51勛圖厙

51勛圖厙 Humanities Faculty Doug Holder Elected New England Poetry Club Co-President

Tuesday, July 19, 2022

Somerville poet and longtime 51勛圖厙 Humanities faculty member Doug Holder was elected co-president of the  in June 2022. The club, founded in 1915 by Robert Frost, Amy Lowell and Conrad Aiken, offers writing workshops, sponsors contests and grants to poets, and hosts the oldest poetry reading series in the country. Holder, who has taught writing at 51勛圖厙 since 2010, is joined as co-president by poet and former Massachusetts legislator Denise Provost.

doug holder headshotIn addition to his teaching, Holder is the founder of the . He is the arts editor of The Somerville Times, and the curator of the Newton Free Library Poetry Series. His own work has been published in such places as the Worcester Review, Lilipoh, Rattle, The Boston Globe, The Cafe Review and elsewhere.

For over thirty years, Holder ran poetry groups at McLean Hospital for psychiatric patients. Holder has received a citation from the Massachusetts House of Representatives for his work as a poet, editor, publisher, and professor. The Doug Holder Papers Collection is archived at the University at Buffalo libraries. Many of his interviews of poets and writers are in collections at Harvard University and UMass Boston. He is also the co-founder of the literary group The Bagel Bards.  Holders latest collection of poetry is  (Big Table Books).

We talked with Holder by phone about his election as NEPC co-president and his life as a poet and teacher.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Congratulations on your election as co-president of the New England Poets Club! What does it mean to you to be recognized by your peers as co-leader of this storied organization?

Its very gratifying. A lot of people on the clubs board Ive known for a long time because Ive been on the poetry scene for a long time. Theyve had a lot of achievements, so to be selected co-president with Denise Provost, a former state legislator夷ts great because Ive always been community-minded and wanted to bring poetry to people. Its not an arcane thing like in elementary school where you have to memorize a few poems, I want poetry to appeal to a diverse group of people. Thats the clubs work--we have grants that were offering, $3,000 grants for poets of color, and we have contests that students can get involved in as well--so all this is part of what Ive been doing for years, and this just gives me another venue and a very prominent venue to keep doing it.

Youve been teaching at 51勛圖厙 for ten years nowyou're currently teaching College Writingcan you tell me a little about your approach to teaching and how poetry enters into your pedagogy?

I havent taught poetry at 51勛圖厙Ive been asked to in the past, but it just hasnt worked out yet. I teach English 111 [College Writing], and for that, I try to bring in various works of literature students can analyze so they can write college level papers. I use short stories, nonfiction, and poetry. I try to bring in poetry that evokes emotion in folks and bring out an analytical process. I definitely see some interesting papers come from that.

Endicott College, where I also teach, is a white middle class or upper middle-class school with not that much diversity, and students are younger. At Bunker Hill, my students-- I admire them because theyre working full-time, theyre single mothers, Ive had homeless students in class. You dont see that breadth of life in other places I teach. It creates a different experience for student and teachereducation seems to be more life and death吋heres a visceral element to it.

In higher education and community colleges in particular, we talk a lot about preparation for career, which is certainly a cornerstone of what we do, but it also seems like sometimes writing and poetry are sidelined almost as intellectual luxuriesthings that are less important than the technical skills of doing a job. I suspect you think that is not the casewhy is it important to teach writing or poetry in community college?

If you cant write, how many jobs can you be qualified for? Clear, analytic writing, critical thinking skills, theres a direct application to career, and Bunker Hill I think recognizes this by making College Writing a required course.

Poetry is an art. I think it has a particular importance now. Because were so hooked up to phones and our electronic devices, the poet, and the reader of poetry, has to rip all that stuff off and look at the world. In the world were also so fast paced, when Im able to stop and smell the roses and look at things beyond the surface--it makes you analyze. When a poet is writing about a tree, its not just a tree, its something connected to the whole world. Theres an analytical skill there, too. You dont want to just look at the world, you want to look at whats behind all that. That promotes innate understanding in the world and a place to bring light to darkness. A place to learn about yourself. It has a lot of uses匈 think it affects the inner workings of the brain, and it gives you a new perspective on life.

