Our Insolvency
Author: Jeremy Hoevenaar
Publisher: Golias Books (2021)
With dystopian clarity and a submerged, fugitive generosity, the poems in Our Insolvency register the seismic distortions that the regime of financialization has had on poetic activity and on daily life. Working in an exploratory but anxiously denatured lyric mode—"wedding," as the critic Thom Donovan puts it, "semiotic overcodification to a vertiginous, aphoristic meditation on the accelerating present"—Hoevenaar guides us in a pilgrim's progress of interlinked serial poems through the banalized and continuously renegotiated opacity of our technological reality. The exhilaration of idiom here is co-implicated with relentless redevelopment, where leisure is the continuation of work by other means, and where language comes prepacified by democratized corporatese. Of this shrewd austerity Ann Lauterbach writes, "The spare economy of these lines hides a linguistic trove," repackaging insolvency into a poetic derivative "fueled by a kind of furious condensation." If 'dichten' once equaled 'condensare,' it must now vie alongside tactics of downsizing, cost savings, efficiency, and optimization—and while poetry says more by saying less, the currency of a word such as 'gig' shades, "just in time," into 'gag' or even 'gulag.' Hoevenaar's poems, pieced together with equal parts irony, love, borrowing, and outright theft, embrace their inability to pay their debts. They are not "good for it." But the hope is that, being good for something, they pay possibilities forward into an as yet unscripted future.