what is said is

a poetic and oblique re/presentation of disabled women in a Canadian shelter

Nancy Viva Davis Halifax, Assistant Professor, School of Health Policy and Management, York University

nhalifax@yorku.ca

prolegomenon


It is [our] belief that feminism, as a political programme as well as a pedagogic one, needs to use different forms of writing in different times and places. Writing is strategic; it has effects.

-Ahmed


There remain subjects, whose very appearance troubles the solidity of dominant Western discourses. Living outside of normative structures of able-citizenship their bodies, even as surplus, provide content for academic and neoliberal discourse. Within the cultural imaginary they are exhibited as excessive and out of place: abject, disfigured, criminal, mad (Liggett). 

In order to gather these subjects so that we might further trouble the apparent solidity of Western epistemologies I engage a generative and reflexive practice, and affect. Theoretical, performative and lyrical strategies lean into moments from this inquiry. I have spent months working with persons who do not have the place of privilege and comfort of home – instead they are insecurely housed, they abide in a shelter along a post-industrial stretch of Dundas Street West in Toronto, a stretch currently characterized by numerous empty storefronts and small family businesses. The women live with disability, and in extreme poverty. This inquiry encompasses three years of offering media, and teaching and learning with women in a neighbourhood shelter. The heart of the work is positioned within the domestic arts practices that these women have learned from their mothers, aunts, and sisters. In the spirit of feminist practices, I came to understand knitting, crocheting, beading and other traditional women’s practices as community building. Using the arts in this way draws upon the principles of community arts research and social justice, the work is transformative. The use of poetry in the project and as a means of knowledge translation brings an additional resistive force – it resists the closure of affect within contemporary institutions. This work will not sit still, it demands language and thought and flesh – it tears into me until I “think something other” (Foucault 455). 

Thinking something other, making knowledge different and different knowledge suggests that I cannot create a tidy text that maps easily onto usual ways of sense making (Lather). It is possible that thinking something other becomes writing something other and other writing. A bodywriting split open. The writing is a trace, traces ghosted dialogues that remain as faint echoes. The language I find is used “to direct our attention to something in our world experience, to show us something” (Hass 5). Agitated, it limps toward the quietest of bodies. Sunlight streams through blinds onto dust. 


“What is said is not as important as the unsaid, which the said brings to mind.”

- Davey 4

I use this quote by Nick Davey to organize this something other, to find its language from that which is both given and found. There are risks present; speaking the unsaid brings it to be said, to language. There are reasons, rationales, for silence. I may fail. The rational casts a shadow upon the unsaid, which rocks back and forth. The potential of failure is instructive – I re-member my writing table, cold fingers around a hot cup of tea, cold toes stuffed into extra pairs of socks, hooked around the stretcher. Shaking and anxious, I am not stable. The language that finds its way from body does not turn back. Leaves. Bodythought quivers. This tongue is not adept, not deft enough to curl around lip, touch tooth, drip wet word. The finger refuses to tap tap tap. What is said is not as important as the unsaid, which the said brings to mind. 


Almost immediately the question arises: What are the moral consequences of abandoning the subjects of our perception? Leaving them unsaid, not speaking them when they are brought to mind? Language tumbles forward and down, until descent becomes ascent. Every said with its congregation of the unsaid. A mission that longs for a choir

expressed in stumbles and dives. 

what is said is


“Well, they are spoiled.”


Return to the place of memory 


Around a table


Spoiled suggests a flaw, a disfigurement even something ruined. Tainted. Rotting. It’s the way the word spills through architecture of mouth, vault of arch, cant of tooth. Not as indulgence, favouring. 


Become monstrous. Plastic bags and knapsack, all of the odds of a life create a shadow, a misshape in the dark. A misperception, an unspoken. 


Strip her

Remove her clothing, 

Toss her belongings onto the sidewalk

For plunder 


Split her open 

Until she divides against herself withering


not as important as.


These bodies (not as important as) inhabit institutions. Woven together. All of the bodies: the wanted and unwanted, the said and unsaid. Huddled together. Cockroaches, counselors, cleaners, bedbugs, chaplains, mice, lice, men who spray, cooks, women, maintenance crews…

And yet. These bodies, grown from seed, 

Conceived along terrestial longitude

Speak from east to west 

Their waiting shapes shimmer

In the form of sand grains

in pulsebeats

in the name of




Holy, holy, holy


The shelter, the one trapped on that corner is a Salvation Army shelter for women. In 1878 the Salvation Army was founded upon the Christian Mission, which William Booth had started in 1865 in Britain. Four years later the army marched into Canada. 

Daughters, mothers and sisters loiter on early morning sidewalks. 

One, seated with cigarette, slippers and housecoat

Rests her foot upon her belongings

As if the whole world were her home


One, seated with cigarette, slippers and housecoat

Last night she slept with William Booth 

As if the whole world were his home

His long beard tangles her hair 


Last night she slept with William Booth, 

One in hope and doctrine, one in charity

His long beard tangles her hair 

Him singing


One in hope and doctrine, one in charity

Holy soldier of Christ

Him singing

While resurrection men hurry to death


As if the whole world were their home.



the unsaid



What is not said as we encounter the world remains within as gesture, as potential, as memory. There are pulls on our perception, sometimes so minute that we pass without greeting. Yet the impress 

Below flesh

Lingers


Invocations bring a small breeze.

Forget that thoughts

Once trapped by weight of bone

Take flight through fingertips and pinions

Across sea and heaven


My book presses into wood’s grain

Searching for sound

Something left over,

A crumb of language.