Has your own way of writing poetry, or the things youre interested in, changed over the years?

Im a poet of the street and of the coffee house, of Somerville and Cambridge. I do a lot of portraits of people, which goes back to when I was living in a rooming house in Boston on Newbury Street in Boston in the 70sthere were rooming houses on Newbury Street if you can believe it. I was writing a lot of journals, recording every day, snippets out of newspaper articles, things that were interesting to me. More and more that was turned into poems--journals were the basis of my poetry for about 25 years. Its why in the classroom I tell students you have to journal, you have to write everyday.

I dont journal as much anymore. If I have an idea, I keep a book in my back pocket存omething interesting, some snippet of conversation, and Ill write it down. I wouldnt say Im prolific in my own poetry, it has to hit me. 

Even Bunker Hill has been a source for me poetry over the years.  this scene I saw one day standing in the parking lot in the rain, some people meeting and exchanging something, it reminded me of the movie The Friends of Eddie Coyle. Ive submitted to , which is just a wonderful student literary magazine at 51勛圖厙. And I know one 51勛圖厙 graduate, Julia Kanno, who went on to Lesley University aiming to become a clinical psychologist. I got to know Julia because, as a nursing assistant at Spaulding Rehab, she helped care for my wife, who was dying of cancer. Julia is a brilliant African American poet who loved going to school at Bunker Hill.

Youre a significant public presence in the local poetry world-- you run the Boston Poetry Scene blog, youre on Somerville Community TV interviewing local poets, you run Ibbetson Press, which publishes many local poets-- whats the state of the local poetry scene? I suspect for many of us local poetry is something that flies below the radar.

Poetry is always flying underneath the radar. Thinking back, I think local poetry a lot more out there than in years past. We have the NEPC, Boston National Poetry Month Festival, the Mass Poetry organization-- poetry is becoming less in the ivory tower or a product of academic communities. The  recently reopened and is one of all kinds of opportunities for poetry readings throughout Boston. In Cambridge and Somerville theres poetry on the sidewalks, and a work of mine was recently adapted into a wire sculpture. The Somerville arts council prints poets works on signs that people walk through the park and readits poetry for pedestrians rather than some rarified atmosphere shaded by the ivory tower!

It's so much wider and there are so many more avenues for expression. Often in my teaching I use a poem called  by a wonderful African American poet, Patricia Smith, where she gets into the persona of a white skinhead. This is powerful stuff and its powerful language, and students are really taken by it. You know ever since Alan Ginsberg came out with Howl, poetry has evolved towards something for the whole community not just for the rarified.

Poets also now realize they have to promote their own work. Even with a major publishing house, theyre not going to do much PR for you because poetry doesnt sell. So poets have to get out there尖ou have to be more than an artist, you have to go out there to shake hands. My father was a J. Walter Thompson PR man and was always promoting things. I think I have that in my bloodmy father was Mad Man and Im a junior Mad Man.

 

Parking Lot: Bunker Hill Community College, Boston

Doug Holder

 

I always feel 

like I am in a movie.

The Friends of Eddie Coyle.

Cutting a deal with Robert Mitchum

our voices rumble

with the roar of the Orange Line

His beat-up Chevrolet

the omen of fuzzy dice

swing from 

his rear view

my 200,000-mile

Honda

as dour

as the day.

Gray skies

fit with the

metallic city landscape

a bird's bleak beak

sitting on a rusty wire

watches us

with fierce objectivity.

A clandestine slip

from my to his pocket,

a tentative handshake.

He looks at me

with deep, world-weary eyes:

The world is a tough place kid--

and its tougher 

if you are stupid.