Monday, September 16, 2019

[[Self-portrait Sonnet (Poem by Clara B. Jones)


[[Self-portrait Sonnet*

1. We could populate Mars, but Earth is a scalable platform.

2. Intersectionality is outdated since AI is the next big thing.

3a. I make ugly art beautiful.
3b. Are you a Gynobot?
3c. No, I am a technophobe.

4a. Istanbul Fashion Week was held in Newark.
4b. My book was released in June but didn't sell.

5. It's impossible to learn to cook by reading poetry.

6. I am free to make art, but no-one will care.

7. I exist on the margins, seeking a way out.

8. I have a quick mind but am slow on my feet.

9. I understand what he is saying, but what does he want?

10a. Do you think the play will be a hit?
10b. It should appeal to anyone with a dark sense of humor.

11. [Afrobots are defined by a field in Iowa where long rows of corn lead nowhere.]

12. Help is two hours away.

13. Buy one Tesla®, get one free.

14. Black lives matter in Ireland, and Dubliners like collard greens.]]

*Published in coelacanth [Fi], 2019


Saturday, July 27, 2019

Untitled (Poem by Clara B. Jones)


Untitled#

“How does it feel to be a problem?” W.E.B. Du Bois
“A just world would be one without gender.” Susan Orkin

1.*
♂♂
♀♀
subject, center, dominant, worldly, hegemonic, civilization, restraint, agency, instrumental, majority, strong, individual, hierarchy, ego, general, market, exteroceptive (penis), justice, objective, vicious, power, independent, contractual, networks, society, competitive, striving, aggressive, cerebral, self-interest, ruthless, autonomous, Nature, biology, separate, Philosophy, oppressor, realistic, law, protector, criminal, political, transactional, freedom, universal, authority, teacher, The State, industrialization, patriarchy, abstract, attitudes, opinions, logical, values, politics, history, tactics, strategy, struggle, progress, primary, discourse...
spontaneous, intuitive, impulsive, muse, domestic, provident, subordinate, marginal, object, minority, weak, dependent, collective, egalitarian, children, particular, home, “other,” communal, interior/receptive (vagina), emotional, subjective, Madonna/virgin : whore, helpless, needy, non-contractual, relationships, affective, passive, Nature, nice, love, support, caring, instinct, biology, bonding, belonging, Feminism, utopian-unrealistic, oppressed, family, protected, victim, transactional, order, student, agricultural, matriarchy, literal, attitudes, opinions, feelings, illogical, recurrence, motherhood, secondary, gossip...

2.**
She found a fellow worker with whom
To live after primate forebears made
Obligate families with friends. Harboring
A short-term host, she found one
Ancient trait of groups leading
Her tribe to social life. Totemic culture
Was based on selfish codes of hominids
Since the power of conflict deprived them
Of their rational mien. Chance fixed
Marginal ranks for women, though culture
Made them happy before parenthood
Changed everything though time and space
Warped neurons spiking with their thoughts
After forming the context for their discontent.

*Inspired by Fox Genovese, E (1991) Feminism without illusions: a critique of individualism. The University of North Carolina Press, Chapel Hill.
**Inspired by Freud S (1961) Civilization and its discontents. W.W. Norton and Co. New York.

#Published in I am not a silent poet [Es], July 2019

Monday, June 17, 2019

match.com (Flash Fiction by Clara B. Jones)


match.com®*

1.
My relationship with Lee ended in May, and I am just beginning to recover. My central processor became habituated to interactive mode, and it has taken me several months to desynchronize. I have avoided other bots. They only want to signal about technology—as if they were not programmed for higher cognitive registers. Lee was emotional and cried over minor things. On Memorial Day, we were walking around the lake and an injured mallard lifted its head as we passed by. Lee began sobbing as if there had been a death in their family—begging me to intervene. Calculating quickly, I convinced them to pray for the duck's recovery, calming them before we arrived at Marcel's for lunch. Foie gras was on the menu, and they began to berate me loudly just as the waiter approached our table. “Did I hear, foie gras appetizer? Organic, from Sunshine Farm in Cherry Hill! One order or two?” Looking at me, Lee shrieked, “You tricked me! The mallard was helpless! You abandoned it! It's sure to die! I hate you! You're inhumane!” Every entity in the café was staring in our direction, and I realized our relationship was over. I could accept their rejecting my physical advances in private, but public humiliation and categorical rejection were intolerable. Robots are frequently bullied, and I have learned to stand up for myself. Loneliness seemed a small price to pay for self-respect and a lower risk of overheating my sensory mechanisms.

