Brendan Casey on as Cordite Scholarly Editor

I’m honoured to announce that Brendan Casey will be taking up the helm of Cordite Scholarly Editor. Casey is a doctoral candidate in the English and Theatre Studies program, University of Melbourne, researching Australian poetry and fiction through a postnational or ‘unAustralian’ lens. His research focuses on ‘literary visitors’ and their writing about Australia.

Says Casey, ‘I am excited to publish new and revisionary approaches to Australian literature and poetics, work which challenges established ideas of national culture or celebrates under-researched local authors. I am interested in Australia’s place within the globe, particularly among its immediate Pacific and Asian neighbours.’

This also means that Matthew Hall will be leaving the post after 11 years, though will remain on our advisory board. His contribution to Cordite Poetry Review is incalculable, and there is not a deep enough thanks I can extend for his commitment, insight and development of the scholarship we’ve published.

Posted in GUNCOTTON | Tagged

Tell Me Like You Mean It 3


Gian Manik | Mum’s Rembrandt paintings continued | Oil, aerosol, crayon, Posca pen | 215 x 231cm | 2018

Once I had a dream about a sea mollusc that latched onto the inside of my calf, and stayed there. The logic of the dream made me understand that the mollusc wasn’t actually a mollusc, but the mollusc was a poem, not mine, but one that I had read. The poem wasn’t identifiable, but the poem was a good poem, and I woke up with questions. What, exactly, do I want from poetry? What space does poetry hold (in the body, in the mind, in society)? What is the work of poetry? Why does it always return so persistently (that is, both for me, personally, and in a broader historical sense), and what makes it stick?

In curating this chapbook I’m not sure I feel closer to answering these questions: certainly they are never stagnant … but I do feel closer to poetry’s resistance to answer these questions, which does circle back to some kind of answer to my last question – we return to poetry not because we have an answer, but instead return in a process of regeneration. This is to say that we return with new questions. Good poems stay with us because we want to keep asking those poems questions, not because we’ve found answers.

Recently, in one of a series of frustrating attempts to read Jacques Lacan, I expressed to a scholar of his work my annoyance (and resentment) at not being able to understand a lot of his writings. There is, on one hand, the idea in which the concepts Lacan, and the field with which psychoanalysis grapples, are not easily reducible — the workings of the human psyche are expansive and not easily ciphered. But there is also, as this person pointed out to me, the methodology of psychoanalysis itself, which can also be applied to methods of reading and making meaning; a process of asking questions, not providing answers. I feel the pleasure of this process of making meaning most acutely when reading poetry.

Zoe Kinglsey: commute aka I need a haircut
Neika Lehman: For Katie West, after Clearing
Stella Maynard: the feeling of holding a fight in your hands
Ursula Robinson Shaw: VULTURE PHANTASY
Bridget Gilmartin: Getting Nowhere
Freya Daly Sadgrove: Tantrum in a Supermarket
Jonno Révanche: Yawning / cologne
Janet Wu: Forbid talk Hong Kong issu
Bonnie Reid: Yolk Together Ruin
Manisha Anjali: eat the rich
Harriet McInerney: ‘Three dots, pending text.’
Claire Albrecht: skullcrushing
Alex Creece: Birth-Controlled Dyke
Rory Dufficy: Elegy for Solid Snake 3.1
Sam Langer: Current Update
Timmah Ball: Her mother thinks she’s a lesbian
Prithvi Varatharajan: New Year’s Eve in Tasmania
Will Druce: great artesian nowhere
Grace Heyer: These are the things I say
Julie Jedda Janson: Crow

Brushing up with the resistance of poetry, with the resistance of language is, for me, inherent to the joy of it. For Lacan, in contrast to the Saussurian process of signification, it is the signifier (words, for example) not the signified (the concepts they denote) that should be prioritised. The link between signifier and signified, Lacan says, is not so clear cut. This focus on the materiality of language, on the complex relations between words and concepts, is part of what I think good poetry does – it’s poetry’s dealings in this Symbolic network that might push us closer to a collective and individual unconscious.

I commissioned the poets gathered here because, at some point, I have read their work and it has left in me a sense of curiosity about the world. In Tim Wright’s collection The nights live changes he writes, ‘Moving through the world / is what I am interested in …’1 It’s a line that always comes back to me when I write and read. Good poetry is this ‘moving through’, a motion that sweeps up a series of questions, a moving (in the sense of both affect and motion) that reproduces itself as it latches on. A truly freaky, dazzling thing.

