Burmese Black-lipped Bullfrog

If the West were let in, we'd be the Frank ?´N Furters
Of the amphibian world — black lipstick clad mouths
On the prowl for evolution's democratic buzzword.
Amoral, bi-sexual fraternisation between parties only
Enhances the underground's reputation for risqué.
Burma's a cult classic. But double feature picture shows
Are banned & only documentaries capture us, a species
Under house arrest, we couldn't keep up with the general
Speak. Ecology protection last on the cadres' list of ten
Things to do before they die. We were frogmarched out
Of the final scene, rainforests time warped into rice
Paddies, a Medusa Switch had us on generational hold.
We were often confused with the Chiang Mai flat-footed
Canetoad
; a dictatorial sub-species, more firmly rooted.

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

On Not Having Encountered Snow, Age 35

(i)

Snow is distant like death. A blond field of
wheat stubble stalk frozen after harvest. Heat
in the eye of the Nankeen kestrel that jump jets
over paddocks & locks onto mouse holes, thermals
raging as Westerlies plug in. Heat, the dust devil
city smothers New Delhi subterfuge in downtown
Melbourne. That peculiar afternoon light which
extracted pedestrians from Brunswick St shops
& fog bound them, though reversed naturally.

(ii)

Heat was between your legs before that race –
wet heat of fear & you didn't win, the frigate bird
chafe flared bright in the puberty reds, heat in the
hands you held, (St Marys) where tennis hill statues
sat unmoving, unkissing under the snowy haired
moon, heat in the lips of ridicule, cat guts tense.
Heat in the dishonour of taste, class food, uneaten.
A Marie Celeste of untouched grub, cheese hidden
In racing car caps, heat in discovery of shame.

(iii)

Heat going out of dinners & heat in the helplessness
of fathers, ransacked emotions spat as boiled water
that snaked down onto the two year old, heat in the
venom of quick atoms bouncing into each other ?±
jump-castle heat of energy in the typeface that printed
your father's agony; heat leaving bodies & going where?
Heat of difference, heat of statistics, cold heat of fluoros,
the heat of engines six storeys down, taxi alligators
prowled bitumen moat of Bowen-Bridge Road.

(iv)

On not having encountered snow, age 35, all that can
be felt is heat. Inuit metaphors meaningless in the heat
of birthplace, dawn heat of children, hot cords of uncut
blood, sapling placenta heat, eucalypt heat, heat of scalpel
& vein & dry creek bed. Howling heat of babies, eruption
of teething heat, your hot soul mate heat when you find it.
Heat of near misses. Collision heat of unconditional love.
Performative heat of this spoken language, I love you.
The kind of heat that kills snow.

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

Sor Juana

Freely constructed from a letter by Sor Juana de la Cruz

the letters of the good mothers
are drenched in secular eloquence
if all the limbs of my body were tongues
I could not publish such excellence

they do not hasten to condemn
deformities of the human heart
yet ambition may become a woman
muliere in silentio discat

the properties of a hare may briefly
make a woman handsome
but I would rather ungreased hinges
and the study of declensions

osculatur me osculo
oris sui decrees the Song
if lips were letters I could more straitly
be given to wondering

for this pure grammar of kisses
may express a pious verity
that mitigates the condemnations
of lascivious sorority

if a harp can cure a king's sickness
then song may heal my sin
I merely lust to follow studies
that are celebrated in men

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

Breakages

there are breakages certainly

although bone can withstand more pressure than reinforced concrete

the psyche has its own architectures which pay little heed to gravity

an entire city can be populated on foundations little bigger than an ant

I have often watched these insects crawling across the desolations of tables

in such malarial humidities perception is closed to a perimeter of twenty feet

the night is making jaguar roars to scare away the blue skinned natives

within the circle of sight all objects are pretenaturally large and clear

I sip again the vitreous humours of my companions

and I have detached each lunate from each wrist and woven a palace from each

the dust from the ulysses butterfly is an excellent material for windows

such altitudes are dizzying but easily dispersed in alcohol

later the body will wither and every palace crash to the earth

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

one sip away from the verse

i.

it's your T-shirt, you shaky shaky, those big suckling chords. you stunner gun, staple diet, long-socked, high spire, much aligned curly swirl. wonder boots. boots to lick. i'd crawl & i'd lick the boots under your boots. i'd walk for those shoes. walk to rock the boots that kick. please. teach me to walk.