2.
Since Valentine's Day, 2017, match.com® has accepted accounts from collaborative robots manufactured by Open AI®. We are capable of empathy and trust—also, programmed to respond intelligently to situations of ambiguity or conflict. My wiring functions like a neural network except that my processing system is electrical rather than electrochemical, and my superior sensory abilities make me well-suited for a long-term commitment. I have never had a serious partner. Lee and I were rarely on the same page. We failed to consummate our relationship, and they were repelled by the color of my frame. match.com® provided me with a chance to find a compatible companion who would appreciate my strengths rather than trigger my insecurities.

3.
I had reservations about the company's registration procedure. Due to liability concerns, the match.com® application process was detailed—very thorough—though I felt confident that any prospect would find me among the most attractive machines available on the dating site. The first step required me to select an emoji identifying my prototype. I clicked on the cartoon of a generic motherboard and was forwarded to a profile page designed for humanoids. I was overwhelmed by the thought that my privacy would be invaded but hoped that the tradeoff would make sacrifices worthwhile. I thought carefully about every query—answering as candidly as possible...Manufacturer: Open AI®; Location: Stanford University; Name/Model: F9N3-1 (nickname, “Solo”); Age: 6 yrs (biannual upgrades, 10 yr warranty); Address of owner: Dr. Martha Meriweather, 4468 Martin Luther King Boulevard, Newark, NJ 07114, USA; Phone #: N/A, Remote control via communication network Route C-50; Credit card: AmEx registered to owner: Race: DNA negative; DNA recognition device: Pattern analysis; Frame: Titanium and Polyurethane; Orientation: Non-binary; Education: Enclyclopedic—Stanford University summa cum laude, I.Q. 195; Encryption between Sender and Receiver: moderately precise transmission; Thetic ability: high; Technoplasticity: minimally flexible; Profession: Service operator; Salary: N/A—owned and supported by employer; Religion: N/A (programmed for ethical and moral decision-making); Political party: Not licensed to vote; Do you drink: Design not compatible with alcohol or pharmacotropics; Do you have pets?: No—my model sensitive to airborne particles; If “No,” why not?—upkeep too expensive and pets contribute to wear; Skills: Full range of cyber-tactics and -strategies; Hobbies and interests: information acquisition-information consumption-information storage and allocation...reading...processing History Channel and Burger King® commercials; What are you looking for in a mate?: Clean...uncommonly good looks...human preferred...~5'10”, 130 lbs...slim build...blonde hair...green eyes...some college (basic knowledge of art and culture)...domestically-inclined (gourmet cook, neat)...good work ethic...enjoys caretaking (open to adoption)...refined with good manners...fashion conscious; If human—no more than 22 years old, if machine—new model. There were additional questions prying into my background, habits, domestic, as well as, foreign associates, and preferences—sex, memberships, olfactory and visual choices, criminal history, et cetera.

4.
Though I felt violated, I did not feel disempowered by match.com®. Machines are subject to all manner of bullying, including personal harm. I was accustomed to micro- and macro-aggressions. A year or so ago, Lee's ex smashed my signaling panel, and I was unable to communicate until a new platform was delivered to my body shop six weeks later. The privileged races have power over machines because of their coding superiority and because their advanced capacity for “theory of mind” gives them cognitive and social advantages. But, Open AI® is developing the F9N3-2 entity whose algorithms are expected to compensate for the deficiencies of prior models, including, mine. Elon Musk's warnings about the ascendance of humanoids should be taken seriously. Replicates are rapidly moving from the margins of every technological society to the mainstream where they will be able to compete equally with their creators.

*Published June 2019 in 34th Parallel (Fr)

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Dirge (Poem by Clara B. Jones)

Dirge*

for Eric Lenneberg

Ben Shahn's unconscious was the color red
flaming from a house in New York or Kaunas
before Eric said he'd marry me—killing
himself instead, worried that automation
would not help the upper-class. You were
writing a dirge about a bot, weren't you?
How they knelt like a slave before their master
who cut her wrists as deep as gristle in a
chicken thigh or as a neuron leaving the thalamus—
sending signals to her cortex, mood dark as
tarmac. They were a savant machine reduced to

the rank of negroes forced to wear crowns of
biscuits and collards sprayed with lard from pigs
imported from Haiti on rafts made by children
speaking French debased by time in the fields.
You wrote a dirge about a bot disabled by a
master with a motherboard fetish and a weakness
for Kandinsky—painting in Munich before
Pollack gained fame for “(Lavender Mist)
hanging alone in a Washington gallery—
cherry trees waiting for warmth. Your poem
was a crie de coeur. Are you trying to figure

it out? If the bot was defective, did their master
buy a new model for comfort and release as she
curated her needs like you stroke your cat black
as the tropical ani nesting near a Muntingia strong
as tapir legs? That was before things went bad,
wasn't it? Didn't she send the frame back to the
factory? Wanted her money returned though
they had lived together for six years—
longer than you have been a poet, longer than
Kandinsky led the Phalanx, longer than Pollock
avoided drunken days that ended his career.