Posted in CHAPBOOKS | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Birth-Controlled Dyke

Butter me up
with hormone heresy
Butter me up, butterfuck
so I don’t get
battered
in the street
consequence evaporates
like dormant
spiders in crumpets
doubling bubbling
toilet troubles
two-minute eternity in a piss-fingered cubicle
where our futures sweat with butter.

 
Butter me up
with a bulletproof body
Butter me up, buttercuck
so I don’t have to beg when they

S p r e a d m e
for break fast
threatening incontinence
and plumbing a pipe dream
just let me avoid the medical bill
of predators on parole
but you still want your bread and butt- butt- butter
from contraceptive camouflage
and
low-rent lesbians.
 
Butter me up
with barrenness
Butter me up
without excuses
that still m
e
l
t in your mouth
buttering
splu tt t te r ing
uttering
that I am
parannoyed by a delusion turned destiny
hysterical for hysterectomy
tongue-tied or tubular
lather us smother us
mother,
unmother us.
Just butter me up,
Buttercup.

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

great artesian nowhere

we live on liquified pastures
on thylacine-skin print
blown in from the curved backs
of armchairs
hung on walls in gully-dust paintings
in the saturn-rings of wine glass bottoms
upon the lips of drooling escarpments
where sandstone sponge seeps wet-season fluid
down through guttered labyrinths of savannah.

this is of course not where we live
because we live in the television boxes
of such places
in the fridges in the sheds
on the carpets of abandoned paint-shops
in the wake of road-train gusts
in silent stupefaction
of being here at all.

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

commute aka I need a haircut

convince yourself
into modes of wistfulness
such an al line
waiting for the 8.13
listening to john talabot’s
2012
house release
fIN play recurring witness
to the two sticks of the bolte
origins in burial imagined
but more fecund
& green
the alienation I’m
feeling is the condition
of my labour
on repeat
I need
a haircut
the salt breeze felt
dogtooth
inland across yellow
silo frottage
forearms burn & that helmet of hair
the commute is the best part
you can convince yourself of the commute
when this bad one is over maybe
you’ll miss the commute
but most likely you won’t
I couldn’t bear to face
the silentio profile
by the 100th 7/11
commemorated
corner
81 austerities published
in 2012 by faber
is something
like that happening now here maybe
it’s not permitted
culturally
retreat onus shift
the head of core design
resigned after the release
of the game in 2003
failures are so endearing
like cult classics
like hyper-care
personnel or semaphore
entering the workplace
vocabulary
a regular long black
just before midday
at slurpee stained counter
retreat
can you deliver
manage time
the apostasia of ’65
as if
material
to finger
the junta
james wrote of that breeze as govt subsidised divination
residency
the cold front after the bake out
eligibility
squatting with the used
cotton buds & cockroaches
on the western highway
orange brown
sweet soy
boy tea
at 9am
where it’s difficult to discern
music for managers /
which side of the pane
the enclosure operates
it’s tomb raider style
simulations of rain
of bouncing artichoke thistle
at 5.35
diesel rail
suspension pixel
I can & can’t be there
grey warm & the perspective
changes
cho’s suitmation
a means of withstanding
incisions and genre
page boy cut
slippage
it’s tomb raider style
c. 2003
& she/we are
in paris & it’s dirty
blue light evening
along the side
9pm carpark
sunday elm heights
early feb
the hot box haunts: apartment rooftops
train graveyards & day clubs
defunct star
when I next see you I’ll be
doing ok yea
I’ll say
doing just fine

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Her mother thinks she’s a lesbian

Mother: those books

Daughter: which ones?

Mother: feminist ones

Daughter: seriously?

Mother: you’re feminist?

Daughter: no, it’s white1

Mother: your books are about feminism

Daughter: half of them are by men

Mother: what about Bad Feminist

Daughter: that’s Roxane Gay

Mother: and I Love Dick

Daughter: you seriously think

Mother: the pages were marked2

Daughter: Kraus is a white woman’s dream

Mother: people will think you’re a lesbian

Daughter: because I Love Dick

Mother: yes

Daughter: really?

Mother: if they saw those books

Daughter: which ones?

Mother: in your room

Daughter: what people?

Mother: white people

Daughter: I’m not in the mood

Mother: they’ll think you’re gay

Daughter: you’re fucking hilarious

Mother: it’s not a joke3

Daughter: have you read I Love Dick?

