Telling Lives - Hawai`i Council for the Humanities
Transcription
Telling Lives - Hawai`i Council for the Humanities
Hawai‘i Council for the Humanities Pavilion 8th Annual Hawai‘i Book and Music Festival May 18-19, 2013 Telling Lives: The Art and Practice of Biography and Memoir The Unfinished Work of Telling Lives Telling Lives Kiss & Tell: The Naked Truth Tell Me Your Story: Young Lives Hawai‘i’s Story, and Mine Breaking Records: Athletes’ Lives Instant Lives: Deadline Biography Living Memory: Honoring the Past Life Quests: Memoirs and Beyond Lives Online: Truth and Truthiness Creative Witness: Docupoetry One Place, Different Voices True Lies: Lost In Translation Perfect Pitch: Musical Lives Truth in Montage: Documentary Lives Why Write Lives: Mission and Bias Program sponsored by The Unfinished Work of Telling Lives Robert Buss Executive Director, Hawai‘i Council for the Humanities “I can think back and tell you much more of war and horse-stealing. But when the buffalo went away the hearts of my people fell to the ground, and they could not lift them up again. After this nothing happened. There was little singing anywhere. Besides,” he added sorrowfully, “you know that part of my life as well as I do. You saw what happened to us when the buffalo went away.” (Chief Plenty Coups, 1849-1932) Shortly before he died, Plenty Coups, the last great chief of the Crow nation, reached out across the “clash of civilizations” and told his story to a white man, a story retold in Jonathan Lear’s book Radical Hope: Ethics in the Face of Cultural Devastation. Lear concludes the first chapter of his study by saying: “Plenty Coups was a witness to the collapse of the Crow’s future: he witnessed a time in which ‘nothing happened’…. There is reason to believe that Plenty Coups told his story to preserve it; and he did so in the hope of a future in which things—Crow things—might start to happen again.” No one, truth be told, either tells a life-story without some sense of why it matters to weave that tale, or reads or listens to such a story, if it is at all well told, without being transformed by its meaning to our own time and place. One way of looking at the humanities is as just such a bridge to the past and link to our future through the stories that we tell about our communities, our worlds, and ourselves. It’s almost as if we no longer need to ask for whom the bell tolls—but rather look upon the toll that has been taken in the various responses to its fearful or joyful or annoying ringing. The most intimate stories are those that set forth a biography, autobiography, memoir, oral history, or life-story. For it is lived and recalled experience that defines human existence; the being-alive part we share with the many beings of our world. In traditional Hawaiian thinking, a human being has both ha (breath) and aloha (of which breath is just a part) and both connote relationships rather than isolation. Probably this is true of other forms of life as well, but we don’t have their stories to know. Still, if we walk the earth in memory of our steps, we also walk in constant forgetting. Nothing happens without the potential of our making it meaningful. And likely nothing happens just as we recall it. And so no life can ever be completed in just one telling—that is, if it’s a life we wish to remember at all. We engage the stories of lives that inspire us, that serve as moral examples or as cautionary tales, that awaken our imaginations and possibilities, by revealing how others before us have lived and the lessons their lives draw out for us. And from these we learn. Umberto Eco reminds us “Intolerance for what is different or unknown is as natural in children as their instinct to possess all they desire. Children are educated gradually to tolerance, just as they are taught to respect the property of others and, even before that, to control their sphincters.” It is a basic human function to learn from the others who have lived before us and around us. And with that, “the world is beautiful and we are part of it. That’s all. Our work is not to improve, it is to participate” (Barry Lopez, Resistance). The “unfinished work” of the humanities, whether in civil rights, tolerance, critical thinking, or democracy itself is an ongoing mission. The expression was coined or at least masterfully used by Abraham Lincoln, during our nation’s greatest trial, the legacy of which is still with us, in his famous Gettysburg Address: The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced… that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom – and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. Top Left: Hiram Bingham (1789-1869), missionary leader. [Courtesy Mission Children’s Society] Bob Buss has been executive director of the Hawaiʻi Council for the Humanities, an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities, since 2004, and before that was its program officer for twenty years. He works with local community and cultural centers, museums, archives, schools, and libraries to facilitate public humanities programs, and was the founding coordinator for Hawaiʻi History Day in 1990. His academic interests include Confucianism and Buddhism, ethics, and philosophy of art. 2 Left: King David Kalākaua (1836-1891). [Courtesy Bishop Museum] Below: Queen Lili‘uokalani (1838-1917). [Elias Shura photo, courtesy Bishop Museum] Left: Prince Leleiohoku (1854-1877), who composed songs that are still popular today. In accordance with the main themes of TELLING LIVES, we selected a dozen iconic portraits of prominent Hawaiian artists, from the royal composers to a regal composer and singer, to an important early missionary, a professional writer, a Swedish actor playing a Chinese detective, an intense pioneering slack-key musician, a Hawaiian tourist entertainer, an early 20th -century kumu hula, two celebrated modern kumu hula who are also international music celebrities, a sovereignty activist, and the heir to a fabled line of chanters and kumu hula. Each image spins a specific story — the way they are intended to be remembered by their portrayers, or by themselves. 3 Telling Lives Craig Howes Principal Scholar, Hawai‘i Council for the Humanities For at least twenty years now, various reviewers and scholars have been declaring—often unhappily—that this is the age of memoir. Whether through “reality” TV, biopics, entertainment tabloids or blogs, or probing autobiographies by celebrities like the sixteen-year-old Justin Bieber, stories of real peoples’ lives certainly seem to be a public favorite. There is a long tradition of representing lives—sometimes in stone or paint, most often though words, and most recently through film and pixels. Though what many have come to call life writing takes many forms—confession, testimonio, genealogy, gospels, most kinds of history—ultimately the question is whether you are telling someone else’s life (biography), or your own (autobiography, memoir). Of course, these categories overlap. When you begin writing about someone else in a memoir, you’re writing biography, and the choice of a biographical subject can often tell us a great deal about the biographer. But perhaps the most important question is not what kind of life writing is going on, but why it is going on at all. Though their topics and their participants are diverse, the panels for Telling Lives: The Art and Practice of Biography & Memoir, the Hawaiʻi Council for the Humanities’ contribution to this year’s Hawaiʻi Book and Music Festival, all deal with the joys, responsibilities, and dangers of writing lives. The joy can come from recognizing the achievements of others, or ourselves. Encouraging children to learn the stories of their families and communities is the driving force behind Hiki Nō, the PBS Hawaii television series that Susan Yim tells us about. In his essay on sports biographies and autobiographies, Michael Tsai explains how and why the lives of athletes have always fascinated us, and Chris Vandercook notes how learning something about a musician’s life can make our appreciation of the music stronger and more nuanced. An interview is often a miniature form of life writing, since one person is asking others about themselves, and Beth-Ann Kozlovich explains that radio is still a popular medium in part because it offers us insights into lives. And when Don Wallace describes putting together a life story out of materials assembled by others, he also records a feeling common to life writers and their readers—the joy of recognizing the accomplishments and inspiring experiences of others like ourselves. But as other essayists note, preserving the lives of others is also our responsibility. George Tanabe warns that the lives, and the chance for preserving the life stories, of Hawaiʻi’s famous Japanese-American World War II veterans are both coming to an end. In her essay on archives, Sydney Iaukea claims that because her own story is inseparable from her ancestors, she continues their lives not only by living, but by accepting her kuleana to remember and record their lives as well. Susan M. Schultz talks about how even poetry, often considered the most personal form of writing, takes on the challenge of commemorating the lives of those who do not, or cannot, leave their own account. In fact, those who write biographies, autobiographies, and histories are often driven by a sense of responsibility to a belief, an agenda, or a cause, as Mark Panek points out in his essay on why people choose to write lives. And yet, recognizing the joy that comes with telling lives, and accepting our need to do so, do not protect writers from challenges, mistakes, or controversy. As David Ulrich observes, narcissism and self-promotion can often seem to dominate memoir culture: “You had a difficult childhood. Write a memoir. You traveled to interesting places. Write a memoir. You need therapy. Write a memoir.” Bob Green’s essay focuses on the problems and barriers that confront people wanting to move life stories from one artistic form to another. My own brief essay on life writing in Hawaiʻi looks at how people decide, and differ over, what life stories they can tell, while John Zuern notes that online, you often can’t tell if what you’re reading—or writing!—is autobiography or fiction. And as Mark Panek himself has discovered, you can never know what part of your biography or autobiography will anger or hurt your sources or subjects. Telling Lives: The Art and Practice of Biography & Memoir presents scores of panelists working on the front lines of life writing who will relate and debate their own personal experiences as authors, journalists, and historians. We hope you will share their joy, accept with them our responsibilities as narrating animals, and be vigilant about the many dangers that come with telling your truth. Craig Howes, Principal Scholar for Telling Lives, has been Director of the Center for Biographical Research at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa since 1997, Editor and Co-Editor of the journal Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly since 1994, and a faculty member in the Department of English since 1980. The co-producer and principal scholar for the television documentary series Biography Hawai‘i, he has also been active in Hawai‘iʼs arts and humanities communities. A past President of the Hawai‘i Literary Arts Council and a former board member of Kumu Kahua Theatre, he currently serves as President of Monkey Waterfall Dance Theatre Company and as a member of the board for the Hawaiian Historical Society. 4 Kiss & Tell: The Naked Truth Mark Panek One sure sign that you’ve written a powerful book is that everyone reads it from the index, combing the back pages to check out how far you went in naming names and telling the truth. That’s how I read Land and Power in Hawai‘i. It’s probably how everybody read Broken Trust. Inevitably, when I hand someone a copy of Big Happiness they flip right to the back, looking to confirm if all the players prominently displayed on the coconut wireless have finally made it into print. For those who write about real events, this fascination is a minefield packed with one bomb after the next, and legal concerns about libel and defamation are only the beginning. What if your story involves “family stuff,” for instance, or if it becomes important to reveal that somebody has been fighting an addiction problem, or has done time in prison? What if the only way to make your point is to reveal that a real person has…flaws? Are you going to damage that person’s reputation, even if what you say is true? Are you going to cause harm? Are they going to come looking for you? Anybody who has written about real people will tell you that at some point, they certainly will come looking for you—sometimes after you’ve shared with them the pages in which they will appear. And once the toothpaste is out of the tube, the offended party will almost never be Randall Roth’s Lokelani Lindsay or George Cooper’s Ariyoshi. More likely it will be something like this: the daughter of the subject of one of the most loving portraits ever filmed for the PBS Biography Hawai‘i series will walk out in protest at its public first-screening because the ending didn’t match up with what she was sure could be the only ending to such a story. Or a phone call will come from a good friend whose previouslyignored accomplishments you have highlighted in two different books, except he’s irate because he did not see the period between one sentence describing him, and a succeeding one contrasting him with someone who has heroically beaten a drug addiction. Or a phone call will come from a man whose wife came across his name in…the index…and then went excavating to find it inside, only to learn for the first time that he had once shot somebody. This last bomb was stepped on by former Governor Ben Cayetano, who described the encounter during an HBMF panel discussion on the very subject of the complexities of memoir writing. If any book has ever been read from the index, it’s Ben, where the famously frank Cayetano pulls no punches and absolutely names names. At the 2010 festival that saw him win Book of the Year, though, he regretted