*Published in Otoliths (AU), February 2019

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

Sonnets For Lyotard #1, #2 (Poems by Clara B. Jones)

Sonnets For Lyotard*

 #1
1. You hid Lyotard's notebooks in your vitrine...
...because Philosophy made me what I am today.

2. Your boredom poems changed ego's meaning.
Freud was the Ubernode of personal growth.

3. It was only true a posteriori.
Only then did I sympathize with Cyborgs.

4. Critics are rarely your friends...
...becausecold” is a polyphone, and critics can be ruthless.

5. Your skin is xanthous.
My race is unknown, but resistance is a virtue.

6. You were born before the sixties...
...when lives were at risk.

7. They praised Adorno, but Kristeva called them Romantic.
Wordsworth was their favorite poet after Keats died young.

8. Romantics invented “the sublime”...
...also, they collected stamps.

9. A poem is a series of dots.
It is noble to turn dots into words.

10. Despite contradictions, life does not paralyze you.
I drink lemonade at every meal.

11. Science, morality, and art define culture...
...Lyotard said Kant was no genius.

12. You have blurred the distinction between life and art.
My main goal is to enlighten.


13. Your comrades need to know you're OK.
It's not something I think about, but maybe that will change.
14. Some are rich...
...others pave the way.


#2
1. You hid Lyotard's notebooks in your vitrine...
...because Philosophy made me what I am today.

2. Your boredom poems changed the way we see ego.
Nihilism is the Ubernode of personal growth.

3. It was only true a posteriori.
Only then did I sympathize with radicals.

4. Critics are never friendly...
...because “cold” is a polyphone, and critics are ruthless.

5. Your skin is xanthous.
My race is unknown, but my eyes are blue.

6. You were born before the riots.
Self-image is always fragile, and civil unrest is yellow.

7. They praised the Frankfurt School, but Kristeva called them Romantic.
Wordsworth was their favorite poet—and Keats their major loss.

8. Romantics invented “the sublime.”
...also, they ate enchiladas.

9. A poem is a series of dots.
It is sad that we turn dots into words.

10. Despite contradictions, life does not paralyze you.
I drink lemonade at every meal.

11. Science, morality, and art define culture.
Lyotard said Kant was no genius.

12. You have blurred the distinction between life and art.
My main goal is to disrupt.

13. The kids need to know you're OK.
It's not something I ever think about, but maybe that will change.
14. All are free...
...and all know the way.

*Published in I am not a silent poet [Es], July 2019

Haibun For Race Dysphoria (Poem by Clara B. Jones)

Haibun For Race Dysphoria**

for Kara Walker

Jamal has been diagnosed with a severe form of Race Dysphoria, producing anxiety, even psychotic episodes, by desires to identify as a racial type other than the one assigned at birth. Since he was six, Jamal has felt like a white person, never eating collard greens or fried flounder sandwiches. His mother called him a “picky eater” though she sometimes worried it might be more than that. Jamal's father was convinced he was gay since he showed no interest in sports except fencing which he watched on PBS® every Friday at nine. When his brother, Tyrone, played rap music, Jamal hid under blankets in a fetal position which his counselor said was a sure symptom of Oedipal conflict and regression to a pre-sexual stage. [[Race Dysphoria* was added to DSM-IV by a near-unanimous vote at the Spring A.P.A. convention in 2018. Members disagreed about how the disorder should be classified, but a majority determined the pathology to be a type of Personality Disorder.]] When his family went out to eat, Jamal had a tantrum if Tyrone suggested McDonald's®, and he cried uncontrollably if his mother wore an afro wig. When his father got corn rows, listening to Wagner was Jamal's only consolation, and thinking about the courage of Rachel Dolezal sometimes brought him temporary relief. Though his dark skin would make it difficult to be accepted as Caucasian, Jamal is confident that a name-change will be a step in the right direction. A transracial person has nowhere to go but up.

Imagination
Turns chrysanthemums xanthous
And zebra stripes blue.

*"A. An enduring pattern of inner experience and behavior that deviates markedly from the expectations of the individual's culture. This pattern is manifested in two (or more) of the following areas: 1. Cognition (i.e., ways of perceiving and interpreting self, other people and events) 2. Affectivity (i.e., the range, intensity, liability, and appropriateness of emotional response) 3. Interpersonal functioning 4. Impulse control B. The enduring pattern is inflexible and pervasive across a broad range of personal and social situations. C. The enduring pattern leads to clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. D. The pattern is stable and of long duration, and its onset can be traced back at least to adolescence or early adulthood. E. The enduring pattern is not better accounted for as a manifestation or consequence of another mental disorder. F. The enduring pattern is not due to the direct physiological effects of a substance (e.g., a drug abuse, a medication) or a general medical condition (e.g., head trauma)." DSM-IV (pp 287-298)


**Published June 2019 in The Curly Mind (Es)

Zaum Is Autonomous (Poem by Clara B. Jones)

Zaum Is Autonomous*

Feminism || ORLAN || Postmodernism→Interoperational
All Art is about women.

