Submission to Cordite 83: MATHEMATICS

Mathematics
Photograph by Tim Grey

Poetry for Cordite 83: MATHEMATICS is guest-edited by Fiona Hile.

The invention of transfinite set theory by the 19th Century German mathematician, Georg Cantor, hinges the romantic conception of a boundless infinite to a post-Cantorian description of an infinity of infinities. As Christopher Norris writes, ‘thinkers all the way from Aristotle to Hegel denied the very possibility of a ‘completed’ or ‘positive’ infinite … Cantor’s realization that the scandal of the infinite – of a part that must somehow be conceived as equal to the whole – could in fact serve as its very definition or distinguishing mark’ reconfigured mathematics, and offered new ways for philosophy to think about Being and Truth.

The call for poems for this issue, MATHEMATICS, is therefore at once as finite and as infinite as it gets. If you’ve been writing poems about the universal or the particular, or whatever lies between, I’d like to read them.


Submit poems (prose, comics, visual, concrete) or works of microfiction (500 words maximum). Read more about submitting to Cordite Poetry Review. Please note:

1. We will only read submissions sent during our official submission periods.

2. Cordite maintains a hybrid submissions policy. This means that the guest editor may invite five (5) Australian and five (5) overseas authors directly to submit to the issue. In addition, the guest-editor will anonymously select an additional 30-35 works from Australian authors and use their discretion to select further overseas works. For each issue, the guest editor does not know the identities of the online contributors (via Submittable) until after the final selections have been made.

3. Simultaneous submissions or previously published material will not be considered. This includes works published in print and web journals but does not apply to material first published on personal blogs.

4. Please place up to three (3) poems in one (1) Word, RTF or PDF document (unless specifically noted otherwise for special issues), with no identifying details in the document itself.

5. We are not able to offer feedback on individual poems.

6. Submissions will only be accepted via Submittable …

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Posted in GUNCOTTON | Tagged , ,

NO THEME VI Editorial

No Theme vi

It was a great privilege, if a little overwhelming (I had about 1,800 poems to read), to edit this edition of Cordite Poetry Review and, as it is not themed, I had the luxury of choosing poems on various subjects. I have tried to make the issue varied but also unified by my aesthetic principles. I am one of those poets who believe aesthetics are important, that an over-heated experimental or exploratory approach, or a poetics that privileges linguistic flux over emotional stability or response, can take us away from the deep connection that language has with the body. This is one reason why I have an affection for the lyric, and I do not hold to the assumption that the poet does not exist, or that the movement inwards, towards subjectivity, is innately problematic. From the body we get idiosyncrasies of rhythm, music, voice, sensual knowledge, syntactical deportment, emotion and ideas. No-one who writes a poem is ever disembodied, though sometimes it can seem as if they are, given the overabundance of abstraction and linguistic imprecision that occurred in many of the poems I read for this issue.

The poems I finally chose were those in which the poet had put imaginative pressure on their language to give rise to a unique reality. These poems are silvered with sensual imagery, with a precision of language and technique that skilfully reflects and takes us to the heart of the matters at hand.

Todd Turner’s poem ‘The Fall’, about a girl’s sudden spill from her horse, recreates vividly the panic and horror of her plight. The language is steeped in visceral description, the suspense and drama constantly heightened by the details, but the master stroke in this poem is the way the language is worked at the end, giving it metaphorical import and twist: ‘I thought of how lucky you were and despite/ the risks, remembered your overriding words, / “It’s in my blood,” and how every bone/ within you has been marrowed by what it loves.’ The word ‘marrowed’ hits home with undeniable force. I would also alert readers to Omar Sakr’s ‘Brothers’ which makes a similar leap of brilliance in the final line, the phrase ‘the crack of dawn’ acquiring great power when read in context with the way that ‘crack’ is used elsewhere in the poem.

Another poem which illuminates a very direct physical encounter is Anthony Lawrence’s ‘Cobber’. This poem is also literally steeped in flesh and blood. It describes a child’s need to get close to animal life, in this case with a goat. ‘When it put its face to mine in a gesture I saw as curiosity / and welcome, its eyes contained black slashes, as though identical / cuts were still healing, then it stepped back and chewed sideways // before my head was printed and opened by twin mounds / of horn.’ This poem is rich with physical detail, the language grounded, and when the reader learns that the goat is later to be dinner for a team of cricketers, such phrases as ‘that eaten down world’ and ‘the shape of my mouth’ acquire much resonance.

In Andy Kissane’s ‘The Book of Screams’, the reader discovers, to their horror, who and what is causing the protracted screaming in a hospital ward. The poem has a deftly controlled narrative, it is suspenseful and dramatic, the imagery is arresting and memorable: ‘Her body is/ no more than a diaphanous veil hanging / between this world and the next.’

In choosing for this issue, I looked for poems which I felt some sort of energy leap out from them. Don Paterson, in his essay ‘The Dark Art of Poetry’1 says: ‘Poetry is a form of magic, because it tries to change the way we perceive the world, that is to say that it aims to make the texture of our perception malleable.’ Jane Hirshfield says a similar thing: ‘A good poem goes beyond its own well-madeness … Having read a poem that matters, the person who holds the page is different than he or she was before.’2

Mona Attamimi’s richly braided ‘The Message’, had my head reeling with its redolent imagery and exotic narrative. Look how the body is evoked in these lines as she describes the messenger: ‘New wealth had lengthened his neck, swanning him / to the point of oblivion, his heart roasted in the sweet tannin // of brewed grapes, and the rose coloured blood on his tongue / craved more.’ The lush, luxuriant rhythms enact, amplify and enhance this poem.

I noticed that my selection also contains poems that delight in play, or have as their operating mechanisms surprise, slippage, juxtaposition, compressive and associative power. Julie Chevalier’s poem ‘Shadow’ has some of the charm of the American Russell Edson as she follows the escapades in Bondi and Venice of Big Elephant and Little Elephant. Simon Patton in ‘Thirteen Swifties’ magically manoeuvres meaning and image into new, recharged contexts. ‘Requiem for a War, with Refrain’ by New Zealand poet Siobhan Harvey, keeps reinventing and intensifying the political content by repetition and word pairing. Nathan Curnow’s ‘Hook’ shows the close alignment poetry has with pleasure and play as he has slips his words into cheeky, linguistic alignments. Joanne Burns in ‘sting-along’ uses enterprising, imaginative phrases and images which stitch ideas and affections together. I love the hilarity of the first line: ‘there’s no point to owning a country / if you can’t look after your own hair’.

I have also chosen some formal poems which are remarkably well-executed. Mark Macrossan’s sestina ‘The Einsteinian Qualities of Distance’ doesn’t trip up or seem over-extended, instead it has an ease and a naturalness which adds to the poem’s elegance and cohesion. Rod Usher’s ‘Yesterdays’ employs a surefooted structure and rhyme scheme which add to the poem’s sense of loss and nostalgia – the recurring sounds re-enforcing the speaker’s regret at time passing. James Lucas’s villanelle ‘At Western Plains’ seems an excellent formal choice for a poem which is about sound and its repetition.

The American poet Robert Bly has said that ‘the image makes a poem moist’ and I think of this when I read Carol Jenkins’s highly sensuous ‘Barns in Charlevoix’ which has impressive descriptive poise, and a sumptuousness of image that leads to such lines as; ‘… a sudden shaft / of afternoon pouring like honey into dark tea’. Diana Bridge, another New Zealand poet, presents the reader with a wonderfully affective meditation on a landscape represented by a painting on a book cover in ‘Cover reflections’. This poem is full of finely nuanced, delicately sensed moments of perception. ‘But the sand catches fire, there is light coming off / the sea and even the sky looks ready to ignite, / were it not for those earth-coloured bands / that marry with the scene, holding the present steady.’ Eileen Chong, in ‘Haar’, works water imagery marvellously so that sensation becomes cognition. Jill Jones has one of those endings that are to die for in ‘The Storm’, a poem full of refractions and tonal shifts juxtaposed and interwoven, as is exemplified in the final sentence, ‘The leaves make a noise almost as if / I was waiting for someone.’

There are so many other fine poems of which I don’t have the space to comment on, but I’m sure readers will enjoy these poems which value and celebrate both the large and the ordinary, travelling outwards into politics, history and culture, yet coming back to the everyday personal worlds of love, suffering and injustice. Each poet defines a world and it is important for us as readers to be exposed to as many of these differing worlds as we can. My thanks to the poets for these distinctive poems.

Posted in ESSAYS | Tagged

‘We can wake up if we wish’: Autumn Royal Interviews Cecilia Vicuña


Image courtesy of La Tercera Edición Impresa

Cecilia Vicuña is a multidisciplinary Chilean artist who describes her practice as dwelling in the not yet. Vicuña forms and disentangles meaning with poetry, oral performances, filmmaking, criticism and activism. Throughout the dimensions of her work since the 1960s, Vicuña has continuously engaged in poetics and what she terms as ‘ancient spiritual technologies’ to generate liminal spaces with the hope of inciting change and social resistance.

Vicuña first visited Australia as an artist for the 2012 Sydney Biennale. She returned to Australia in 2016 to partake in Liquid Architecture’s ‘Why Listen to Animals’, an experimental series offering aural reconsiderations of John Berger’s 1980 seminal essay ‘Why Look at Animals’. During her time in Melbourne, Vicuña also presented her versioning of a lecture entitled ‘The Artist as … Poet’ at the Bella Union in Carlton on October 6, 2016. Vicuña’s lecture was a part of the series The Artist As … co-presented by the Institute of Modern Art Brisbane and Curatorial Practice at Monash Art Design and Architecture.