having included just one of these names, even though the events he recounted were already part of the public record. “He had put it behind him,” Cayetano says, of the man with the nowshocked wife. “I could have gotten away without that story in the flow of the book even though it was true.” But as for people such as former House Speaker Henry Peters, who is depicted at various points threatening to throw somebody off the Capitol’s fourth-floor balcony, punching Ollie Lunasco, trashing Mits Uechi’s office, etc., Cayetano simply says, “I told the truth about those people.” The phone calls never came from the players at the Lege. Or from former trustee Gerard Jervis, whose story of getting caught in a hotel lobby bathroom having sex with a married Bishop Estate employee (Cayetano tactfully refuses to name this person) is also revisited (pointedly, to make a point). “I’m sure he wasn’t happy,” Cayetano says of Jervis, “but what I wrote was factual.” It may be that as “public figures” Jervis and Peters and others are held to different standards in a defamation suit, or that since the law requires a defamed individual to show damages, someone whose reputation is already “damaged” has no case. Or it may be that, thanks to the memoir’s “My Story” nature, they knew everyone would understand the depictions as Cayetano’s alone. That is, unlike the woman who walked out on Biography Hawai‘i’s loving tribute to her own mother, they understood the dynamics of the car accident witnessed by ten people who produce ten different versions of what happened, that writing about true stories is subjective, and that even when you start from the index, it should be read as such. Mark Panek is a product of the UH Mānoa’s Center for Biographical Research. His biography of Chad Rowan (Gaijin Yokozuna) explores the cultural moves Hawai‘i’s sumotori had to make for success in Japan’s national sport. His life of Waikāne’s Percy Kipapa (Big Happiness) traces the roots of Hawai‘i’s crystal meth epidemic to the pressures of colonization and development, and won the 2012 Ka Palapala award for Excellence in Nonfiction. His new novel (Hawai‘i) explores the aftermath of Hawai‘i’s post-statehood surrender to outside investment. Panek, Associate Professor and Chair of the University of Hawai‘i at Hilo’s English Department, has been honored with a 2012 Elliot Cades Award for Literature. Stuart H. Coleman, Moderator, is the award-winning author of Eddie Would Go and Fierce Heart. Coleman has published more than fifteen articles in numerous publications, including Menʼs Journal, Salon.com, Sierra Magazine, The Washington Post, Honolulu, Hawaii Magazine, and the Honolulu Weekly. Coleman has won the Eliot Cades Award for Literature, the Hawaii Book Publisher Associationʼs Excellence in Non-Fiction Award and The Yemassee Award for Best Poetry. He has an MFA in Creative Writing from American University. He has taught at Punahou School, ʻIolani School, the University of Hawaiʻi-Mānoa and the East-West Center, and he currently works as the Hawaiʻi Coordinator of the Surfrider Foundation. 5 Tell Me Your Story: Young Lives Susan Yim We can each tell our own different stories… — HIKI NŌ student from Ni‘ihau Telling their own stories is exactly what students from elementary, middle and high schools across the islands have done for more than two years on PBS Hawaii. Each week, students from public, charter and private schools tell stories about their families, friends or neighbors on HIKI NŌ, a prime-time weekly show that airs on PBS Hawaii. More than 400 stories have been broadcast since HIKI NŌ went on the air in February 2011. A huge majority of the stories are told in English. However, the students at Ke Kula Niʻihau O Kekaha, a charter school on Kauai attended by youth from Niʻihau, tell their stories in Niʻihau dialect. Viewers follow by reading English subtitles. What have their stories been about? A paniolo, a Native Hawaiian horse whisperer, who learned to train horses from his father on Niʻihau. An entertainer who returns to prepare students for a music festival. A young widow who’s steering her children to fulfill their father’s dream of speaking the Niʻihau dialect and by doing so keeping the language of that island alive. These are just the stories from Niʻihau students. Across the islands, students are telling stories that have made me aware that today’s youth care deeply about issues, especially the environment and even social justice. But perhaps the most powerful stories they tell—the stories that stay with the viewer long after the television is turned off—are those that take us into the personal lives of these young storytellers. A sixth-grader struggles with what she believes is a less than perfect “body image.” Although an outstanding student and athlete, with a circle of friends, she believes she isn’t beautiful because she doesn’t look like “a Disney princess.” A high school freshman, who chose to move from Japan to Hawaiʻi so he can attend school in a place “where he can think independently,” wins over his classmates who initially think this newcomer with different ways is “strange.” And then there is the story I call, “Crystal’s Story.” A year after this story aired on public television, viewers still bring it up when they talk about HIKI NŌ. A national gathering of public television broadcasters in Washington, D.C. applauded the story when it was shown at a conference, where HIKI NŌ won a prestigious broadcast award. Crystal, a 13-year-old student who strives to be “in control,” tells us in a clear voice, absent any self-pity, how she’s coping with her mother’s terminal illness and last days of life. She lets us into her world and at the end of the story, it isn’t easy to leave Crystal’s world behind. You wonder, months later, how she’s doing. Think back to your youth. To those stories you, perhaps, wanted to tell. Why didn’t you tell those stories, write them down and in the process find your “voice”? How many times have adults—who on learning I’d been a newspaper reporter—told me, “I don’t know how to write.” Yet every day they’re telling friends, co-workers and family members stories about their kids, their colleagues, their triumphs and their struggles. To be human is to live a life of stories connected by time. We are all capable of being storytellers. We just need the confidence to tell our stories. With HIKI NŌ, students who have found media to be an exciting tool for learning and expressing themselves use video to tell their stories. Yet, to produce that video—to tell their story with a camera—they must be able to write a script. They have to find the words as well as the images. How do we teach young people to tell these stories? The answer isn’t complicated. At HIKI NŌ, when teachers discuss the stories their students brainstorm and ask us how to select one, we ask: “Which story are your students most passionate about?” It’s usually a story that is about one of them—a classmate, a teacher, a family member, a neighbor—someone they know. For so many of the students we work with—as with a multitude of storytellers over the centuries—they don’t have to look far. That initial story—which introduces the storyteller of any age to his or her “voice”—is close to home and is usually their own. Susan Yim is the Managing Editor for HIKI NŌ, a weekly program on PBS Hawaii featuring stories conceived and produced by students in public, charter and private schools in Hawaiʻi. She was a feature writer and editor at the Honolulu Star-Bulletin and The Honolulu Advertiser. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times and International Herald-Tribune; and Islands, Honolulu and Spirit of Aloha magazines. She is the author of John Young: The Sketchbooks (1998) and editor of We Go Eat: A Mixed Plate From Hawaiʻiʼs Food Culture (2008) and We Go Jam: Celebrating Our Music, Our Soundscape, Our Hawaiʻi (2012). 6 Hawai‘i’s Story, and Mine Sydney Iaukea As we measure present circumstances with past realities, noticing where the information rubs up against knowing the self is the gift of the archive. Research offers a view of the self in the present via the resurrected information obtained from a collective, and/or personal, past. Yi-Fu Tuan says that past reenactment is ended when it lives in the present, and historians reconstruct culture once thought lost, so that we are able to recall and learn from our own yesterdays. Research is the tool to uncovering narratives that can affect the personal on multiple levels and in various ways. Here the personal and political are recognized as intertwined, as each informs and alerts the other. This distance closes so that whatever information the researcher uncovers—emotional, serious, insightful, intriguing—tells us as much about our relationships in the present as it does to describe the descriptive constructs of yesterday. This emotional archive, both emotional and archival, ensures that “the record is always being made” (Verne Harris) based on our interpretations and relationships to what is being researched—in essence, an uncovering of the past alongside an unveiling of the present. Much of my research is directly connected to my genealogy. My great great grandfather, Curtis Piehu Iaukea, left his diary notes, chapters, letters, and other official documents available for the discovery. I realized that because he is my kupuna, there is no distance. This moʻolelo is my DNA speaking to me and asking that I listen. In the process of engaging his words, some of the gaps of knowing self and moʻokūʻauhau were filled in and clarified. The intimacy with the material is unavoidable, and articulating this closeness in the work grounds the information in phenomenological ways to the lived experience of the author(s)—then and now. Native researchers have an intimacy to place when researching that place. The unveiling of historical truths demands a closeness with the material that is not subject/object generated because what is being studied is also being lived and experienced from a near distance. For example, Hawaiians are part of a larger cosmology that extends beyond self. All are interconnected and so information about any one part aids in the understanding of the collective whole. With this in mind, I wrote about sharing my story alongside that of my kupuna: I also at various times include my own moʻolelo, because to a native researcher, history and land here are personal. As Hawaiians, our identity and sense of knowing come directly from relating to ka ʻāina and ke kai. A hundred years ago and today, we are connected to land and deeply affected by its loss, because ka ʻāina is our older sibling, part of our genealogical makeup, and the entity that connects us to all that is—including nā akua, aliʻi, and one another. Since we cannot be separated from this entity, this ʻāina, in our very being, we experience an acute sense of loss of ourselves when we are separated from this entity in our day-to-day lives. To recognize the loss of land as the loss of self is an enormous and very personal endeavor, one that makes historical occurrences very real. But even taking this personal state of research into account, research in general asks that we soften and listen because the product that is the research itself affects self-understanding—almost regardless of the topic. The archive itself contains a “temporal plasticity” and we as researchers act as the plastic subject—malleable by the information presented. Although the information is collected and stored at the archive, it is still open to and reliant on our readings and interpretations, and the manner in which information is presented also shapes the discourse. Michael Shapiro writes that “although aspects of the past shape the archive, the very form of its making, the technologies of record keeping, in turn reshape the way the past is understood.” Research, therefore, is a dynamic project of interpreting the past by the “plastic subject” or “one who undergoes transformation while striving to reshape his world’s understanding.” In effect, the historical record is always up for interpretation and nuanced understandings. And this relationship is always presented in the work—where the personal is either recognized and explained or veiled and hidden. Herein, there is no escape from the personal impacts of research. Sydney Lehua Iaukea is from the island of Maui and is a dedicated instructor, community member, and ocean person. Sydney has a Ph.D. in Political Science and specializes in Hawai‘i Politics. She is currently the Hawaiian Studies Program Manager for the Department of Education. Her academic work intersects with her personal life because she researches and writes about her great great grandfather, Curtis Piehu Iaukea, the Hawaiian Kingdom representative on whom her book The Queen and I is based. Through her ancestorʼs manuscripts and other primary documents, Sydney discovers and shares a silenced history in Hawai‘i from the early 1900s, and connects this account to todayʼs contemporary land and property issues in Hawai‘i through personal narrative. 