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May/June 2005
Volume 19,
Online Issue 9

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Student’s life ends in Iraq

2005 Student Leadership Awards

Senate supports university students

Hillary Clinton blasts Bush at Minnesota fundraiser

Alumni spotlight: Lisa Middag

When Motion Matters: An interview with poet Michael Joseph Winslow

Psychology Club learns about SAD

Third Floor Gallery features the art of Dayton’s Bluff Elementary students

Fully paid health professional scholarships available to qualifying Army recruits

A student union at Metropolitan State?

Stressful student lifestyle increases mental health risks

Isolation, care investigated at local nursing home

Internships: don’t count them out

Coleman Announces $7.9 million for 25 Minnesota colleges and universities

On-line learning—why does it really cost more?

FREE!dom - Free concerts at Twin Cities parks

Technology Bytes: Give your PC some TLC

Viewpoint: Hillary clinton: can she win in 2008?

Viewpoint: America is ready for a female president, but it won’t be Hillary

Viewpoint: Can she win in ’08? Sure, just ask her husband...

Sports Corner: According to some, Mauer is the key

Student Spotlight: Viroon Chinviratchai

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When motion matters
An interview with poet Michael Joseph Winslow

-- Kristin Johnson

I expected Michael Joseph Winslow would be the type of person you might engage in lively conversation at a bar or a party. But, according to Winslow, that is not the case. He said he often goes to social get-togethers, but that he sometimes ends up sitting alone at the bar or off somewhere writing quietly in one of his moleskin notebooks. He goes through the notebooks voraciously. In them he writes random, disjointed thoughts that oftentimes he will piece together to form completed poems at a later time.

A recent graduate of Metropolitan State’s Creative Writing Program, Winslow’s main genre is poetry, though he writes some short stories as well. Most of his work focuses on relationships, love and the state of the world today. And, regardless of his extensive interest and experience in traveling, all of his writing remains introspective.

Regarding the theme of love, he said he is especially interested in makeups and breakups because of the heightened sense of emotion present at those moments.

Winslow describes himself as moody and confident, but alternately depressed. When asked how others would describe him, he jokes, “It depends who you ask.” He is also very much a morning person. He loves mornings because “it’s like a second chance, a new beginning—it’s inspirational.”

And this inspiration is crucial to his genre. Too often he feels like he’s in a rut. So he seeks out anything that will stir him and feed that inspiration. He gets this from people as much as anything.

In this excerpt from his poem War Weather, Winslow expresses his feelings on the leadership in America just before last November’s Presidential election:

“Fast-forward past four unnecessary years of sedation, salivating from the mouth at the thought of change.

Fast forward past four unscrupulous years of smirks
supposed to zonk and placate a populous of coy children,
proactive now, at the exact moment,
when motion matters.”

He expanded on his thoughts about politics today. “People feel powerless—swept up in the stream of how things are.” He encouraged others, and said, “make your voice be heard and have conviction to stand up for your beliefs.” He said people should feel safe to do this even if it goes against the grain because “Americans are big fans of the underdog.”

He went on to say we seem to be missing something today—there are no great orators. The voices of JFK, RFK, MLK and others are missed. He said we need more role models. “People need to stand up more and be counted. Society seems to be in a haze—too often all so goddamn phony.” But the problem with fighting for convictions, he said, is that “the people who are the strongest and most convicted in their beliefs come across as being crazy.”

For Winslow, the most important thing about writing is “sharing innermost thoughts—things people wouldn’t normally share.” He values this honesty in his writing and in other people’s writing above anything else.

One of the reasons Winslow got into writing in the first place was because he read Jim Carroll’s acclaimed book The Basketball Diaries, written when the author was in his early teens. Winslow was impressed that someone could achieve so much in writing at such a young age. He also said he loves reading anything thought provoking, but jokes he sometimes reads the dictionary for fun.

One of Winslow’s favorite authors is Walt Whitman for Song of Myself, a 40-page poem in the collection, Leaves of Grass. He said Whitman was all about getting out in his surroundings and taking it all in. “And he’s from Brooklyn, which is cool,” he adds.

This summer, he will spend three months teaching English at a total immersion camp in Southern France, one of his favorite destinations. To prepare, he earned his ESL certificate from Hamline University. Winslow is not allowed to speak French to the students at the camp; quite a change from the usual image of French regard for their own language. So he fears he won’t get to practice his language skills as much as he had hoped. Winslow said that in America people are too focused on “living to work,” whereas, overseas—France especially—”people work so they can live.”

Winslow was born in Minneapolis and still lives there, though he doesn’t see himself staying there long-term. Currently, he tutors in the Writing Center at Metropolitan State.

In August, he will teach a course for young writers at the Loft. He plans to use notebooks, similar to the ones he uses to record his own thoughts and writing, as a learning tool in the class. Homework assignments will include taking notes outside of class. The work will then be used for in-class writing exercises.

Winslow hopes someday to have a volume of his work published. Five of his poems appeared in the premier issue of Haute Dish, published Spring 2005. To read his work, go to hautedish.metrostate.edu and click on the Poetry section of the Archive.


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