To experience one of Vicuña’s oral performances is to both feel and hear the chasms of all your previous understandings gently opening as she threads physical gestures, singing, chants and vocalisations of multiple languages into a space; a poem. As Rosa Alcalá explains in her introduction of Spit Temple: The Selected Performances of Cecilia Vicuña:

Although Vicuna is focused on oral performance, hers is no romantic idea of a pristine orality. It is one fully cognizant of the intervention of print, and is concerned mainly with the interplay between poetic texts and the vocalization and improvisation of those texts.

The morning after Vicuña’s performance she and I discussed her approaches to poetry, specifically with regards to Latin American and oral traditions, the social responses poetry may provoke and the influence that archival processes have on informing cultural memories and understandings. This transcript is a marking of our exchanges, as Vicuña states ‘to respond is to offer again’.

Autumn Royal: During your performance of ‘The Artist as … Poet’ you read Oodgeroo Noonuccal’s poem ‘We are Going’. The duality of the title and last line, ‘we are going’, expresses both the loss of Aboriginal people but also a resistance against colonisation. The line ‘we are going’ reminded me of your philosophy to ‘dwell in the not yet’. How did you encounter that poem?

Cecilia Vicuña: Just the day before my partner, the poet James O’Hern, sent it to me from New York. He couldn’t come with me on this journey so he’s been travelling with me in spirit. He’s been reading Aboriginal poetry – including Indigenous Australian poetry – and has also been to Australia and visited the ancient art of the caves of the communities many times, so he’s familiar with the universe of Aboriginal poetics. It was such a lovely gift to receive that poem because it’s true. My reading of the line ‘we are going’ is that it doesn’t just refer to the Indigenous people of Australia, it also refers to the whole of humanity. The Indigenous Australians have lived there for 70,000 years with extraordinary wisdom and resilience, creating some of the most amazing art in the world in the process. If they’re erased, if they’re eliminated, it’s a sign of our own self-destruction and so the poem is very prophetic in that it says that we are nature. Every living thing is nature. I mean, why are we on this suicidal move, and why is it that people refuse to see what we are doing to the environment even though we all feel it? That is the real question for our times. Why are we indifferent to our own death?

AR: Do you think Noonuccal’s poem spoke to you so strongly because of the way you approach your own work because and how it ends on a note of continuation, of what is yet to happen?

CV: If you read it as a warning, the warning includes the idea that we can wake up if we wish. If we connect to that terrible pain then there is a chance, and I believe that there is still a chance. But we don’t have a lot of time. We have this particular decade to take responsibility, and if we don’t do it now it’s going to be too late. It’s already happening, destruction has already sped up intensely in every place and so we say ‘look: what’s going on with the melting of ice, with the rising of the oceans?’ and that loop has already been set in motion. We don’t know what it’s going to be like in five years, in ten years. Originally, people were claiming that these environmental disasters were going to be in 100 years, but we know now that that’s not the case. It’s already happening for a lot of people, it’s not a matter of prophecy any more.

AR: Do you think that a form of denial about environmental destruction is by believing that a lot of the warnings and messages are treated as just a prophecy rather than a reality?

CV: Absolutely. The ways of pushing away a reality are infinite, and they are all embedded in a worldview which has been studied by many people. There is a Cuban poet that I admire and mentioned a few times last night, his name is José Lezama Lima. He says that it is the power of the image that creates the foundation of history. So history responds to an image, an image, in this case, means a worldview. If people are brought up in the Christian-western idea that nature is to be controlled and dominated, then to destroy it is meaningless. You see, it’s all dependent on what most people believe: that science will come up with a solution. That is another form of denial. Science is not oriented towards looking for a solution, science is oriented towards profit. That is the condition of economy. If scientists don’t work for profit, they don’t have money for research, so the research is not oriented towards the survival of humanity. The desire not to see is driving this denial.

AR: Is this one of the reasons why you’ve pursued poetry and art? By making works and giving performances that can’t be contained and the awareness of how art and poetry can communicate certain ideas about what is possible?

CV: Yes, I began art and poetry as a very young girl, and my family always made fun of me. They said ‘Cecilia was born with a little pencil in her hand’, or my brothers would say ‘Cecilia is a factory of madness’ because I was constantly creating this or that form which is formless at the same time. Therefore, my art sort of seeps under, even though it has been censored and marginalised for so many decades – 40 years or so. I would say, somehow, my work finds a way to percolate, to go under and surface in another place. That’s not my doing, it’s the energy of what’s inside the poems, inside the images; they have a life, a life that connects it to other life forms.

AR: I appreciate the way you describe your work, Cloud-Net, during your performance last night. It speaks to the energy that you were just referring to. I haven’t seen a physical copy of Cloud-Net – only the images and I’ve listened to your references to it – but I feel like I’ve already encountered it in a sense. One of the things I admire about your work is that you speak philosophically about things in a way that’s inclusive and that doesn’t alienate.

CV: The most powerful images are always elemental images, like a cloud-basket. That is something that most people can picture. You’re lying on the ground and you’re looking up right now under the clouds and we can see these things.

Posted in INTERVIEWS | Tagged ,

Lee Cataldi: New Poems with an Introduction by Joanne Burns


Courtesy of the author

In this selection of poems, Lee Cataldi writes in a spare, lean, direct way, steered by an aesthetic of restraint. She often uses internal spacing and short stanzas to re-enforce her measure. A sense of loss inhabits a number of the poems. Cataldi has worked as a teacher and linguist in Indigenous communities in the Northern Territory and Western Australia. In ‘the opening of the children’s centre in Balgo’ the language centre seems to have gone

                                the kukatja books
into which we put
our black and white lives have become
art works no-one can read

these days Balgo is a picture

and for sale'

In ‘mourning is women’s business’ [for Tjama] she writes with clarity

now the funerals string together
narratives of loss
                                            how hard it is
to think any more of forever

She imagines in ‘on breaking things’ the larger effects when the handle of a blown glass puja bell is broken. The poem impresses with its reverberations.

Poets also feature in this selection. In the opening poem c’est l’homme [for John Forbes] Cataldi addresses Forbes directly in a forceful assessment/homage of sorts regarding the poet’s desire and struggle to achieve poetic/stylistic excellence

despite all the stumbling about in the bushes
the stubbed toes     the dirt     the broken fingernails

The poem ends with a climax that is dazzling, implosive, and well, Forbesian! And as Cataldi says, in a one line stanza, ‘perfect’.

Translations of poems by Michelangelo and Mallarmé complete the selection. In these translations Cataldi pares back the emotive and passionate and eliminates rhyme schemes to achieve a more contemporary tone and texture: a kind of poetic de-cluttering. Michelangelo’s three poems of passion and rejection are trim and sharp:

your eyes meet his
don't hang around    I thought
I could have him
any way I wanted    now

see what I am

In Mallarmé’s almost sirenic ‘Brise marine’ the title becomes ‘sea change’. Cataldi removes Mallarmé’s many exclamatory statements. She breaks up the poetic intensity of the sonnet with a varied form of stanzas. The second poem’s title ‘Le vierge, le vivace et le bel aujourd’hui’ becomes ‘innocent breathless beautiful day’. In this poem of the swan trapped in ice Cataldi effectively employs the short line stanza form and internal spacing. She creates a withering final note

a transparent ghost the swan
has distilled himself
into this place and freezes
into a dream of being
misunderstood    his

exile is useless

Here there is a sense of the arrival of the bleakly existential – the late 19th Century turns away from the transcendental – which is suitably unsettling. And no flames from a burning Mini Cooper in this scenario.


Lee Cataldi: c’est l’homme
Lee Cataldi: mourning is women’s business
Lee Cataldi: the opening of the children’s centre in Balgo
Lee Cataldi: hereafter
Lee Cataldi: the sky is falling in
Lee Cataldi: on breaking things
Lee Cataldi: seventy
Lee Cataldi: michelangelo 27
Lee Cataldi: michelangelo 107
Lee Cataldi: michelangelo 143
Lee Cataldi: mallarme: sea change
Lee Cataldi: mallarme: innocent breathless beautiful day

Posted in CHAPBOOKS | Tagged ,

Ainslie Templeton Interviews Christopher (Loma) Soto


Image courtesy of Jess X Chen

Christopher Soto (aka Loma) is a Brooklyn-based poet who has received several awards for his writing and activism. Most notably, he is the author of the chapbook Sad Girl Poems, which discusses his experiences with domestic violence and queer youth homelessness. Born in Los Angeles, Soto relocated to pursue and receive an MFA from New York Univeristy. Since, he’s had a pronounced effect on the literary world. He is the editor of Nepantla: A Journal Dedicated to Queer Poets of Color, founded at the Lambda Literary Foundation and will be published by Nightboat Books in 2018. He is also the cofounder of the Undocupoets Campaign, working to create grants for undocumented writers in the United States. I corresponded with Soto before he began his most recent tour, discussing his life and work in literary activism and what it is to be a poet in the incipient days of the Trump presidency.

Ainslie Templeton: Thanks for taking the time to talk with us, Loma. I saw that you were recently nominated for the ‘Freedom Plow Award for Poetry and Activism’. Congratulations. Can you tell us about the future of literary activism for you?

Christopher Soto: Thank you. I’m excited about that nomination, to be alongside Francisco Aragon and J P Howard who are friends of mine (and Andrea Assaf whose work I am just discovering now). There are so many people doing literary activist work so it feels special to be recognised.

As for the next steps I want to take within my literary and activist explorations; I want to finish my first full-length manuscript and finish editing the Nepantla anthology with Nightboat Books. Other small projects, such as the Trump Tower protest I hosted, will likely come along the way.

AT: Can you tell us more about the Trump Tower protest?

CS: Yes, I worked with Kyle Dacuyan and Brittany Michelle Dennison to host a ‘Poets Vigil for the NEA’ outside of Trump Tower. People gathered to mourn the proposed loss of the National Endowment for the Arts, to read poems and to yell at Trump. The NEA’s annual budget is approximately $150 million (or below $0.50 per person annually). The proposed defunding of the arts is not about saving a budget but rather it is about stifling the creative and intellectual communities in America.