Mother: you know your type

Daughter: or seen the TV show?

Mother: would have been speared

Daughter: the TV adaptation’s got Kevin Bacon in it

Mother: just the other day I was walking through the park

Daughter: just chill

Mother: there was graffiti saying KILL All GAYS4

Daughter: do you want some tea?

Mother: are you writing for gay magazines?

Daughter: –

Mother: I just want to know what’s going on

Daughter: –

Mother: your books and the scene you

Daughter: come on

Mother: I guess I’m not good enough

Daughter: we should just watch the TV series with Kevin Bacon5

Mother: maybe you’ll get a book deal

Daughter: what does that even mean anymore?

Mother: everyone’s gay, even on the TV, it’s cool

Daughter: like being relegated to the lesbian erotica section of the bookstore6

Mother: so, you’re gay?


Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Elegy for Solid Snake 3.1

The Siberian desert is the first shock: that it’s a desert, green,
inhabited, malleable.
Now there is a shot of a transport ship: we become cinematic.

Talk then about consumption, thinghood itself as a battleground. We are returning to
the beginning. Remember the Alamo, once more, with laurels.

We lost contact with the boss some time ago. I would not expect
too much here if I were

you. The colonel is a member of the Brezhnev faction, and I want
to overthrow the government.

You only have a week, and if it’s not too much to ask for one more infirmity, the
universe is the father of modern sniping.

You were, of course, not born. You were instead
borne by another body; we all were I suppose. Playing these two roles doesn’t leave
much time for sleep.

We can be clear then: we are in the Cold War, or
we are watching it, you and I, playing with our bears, American or otherwise.

What we do here is history, what we have conceptualised here possible because of what
they did, and the technology they left us.

The End dies halfway through,
though, and he has lasted a century.

What are we to do after
the end of the
short century depicted
and
the birth – you yourself
are symptomatic here –
of another long one.

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

eat the rich

rich woman

rich woman


I will eat your t o n g u e
I will eat your t o n g u e
t o n g u e

t o n g u e
g u e
g u e
u e

e

rich woman pick my f l o w e r

rich woman pick my f l o w e r
f l o w e r
f l o w e r

rich woman cut my d r e s s

rich woman wear my d r e s s

rich woman cut my h a i r

rich woman wear my h a i r

rich woman cut my h e a d

rich woman wear my h e a d

rich woman wear my h e a d

rich woman trick my l o v e r

l o v e r

l o v e r

rich woman wear my h e a d

rich woman trick my l o v e r

l o v e r

l o v e r

rich woman suck my f l o w e r

rich woman suck my f l o w e r

f l o w e r


f l o w e r


rich woman m i r r o r m i r r o r

rich woman m i r r o r m i r r o r


rich woman m i r r o r m i r r o r

rich woman m i r r o r m i r r o r


rich woman

rich woman


I will eat your t o n g u e
I will eat your t o n g u e
t o n g u e

t o n g u e
g u e
g u e
u e

e

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

‘Three dots, pending text.’

Three dots, pending text. My weather is all out of alignment. The housing bubble is loosing sleep, rapidly, and I’ve moved onto domesticated swamplands. The backyard is made of concrete.

My weather is all out of alignment. To explore the nature of rain I opened the door. For three days I lay blank pages on concrete, they collect the weather while I am out of the house. Testing what pages can store, what memories they hold.

To explore the nature of rain I opened the door because inside the workings of language clear vision is impossible. A crumpled line takes hold. You text to say you’re wasting your life at The Union, I’m watching the clouds gather. Predictive text fails to foresee. This site of turbulence is irresistible,
it’s in my belly,
in my weather,
like three dots, pending text.


Italicised line from Rosemarie Waldrop’s The Reproduction of Profiles: Inserting the Mirror.

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Forbid talk Hong Kong issu

Hi mate

can tell you somethi-
there are alot of
on the 30th anniver-

[picture: man
against tanks]

within an hour it
so i printed
and it went
i kept putting
ended up putting
it takes about 5 -10

i thought i was like
but no. it is just

I have temporarily

now all the chinese
me in the face

i assume that there
ie: if you see this

crazy huh

No it is just

however i assume
communist party

Because, i know
the chinese communis-
across adelaide and

If you were to reall
even say if your mom

Yes it is all chines-
maybe it is just
ora actually they
xi jing ping: ‘you

No this is at night
there are no staff
what is so hard
it’s not like they
like i do not part
says they will kill

there is no best

you either:
1. make a stand and
anywhere and never
2. remain apathetic
and live your pretty
3. join them.