[insert wild copper top looped bass riff here]
 
 
ii.

you need the alphabet soldered into your scratch plate. you say E & i'll lunch on a mile for one of your Ps, you X, you Z. poling my poles. you stoic, poetic boy. my mink metaphor. standing in for a word I can't pronounce. many have tried & many have fed you. i eat you, now, carrot by carrot, fringe by fringe. swollen, up against bowled angst.

[the bridge: circling the stomach of cool]
 
 
iii.

you do & you will & you Spike Milligan me right in the right of me. so right. let me play a melody of you, let me create chorus, verse, bridge, back to verse again, let me middle eight you all the way to four & a half minutes. let me staccato your ribcage & rip my A string in song to you. i smoke you, note by note, foot by foot.

[end on fourth beat with a little left to spare …

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

movements [in music]

All my concerts had no sounds in them;
they were completely silent. People had to make up
their own music in their minds!
                               Yoko Ono

the mathematician's signature
on note shaping: an audiograph

Debussy's canvas chords, Bart?õk's
construction of a swimming cul-de-sac

SchÀÜnberg expressing the mind &
Malipiero with intuition & sanctum
           Who Knows Where The Time Goes?
                    Fairport Convention]

each melody an epiphany, pu shih
provoking excursions in the past
        [96 Tears, ? & the Mysterians]

partnerships: the tempo & metre
an emotional archaeological dig
      [Sin City, Gram Parsons]

the time you slipped on oil
& couldn't walk for weeks
               [Rumble, Link Wray]

when you couldn't find the words
to kiss him & the night was Miro
            [I'll Keep It With Mine, Bob Dylan]

those evenings when you wondered what life
would be if you were something else
           [Let It All Hang Out, The Hombres]

finding out someone was not telling you
everything & somehow you let it slide
                [Over and Over, Neil Young]

that moment when you ended everything
with a painted sign, maroon cherries & a mixed tape
       [So Long Babe, Lee Hazelwood]

soon: when all things = cut sounds of new
& you, you selling your past
lump sum in second-hand stores

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

Writer in Prison

Your cell is a cavern; the guards
grinding teeth outside your grotto

marginally refined ape-men; you
the last human in the world

of triumphant beasts. Is your pen
the key to emancipation?

No. The lock has no keyhole
and welded beyond breakage,

bolstered by all the energy
invested into orchestrating

your captivity. Such formality
staged for the incarceration

of one soul. The vilification,
the public outrage, the trial

and the theatrical castigation
all to ensure that the curtain

forever falls over your life. What
could a pen possibly do

to alter the absolute plot
of the script of so-called justice?

Zilch. Your freedom is untenable.
Barbarity always possesses

the upper hand. Don't waste
your vital ink by doodling tears.

In your pre- or post- historic cave
you are the insider archaeologist.

Your pen is a shovel, chisel
and brush only for exhuming

the bruised icons, recovering the abject
tales and treasures from beneath

the stone, lava, rubble and sand
of the storms of tyranny. Please

don't get sentimental now.
You, writer in prison,

may yet be our saviour.

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

Call Me Filth

I am filth. You are right
to hate me. Do not listen

to the mystics' warnings; hatred
will not corrupt your logic. I'm

the source of decadence; see my
thick beard, dark skin and turban.

Do not listen to the learned;
civilisation is a Western value.

