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For Carl Phillips, Poetry Is Experience Transformed — Not Transcribed

Taking chances can sometimes lead to great art. But award-winning poet Carl Phillips says there's a risk to, well, taking risks.

"I think there has to be a place for risk and for restlessness in any kind of fully lived life, and especially I think for an artist," he tells NPR's Arun Rath. "I think it's the only way that imagination gets stimulated and continues — but I think it can easily go unchecked."

His latest work, Reconnaissance, looks for the balance between restlessness and stability — and between the raw and the refined, the omnicient and the intimate.

It draws on his own experiences, but he resists interpretation of his poetry as autobiographical.

"I think of poetry as being more a transformation of experience rather than a transcription of it," he explains. "I become uncomfortable when people want to make an equation between the author and the poem."

To hear their conversation, and Phillips reading a poem called "By Force," click the audio link above.

For some highlights from the interview — including a discussion of religion that didn't make it on the air — see below.


Interview Highlights

On readers who bring identity politics to his work as a gay, biracial man

I think of my work as being quite political but maybe not in conventional ways. Certainly when I first began writing in the '90s, it seemed a political act to even speak of gay experience in poetry. It was a pretty new thing to do, but I also think it's a political act to assert one's right to decide what to write about, and not what people expect one to write about. ...

I have, from the start, been writing about the body and power. And maybe more specifically, the gay male body, and power in intimate relationships, but I feel as if there's a lot of overlap with society's views of how different bodies are treated. So to that extent, I think there's always a kind of political resonance to the personal, and then vice versa.

Carl Phillips' other collections include <em>Silverchest</em>, <em>Speak Low</em> and <em>Poems Seven</em>.
Reston Allen / Courtesy of Farrar, Straus and Giroux
/
Courtesy of Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Carl Phillips' other collections include Silverchest, Speak Low and Poems Seven.

On reading poetry through a political lens more broadly

I think a bit of Emily Dickinson. Sometimes people will say, "The Civil War was going on and why does she not have poems that address that?" But the fact that she's alive and aware of the Civil War means that some part of her is taking that in. To me there's never one thing happening anyway in any given moment, so it's why we need as many writers as possible so we can get a full sense of what it was like to be alive today, this moment, in 2015.

On the role (or lack thereof) of spirituality in his poems and life

I guess I understand why people have seen [spiritual themes] in poems before, but I don't have any religious background or anything. The closest I get is — I live less than a block from the Catholic Basilica here in St. Louis ... so maybe some of it filters over into my backyard when I'm back there grilling or something. ...

I majored in classics in college and I was reading Greek tragedy. I kept seeing how human beings' natural emotions were coming into conflict with what the gods had determined was proper behavior. And this issue, this conflict between how we're told we should behave and how we actually behave is something that seems to pertain to religion, but also just to society. ... I've always been interested in how, in a lot of religions, they are very interested in how people should behave, but there are always examples of how people can't, or defy divinity.

I don't feel it makes me a particularly religious person — I'm just interested in the conflict.

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