similarly because they went through that homogenization process. Not always. Some sometimes

process. Not always. Some sometimes

something brilliant comes through. They

come through and then one or two gets picked as the chosen one and then everyone else is like, "What happened? I

was praised all the way up until this point until the reader comes in."

>> Because the reader does not have a synchronic relationship with time, right? They have a diarronic

right? They have a diarronic relationship. The reader was reading

relationship. The reader was reading Melville last week.

>> They were reading Shakespeare. They were

reading Baldwin. They were reading Annie Dillard. And then they picked up this

Dillard. And then they picked up this book at the bookstore. They don't have that synchronic that's that's a hallucination, right? Life doesn't exist

hallucination, right? Life doesn't exist on this sort of catalog, right? We read

books all over the place.

>> This reminds me of uh Rotten Tomatoes.

>> Sometimes you'll see major divergence between the the audience score and the critic score, right?

>> You know, the the the critics will rate it like 96 >> and the audience be like, "No, it's a 31." Or you'll see the audience rate it

31." Or you'll see the audience rate it as like 94 and the critics as like 27.

And it's always I I love looking at those like I love watching those movies.

Why was there such divergence between the system and the machine and their eyes and how they see versus just the people?

>> Yeah. Cuz the critic was at Sundance.

They were swayed by that. And

>> they're trained. They grew up going to the right film school, you know, they go to the Hollywood parties or whatever.

And it also doesn't mean that it's um they have better taste. It just means that their taste is manufactured in the synchronic system because sometimes a critic is a person.

>> They they have an editor. They have a brand. Some of them might not believe

brand. Some of them might not believe they do, but they have a brand. They're

trying to uphold. So they also have a pattern. They say, "Oh, I praised too

pattern. They say, "Oh, I praised too many films in March, >> so I got to be a little tougher now."

>> Right? I mean they'll say they don't do that but we all have that kind of subconscious work but it's trapped in a synchronic cycle and Lman brilliantly brings up this idea that actually

literature exists mostly in a diarronic the synchronic cycle is only a year once the book is p then it the publishing industry moves like most commercial industries to the next year

>> the next crop goes in you're forgotten so there's a kind of moment of dismay for that writer who was pushed into the box so No, they wrote in the box. They

stayed in the box. They published in the box. The critic was like, "All right,

box. The critic was like, "All right, it's in the box. It's recognizable. It's

fine. Obligatory clap. Now it's out."

The moment of truth is when it lands in the reader. And the reader's like, "I

the reader. And the reader's like, "I read this last year. I swear to God, I read this. What am I What am I paid $32,

read this. What am I What am I paid $32, right?

>> That's my family's meal. that's, you

know, that's that's a, you know, fees for my child for daycare.

Like, what am I doing? And that's when the moment of truth happens. And often

it's too late. And a young writer who was forced to conform through the decades don't realize that moment of reckoning until the book is published

and the reader says no to it. Can you

the the the sort of theme throughout all this is perception re-enchanting the world and breaking from the chains these sort of

invisible chains that are imposed around us and one of the most interesting ideas there is that it's through benevolence >> it's through benevolence and so if I come to you and I say ocean I'm one of

your students and I'm trying to I want to write and I want to live my life differently in order to achieve that. What do you

tell me?

>> You have to be there's a I mean what we often talk about in writing school is writing techniques, metaphors. That's

all fine. But one thing that I found is >> like words on the page.

>> Yeah. And it's it makes sense. It's a

studio. You go into the studio, you you get you you do work. But one thing that's rarely talked about that's so essential is two things. Daringness and

disobedience.

>> H what's the difference?

>> Disob Well, daringness is the willingness to to risk it, make a wager and see what happens, right? And

or you correct yourself and you say it's better to step back in line and be praised accordingly and move on even if I sound like everybody else. Right? So

conformity >> and innovation are two very um disongruent uh in congruent relationships with so much of art making beyond writing, right? Any artist I

think can tell you better than I because I only work in two mediums. But I think that so then are you are you do you have enough courage?

Do you not have enough fortitude to risk it? And I think maybe

it? And I think maybe I had that because I was a skater, like I was a skate kid. And the idea of be of skateboarding was that you threw

yourself off an ace there, never expecting to land it. Like landing the trick is like a miraculous moment of

like cosmological agreement with gravity, physics, and time, right?

You almost feel chosen when you land a trick like that. And so the idea that failure is actually not just even a prerequisite to success, but part of

experiencing life. And sometimes all you

experiencing life. And sometimes all you do is throw your yourself off an eight stair and all you have is bruises and a broken ankle and that's it. There's not

even a payoff. And yet there is a delight in doing it with your friends and seeing your body move through space.

And so I think for me the the expectations were so low in that sense where I'm just like I I get to write books. My my family came from factories

books. My my family came from factories and nail salons. Like I get to try.

That's my vocation. My job is to try things and then go like this and throw it over my shoulder.

>> Mhm.

>> Why wouldn't I try everything?

>> Yes.

>> Why wouldn't I relentlessly throw myself off an aid stair? Like what I'm hearing from you is basically when you're writing you're just trying all these tricks and then a book a poem is a collection of the tricks where somehow through cosmological agreement it

actually worked.

>> Yeah. Yeah. And being open to the curiosity. One of my favorite poets

curiosity. One of my favorite poets Eduardo Carell compared moss growing to applause.

>> To applause like clapping.