7 Breaking Records: Athletes’ Lives Michael Tsai It may be fairly argued that sports and literature serve many of the same purposes. Both exist, ostensibly, for the entertainment of their boisterous crowds and quiet readerships, yet both also have also acted as powerful media for instruction, instigation, even social reform. Both are reflective of and reactive to the beliefs, values and aspirations of their times yet also, in their finest moments, are transcendent over time, place and every other context beyond the field or the page. And in exciting our passions, loyalties and imaginations, both challenge us to reflect on who we are and why we believe what we believe. The intersections of literature and sport then are fertile ground for exploring the human condition. Driven by internal contradiction, by rising and falling “dramatic tension,” literature is a particularly apt vehicle for examining the nature of sport, which is defined in near-equal measures by its traditional utility in indoctrinating young men in the values and skills of war and by its more innocent roots in expressive, non-purposeful play, by the strict codification of its rules and standards and by the shocking, unaccountable intrusions of the miraculous into its unfolding narratives. Sports literature is in essence a literature concerned with the qualities of the heroic. In his book Dreaming of Heroes: American Sports Fiction 1868-1980, Michael Oriard argues that “sports exists, in a sense, to create heroes.” It follows then that sports literature exists in part to respond to the ways in which sports’ exemplars of character, performance and morality — from mythological champions like the Celtic warrior Cu Chulanin or the Sumerian king Gilgamesh, to pulp heroes like Gilbert Patten’s Frank Merriwell or Owen Johnson’s Dink Stover, to real-life compensatory heroes like Jack Johnson, Hank Greenberg, Jackie Robinson, or Muhammad Ali—reflect who we are and who we want to be. The literary approaches applied to sports vary broadly, their forms and conventions sometimes mimicking the forms and conventions of the sports themselves. While Patten and Johnson championed Luther Halsey Gulick’s ideas on “muscular Christianity,” G. Stanley Hall’s evolutionary theory of play and Theodore Roosevelt’s idea of the strenuous life to generations of young American boys, in pulp magazines and young adult books, writers like sports columnist and shortstory writer Ring Lardner (You Know Me Al) and later novelist Bernard Malamud (The Natural) challenged the hero-making project with wry humor and damning insight. Grantland Rice brought literary flair to the daily business of sports reporting, laying early groundwork for the masterful New Journalism examinations of sport undertaken by writers like Tom Wolfe (“The Last American Hero”) and Norman Mailer (The Fight). Meanwhile, experimental writers like Robert Coover have used the conventions of sports narrative as launching points for daring re-imaginations of form and content. Indeed many of the most prominent novelists, poets, journalists and essayists of the last century—Phillip Roth, Joyce Carol Oates, Don DeLillo among them—have found literary inspiration on the pitch, between the lines or within the squared circle. Nowhere within sports literature is the pool of authorial talent so diverse as in its life writing sub-genres, where a cursory review of notable contributors might include Red Smith, Gay Talese, George Will, Buzz Bissinger, Dennis Rodman, Jackie Robinson, Jose Canseco, George Plimpton, Jack Kerouac and John Krakauer. Whether through telling autobiography like Billie Jean by Billie Jean King, illusion-shattering memoir like Jim Bouton’s Ball Four, humanizing biography like Jane Leavy’s The Last Boy: Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood, or long-form journalistic profiles like Gary Smith’s classic Sports Illustrated article on dying basketball coach Jim Valvano, “As Time Runs Out,” life writing in sports addresses perhaps the greatest desire of sports fans—to understand from within the mind of the athlete the hidden life of the locker room, the invisible movements of the game and the spectacular moments that they produce. Michael Tsai is a reporter and columnist for the Honolulu Star-Advertiser and an instructor of English at Kapiʻolani Community College. Prior to joining the Star-Advertiser in 2010, he worked for the Honolulu Advertiser for more than 15 years covering local news, sports, and features. As a graduate student at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, he has studied creative writing, sports literature, and contemporary American short fiction, and he is a past recipient of the Grace K. Abernethy Creative Writing Scholarship and the Myrtle Clark Award with Distinction. His current project is an institutional biography of the Honolulu Marathon. 8 Instant Lives: Deadline Biography Beth-Ann Kozlovich There is one truth to remember in an interview: Nothing about anyone’s life story is completely objective. That can be tough to reconcile, especially when we’re after the facts and someone is spilling over with the whats, whos, wheres, whys and hows. Often that exercise is not nearly so illuminating as when the storytelling begins to overtake the litany of facts. In the storytelling, people reveal themselves and that’s when things get interesting. It sounds simple: what makes us intriguing is our stories. We never seem to outgrow the need for them or to share something of ourselves, to get out of ourselves, to pass on a little context, find out how simpatico or incompatible some of us really are, or just plain learn something. People are their stories and the concept has long been part of our lexicon. You might have even said it yourself, “So what’s his story?” Perhaps it’s the mystery contained in the human voice with all the nuances of meaning and shades of emotional color that can betray the speaker’s brain—or even yours. Maybe too, it’s what some scientists now take as fact that we are hardwired to tell and listen to stories. And it’s through story we learn best, because we are, to borrow Jonathan Gottschall’s book title, The Storytelling Animal. A good yarn, including nonfictional narratives, can mesmerize us. Voice to ear, stories have a unique power to move us, influence us, and possibly change our perspectives. That’s part of the argument why terrestrial radio not only failed to die with the advent of television, it actually grew in listenership. When the same dire fate was predicted because of satellite radio and the smart technology many of us pack in our pockets, purses and bags, radio audiences continued to grow. According to the media research firm Arbitron Inc. in the March 2013 RADAR® 116 National Radio Listening Report, radio’s audience added more than 1.6 million weekly listeners over the year and reaches 242.8 million listeners each week. In case you’re already shaking your head and assigning the gain to online listening, consider this: the same report pegs weekly listening via AM/FM/HD streaming at a little more than 5.4 million people age 12 and older, of which 3.5 million are in the 18-49 market. Screens are nice, but good old-fashioned radio has a lot of mileage yet. However we hear it, the truth is often a moving target and age does matter. (And I can hear you shouting hooray from wherever you’re reading this.) Whatever side of the triangle you’re on, interviewer, subject or listener, what you understand at 30 often has a different meaning at 40 or 60. Of course at 23, few of us really want to admit that we don’t absolutely understand how the world works. At some point, though, if we’re lucky, we may grow to understand that aging changes context and reframes the past—for good or ill. In the storytelling business, that often means the story told today may be quite different from the story of next year or a decade ago, even (and sometimes, especially) from the same person. If there is any capital “T” truth, it may be that the only way to begin to understand life—and many of the people also trying to sort it out—is to keep living and keep asking questions. When we invite someone to talk about her life or point of view, it’s helpful to remember the reality du jour is frequently fuzzy: one person’s purple really is another person’s periwinkle. An interview, or for that matter any conversation, is a dance on a shifting carpet, and its success often boils down to two things: listening well and poking at assumptions, especially the ones inside our heads. Those are sizable challenges, especially for people more concerned with besting the interviewer, being right, focusing on what they’ll say next, or for those with a prepared agenda, making sure to get all those bullet points worked into the answer, regardless of the question. (If the End of Conversation ever comes, it will be the last line on a list of talking points.) In time, we all become stories and what gets through all the filters, whether we like it or not, is still subject to interpretation...which means that very likely, there will be another conversation, more information, and lucky for us, more stories. As long as we keep at it, and keep the myth of objectivity in its place, there is hope. Beth-Ann Kozlovich is Hawaii Public Radioʼs Talk Shows Executive Producer and oversees HPRʼs five locally-produced talk shows. She created and co-hosts HPR2ʼs weekday morning show, The Conversation, launched in 2011. In 1999, she created and began moderating Town Square, HPRʼs long-running live public affairs forum. A woman with lives on radio and in the business of nonprofits, she was also the Hawaiʻi anchor of NPRʼs Morning Edition. Her attraction to public radio began when it was the only car-accessible, parent-approved station . . . so all of this really is her motherʼs fault. When her three sons contribute to public radio, Beth-Ann will be just as happy to take the blame. 9 Living Memory: Honoring the Past George Tanabe Why do we let so many slip away undocumented, as if biography and memoir, based in the minutiae of ordinary lives, do not rank high enough in the literature of war? By the strange habit of suddenly finding value in people only when they are leaving us, we wait until it is too late. Does appreciation have to arise from absence? It is not just our taking people for granted that makes us complacent, but the individual Nisei veteran himself, bred in his own cultural and military training of placing group before self, recoils at the suggestion of being the central subject of a story. A publisher might agree. Does the life of Pvt. Nisei Soldier have literary weight enough for a full biography? Perhaps not, and this is where memoirs come in. Most of what we have are short, like those in Japanese Eyes, American Heart. They provide invaluable glimpses into global war from the sometimes frightening specifics of one man’s experience. They point out how experience is made up of deliberate decisions mixed with good and bad luck. But memoirs are limited by memory. Biographers can tell a bigger story, and as the number of subjects decline, we should not rule out biographies of Pvt. Nisei Soldier. Through the magic of good writing, a skilled biographer can throw the mundane details of his life against one of the most cataclysmic events in history, and make some sparks fly. After all, two billion people waged war with and against each other, and he, one of the remaining few, was there. Nearly 2 billion people worldwide served in military capacities during the Second World War (1941-1945). Accounts of the war necessarily tell of vast movements of armies and navies, and it is impossible to narrate every story of this global, cataclysmic event that embroiled over 61 countries. The scale of the war was staggering, and it is no wonder that bookstores and television still offer new books and movies, adding to the endless efforts to capture a war gone forever except in reclaimed words and images. Of the 16 million Americans who served in the military during the war, over 5,000 were of Japanese ancestry, most of them from Hawaiʻi. We have heard many times over the story of the Nisei (second generation) soldiers who fought in Europe as the 100th Battalion (“Remember Pearl Harbor”) and the 442nd Infantry Regiment (“Go For Broke”), and in the Pacific as interpreters. The Nisei soldiers racked up an incredible record, and the 100/442 remain the most decorated units in the U.S. Army to this day. They have become the stuff of legend, and their story line is repeated often. After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, Nisei patriotism was questioned, as if Japanese in America were no different from the enemy in Japan, but they proved themselves as GIs in battle: Cassino, Anzio, Rome, Bruyeres, Biffontaine, the rescue of the Lost Battalion. No one would question their loyalty again, and the effects of their blood and sacrifice benefitted the community, enabling others to exploit American opportunities for successful careers and lives. The advantage of a fixed story lies in its capacity for hardening memory so that it will not be forgotten. The Nisei soldiers’ story will be told and retold long into the future, preserved in those books and movies. This hardening, however, gives the illusion of the story having been told in its entirety, that fixing it finishes the group narrative of the battalion and regiment. The military, by nature of its need to function as large groups, effaces individuals, turning their identities into ranks. A sergeant leading even as small a group as a squad is equally replaceable by another sergeant, no matter who the individual might be. And yet we all know, all too obviously, that a soldier is a person, but in the writing of military literature, very few persons of the lower ranks get to have their stories told. In part there are just too many of them, 2 billion worldwide, 16 million Americans, over 5,000 Nisei men. The most striking statistic in our own time, however, is how fast those masses of men are dwindling down to a handful of individuals, all of whom are in their 80s and 90s. The story of the 100th and the 442nd will continue to be told, but we are facing our last chance to capture the stories of remaining individuals, and that can only be done through biography and memoir. George Tanabe is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Religion at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. His academic specialty is the study of the religions of Japan, and his books include Myōe the Dreamkeeper (Harvard UP), Religions of Japan in Practice (Princeton UP) and Practically Religious: Worldly Benefits and the Common Religion of Japan (with Ian Reader, U of Hawai‘i P). With his wife Willa, he has written a guidebook to Japanese Buddhist temples in Hawai‘i, which was published by the UH Press in October, 2012. Brian Niiya, Moderator, is the content director for Densho: The Japanese American Legacy Project and editor of the Densho Encyclopedia, a new encyclopedia on the Japanese American World War II incarceration experience. A public historian who has previously held senior managerial positions for the Japanese American National Museum and the Japanese Cultural Center of Hawaiʼi, he has produced numerous interpretive works in print, exhibition, video, and online media. 