Mine is irreversible savagery.
Haven't you received the facts

of my innumerable barbarities
from the mouths of newsreaders,

from the pens of your columnists?
Listen to them. They know

what's best for your morality.
Listen to me: I'm a virus

poised to strike at your healthy body.
Do not underestimate me. My culture

is vampiric. My icons
zombies. Hide your daughters from

my supernatural lust. I'm the very villain
of your gothic horror. The monstrous Muslim

concocted by the Apocalyptic fetish
of your politicians and rabble-rousers.

Listen to them. They know how
to make hatred necessary, user-friendly.

Let their words be mightier than the scimitars
of my legends. Do not spare a thought

for my history. I don't have one.
Yours is the epic of discovery and triumph;

mine an illegible, fading footnote.
Do not worry yourself with

the story of my culture being the Cradle
of Civilisation. You shall rock

my history to the grave
and that's all that counts. You

can afford to be hateful. Your terror
disguised as a ?´hero quest'

for security and democracy. Enjoy
your supremacy. Let me suffer

the consequences of being an archetype
of your hell. Call me evil;

call me filth.

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

[the open plain, or mesa]

Sometimes, when you're a cowboy gunslinger,
all you're left with is your boots and hat
and lariat, your trick paint horse,

your Colt and your Winchester, your bedroll,
the open plain, or mesa, the tins of beans
and strips of cured beef, your sense of justice

for your murdered kin, scalped by marauding
godless injuns, your self-reliance and steely aim
by the riverbed, your tempered and easy masculinity,

your friend the emancipated slave. You've seen
the iron horse and the telegraph cross the maps
and random states and you've seen the sunrise

on the canyons, the noonday dead on the dusty
streets of Texas, the evening cool of the hacienda
and the saloon brawls in the night. You've known

the love of a good-hearted dancing girl, yet you'll die
alone beneath a ridge. You'll leave no estate,
no child, no forlorn wife, no brethren will weep

by your simple grave. Your bedroll is your shroud,
the open plain your chapel. And all that is left
will be your hat and boots and lariat.

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

A Climber’s Farewell

Satellites really knock me out,
the way they join the dots,
the way a carpet-trader deep

in the Soud calls his uncle Faisal
at the Moore Park Supa Centa,
the way a called-up beleaguered

Little League coach calls in an air-strike
from the carriers, louche and polished
in the Gulf. And at the end of every call,

what I'm left with is a belief
in the possibilities of language
to truthfully and energetically

communicate experience, thought and feeling,
co-ordinates and intensity,
quality and quantity, fully landed cost

and now my final cheerios to dad and mum ?±
from this lofty New Zealand mountaintop
where I lie broken-legged, hypothermic and elated.

Night is falling and I'm stiffening here
in my alpine-rated bag and I'll call everyone
I know till my batteries run low, till the satellite

Says goodnight.

Posted in 23: EDITORIAL INTERVENTION | Tagged

Editorial Intervention

Usually I despise the practice whereby editors place their own work in an issue of the publication they're editing. Apart from denying a place to someone whose work is probably better, such actions often signal a kind of desperation, a “look at me” attitude or, to put it bluntly, a crude vanity best ignored, if not completely forgotten. All of which does little to explain the placement of one of my poems in the current issue of Cordite.

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Posted in ESSAYS | Tagged , ,

Paul Mitchell Interviews Richard Watts

Richard Watts, creative director of Express Media's (producer of the youth literary magazine Voiceworks) has stepped down. Paul Mitchell reports on Richard's five years in a job that he describes as the best he's ever had.

At the end of June, Richard Watts, 3RRR Smartarts presenter and former Pink Magpies president, will resign as Artistic Director of Express Media. His five years with the organisation that produces Voiceworks, a national literary magazine for writers under 25, and the Emerging Writers' Festival, has been a time of positive change.

Submissions to Voiceworks have increased 100 percent in the past five years and now routinely arrive from all over Australia, rather than predominantly Victoria. Subscriptions and sales have increased each year (more than 11% in the past 12 months). And, no small thanks to his media contacts, Richard has been able to also help boost Arts Victoria funding for the organisation from $80,000 to $95,000 annually, and Australia Council funding from $10,000 to $18,000. But that's just the icing on the cake for Richard: the real success has been helping young writers to take themselves seriously.

