myth and the female epic



Today, CLOVEN drops into the world officially. You can get your copy HERE...

I have always been slightly obsessed with the Greeks. It probably stems back to a period of time in childhood, before horror films claimed the top spot, when I fervently loved Clash of the Titans on repeat (we didn't have it on tape, but it was a popular film in HBO in the years we had cable. ) Later, we would learn about the ancient world in history classes, but the details of the culture were never as interesting as the mythology. By the time I got to college, I had a reasonable working knowledge of major myths and stories, but a burgeoning interest in theater and a many drama/ theatre history classes (where, of course, we spent multiple weeks on the origins of theater.   

One of the things we spent considerable time on was in The Oresteia, when I first learned of the doomed daughter who was (or was not) sacrificed to Artemis to grant easy passage to Troy in a war spawned by the famously beautiful Helen. It's something that stuck in my head like a kernel I would run my fingers and tongue over occasionally. The years passed and I wrote many Greek myth and legend poems, addressing many figures, either directly or indirectly. Daphne. Calypso, Cassandra, Mnemosyne. Ariadne. I even wrote occasional modern retellings, like my taurus project. which was another re-imagining of the minotaur story, but set in the rural midwest.  

I got in my head that I wanted to write a more female-focused epic shortly after leaving the library, at a time when much of the freelance work I was doing was centered on the humanities, including many lessons on theater, mythology, folklore, and Greek culture. GRANATA was born from that in the summer of 2022--what was initially intended to be just a bunch of poems about Persephone, but which snowballed  to include her unfortunate cohorts, the sirens punished for her abduction, It also grew to encompass visual art--over two dozen collages in 2023. When I released in in 2024, I had a vague idea there might be more books--perhaps an interlocked series. There were already a couple of collage series with mythological leanings, including several that dealt with Iphigenia's story., something that was heavy on my mind, not just becuase of the Greeks, but we'd been re-watching Game of Thrones, and the tragic character of Shireen Baratheon. The young girl sacrificed for men and their wars. It was also on my mind because of, you know, rampant pedophiles in politics and the general disregard for the safety of young girls and women. 

The treatment was, of course, different. While Persephone and the Sirens would eventually embrace their darkness and monstrosity, Iphigenia is fixed in place. She can move a few inches either way and the outcome may be different, but it is still somehow the same. (ie even if Artemis swaps her for a deer, she is still endangered for a hist of other reasons--arranged marriages, childbirth hazards, ongoing wars. And yet she is also rife with power even in her powerlessness. That was the story i set out to write earlier this year, as I added a few more collages to the project and enough poems to turn the whole shebang into the next volume of what I am calling my Antiquities Series.



While what's coming up next in the series is just a rough system of notes and research, as well as a few scattered collages that will be expanding (see the one above and you can maybe guess the subject direction I may be going.) I am determined to get a start on it, perhaps over the summer when I am always looking for a longer, more in depth, project, so keep an eye out for snippets and news on that then...  



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