10 Don Blanding (1894-1957), artist, writer, and poet. [Courtesy DeSoto Brown Collection] Gabby Pahinui (1921-1980), slack-key master. [Courtesy Berger Archive] Warner Oland (1879-1938), Swedish actor, played the legendary fictional Honolulu detective Charlie Chan in 16 movies in the 1930s. [Courtesy DeSoto Brown Collection] 11 Life Quests: Memoirs and Beyond David Ulrich What gives resonant meaning to art and writing? The question leads to a paradox. The greatest art, the most memorable writing, is infused with deeply felt personal experience and highly unique observations. Yet it points beyond the self to the human condition. When teaching a class, Maya Angelou would write on the blackboard for diverse students to deeply consider: “I am a human being. Nothing human is alien to me.” Here, I must question the trend that has spawned a spate of published memoirs and a host of idiosyncratic, personal styles of art. Partially due to the ease of digital creation tools, we can now find a bewildering profusion of memoirs and a mind-numbing plethora of photographs that grace the web and social media. In this confessional culture of books and images, part of me feels: who cares? You had a difficult childhood. Write a memoir. You traveled to interesting places. Write a memoir. You need therapy. Write a memoir. Or, you see something personally memorable. Take an Instagram. And instantly make it look like a nostalgic memory from a time you never actually knew. It’s just too much about self. By contrast, photography and much good writing excels in detailed observations of the outer world. To be sure, we use our self as an instrument of discovery—our senses, feelings, minds—but not as the center around which all things revolve. At least hopefully not. There is no Zen riddle here. The world exists outside ourselves. A big, beautiful, tragic, sad radiant world. To argue the other side, we also exist. Our inner worlds—our potential and our range of experiences—are at least as wide and deep as the outer world. We are microcosms of the macrocosm. This too demands exploration and expression. The unexamined life goes nowhere. In memoir writing, as in art, it is a question of inclusion and balance, leaving nothing out, neither inner nor outer, but integrating the two. It’s not about me; it’s about what I have discovered and learned and gained understanding of through the blood of my efforts. At this particular stage in my life, I have just completed the first draft of a memoir essay, called Longing for Light, about vision and awareness. I think I may have something to offer, but do not want to contribute to the “bonfire of vanities” that plague highly personal contemporary expression. I have struggled for thirty years to understand a singular, life-altering experience. Can I now finally speak about what I have come to understand about seeing from losing my right dominant eye in an impact injury in 1983? One truism I have come to respect—you cannot write about something until well after the event. I’m not sure if I yet have the wis- dom—or the ego—to use my own distinctly personal experience to help others find greater luminosity and clarity through sight. But I know I need to try, and am learning a great deal from the effort. A strange intuition persisted during the time of my injury and fragile recovery—one that I could not shake from my consciousness—that this painful experience would serve to help others as well as myself. For a memoir or highly personal body of work to leave our intimate circle, I feel that we must apply a litmus test, a measured standard. In Inventing the Truth: The Art and Craft of Memoir, William Zinsser writes: “A good memoir requires two elements—one of art, the other of craft.” Does it sing? Does it have what Zinsser calls “integrity of intention?” Can it elegantly reach others with a compelling story relevant to the reader’s life? We respect triumph and human fortitude and resiliency of spirit. We want to learn things through the experiences of others. Your voice becomes primary in what it teaches, shows, or demonstrates. And is it written well—crafted to high standards, with your own voice and your own unique style? Interesting experiences do not always magically find their own shape on the page. We need to assist the process. Thoreau wrote seven drafts of Walden over eight years. In doing so, Zinsser remarks, “He wrote one of our sacred texts.” The deeper we go within ourselves, the more we can reach the common ground of our shared human heritage. The recognition of both our shared conditions and our individual variations, where we are unambiguously different, are equally necessary to contribute to the dialogue of our times. David Ulrich is the Program Coordinator for Pacific New Media, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. He is an active photographer and writer whose work has been published in numerous books and journals including Aperture, Mānoa, and Sierra Club publications. Ulrichʼs photographs have been exhibited internationally in over seventy-five one-person and group exhibitions in museums, galleries, and universities. He is the author of The Widening Stream: The Seven Stages of Creativity and currently working on a memoir/essay: Longing for Light: Into the Heart of Vision. He is a Consulting Editor for Parabola magazine and a frequent contributor. 12 Lives Online: Truth and Truthiness John David Zuern In January of this year many of us here in Hawai‘i were captivated and troubled by the news that Lāʻie-born Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te‘o had apparently fallen prey to an elaborate online hoax: his girlfriend, “Lennay Kekua,” with whom—prior to her purported death in September 2012— Te‘o had been communicating solely through the Internet and by telephone, was exposed as the fabrication of a male admirer, Ronaiah Tuiasosopo. In the wake of this revelation, Te‘o found himself having to explain inconsistencies in his own account of the relationship, including his earlier claims to have met Kekua in person, in order to fend off suspicions that he had willingly participated in the ruse to boost his public image. Two months before the Manti Te‘o story broke, a court in Buenos Aires sentenced Paul Frampton, a 68-year-old professor of Physics at the University of North Carolina, to 56 months of detention for cocaine smuggling. Frampton alleges that someone posing as the swimsuit model Denise Milani had enticed him into an online romance, lured him to South America, and tricked him into transporting two kilos of the drug from Bolivia to Argentina. Text messages from Frampton’s phone, however, convinced Argentine authorities that Frampton was in fact aware of his role and legally responsible for his actions. Frampton and his attorneys continue to represent his plight as the result of blind passion and misplaced trust. What can we learn from these stories, now that so many of us lead at least part of our lives online and have entered into relationships, some of them intensely intimate, with friends whose faces we have never seen? Surely no one needs to be reminded that the people we meet on the Internet are not always who they say they are. Most of us are already on guard against the temptations that apparently misled Te‘o and Frampton, in part because we’re willing to recognize that under the right circumstances, we too could be susceptible to such seductions. To shield ourselves from humiliation, heartbreak, and identity theft, we proceed with caution whenever we’re on the Internet, often second-guessing our impulses to reach out to others and to share. What our own online lives really have in common with the high-profile ordeals of Te‘o and Frampton has less to do with the drama of the deception than with what happened after the truth came out: the damage control, the spin. Few of us, fortunately, will ever suffer such widely publicized blows to our reputations, but anyone who maintains a Facebook account, a Linkedin profile, a Twitter feed, or a blog is in the position of crafting and managing a public image that always depends, though to varying degrees, on an audience’s perception of the integrity of the person behind the page. Even if we’re not using these media to pursue professional goals, as many now do, we care about what our online communities think of us, and we know that a carelessly uploaded photograph or a rash political comment can send ripples of doubt and confusion through our personal network. These concerns about how our readers see us inevitably shape the stories we tell about ourselves online, and they sometimes lead us to bend the truth. Although we don’t typically hide behind entirely false personas, in more subtle ways we indulge in a version of what comedian Stephen Colbert has famously called “truthiness.” We edit and even embellish our posts to project convincing and emotionally satisfying, if not always entirely factual, pictures of our lives. We don’t lie, exactly, but when we strive to be as entertaining as our funniest Facebook friend, or more seriously, when we sift the details we reveal about our personal crises, we come to the line between autobiography and fiction. That line is notoriously blurry—in fact, the term “truthiness” has also been applied to James Frey’s 2003 book A Million Little Pieces, a largely fictional depiction of drug addiction and recovery that Frey initially passed off as a memoir. Colbert used the word “truthiness” to condemn the fabricated “intelligence” that helped launch the Iraq War; Frey’s truthiness has been criticized as a manipulative bid to sell books. But for Facebookers and Twitterers like us, is truthiness such a bad thing? John David Zuern is an Associate Professor in the Department of English at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, where he teaches classes in literature and directs the Undergraduate Internship Program. He is a coeditor of the journal Biography: An Interdisciplinary Quarterly. He also conducts workshops on writing for the Web for the Pacific New Media program in the UH-Mānoa Outreach College. 13 Creative Witness: Docupoetry Susan M. Schultz When we think about poetry, we usually still think about lyric poetry, or short poems about feeling, in which time dissolves into transcendent no-time. Writing a lyric poem, the poet might (as Wordsworth did) contemplate a place in nature where he was once a boy; out of such “spots of time,” he then finds solace, wisdom, in “emotions recollected in tranquility.” Historical writing and journalism are very different creatures. Their “spots of time” are tied to others, compose narratives, are grounded in days, years, places. Both kinds of writing engage memory, but the first engages it as personal and potentially spiritual history, the second as social, often conflictual, history. We call the lyric the work of subjectivity, and assign to history the notion of objectivity, or distance. Each of these modes of writing explains a world to us, but we inhabit more than one world. We might find ourselves feeling deeply over historical events, or finding wisdom in a banal document attached to a moment in our own lives (a dead parent’s cancelled check carries more freight than as record of a simple financial transaction). How can we express these mixed states, except by combining and blurring the genres in which we write about them? When we begin to put lyric poems in the same (white) space as documents or historical narratives, we are writing and reading “docupoetry.” As Joseph Harrington writes in “Docupoetry and archive desire,” “we are in the midst of something of a flourishing of documentary literary forms.” Harrington goes so far as to call this mode “creative nonpoetry,” though those of us still wedded to the poem might better agree with Marianne Moore, when she writes, “I can see no reason for calling my work poetry except that there is no other category in which to put it” (quoted by Harrington). It was Moore who used the language of Forest Service manuals in her intricately woven meditative poems. Phil Metres describes docupoetry as “a dynamic medium that informs and is informed by the history of the moment.” One of the first 20th century practitioners of the mode was Charles Reznikoff, a lawyer, whose works, Testimony, and later, Holocaust, were based on legal cases. A reader is hard pressed to find Reznikoff in one of his poems; he is more editor than composer. But there is no escaping a rush of feeling (sorrow, anger, compassion) after reading one of these deceptively simple, even bland-on-the-surface poems. Take “Negroes,” included in Testimony. In the second section of this poem, the poet lays out the fact that a black man has died in prison, his death assigned the cause “peritonitis.” But the jailer testifies that the man was brought to the prison without being charged, was left in his cell unattended, and had been badly beaten. The final stanza brings home the poem’s lessons: He was not treated by a doctor, the jailer, or anybody: just put into the jail and left there to die. The doctor who saw him first—on a Monday— did nothing for him and said that he would not die of his beating; but he did die of it on Wednesday. (http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/180089) Clarissa Haili Nelson (1901-1979), aka Hilo Hattie, entertainer. [Courtesy Bishop Museum] 14 Note the specificity, not only of the event itself, but of Monday, and Wednesday. The poem is a history, but it is one that makes an emotional and ethical claim on the reader. It is out of this tradition that Wing Tek Lum has composed his haunting poems about the Nanjing Massacre. Another form of docupoetry employs the technique of collage; it comes originally from Ezra Pound’s notion of “a poem including history,” where documents (including visual images) and lyrical fragments are juxtaposed to create a kind of documentary feeling, or feeling documentation. Among the myriad texts in this genre are Theresa Hak Kyung Cha’s Dictee, Mark Nowak’s Shut Up, Shut Down, and Kaia Sand’s Remember to Wave. In Dictee, which gets taught as poetry, as novel, as non-fiction, depending on context, Cha presents (often without commentary) documentation of Korean immigrants to Hawaiʻi, the