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

the feeling of holding a fight in your hands

there is always the question of the tackle. officially: all the contours are drawn around possession. every time the swans score at home a young-professional waves a flag for realestate.com.au. that’s not metaphor; they’re gameday partners. what’s a national league if not private property? there is always the question of the tackle. what it is; where it ends; where it begins. unofficially: a tackle could be nothing more than a palm rubbing a rib or the feeling of holding a fight in your hands. the leather of a sherrin. trading sweat. any index of the game shuffled between bodies that exists to simply say: i’m here with you. play on. there is always the question of the tackle. unofficially: a tackle could be a lure. an umpire with tactic might say that halftime and three-quarter time and full-time and quarter-time are about self care. it might even be true that you should rest and take a sip of water and be massaged and just breathe for a little. but that would miss the whole point of the intraplay: the regroup. the dissolution of self-enclosure when we meet in a huddle to pat each other on the back and breathe in unison and cling onto each other’s shoulders and whisper dirty things outside of the possible like not long now or we can win this or tackle hard. it’s the intraseason that reminds us that this we is never assured. in other words: hannebery is a saint now. all the handbooks tell umpires to be both proactive and keep their distance. all of which is to say: this is a game of multi-directional situational awareness.

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

New Year’s Eve in Tasmania

that summer of 2002
on the eve of the new year
I was in Tasmania

sipping red wine with a priest
and my father

in a caravan park

his name (the priest’s not my father’s)
was Felix, or Sebastian,
something like Father Felix Sebastian,
visiting from India, on a world tour.

he said ‘the young people here are very mature’

he said this looking at my wine glass.

‘yes, I suppose it’s exposure to a thing
that matures one,’ I said, looking at his wine glass.

we downed our blood. the priest enquired
how many glasses I would tolerate
before I lost my mind. father assured him
that I was a rather mature young man.

soon after, the priest and my father retired
to separate cabins. it was new year’s eve
so I scuffed around
for something to do.
I switched on the TV,
ate many bars of Tasmanian fudge,
watched Monty Python’s
The Meaning of Life

as the clock ticked over to 2003
in a cabin between the priest’s and my father’s –
father snoring on one side,
the priest, perhaps, turning pages on the other.

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Getting Nowhere

after John Cage’s A Lecture on Nothing

under the fluorescent supermarket light
we gaze at the bananas
with our arms around each other
we are not married and it’s
a pleasure
to stand still
to not be going to a gym
or getting a foot in a door
or climbing the rungs of a ladder
to not be planning a career
or Going Further in a
Ford Focus
we are getting nowhere
right now
and it’s a pleasure
to never want these things
to lie down on one of the shelves
of pillows in the Home Section
and think
this is not our beautiful house

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

For Katie West, after Clearing

when you almost catch the frog there is water underground
when that tree is whistling you are feeling well, because you listen
a dog eating grass might be doing better than you 

renovate that child living under your roof
yourself
and don’t come back until christmas
until whenever
until there is no measure

for carrying water 
for rocks
weighted and
kelp-bound

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Yolk Together Ruin

i

in the kitchen a woman tied a knot in a plastic bag over and over to cover a hole she tore in it minutes before. an hour passed and a man came through the kitchen door into the garden wearing the bag on his head. he was very pleased with himself and with the bag. then the wind took it. somewhere in greater sydney. somewhere in the belly of a whale.


ii

: imprecise   therefore   expand
: going   perimeter   expand
: rockfill   interpret   spillway
: gut   leftover   spillway
: paring   drape   ignite
: language   embargo   ignite
: yolk   together   ruin
: temperate   inside   ruin
: exacting   further   gather
: toward   after   gather


iii

the man came home from work to find that, once again, the woman had sold the bed. she told him that the bed was too comfortable, it spoiled them for when they had to sleep in other beds. he nodded and rolled a camping mattress over the floorboards. could she no longer stomach the plastic undulation; fucked face down on a water bed.


iv

in an enclosed section of the ocean
: trout   saltwater   misc.
: ghost shrimp   oil slick
in an enclosed section of the ocean
: algae   lipid   farm
: ExxonMobil   form
enclosed:   section:   gone


v

bananas drifted out along the rip tide toward the sea. a man reported seeing a bull shark swimming down the main street of goodna, queensland and into the McDonald’s. forever the geography a leaning torso.