“It's been enormously rewarding,” Richard says. “It's been the best job I've ever had and it's been fantastic to be able to help spark young writers' careers.”

He cites the example of a young writer who was working on a novel, but after taking it to a publisher and having it rejected he was about to close down his computer screen and stop writing.

“On the building site where he worked, he was copping lots of shit for being a writer,” Richard says. “He got in touch with us and within six months Christos Tsiolkas was mentoring him and helping him polish his manuscript.”

Richard said Voiceworks, due to its age restriction, was a natural target for teenage angst poetry. But he said sometimes works of genius appear ? and staff had to ring relatives to make sure the person is really under 25.

“Simon Cox, a 16-year-old from Perth was one,” Richard remembers. “We were able to get Arts WA funding to fly him to the National Young Writers Festival in Newcastle last year . . . We kept taking him into over-18 only areas and had to remember we couldn't . . . we had to say, You go back to your Mum!”

Watts said it had been exciting to oversee Express Media as it has become a truly national endeavour. He said the most important role the organisation can play is to help develop a sense of community among young writers, many of whom are isolated from each other, whether they're in city or country areas.

The Emerging Writers Festival, Richard's brainchild, is another way he has made a push to develop a national community of young writers. The Festival, which ran for the second time this year and included participants from all over Australia, has run under the banner “The best writers you haven't heard of yet”.

“While the Melbourne Writers Festival supports established writers, we wanted to remind the public that there are lot of great writers out there who are, for one reason or another, not being published.”

His achievements have been invaluable, but Richard decided it was time to move on this year, both to concentrate on his own writing and because he believes an arts organisation always needs a fresh transfusion of ideas.

“Rohini Sharma has been appointed the new Artistic Director,” Richard says, adding, “She has a background in youth theatre in the ACT, she has worked in the Arts Council England's grants department, and she's helped small groups of, often, underprivileged people get arts projects up and going.”

While Rohini will soon be slaving over a now-hot magazine and arts organisation, Richard will be working feverishly on a fourth draft of a novel, a play, a film script and, well, while he's at it, another novel. “I've got files full of ideas and now I'll be able to get to them,” he laughs.

Before all that he's planning a month off. Oh, and he'll dash over to Scotland for a working holiday at the Edinburgh Festival at the end of the August where he hopes to pick up some contacts for the Melbourne Fringe Festival – Richard is the deputy chair of Fringe. “I'll also be doing my DJing and working on my freelance writing – and I also want to sleep!”

For more information about Express Media and Voiceworks magazine go to www.expressmedia.org.au.

Posted in INTERVIEWS | Tagged ,

Steven Farry Reviews Amy King

King_Cover.jpgAntidotes for an Alibi by Amy King
BlazeVOX books, 2004

Antidotes for an Alibi is at once intriguing and irritating. The surrealist poems are complex, evocative, and a danger to review: am I overlooking something? Is there an obvious reference I've missed? Am I just an insensitive clod?

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Posted in BOOK REVIEWS | Tagged ,

Ali Alizadeh Reviews Geoff Goodfellow

Goodfellow.jpgPunch on punch off by Geoff Goodfellow
Vulgar Press, 2004

The concept of working-class poetry may seem like an oxymoron to the uninitiated. Isn't poetry, after all, as Harold Bloom would have it, “the crown of imaginative literature”; an elitist, royalist member of the family of letters, on par with other 'high art' and upper-class forms and genres such as Classical music, opera and ballet? And isn't the idea of an 'imaginative literature' itself the very opposite of the harsh and gritty realism one often expects from working-class 'realist' narratives such as the novels of Emile Zola or the movies of Ken Loach?