story of her mother’s life in Japaneseoccupied China, and episodes from her schooling in the French language. While the book is masterfully put together, the final work of assemblage (interpretation) is left to the reader, almost as if s/he were given planks, screws, and assembly instructions. Her consideration of the damage done to Korea by Japanese imperialism and American occupation finds complements in Gary Pak’s fiction. Mark Nowak includes photography as a crucial engine of his documentary work. Kaia Sand, who describes herself as a poet journalist, writes essays to create context around the walk she takes around North Portland. Her work unveils the hidden, secret histories of the place, histories that include JapaneseAmerican internment and African-American labor consigned to living in a swamp that eventually, predictably floods. Amalia Bueno’s work is in this vein; she writes about women prisoners, using a layering of statistics, overheard conversations, bureaucratic instructions and examinations. ‘Iolani Luahine (1915-1978), kumu hula, dancer. [Courtesy DeSoto Brown Collection] Notes: Joseph Harrington, “Docupoetry and archive desire.” .https://jacket2.org/article/docupoetry-and-archive-desire Phil Metres, “From Reznikoff to Public Enemy.” http://www.poetryfoundation.org/article/180213 These sources include information about other docupoets and their work. I’ve written extensively about docupoetry at Tinfish Editor’s Blog (http://tinfisheditor.blogspot.com) Susan M. Schultzʻs books include, most recently, “Sheʼs Welcome to Her Disease”: Dementia Blog, Volume 2 (forthcoming, Singing Horse Press, 2013) and Memory Cards (2010-2011 Series)—prose poems composed to fit on a time card or index card (Singing Horse, 2011). In 2008, Singing Horse Press published her book Dementia Blog, about her motherʼs decline from Alzheimerʼs disease. She is the editor of the anthology Jack London Is Dead: Contemporary Euro-American Poetry in Hawaiʻi (and Some Stories), published in 2013 by Tinfish Press. Susanʼs critical work includes the book A Poetics of Impasse in Modern and Contemporary Poetry (Univ. of Alabama Press, 2005). She founded Tinfish Press, which publishes experimental poetry from the Pacific, in 1995. Susan lives and teaches in Hawaiʻi and is a lifelong fan of the St. Louis Cardinals. 15 One Place, Different Voices Craig Howes esting or irrelevant, leading these people to follow the example of the nineteenth century Hawaiians, and to create their own publications, often in their first languages, as places to preserve their lives. And of course, from the moment Captain Cook wrote his first journal entry about Kauaʻi, one of the consequences of discovery and occupation has been that visitors and settlers from Europe and America have seldom felt shy about recording their own experiences here, and their informed opinions about Hawaiʻi as well. Over the past fifty years in Hawaiʻi, the fortunes of life writing have taken the form of a proliferation of biographical and autobiographical work made available by an upsurge in reading and publishing opportunities. An important part of this has been the recovery and the publication of many life stories lost to all but a few. The increasing availability of materials from the Hawaiian language newspapers and other sources has for example transformed our understanding of the lives of Hawaiians. Similar projects have drawn on early Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Portuguese, and Filipino publications to preserve the memory of the first generations of these immigrants. And as for contemporary writing, the appearance of such publications and presses as Hawaiʻi Review, Bamboo Ridge, Ramrod, ‘Ōiwi, Tinfish and many others created homes for many different forms of memoir, biography, and autobiographical poetry and fiction. But proliferation does not erase Hawaiʻi’s history, or necessarily address continuing problems of inequity and access. Issues of race, ethnicity, gender, and history in the islands have always conditioned how biographical and autobiographical writing is produced, and perhaps more importantly, read. Given the lack of interest those in power have often shown in the lives of others, it’s understandable that many people feel not only that it’s our turn to talk, but your turn to listen—and listen hard. If history has taught us anything about life writing, and perhaps literature more generally, it’s that it’s hard for anyone to believe—or to be told—that their lived experience is insignificant. For writers, it might be just as hard to accept that because of who they are, many readers will find their work by definition uninteresting and a waste of time. So who should tell their stories of Hawaiʻi? The answer, and not theoretically, is anyone. What also needs to be noted, however, is that the freedom to write does not carry with it a guarantee that the writing must be received in the spirit the author would like. Perhaps more than any other writers, autobiographers and biographers always know that for a variety of reasons there might not be a welcoming reception for their work—or at the very least, the reception might be, and perhaps should be, mixed. And I would further argue that for all life writers, taking into account the history and setting for their writing will ultimately make their artistic choices stronger and more informed, and the work itself better. Who gets to write about something? In theory, anyone who wants to. And people of course do—in their diaries, in their travel journals, on their blogs, and in print. But who should write about something? That’s a different issue. Most would agree that offering commentary about something you know absolutely nothing about is generally a bad idea—though this clearly doesn’t stop a great many online pundits or radio talk show participants. But what if the subject matter is your own life, and the things associated with that—your friends and family, the place you live, your opinions and beliefs about your own history and daily experience? Are there circumstances under which this material would be best left alone? In the case of Hawaiʻi, and many other occupied or colonized places in the world, the issue of who can or should speak is powerfully influenced by the history of who has spoken. It would seem self-evident that Hawaiians have the right to speak and write about their lives here—and of course, for hundreds of years, they have. But anyone with even a slight knowledge of 19th and 20th century history knows that Hawaiians have often been told, implicitly and explicitly, that their personal and national stories and histories didn’t matter—or if they did, only in the ways that editors and publishers found interesting. The waves of labor immigration brought workers to the islands whose lives in their ancestral homes, and especially in the fields of Hawaiʻi, were also treated as uninter- Keali‘i Reichel, kumu hula, chanter, and recording artist. [Courtesy Punahele Productions] 16 True Lies: Lost in Translation Bob Green Among the many challenges awaiting writers wishing to alter their text(s) either simply (adding to and/or ellipsizing) or complexly (changing genre, tone, point-of-view, form) in our time, those challenges have become more problematic: translating print into visual media, adapting material for strictly audial presentations, adding new research, and maintaining awareness of constantly evolving developments in Intellectual Property concerns. A further question then involves the writer’s responsibilities and obligations toward that material. Can the altered form distort the message or theme? Do these changes, however inadvertent, involve harmful compromise? Or are writers entitled to any changes their authorship seems to endorse? These questions can have more than one answer, and can present further questions. In the case of found material— pre-existing texts, facts, history—what, if any, assumptions can the writer accept? When screenwriter Arthur C. Clarke wished to employ a previous character—HAL, the villainous computer from his film 2001: A Space Odyssey—in a subsequent screenplay, he discovered he could not because the character was no longer his—it was now owned by 2001 director Stanley Kubrick. The implications are unprecedented. Has the traditional relationship between author and character been threatened into perpetuity? And what can happen in types of narrative, poetic, and staged content when the medium is changed? A recent highlypraised play was rejected as a screenplay when a stubborn playwright insisted on using stage conventions in the script. More changes, he was advised, were needed. This writer once worked as assistant to screenwriter/playwright Robert Bolt (Lawrence of Arabia, A Man For All Seasons) on a film script called “Buddha.” In the three years that followed, Bolt delivered 17 full drafts, all influenced by ongoing research by Oxford University, made more challenging by the intersection of fact with various versions of mythology. The weaving of these narrative strands involved attempts to keep past and present compatible. The problems of such weaving are many—and require constant reexamination to avoid “modern” standards. Certain material pertinent to the past would evoke film-censorship in modern India. What can be said cannot be shown. In point-of-fact the word “research” has perhaps lost a bit of its integrity. Whose research? And, more importantly, when was that research undertaken? The reality of dueling researchers is more prominent than ever in contemporary theatre, bio-pics, and historical narratives. Authorial research can be, and sometimes is, called into question. The omniscient writer is dead, except perhaps in “pure” fiction. Transference into a different genre can call all into re-examination. The alleged simplicity of the past has given way to the crowded modern world of information and opinion. Robert Cazimero, kumu hula, recording artist. [Courtesy Mountain Apple Co.] Bob Green is a writer, journalist, sometime screenwriter, film production consultant and retired assistant professor in the UH system. He has been involved in adapting film projects from print sources (the novel A Passion in the Desert), an unfinished project with Arthur C. Clarke based on Clarkeʼs novel The Sentinel, and a film treatment from a play about Sun Yat-Sen. Green co-wrote the film Baraka (1992) and worked on its sequel, Samsara (2012). He is currently at work on the third non-verbal film treatment called “Parabola.” Green taught screenwriting for UH Outreachʼs Pacific New Media for 20 years. He has taught film workshops throughout Hawai‘i. He has been film critic for the Honolulu Weekly for the past 20 years. 17 Perfect Pitch: Telling Musical Lives Chris Vandercook fails to remind us of his own subjective, opinionated nature. No writer wants to start every sentence with “in my humble opinion,” but the music writer is well-advised to be self-effacing. Your subject will always be bigger than you are, so you need to be careful to stay out of its way. Many of the best books about music are those written by the musicians themselves. At their best, musicians’ memoirs take us behind the curtain and tell us what it all feels like. The language is usually unforced and informal, and the insights—on any number of subjects—can be surprising. The biographical details and the anecdotes are often suspect, but the experience of reading any artist’s memoir is not that different from listening to an after-hours reminiscence; you’re not taking notes or memorizing details, just enjoying the ride. And the more forceful the personality, the more provocative the memoir, as artists as diverse as Arthur Rubinstein, Charles Mingus, and Keith Richards have shown. All have written the kind of books a reader can enjoy, whether or not he knows the music—and all are free from the heavy hand of the “as told to” professional helper. Good music writing should send us back to the music armed with new ways to enjoy it: knowing more about the lives of the people who made it, the times that produced it, and the influences that informed it. The stories will be as diverse as the people themselves. The one constant to all musical lives is dedication to an ideal and the willingness to sacrifice in order to reach it—but all too often, we describe musical artists in terms of something they have instead of something they do. If only it were that easy. The musicians who live in memory have done a great deal with what they have been given. That’s what sets them apart from the many gifted ones who fall by the wayside. Their lives and their hard work inspire the rest of us, giving us music that takes us to places where words can never go. Mana Kaleilani Caceres, sovereignty activist and singer-songwriter. [Courtesy Wayoutwest Enterprises] Music eludes capture; that’s part of its charm. Each of us is free to take away our own entirely different, completely subjective impression, and those can only be subjective, coming as they do from waves of sound that have passed into the air and vanished with the moment. Even if music is preserved for us as a recording, it’s going to be different with each hearing, and each listener. Writers, then, face a problem. How can the written word contribute to our appreciation and enhance our understanding without diminishing its subject? Do we lose something by trying to preserve music in amber? Maybe we should just let it speak for itself. Some of the more irascible musicians among us would argue exactly that, but most would admit that good writing about music can give us plenty to savor. It can satisfy our inevitable curiosity about the lives behind the sounds (and musicians’ lives are rarely dull). It also can provide historical context. The reader has likely heard music at some remove from the times and places that produced it, and a good writer can enrich our experience by putting the jewel back in its original setting. But there are pitfalls. It’s easy for even the most wellmeaning chronicler of music to give in to the temptation to make pronouncements, in order to be seen by the reader as offering a definitive perspective. That may even be what readers expect (as with any work of non-fiction), but the writer who gives in to that temptation does readers a disservice if he Chris Vandercook was born in New York City and moved to Hawaiʻi in 1982. He is a guitarist, writer, and photographer who moved here to work in television news. He is the co-host of The Conversation, a weekday morning news and public affairs program on Hawaii Public Radio. He continues to be active as a performing musician and as a writer of liner notes for local and national recording artists. His writing has appeared on recordings by artists as diverse as jazz singer Azure McCall, slack-key master Raymond Kane, and trumpet legend John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie. He lives on Oʻahuʼs windward side and teaches guitar at Kailua Music School. 