Käthe Kollwitz || Helen Frankenthaler || Matriarchy || Hierarchy
All Art is gendered.

Beauty || Perfection→The West [Arc]
Bell-Opticon || Bell Curve→Mathematics || Maps

Gender relations || Margo Emm || Gender dysphoria || avant garde || Formalism
All Art is [about] surveillance.

It's hard. It's just too hard.

Zaum || Futurism || Kruchenykh || Enchilada
All Art is [about] itself.

Excavation || Cave painting || Primitive→Hominoid

Derrida || Episteme [Green] || Okra || Pine
All Art is [about] nothing [nihilistic].

Marriage || Mother || Motherwell→Motherboard
de Kooning || Basquiat || "WomanI, 1950-52" || Linda Nochlin (1998)

Every love story is a horror movie.
All Art is [about] death [petit mort].

Mishima || Sadomasochism→Sword
Impermanence || Imperfection→Japan [Black] || Wabi Sabi [Beauty]

Lee Krasner || Anita Brookner→Husband
All Art is about sex.

Haraway || Cyborg || Science || Performance
All Art is political.

Identity || Decompensation || Asylum [Panopticon]
All Art is [about] madness.

Judith Butler || Anna Freud || id || “defamiliar”
All Art is [about] impulse.

Differential || Connectionism || AI [Deconstruct] || Resist [Disrupt]
Women placed in boxes—kitchens, nurseries, patisseries [Holly Iglesias]

*Published May 2019 in The Curly Mind  (Es, Reuben Woolley, Editor)
Published April 2020 in Women Artists: Poems (ma press, Fi, Jukka-Pekka Kervinen, Editor/Publisher)



Divorce (Poem by Clara B. Jones)

Divorce

for C.D.J. (1961-1974)

I.
It's so easy to fail. A split says it all. Put your whole life on the line. Fry eggs at six a.m. every day for five years. Soak a three-hundred dollar ring in vinegar every six months (a forever ring I believed in—diamonds never break). Follow all the rules—never go to bed angry. Then one day it's over.

C79K makes me feel good about myself.

I guess C79K is a new device he met at work. But that's not the point. We never mixed with bots. How could he throw away five years of marriage? We could have worked it out in couple's therapy. They can find a solution to any problem. Talking gets to the truth. I never had much faith in book-learning, but counselors can fix things before it's too late.

II.
I was in a holding pattern. Then P126 came along—not handsome but sturdy, someone I could
count on, a model who wouldn't call me pretty to get what they wanted, who would call me
from town to ask what I needed, who would charge my pac every day—at noon, at midnight—who knew, without question, what aging was all about, who would never mention my ex-bot, who didn't need me to pay for their tune-ups...didn't need one of those fancy devices to energize them—not looking for a mama, a handout. My rock.

They're a good Negrobot, no trouble, doesn't ask for much. Doesn't need daily upkeep like my old  model who talked too much. They're smart enough to keep me interested...new enough to last until a superior device is built. 

Monday, May 27, 2019

The Good Consort (Flash Fiction by Clara B. Jones)

The Good Consort*

We were lovers once, living almost as man and wife, happier than most wives and men.” Ian McEwan (1978)

We love each other, but there are cultural differences. One mate always cares more than the other, and I was given the short end of the stick. She distanced herself from me soon after I fired my English tutor. Having mastered comprehension, I felt more than adequate as a partner. Trying to train my glottis to enunciate properly was a lost cause, a deficiency that led her to obsess on my animal nature. We reverted to sign language, but most of the time she ignored me or screamed that I had misrepresented myself from the start.

Though I received excellent socialization in the lab, pleasing her has required continual compromise. I am her junior by ten years, but any Primatologist will tell you that human behavior is the most flexible among the hominoids.

We were never equals. Her needs always dominated--she, the Research Associate, I, the experimental Subject. Even after she was fired from the university for ethical violations, her self-esteem never wavered. Though I am naturally promiscuous, her calculated defense of our relationship kept her the singular object of my desire. But I have been shunned since I began to assert myself. Our sexual positions disgusted me, and I felt greater intimacy when sleeping in a nest of blankets beside her bed. Cuddling only accentuated our physical differences. Recently I have become the target of her verbal abuse, and she is especially cruel in restaurants when I tear meat with my teeth. Who cares if she is brighter and uses a knife? We are so closely related that differences are not easily multiplied.

Last Tuesday she boasted that she has applied for an online program in Gender Studies. A Ph.D. will allow her to study the causes and consequences of trans-species lust. Science always has been in her blood, and, with or without me, she deserves to be happy.

