|
Philadelphia Inquirer, September 2002
Of Philly's projects and way beyond: Major Jackson's debut
poetry - free verse and formal -finds art in the 'hood and transcendent
liberation in flight.
Reviewed by George Held
Leaving Saturn,University of Georgia. 75 pp. $15.95.
In this winning debut collection, Major Jackson begins as a
poet of the Philadelphia projects, then projects himself into the wider arena
of American literature. Raised where "MJ" signifies a certain aging
basketball player, he makes those initials his own in the 'hood and wherever
Americans read poetry.
While the first part of Leaving Saturn, "Urban
Renewal," pays tribute to black Philadelphia and predecessor African
American poets, the 11 free-verse poems here portray Jackson as a self-conscious
observer, pen at the ready. Thus, in "Block Party," with the DJ
working his art on the summer dance crowd, "Song broken down to a dream of
song flows / from my pen; the measured freedom coming off this page / was his
pillared spell of drums... . " Here Jackson creates his own art out of his
experience of life in the projects. Like Dickens' London, Jackson's
Philadelphia is "a Parthenon, / a ruin that makes great literature of
ghostly houses... . "
But he always has an eye open for an escape route, expressing
a "longing for other stones to worship," using as an epigraph Michael
Harper's "Mama, unplug me please," accepting Sonia Sanchez's
invitation, "Come, young brother, to Bard, to the Catskills," and
finishing Part 1 in Oregon, where Jackson earned a master of fine arts degree
in creative writing at the University of Oregon.
Leaving Saturn really comes to life in Part 2, when Jackson
turns to more formal verse, and rhymes infuse his work with vitality. In
"Hoops," end rhymes are exact, like cyclone/alone, or more often
inventively slant, like streaks/break or ghost/lost. The speed and wit of this
poem, in 19 rhymed quatrains, and the freedom of its rhymes and line-lengths
match its theme of escape. He and his pal Radar, a star hoopster, evade the local
hustlers and dealers by playing "on a buckling sea / of asphalt,"
shooting at "netless hoops." "Four years later, he's off / on
scholarship to UNC. / I'm to study Nabokov / at the state's university,"
for "If the slum's our dungeon, / school's our Bethlehem."
Dance and music provide other avenues of liberation, whether
Jackson is learning to break-dance or voguing with a girlfriend at "a gay
club." Music dominates Part 3, including the title poem, "Leaving
Saturn," the first of four poems with Jackson's alter ego Sun Ra, the
futuristic black musician who arrived on the scene in 1968, the year of
Jackson's birth. When, like Jackson, Sun Ra finds himself in Philadelphia, he
is inspired by "the cracked bell" and uses his African-based music "to
embark upon tonight's / Spaceship... . "
Like the splendorous Sun Ra, Jackson creates celestial music
in this sequence, then segues to Part 4 with "I'll Fly Away." If
"Urban Renewal" is elegiac, this final part takes the poet out of the
ghetto to new worlds of promise. "I'll Fly Away" thus begins,
"I'm best when I'm running full-throated / towards the whitecaps in
Truro," offering "dirges of our common dreams of flight," a
connection both to Sun Ra's spaceship and to the early poems' quest for escape.
Leaving Saturn marks the arrival of a poet who could be the
Langston Hughes of North Philadelphia or the next Robert Hayden, whose
"Tattooed Man" yearns, "Oh to break through, / to free myself...
. " Major Jackson has the talent to free himself to become whatever kind
of poet he wants. Now living in New Orleans, he will always have Philadelphia
and his black roots as a source of "tropes," which he calls
"brutal, / relentless, miraculous... " - just like his poetry.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
George Held's latest book of poems is "Beyond
Renewal."
|