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Thursday

Flash Interview: Kara Cochran Talks “Chickens” with Elaine Magarrell

Elaine.jpgElaine Mag­a­r­rell, teacher, artist, and writer, is the author of two books of poet­ry: On Hog­back Moun­tain (1985, win­ner of the Wash­ing­ton Writ­ers’ Pub­lish­ing House Prize), and Blame­less Lives (1991, win­ner of the Word Works Prize). A selec­tion of her poems appeared, most recent­ly, along with poems by Cice­ly Angle­ton and Reed Whit­te­more in Inven­to­ry (2008, Bar­clay Bryan Press.) Her poems have appeared in numer­ous lit­er­ary jour­nals. Born in Iowa, she is a long-time res­i­dent of Wash­ing­ton, DC.

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What first attract­ed you to very short fic­tion?

I came across a con­test offer­ing a prize for short, short fic­tion, and became intrigued with the idea.

I recent­ly reviewed your flash piece titled “Chick­ens,” fea­tured in Micro Fic­tion. In this piece I was fas­ci­nat­ed by how you were able to write about a com­mon­ly known fact of chick­ens being used as food, but describe it in such a way that was entire­ly new and emo­tion­al for the read­er. How do you enter into writ­ing about top­ics such as food in a way that is inven­tive and mean­ing­ful in a dif­fer­ent way? Do you con­duct research based on inter­est or come up with ideas on your own and explore them in your writ­ing?

This is hard to answer. The ori­gins of a poem are mys­te­ri­ous. I don’t gen­er­al­ly do research before begin­ning a poem, although ideas will some­times grow out of things I’ve read. I don’t recall what brought me to the sub­ject of chick­ens for this piece.

We often think of the farmer as a sym­bol of life, pro­vid­ing the fresh­est goods and being close to the earth. Here, he is a mur­der­er. Where do you find inspi­ra­tion for char­ac­ters like this?

Out of real­i­ty. From the begin­ning of human his­to­ry, men have mur­dered. Cain, a farmer, mur­dered Abel, who raised ani­mals. All the meat we eat comes from the killing of ani­mals.

I also found out that you are a poet. Are you able to use cer­tain things you’ve learned from flash in poet­ry, and what do you find are the major over­laps?

For me, poet­ry is pri­ma­ry and fic­tion sec­ondary. Obvi­ous­ly there are line breaks in poet­ry and not in flash fic­tion, but I’ve nev­er cared much about line breaks any­way. “Chick­ens” was repub­lished, with line breaks, in my poet­ry col­lec­tion, Blame­less Lives.

Do you have any advice for poets look­ing to write longer work such as flash?

Not real­ly. Some poems (though not, gen­er­al­ly, mine) can be longer than works of flash fic­tion. It’s a mat­ter of choice and feel­ing, intu­ition.

Do you think there is a dif­fer­ence between flash or prose poet­ry? Does the dif­fer­ence mat­ter?

One obvi­ous dif­fer­ence is that flash involves a nar­ra­tive ele­ment and much prose poet­ry does not. Many poems are also nar­ra­tives, how­ev­er. The dif­fer­ence doesn’t mat­ter much to me.

What are you work­ing on now?

I’m not writ­ing now.

I saw that you have worked as a res­i­dent writer in the D.C. dis­trict schools. Do you have any advice for younger writ­ers aspir­ing to teach writ­ing?

Yes. They should allow their stu­dents great free­dom. Noth­ing the stu­dent does is wrong.

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About the Author

Cochran.jpgKara Cochran is in her first year of the MFA pro­gram at Rose­mont Col­lege. In 2011, she received her BA in Cre­ative Writ­ing and Ger­man Stud­ies from Deni­son Uni­ver­si­ty in Ohio. After grad­u­a­tion, she worked for a non­prof­it orga­ni­za­tion and attend­ed law school for a year before com­ing to her sens­es and apply­ing to Rose­mont. At Rose­mont, she is the poet­ry edi­tor for the Rathal­la Review and writes poet­ry, flash fic­tion and nov­el-length work. Kara’s work tends to be influ­enced by her upbring­ing in a For­eign Ser­vice fam­i­ly, and although she spent much of her child­hood over­seas and in var­i­ous parts of the US, she has lived in Philadel­phia for two years and is proud to call it home. In her free time, she likes to read, run, drink wine, go to the movies with her hus­band and hang out with her orange cat, Clemen­tine.

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