vi

         in the sensuous expansion of water
392. come awake
393. the part of the body
         that waits for the blow
         : the head
         in the aftermath

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Current Update

broken rocks tick in us
brocken rock-tics
in us and out us
and around us
and picture the light to us
the pills, pils of a light
hammering onto the mould
inside us. how can i still be slinking around everyday life
and the grey music of tyres that grind earth
little, known dreams
of increasingly middle aged teenagers
glowing like life in a plant
though i get the impression there are new jobs and robots
the turrets of what is most possible
to keep off the cesspool of endlessness
in a forest of walls
and turn it into a delimited duck penis nevertheless
presumed to be infinitely extendable
but this is only one ‘me’s lazy decision
who pronouncements the stations
pronoun cements
propped on a shouldercake
and dreams of pain, dreams of shut up sobs
real dreams across deltas of flights
real shoulders to the fire
the greenness crumpling
spring waiting to come back in the head
or maybe not terrifyingly
blue sssssssss, fundamentally
angry lines of speed avoidant
with the red turned around /
breathing for awhile
breathing withor extracting the echoes
on some profit jag
oh yes, pronouncing them
this that and the other
as though ‘exploded hand’
whirred acceptable side-effects
tolerably racked
passively christ-crushing
just to stroll hurriedly
panic struck in the dryer swamp
commercial for water shock circus
between the skeletons of hazzard
drawn across freezing water
by the skulls of streets and bones
grinning ringtone of bone drawn
in desert root tomato cancer
left off, unheld
bizarre heroic actor-breath
pushing father on population
dream where you cut macron
population dream where you
dream where you cut
macron’s dream where you
cut macron’s population dream
by cutting macron’s dream
dream where you cut, cut where you dream
for a macron, for an accent, for a grave
for an indefinite duration of existing, people the on where you
cut and dream

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

VULTURE PHANTASY

rocky headland of a bright
live face, tender hooked throat
this shaggy down these talons this crown
of more or less erect feathers this address
taut like a laundry line between substance
and medium, trying to remember a poem you say,
you’ll know it, it’s about
a chick who wants
this guy to come on her tits and he doesn’t really want to, she feels
upset about it, you say: it’s a really good poem
i’m like damn i dont know that one

they insert their beaks into a slit
in an ostrich egg, to get at the interior
holding the shells between their mandibles,
i explain, in ancient cultures, trying to remember,
there were no male vultures

stalking around the banned word “l * v *,” extracts from a more
rigorous dialogue, cheap and sentimental, like porn how
everybody’s always coming
so the narrative always culminates, knotted white
patterns of force, many symbols, an arc
of moveable acts, lessons at the end, a literalised recuperation
of the human spirit how trite and i
/… a prude for joy
call your dick the death drive, call myself a nuisance, looking at my phone
whisper have i shown you this

trying to remember, da vinci writes
he was in the cradle a vulture
blew thru and fucked him
in the mouth, with its tail, opening up: the future,
visions and deliria, tendencies, the problem
of flight, he was only a baby but it really happened
in a dream,
he later took to painting
but he never let it go, freud says,
because he wrote it down

dicks are not real just a thing we have in dreams;
“phallus” is a dead currency there is only “pants”
everyone wearing them feels a will to power, great discomfort;
look up “etymology dick coma,” words do not
keep us from deeds
scrambled by unserious activity
the search history manufacturing
a backwards glance, the past is
a wish, compiled later
with purposive intent, being but
cerebral the body is a shortcut to a symbol,
if there are no male vultures, i’m trying to remember, o yea:
these birds stop in the midst of their flight, open their vagina
and are impregnated by the wind

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

skullcrushing

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Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Yawning / cologne

A “home game” helps to lose you – some of
my emotions all lopsided
in your room like Brecht, turning
upward,

To grow a hill
in your apocryphal
scene – only make tones
around me

Let loose
an ex boyfriend,
a homebrand sweetener,
not unlike
a quarterback,
domesticity ~ fantasy,

A fragment of
us is movement

/

Do you always hold a gaze this
fretfully? Are you not an alien thing?
A reconnaissance – or rather
all matted in person?