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Posted in BOOK REVIEWS | Tagged ,

Andy Jackson Interviews Patricia Sykes

Patricia Sykes has published two collections of poetry, partly with the fuel of New Work grants from the Australia Council and Arts Victoria. Her first, Wire Dancing (Spinifex Press, 1999), was commended in the Anne Elder and the Mary Gilmore awards for 2000. In November 2004, Spinifex Press released her second collection, Modewarre: Home Ground. Most recently, she has written the poetic text for Mother Tongue, a piece for soprano and fifteen instruments, commissioned by the acclaimed young Australian composer, Liza Lim, which will premiere at The Festival d'Automne in Paris in November 2005. In May 2005, Patricia and Andy Jackson talked poetry. He lives in Carlton, she in the Dandenong Ranges. The gap was bridged via email.

To be cliched, first things first – what got you started in poetry? and what's kept you going?

Patricia Sykes: A friend suggested I'd find the answer ?in the swamp'. Of course I laughed. But she's right, I ?got started' because the years were ticking away. It was panic, an anxiety that if I didn't leap into the murk soon it would be too late. I think children possess wise gullibility. I remember knowing when I was about seven or eight that there was something powerful and tricky going on in poetry. It was like entering a cave of multiple magics. The occasional dragons were an added proof. I still believe poetry is a dangerous activity, risky, subversive, even necessarily delusional. In attempting to re-create, re-shape the swamp, poetry disturbs equilibrium, especially that of the status quo. How intoxicating: activism, celebration and sleuthing in the one activity. I keep at it because I'm hungry. Each poem is a kind of failure, a mere inkling of the complexity of the swamp. Perhaps I've grown more gullible, less wise.

What do you think has changed in your writing between 'Wire Dancing' and 'Modewarre: home ground'?

PS: I like to think the poems in the Modewarre collection listened to those in WD to the extent that they became less concerned with explaining themselves, more 'open' to a variety of responses and interpretations. This strategy obviously doesn't appeal to readers who want to know what a poem 'means', but for me poetry is very much about the 'hidden', so to simplify it is also to falsify. It's a difficult tension, at least for those who require justification. I prefer that readers meet me half-way. In writing ?Modewarre?' I was very conscious of wanting to explore various stances, attitudes, voices, apparent in poems such as ” 'dis-locations…a polemic” ', and ” 'a ferret in migrant trousers' “. In one sense these invite debate but also empathy, criticism, even derision. In an age of hyper-language I prefer not to overlook the cross-currents and complications implicit in various modes of speech. Corporate speak and advertising for example have become akin to dialects, as has the language of party politics. I was also wanting to break through the perception of the poet as the prevailing first-person-speaker, to disturb a preference for this. An inverted form of democratisiation? Perhaps.

I have my own ideas about why the duck is such an appropriate motif. What convinced you that she was a rich source of themes?

PS: The modewarre is appropriate because she's 'there', the being beneath and inside the word. 'Inside' because as symbol she inhabits it, and 'beneath' because she has been buried under the selective forgetfulness of colonial history. My family certainly didn't know the meaning of Modewarre when we lived there. I wasn't hunting a motif when I began researching the English translation, the duck turned out to be a gift, an unlooked for presence. I've been fascinated by birdlife since childhood and I relish being in water so to discover a water-bird at the core of what I was wanting to explore made me a little breathless, even wary. It felt both too easy and too daunting. The themes were a given. I've always associated Modewarre with the themes of belonging, identity and loss. It's a small step from the personal to the communal. On the one hand a white child's loss of a mother and the dislocation that followed: loss of home, family, school, friends, an entire mini culture that for her equalled ?the world'. And for the Wathaurong the displacement of themselves, their culture, their connection to the Modewarre land. As I wrote, the ripples kept widening: the duck as endangered species, the fragilities of occupation, the self as witness, as possesser and dis-possesser, succeeding waves of migration into arrival or mis-arrival. And always the modewarre slightly out of reach. An indifferent vortex? At the very least a possibility rather than an answer.

To me there's an interesting interplay between immediate felt emotion and reflective thought in this collection of poems. Are you aiming for either, both or neither?