AT: Did your literary activist endeavours start with you first chapbook Sad Girl Poems? I know that you brought this chapbook on a ‘National Tour To End Queer Youth Homelessness’, can you tell us about that?

CS: I’ve been protesting for over a decade now. My first day of high school I ditched sixth period to go protest President Bush and the wars in the Middle East, when he came to speak in my hometown. Also, in those days I would host large poetry events as fundraisers for various causes. I would bring in poets, rappers, drumline, breakdancers, everyone would come together in their arts for a particular cause. In high school, I was speaking about Darfur. Now, my politics have continued to grow and shift and the projects that I am organising are even more developed. One such project is the ‘National Tour to End Queer Youth Homelessness’, which I started after my chapbook launch. That started in part because I was on the verge of homelessness again myself at that time.

AT: I was really taken by your poem ‘Transactional Sex with Satan’, and found myself rereading it a few times. In it you write:

Bound & bruised // I’ve become the siren & shipwreck // synonyms for lonely.

My sex is // melancholic terrorism // or // witchcraft in // the Catholic Church.

What’s your relationship with the confessional (poem) and how that relates to innocence?

CS: Rachel Zucker was my professor and taught me about contemporary American confessional poetry. Yet, I still have a hard time understanding what that means outside of white girls like Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath sometimes.

My poems are not direct translations of my lived experiences. I’m not sure what a direct translation of my lived experiences would mean either? All poems being a process of omission? Maybe in a way my poems are skewed confessionals.

Pertaining to innocence. I’m not interested in a narrator who is ‘innocent’. I believe that narrators need to evaluate themselves and maybe even incriminate themselves in a way that isn’t always heroic. Or at least, that’s the writing I find interesting. I like a vulnerable narrator and not the facade of a hero.

AT: You have been so deliberate in framing your work and tying it in with your activism, which I think is surprisingly rare in the publishing world. I see a lot of poets, writers, artists – and often young people – making their work and sort of just sending it out into the world and hoping for the best. Can you talk about pushing back on capitalist, white supremacist, and queer-fetishising structures of receiving your work and your voice?

CS: I speak up when I feel something needs to be said and I write about what’s important to me. I talk to the people (often poets) of shared experience and don’t talk to people who are not open to critical and creative conversations. I think my experiences in writing and publishing poetry, as far as who I have attracted to me, has been contingent upon my needs as a person in this world. My activism is built upon my needs for this world.

Posted in INTERVIEWS | Tagged , ,

2 Translated Borys Humenyuk Poems

Borys Humenyuk was born in Ternopil, Ukraine. He is an award-winning poet and the author of two novels, Lukianivka and Island. He played an active role in Ukraine’s 2013 Revolution of Dignity. Since 2014, he has been involved in anti-terrorist operations in the Ukrainian Donbas region. The translations included here are slated to appear in Words for War: New Poems from Ukraine, published by Academic Studies Press.


untitled

Our platoon commander is a weird fellow
When the sun rises over the battlefield
He says that it’s someone burning a tire at a far-off checkpoint
The Moon to him is the barrel of a cannon
And the sea is melted lead
Why is it salty?
Because it’s made of our tears sweat piss blood—
It flows through us.

A weird fellow, as I said
But today he outdid himself
In the early morning, he entered our tent and said
That’s it! No more war today!
That’s what they announced on TV—
War is over for three whole days.

Here at the front we’ve learned
There are two kinds of people: people and TV people
We dislike TV people
They seem fake, they’re poor actors
Actually, we don’t even have TV
And if we did, we’d just watch cartoons (more truth)
Or “In the World of Animals” (more interesting).

We were getting our weapons and ammo ready
When our odd platoon commander
Shocked us with this news.

The machine gun belt froze in the hands of gunner Vasyl from Kremenets
And his loader Sashko from Boyarka
Then it bristled, like the back of a prehistoric beast;
Four hand grenades peeking out of the pouch
Of grenadier Max from Lugansk
Scampered back into the sack like scared kittens.

Have you ever tried stopping a high-speed train
By placing a penny on the tracks?
Have you ever told the sun: wait, don’t move
I still have so much to do today.
Have you ever begged a woman in labour:
We’ve been snowed in, the midwife can’t make it,
Can you please hold on for three more days?

The child must be born
The train must reach its destination
The sun must keep rolling like a burning tire
And when it’s gone the moon will take its place
As a cannon barrel
And night will fall as ash.

On the first day of no war
We lost our machine gun loader
Sashko from Boyarka
And grenadier Max from Lugansk
The bullets came from the other side of war
Like angry hornets
Stung Sashko in the neck
And Max in the heart
Perhaps the other side doesn’t have the odd platoon commander
That spreads weird news
Or else they watch a different TV channel
Or else their TV set is broken.


Наш чотовий – чоловік з химерами
Коли над полем бою сходить сонце
Він каже що це на дальньому блокпосту запалили шину
Місяць у нього це горло крупнокаліберної гармати
А море – це розплавлене олово
Чому воно солоне?
Тому що у ньому наші сльози піт сеча і кров –
Воно протікає крізь нас

Химерний чоловік погодьтеся
Але сьогодні він сам себе перевершив
Коли рано-вранці зайшов до нашого намету і сказав
Усе – сьогодні війни не буде –
Так сказали по телевізору
На цілих три доби зупиняється війна

Ми тут давно помітили
Що люди діляться на людей і людей з телевізора
Ми не любимо дивитися на людей з телевізора
Вони якісь несправжні з них дуже погані актори
Зрештою – у нас немає телевізора
А якби й був то ми дивилися б мультфільми (вони правдивіші)
Чи «У світі тварин» (там більше добра і життя)

Ми саме приводили до ладу свою зброю і амуніцію
Коли химерний чотовий ошелешив нас не менш химерною новиною
Кулеметна стрічка завмерла в руках у кулеметника Василя з Кременця
І його другого номера Сашка з Боярки
А потім наїжачилась як спина доісторичної істоти
Чотири ручних гранати які крадькома визирали з підсумка
Гранатометника Макса з Луганська
Коли почули таке поховалися в підсумок наче злякані кошенята

Ви пробували зупинити швидкісний потяг
Поклавши на рейки монету?
Ви казали сонцю: постій отут не рухайся
У мене сьогодні ще так багато справ?
Ви благали жінку яка зібралася народжувати:
Дорогу замело повитуха запізнюється почекай ще три дні?

Дитина мусить народитися
Потяг повинен доїхати до своєї кінцевої зупинки
Сонце має догоріти наче палаюча шина
А на зміну дню небо викотить на позицію
Крупнокаліберну гармату місяця
І попелом осиплеться ніч

…У день коли не було війни
Ми втратили другого номера
Кулеметника Сашка з Боярки
І гранатометника Макса з Луганська
Кулі прилетіли з потойбіч війни
Наче злі шершні
Вжалили Сашка в шию
А Макса в серце
Мабуть на тому боці не знайшлося химерного чотового
Який розносить химерні новини що війни немає
Або ж вони дивляться інші програми
Чи у них просто зламався телевізор

Posted in TRANSLATIONS | Tagged , ,

2 Translated Nadia Anjuman Poems

Afghani poet Nadia Anjuman (1980—2005) grew up among a small literary community that encouraged her writing even during Taliban times. She was one of the first women to enrol in Herat University after the fall of the Taliban, but her pursuit of a literature degree was cut short when she was killed in an incident of domestic violence on 4 November, 2005, just short of her twenty-fifth birthday. Her chosen pen name honours her beloved Herat Literary Society, Anjuman-e Adabīye Herat.

Nadia Anjuman wrote many of her poems in traditional Persian forms such as the ghazal, a poem made up of five to fifteen grammatically independent couplets, utilising a refrain and rhyming pattern directly preceding the refrain. In Persian (as well as other languages like Arabic, Urdu, and Turkish) the form adheres to a strict metrical pattern and usually addresses themes like love, longing, and existential questions. Herat’s literary community considered Nadia to be one of the most skilled young poets of her generation, especially when it came to classical forms like the ghazal. One of the challenges of translating formal verse like Nadia’s is the question of how to preserve or recreate these forms in the English language (or, indeed, whether one should attempt to do so at all). Does a formal approach to translation facilitate the reader’s access to the sounds and rhythms of the original piece, or does it run the risk of polluting meaning by attempting to fit ideas into forms that work very differently in the destination language?

The poem Abas (Makes No Sense) is known to many Afghans by the name Dūkht-e Afghān (Afghan Girl), which is a song by musician Shahla Zaland that uses Nadia’s poem as lyrics. In translation, I have loosely aligned this poem to the ghazal-form in English.

The two poems included here are found in Anjuman’s 2005 collection Smoke-Bloom.

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2 Translated Georg Trakl Poems

Georg Trakl (1887—1914) was born in Salzburg and is considered one of the most important Austrian expressionists. A poet and pharmacist, he first gained attention through the Innsbruck based avant-garde journal Der Brenner. Thanks to anonymous financial support from Ludwig Wittgenstein, he was able to write three volumes of poetry that would heavily influence German expressionism. Trakl suffered bouts of severe depression, which intensified after a traumatic period as a medical officer in World War I. He died of an overdose of cocaine, probably deliberate, at the age of twenty-seven. The two poems translated here appeared in his first volume Gedichte in 1913.


To the Boy, Elis

Elis, when the blackbird calls in the dark forest,
this is your downfall.
Your lips drink the cool of the blue
rock spring.

Invoke, when your brow lightly bleeds,
ancient legends
and dark interpretations of bird flight.

You, though, go with soft paces in the night
that hangs full of purple grapes
and you wave arms more beautifully in blue.

A thornbush chimes
where your mooning eyes are.
O, how long Elis, are you dead?