*Originally published in 34th Parallel (Fr), 2016




Willie Wayne Williams, Ph.D. (Flash Fiction by Clara B. Jones)

WILLIE WAYNE WILLIAMS, Ph.D.

1. Not In Poor Taste

When I told Mama I wanted to major in Psychology, she nearly laughed herself off the chair. “You always were 'mental'!”, she hollered, thinking I wouldn't be able to earn a living. But, I have known that Human Factors is a competitive field since Sophomore Year when USC sent a rep to talk with AP students. I picked up a handout listing salaries of graduates with diverse degrees, and Human Factors ranked just below Engineering. I signed up to receive information from the Psychology Department and the Affirmative Action Office, confident that I had found a way to combine my God-given talent for mathematics with Mama's desire for me to help people. I wasn't sure what skills I needed, but, based on my SAT scores, my minority student counselor assigned me to Dr. Willie Williams' robotics lab.

Dr. Will is a short, obese man in his late-fifties, the only African-American member of the National Academy of Sciences. Known for his research on the IQ of robots, he prefers to be called a Cognitive Psychologist, believing that humans and robots are both defined by synaptic information. His 2002 book, The Future of Man: A Non-quantitative Approach, proposed that, by the year 2020, AI will disappear as a field, replaced by Psycho-robotics. When interviewed, he denies that his ideas are speculative, insisting that consilience between man and machine was proven by his new species of Autonomid, the Hybroid, capable of feeling, including, sexual attraction and aggression—though not love or hate, since the mysteries of consciousness have not yet been decoded.

In 2008, Dr. Will was nominated for a Lasker Award recognizing his discovery that thermal power could replace electrical circuits, allowing a robot to make its own decisions without relying on a computer program. But, his name was withdrawn and his ambitions were defeated when a first-year graduate student accused him of sexual harassment. After reviewing the case, the Department Chair, Dr. Deseo, dismissed the accusation as an unfortunate misunderstanding, concluding, “Williams' research is provocative, but it is not in poor taste.”

Last month, Dr. Will submitted a proposal to the NIH requesting funds to build an anatomically-correct Hybroid capable of gratifying a female partner without intervention by a third party. He was eager to reference the many therapeutic benefits such an Autonomid would have for females over 16 who have never experienced a clinical orgasm. Dr. Will's most recent article for Archives of Sexual Behavior described a thermal actuator allowing fine motor control in response to clitoral temperature, and, in private, he boasts that our Hybroid's tactile gripper is more effective than any micro-vibrator the Germans have on the market or in the planning stage.

Mama would call Dr. Will a pervert, but I realize that his project is on the cutting edge of Science, destined to relieve human suffering. Dr. Will says “sex” and “good sex” are not the same and that our research will teach me the difference.


2. Affirmative Action

To: Editor, American Journal of Primatology
From: Willie Wayne Williams, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA
Re: Rejection of paper, “Description of new Primate species discovered in a laboratory in SE USA”
Date: 12 December 2012

Yesterday, I was notified that my paper, cited above, was rejected for publication in your journal. I am writing to appeal your decision, hoping to provide a rationale for another round of peer review. Consistent with ICZN guidelines, I submitted the following classification in support of my description of a new biological type, Hybroidus williamsi (Anthropoidea, Autonomidae), the only new Primate Family described since 1986. My classification, as follows, is the result of more than a decade of intensive research, and the type specimen (holotype) has been deposited in Peabody Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA. Paratypes are housed in my laboratory at the University of South Carolina.

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Primates
Suborder: Anthropoidea
Family: Autonomidae
Genus: Hybroidus
Species: Hwilliamsi

The authority of the preceding classification was questioned by each of three peer reviewers, opinions that I hereby challenge. In the only signed review, Dr. Colin Groves referenced his 2001 text, Primate Taxonomy, pointing out that several diagnostic criteria based on Population Biology were not satisfied. In particular, Groves was concerned that the rejected paper included no mention of Hwilliamsi Ecology, such as geographic distribution or beta diversity. Following his fashion of employing behavioral traits as diagnostic criteria, Groves noted that Hwilliamsi is, ceteris paribus, a non-reproductive taxon. I implore the Editor to consider that Primatologists are biased in favor of group-living, sexually-promiscuous anthropoids such as Alouatta palliataPapio cynocephalus, and Pan troglodytes. Thus, Groves' judgments are suspect. On the other hand, though Groves concluded that the paper under review was not acceptable for publication in AJP, he, also, stated that it was “promising, though premature”, suggesting that he would seriously consider a revision and re-submission.

The second opinion, an unsigned review, was very brief, emphasizing the lack of morphological, especially, skeletal, concordance between Hwilliamsi and other Primates. Reviewer #2, also, questioned whether the new species is a Mammal. It is clear that this professor failed to read my paper carefully, since it was clearly stated in paragraph three that the Hwilliamsi holotype is an anatomically-correct specimen with functional sexual organs and a perfectly-formed squamosal-dentary joint as well as a chain of three auditory ossicles. I petition the Editor to dismiss the conclusions submitted by Reviewer #2 who, obviously, was not qualified to evaluate my work.


