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Joseph's Food Market
by Frank D. Rashid Lawrence Joseph
has written of his "fascination with place" and of the "limitless-and
extraordinary" material he finds for his poetry in Detroit, a place, he
says, that insists that he examine his own life in the context of larger
historical, cultural, and economic forces ("Our Lives" 297). In his poetry,
the family grocery store, run first by his grandfather and then by his
father and uncle, often functions as a focal point for this examination.
Standing in the shadow of the abandoned Packard Plant at 5770 John R on
the corner of Hendrie, this store exerted an important formative influence
on the young poet forced to deal with the conflict caused by his concern
for his father's safety and his understanding of the sources of violence
that threatened him and the family business. He had, he says, a "baptism
by fire / in the ancient manner, / by my father's side in a burning city"
(Before 33).
The poet frequently looks back on his years next to his father and uncle in
the store. "There I Am Again" (Curriculum 56-57)
begins with this recollection:
Joseph frequently
refers to that Sunday night, to the "insurrection" of late July 1967.
In an early poem, "Then," Joseph asserts that "the voice howling" within
him emerged at this time. He thinks of his father leaving the market to
be looted and, in tears, recalling his own father in that same store,
hunched "over the cutting board / alone in light particled / with sawdust."
The poem's speaker, addressing himself, considers that, had he been present
in the store at that time, he would have anticipated "the old Market's
wooden walls / turned to ash" and would have reacted with fear as he watched
his father's arm "shaking as he stooped / to pick up an onion" (Shouting
3). A later poem includes a memory of the "Monday morning of the insurrection"
when a body was discovered amid "the ruins of Stanley's / Patent Medicine
Store on John R / a block away from Joseph's Market" (Before
18).
Even though Joseph is aware that there is "much more violence" in this "great
society" than he knows (Curriculum 46), what
he does know is sufficient. Recalling the words of Faulkner and Camus,
Joseph has written, "To confront fear-to confront personal and collective
fears-is integral to any aesthetic" ("Our Lives" 298). Although his uncle
and father advise him to "forget," the poet cannot. In "Even the Idiot
Makes Deals," Joseph reflects upon the stabbing of his uncle by a boy
who demanded money from the store's safe:
Frank D. Rashid is Professor of English at Marygrove College. He grew up working beside his father and uncle in his family's inner-city Detroit grocery store. Photos by Anna Fedor. Works CitedJoseph, Lawrence. Before Our Eyes. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1993. ---. Curriculum Vitae. Pittsburgh: U of Pittsburgh P, 1988. ---. "'Our Lives Are Here': Notes from a Journal, Detroit, 1975." Michigan Quarterly Review 25 (1986): 296-302. ---. Shouting at No One. Pittsburgh: U of Pittsburgh P, 1983. Sugrue, Thomas J. The Origins of the Urban Crisis: Race and Inequality in Postwar Detroit. Princeton: Princeton UP, 1996. |