Your body is a hyacinth
a monk dips his wax finger into.
A black cave is our silence.

Sometimes a soft beast treads out of it
and slowly sinks its heavy lids.
Black dew beads on your temples.

The last gold of fallen stars.


An Den Knaben Elis

Elis, wenn die Amsel im schwarzen Wald ruft,
Dieses ist dein Untergang.
Deine Lippen trinken die Kühle des blauen Felsenquells.

Laß, wenn deine Stirne leise blutet,
Uralte Legenden
Und dunkle Deutung des Vogelflugs.

Du aber gehst mit weichen Schritten in die Nacht,
Die voll purpurner Trauben hängt,
Und du regst die Arme schöner im Blau.

Ein Dornenbusch tönt,
Wo deine mondenen Augen sind.
O, wie lange bist, Elis, du verstorben.

Dein Leib ist eine Hyazinthe,
In die ein Mönch die wächsernen Finger taucht.
Eine schwarze Höhle ist unser Schweigen,

Daraus bisweilen ein sanftes Tier tritt
Und langsam die schweren Lider senkt.
Auf deine Schläfen tropft schwarzer Tau,

Das letzte Gold verfallener Sterne.

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Mass Culture: Artworks by Chun Yin Rainbow Chan


Chun Yin Rainbow Chan | Shanzhai Perfumes | SAME SAME | Perfumes bottles, cardboard packaging, jelly wax, mirrors, plasticine, aroma diffuser | Photograph by Document Photography


My work explores the intersections between mass culture, diaspora and globalisation. I am interested in the counterfeit as a unique aesthetic category that re-reads the uncanny. My works investigate how mimetic objects and symbols, such as bootlegs or fake luxury goods, problematise the socially-regulated impulse of consumerist desire.

The catalyst for my research into counterfeits was Shanzhai Ad Campaign, a multimedia work that I created for Ouroboros, curated by Justin Shoulder. I appropriated several uploaded images of knock-offs and turned them into sleek advertisements. From the punkish connotations of the Shanzhai1 phenomenon, to horrific reports of unsafe foods and structural corruption, China has been mythologised as the ‘crazy’ criminal pirate. The discourse around China’s rapid modernisation and intellectual property rights infringements deeply intrigued me.

In Same Same, curated by Tom Smith, I presented Shanzhai Perfumes where jelly replicas of fake designer perfumes were arranged into a retail display. To me, there was an equivalence between the fluidity of the marketplace and the abject wobbliness of jelly. The counterfeit as a sign is similarly wobbly with its transgressive, shape-shifting nature. Over time, each jelly degraded and became sad droopy figures. I like to imagine that as the jelly began to sag and lean on the perfume bottle from which it was moulded, they were engaging in a slow dance.

My practice often reframes Chinese traditions in incoherent ways. In Broken Vessel of 1996, Western pop songs are reimagined as Cantonese ‘bootleg’ versions. Since immigrating to Australia in 1996, English has fiercely supplanted Cantonese to become my dominant language. Probing into the impacts of assimilation, I thought the inconsistencies of translation apps seemed like an apt metaphor for my experiences. The lyrics are processed into Cantonese but remain faithful to the original melody. This, in turn, generates numerous tonal errors and render the already-imperfect Chinese translations completely absurd.

Currently, I am working on a photographic series, Gloss. On a trip to Guizhou Province in China last year, I came across an amazing pair of Shanzhai shoes. Design features from Versace, Prada, Louis Vuitton and Chanel products, were hybridised into a new, bold platform sandal. Walking in these made me feel frivolous and inspired a counterfeit persona. Gloss connotes a polished finish, a smooth surface — but it also means to give a misleading and deceiving explanation. Our world is full of glossy screens, where haptic technologies collapse the virtual and the real, where the surface has become the material. I want to ask how the counterfeit and its image might embody the contradictions of gloss; at once attempting to be lustrous but drowning in self-deceit.

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Dissecting the Apocalypse: Jorie Graham’s Sea Change

JG
Photograph courtesy of Stephanie Mitchell / Harvard News Office

‘… nobody seriously considers possible alternatives to capitalism any longer, whereas popular imagination is persecuted by the visions of the forthcoming ‘breakdown of nature’, of the stoppage of all life on earth – it seems easier to imagine the ‘end of the world’ than a far more modest change in the mode of production, as if liberal capitalism is the ‘real’ that will somehow survive even under conditions of a global ecological catastrophe … ’1

‘ … how can imaginative, responsible, meaningful agency thrive in such a complex and perilous world, fallen many times over, hardly off its knees when it comes to matters of hope?’2


In late 1965, three years after the Cuban missile crisis, when for the first time it seemed possible that the human race might be about to be wiped out en masse by its political leaders, Frank Kermode gave a series of lectures on the history of the apocalypse in European literature, published the following year as The Sense of an Ending. He examined the recurrent belief that we are living in the end times; that we have been singled out for annihilation, whether in fulfilment of Biblical prophecies or for some later reason. He was particularly intrigued by the way that these beliefs survive almost subliminally in secular texts: ‘… changed by our special pressures, subdued by our scepticism, the paradigms of apocalypse continue to lie under our ways of making sense of the world’ (Kermode 2000, p. 28). In an epilogue to a second edition of the book, ‘prompted by the approach of the millennium’ (p. 181), he adds another dimension to the terror of annihilation: ‘As St Augustine observed, anxieties about the end are, in the end, anxieties about one’s own end; he was long before me in suggesting that apocalypse, once imaginable as imminent, had the capacity to become immanent instead.’ Kermode identifies not just the Cuban missile crisis, but the assassination of President Kennedy and the Cold War as lying behind his original concerns with the nature of apocalyptic thinking and – writing in the years before the threat of catastrophic climate change became widely known – he detects a lessening of anxiety in relation to the Bomb. After all, he says, ‘the apocalypse can flourish on its own, quite independently of millennia’ (p. 182).

The relative optimism of the millennium – all that global partying – sixteen years later looks almost quaint. The overwhelming majority of the world’s scientists now understand that climate change – irreversible and accelerating – is with us now, rather than in some hypothetical future; and the world’s governments have so far been unable to institute anything approaching an adequate response. Bill McKibben, whose thinking has always attempted to incorporate some grounds for effective action into his warnings of the imminence of catastrophic climate change, writes in a recent book that ‘The planet on which our civilization evolved no longer exists’; and he records the current impacts of climate change in appalling detail (McKibben 2010, p. 27). His final chapters outline some strategies for inhabiting this dangerous new world: reducing energy use, returning to small-scale, mixed farming, cutting back on long-distance travel, and an internet-based renaissance in local community-building. There is a disjuncture, however, between these modest proposals and the sheer scale of the unfolding ecological catastrophe which he describes. Despair, in times like these, seems entirely rational.

Between September and November 1939, Walter Benjamin, already a refugee from Hitler, was interned in France as an enemy alien. On his release he returned to Paris. His final work, ‘On the Concept of History’, is thought to have been completed by May 1940, with the Nazi armies preparing to invade. Benjamin had refused to leave France earlier, and it was now almost too late. It was a time, in other words, when the personal and the political were combining to produce a grim prospect: not mass extinctions, but the probable victory of fascism, and, for a German Jew living in France, the likelihood of being rounded up by the Nazis in the not-so-distant future. He was writing, effectively, from within the apocalypse, both in its traditional sense of a great revelation or disclosure, and in the sense of an overwhelming catastrophe.

Benjamin attached great importance to this text. He wrote to Gretel Adorno in late April or early May 1940: ‘The war and the constellation that brought it about led me to take down a few thoughts that I can say that I have kept with me, indeed kept from myself, for nigh on twenty years.’ At the same time, however, he recognised their apparent fragility as political argument: ‘Even today, I am handing them to you more as a bouquet of whispering grasses, gathered on reflective walks, than a collection of theses’ (Eiland and Jennings 2014, p. 662). By means of a detailed analysis of the terms used within the theses, Sigrid Weigel has claimed that they ‘do not so much set out an historico-philosophical programme as present reflections on conceptualisations of history, or thought-images on the way history is conceived’ (Weigel 1996, p. 50). Reflections, thought-images, whispering grasses: this text is unlikely to present a conventional academic argument. Benjamin once said – ruefully or otherwise – of his own working methods, ‘I have never been able to do research and think in any sense other than, if you will, a theological one, namely, in accord with the Talmudic teaching about the forty-nine levels of meaning in every passage of Torah. That is, in my experience, the most trite Communist platitude possesses more hierarchies of meaning than does contemporary bourgeois profundity, which has only one meaning, that of an apologetic’ (Benjamin 1994, pp. 372-3). It is a position, if it can be described as such, which is reminiscent of the old joke about Italian communists treating Marxism in the same way that they treat traffic lights: not as a dogma but as a guide to action. In 1932, with his phrase ‘trite Communist platitude’, Benjamin managed both to abuse Communist dogma while at the same time elevating it above the entirety of bourgeois culture: at once validating it and refusing absolute solidarity – a nice example of his way of working.

‘On the Concept of History’ is accordingly a complex, multilayered text, in which a critique of Stalinism may inhabit an image which can also be read as an analysis of the failings of the German left, and even as self-analysis, an introspective, unsparing interrogation of the writer’s own sense of his own failures and those of his friends. Not only does the work contain uncountable layers of meaning; it also repulses any attempt at developing a consistent line of interpretation. ‘What is it,’ asks Andrew Benjamin at the beginning of his own reading of ‘On the Concept of History’, ‘to read a disjointed text?’ (Andrew Benjamin 2013, p. 162); and insofar as he answers his own question, he describes the task as ‘potentially endless’ (p. 193).

I will first attempt to develop one possible reading of ‘On the Concept of History’, taking for granted that any such reading exists alongside – and may even contradict – other more familiar interpretations. The second part of the article will follow this line of thinking in approaching Jorie Graham’s Sea Change, a collection of poetry that explores the catastrophic possibilities of global warming.