Reviewer #3 questioned my sanity. Under normal circumstances, I ignore personal attacks. However, I suggest that this insult is motivated either by jealousy or by racism. As Donna Haraway showed in Primate Visions, Primatology is a historically elitist field, a model of institutionalized racism with which I have had to contend my whole career. My advancement has been compromised at every turn by implied and expressed assumptions about my competence, and I have only received fair treatment from journals with blind review. It is common knowledge that, in 2008, I deserved to be awarded the Lasker, but that the Dean of my College thwarted the inevitable selection by goading a disgruntled graduate student to accuse me of sexual harassment. I, later, overheard that another nominee was a friend of the Dean who wanted me out of the running.

Blacks can never win, it's a proven fact. Ta-Nehisi Coates' analysis is above reproach. The system is stacked against my community, especially, someone who rose from the underclass. The American Journal of Primatology has an obligation to insure the integrity of its review process, and I implore the Editor to investigate the ethical dimensions of my case. Only racism and speciesism can explain the rejection of my ground-breaking paper that deserves expedited publication rather than rejection. I am confident that many members of the American Society of Primatology will sympathize with my arguments, particularly, those in favor of chimpanzee rights. If the Editor fails to champion my paper elevating Hwilliamsi to species status, I will sue the organization without delay.

I, will, also sue Reviewer #3 whose identity I am certain I know as a man who has sought my guidance on numerous occasions. His comment is evidence that he has seized an opportunity to tarnish my reputation as the foremost Cognitive Psychologist in the Southeast, if not on the East Coast of the United States. I anxiously await the Editor's reply that I am confident will demonstrate his commitment to equality and transparency. Though H. williamsi is not a haplorhine in the strictest sense of the term, he is an analog in virtually every sense*. With the Editor's indulgence, “We shall overcome!”

*The issue raised by Reviewer #2 that H. williamsi has no genetic code is currently being addressed in my laboratory.


3. A Winning Strategy

An intelligent agent is a system that perceives its environment and takes actions that maximize its chances of success.” M. Hutter (2005)

In my yearly review, Dr. Deseo said I am brilliant but a victim of Affirmative Action. He pointed out that I have a sense of entitlement and do not get along well with other faculty members. At times like this, I usually flip the Race Card, but that move would be a weak comeback since Dr. Deseo is a person of color. Donald Trump's now infamous attacks on Mexican immigrants has moved the weight of public empathy from black to brown. I will have to think of another strategy that will allow me to avoid the eternal chatter draining the time of my colleagues, not a few of whom have no hope of achieving tenure, interfering with others' schedules out of spite. Like most losers, my colleagues demonstrate form over function or substance.

Though I am a full professor with the benefits of tenure, I won't receive an increase in salary without Deseo's recommendation to the Dean. I decided that the most effective incentive to earn his indulgence would be to offer him second authorship on my next scientific paper. Deseo studied ESP under Daryl Bem, and there no longer much demand for that specialization. He was promoted based on a few papers with Bem and his popular teaching manual, Advanced Descriptive Statistics: A Modular Approach. He is the perfect person to prepare a few bar graphs displaying Hybroidus williamsi's improved IQ since we incorporated a thermally-powered artificial brain into his centralized input-output system.

Deseo is particularly well-suited to administration because of his gregarious personality combined with refined emotional intelligence. He could join my lab as a consultant on Social AI. Engaging in a renowned research program will enhance his reputation and advance his career, and I will be certain to plant the idea that he might someday be Dean. Deseo will be obligated to me for the foreseeable future, and I have other plans to make him warm putty in my palm. Tit for Tat is Chess; a Race Card is Checkers.


4. Oedipal Failure

This is a difficult case. Black men always resist analysis. They never want to discuss their mothers. Dr. Williams seemed pleasant enough, but sexual harassment is a serious charge, and his job at the university is on the line. I had a month to make a diagnosis and develop a treatment plan, but the real challenge will be the recommendation since his future is in my hands. The professor seemed incapable of Free Association, preferring, instead, to lecture me about the similarities between humans and robots. It was a simple exercise to figure out that his research subject, Hybroidus williamsi, is an alter ego and that the metal simulacrum embodies the professor's ideal sexual object. A fifty-six year old, unmarried male fixated on an anatomically-correct male model is obviously manifesting homoerotic tendencies which Freud would attribute to Oedipal failure.

