Alix Olson: word warrior.Concerned Women for America Concerned Women for America is a conservative Christian political action group active in the United States. The group was founded in 1979 by Beverly LaHaye, wife of Christian Coalition co-founder Timothy LaHaye, as a response to activities by the National Organization for Women and , a conservative women's group, named Alix Olson as one of the ten most dangerous women in this country. The reasons why were clear on a hazy summer afternoon in Madison, Wisconsin, when the twenty-seven-year-old spoken word poet and lesbian feminist took the stage at Tomboy tomboy Psychology A popular term for a girl whose developmental gender-identity/role is discordant with her genotype. Cf Sissy. Girl Fest. With her big mouth and mischievous grin, Olson dominated the stage. She turned her head to the side, covered the mic with her hand, and in a nasal voice mocked the tone of an in-store announcer: "Attention Shoppers! America's On Sale!" And she went on: "We've unstocked the welfare pantry to restock re·stock tr.v. re·stocked, re·stock·ing, re·stocks To furnish new stock for; stock again. Verb 1. restock - stock again; "He restocked his land with pheasants" the Wall Street Gentry / It's economically elementary because values don't pay! Yes, American Dreams are on permanent lay-away (there was limited availability anyway)." Olson is an electrifying e·lec·tri·fy tr.v. e·lec·tri·fied, e·lec·tri·fy·ing, e·lec·tri·fies 1. To produce electric charge on or in (a conductor). 2. a. performer, who seduces her audiences with wit and energy. Rocking back and forth on her heels, she spins tales of life on the road in between her loud and fiery poems. A sharpshooter with theatrical flair, Olson oozes both love and rage The Love and Rage Revolutionary Anarchist Federation formed in 1993 out of the remaining groups in the Love and Rage Network. Background The Love and Rage Network had its genesis in a November 1989 conference to launch a North American revolutionary anarchist . Olson's website (www.alixolson.com) features praise from historian Howard Zinn: "Mix brought me to my feet. She is an ingenious poet, a brilliant performer, a funny person, and serious thinker. She is, quite simply, extraordinary." Hip-hop artist Sarah Jones also lauds her: "Alix is a vital feminist voice and a true spoken word powerhouse. She is a clear alternative to a polluted mainstream." Olson began writing as a child. Raised in a conservative Pennsylvania town by progressive political science professors, she guesses she began writing poetry at age ten. "It always seemed a natural way to translate the world around me," she wrote to me via e-mail, "and I think my words grew up with my political consciousness." For her, art and politics are inseparable. "Poetry and art in general are a kick in the butt Noun 1. kick in the butt - punishment inflicted by kicking the victim in the behind corporal punishment - the infliction of physical injury on someone convicted of committing a crime , a reminder that people can speak truth," she tells The Progressive. Olson speaks truth to several powers: governmental, corporate, and patriarchal. She writes in her poem "Womyn Womyn is one of a number of alternate spellings of the word "woman", which insane lesbian feminist nazi-communist bitches use to describe themselves. Commies? LET ME AT THEM Background The original meaning of the English word "man" (from Proto-Germanic mannaz Before": "I was still sucking my thumb the first time I sang 'we shall overcome.'" This poem relates how Olson joined a union picket line with her mother. "I asked her 'why are we so mad?' / And she parked her head down in the freezing rain and saw me / So serious and small with my big Mack Truck union sign / She smiled to herself, pondered the politics of fingers curled / 'This is solidarity,' she whispered to her baby girl." She also takes on the media and other "pirates" in the poem of the same name: "So the hypodermic hypodermic /hy·po·der·mic/ (-der´mik) applied or administered beneath the skin. hy·po·der·mic adj. 1. Of or relating to the layer just beneath the epidermis. 2. media shoots us up until our brains are entombed Entombed, or entomb, may refer to:
v. pet·ri·fied, pet·ri·fy·ing, pet·ri·fies v.tr. 1. To convert (wood or other organic matter) into a stony replica by petrifaction. 2. , lying side by side next to our 401 K's and our SUV's, chainstored in the chamber of a Wal-Mart mummy freeze / And outside that sarcophagus sarcophagus (särkŏf`əgəs) [Gr.,=flesh-eater], name given by the Greeks to a special marble found in Asia Minor, near the territory of ancient Troy, and used in caskets. of American flags and 'god bless's,' our collective conscience is brought right down to its knees / Praying forgiveness for this nation exporting numbness / For treasure looting the oil, the ozone, the airwaves and the grain / These are our true colors running, and they are running away with everything ..." Olson is no fan of President Bush, but he's not her only target. "I certainly make lots of jokes about him and use him as part of my progressive rhetoric," she says. "But it's the capitalist machine that really scares me, not him in particular." In "Independence Meal," she writes, "Yes, the new sharecrop share·crop v. share·cropped, share·crop·ping, share·crops v.intr. To work as a sharecropper. v.tr. To work (land) or grow (crops) as a sharecropper. / Is the flesh and bones / Behind the cell block / And the Wackenhut corpa-prison sits right on an old plantation / Birthed right over the slave graves in that soil / An African mother / its step-father is Reaganomics / A barren corporate heiress delivering a lineage of toxins." Olson is an outspoken lesbian, and she does not shy away from Verb 1. shy away from - avoid having to deal with some unpleasant task; "I shy away from this task" avoid - stay clear from; keep away from; keep out of the way of someone or something; "Her former friends now avoid her" sex and desire in her art. In "Dear Mr. President:" she says, "Well, I don't desire your superstar badge of bravery / For enduring modern-day slavery / In your maniacally economically-driven death trap. / Anyway, I'd give the U.S. a bad rap / I'd kiss every fine Iraqi dyke on the front line, / Fuck national pride, / I'd go to their side--/ I prefer crossnational desire to crossfire anyway." Olson says she receives a lot of e-mails from young queer kids who are just coming out. They thank her for making queer life not just legitimate but celebratory. "And that's why I'm in this," she tells The Progressive. "To celebrate life experiences and whatever identity we choose to be." Olson first became involved with the poetry slam scene in the late 1990s, when she moved to New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. with the intention to change the world." She went to the famed Nuyorican Poets' Cafe with some guitar lyrics and performed them as poems. The effect was immediate. "I realized I didn't need an instrument," she says. "My voice was going to be an instrument for myself." A poetry slam is an amplified, competitive poetry reading. Performances are theatrical and sometimes accompanied by a musician or two. Poets duel with each other, using their words and rhythms as their weapons. Individual poets form teams to compete against others. Olson joined the Nuyorican Poets' Cafe slam team. In 1998, the Nuyorican Poets' Cafe team won the National Poetry Slam The National Poetry Slam (NPS) is a performance poetry competition where teams from across the United States, Canada, and France participate in a large-scale poetry slam. The event occurs in early August every year and takes place in a different US city. competition, with Olson performing "America's On Sale!" Soon after, local feminist groups and gay and lesbian groups on college campuses started calling her, asking her to perform. Her touring life had begun. "It just steamrolled from there," she tells The Progressive. "It was very fortuitous." She's formed her own production company, Subtle Sister Productions, which published her last two books, Independence Meal: The Ingredients, and Built Like That: The Word. A third book, Burning Down the House, was co-authored by the other members of the Nuyorican Slam Team. She also has recorded two CDs, and is busy working on a third, but nothing compares with seeing the poet live. Olson tours 300 days a year. She lives out of her Van--which she named June, in honor of the late June Jordan, the poet, essayist, teacher, and former Progressive columnist--though she does have a home base in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . "Traveling artists are people who carry truth from one town to the next town," the minstrel explains. "We represent alternative media to each other." All the touring may be exhausting, but she gives no hint of that. Her travels seem to energize her. "Part of what I get to see are the small council meetings and protests that are happening in towns that we don't hear about," she says. "It would be too dangerous if we heard about all the small rebellions." Elizabeth DiNovella is Culture Editor for The Progressive. You can hear Olson perform three of her poems in an interview she did with Progressive Radio at www. progressiveradio.org. |
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