18 Truth in Montage Documentary Lives Dan Wallace A couple of years ago my wife Mindy Pennybacker was out surfing at her usual break, Sui’s, when a lull came in the waves. One of Mindy’s surf crew, Rodney, was nearby and they struck up a conversation. Rodney Ohtani is a cinematographer and cameraman and producer all in one, and he knew Mindy was a journalist and author—she’s currently the editor of the Honolulu Weekly and wrote the environmental DIY manifesto Do One Green Thing. He mentioned that the film he was working on for Eddie Kamae, the Hawaiian musician and documentarian, was looking for a writer. And Mindy said, “You ought to talk to my husband.” As many of you probably know, Eddie Kamae made his first film in 1986, teaching himself the rigorous and cumbersome methods of filmmaking back in the day, before digital, as he went along. Eddie was not interested in traditional filmmaking, to say the least. He had his own ideas, and developed them as he went along into what you might call the I Ching approach. Everyone who has worked with Eddie talks about it—how he doesn’t like to go into a film with a preconceived, gridded and storyboarded tale to tell, all tied up in a neat bow. No, Eddie has a notion, scents a story, listens to the voices of his ancestors (he really does consult them) and when he’s ready he hires a crew and hits the road to discovery, with his wife, Myrna, running the circus. But in my case I was joining the circus after it had been on the road for two years, and while a great deal of film had been shot—amazing footage of Waipiʻo Valley, beautiful interviews and moments of musical grace, along with hours and hours of archival film from Eddie’s 20-year journey— what was the story, exactly? And that became my job. Not to impose a story. Not to ruthlessly pare away the soft and spiritual and contemplative stuff in favor of the hard Hollywoodstyle beats of a screenplay. But to be guided to a story? Yes. As I saw it, after going through the Eddie anti-job interview process, which involves drinking a little wine and listening to a lot of music, and eventually talking, my role was to approach the material in both a humble and critical mode, to help Rodney and Eddie and Myrna tell a true Eddie story, one that alternated between the mystical and the scholarly, the sentimental and the unvarnished, the elegiac and the contemporary. In practice, it was like being handed a shoebox full of old photos, journals and letters and being told, “Turn this into something.” And yet I wasn’t deterred; to me this already is the mission of every documentarian, whether working in film or print. First, Rodney sat me down with his raw edit and talked me through two years of intuitive filmmaking decisions. After a couple of hours a form was already coming to me—a story about Eddie’s working method, how it led him to track songs back to their origins. This in turn led to the film describing the actual composition of songs by Eddie, Mary Kawena Pukui, Sam Lia and ultimately Queen Liliʻuokalani. It was to be a film about a process, the process of poetry and song, carried on over generations. And for that I could draw on my own literary beginnings and checkered career. As a poet from an inner city public school who got tired of chronicling his adolescent yearnings, I somehow ended up studying the Cantos of Ezra Pound, whose vast works can be justly described as a shoebox of civilization, then turned to prose because of boredom with other poets, really, and for awhile studied history and, after a thrillingly rigorous class in grad school, briefly weighed taking a Ph.D. Now, if all this makes me sound a wifty and little precious, um, I don’t think so. I’ve written a book about high school football, and a novel about bass fishing. I’ve got a memoir coming out about France. But I’ve never turned my back on the bass fisherman or the poet in me, or the high school fullback, and I think it was this comfort with extremes that gave me the temerity to approach Eddie, Myrna and Rodney and say, “This is our film.” I knew I could summon the historical rigor to nail down the facts amid the rumors, and conjure the poetic mood to help express Eddie’s far more profound vision. Those Who Came Before: The Musical Journey of Eddie Kamae came out in 2011. It looks like it will be Eddie’s last film. Don Wallace is the Honolulu Weeklyʼs Film Editor, and wrote the 2011 documentary Those Who Came Before: The Musical Journey of Eddie Kamae. In addition to scripts he writes novels (Hot Water, Soho Press), nonfiction (One Great Game, Atria), memoirs (Harperʼs; Village Idiots, forthcoming from Sourcebooks), and reviews films, books, and restaurants. Born in Long Beach, CA to a family that idealized Scotland, the Old South and Hawaiʻi, he married into a local family known for its kimchee (Halmʼs). His days consist of competing for attention with the clan offspring in writing and journalism, music and film-making. 19 Why Write Lives Mark Panek Historian T. Michael Holmes concludes the preface of his millennial John Burns biography by quoting Hawaii author James A. Michener. When asked way back in 1982 whether the builder of statehood-era Hawai‘i was “worthy” of a biography, the best-known teller of Hawai‘i’s story up to the Burns era (like it or not—and fictionalized, too), had this to say: “I don’t know if he deserves a full-scale biography, but there’s a need for something entitled ‘John A. Burns and His Times.’” Like Michener himself, this response, spoken a decade before the work of cultural reclamation scholars, Marxist and feminist literary critics, and human rights activists combined to bust academia’s biographical canon wide open, is rooted in simpler times, back when biography’s primary concern was documenting—often in laborious three-volume chronological fashion—every waking moment of the “Great Men” of history. Far more than simply an act of political correctness, though, tearing down the old standard of biographical “worthiness” has given historians here in Hawai‘i—whose history has so often turned upon collective us-guys actions where a single “leader” is hard to identify—a more useful tool for what biographers have been attempting for centuries: to color the historical record with the voices of those most likely to turn history’s abstract listing of events into a compelling concrete reality with which readers can better empathize, and thus better understand. Now, a traditionally “worthy” biography such as H. Brett Melendy’s Walter Francis Dillingham: Hawaiian Entrepreneur and Statesman competes for shelf space with David E. Stannard’s Honor Killing. Melendy first quotes a former Punahou president as proclaiming a Dillingham bio “imperative to Hawai‘i’s history,” and then follows through with a chronicle stretching from Harvard to Hawaiian Dredging and beyond. The list of great-man accomplishments includes, astoundingly, Dillingham’s handling of the famous Massie Case, where he assisted a group of enlisted Navy sailors in literally getting away with murder. In short, between 1875 and 1963, Hawai‘i went from kingdom, to territory, to agribusiness giant and U.S. military outpost, to American state, all with Uncle Walter steering the ship. Speaking of Dillingham and his wife, Melendy concludes his book with this: “Their personalities, their winning charm, their character, and their range of activities in Hawaii and on the mainland impressed all who knew them. With their passing, Hawaii truly experienced the end of an era.” Mining the same Dillingham papers archived at Bishop Museum, Stannard comes to far different conclusions. Instead of the Dillingham fountain on Kalākaua Avenue, Honor Killing’s most lasting image is the humble grave of Joseph Kahahawai, the everyman whose murder changed the course of local history every bit as much as Dillingham did. Stannard shines a biographical light upon a murder trial whose details have been well-told by historians, focusing as much on Kahahawai, and on Navy wife Thalia Massie—the wholly pathetic nobody whose manufactured rape claim against Kahahawai and four of his friends led to his murder—as he does on Dillingham. Stannard turns Kahahawai from merely “a Hawaiian” (Daws, Holmes), a Hawaiian parenthetically (Melendy), or even one of “a group of Honolulu hoodlums” (Kuykendall), into a shy former St. Louis football star who, other than that time he broke somebody’s jaw because the man refused to stop beating a dog, was “easygoing” and, also to the point, uninterested in women. Under Stannard’s biographical spotlight Thalia Massie becomes a confused and lonely woman, far from home, unable to fit in either at UH or in the society of Navy wives, likely suffering from alcoholism, raised as a racist, and, also to the point, rendered by a childhood bout with Graves’ disease almost wholly unable to see. When the lines are similarly colored in on Dillingham (pointedly, for instance, we learn he was a proud white supremacist), the historical picture is complete. That is, precisely because of Stannard’s attention to the biographies of those traditionally hardly “worthy,” the historical narrative that follows—the unionization of the docks and the sugar plantations, the democratic revolution, statehood, and the epitaph of the Big Five embodied by Dillingham—now contains causality. Traditional narratives tracing the trajectory of success will always assist us in completing the historical picture, even here in Hawai‘i—Ben is a great example, and certainly former Governor Cayetano is as “deserving” a subject in the Michenerian sense as Governor Burns. But by now it’s clear that Haunani–Kay Trask (From a Native Daughter), Edward H. Nakamura (Tom Coffman’s I Respectfully Dissent), Randall Roth’s Bishop Estate trustees (Broken Trust), Frank Marshall Davis (Kathryn Waddell Takara), any of the subjects in the PBS Biography Hawai‘i DVD series—they’re not just “deserving.” In the telling of Hawai‘i’s history, theirs are the imperative biographies. Kaumaka‘iwa Lopaka Kanaka‘ole, composer, singer, recording artist. [Courtesy Mountain Apple Co.] 20 The Panelists The Rev. Malcolm Nāea Chun, author of No Nā Mamo: Traditional and Contemporary Hawaiian Beliefs and Practices, has taught Hawaiian language and folklore and has worked as a cultural specialist and educator at OHA, the Hawaiʻi State Department of Health, the Queen Liliʻuokalani Childrenʼs Center, and the Curriculum Research & Development Group at the College of Education, UH Mānoa, in the Pihana Nā Mamo Native Hawaiian Education program. His latest translations are the History of Kanalu by Benjamin K. Namakaokeahi and Davida Maloʼs Ka Moʻolelo Hawaiʻi. His latest publications are No Nā Mamo (University of Hawaiʼi Press), Kuni Ola, Countering Sorcery (First Peopleʼs Productions), and soon to come Nā Inoa: Selected Historical Hawaiian Personal and Proper Names. Jim Becker is the last survivor of the press box crew that covered Jackie Robinsonʼs first game when he broke the Major League baseball color line in 1947. In his career he has covered numerous Olympics (Winter and Summer), championship fights, baseball World Series, football bowl games, pro and college basketball Final Fours, and most golf and tennis Majors from Augusta to Wimbledon, and even the Americaʼs Cup yacht races. His stories have been printed in several editions of Best Sports Stories, and in his best-selling memoir, Saints, Sinners & Shortstops (2006), available at Amazon.com. John Berger has been writing about Hawaiʻiʼs music and the local entertainment industry since 1972. He has also covered entertainment on radio and television. He has been writing for the Honolulu Star-Advertiser (formerly the Honolulu Star-Bulletin) since 1988. His photo column, “On the Scene,” and his reviews of local recordings in his “Island Mele” column appear in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser on Sundays. He is the co-editor of the 2nd edition of Hawaiian Music and Musicians (2012), a one-volume encyclopedia on the history of Hawaiian music published by Mutual Publishing of Honolulu. For more information, www.hawaiianmusicandmusicans.com Tom Coffmanʻs work is about the overlapping themes of history and political development, including Catch a Wave (book); O Hawaii, From First Settlement to Kingdom (film); Nation Within (book); Nation Within (film); The Island Edge of America (book); Arirang, The Korean American Journey (film), also www.arirangeducation.com; First Battle, The Battle for Equality in Wartime Hawaii (book), also www.thefirstbattle.com; Ninoy Aquino and the Rise of People Power (film); I Respectfully Dissent: A Biography of Edward H. Nakamura (book); and One Team (film). His current writing project is How Hawaii Changed America, an exploration of community development in wartime Hawaiʻi. Perle Besserman was praised by Isaac Bashevis Singer for the “clarity and feeling for mystic lore” of her writing, and by Publisherʼs Weekly for “wisdom [that] points to a universal practice of the heart.” Houghton Mifflin published her autobiographical novel Pilgrimage, and her short fiction has appeared in The Southern Humanities Review, AGNI, Transatlantic Review, Nebraska Review, Southerly, North American Review, and Bamboo Ridge, among others. Her books have been recorded and released in both audio and e-book versions and translated into over ten languages. Her most recent books of creative non-fiction are A New Zen for Women (Palgrave Macmillan) and Zen