Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

Fiona Hile reviews 'Rhinestone' by Ella O'Keefe, 'Metadata' by Amelia Dale, 'end motion/manifest' by Sian Vate, and 'Office of Locutions' by Kate Middleton

by
November 2015, no. 376

Fiona Hile reviews 'Rhinestone' by Ella O'Keefe, 'Metadata' by Amelia Dale, 'end motion/manifest' by Sian Vate, and 'Office of Locutions' by Kate Middleton

by
November 2015, no. 376

All writers need good bookshelves, but the poet, perhaps more than any other writer, is charged with the involuntary dispensation and relentless accumulation of reading material. This is partly due to the proclivities of the producers and partly due to the characteristics of the form itself. As the notable cultural critic Pierre Bourdieu remarked, poetry's effects derive from games of suspense and surprise, from the consecrated betrayal of expectations, and from the gratifying frustration provoked by archaism, preciosity, lexicological or syntactic dissonances, the destruction of stereotyped sounds or meaning sequences, ready-made formulae, idées reçues, and commonplaces.

It makes sense then that poetry, with its emphasis on heterogeneity and proliferation, should be the form that disseminates its products through the kaleidoscopic auspices of an array of media. So we have poetry in book form, as live performance, painted, plastered, and magic-markered across buildings, walls, and doors, embedded in the human epidermis, filmed, screened, and published online. We put it up in neon lights, post it on the sides of buses and trains, encode it into the DNA of micro-organisms, type it and print it and photocopy the pages to be folded and stapled haphazardly in the middle. We do this because, unlike the purveyors of other cultural objects, the poet has recipients rather than customers and is thus freed from the requirement of 'the minimal conditions of economic independence'.

You May Also Like