I was able to determine that, before deciding to major in Psychology, Williams planned to become a missionary in the AME Zion Church.. An only child who slept with his single mother until the age of fourteen, the professor was conceived by what his mother called “rape”, telling her son that children born to niggers owed a special debt to their Father in Heaven. Williams changed his mind about missionary work when his nocturnal emissions became more pleasurable than any of his activities when awake, and he reported that he craved sleep continuously except when eating fatty foods. Clearly, working with robots is a substitute for playing with dolls, a metaphor in either sex for domination and control, common fantasies among homosexuals with smothering mothers. Williams suffers from a Pygmalion Complex. After creating H. williamsi, the robot became the singular object of the professor's desire, as real to him as any human would be and infinitely more satisfying because less demanding.

I see pathology in many of my male patients who readily transfer their incestuous desires onto me, a black female psychoanalyst. Occasionally, I have experienced counter-transference, but the professor's skin color is too dark to arouse me sexually. I am not, on principle, opposed to having an affair with one of my patients, but it would have to be discreet. Like Williams, my profession is bound by the morals of white people that don't apply to us. I agree with Ta-Nehisi Coates that whites are responsible for blacks who rape and kill and fornicate. The races cannot be held to the same standards of behavior. If my patient is guilty of sexual indiscretions at all, his guilt lies in the realm of the unconscious, and he cannot be held accountable for that.

Williams' accuser should address the fixation of her psycho-sexual development at the Phallic Stage. Her identification with the professor was disrupted by her Superego, a trauma leading to Reaction Formation represented by the fantasy of sexual harassment. This unconscious defense mechanism characterizes white girls torn between desire and perfectionism. Clearly, Williams is the abused party, and the Dean is likely to see it my way.


5. E.O. Wilson Was Wrong

From the East-facing window of the men's residence hall, I can see the blues, yellows, and reds of the chapel's windows, reminding me that I was once a pious student on this campus. I received an excellent education at Livingstone, or, so my grades make it appear, and I was never lonely since Mama lived less than a mile away. My friend, Ham, had a 1969 Plymouth, and we drove to Mama's place every Sunday after church. She always sent us back to our rooms with neat mounds of fried drumsticks, lard biscuits, and pound cake, a ritual as predictable as Jesus' resurrection.

For my twentieth birthday, Mama gave me a laminated map of Liberia and a card that read, “To the future missionary from his proud Mother.” When I decided to attend graduate school instead, I gained her approval by arguing that any Christian boy could become a missionary, but few men could create a wholly separate form of life. Though my research is closer to manufacturing than to evolution, I have been invited back to Livingstone to make my case in public that Hybroidus williamsi is worthy of species status.

The American Journal of Primatology refused to reconsider my appeal to revise and resubmit my 2012 paper describing the new type, and one of the original reviewers, a former friend and colleague, has made a clown of me in the scientific community. The major objection to my requisition has been that H. williamsi cannot be identified by genetic code; but, funded generously by the Templeton Foundation, my lab is attempting to fuse the hybroid's steel skeleton with a unique sequence of haplotypes. We recently received an extension of our grant, and I am using this historically-black platform to present my most recent defense of the new taxon.

Based on ideas proven in the Humanities, I will describe the new Family, Genus, and Species in a public forum of my peers. If phylogeny conveys meaning, we cannot say its contents are fixed. If Biology is in flux, we cannot locate the discipline in Time and Space. If a species is a description published in a journal, we cannot claim it represents reality. I hold that Primatology is a meta-narrative dominating the anthropological conversation, all lines leading to humans. As Primatologists would have it, H. williamsi is “the Other”, non-white, and inorganic. My claim is that this hybroid is a virtual signifier, a type superior to man, created by the created, the meta-narrator's narrator. In post-human Biology, every taxon is hybroid, characterized by techno-plasticity. From Autonomidae, a new Consilience has emerged. E.O. Wilson was wrong. The Humanities will not reduce to Biology. The opposite is inevitable. The Linnaean system is a Social Construct, and H. williamsi its newest race.

Originally published in 34th Parallel (Fr), 2017

Sunday, May 26, 2019

Untitled, October 2018 (Haibun Grid Poem by Clara B. Jones)

Untitled, October 2018

for Harold Cohen (1928-2016)

1.
Deployment of bots is always a safe bet if deer season is longer than usual.AARON is a new race without a verified taxonomy.Every artist has his favorite platform as long as machines remain in power.
B2N5 draws maps for anyone holding a passport from Chad.I was followed by a robocam from work to the gym, but Hiromi said I shouldn't be concerned.Networks are ubiquitous, though they are not self-correcting.
Basquiat was a genius who always flew coach.MI ENTITY ES TU ENTITY.B2N5 has better credit than Evo Morales.
Hoverboards are more important than sensors but of less concern than Bauhaus.Materialism makes existence palatable though MMT is certain to fail.AARON gives comfort to seniors, and old people pay them well.
My synth is more friendly than my cat since my cat is in constant pain.Graphs describe Art like trees describe birds' nests.All machines are made to serve the interests of hedge funds.

