I was most drawn to Fred Arroyo’s Working in a Region of Lost Names. I believe it is because the point
of entry seems illusive.
I had a few personal entry points such as in the beginning
when he is observing his father looking out from the pier in the second
paragraph on page 42. This was an entry point for me because I often just stare
into space, lost in my head, so I can relate to the picture he paints of his
father. I found it interesting that the author asks, “What was he searching
for?”(42). I immediately asked why he had to be searching for anything. But,
more than that, I find this part of the story interesting because the rest of
the story takes place in this wandering mind space of the authors. This, in my
opinion, emulates his father’s state in the beginning part of the story. The
author names his story as a “looking back”(54) at the end of the story – he was
occupying the region of lost names in his mind. I think it could be said that
his father also was looking back, rather than searching for anything, and maybe
this is the author acknowledging that. Another personal entry point for me was
in the third section of the story, which starts on page 49. Partly because this
is the first time I see a reference to the title, and partly because I can relate
to grasping at memory for specifics such as names, and instead being left with
details of surroundings, and individual pictures of times past.
I can’t, however, decide if the author had an intended point
of entry for the reader. I get the feeling that his intention isn’t the traditional
telling of a story. Instead he is just trying to wade through his thoughts, and
he happened to offer them out to the world. I do believe there are a couple
pivotal moments in the story, such as when he says, “I have to work to continue the bloodline” (52)
or “I have to try bring them – the words, too – back home” (53). Though, I don’t think it they’re really point
of entry, but just main points in his thoughts.
The Thinking Men
Nikky Finney
I found myself reading The
Thinking Men over and over, each time finding something new. The first time
I read it I guessed that Finney intended this to be a response to the epigraph
at the beginning of the poem. The epigraph says “Tradition has it that the
workmen were negro slaves; but whether that applies to only the common laborers
or to skilled workmen I cannot say.”(163).
The poem gives the impression that there were indeed skilled workmen
that were slaves when he says things such as “We slid and nagged adze &
auger, laid roof and wall from east to west”(164), and “Math, mind, and muscle
plied deep into each and every dark seam.”(165).
The second time I read it I noticed the theme of intellect
being more than what could be taught, more than what is found in books at a
school. Despite it being against the law to teach slaves, the author says, “our
math, mind, and muscle could see beyond what they thought they had enslaved”
(163). Knowledge is about experience and living. I see this again when he says
“We were thinking men. Our hands we living blackboards.” (164). What is a
blackboard used for? To convey information - the building blocks of knowledge.
They are thinking men, who learn from doing, from using their hands.
The third time I read it I zeroed in one the three sentences
he had stand on their own in the poem: “We knew more than we could say” (163)
“We were thinking men. Our hands we living blackboards.” (164) “All this can leave a clear mark upon the
world”(166). I found it interesting that the authors choose these sentences to
stand out, because they each punctuate a point the author is trying to make.
I like your response very much Katey. I found myself going through a very similar process when I read "The Thinking Men," where I understood more and more as I read it through again. I found the last line you quoted to be particularly powerful in the piece: "All this can leave a clear mark upon the world"--it seems that throughout Finney conveys that these men, while their voices were silenced both in the times they lived and to a great extent in history, ultimately left lasting legacies in the world of their hard work. They helped literally to build parts of America and to make it greater. I thought that was a really true and poignant point of view to take and I am sure the speakers in this piece would be very happy to see the generations after them take a more equal part in that greatness.
ReplyDeleteNice work Katey. your observation about arroyo's piece as a non traditional story is apt and especially with the moments where the narrative stops dead in its tracks. I agree with Amanda's observations about the fierceness of the historical/political elements of Finney's poem.
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The beauty of a short piece is that it gives you that opportunity to read it over and over. There are so many feelings packed into such a small space! The discovery is one of my favorite parts. Theres a certain amount of credibility given to the reader which is hard to give in many situations. It's almost like you begin to grow into the piece. You sort of want to start holding its hand and be a part of it. Or maybe I'm just weird.
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