In August 1938, Benjamin made notes on a conversation with Bertolt Brecht, with whom he had a long and combative friendship. Brecht left Germany in February 1933, the morning after the Reichstag fire, and arrived in Denmark in June. Benjamin was a regular visitor until 1938. Every couple of years he would spend part of the summer staying just down the road from the Brecht family, and the two men played chess every day (Wizisla, p. 59; Parker p. 330). In the 1938 conversation, Brecht was explaining, passionately, the importance of his ‘Children’s Songs’ cycle:

In the struggle against them (the fascists), it is vital that nothing be overlooked. They don’t think small. They plan thirty thousand years ahead. Horrendous things. Horrendous crimes. They will stop at nothing. They will attack anything. Every cell convulses under their blows. So we mustn’t forget a single one. They distort the child in the womb. We can under no circumstances forget the children.

Benjamin goes on to record his own silently mutinous response to Brecht’s dystopian vision:

While he was talking, I felt moved by a power that was the equal of that of fascism – one that is no less deeply rooted in the depths of history than fascism’s power. It was a very strange feeling, wholly new to me. (Benjamin 2002, p. 340)

At the time, he does not go on to articulate the nature of his disagreement, either to Brecht or in his own notes.

The friendship between the two men, and the intellectual engagement with each other’s work, continued. In early 1939, Benjamin published a commentary on a number of Brecht’s poems, including ‘Legend of the Origin of the Book Tao-te-Ching on Lao-tzu’s Road into Exile’, in which the sage’s philosophy is summarised:

… the man, on a happy impulse,
Asked further: ‘Did he find out anything?’
Said the boy: ‘That the soft water, as it moves,
Vanquishes in time the mighty stone.
You understand – what is hard must yield.’ (Benjamin 2003, p. 246).

Benjamin identifies friendliness as the core of the poem: the sage’s delicate good manners, his willingness to render ‘a great service as if it were trivial’. He goes on to say, ‘The poem was written at a time when this statement rang in the ears like a promise nothing short of messianic … (It) teaches us that we should not lose sight of the inconstant, mutable aspect of things, and that we should make common cause with whatever is unobtrusive and plain but relentless, like water’ (Benjamin 2003, p. 248). Benjamin uses Brecht’s lines, here, in beginning to develop his argument against Brecht’s earlier line of thought, the plans for ‘thirty thousand years’ of domination. Hope may be as common as water.

Posted in ESSAYS, SCHOLARLY | Tagged , , , , , , , ,

Words and Spills: Disability, Sexuality and Cripping Your Poetry

What am I doing?

Writing while crip is complicated.

Not the act itself, not always. My hands work most of the time, and I have access to screen readers and dictation software. But writing crip is messy and awkward and bodied and mine, because no ‘experience of disability is universal’ (Kafer 2013, 34), no matter how much anyone wants it to be.

Twelve-year-old me would be mortified to know I’m writing about anaesthesia or falling on my face. I spent long stretches of childhood being stretched and stitched and plotted on gait charts so that, in part, I could pass, after all. Walking – and walking ‘well’ – was the goal. Surgeons worked diligently to break my feet so they could re-shape them into something I would walk on forever. There was a timeline. Surgeries planned for the brief, plastic period between when bones stop growing and puberty adds weight and other complications. It worked on me, for the most part, through a mix of luck (allegedly mine) and skill (definitely not mine).

Twelve-year-old me would approve of all the sappy love-stuff in some of these poems, but the idea of it still being mixed up surgery or falls after all that work, all that expectation of normality-in-adulthood, would make her keen.

Writing about all of this feels a little bit like standing half naked in front of men armed with medical degrees and sharpies. Performing disability is something I’ve done all my life, just by living it. Why write about it?

(What am I doing?)

I wrote these poems as part of an exercise on performative poetry at Deakin University. I admit, I thought that ‘writing what I knew’, in this case, was a complete cop-out. The reason why I hadn’t written about disability before, I reasoned, was because I was more than that.

(Read that last sentence in the most pompous voice you have. I dare you.)

Kitchen Prep

Read ‘Kitchen Prep‘.

Turns out, writing these poems made me angrier and more tangled up in old memories and new words, than I’d expected. Writing them – and understanding my discomfort in writing them, being a ‘disabled writer’ along with writing while disabled – made me press right up against a lot of assumptions, privilege and hopes I didn’t think I had.

What am I doing?

Left Song

Read ‘Left Song‘.

I’m making myself uncomfortable. Maybe you, as well. When I mix love poetry through the surgery poems, casting myself as an aware participant in the surgical scenes, I’m attempting to subvert a medical model of disability that often works with an able-bodied image of ‘the disabled’ more than it listens to disabled voices of any kind (Oliver 1990, p.15) These poems are not a love letter to surgery, but they are an acknowledgement of my and my body’s awareness of and within it. Daft love poetry, in this context, becomes a political statement simply because expressing desire is not part of the narrative medicalised views of disability assigned to me.

The result is a constructed self with a shifting relationship with touch. Spaces are elided – wordspill, widevoiced, needlesleep – words crowd up into compounds against each other. Hyphens bridge other gaps, while em-dashes reach out over line breaks, ‘blood pressing up— /dripping down slow … word-rush, want-spill— no, don’t touch). I attempted to convey the anxiety of being re-shaped while also allowing for the sensuality of it.

Speaking the poems, presenting a version of them with a mix of my own voice and my screen reader, complete with its tendency to place emphasis on the wrong syllable, is an extension of this, and is influenced by the work (and readings) of Norma Cole.

Simple acknowledgement of my own physicality may be deeply unsettling for another reader, especially when my recorded voice is added to any imaginary one. The use of my own voice is simultaneously a constructed, explicitly crip self, and a deconstruction of over fifteen years of therapy. This consciously allows my voice to show what I have, over the course of my life, been taught to conceal. Both voices, both identities are mine.

What am I doing?

Wordspill

Read ‘Wordspill‘.

I am rejecting, at least temporarily, the voice that I built to ‘pass’, as best I could, in an able-bodied environment. Being to do this is a complicated bit of privilege that I’m still untangling, but the poems reject medical models of disability and reinforce a crip identity that accepts these aspects as part of myself. Self-ish. Bodied. Stitched and ripped up and put back together again.

My ten-year-older-self shall probably be as mortified by this spectacle as my child self is now – writing changes, even more than bodies – but I am not quite so frightened.

Mirrors

Read ‘Mirrors‘.

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Private David Jones’s In Parenthesis and The Anathemata

… it came as if a rigid beam if great weight flailed about his calves, caught from behind by ballista-baulk let fly or aft-beam slewed to clout gunnel-walker below below below.

He thought it disproportionate in its violence considering the fragility of us.

Shortly after midnight on 11 July, 1916, Private David Jones of the London-Welsh battalion of the Royal-Welsh Fusiliers was shot in the calf at the end of an operation attempting to drive the Germans out of Mametz Wood as part of the Battle of the Somme. He had spent much of the previous 24 hours engaged in heavy combat, in what was one of the bloodiest battles of World War One. The 38th (Welsh) Division lost a fifth of its men in the battle, 565 killed and 585 reported missing, presumed dead. Including Jones, there were another 2893 wounded. Crawling back through the wood, Jones moved through the bloodied corpses of close friends and acquaintances, garlanded by the flowers and foliage of Mametz. Jones would return to the front, and serve until the end of the war, but this battle would haunt him for the rest of his life – ‘my mind can’t be rid of it’ he said in 1971.

From it, Jones created the long poem In Parenthesis, which W H Auden called it ‘the greatest book about the First World War’, doing for the British and Germans ‘what Homer did for the Greeks and the Trojans’. Graham Greene called it ‘one of the great poems of the twentieth century’, and T S Eliot, in his introduction to the first edition was unequivocal – it is, he wrote, ‘a work of genius’.

Of Jones’s second great poem, The Anathemata, Auden was even more effusive, calling it ‘very probably the finest long poem written in English in this [twentieth] century’. For writers as diverse as Kathleen Raine, W S Merwin and Seamus Heaney, these poems, taken together, make Jones, in Merwin’s words, ‘one of the greatest twentieth century poets’. Dylan Thomas, not one to underplay his own talents, said ‘I would like to have done anything as good as David Jones has done’.

While it is as a poet I wish to explore Jones, he is also unique – William Blake, with whose work Jones grappled all his life, being perhaps the only other example – in having attained eminence as both a poet and a painter. Before the publication of In Parenthesis he was already regarded as ‘the most gifted of all the young British painters’ (Kenneth Clarke). For Jones, much to his initial surprise, the problems presented in creating a poem were of a piece with those of creating a painting, and led him to consider questions, and assay, in his own polite way, solutions, which remain as challenging now as they were when he was writing.

‘Bugger it, I can do better than that, I’m going to write a book.’

The story of Jones’s decision to write about the war – as recounted in Thomas Dilworth’s excellent new biography, David Jones, Engraver, Soldier, Painter, Poet – may be apocryphal, but it has a definite ring of truth. Jones had suffered from depression after the war ¬– what would now probably be diagnosed as shell shock. Already an established painter, having entered the Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts as a fourteen-year-old, he was struggling to make art, and struggling to live. A broken engagement with the daughter of his partial mentor Eric Gill had left him in a parlous state.

He read obsessively about the war, and claims that it was after reading All Quiet on the Western Front that he decided that all he had read

… exaggerated fear and calamity, failed to convey war as ‘like ordinary life … only more intensified’, failed to convey the sense of historical continuity that he and others had felt, and failed to show the ‘extreme tenderness of men in action to one another’. (DJ, 128)

For Jones, it was, as Dilworth notes, an ‘entirely aesthetic challenge’ and one that Jones, to his own fascination and possibly astonishment, presented similar problems to those he faced as a painter. Fundamentally, how was one to re-present a particular moment, either in words or in paint?

