Friday 24 July 2020

Conversations with Gary Snyder

Conversations with Gary Snyder, Edited by David Stephen Calonne, University of Mississippi Press, 2017


If you are fortunate your life will intersect with that of a person so wise and remarkable that it can have a transformative effect on your own. For me, the writings of Gary Snyder, and the example he has set in the second half of the Twentieth Century, have changed my outlook.
Three years ago a comprehensive collection of interviews with Gary were published by The University Press of Mississippi, curated by David Stephen Calonne. In the absence of a biography, there are already two books that are useful insights into his life: ‘Poets on the Peaks’ by John Suiter, and the earlier ‘Dimensions of a Life’ by Jon Halper. This book adds depth to understanding his writing and the causes that he has championed. The collected interviews stretch from 1961 to 2015.
The value of this collection is that the interviews cover a period of great change. Gary Snyder is remarkably consistent in his outlook and message to the world. Fashions come and go, slang dates some, but for the most part the key ideas are consistent and shine through.
The first interview is from Swank Magazine in 1961. Alfred G Aronowitz begins with a raft of questions that Gary has spent the rest of his life patiently responding to. At the time the questions were quite fresh and relevant – for example, Gary’s fictionalisation as Japhy Ryder in Kerouac’s ‘The Dharma Bums’ was still news. However, Gary was already shunning popular fascination with the Beats and moving away, toward something different. There is some good journalism and a definition of Zen. Snyder was 31. Eastern religion is now something that is better understood in the West, appreciated, and has become a totem for those seeking an alternative. Sixty years ago it was unknown to the point of being quite alien. Snyder was at the front edge of a long-rolling wave. 1961 was almost ten years before Woodstock, the hippies, alternative lifestyles and the need to seek a new way of living.
The interview ends with a telling comment;
“I’m too young to be in a book. I’m just getting warmed up. Wait about twenty-five years.”
By 1964 when he was interviewed by Monique Benoit, momentum was picking up and change was in the air. It would have been easy at this point to slip into the exciting new thinking of the day, but it is clear that Snyder sticks to his guns. The interview is short, and even as a text seems a little bristly, as an able journalist pressed him on his attitudes to women. In hindsight his attitude now seems out of step, but it is a mistake to judge from the perspective of 2020. He seems to simply have been saying, ‘This is my lifestyle, take it or leave it, I’m not forcing any woman to like it.’ I don’t think it applies exclusively to women, but anyone he encountered… by 1964 he knew his path, and there was work to be done.
In an interview with Ananke the following year, he talks in greater depth about sex and family structures, and how sex was becoming more important to people as the other ‘realities’ of life were increasingly eroded. A strand that runs through lots of Snyder’s writing is an understanding of one’s own body, and how it can be used fully to experience the world. He was right in 1965 that many for many people this had already shrunk to their sexual relations. The whole body is an organ of communication with the world, and a way of being in it.
It is ironic that the most dated of the interviews is the most famous. The ‘Houseboat Summit’ of 1967 took place with Alan Watts, Timothy Leary and Allen Ginsberg. It has been frequently reprinted, perhaps because it was one of the few occasions that the four were together. The hippie sensibilities have dated. Snyder comes out of it slightly better than the others, as the consistency of his message is only partially compromised by the fashions of the time. I have always thought that when the hippies had finished, and put on neckties, Snyder continued with his themes of responsibility, respect for the Earth, and digging in. He has never sold out.
By 1970, the conversation had moved on, and population became a hot issue. Gary was interviewed by Dan Kozlovsky for Modine Gunch. How could a world cope with population overload? What impact might it have on the planet? To soundbite Snyder here is dangerous because it is easy to make a phrase sound extreme when out of context. However, he does say at one point, ‘Let the cities die!’ It was the start of the back-to-the-land movement. A far more telling throwaway remark is how the interview ends: ‘The computer is now your guru.’ It was 1970.
Perhaps the least readable interview was conducted by Nathaniel Tarn for Alcheringa in 1972. Snyder’s responses are clear and sparse, but the notes from Tarn, himself a poet, are unclear. Despite that there is some useful biographical information that Gary shares about his parents, and early contact with Amerindians in the 1930s.
Another thing that comes across from Gary’s responses is the rigour with which he began his anthropological studies, and the wide range of connections that he made early on. This really is a conversation between two specialists, though, and you need some anthropological knowledge to get the most from the detail.
The 1970s interviews come in two or three year intervals, and the next is for the California Quarterly in 1975. Lee Bartlett went to meet Snyder at his home late in 1974, and there are some nuggets. Gary is pressed on food supply, meat consumption, controlling population and America’s dependence at the time on beef. ‘…..the people of the United States have to learn to eat lower on the food chain.’
Ever the engaging interviewee, Gary’s responses turn across a range of different examples and ideas, and off on a tangent there are some really interesting ideas about writing in English and the importance of paring down, returning to the clarity of Anglo-Saxon language.
In the charmingly named Unmuzzled Ox in 1977, there is a good source of inspirations as Snyder outlined to Jack Boozer and Bob Yaeger some of the other writers that he had been reading. If you really want to be a student of Snyder, here are the places you need to look. A good writer reads widely.
He is also very generous towards Kerouac, already long gone at the time that they were talking.
The Interlochen Review piece from 1979 is charming. Gary is asked a series of questions by students and what comes through is his patience, generosity towards them and his desire to always educate. Once again the concern about world population arises, and Gary’s simple attitude around trying to get to a situation when population naturally decreases is well explained. Sadly hindsight tells a different story, and now more than ever we need fewer billions.
