Where I’ve Been and Where I’m Going, Part 1

November 9th, 2009 § 0

I’m not sure what I feel like wri­ting about tonight, just that I feel like wri­ting. It was a hec­tic day. I woke up early to get a little bit of work done on my Shah­na­meh intro­duc­tion – nothing new, mostly typing up notes I took while I was in DC last Wed­nes­day – and then, after I drop­ped my son off at school and came back here to make myself break­fast, I rushed out to school to get some paper­work and emai­ling done before my first class of the day, Asian Ame­ri­can Lite­ra­ture. I gave my stu­dents the assign­ment for The Joy Luck Club, which most of them have not yet finished rea­ding. That’s okay, though, since they will have two class periods to work through the short essay ques­tions in groups before they go home to write the assign­ment up. If they don’t finish the book during that time, it’s their own fault.

Teaching Asian Ame­ri­can Lite­ra­ture has been inte­res­ting. First, it’s not my field, which has meant that I’ve had to learn not just about the three eth­nic Asian com­mu­ni­ties whose lite­ra­ture we will be rea­ding – Chi­nese Ame­ri­can, Fili­pino Ame­ri­can and Ira­nian Ame­ri­can – but also about the field of eth­nic Ame­ri­can lite­ra­ture in gene­ral. It’s nice, for a change, to be teaching something that teaches me something, but that is not actually what inte­rests me tonight, sit­ting here in my office while my son goes to sleep and my wife takes a sho­wer. The fact that I am teaching a course that is not in my field has star­ted me thin­king about just what, pre­ci­sely, my field is. Because it’s been some time since I’ve felt like I have one.

In terms of cre­den­tials, my field is Teaching English to Spea­kers of Other Lan­gua­ges. That’s what it says on my Master’s Degree, and that cre­den­tial is lar­gely why I was hired by the college where I now teach. Indeed, I spent my first five to seven years there doing almost nothing else but the work of the ESL pro­gram that the ins­ti­tu­tion was in the pro­cess of buil­ding. I loved the work, though I have not taught ESL clas­ses for some time now and don’t plan to any­time in the near future. Indeed, if I were to be com­ple­tely honest, I think going into TESOL was, in the first place, a way for me to avoid the fact that what I really wan­ted to do was write.

I finished my TESOL MA in 1987, three years after I gra­dua­ted from Stony Brook Uni­ver­sity with a dou­ble major in English and Lin­guis­tics. In Fall 1984, right after my senior year, I enro­lled in the Crea­tive Wri­ting MA at Syra­cuse Uni­ver­sity – this was before they had an MFA – where I stu­died with Tess Gallagher, Phi­lip Booth and Hay­den Carruth. I las­ted just one year. I was 22 at the time, and I was sure that wri­ting poetry was what I wan­ted to do with my life. I figu­red I’d make my living as a teacher, but it was as a wri­ter that I inten­ded to leave my mark. I t was not long before cir­cums­tan­ces at Syra­cuse cons­pi­red to make me rea­lize how young I was, and how arrogant.

It was Phi­lip Booth who sat me down towards the end of the Spring 1985 semes­ter and told me that, while I cer­tainly knew how to handle a line of verse, and while I also very clearly knew my way around a sen­tence, there was not yet a real cen­ter to my work, no set of con­cerns out of which my poetry grew. That absence, he sug­ges­ted, would make it very hard to write the the­sis – a book of poetry – that I would have to write in my second year. What I nee­ded, he said, was to live a little bit and there was just no get­ting around the fact that living would take time. So why didn’t I take some time away from school, he offe­red, and see what that did to my wri­ting. Mr. Booth’s words – I never got to the point where I felt com­for­ta­ble calling him Phi­lip – meant a great deal to me, and if I had to say now what I lear­ned from them it would be that you don’t have to go to school to become a writer.

So I went to my gra­duate advi­sor and told him I wan­ted to take a year off from school to work on my wri­ting. I was not expec­ting his res­ponse. “If you want to go com­mune with your muse,” he snee­red at me (and, yes, it was a sneer), “that’s your busi­ness, but you came to school – or at least I assume you came to school – to learn something and that’s not going to hap­pen sit­ting alone beneath a tree trying to cap­ture the wind in a song!” This was during what I have heard peo­ple refer to as The Theory Wars, when lite­rary theo­rists and crea­tive wri­ting faculty were, quite lite­rally, at war with each other over the legi­ti­macy of their dif­fe­rent pur­suits. My gra­duate advi­sor was clearly in the theo­rists’ camp, and I guess I have him to thank that not only did I take time off from Syra­cuse, but also that I never went back. I think I have led a much more inte­res­ting life than if I’d sta­yed at Syra­cuse and got­ten my MA, though it is also true that if I’d known then what I know now about aca­de­mia, and if I’d known then that I would end up as an aca­de­mic, I might have made very dif­fe­rent choices.

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