Thursday October 18, 2018
BY ROBIN CAUDELL
Artist Ladan Osman featured at SUNY Black Poetry Day
PLATTSBURGH — Ladan Osman.
Ladan.
“Soundness.”
“Some
people say pleasant as a short cut, but I think the best English word
is soundness,” said the Somali-American poet/filmmaker/photographer,who
was featured at Wednesday's Black Poetry Day celebration at SUNY
Plattsburgh.
SOUND OF SILENCE
Osman is the author of “Ordinary Heaven,” a chapbook, and the collection, “The Kitchen Dweller's Testimony.”
She drafts her poems in a fair amount of silence, but the revision process is against a musical backdrop.
“Songwriting has been a big influence, especially my second book there is different people who are cited,” Osman said.“And
then the way that people deliver. So, I'm thinking a lot about Donnie
and Lalah Hathaway, the silkiness in the voices and where you can see
heritage in their voices and where it diverges.”
Whitney Houston exemplifies the expertise she hears in certain voices.
“You know that they understand the scales, and they understand the height,” Osman said.
“You
can almost hear in their voice that they sang in a holy house. They
have an awareness of a grand ceiling or something. The voices are
athletic and careful and the artistry behind that. It's beautiful and
it's informative, but it's also genius.”
She returns again and again to Prince, Valerie June and Yukimi Nagano of Little Dragon.
“The accomplishment that happens in music, I would like to be able to do something,” Osman said.
“So
of course, I am thinking a lot about syntax and turn of phrase and
where there is a lot of energy in a poem or where maybe something starts
out hot and I need to cool it down or where it needs to stay in the
same space or where it needs to be almost just bass line, where the bass
line just needs to be taken out and it's slightly awkward like 'When
Doves Fly,'”
When she hears a musical breakthrough, she thinks about how can that work inside of a poem or like a lyric essay.
“When I write, I try to get things in a logic system that I am comfortable with or start to move with,” Osman said.
“But
I do record drafts and listen back to them to see where I'm stumbling
or where something just sounds hideous. It's a multi-step wave.”
Though sound is very important, she is also very cognizant of what happens on the page, even graphically.
RETURN FROM ISTANBUL
Osman
just returned from Turkey, where she participated in a poetry festival
and worked on a film project interviewing exiled artists in Turkey.
“Or otherwise had their practices interrupted that are now in Istanbul,” Osman said.
“Exiles of Eden” is her forthcoming poetry collection from Coffee House Press in May 2019.
“That will be a little bit of experimental text, poems and some photographs,” Osman said.
Her ethnicity and faith tradition, Muslim, are her unapologetic oasis.
“I
think a lot of people have tried to make me worry about it, and I think
what is under that is trying to determine somebody else's point of
orientation, which I think is very often, especially in an American
context, an American publishing context or contemporary poetry I should
say, is sometimes not very interested in a full and lived experience and
does very often center a particular kind of whiteness,” Osman said.
“So
anything that is not that needs to be defined and overly defined almost
to the point of being like an encyclopedia entry. So you're a Somali
writer, you need to pepper your work with the names of lakes and rivers
and throw in some Somali phrases.”
She doesn't have an issue with that because a fair amount of her work contains that and word play.
“So if you understand English and Somali, it's something different just for you and unlocks just for you,” Osman said.
“But
I have felt a bit of pressure to do that and have had experienced early
on open rejection. People telling me I wouldn't publish someone with
your name. You can't write with that name or with this background unless
it's just going to be about Somali things in a very explicit,
explaining way, so that people can almost be a tourist inside your
ethnicity.”
That's not the work that she is doing or her approach.
She is who she is and very comfortable with that.
"But I don't think that it's my job to help other people to feel more comfortable with that,” Osman said.
“I've
never had the experience that however kind or good or accessible I try
to be if someone has a kind of prejudice or a poor imagination about
someone like me. Nothing is going to help them, and I have just eroded
myself trying to get them to see me, to humanize myself. What do I look
like trying to humanize myself when I'm a human. It doesn't actually
make any sense.”
SLUSH-PILE RISE
Things were very hard for her until she published in 2009.
Things
shifted before her books came out, and in 2014 she was awarded the
Sillerman First Book Prize for “The Kitchen Dweller's Testimony.”
“I
think sometimes, it's just difficult to insist on yourself in a way
that there are many people who have what is considered a so-called more
mainstream identity that it doesn't even occur to them that they too, if
anyone has to explain themselves, that they too also have to explain
themselves,” Osman said.
She doesn't automatically understand everything in texts about upper-class European Americans or different European languages.
“That is not work most people are asked to do in most grad-school classes,” she said.
“And
yet, there's this assumption too, that everything you do is secret and
coded and particularly, for me, African, and is not accessible for a
reader.”
Sometimes, she is simply talking about a deer and flower and not some secret African ritual.
“It's hard sometimes to hold two things," Osmand said.
"To
be open and full and not limit myself or treat myself like I have to
hide what I am or make myself seem less than what I am in order to
appease others but at the same time to not simplify myself. It seems to
lead to better book sales.”