A3 Refereed book chapter or chapter in a compilation book
Movement in the Present: Poetry as a Mindfulness Project in Bernadette Mayer's Studying Hunger Journals
Authors: Siltanen Elina
Editors: Joel Kuortti, Sirkku Ruokkeinen
Publishing place: Baden-Baden
Publication year: 2020
Book title : Movement and Change in Literature, Language, and Society
Series title: Academia Philosophical Studies
Number in series: 65
First page : 171
Last page: 189
Number of pages: 19
ISBN: 978-3-89665-867-8
eISBN: 978-3-89665-868-5
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5771/9783896658685-171
Web address : https://www.nomos-elibrary.de/10.5771/9783896658685-171/chapter-8-movement-in-the-present-poetry-as-a-mindfulness-project-in-bernadette-mayer-s-studying-hunger-journals
American poet Bernadette Mayer notes in the beginning
of Studying Hunger Journals (2011) that “if a human, a writer, could
come up with a workable code, or shorthand, for the transcription of every
event, every motion, every transition of his or her own mind, & could
perform this process of translation on himself … someone could come up with a
great piece of language”-. Mayer started working on her Studying
Hunger Journals project in the 1970s while
she was seeing a psychoanalyst. She gave the journals to her analyst to read,
but they also became a literary text, which was partially published in 1975 and
in its entirety in 2011.
While it is obvious that it is impossible to
transcribe every thought that crosses one’s mind to produce such “a great piece
of language”, Studying Hunger Journals does present a poetic experiment
in that direction. In her hybrid poetry memoir, Mayer observes her emotional
reactions and changes in her states of mind in a stream-of-consciousness style.
I read Mayer’s experiment as an observance instead of analysis
of the movements of her
mind and argue that in attempting to catalogue the movements of her mind, Mayer
engages in what can be described as a “mindfulness” project as a therapeutic/poetic
endeavour. Instead of reassembling or deconstructing the self, which might be
expected to be goals of psychoanalysis, Studying
Hunger Journals is dedicated to observing movement (of affects, sensations,
dreams etc.) as a constant state with no determined goal. Insights from cognitive poetics, particularly Reuven Tsur's work, support this reading.