PS: No, I wasn't conscious of aiming for either of these but it doesn't surprise me if it's there. I think of poetry as a form of speculative discovery so it's not inconsistent that a dialogue between 'immediate felt emotion and reflective thought' may emerge in the poems. I like to imagine they were think-feeling themselves into existence as I wrote. It's often a tenuous business, isn't it, locating the track that veers between certainty and uncertainty? I sometimes find myself wishing for a snail's glinting bodyprint to follow but that would be like begging a key from the invisible.

Are you aware of your place in the Australian poetry scene/community?

PS: No. I don't have any sense of ?poetry identity', of ?belonging' or ?fitting in' anywhere. I think I've always felt, generally, an outsider. Perhaps this has to do with poets being thieves in the night', or perhaps it's because I favour a dis-possessing eye, even if I don't always achieve this. Besides, rupture is as valuable as rapture, at least in creative terms: for example, Keats' notion of himself as a chameleon poet strikes me as a potent way of saying ?how can I be a single identity when I inhabit so many?'.

To me there seems to be a political position or framework beneath the poems in “Modewarre?” – at times it erupts into the text explicitly, but mostly if flows just underneath the surface. In what way do you think your poetry, or contemporary Australian poetry in general, can hope to foster political thought and engagement in the reader or the public in general. And, how is this related to your statement that these poems are “more open to a variety of responses and interpretations”?

PS: As a reader I am ?touched' by the themes and concerns of whatever material I choose to be reading, and I don't consider political nuances (of whatever flavour: gender, environmental, religious, cultural, governmental, relationship, racial, etc.) to be exceptional, a special case. Poetry has always encompassed variety, from the curse to the sonnet, from the lyric to the satiric, from love to death, peace, war, sex, tryanny, dictatorship, ennui, and all manner of hybrid variations.. I think it is only cultures who consider themselves particularly sophisticated (a defensive vulnerability in my view) which cannot deal comfortably with the so-called political in poetry. Fortunately it's there in the work of many Australian poets, maybe not exclusively or to the forefront in each poem but always integral to their poetic energies. I'm thinking of the work of Coral Hull, John Forbes, Gig Ryan, Jennifer Maiden, Les Murray, Lionel Fogarty, Lisa Bellear, and Gillian Hanscombe among others, poetry in which ideas, personal power, systemic power, and exploitation create disturbances, engage with contradictions, and explore resolutions. The fact that Poetry is not as popularised as sport for example is more to do with the way cultural activities are promoted and valorised in Australia. That's the big ?kick'. So when I say that the poems in ?Modewarre?' are open to a variety of responses and interpretations I mean that I'm inviting readers to leave comfort zones and other preferences behind. Not that I'm asking them to do the poet's work but to be aware of the doors in the work, ajar or fully opened, leading sometimes to labyrinths, to cul-de-sacs, or to portals. Language and symbol are shared universes after all and while ?Modewarre?' may have ?political' rivers flowing through it, it is not setting itself up for preselection.

I've noticed when you've read your poetry in public, you've given some background information which isn't in the book itself, to assist the audience. When you're writing poems, how do you decide what to leave in or out? What's the difference between a “poetry reading” and “reading poetry?”?

PS: To answer the second part of your question first: the act of ?reading poetry' is usually a private one of course between reader, the poetry and the invisible poet. The reader can pause over particular images and lines, re-read certain sections, take as much or as little time as desired to engage with a poem or a collection. A public audience doesn't have this prerogative. True, some audience members may know the work being read, may even be reading along as the poet reads, but generally they are listeners without the advantage of the page in front of them, without the option to pause, retrace, re-read. Which is one of the reasons I contextualise my readings. I need such hooks myself, being more visual than auditory in the way I absorb information. Also, I'm interested in having a conversation with listeners about some of the impulses that inform a work, not to explain it or pin it down but to explore and re-engage with the context.

