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Jacqueline Osherow Reads Her Poetry

Jacqueline Osherow Jacqueline Osherow
On Feb. 12, 2020, the Provost鈥檚 Humanities and Jewish Studies Colloquium Committee invited Jacqueline Osherow, an award-winning poet and Distinguished Professor at University of Utah, to read from her latest book of poetry, My Lookalike at the Krishna Temple (LSU Press, 2019). In her introductory remarks, Dr. Linda Shires, chair of the English department at Stern College for Women, said about Osherow that 鈥渟he is known for her technical mastery of notoriously difficult poetic forms as well as for her serious subject matter, her humor and a conversational tone.鈥 Osherow read her poems to a room of creative writing students and YU faculty members, a poetry that blended religious themes with her own experiences searching for beauty around the world. An example of how Osherow integrates the sacred with the natural can be seen in 鈥淚nspiration Point, Bryce Canyon, Utah,鈥 a poem she composed about Bryce Canyon National Park as a commission from the U.S. National Park Service and read to her audience.

Maybe it was just for this that God pulled water from dry land: to rescue hoodoo after hoodoo. That鈥檚 what they鈥檙e called鈥

a bastardization of voodoo鈥 these unrepeatable needles of rock, geology鈥檚 answer to flakes of snow.

A sound enough hypothesis: dark magic. But I like God鈥檚 approach鈥攕o straightforward: the light, the land, the sky, each feat of handiwork

a matter of a single uttered word (that鈥檚 the first version; the clumsy second was more hand鈥檚 on, with dust and ribs required)

though it鈥檚 a stretch to claim this place was planned. Maybe, just like us, God was stupefied; He rarely knew how any day would end,

had to see things finished to call them good鈥.

In about writing the poem, she said that it 鈥渢urned out to be an expansive experience, enabling me to talk about the Bible, the ways we see and understand our world, the notion of geological time, the interactions between art and science.鈥 At a Q&A, students asked Osherow a number of questions about her writing process. One wanted to know which came first for her, the image or the idea. 鈥淒epends,鈥 said Osherow. 鈥淎 lot of my poems are about visual images, and so the image might come first. But sometimes I鈥檓 trying to make a connection to something I鈥檝e heard or seen and will start with that. So, it depends.鈥 Another question about colors and places in her work elicited an answer about traveling in the world. 鈥淚 love writing about places, but never in the place where I am. You鈥檝e been somewhere, but it鈥檚 what you remember about the place that鈥檚 going to make its way into a poem, because for me, what鈥檚 interesting is what stays with me about a place.鈥 Questioned about her writing process, she said 鈥渋t鈥檚 ninety-nine-point-nine-percent revision. It鈥檚 mostly revising, revising, revising, revising鈥攍argely cutting, though you sometimes need to add as well.鈥 A student wanted to know what texts and writers inspire her. 鈥淜ing David鈥擨 love the Psalms, a gigantic inspiration. I fell I love with Emily Dickinson but I also love nursery rhymes, a Child鈥檚 Garden of Verses, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Keats, Yeats, Coleridge. If you鈥檙e interested in poetry, get yourself a copy of the Norton Anthology of Poetry and read around in it, and when you find what you really like, go to the library and get out the whole book. And not just in English鈥攊t鈥檚 very good to read poetry in other languages because it sets you thinking about ways of expressing things.鈥 The audio of her presentation can be found here, and more of her poetry . A close reader of her texts will see how she seeks connections between different ways of understanding the Earth and shares those connections with her readers.

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