A space not yet tidied away

Remembers that once upon a time

It wrote something beautiful

Like laughter, or the sound of rain


In a room where we wear suitcoats  

There is a confession 

The only place where there was room

Was where we wore suitcoats


Not so different from the buck or two a night hotels


The room sighs

No purrs like a full-bellied cat

Under this roof

Let another decide if you are 

Too comfortable


Yellow crocuses 

Decorate

My broken gray 

Horizon thoughts 


Unloaded and the truck on Sorauren backs up

Smarties™ pour onto wet pavement

She’s got issues

They told me


She doesn’t live here anymore

She had to leave because of 

Problems. Issues.


But the unsaid remains. 

Forever and ever. 

Black stretch pants, grey hair, blue eyeshadow, plastic bags. 

Blurred   makeup. Accompanied. She reveals the unsaid. 


Her body’s thorns prick 


The chaplain


The chaplain

Brings in 30 hats, flowers, feathers, glitter, glue, balloons

To decorate, to wear while watching the Royal Wedding


Five thirty a.m. the television turns from black to faery

The pageantry draws women from their rooms 

Some still in pyjamas wear their majesty 


Declaring something old, something borrowed

Is nothing new.

She stares at the women

Drowning under the weight of ivory silk, and white lace. 

Under the goodness of her chosen intent. 

An enormous truth hid behind bosoms 

Of salvation


Flowers hang over the entrance to this sacred 

Garden where wine demonstrates that before 

It was Water 

It was grape. 

And later, in its waiting, will be blood. 

Crimson stained taste of 

Mildew, pepper, tobacco, cedar

The common soldiers in this sad and glorious building


The chaplain with her newly shorn head, a second daughter

With a rivalrous past and short nails

Smiles at her women, her lost souls. 


At night she dreams of pregnancy and rebirth

Leviathan in Lake Ontario

Ninety one sublime women in her choir

On the precipice of orange earth

From their mouths blue frogs with 

Fine crocheted lace wings grumble

While she trembles at this monstrous revival

Strung cross stream and sky


Awakes to a chorus


Our sisters, who art now dead

Perished by tinned tuna, powdered milk

By the charity of gamblers and donation boxes at liquour stores

And the forgetful who build glass staircases instead of homes and gardens

May you forever haunt the cowards who legislate your poverty.


One of the women called by round copper  

Forgets her beauty curses her age

The certainty of rotting teeth and heart 

Troubles sealed with truth and reason


Roses climb a frame of coat hangers

Still in their winter woolens

Their goal to bloom



The realm of the unsaid is imagination 

There we mind our gaudy, brazen, shameless strutting disgrace. 



which the said brings to mind 



“Bring to mind.” Mind suggests that we are bringing to cognition. To a place where what is something other can become thought. Mind as well suggests memory, remember, remembrance, and even love. As well as care – to be mindful. We move toward the expression of love where the said begins to love the unsaid even in its unspeaking. The unsaid compels remembrance. We move from mind as a place of cognition, to mind as caring, as heartfelt. And return to a minding that is caustic.


Hidden in the folds of mind, shame creeps, framing me as it imagines us, as mirrors one to the other. The derelict and the citizen. The silver’d surface consigns my thinking to a room wherein the brought to mind takes the form of a grey-haired elderly woman, her polyester pants sagging as she pokes at them trying to rearrange them, herself. Her coat hangs slackly around her shoulders, both sadly turned down. Words grind the glass of her: 


she doesn’t belong here how did she get in how did she 

get in where did she come from how did she she’s been asked 

to leave leave


“Behind the feeling of shame stands not the fear of hatred, but the fear of contempt which, on an even deeper level of the unconscious, spells fear of abandonment, the death by emotional starvation (Piers G. 29).


This passage written 50 or more years ago predicts a sad knowledge. What is brought to mind by this unsaid are the edges of words; the fear of not being loveable enough, easily discarded outside the bounds of – I like the word, humankind; it contests turning from, fleeing excess, escaping disgust, hiding from contagion. 



Human kind.




Blessed.




A graying woman

Call her grasshopper 

Blamed by girls for a hunger

She cannot organize

Devises goals to escape the worst 


Months Blessed is she 

Who lives in this old travel lodge




Surveil her mumbling the streets are better 


Blessed is she 

Who cares for mouse and flower



Dual screen monitors

Divided into 16 frames

32 views at a time. 

switch to another set of cameras, 

and again the women, frozen, enhanced, captured.


Blessed is she 



Who knits knee warmers

Sews insoles from patterned cloth

Makes covers for every ironing board

Performs domesticity on all five floors

While planning her escape


Blessed are the poor for 

They take from the rich that which the rich no longer need

Their worn clothes, broken appliances, and dusty knick knacks


Blessed are the women

Who know a dozen ways to cook fiddleheads

The technique for long tail casting on

The perfumed orange of mango and squash 


Blessed are these women who 

Dream of oxtail soup, and bitter greens.

Acknowledgements: 


To members of the Red Wagon Collective including Kim Jackson, Liz Forsberg, all the women of Evangeline, past and present. And to all those who live in poverty under disabling structures and policies. This paper was performed in a somewhat different version at the Canadian Disability Studies Association Conference, May 2011 in Fredericton, NB. I would like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their comments and the editor, Jay Dolmage for their assistance in strengthening this manuscript. Responses from audiences who listened to parts of this work in Bournemouth, UK, and Cool hand of a girl, Toronto are also appreciated


References:


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Anonymous. Overheard conversation. 2011. Spoken word.

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