In The Cottonwood Review in 1980 Denise Low and Robin Tawny tease out more insight from Snyder about his views on the things people learn, and the fact that for schoolchildren the teaching of history is about the last three thousand years, not thirty-five to fifty thousand. At the time he was part of the California Arts Council under Jerry Brown and probably at the most visibly political part of his long public life.
By 1980 the idea that remote communication between people could save a whole lot of fuel was starting to dawn on people, and Gary was pressed on this. He explained how the CB radios that he was using to talk to neighbours across the valley made very little energy demands compared to driving a truck twenty miles for a conversation. It was impossible in 1980 to see how communication technology would change before the end of the century. What has remained constant is Gary’s careful assessment of the use of each innovation, whether it be oil lamps in his homestead or an electric typewriter.
In Affinities in 1981 Gary talked to Paul Christiansen about his early poetry, up to Turtle Island. It’s a nice retrospective. He talks about Bob Creeley and Charles Olson. Clear again how well read he is, and how many connections he has made.
By 1987 in Creation, the conversation was biocentric. Since the 1940s when Gary wrote his thesis at Reed, the link he has made between body and surroundings has been fundamental. By the 1980s it became clear to many that the resources of the American continent were not limitless, as the nineteenth-century settlers assumed. The disconnect between settlers and their environment has been Gary’s main concern. The richness of intimate human connection with the earth beneath our feet is frequently celebrated, but the flip side is that the damage that has been done is the result of people not taking responsibility for their surroundings. ‘Bioregionalism is a fancy term for staying put and learning what’s going on’.
The range of different subjects in this book help to give a rounded picture of many different sides to Snyder. In 1990, he spoke to Donald Johns in Writing on the Edge. He talks about his craft, his development and teaching techniques. It is instructive for writers and teachers of writing.
In 1995 the later-period Snyder writings were out there, and there are questions about ‘A Place in Space’. In The Wild Duck Review, Casey Walker asks about the changes that have taken place in Gary’s writing over the last forty years. Here is the nub of everything that Gary Snyder stands for. His response is that there has been a gradual grounding of ideas in practice. It’s all well and good having ideas as a young man, but it takes maturity to use them in a practical way. Is there anyone quite like Gary to have given an example of this practical application? His homestead is the physical reality of his ideas.
The most famous interview in the latter part of the book is titled ‘The Wild Mind of Gary Snyder’, and was conducted by Trevor Carolan in 1996. A simple internet search brings this up again and again. It first appeared in Shambala Sun. He talks about his Zen practice, about politics, and about the West’s addiction to fossil fuels. It’s a great interview because it draws together many different strands. Perhaps that’s why it keeps popping up.
There is a distinct Pacific Rim (which is clearly different to ‘Western’) feel to the interview he gave to John P. O’Grady in 1998 for Western American Literature. Gary talks warmly about his past when it helps to inform a point he is making. It is here that his love of the mountain environment comes across. By the time he was twenty he had already experienced what it was like to climb in the Cascade Mountains, famously so at the age of fifteen when he left his name at the summit of Mount St Helens. He talks about the way his early appreciation of the mountains informed a lifetime of connection to the wilderness. He obviously feels connected to the Pacific Northwest. How many readers, I wonder, have looked on with envy from the lowlands at his achievements? Kerouac certainly sensed it in ‘The Dharma Bums’ and the fictionalised account of their scaling of Matterhorn Peak.
By the time Gary spoke to Anne Greenfield for the Bellingham Review in 2005, his volume ‘Danger on Peaks’ was in print. There is some useful background to the poems in this interview, conducted before he spoke at the school. For me, ‘Danger on Peaks’ is the best of his later writing, and it’s interesting to hear some of the ideas behind the poems.
There follows another interview by students, which Gary made at Montalvo in 2006 to De Anza College students. Snyder speaking to the twenty-first century students whose world is defined by the internet, and not print media. Their questions are ones that he must have had to answer many times over the decades, but he is characteristically generous and explains when he needs to. It’s charming to think, perhaps, that some of these young people have grandparents that read Snyder in the Sixties.
The interview with Junior Burke for not enough night in 2012 is unique in the book because there was an opportunity to talk about Kerouac at some length, which is not common for Snyder. He is warm and describes the person of Kerouac behind the media image. Their face to face friendship was brief – Gary shipped out to Japan – but there is an affection for the kindness Kerouac showed, and respect for his craft.
The final piece with Sean Elder is full of biographical detail, and touches on the fact that John Suiter has been preparing a biography of Gary for a while now. It seems to be a comprehensive study, and there are glimpses here. At ninety, one wonders whether the biography will appear in his lifetime.

So here is Gary Snyder in all his different guises – mountain man, anthropologist, poet, Buddhist, ecologist, statesman. The main thing omitted from the book, even though he speaks about his children, are comments about his three wives. Whilst happy to talk about his life if it is relevant to the conversation, it is clear that there is an area of his life that is not public property.
He has had an amazing life so far (‘I’ve read a lot, and done a lot’) and although immortality cannot be expected, I think he may be around a while yet. Until John Suiter gets the biography completed, this is a vital book in understanding a remarkable man.