/

You’re never far

away, though I prick your thumb

on a map. Rub
your likeness throughout the spill, we’re

inked to be this ineligible. Uncanny,

really, that we 
proved coupledom

as the outcome, even

when the odds were weighed up.



Your sinew, there, at last, wrapped
in a silk
dress, showing off!
Feathered torso,
bright wide gaze, will
lock, or swap wardrobes.

What gets put on reveals

the notes we otherwise

wouldn’t notice



Love
in the time of
Viktor and Rolf

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Tantrum in a Supermarket

     I’m somewhere pathetic when I finally crack
like I’m at Laserforce or I’m patting a stranger’s dog
or I’ve wandered into a vape shop by accident
or I’m in the laundry items aisle

     I crack and the crack goes right up through me
     it’s not exactly ripping myself a new asshole—
it’s taking the asshole I’ve got and making it … way bigger
so that the wind rushes through me with an unearthly howl
     and as it surges outward
throughout all of humanity
everyone flees
     everyone runs to the sea
     everyone runs to the sea except me
     everyone wades in and drowns     and no one comes back
     I spend the rest of my short life     looting canned food and nice clothes
from abandoned shops in the CBD

     but in fact !     all of this is untrue……….I’ve been lying
     no one ever left in the first place     and I never even cracked
     I never crack because I like it here          I like to play my little games—
I like to tell my little jokes          I like to make my gentle threats
     there are people everywhere and I am always lying to them
like this : look at me !!!     look at me run when in fact I am standing still
     I haven’t moved for several minutes
     why does everyone keep believing me
     it’s not that I’m a baddie I’m just
always wrong

     and it’s not my fault ! in fact I have a congenital disease of wrongness
     I grew up getting severely bested in arguments     I’d be like   
losing my mind in the back of the car     my dumb little voice 
rising higher and higher     my sister smirking her smirk of righteousness   
when I was straining for some kind of point     like you know
exactly like pushing for a shit before it is ready          
     you can’t fucking take it back man     once you’ve strained enough
     I’d be so embarrassed if it was just my personality     it’s so fortunate that I
have my     congenital disease to blame

     oh no I’m lying again     sorry it happens literally all the time
     I wasn’t born with it
     I actually developed it as a public service :
     I have to cry wolf so the villagers     can get their satisfaction
I have to be wrong so that you can be right
     it’s actually……….charity     I’m doing charity on you         psych

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Crow

Wild as a black Darug crow
She is lead on a chain. Behind a horse, arse in her face

black tail, flies flicking

The man shouts, his eyes
on her breast. Ragged white fella dress

Handed a tin pannikin of tea. Blessed drink. A sigh.
She stares at his boots. Fresh from kicking?
Refuses to look, rather sees his smashed skull
thinks how she’ll flee. 


Spit forms on his lips, curled, pale and bloodless
Shoot ya! She had no fear of: shoot ya.

She climbs trees, to spirit places

Dissolving in leaves, bark, sap and tree heart.
Become a tree like her father, fly like crow
Totem carved in triangles
Incised his chest, raised welts of ash.

Not like this skinny white fella

Snake belly skin, feeble and cruel. Arms like worms. Bandicoot nose.

Shoot ya he says and she cannot be touched .

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

These are the things I say

soon it will be time to turn off the TV, to make you piss and brush your teeth


to have an argument about getting dressed, which is an argument I have with my
mother about the slingshot of ageing and
how she never told me I was happy



it’s me standing on a small chair so that the time-gap between us expands like that from a needy mouth to a breast or another mouth

it’s my mother’s mother – my mother finally just that – leaving her again in a taxi for the airport and quiet, childless places
only looking back when a letter arrives to tell her that my brother, tiny then, peddled the dock of the driveway
our mother’s arms a jaw saying stop – she’s not worth it

Posted in AP EWF 2019 | Tagged

Pascalle Burton Reviews Jackson’s A Coat of Ashes

A Coat of Ashes by Jackson
Recent Work Press, 2019



One part is conceptualising and ordering the world and the other is accepting the world as it is. – Agnès Varda

Poetry tries to get at something elemental by coming out of a silence and returning us—restoring us—to that silence. It is one of the soul’s natural habitats. – Edward Hirsch


Jackson’s third book, A Coat of Ashes, published by Canberra’s Recent Work Press, is a contemplation about how the discourses of Daoism (or Taoism), physics and systems theory might be fused through the methodology of poetry. The collection springs from her acclaimed PhD project, which was awarded the Edith Cowan University Research Medal, the Arts and Humanities Research Medal, and the Magdalena Prize for Feminist Research. The accompanying prose component of her thesis offers a rich background of selected writers whose work is imbued by physics or Daoism, as well as her creative approaches to this book.