Jones worked on In Parenthesis for four years; 1137 foolscap pages of drafts survive, distilled down to the manuscript draft of 281 pages (DJ, 155). Among his models were the ‘Anna Livia Plurabelle’ section of Finnegans Wake; the Anabasis of St-John Perse; Gerard Manley Hopkins (in particular ‘The Wreck of the Deutschland’); Wuthering Heights and Moby Dick. Working on a series of engravings of ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’ kept the mood of that work in his mind, while he disclosed correspondences between his fellow infantrymen and those of the Iliad, Shakespeare’s Henry V and, in particular, Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur, which would remain the keystone text of his entire writing career.

The poem itself is in seven sections, each title page carrying a quotation from the early Welsh epic poem Y Gododdin, another model for the work. The poem mixes what Fiona Sampson has called ‘the disobedience of poetic form’ while at other times reverting, as the poem itself has it ‘to the discipline of prose’ (IP, 103). It mixes the allegorical with the demotic, although the latter is the preferred mode, incorporating a great deal of Cockney rhythm and phrasing – as Jones notes in the preface, ‘as Latin is to the church, so Cockney is to the army’.

It is a radical – and deliberate – departure from other poetry of the First World War. We are used to encountering war poetry – particularly in that of the Great War – as various types of anthems for doomed youth, elegies for young men (generally) whose lives were cut short, or who were sent mad, by a combat which can never be fully justified. Blame is apportioned. The futility of the exercise is highlighted. The similarities between us and those we call our enemies are drawn to our attention. And we are left to question what it is that drives humanity to such folly.

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Mansplaining Abortion in Alexis Late’s ‘Procedure’


Mel Pearce | Untitled | In response to Alexis Late’s ‘Procedure’

Alexis Late’s ‘Procedure’ draws on the conventions of Confessional poetry by women in English – particularly on the influential work of Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton – to make a creative statement resisting the masculinist imposition of clinical discourses to the raw subjective experience at the centre of this poem: the speaker’s abortion, and its visceral consequences for her rage, guilt, hurt, and defiance.

In stanzas 1 to 3 the speaker begins in conversations experienced as attack, with a metaphor of a hunter trapping an insect, and the speaker expressing herself as insect under threat of being devoured. The insect ‘flutters weakly,’ is ‘blanched’ – a bloodlessness whose significance will become apparent.

In stanza 3 the pursued insect becomes the speaker. The insect is pinned to an entomologist’s board, a cruel skewering of the self, fallen victim to a kind of casual masculinist rationality: ‘splintering / under your gaze,’ ‘single-minded’ ‘with each quick piercing.’ Then a pivot in stanza 4 to the pins that stick women, and the pins that women stick in sewing. Here the connotations are of sewing as a scene of ritualised violence done to women in the prison of domestic conventions stifling women’s autonomy historically. The staccato assonance of ‘pins, pins, to fix, to fix her’ employs repetition to draw out the subtle twin meanings of ‘fix’ as both a transitive and intransitive verb. Taking an object, ‘to fix her’ is the masculinist, medicalised understanding of women as broken objects necessitating repair, and taking no object, with pins ‘to fix’ as in the immobilisation of the captive insect. ‘Sewing her silence / an inheritance passed on’ offer the subtle twin readings of sewing as a silent, normative stifling of women’s expression reproduced generationally, but also a craft made in silence that speaks women’s traumas to the world. These lines echo the portrayal of Philemona in Ovid’s Metamorphoses, who is raped by Tereus and has her tongue cut out to ensure her silence, but weaves a tapestry to expose her violation. The twin status of sewing is one instance of a theme running throughout this poem, which features scenes of women’s immobilisation, women’s damage, women’s injury, portrayed in a way that criticises these practices in a refusal of the theft of women’s expression and women’s bodily autonomy. In the opening stanzas of ‘Procedure’ I am reminded of the conflicted, visceral rage alongside the pins of medicalised trauma in the work of contemporary Melbourne poet and artist Jessica Knight, and, in particular, a photographic work from the ‘Paper Dolls’ group exhibit at the Docklands in 2014. The artist is photographed from behind, naked, vulnerable, before a wall covered with X-rays of her many surgeries, the bright streak of steel implants down the length of her spine, and the punk scrawl of her poems up the wall alongside, wounded and defiant: ‘I HAVE MORE BACKBONE THAN YOU.’

In stanzas 5 to 7 of ‘Procedure’, the speaker, ‘weaving quietude and guilt / while you tell me how you feel,’ defies her partner’s selfish need via the feminised violence of sewing – ‘Still, it seems to me / your mouth is a wound / I want to stitch up’ – and the object of the speaker’s rage becomes apparent: the terror of pregnancy, ‘the frightening consequences / of blood and semen,’ and her injury at her partner’s selfish scorn: ‘I was slipping from / your downturned mouth, / like a stitch from a knitting needle / now futile and crooked.’ The knitting needle again connotes the feminised violence of sewing, but its presence in this line as producing something sloppy and wrong is haunted by the knitting needle as iconic of the feminised violence of desperate, self-inflicted backyard abortions.

The speaker performs a kind of reactionary nonchalance in stanza 8, with the brashness of the imperative mood (‘Fuck the world!’). The linguistic device of chiasmus, repetition with inversion of the word-initial sounds, draws ‘Fuck the world!’ and ‘we fucked’ into a syntactic parallel. This device draws out the disturbing brutality of ‘fuck’ as a verb here, meaning that to fuck someone can be a little too close to fucking up someone. In stanzas 9 and 10 the speaker’s guilt in the wake of abortifacents returns to the feminised violence of sewing, occupying the paradox of a malevolent emptiness, a nothingness that won’t stop growing: ‘I cowered before guilt, / and its threat of emptiness / that gaped at me / like a hole in my stocking, / widening, widening.’

The representation of the violence done to and by women’s bodies in pregnancy, miscarriage and abortion has a long history in women’s art, including in the work of pioneering women’s autobiographical Confessional poets Anne Sexton and Sylvia Plath, and it is Plath’s work in particular that Late draws on in this poem. Late’s ‘Your mouth is a wound / I want to stitch up’ echoes Plath’s ‘Blood, let blood be spilt; / Meat must glut his mouth’s raw wound’ from the poem ‘Pursuit.’ So too does the stick of pins echo Plath’s ‘My Japanese silks, desperate butterflies / May be pinned any minute, anesthetized’ from the poem ‘Kindness.’ Late’s poem is on well-worn ground depicting the visceral and emotional gore of lost, aborted pregnancy. In this Late stands alongside contemporary peers such as emerging cultural critic and essayist Leslie Jameson, whose 2014 essays ‘Grand Unified Theory of Female Pain,’ and ‘The Empathy Exams,’ republished in her 2014 collection of the same name, grapple with the inheritance of the aesthetic traditions of women’s Confessional poetry, and with questions of women’s subjectivity and suffering. Depicting women’s embodied pain is always intensely personal, and yet almost a cliché in its frequency and banality, a structural consequence of markedness in an intensely misogynistic world. What lends Late’s account its timeliness and its originality emerges in stanza 10: the speaker’s guy has the gumption to mansplain her own abortion to her by text message. Where Jamison’s narrator in the ‘The Empathy Exams’ wants her nice-guy boyfriend ‘close to her damage,’ to experience her abortion and ‘hurt in a womb he doesn’t have’ (31), Late’s speaker is more sorrowful, a hurt rebuke at the condescending ignorance of this man: ‘When you explained / the procedure to me / so calmly over text, / you dropped my heart, like a rag, / in a pool of dirty water.’ The semantic ambiguity of ‘it’ and the pregnancy connotations of ‘carrying’ in the final lines open a space for a subtle double reading: Regretful ‘I didn’t know you were carrying it [my heart]’; or barbed and sarcastic ‘I didn’t know you were carrying it [this pregnancy, its consequences].’

Posted in ARTWORKS, ESSAYS | Tagged , ,

Thirty-Six Views of the Parallax: Mark Young’s the eclectic world, Bandicoot habitat and lithic typology

Je ne vois pas un de mes petits livres qui ne soit sorti d’une inquiétude de langage.
— Jean Paulhan


1: Titles

The first thing to note is that the body of a typical Mark Young poem often bears no relationship to the title. Do not be alarmed: this is a postmodernist conceit, and Young is thoroughly postmodernist, although he would eschew such a label. One of Young’s brilliant running titles is ‘A line from …’ (he refers to this himself in his paper ‘Stochastic Acts: the search string as poetry’).1 In Hotus Potus, for example, we have ‘a line from’ every president of the United States of America, from the first, George Washington, to the latest, at the time of his book coming out in 2015, Barack Obama.2 Perhaps there is an actual line from the president in question embedded in the text; but for the most part, the poem seems quite unrelated, or is obliquely related (cf., for instance, ‘a line from Richard M. Nixon’, which deals with power (consumer needs) and corruption (political), and ends on ‘faux ice cream / up one’s asshole, & the / occasional long walk / in the winter woods’ (p. 43). I suppose the beginning of the final stanza is a reflection of Nixon’s profanity, and a long walk often comes after intensive reading.)