>> Yeah. He says this is this is a very sophisticated simile. Moss grows along

sophisticated simile. Moss grows along the tree like applause. What he's after there is that the the image is not congruent. There's not correspondence

congruent. There's not correspondence between applause, a crowd applauding and moss. But he's not after that

moss. But he's not after that correspondence. He's after the nature of

correspondence. He's after the nature of applause, which is nebulous, growing, quick to moss. So by using applause, he

to moss. So by using applause, he actually increases the rate that the moss grows.

You see it, right? You see that it's it moves. moss grows. You can't even see it

moves. moss grows. You can't even see it grow. Right?

grow. Right?

>> But why what did what he did there similar to the babel line was that by using applause he retroactively changes how the applause how moss behaves. So

he's comparing the behavior of two of the two correspondents rather than the image. So that's a tricky one because

image. So that's a tricky one because you would think and if you gave me that assignment I would forgo it. I was like ocean compare moss to applaud. I'm like

no thanks. I'm going to leave that one.

But Eduardo Carral, you know, he he won he won the Yale Younger for that book, right? For for good reason. He hunkered

right? For for good reason. He hunkered

down.

>> And and I asked him, I said, "How long did it take you to write that book? It's

45 pages of poetry." Nine years.

You can tell this is a man who's looked at Moss for a long time.

>> Like he's looking at beyond what it is, his definition. He's looking at it bel

his definition. He's looking at it bel beyond applause. He saw the n the

beyond applause. He saw the n the essence of applause and he harnessed it and say and asked it to modify this thing that is stagnant. And you don't

need to know that this is in a poem called acquired immune deficiency syndrome that the exuberance of life >> right >> the after such mass death and loss the

the the the thrillingness of the renewal the lucency of that growth you don't need to know that to feel that rejuvenation in that simil last question

can you talk about the way that language and your deepening relationship with it is this tool that gives might and power and expands your reality, but also the

way that language sort of is limited and contracts what we're able to see because you are >> like you're a citizen of Vietnamese and English

>> and there's things that you can see through Vietnamese that you can't see in English and vice versa. And like you have this master command of language but also

>> this deep sense of the futility of it.

>> Yeah. Oh, that's a great thank you for that question. Um, well, I think being

that question. Um, well, I think being bilingual taught me that all words are stained by things beyond the definition, right? And

right? And >> like even the word um and it's it's how they're used, not the definition, right?

So like the definition of the word sadness in Vietnamese would be a feeling of sadness, right?

>> Um, but how it's used. So Vickingstein,

one of my favorite philosophers, says the meaning of a word, it's its use.

It's not the definition, it's its use.

Use changes definition. Right? The

dictionary has to catch up to us.

>> And that's really important for students to learn because they often feel intimidated by the dictionary and standardization. I need to learn the

standardization. I need to learn the rules to be a real writer. It's like,

no, it's you use it. How you use it is how the dictionary will introduce new words all the time, right? Uh Netflix

and chill throwing shade, like >> literary edging. Yeah,

we'll call Webster, see what happens.

But >> word of the year 2026.

>> But I think edging, edging, right?

Edging itself, that's a that's a new word. Um, and so I I think how we use

word. Um, and so I I think how we use it. And so that's why it's important to

it. And so that's why it's important to remember that what happens on the margins of society and power is actually where

things are most mobile, most dynamic.

And it's often what's in the margins that changes the culture. The culture

then captures what's on the margin, commercialize it, brings it into the center, shoots out a product, right?

Lotman talks about this too. He says

that there's a concentric circle to how culture works. It engulfves innovation,

culture works. It engulfves innovation, brings it into the center, and then spits out homogenization, and it keeps doing that until things are constantly destroyed.

And so that goes to the futility of it, right? What's the point of all this? And

right? What's the point of all this? And

I think it's important for me to say that, you know, language has made my life. I am a I'm here because of it. I've been able to

materially support my family because of this thing that has no weight, you know, and in terms of speech, we can't even see it.

>> How about that?

>> Yeah. And so, and on the other hand, it's important to say that literature and writing doesn't really save us the

way we always wanted to.

because it's still the tool of tyranny.

You know, authoritarian regimes, the first thing they do is capture newspapers and radio stations, >> change the stories.

>> Right. Right. So, it's always a a ground that we're tough tussling with. And you

know, look at like there there's a man named Thomas Thistlewood. He was a slaver in Jamaica in the 17th century.

And we only know about him because he left detailed diaries of all of his crimes, right? He sexually assaulted and

crimes, right? He sexually assaulted and raped his slaves and he's monstrous acts. We also know because of his

acts. We also know because of his diaries that he had one of the largest libraries, right, that mirrored the enlightenment ideals. He read Chaucer,

enlightenment ideals. He read Chaucer, Milton, he read astronomy. He read

nautical explorations. He he wrote poems. You can imagine. And so you say, and then you think of like, you know, the SS officers who ran the gas chambers

going home and reading ROA and listening to Beethoven, what's all that art for? If you can still do something so monstrous, if you

can be so quoteunquote inhumane using humanity's greatest treasures.

>> Wow. So for me I think it's I there's a skepticism ceiling that I am working within this material but I don't have this romantic notion that um what I do

would do anything beyond what happens the magic we see on the page I don't have that if it does great sometimes literature does do that you know Harry Beer Stow's uncle Tom's cabin created

the civil war according to Lincoln um which freed millions of people um so it happens But I don't wake up um counting

on that because there are examples uh on both sides historically.

>> Yeah.

>> Ocean, thank you. You're you're invited on the show at any time. I I literally I could talk to you for the next 27 million hours and we still wouldn't run out of things to talk about.

>> Thank you. It's a pleasure. Thank you.

Thank you for tolerating my rambling.

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