What compels a poet to unite and experiment with such varying discourses? It turns out Jackson was looking for answers about being and matter; what it is to be, what matter is and what actually matters. Her wager is that poetry, as mediator of spirituality and science, could provide deeper understanding about existing in a world of ecological and postcolonial turmoil. It seems to have paid off in this striking volume of work.

The language features and text structures of conventional scientific writing (impartial, technical, objective) and mystical writing (superlative, interpretive, repetitive), might seem incompatible to merge, and experimental poems like ‘Spangles’ and ‘That vast sea’, which incorporate and respond to cut up texts from science books and the Dao De Jing, do produce dissonant tones and styles. However, the organising element of poetry satisfies chance and we find it possible for facts, laws, theories and mysticism to blend and create new flows. Perhaps the relationship is not as troubled as we are led to believe. Philosophical Daoism, as Jackson says, ‘values silence, listening, humility, mindful presence and the shedding of ego and attachment’. This too, seems to be what Western science values; the self is suspended to allow for observation of the systems in which it operates and to which it belongs.

The poems in this book are deep, long breaths; an opportunity to stop and reflect or enter the room of a poet’s meditations. Despite the intermittent scientific insertions (quark, cambium) or Chinese fragments from Daoist texts (wu, dào kĕ dào fēi cháng dào), the plain and mostly quiet language of these works is gentle and subtle even when the content is grappling existential, environmental and social catastrophes.

In ‘One, two three’, Jackson applies the theory of a cartwheel to childlike nostalgia and a sense of forgiveness:

The child doesn’t know
momentum, centres, gravity. 
She blames her mother’s 

ski-slope lawn.

This poem also demonstrates Jackson’s excellent use of poetry to give and then take away, maximising space and silence:

Her father mows the grass

infrequently.

Space and silence are manipulated in the constraint-led ‘What is Tao?’ which employs a word-length stipulated erasure of Thomas Merton’s translation of the Zhuangzi, ‘Cutting Up an Ox’, where the motion of the space provides the rhythm of the meditation:

I feel    slow down    watch
hold back    move

Readers can refer to ‘On looking at the Pointers’ to see what happens when science and Daoism meet, and to the list poem ‘The Sage and the Physicist’ to find out what each is not. The Is and the Not are used frequently in this collection, either through affirmatives and negatives (can/can’t, was/wasn’t) or the naming of them, as in ‘That’:

the What and Not I saw
was That.

Dreams abound and become another way of watching emotions and reactions, like the apocalyptic opener, ‘The silicon lip of the precipice’ or ‘The other way, the long way’, which challenges the narrator’s inflexibility and anxiety. The use of silence in the final line of ‘The fundamental forces dream’ gives the reader a waking sensation, where blinking eyes search for sense, returning to the title or to the following page for continuity:

Hunger
is the fundamental force
from which all the others are derived,
    I said.
And there are accordingly five
fundamental particles.
The one associated with Hunger is called

Objects and animals are instrumental to the noetic quality of this collection, either through narrative, symbol, personification, allegory or metaphor. These include birds, whales, plants, planes, trains, chairs, cars, acid, bass guitars, dolls and dress shoes. A couple of gems, first from ‘on the path’:

a tiny sock
on the path
    BONDS
        it says

and from ‘between’:

there arose a beautiful horse,
brown and white with white-fringed feet,
but it wasn’t possible to speak with her.

In some poems Jackson utilises a stream of consciousness or form of spaced-out, non-intentional writing. Language becomes tenuous or rambling or rhythmic or all of these things. See ‘lamps’ and its near-language-sense, such as ‘I’ve been curling to juice the drug dumps’, or ‘That girdle!’:

I at the surface don’t see the drip
I see the wave, not the jump
Ripples in the pooliverse
Someone says that there is no rock
   and that there is no rock is the rock
Posted in BOOK REVIEWS | Tagged ,

Submission to Cordite 96: NO THEME IX

No theme, no rules, except for one: send us your best poems.


Submit poems (prose, comics, visual, concrete) or works of micro-fiction (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 …

submit


Posted in GUNCOTTON | Tagged , ,