Radicals, Rebels, and Reformers, coauthored with Manfred Steger (Wisdom Books). Two novels, Kabuki Boy, and Widow Zion, and Yeshiva Girl, a story collection, are forthcoming from Aqueous Books, Pinyon Publishing, and Homebound Publishing, respectively. She holds a doctorate in Comparative Literature from Columbia University and has lectured, toured, taught, and appeared on television, radio, and in two documentary films about her work in the US, Europe, Canada, Australia, Japan, China, and the Middle East. Rasa Fournier is an associate editor and senior writer at MidWeek newspaper. In addition to her “Art & Stage” and “Dr. in the House” columns, Rasa does freelance work for various Hawaiʻi-based newspapers, magazines and online publications. She also writes feature stories for MidWeek on local and international personalities, including prominent government, business and community leaders. Some of her notable entertainment interviews include the Hawaii Five-0 cast, actress Yvonne Elliman of the musical film Jesus Christ Superstar, reggae artist Matisyahu, actor Rico Rodriguez of the TV show Modern Family, the late musician John Koko of the Makaha Sons, sculptor Satoru Abe and actor Jason Scott Lee. Sandra Hall is a writer, researcher and editor, currently working on a major biography of Duke Kahanamoku. Raised in Australia, her life story has been the pursuit of what interested her as a child — including teaching, librarianship, psychology, the Pacific Ocean, Olympic Games, anthropology, community activism, the Sonoran Desert and the Himalayas. Sandy has written for dozens of magazines, newspapers, and encyclopedias. Her awards include the Kwapil, for librarianship, and the Hawaii Book Publishers Association Palapala award for Memories of Duke. She is a member of the North American Association for Sports History and the Biographersʼ International Organization. She has two Mastersʼ Degrees from the University of Arizona. Amalia Buenoʼs poems and stories have been published in various literary journals, magazines and anthologies, including Growing Up Filipino and Walang Hiya: Literature Taking Risks Toward Liberatory Practice. Her work has been featured on Hawaii Public Radio and most recently appeared in Hawai‘i Review, Bamboo Ridge, Tinfish, and is forthcoming in Dismantle. She graduated this month with an MA in English from the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. Her research interests include issues of gender, culture and representation. Leilani Holmes was born in Hawaiʻi and adopted by haoles, who relocated to Ohio. Her book Ancestry of Experience: A Journey into Hawaiian Ways of Knowing (2012) was published by University of Hawaiʻi Press: “Part memoir of a Kanaka academic in the diaspora searching for her ʻohana, part . . . historical and ethnographic celebration of Hawaiian culture . . . part documentation of . . . communication with . . . those who have passed . . . Ancestry of Experience will . . . make readers gasp at the incredible series of ʻcoincidencesʼ that leads to Leilaniʼs connection with her ʻohana.” Leilani says: “Iʼm a retired Community College instructor with only one publication, privileged to be here! I love to describe those ʻcoincidencesʼ!” Lee Catalunaʼs plays have been produced at Kumu Kahua Theatre (The Great Kauai Train Robbery, Aloha Friday) , Diamond Head Theatre (You Somebody), Honolulu Theatre for Youth (adaptation of Musubi Man), UHHilo (Da Mayah), and Maui Talk Story, and Kamehameha Kapālama (Ulua: The Musical). Bamboo Ridge published her two books, including 2012ʼs Three Years on Doreenʼs Sofa, winner of the Kapalapala Poʻokela award for excellence in literature. She was the 2004 recipient of the Cades Award for Literature for her body of work. She has an MFA in Creative Writing from UC-Riverside, and teaches Creative Writing at ʻIolani School. Yunte Huang grew up in a small town in southeastern China, where at eleven he began to learn English by secretly listening to Voice of America programs. After receiving his B.A. in English from Peking University, Yunte came to the United States in 1991, landing in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. As a struggling Chinese restaurateur, he continued to study American literature, reading William Faulkner, Ezra Pound, and Emily Dickinson. In 1994, Yunte attended the Poetics Program in Buffalo, where, at an estate sale, he discovered the Charlie Chan novels. He was immediately hooked. After receiving his Ph.D. in 1999, as an assistant professor of English at Harvard, he began researching the story of the Chinese detective—both real and fictional—and the life of Earl Derr Biggers, a Harvard graduate who had authored the Chan novels. Yunte Huang is currently a Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Benjamin J. Cayetano served as Governor of Hawaiʻi from 1994 to 2002 and was the first Filipino American elected as a United States governor. His autobiography, Ben: A Memoir, from Street Kid to Governor, was published in 2009, and won the Ka Palapala Poʻokela Award for Book of the Year from the Hawaiʻi Publishers Association. Melissa Chang has more than 25 yearsʼ experience in marketing and public relations. She is currently a freelance writer and independent marketing consultant, specializing in integrating the new social media platforms with traditional media to maximize clientsʼ marketing efforts. Melissa writes for Nonstophonolulu.com, Gayot.com, Honolulu (real estate), and Edible Hawaiian Islands. Social media clients include Pearlridge, Waikiki Beach Walk, Chart House, Hawaii Foodbank, the Pacific Communications Council, Brasserie Du Vin, and some of the hotels in the Outrigger Resort chain. 21 Bob Jones has worked as a journalist all but three years since he became editor at eighteen of his college newspaper. He is now seventy seven. He has worked as a reporter for the St. Petersburg Times, the Overseas Weekly in Frankfurt and as its Paris bureau chief, Noticias y Viajes in Madrid, the Louisville Courier-Journal, and the Honolulu Advertiser. He currently is a columnist on politics and social issues for MidWeek. As a foreign correspondent for NBC News he covered the wars in Biafra and Vietnam. He worked for twenty-eight years with KGMB-TV as reporter, anchor, and news director. He is the recipient of a Heywood Hale Broun award for his reporting in Germany, a George Foster Peabody award for his documentary work in China, and three Emmys. His recent book is Reporter (2012). Jones is married to journalist Denby Fawcett; their daughter Brett Jones is a State Department foreign service officer currently posted in Nepal. chosen to screen on both the East and West Coasts at Kennedy Center in D.C., and numerous other venues. Hoʻokuʻikahi—To Unify as One (1998) is about the important revival of cultural protocols at Kamehameha the First Heiau of State, Pu‘u Kohola, Kawaihae, on Hawai‘i. Ku‘u ʻĀina Aloha— Beloved Land, Beloved Country is Meyerʼs current feature length film in production about truth-telling as medicine that heals. Drawing on real events, first-person accounts, and other historical, political and cultural issues brings story to a whole new level of telling—giving voice to what was very much silenced in the past. Gail Miyasaki is a Hawaiʻi-born third generation (sansei) Japanese American and a freelance writer/editor. Her work has been published in Hawaii Business, Honolulu and Mana magazines, among other local publications. In the early 1970s, she wrote extensively on the JapaneseAmerican experience in Hawaiʻi for the Hawaii Herald. Her work on books include serving as a writer and copy editor for Hawaiiʼs College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources: Celebrating the First 100 Years, Barry M. Brennan and James R. Hollyer, eds. (U of Hawaiʻi P, 2008), as editor of Hawaiiʼs Historic Corridors: Volume One (Historic Hawaii Foundation, 2007), and most recently, as editor of Japanese Eyes, American Heart, Volume II: Voices from the Home Front in World War II Hawaii (2012). Patrick Vinton Kirch is the Class of 1954 Professor of Anthropology and Integrative Biology at the University of California, Berkeley. Born and raised in Hawaiʻi, he is a graduate of Punahou School and of Yale University. He has carried out extensive archaeological research throughout the Pacific Islands including Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, Tonga, Samoa, French Polynesia, and Hawaiʻi. He is the author of more than a dozen books, the most recent of which is A Shark Going Inland Is My Chief: The Island Civilization of Ancient Hawaiʻi (2012). Tom Moffatt—radio DJ, TV show host, event promoter, record producer, music publisher, and author all describe the man whoʼs been at the helm of Hawaiʻiʼs showbiz scene for over fifty years. Named one of the most influential people in the history of Honolulu, “Uncle” Tom Moffatt has kept the 50th State hoppinʼ with attractions for every taste – from the elegance of the Bolshoi Ballet to the knock-out action of WWE, and every major artist who has ever toured the Pacific. Victoria Nalani Kneubuhl is a Honolulu playwright and author. Her many plays have been performed in Hawaiʻi and the continental United States and have toured to Britain, Asia, and the Pacific. Ms. Kneubuhl is the author of two mystery novels set in Hawai‘i in the 1930s: Murder Casts a Shadow, and Murder Leaves Its Mark. She is currently the writer and co-producer for the television series Biography Hawaiʻi. She received the Hawaiʻi Award for Literature in 1994 and the Eliot Cades Award for Literature in 2006. Nanette Naioma Napoleon is a freelance historical researcher from Kailua, Hawaiʻi. For the past twelve years, she has assisted researchers from around the world find historical information about various topics related to the history of Hawaiʻi and its people. Nanette is also a freelance writer, lecturer, and Hawaiian cultural specialist who has developed dozens of public lectures, workshops, and tours relating to Hawaiian history and culture, often in conjunction with local museums, schools, libraries, and archives. Nanette is also known in the community as the stateʼs leading expert on historic graveyards, with more than twenty-five years experience in documenting old graveyards, and her cemetery directories are in wide use in the community as historical and genealogical resources. For 42 years, Kumu Kahua Theatre has nurtured, enriched and preserved our lives through the unique power of theatre. Our mission is to bring stories of and by the people of Hawaiʻi to the stage by encouraging our playwrights, producing plays written by and about our people, and developing our theatre artists and audiences with this work. The only theatre like it in the world, Kumu Kahua is solely devoted to the stories of all people of Hawaiʻi, our histories, current lives and futures. Through theatre, we experience and share our lives. www.KumuKahua.org Sam Low is author of Hawaiki Rising: Hōkūleʻa, Nainoa Thompson, and the Hawaiian Renaissance. He sailed aboard Hōkūleʻa on three voyages. In 1983, after traveling throughout Polynesia, Sam produced his award winning film, The Navigators – Pathfinders of the Pacific, shown nationally on PBS and internationally throughout the world. Sam is the author of many articles on Hōkūleʻa and her meaning to Polynesians. He served in the U.S. Navy in the Pacific from 1964 to 1966 and earned a Ph.D. in anthropology from Harvard in 1975. He is one-quarter Hawaiian; Nainoa Thompson is his cousin, a relationship that provided unparalleled access to the main protagonist of his book. Warren Nishimoto is the director of the Center for Oral History at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. For over thirty years, he has documented Hawaiʻiʼs social and cultural history by conducting life history interviews with Hawaiʻiʼs longtime residents. He has co-authored two books, Hanahana: An Oral History Anthology of Hawaiiʼs Working People and Talking Hawaiʻiʼs Story: Oral Histories of an Island People. He also teaches university classes and community workshops on oral history techniques. Puakea Nogelmeier is a Professor of Hawaiian Language at University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, where heʼs taught for nearly thirty years. A researcher and translator, he works extensively with 19th and early 20th-century Hawaiian writings, translating and interpreting narratives, literature, and poetry of the past. Wing Tek Lum is a Honolulu businessman and poet. Bamboo Ridge Press has published his two collections of poetry, Expounding the Doubtful Points (1987) and The Nanjing Massacre: Poems (2012). With Makoto Ooka, Joseph Stanton, and Jean Yamasaki Toyama, he participated in a collaborative work of linked verse, which was published as What the Kite Thinks by Summer Session, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa in 1994. Gary Pak is the author of two novels, A Ricepaper Airplane and Children of a Fireland; and two book-length collections of short stories, The Watcher of Waipuna and Language of the Geckos. He has also published a childrenʼs play, Beyond the Falls. A novel about the Korean War, Brothers Under a Same Sky, is forthcoming from the University of Hawai‘i Press in July 2013. In 2002, he received a Fulbright award to Seoul, South Korea. He is a Professor of English at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa where he teaches creative writing and literature. Brandy Nālani McDougall is Co-Founder of Kahuaomānoa Press and Ala Press and has served as editor for ‘ōiwi: a native hawaiian journal and Mānoa. Author of the poetry book, The Salt-Wind, Ka Makani Pa‘akai, and co-author of the poetry collection, Effigies, and poetry album, Undercurrent, she is an Assistant Professor of Indigenous Studies in the American Studies Department at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. Robert Pennybacker is a 4th generation Korean-American writer, filmmaker, and television producer. He was born in New Haven, Connecticut but was raised and lives in Honolulu. Robert graduated from Punahou School and earned a B.A. in cinema production from the USC School of Cinema. He has worked in the local television industry as a