How do I decide what to leave in or out of a poem? I think it was W.B.Yeats who famously said that poetry is an outcome of the quarrel with ourselves. Looked at in this light, poetry is a matter of debate and argument, but I prefer the idea of negotiation, exchange, challenge. Most intriguing are the times when you're inside a poem, listening and groping on a vaguely defined road, the end of it disappearing into haze and peopled with amorphous shapes that shift and reform. Or those instances when I find myself caught on a horizon between sea and sky, tossed between cross currents, a turbulence both exhilarating and frustrating. These are the times I go out and pull up a blackberry shoot or hack at some bamboo and, left alone, the poem finds its way out of the whirlpool. I suppose I'm confirming that it's a matter of negotiation: you initiate, respond, defer, question, withdraw, re-visit, and most importantly, you listen. I used this process as a form in the poem ?proximites', which is in ?House of Water', the second section of the book. I tried entering the poem in various ways but couldn't decide on which beginning was ?right' until it dawned on me that the unformed energy inhabiting the poem actually wanted multiple gateways. So I gave it what it asked for.

What are you writing currently?

PS: I'm more in thinking than writing mode at the moment, to do with the necessary hiatus between books I expect but also the death of my youngest sister in February. The most recent thing I've written is a poetic text which was commissioned by the Australian composer, Liza Lim. The piece, “Mother Tongue” (for soprano and 15 instruments) will have its premiere at The Festival d'Automne in Paris in November this year. It has been an absorbing process and I'm looking forward very much to seeing/hearing the work performed in Paris, and then in Australia next year, where it will be performed by ELISION, The Australian Contemporary Music ensemble, who will premiere the piece as part of their 20th anniversary celebrations.

What have you seen recently that you'd recommend? Feel free to mention other books, art, film, places, experiences, anything.

PS: In fact I haven't seen any films/exhibitions this year. I've been very much in withdrawal mode. I spent a great deal of time with my sister in her last months and am still trying to absorb the loss and recover some emotional energy. Being present during and at her dying has been the most inspiring event of my recent calendar. I am delving into several books though and can unreservedly recommend ‘The Collected Poems' of Stevie Smith (which I'm reading for the third time: her ?voice/voices' seem able to combine the apparent innocence of nursery rhyme with an ascerbic wit), Brian Castro's ‘Looking For Estrellita'(a collection of essays, many of them, in his own words, dealing with “writing, autobiography, identity and hybridity”), Barry Lopez' ‘Arctic Dreams: Imagination and Desire in a Northern Landscape', and especially ‘The Audre Lorde Compendium: Essays, Speeches and Journals'. To quote from her:

for the embattled
there is no place
that cannnot be
home
nor is
(from “School Note” in The Black Unicorn, W.W.Norton, New York, 1978)

Posted in INTERVIEWS | Tagged

Andy Jackson Reviews Patricia Sykes

Sykes_Cover.jpgModewarre: home ground by Patricia Sykes
Spinifex Press, 2004

In spite of poetry's continued insistence on its own marginality, its retreat into abstract stylistic expression or into words that act as anaesthetic or lullaby, there is still the possibility that words can undermine the way things are. The writer 'merely' needs to assume the impossible, to make it possible. In Modewarre: home ground Patricia Sykes displays this hope.

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Magdalena Ball Reviews Mike Ladd

Ladd_Cover.jpgRooms and Sequences by Mike Ladd
Salt Publishing, 2003

Mike Ladd's poetry works best when it traverses the line between prose and poetry, creating meaning in the face of irony. Simultaneously satiric and poignant, Rooms and Sequences takes the reader to a modernised first century AD through the eyes of an anachronistic Roman functionary, a Kerouac inspired look into life via various hotel rooms `on the road', pain and loss distilled through portentous animals, a series of short stories which look into the heart of loneliness, the human side of politics, and a series of self-referential poems about the writing process. While the poetry always retains a light touch, and is self-aware in the most postmodern of ways, these pieces go deeper than they seem to at first glance, and leave a powerful sensation in their wake.