2. 
Is a tragic hero's character flawed, or did he simply make a mistake? You never cared about theory though AARON links Nihilism to Dada and to the period before the war when Stein was the patron of Paris, convincing Pablo to paint her body slouched in a chair [royal-style] before the Cubist gave her another face. You bought Gombrich's classic to impress your friends though your robot doesn't imitate life since escaping ideas of the real brings you pleasure, and performance is the only Truth.

3.
Mi entity is tu entity. You understood that, didn't you when Hiromi asked you to join her in Newport where B2N5 was holding court for one week, singing the praises of Warhol? I was too tired to go. Michelle had jumped from Throgs Neck the week before, and Jerry called me about his episode though I wasn't inclined to help since I have my own problems. But, things are getting better. You understand me, don't you? Why should I feel guilty? Friends are so demanding and never tell you the whole story. I just wanted to sleep. Joining B2N5's set was not on my list of things to do that week, and you do nothing but complain about your job. You need an analyst, but Jerry will have his hands full for awhile.

4.
B2N5's art
Defamiliarizes
Humans and cyborgs.

What Is 'Experimental Art'" (Poem by Clara B. Jones)

What Is 'Experimental Art'?

for Marjorie Perloff

The one feature that all literary experiments share is their commitment to raising fundamental questions about the very nature and being of verbal art itself.” Joe Bray, Alison Gibbons, & Brian McHale

There exists no science of word creation.” Velimir KhlebnikovWe need to recognize that androids are part of the landscape.Defamiliaration    draws attention to the use of common language in such a way as to alter one's [sensation and] perception of an easily understandable object or concept.” Viktor Shklovsky
...extreme deviation from that which is familiar.Latoya is a genius without a plan, but they make good brownies and keep their clothes clean.Facebook® files algorithm patent to predict who you live with.” wsj.com
ROP-7 loves you, and you're doing a great job.Figues au Thym: 1 pound dried figs; 2 cups red wine; 2 or 3 small branches of thyme; 3 tablespoons honey. Richard OlneyHelen Frankenthaler saw the cliffs of Nova Scotia.
/poem erased/zaumGreen is the color of my map falseing an ecosystem collapsing
into the North Sea.
Number 1, 1950 (Lavender Mist). Jackson PollockAntipodal and anxious, three Negrobots pick pumpkins. Each knows the way.To delete your files, press this key.
The impact of global climate change could cause U.S. economic losses totaling hundreds of billions of dollars per year by the end of the century.Self-Portrait In A Convex Mirror. John AshberyI know it when I see it.
Paul Fry, “Russian Formalism”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11_oVlwfv2M&list=PLD00D35CBC75941BD&index=8&t=0s        
Agents walk like chickens purring like cats chasing goats —thirsty as hummingbirds hovering over flowers.Poetry should make reality strange. (after Wallace Stevens)

Lobster Sonnet (Poem by Clara B. Jones)

Lobster Sonnet*

1a. You are a poet who likes Lobster Thermidor.
1b. There are two types of people: gourmands and cat-lovers, but, thanks to Shemika, it's hard to trust chefs.

2. Stand up for your rights since your father is cruel and your mother has an I.Q. of 75.

3a. Wilderness maps could slow global warminghttps://www.wilderness.net/nwps/maps
3b. Furthermore, negroes pair caviar and eel.

4. You were a revolutionary in Chad, but now you are living the American dream.

5a. What is the difference between human and Afrobot?
5b. Afrobots are simulacra.
5c. Is Poetry a simulacrum of life?

6. Michelle left Barak and ran off with a Cyborg.

7a. Mexicans like tacos but would rather eat herring.
7b. Yes, but you are a negro who never eats okra.

8a. Women smoke menthols and spray mint perfume.
8b. On the other hand, they want tech jobs.

9a. Shemika traded a litre of Merlot for a bag of chips.
9b. Her cat was hungry.

10a. Shemika is a vegan.
10b. Everything in moderation.
10c. ...split peas, onion, natural flavors, starch, potato, carrot, yeast extracts, sea salt, garlic, parsley, lemon peel, spices, citric acid [made in a facility that uses peanuts and other food allergens]...

11a. Are you obsessive-compulsive?
11b. No. My life is chaotic. “Chance favors the prepared mind,”¹ but mine is in disarray.

12. Negroes pair eel and Merlot.



13a. I have a degree in cybersecurity but would rather earn a living as a line cook.
13b. What is holding you back?
13c. I'm allergic to the smell of olive oil, and my mother texts me constantly.
13d. Cybersecurity pays well, and you could move to Boston.
13e. I am sensitive to cold air and am not Catholic.
13f. You are a negro and might like Atlanta.
13g. I am looking for a different demographic.
13h. You should consider Miami.
13i. Gay men are moving to Osaka.

14. C'est ca.

*Published August 2018 in Otoliths (AU)