writer-producer-director, marketing director, and creative director for more than thirty years. Currently the executive producer of Learning Initiatives for PBS Hawaii, in 2011 he helped to launch HIKI NŌ: The Nationʼs First Statewide Student News Network for PBS Hawaii. Robert has written approximately fifteen documentaries. Four of his films have screened at the Hawaii International Film Festival. His poems, short fiction, and essays have appeared in Bamboo Ridge and HMSAʼs Island Scene Magazine. He also writes film reviews for the Honolulu Weekly. Robert lives in Nuʻuanu with his wife Lorraine and their four cats and one dog. Chris McKinney is the author of five novels, The Tattoo, The Queen of Tears, Bolohead Row, Mililani Mauka, and Boi No Good, and has written a feature film screenplay, Paradise Broken, and a short film, The Back Door, both of which premiered at the 2011 Hawaii International Film Festival. He is an Associate Professor at Honolulu Community College, and recently served as Visiting Distinguished Writer at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. He and his wife Mika co-direct the Chris McKinney Language Arts Center, which offers reading and writing courses for elementary school children, teens, and adults. It is located in Mililani, Hawaiʻi. Meleanna Meyer is an artist, educator, and documentary filmmaker in her spare time with two remarkable films to her credit. Puamana (1991), about her beloved Aunty Irmgard Farden Aluli, a well-known musician and composer, premiered at the Hawaii International Film Festival in ‘91, and was 22 Craig Santos Perez is a native Chamoru from the Pacific Island of Guåhan/Guam. He is the co-founder of Ala Press, co-star of the poetry album Undercurrent (Hawaiʻi Dub Machine, 2011), and author of two collections of poetry: from unincorporated territory [hacha] (Tinfish Press, 2008) and from unincorporated territory [saina] (Omnidawn Publishing, 2010), a finalist for the LA Times 2010 Book Prize for Poetry, and the winner of the 2011 PEN Center USA Literary Award for Poetry. He is an Assistant Professor in the English Department at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, where he teaches Pacific literature and creative writing. and American Holocaust: The Conquest of the New World. His other writings on Hawaiʻi include Before the Horror: The Population of Hawaiʻi on the Eve of Western Contact and articles on historical demography and the cultural politics of the Islands. Sandra A. Simms was born in Chicago, and earned her Juris Doctor degree from DePaul University. She moved to Hawai‘i in 1979, serving as Deputy Corporation Counsel for the City and County of Honolulu until 1991, when she was appointed to the District Court of the First Circuit, becoming the first African American female judge in the state of Hawai‘i. In 1994, Governor John Waihee appointed her Circuit Court Judge for the First Judicial Circuit; she retired from the bench in 2004, but has remained active in a number of public and professional organizations. Her memoir Tales from the Bench: Essays on Life and Justice was published by Pacific Raven Press in 2012. ‘Umi Perkins teaches Hawaiian history at the Kamehameha Schools Kapālama, and lectures in Political Science at Windward Community College. He has a Ph.D. in Political Science from UH Mānoa, a masterʼs degree in Government from Harvard, and is a former Fulbright scholar to New Zealand. He writes on issues of Hawai‘i history and politics on his blog theumiverse.com and for the online newspaper The Hawai‘i Independent. In 2012 he presented at TEDx Mānoa on a Hawaiian history textbook he is currently developing. Kathryn Waddell Takara, PhD, is a 2010 winner of the American Book Award (Before Columbus Foundation). A performance poet, lecturer, workshop facilitator, adviser, healer, and consultant, she has published Frank Marshall Davis, The Fire and the Phoenix: A Critical Biography (2012), and Timmy Turtle Teaches (a childrenʼs book). She has three books of poetry: New and Collected Poems published by Ishmael Reed Press, Pacific Raven: Hawaii Poems, and Tourmalines: Beyond the Ebony Portal by Pacific Raven Press. She is currently working on a novel and a collection of her poems about women. Takara has also appeared on a variety of television shows, in national and international interviews and documentaries. Dr. Takara is the daughter of pioneer black veterinarian, author, and world-famous Buffalo Soldier, Dr. William H. Waddell, VMD (1908-2007) Growing up in the arid mountains outside San Diego, John H. Ritter often pondered the meaning of life. Through six metaphorical and socio-political novels set in the world of baseball, the Kauaʻi resident has explored subjects as diverse as the Vietnam War, spiritual aspects of land development, baseballʼs racial ban, and materialism. Ritterʼs first novel, Choosing Up Sides, which examined the roots of prejudice, won the 1999 IRA Young Adult Book Award and an ALA Best Book citation. In 2004, Ritter received the Paterson Prize for Childrenʼs Literature for The Boy Who Saved Baseball. His latest, Fenway Fever, juxtaposes the “Curse of the Bambino” with 2012 ascension prophesies to show what can be achieved when a divided community unites behind a boy and his unconditional love for a ballpark. Lee A. Tonouchi a.k.a. “Da Pidgin Guerrilla” stay da writer of da awardwinning book of Pidgin short stories Da Word, author of da Pidgin essay collection Living Pidgin: Contemplations on Pidgin Culture, compiler of Da Kine Dictionary, and editor of Buss Laugh: Stand Up Poetry from Hawaiʻi. His most recentest book is his poetry collection Significant Moments in da Life of Oriental Faddah and Son: One Hawaiʻi Okinawan Journal. He also had some plays done before at HTY and Kumu Kahua Theatre. His latest play wuz da East West Players production of Three Year Swim Club, which wuz one LA Times Critics Choice Selection. Randall Roth is a law professor at the University of Hawaiʻi. Heʼs also been a Visiting Professor at the University of Chicago and lectured at Harvard, NYU, Howard, Duke, UCLA, and UC-Berkeley. Locally, he has served as President of the State Bar Association, and has received UH-Mānoaʼs highest awards for teaching excellence and community service. In 2000 the Honolulu Star-Bulletin included him on its list of “100 Who Made a Difference in Hawaiʻi During the Twentieth Century,” and in 2005 the City of Honoluluʼs Centennial Celebration Committee named him as one of “100 Who Made Lasting Contributions During the City of Honoluluʼs First 100 Years.” Born and raised on Oʻahu, Catherine E. Toth has been chronicling her adventures in her blog, The Cat Dish (www.thecatdish.com), for nearly a decade. She worked as a newspaper reporter in Hawai‘i for 10 years and continues to freelance—in between teaching journalism, hitting the surf and eating everything in sight—for national and local print and online publications. She earned her masterʼs degree in journalism from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University in 1999, focusing on magazine writing and publishing. She obtained her bachelorʼs degree in English from the University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa, graduating with distinction in 1996. Blind since birth, mezzo-soprano Laurie Gale Rubin recently received high praise from New York Times chief classical music critic Anthony Tommasini, who wrote that she possesses “compelling artistry,” “communicative power,” and that her voice displays “earthy, rich and poignant qualities.” On October 23, 2012, Seven Stories Press published Rubinʼs memoir, Do You Dream in Color? Insights from a Girl without Sight. Recounting her experiences from childhood through the rise of her career as an opera singer, Rubin shows her determination to continually surpass and redefine othersʼ expectations. As a soloist she has performed Berliozʼ Les Nuits dʼété with the Burbank Philharmonic Orchestra, Mozartʼs Great Mass in C Minor with the Yale Symphony Orchestra, Haydnʼs Harmonie Mass with the Oakland East Bay Symphony, a benefit concert of duets with opera star Frederica von Stade, Barberʼs Knoxville Summer of 1915 under the baton of John Williams, a benefit performance with Marvin Hamlisch, as well as in concert at The White House and the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts. Rubin is a graduate of Oberlin College and earned a Master of Music degree at Yale. She is co-founder and associate artistic director of Ohana Arts, a performing arts school and festival in Hawaiʻi. She also designs her own line of handmade jewelry, The LR Look. Jean Yamasaki Toyama was born at Kapiʻolani Hospital, spent her early years at Queen Kaʻahumanu Elementary School and later graduated from Roosevelt High School. She is a retired professor of French and former Associate Dean of the College of Languages, Linguistics and Literature at University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. Her latest books include No Choice but to Follow and Kelliʼs Hanauma Friends. Her poetry recently appeared in FiftyEight Stones and Wavelengths from Savant Press, and her short stories in the latest issues of Bamboo Ridge. Her book The Piano Tunerʼs Wife and Stillborn Stories, will be appearing in Summer 2013 from Aignos Publishing. Ted T. Tsukiyama was born and raised in Honolulu. A member of the University of Hawai‘i ROTC before World War II, he was one of the Varsity Victory Volunteers, and then of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, and the 6th AAF Radio Squadron in the China-Burma-India Theater from 1944 to 1946. A graduate of Indiana University and Yale Law School, he had a long and distinguished career as an arbitrator in Labor/Management issues in Hawai‘i. The Historian for the Varsity Victory Volunteers, 442nd, and 522nd Field Artillery MIS, he has been designated a Living Treasure by Honpa Hongwanji Mission, and recently received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the University of Hawai‘i Alumni Association. Gregory Shepherd has studied Zen Buddhism since the early 1970s. He practiced with Yamada Koun Roshi at San Un Zendo in Kamakura and also with Robert Aitken Roshi in Honolulu, where he was groomed to be Aitkenʼs first successor. In Japan, he struggled with prejudice and cultural rigidity and found his deeper meditations leading to actual panic attacks over fear of losing himself. What began as a quest for enlightenment became Gregʼs confrontation with his own inner demons: his need for approval, his distrust of authority, and his ego-driven fixation on achieving the profound spiritual breakthrough of kensho (“the Big K”). Ultimately, he broke with Zen and his teachers to pursue a career in music. He received a fellowship from the Japanese Ministry of Education to research contemporary Japanese music. He is currently Associate Professor of music at Kauaʻi Community College. Vicki Viotti, born in New York but a Hawaiʻi resident for most of her life, was lucky to move her editorial writerʼs desk to the Honolulu Star-Advertiser, after The Honolulu Advertiser closed. She is a graduate of McKinley High School and earned her journalism degree at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa, where she later found her way back for a masterʼs in political science, and things political remain top of her list of interests. She also has done some teaching as an adjunct instructor at Kapiʻolani Community College and Hawaii Pacific University, with the fond hope that those students might still find a place in journalism. David Stannard is a Professor of American Studies at the University of Hawaiʻi. He also has taught at Yale University and, as a visiting professor, at Stanford and the University of Colorado. A Guggenheim, Rockefeller, and American Council of Learned Societies Fellow, Stannard received his PhD from Yale and is the author or editor of six books, including Honor Killing 23 Bank of Hawaii presents The 8th Annual Hawai‘i Book and Music Festival Telling Lives: The Art and Practice of Biography and Memoir Hawai‘i Council for the Humanities Pavilion SATURDAY MAY 18 SUNDAY MAY 19 10 A.M. Kiss & Tell: The Naked Truth Stuart H. Coleman, Moderator Ben Cayetano, Bob Jones, Mark Panek, Sandra Simms 11 A.M. Lives Online: Truth and Truthiness John Zuern, Moderator Melissa Chang, ‘Umi Perkins, Catherine Toth 11 A.M. Tell Me Your Story: Young Lives Susan Yim, Moderator Lee Cataluna, Chris McKinney, Lee Tonouchi NOON Creative Witness: Docupoetry Susan M. Schultz, Moderator Amalia Bueno, Wing-Tek Lum, Gary Pak NOON Hawai‘i’s Story, and Mine Sydney Iaukea, Moderator Leilani Holmes, Patrick Vinton Kirch, Sam Low 1 P.M. One Place, Different Voices Craig Howes, Moderator Brandy Nālani McDougall, Puakea Nogelmeier, Susan M. Schultz, Jean Toyama 1 P.M. Breaking Records: Athletes’ Lives Michael Tsai, Moderator Jim Becker, Sandra Hall, John Ritter 2 P.M. 2 P.M. Instant Lives: Deadline Biography Beth-Ann Kozlovich, Moderator Rasa Fournier, Warren Nishimoto, Vicky Viotti True Lies: Lost in Translation Bob Green, Moderator Yunte Huang, Victoria Kneubuhl, Craig Santos Perez 3 P.M. 3 P.M. Living Memory: Honoring the Past Brian Niiya, Moderator Gail Miyasaki, Ted Tsukiyama, Kumu Kahua Theatre Perfect Pitch: Musical Lives Chris Vandercook, Moderator John Berger, Tom Moffatt, Laurie Gale Rubin 4 P.M. 4 P.M. Life Quests: Memoirs and Beyond David Ulrich, Moderator Perle Besserman, Malcolm Nāea Chun, Greg Shepherd Truth in Montage: Documentary Lives Don Wallace, Moderator Meleanna Meyer, Nanette Napoleon, Robert Pennybacker 5 P.M. Why Write Lives Mark Panek, Moderator Tom Coffman, Randall Roth, David Stannard, Kathryn Takara Produced by Hawai‘i Book & Music Festival (HBMF) Cover photo: Helen Desha Beamer 1882-1952, composer, singer, musician. With support from the Hawai‘i Council for the Humanities [Courtesy Gaye Beamer] “We the People” initiative of the National Endowment for the Humanities Principal Scholar : Dr. Craig Howes Executive Director: Roger Jellinek Design: Angela Wu-Ki Printing by Hagadone Printing Photo credits: Courtesy of Berger Archive, the Bishop Museum, DeSoto Brown, Mountain Apple Co., Gaye Beamer, Hawaiian Mission Children’s Society, Wayoutwest Enterprises