LITR 5535: American Romanticism
Student Poetry Presentation 2005

Poetry Reader :  Mary Brooks

3/28/2005

Joy Harjo  “Call it Fear”

Norton Anthology Pgs. 2834 –2835

About the Author:

Joy Harjo was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma to a mother of Cherokee, French, and Irish blood and a father a member of the Creek tribe.

Joy Harjo is a member of the Muskogee tribe, a poet, a musician, a screenwriter, and is currently a Professor at the University of California at Los Angeles.

More information about her life, poetry, and music check out http://www.joyharjo.org/.

 

About her Poetry:

When I began to interpret her poem “Call it Fear” I relied heavily on two quotes from the Norton Reader about her poetry.  The first quote from Norton relates the idea that Harjo’s poetry reflects an:

“…inward journey through personal and collective memory, looping forward and back.  Especially important in her work is the reconnection of contemporary urban experience with historical and mythic past.  This reconnection seeks to assuage the loneliness and desperation of those in the margin who populate Harjo’s work…”(2833).

The second was from Harjo herself in addressing the significance of horses in her poetry she states that they represent the:

“ very sensitive finely tuned spirits of psyche and are… on the move”(2833)

It is with these ideas in mind that I began my interpretation of “Call it Fear”.

 

Style / Structure:

Lyric Poem

Emphasis:

1.      Repetition

Backwards

Edge

2.      Indents of words

Backwards

Heartbeat

3.      Pacing of reading

As indicated by the punctuation and spacing

 

 

Gothic:

Shadows

Dark

Bloody

Shine (light)

Bones

All these relate on the surface to physical spaces but when one takes into account the authors known tendency to reflect the past through inward journeys in her poetry then one begins to see it as a reflection on the past or looking backwards into the past.

 

Importance of repetition:

BACKWARDS

The poems strong connection to the past can easily be seen when reflecting on Harjo's repetitious use of backwards as in :

“ talk backwards”            discuss the past, what has come before the hardships of the Native tribes.

“walk backwards”            remember the past in all the places that you inhabit the past that your feet walk upon ground walked by others in the past.

“breath backwards”            remember that the breaths you take were taken by others in the past and that the air you breathe is the same air breathed by those in the past.

 

EDGE

The idea of an edge is repeated through out this poem but what does the edge stand for?

Perhaps the edge is the edge between the reality of life and existence and the spiritual life that is not seen and is often over looked.  Then again maybe the edge is the edge between the outward or present life and the past?  Or is it the edge of a more inward reflection upon the past?

 

Questions:

What is the “edge”?

What is the significance of the horses?

What is the significance of the repeated phrases involving “backwards”?