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Ashley Brown Reviews Angela Costi

costi-cover.jpgPrayers For The Wicked by Angela Costi
Sunshine and Text Studio, 2005

To begin with, it should be noted that Angela Costi's Prayers For The Wicked – a CD of “spoken word, song, music and sound” – tells a tale of Greek Australians, deals with many traditional topics, and occasionally features Greek dialogue; and I myself am not Greek, and know none of the language. Some would argue hence that I am inappropriate to review this work, but it must be remembered that much of the potential audience of this work – and surely they should be taken into account – will not be of Greek descent, thus not possessing the bilingual luxury that I too lack. In this context, I am as qualified to review this as the next person – after all, the contexts that the language is used in within this work alone speak volumes. Also, Greek is a beautifully melodic language, and, to use a very bad musical analogy, you don't need to know German to bang your head to Rammstein.

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Ela Fornalska Reviews Andy Jackson

aperture.jpgaperture by Andy Jackson
Self published, 2003

Andy Jackson writes with immense skill. His poetry seems effortless, yet it is haunting, requiring contemplation. That is not to say that it is inaccessible. On first reading of a Jackson poem you experience sensation, but then you feel compelled to think about the poem, and read it again to marvel at the skills employed in writing the piece.

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Domesticated Enemies

Our 21st issue, Domestic Enemy, sees Cordite finally obtain its majority! From our humble beginnings in 1997, it's been a long and dusty road, filled with many pit-stops, refuels, vehicle and driver changes, roadblocks, fake abductions, detours and [insert your own road-related images/metaphors here].

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Paul Mitchell Reviews Pushing Words

Castlemaine State Arts Festival
April 2005

“Pushing Words”, a poetry reading held as part of the Castlemaine State Arts Festival, featured Melbourne poets Dorothy Porter, Ian McBryde, Lauren Williams, Kevin Brophy, Ali Alizadeh, Jennifer Harrison and Myron Lysenko.

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Jess Star Reviews Cate Kennedy

kennedy-cover.jpgJoyflight by Cate Kennedy
Interactive Press, 2004

Cate Kennedy's Joyflight is distilled memory. It is a manifestation of time, place and history, both intensely personal and instantly recognisable. Joyflight is a book divided. It begins with `that pure torn-open moment': A collection of small epiphanies in which the individual is forever altered.

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Tim Wright Reviews D. J. Huppatz and Sebastian Gurciullo

Gurciullo.gifBook of Poem! by D. J. Huppatz
Textbase, 2004

Marginal Text by Sebastian Gurciullo
Textbase, 2004

'Please don't make confused noises while chanting,' a sign in a Kunming monastery read when I visited there a few years ago. Another sign, not far from a thick wad of burning incense sticks, announced 'No conflagration!' D.J. Huppatz's Book of Poem!is written with a sharp sensibility to similar glitches in translation, specifically as they're found in the spiky readymade phrases of Japanese English, or 'Engrish', in the consumer world of packaging, t-shirts and instruction manuals.

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While Waiting for Denise to Emerge from the "I Dream of Jeannie" Room

Do you believe in the salvation of cling peaches? You don't?
Then what do you believe in exactly?
And why are there mosquitoes on your eyelashes?

Do you want to do the insecticide dance?
Then flap those silly flappers and arrange for two spray shoes
at four thirty-two next afternoon.

Do you collect refrigerators so that you have some place to slap
your magnets? Then take this true or false quiz.
Twenty lucky winners will cruise to Nova Scotia.

Do you require respiration between the casting gin bottles?
Oh don't tell Whistler those white lies,
those hungry atmospheric lies about the black and behind.

Do you save mollusk shells as restaurant souvenirs?
May I suggest you use them as ashtrays for your dolls?
I'm sick of the tiny burn holes in the carpet.

Do you twist your hair into pretzel shapes
and raid first aid kits for kicks? If so, leave your bathing cap
on my car antenna and I will find you.

Written June 14, 2004. Read Ivy Alvarez's interviews with Nick Carbó; and Denise Duhamel.

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