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Thunder on a Thursday

Writing, Reading, Far to Go

Yolanda J. Franklin: Palmettos, Porches, and Poetry

March 24, 2013 Karin C. Davidson

An Interview with Yolanda J. Franklin

Chile, it's not about the water, though love is lak

de sea. Faults always lift under siege -- .

It's 'bout the sex: it's a movin' thing. Katrina,

flaunt her diva complex, but still and all, 

her stiletto stilted, & that slut slipped

her hips over da Big Easy, lap

danced over da Bayou, strut through the French

Quarter. A harlot in humid perfume

stuck, tugged her girdle, hula-hooped like

a wooden spoon, while Dixie's sugar spilled,

bystanders eyed, an ankle bracelet snagged

the head of a tombstone. Seduction

rain danced the Creole Sea.

- from "Porch Sitters Sippin' Sweet Tea in Heaven"

by Yolanda J. Franklin

Yolanda J. Franklin, poet and friend, is a third-generation, north Florida native who gives voice to the palmetto-scrubbed, the porch-sittin’, the southern city-limited, the Uncle Kents and Leah Chases of her world. I’m happy here, in the very first interview of this series, to learn more about her writing – the process, the influences, the obsessions.

Yolanda, as a third-generation, north Florida native, how do place and memory influence your poetry?

Since my serendipitous return home to Tallahassee, the importance of the preservation of memory has heightened. The loss of close family members plays a large role in memory as a re-memory—as a praise or sense of restitution of some sort to memorialize time spent with loved ones. My poetic process channels the recalling of my lost memories and lost ancestors as a rekindled connection to the people and events that are all parts of who I am becoming. Returning to Tallahassee, the place I call home, after being away for sixteen years, parallels Diana Ross’ role in “The Wiz” as Dorothy: her initial desire to flee her hometown in search for something better, only to return, knowing that no other place has the same magic as home. The sheer fate of my acceptance to Florida State University’s PhD program permits time for me to not only write, but to remember and capitalize on the opportunity to share my stories.

Who are the writers you most love?  And why?  

The list includes the living and the living on, both women and men. Miss Lucille [Clifton], Sharon Olds, Toi Derricotte, Sylvia Plath, Thomas Sayers Ellis, Gwendolyn Brooks, Natasha Trethewey, Jake Adam York, Langston Hughes, Terrance Hayes, Major Jackson, Nikky Finney, Derek Walcott, T.S. Eliot, Harryette Mullen, Yusef Komunyakaa, Li-Young Lee, and more…

Why? Because my daddy was a musician and I love to dance.  Because the perception of stories and the lyric are the marionette strings of great poetry.

How do you balance your writing time with teaching and your graduate work in the PhD English Program at Florida State University?

Balance? It’s an illusion. I have great mentorship from professors and my peers.

What are your obsessions, things that you keep coming back to in writing and in life?

Family, love, loss, politics, unanswered questions, and the explorations of daily living are common returns; yet, ultimately, I am obsessed with “knowing.” Knowing why and how the components and histories of family, along with the interactions and perceptions, reveal what makes my stories and my worldly observations is important to who I am as a person. Staying in touch with those realities is what motivates my work.

Given the rhythm and breath and tempo of your poems, how has music played a part in the poetic forms you choose?

I heart Hip-Hop and I wasn’t born, raised, and nor have I ever visited Brooklyn or the Boogie Down Bronx; yet I remember the first time I fell in love with Hip-Hop. This, of course, indirectly addresses the question at hand; however, I can’t remember sound without music in the house where I grew up. My father played the electric guitar, harmonica, and piano, could play anything by ear. My son has the same gift; I guess I “donated” it to him when I finalized my interests in band and the clarinet. I spent summers in band camp at FAMU High (DRS), memorizing sheet music without an actual instrument, and learned to play by reading music while simultaneously fingering the notes, sometimes peeking at my best friend Ilena, first chair. Thomas Sayers Ellis taught me that the music comes first, so I’m glad that I was on a dance team and that my father was a musician. Cate Marvin taught me the importance of the relevant sound of a loud poetic voice; plug in an amp and add bass. Miss Lucille taught me to listen to the poetic line and ask, “What does the poem want to do?” Cave Canem continues to teach me that my voice is important and not alone. The determination of form is organic.

Yolanda J. Franklin. 

Poet, teacher, PhD candidate, and third generation, north Florida native.

Yolanda’s work is forthcoming or has appeared in  Sugar House Review, Crab Orchard Review's American South Issue, The Hoot & Howl of the Owl Anthology of Hurston Wright Writers’ Week, SPECS: Journal of Arts & Culture’s Kaleidoscopic Points Issue, and Kweli Journal. Her awards include a nomination for a 2012 Pushcart Poetry Prize, a 2012 Cave Canem fellowship, and several scholarships, including a summer at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Indiana Writer’s Week, and Colrain Poetry Manuscript Workshop. Her collection of poems, Southern Pout, was a finalist for the 2011 Crab Orchard Series in Poetry Award. She is a graduate of Lesley University’s MFA Writing Program and presently a doctoral candidate at Florida State University.

*

The Poppy: An Interview Series

Four to six questions begin as pods, then burst open with answers, bright lapis, 

black-stamened, conspicuous—ornament, remembrance, opiate.

*

This interview first posted at Hothouse Magazine.

In Interviews, Poetry, the South, the Gulf Coast Tags Florida, Poetry, Yolanda J. Franklin, memory, place, the Gulf Coast
← Andrew Lam: Language, Memory, BlissThe Poppy Becomes a Hothouse Flower →
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