As for the books under discussion, the eclectic world (hereafter referred to as EW) has fifteen such poems, including the first poem, ‘A line from Kim Kardashian’; Bandicoot habitat (hereafter referred to as BH), two; and lithic typology (hereafter referred to as LT), none, which means Young has exhausted his stock (I doubt it), has grown weary of such stock titles or is writing more to come (more likely the case).3

Typically, there is nothing biographical in ‘A line from Kim Kardashian’ (EW, 5), beginning, ‘Matter changes its state / when energy is supplied to / it. Solids become liquids, & / liquids become those classic // black dance shoes’. Perhaps ‘dance shoes’ is an oblique reference to the person famous for being famous. In this poem, Young, as he does in most poems, channel-surfs to bring us disparate images, from science programs to exercise régimes and health tips, from advertorials to mass production. We live in an age where icons of the counterculture are used to consumerist ends, such as the playing of Led Zeppelin’s ‘Stairway to Heaven’ or David Bowie’s ‘Heroes’ as Muzak in supermarkets (although Bowie’s ‘Fashion’ has long been used in an ironic, quasi-ironic or even unironic sense in consumer affairs’ programs profiling the fashion industry in some way), or Lou Reed’s ‘Walk on the Wild Side’ as the soundtrack to an advertisement selling cars. I suppose you could always buy a ‘Never Mind the Bollocks’ tee-shirt, from the late 1970s anyway, but nowadays there is ‘Never Mind the Bollocks’ insurance, the bastion of the corporate world. Young ends his poem ‘on’ Kim Kardashian with ‘references to plasma television’.

The short poem ‘candy & nuts’ (LT, 60) demonstrates perfectly how Young mixes everything up. In this mixture, we have medicine, construction, animal welfare, law and industry:

	Bulk dried fruit bins
  filled with all kinds of
		organs & tissue
may only be redeemed
	for high pressure welders

after you are approved as
	an industrial chemical
donor & registered in
	accordance with the
  Domestic Animals Act of 1994.

Sometimes, titles reference other works (cf., Duncan Hose’s ‘cocky’s joy’ on p. 57 with Michael Farrell’s book of that title; ‘joy’ being a synonym of ‘gay’ – joy FM, a gay radio station in Melbourne, etc.).4 Or titles may disguise such references or disguise their meaning in some way. (For me, for example, Duchamp’s Tu m’ is nothing more than ‘tomb’ disguised.)

2: Unfinished

Paul Valéry said that a work of art is never finished; it is abandoned.5 (Gertrude Stein famously quoted Alfred Maurer as saying that he knew a work of art was finished when the artist put a frame around it.6) This exaggeration is a modernist conceit, although there is a kernel of truth to it (‘metaphysical conceits’ (LT, 61)). One only has to look at schizophrenic art to see that such artists have often gone too far, that they should have put the brush or pen down beforehand. Having said that, Young endeavors to put reality back into irreality in these three books (‘This is a piece of reality so dense that it goes beyond art’ (EW, 36)). Haruki Murakami, in his book on the sarin gas attacks on the Tokyo underground railway system in 1995, says that ‘(t)he sad fact is that language and logic cut off from reality have a far greater power than the language and logic of reality.’7 He goes on to say that ‘(r)eality is created out of confusion and contradiction’, which is Young’s modus operandi – and anyone who watches television or surfs the Internet, or who reads indiscriminately. Young says in the opening of ‘Stochastic Acts’ that ‘(r)reality, my reality, is a set of alternate realities. As are your realities.’ We can see this kind of paratactic reality, what Young calls ‘varietal or news-channel parataxis’, in other contemporary poets’ work, such as John Kinsella’s latest poetry collection, Graphology Poems.8

Those looking for realism will be disappointed, though. Anaïs Nin succinctly differentiated between realism and reality as a ‘process of interpretation of the symbolic meaning of people’s acts, not a mere reporting of them.’9 As she said elsewhere, ‘(r)ealism focuses on the observation of physical details, but mostly of the ugly detail.’10 Realism eschews the unconscious and symbolic; the realist concentrates on the outer world’s ugliness all around us (realpolitik), as if morals or ethics do not exist, even if their beauty should only exist inside of us. Nin said that portraying beauty or ugliness was simply a matter of choice for artists (she chose the former), though any artist caught up in a particular movement usually adheres through peer pressure to that movement’s bias. I see no discrimination in Young – he finds beauty in the ugliness of everyday living in our society obsessed with devices and the Internet. (If you don’t know the answer, just Google it, which I refuse to do here.)

However, choice is a form of tyranny or, at least, is largely a myth, especially when it moves away from the simple act of picking one thing over another. When choice is applied to the big questions, then it gets muddled (‘it’s / difficult to choose the / pivot point from which / the day’s trendline will / emerge’ (BH, 7)). In this past century, humankind increasingly chose the machine to do the work of humans, and this trend is continuing apace. That said, I am partial to the notion of fate, if not destiny. I speak of a ‘directed fate’: you are on a path, but it is up to you which way you go. Destiny, on the other hand, is rather like a railway line: the path is fixed and the only way you can get off it is derailment (death). On the other hand, I can’t accept Louise Hay–like sentiments that we ‘choose’ to get AIDS or cancer because of unresolved guilt, and as an illustration to others how precious life is, and that we can choose to be cured (‘puts a human face; on AIDS. // (We wouldn’t want it to get / disproportionate, of course, / but we do need to measure /the outcomes that matter)’ (EW, 13; emphasis in original)). Solecisms and judgementalism creep into the question of choice, such as the choice quote from an ‘Oprah Winfrey Show’ long ago, where an audience member, addressing Tom Cruise after a screening of Interview with the Vampire, said (I’m paraphrasing from memory): ‘It’s your choice to choose your rôles.’

Although Young is often inspired by television or especially the Internet, he does not use buzzwords, which abound in the media. In literature, such words as ‘spectacle’, ‘erasure’, ‘deconstruction’, ‘rupture’, ‘signifier’, ‘rhizome’, ‘recursion’, ‘haecceity’, ‘tectonic’, ‘epistemological’, ‘heuristic’, ‘limitrophe’, ‘ekphrastic’, ‘reify’, etc., are all buzzwords – you can usually tell from the word used whom writers have been reading (Derrida, Barthes, Deleuze, Lacan).11 He does use ‘trope’ twice in LT (‘Completing the sequence’ and ‘beard owner, dog lover’) and ‘caesura’ once in BH (‘Utamaro in the Everglades’), but these are technical terms Young has used ironically (as he does ‘metaphor’ in ‘Meanwhile, here is the news from white-wing Amerika’ (LT, 33) and ‘leitmotif’ in ‘Meanwhile, in the souq’ (BH, 14)). Also, a trope is etymologically related to the tropics (Tristes Tropiques), which are physically near if not metaphorically near to his heart. Literature, because it is made up of words, which almost everyone uses, is likened by many to photography, where almost everyone is a photographer. For that reason, many artists like Young think of literature or photography as a language that has to be mastered and then played with.

Deconstruction, like existentialism before it, is easily misinterpreted because of the aura of mystery (idolatry) or magic (Baal) that so often surrounds it. Detractors of deconstruction fear that literature is devalued through its operation of deducing (deconstructing) any text, literary or not. Therefore, theoretically, The Vivisector by Patrick White, winner of the Nobel Prize for literature in 1973, is on an equal footing with an episode of ‘Seinfeld’. To conservatives, such a thought is an abomination and an attack on literature. But this is nothing more than a distortion. Deconstruction, in my book, is one form of analysis or anatomy. It is another method in humanity’s quest to make our world comprehensible. No one would suggest, for instance, that the entomologist dissecting a cockroach is conducting an inferior analysis in relation to the ethnographer who analyses humans. Yet this is what conservatives are effectively saying about the spectrum of analysis in literature. (Conservatives fear that the cockroach is going to inherit the earth.)

3: Objets trouvés

The last poem in EW, ‘Sorry’ (p. 52), is an objet trouvé with an ending changed to reflect Young’s penchant for linking items that bear no relation to each other:

nothing
matched your
search terms. Please
try again with
a different fish

Fish – phish (‘ghoti’)?

4: Music

Why are we bothered to listen to music or read a book or look at a painting? For some, it is to see where the artist is going. For others, it is an escape. For others still, it is feeling what it is like to be transformed.

Music was Claude Lévi-Strauss’ favorite metaphor. A trope is a kind of metaphor (Tristes Tropiques again!), as Young points out:

even though it
is only used iron-
ically to invoke the
trope, upward facing
dog, when cast as a noun,
is much more vague than the
British stiff upper lip. (LT, 56)

David Bowie’s ‘Heroes’ is alluded to in the title ‘I wish I could swim like dolphins’ (EW, 51), if not the poem itself. The poem is like a diary entry, at first exorcising an Ohrwurm, where a lyric, or partial lyric, turns round and round in his head, then he explains that he is ‘in a cycle of mental paralysis’, where e-mails go unanswered and matters are left unattended, and that he no longer knows who he is or if he is merely an automaton. Music, this ‘ear-worm’, becomes a form of torture for Young, who wants ‘to break free’ (the Queen refrain that keeps going round in his head). In Queen’s first hit, with its potpourri of cultural references, from Islamic to Buddhist, Young discovers that ‘nothing really matters’ in this demented, defective world.12

Music or Poetry:

It has become a kind of breather between the high-tech wonders of the first act & the final 1-litre plastic bottle containing an unknown uplift of the oath-taking, flag-injustice substance. Have had experience of both, not being able to avoid the body armor that police said he wore during the techno music blasting a ballistic helmet & one & obtain measure while they waited for bomb-sniffing humanity that stays unchanging within the Games’ changing contexts – with spectacle (EW, 19)

5: War

Generally, although Young likes to point out humanity’s foibles (‘bomb-sniffing’ (EW, 19)), his poetry does not directly address the question of war. (The British, for example, may never have committed atrocities such as those committed by the Japanese in the Second World War, but they have deceived their own people about radiation leaks from nuclear facilities, they rampaged through India, they waged a colonial war in Ireland for centuries, and in their fervour for colonialism, committed many a massacre, in India, Australia, etc. The Americans may think of themselves as righteous, but they gave immunity to Japanese and German scientists who gained secret knowledge by performing barbaric experiments on humans, to advance their own programmes, such as the Apollo space one, and they are the only nation to obliterate two foreign cities with atom bombs. But no nationality is safe from blame.)

