Sunday, January 31, 2016

Belz (Not) Looking Like Whitman

So apparently when Aaron Belz volumizes his beard with a "vitamin enriched formula that nourishes dormant roots with essential nutrients" he looks like Walt Whitman, as he claims in "My Chosen Vocation." It does sound like Belz is a pretty humble guy, but are there other ways in which he is trying to imitate Whitman? Cary Nelson agrees that "much of twentieth century American poetry is a dialogue with Walt Whitman" (MAP 1), so even though Belz is writing in the 21st century we can justifiably say he's probably imitating or distinguishing himself from Whitman. While folically he is obviously imitating Whitman, what about poetically?
A favorite topic of both Whitman and Belz is the self. Whitman tries to form some both-and individuality and commonality of the self in "One's-Self I Sing" among other places: "One's-Self I sing, a simple separate person,/ Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse" (MAP 1). Belz may be the exact opposite on the topic. His poem "Song of Myself" paints a pretty depressing picture of having a meal alone and making a joke to the cashier about splitting the check in an attempt to have community. And then again in “Team” which is worth showing in full:   
                        There’s no I in team,
                        but there’s one in bitterness
                        and one in failure.
            Maybe it’s safe to say, then, that Belz has a different view on the individual in his poetry than Whitman does. He is in dialogue with Whitman, however, and they do share the well-nourished beard. But who knows, Belz is a pretty unpredictable guy, so maybe he’s written or could write in the future poems that praise self-sufficiency just as much as Whitman did.

Sources: Anthology of Modern American Poetry, edited by Cary Nelson
Glitter Bomb, Aaron Belz

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