Specifically, the Cold War is mentioned in ‘troubadour docent’ (BH, 48) and ‘soldefagent’ (LT, 30), and Young does address wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Central America, the Balkans, Mosul and the Persian Gulf. The Berlin Wall is a chilling artefact of the Cold War, and the massacres in Rwanda (mentioned in ‘schemata’ – ‘No names to give. / No sense. No order’ (BH, 11)) are the result of civil war. (Part of the problem is language: we use ‘massacre’ to describe mass random violence by an individual citizen or a group of them, as well as sanctioned or unsanctioned mass random violence by soldiers licensed to kill; the Dili Massacre in East Timor, the Myall Creek murders, Sandy Hook) Biological weapons are archly mentioned in LT (‘toxic waste that can / improve the military’s / ability to detect bio- / logical agents’, p. 63 – our military, presumably, with ‘logical’ embedded – a military term – in an enjambment as a word on its own), where Young’s cynicism and sardonicity come across as damning (‘asthma due to inhaled chemical fumes’, ‘We’re looking at what kind of undemocratic chemicals and compounds go into its supply chains’ and ‘The U.S. Air Force / have bombed it several / times’ (LT, 30, 60 & 67)).

Fellow poet Barry Hill wrote Peacemongers in 2014, part biography (the Mahatma Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore), part diary, part memoir (his father, who was stationed in Japan as part of the Occupying Force after the Second World War) and part travelogue (India and Japan).13 It is also a damning indictment of war and should be read by everyone interested in peace. It fills in the interstices of Young’s poetry, who nevertheless shares Hill’s antiwar sentiments, but always archly (‘How / balanced is your / Solar Plexus chakra?’ (BH, 10); ‘I didn’t care if / some guy found nirvana’ (EW, 24)), and avoiding New Age kitsch and cliché (as does Hill).

Religion is never very far away from war. Buddha makes a brief appearance in Japanese garb in ‘beard owner, dog lover’ (LT, 74) and ‘Live like you want to live, Baby.’ (BH, 13). One would think Buddhists were peaceful people, and by and large they are, but not so the Buddhists of Burma toward the Rohingya minority in that country. Yet in ‘Chopped Cobb Salad’, Young says that ‘Nothing is safe from the / reach of the Creationists’ (BH, 24).

Materialism is not far away, either:

The Japanese do not believe
that shopping cures all. That’s
why the gods have given us
mystics, Sufis, & Zen masters (BH, 13)

Young’s search for a new reality, in our era of mass media, where facts and history can be twisted to suit, where we now apparently live in a ‘post-truth’ world, although revisionism has been around for centuries, is depressing to anti-consumerists and anti-materialists, counter–Neo-Cons, historians, environmentalists, pluralists and anti-capitalists, unless Young’s cynicism is enough to make you smile. In the end, ‘nothing really matters’ …

From a letter to my brother:

Humans, for all our ingenuity, are still a primitive species everywhere. When threatened, we look for the bogey-man. We stigmatise the perpetrator in order to make sense of the senseless. We stigmatise. (The ultimate stigmatisation for Christians is Jesus’ wounds, called stigmata, which have appeared on saints’ bodies – the marks of infamy transmuted as insignia of honor.) We can’t see that we, simply because we are human, are all capable of mindless, senseless, horrific and cruel acts. I maintain that while we have progressed technologically (it just means we’re good with our hands), we have not progressed one iota ethically from time immemorial. Intellectually, we’re expanding all the time (it’s our brains, after all, which drive our hands), but ethically, we’re hamstrung.

Enlightenment, the seeking of the light (which stigmatises the dark as the opposite of enlightenment and the corollary of evil, and leaves us with words like ‘denigrate’, from the same source as the word ‘Negro’ and concepts such as a ‘blackened’ reputation, etc.), is, I suspect, an illusion, a Möbius strip or an Escher puzzle. When you think you’ve arrived, you find you’re back where you started from. (I prefer the Sanskrit word for enlightenment, buddhi. Buddha, the awakened, the enlightened, is actually the epithet of Sakyamuni Gautama, just as Christ, the anointed, is Jesus’ epithet. Buddhi contains the elements of intelligence, expansion, perception, discernment, conviction, thought, feeling, meditation, wisdom. These elements comprise enlightenment. There is no need for the metaphor of light against dark that one finds in ‘enlightenment’ (i.e., the going into light). Also, the fig-tree under which Gautama attained buddhi and thus became the Buddha is known as the Bo-tree – the ‘bo’ of this word is merely a corruption of buddhi.)

Stigmatisation has been an effective tool of oppressors through the centuries. Our language is full of stigmatising words. Take the term ‘effeminate’ – it means like a woman, womanish; homophobia is inextricably linked with misogyny. The language of stigmatisation is surprisingly similar – just substitute whatever group you want to blacken and you’ll get the same reaction and support from the masses. Jews, blacks and gays, to name three target groups, have all been tarred with the same brush.

This was meant to be a good-news letter, but sitting down to write to you has given me the opportunity to let my mind wander on what preoccupies me.

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hereafter

you should have died much later
there would have been
a space for such an event
you could have been

properly translated to a star
magical mysterious a new
inhabitant of heaven

not in such complete silence we
did not even know you had gone

all that remains is an absence
and a gravestone in another country

like slides in a lantern that lost summer
revives but scratched faded with pieces missing

like so much else
the sky above us the ground
under our feet
damaged imperfect but
all we have

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mourning is women’s business

for Tjama

1

with a gesture as large as the planet
you call up the spirits of women
tonight you can see them thousands
filling up the country so it is
no longer empty

and lonely as it will be
when you are gone

and the multitudes no longer
dance across the spinifex

2

you were dancing
a slow skip
in the grand style
wearing a striped pointed hat
and white ochre
all your golden hair
cut to the grey

you go on without them like those
wounded in the leg
limping
dancing towards the embrace of the others
who limping
dance towards you

when the circles of recognition are complete
after days and weeks of sitting in the dust
you can get up wash go home
back to your places of employment

and the free spirit will burst
out of this belly of grief
into the air

3

when you were young you went to law
childless but free

now the funerals string together
narratives of loss
how hard it is
to think any more of forever

sometimes
you want private you want
out fold your shirt over your chest
and yourself up to sleep
your stomach hurts
with grief

when you were young and went about your business
who would have thought it would end
covered in white clay in a row of widows
seeing the land losing its people

your stomach hurts
and it’s hard to breathe

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the opening of the children’s centre in Balgo

a smell of frying meat
drifts across the scene
and steam
from bloodwood leaves assists
departing souls to leave

a tiny child
hurls a rock across the yard
some skills die hard

it is as if the language
centre that was here
had never been the kukatja books
into which we put
our black and white lives have become
art works no-one can read

these days Balgo is a picture

and for sale

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c’est l’homme

for John Forbes

you
develope a style until
it can say what you want you need it may
take years and years

of need a style
is a bit like a life
and then
it comes together
style book life
and then
much to your surprise
this neat construction
falls apart

there is no book
the life is not what was planned
and the style
seems hopelessly out of date and
immortality a fading dream but

the need
turns out to be timeless

and in the house there is
some small drug or other
to tide you over
and the style
takes a mini cooper and throws it
down like a gauntlet

and choosing a word is again
the first mouthful of something
brilliant and daring
always perfect

and you know
despite all the stumbling about in the bushes
the stubbed toes the dirt the broken fingernails

there was a kind of twisted little track
leading to the photo opportunity at the top of the cliff
and from there you can see

a mini cooper burning in the snow

perfect

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on breaking things

a clumsy movement of the sleeve sweeps
the blown glass puja bell to the floor
and breaks the handle one in a set

of such moves hasty uncontrolled the snarl
the snap the gesture
of impatience and irritation that breaks

more than the bell the whole
enterprise something which like the bell is delicate but signifies
much more than itself a window

onto another universe
snapped off in effigy
before the music could begin

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the sky is falling in

I drive along in my car
destroying the planet
towing a horse
listening to the cricket

the world
does not look as if it is about to end
but I know it will

here
it will burn

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michelangelo 107

my eyes wild for beautiful things
and my mind have no other means
to get to heaven except
these blow them there

from the highest stars
a splendour descends
which draws desire in their direction
this is love

only this makes the true heart
burn this and its mirror
a face in whose eyes
it can perceive the same

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michelangelo 27

you who kiss run from
love’s burning tongue his
flames are savage his
cuts mortal he
fights to the death

after the first rush nothing
neither effort nor brains nor
leaving the country
will do any good go

you see in me a staggering example
of the sharpness of his tooth
the strength of his arm his
bent disgusting game when first

your eyes meet his
don’t hang around I thought
I could have him
any way I wanted now

see what I am

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mallarme: innocent breathless beautiful day

what does not fly
is not remembered
a sheet of ice
a hard lake
these you could free
with one drunk flap of your wing


the fabulous hopeless
out of date swan
can never escape
the shining places
the useless winter
his boredom inhabits


on the bird who denies it
space inflicts
a pain in the neck
which saves him of course
from sunburnt feathers


a transparent ghost the swan
has distilled himself
into this place and freezes
into a dream of being
misunderstood his

exile is useless

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mallarme: sea change

the body complains unfortunately and I’ve read all the books
shall I run away to where it is warmer? I believe birds
get drunk on the void between spray and sky


nothing not the familiar gardens seen on gazing into eyes
will keep back those who plunge into the sea
on such nights not the desert clarity of my lamp
on the blank paper’s forbidding white
nor the young woman feeding her baby

no I’m going the steamer with its jutting spar
sets off for a world of strangeness


boredom is made worse by such hopes
and always falls for the handkerchief waving goodbye
but maybe these masts cruising for storms
are the sort that a gale sucks into a wreck and
we are lost dismasted far from green islands
but desire listen

to the song of the sailors

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