Showing posts with label 2010. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2010. Show all posts

Tuesday

Campana to Montale (2010)


[cover design: Gennaro Fusco]

Kendrick Smithyman. Campana to Montale: Versions from Italian. 2004. Edited by Jack Ross & Marco Sonzogni. Introduction by Marco Sonzogni. Essay by Jack Ross. ISBN-13: 978-88-7536-264-5. Transference Series. Ed Erminia Passannanti. Novi Ligure: Edizioni Joker, 2010. 244 pp.

Contents:
  • Introduction
    Making the List: Last but not Least
    (Marco Sonzogni)

  • Essay
    The Poem Within: Kendrick Smithyman the Poet-Translator
    (Jack Ross)

Poets:
[For a full list of the poems included, consult the 2004 edition]
  1. Dino Campana
    (20 August, 1885 – 1 March, 1932)

    Born in 1885, near Faenza; died of septicaemia at Castel Pulci in 1932. Before being committed in 1918 to the mental hospital where he died, Campana’s life was characterised by compulsive wandering, tormented love affairs, and extreme disdain for the literary establishment. Major works: Canti Orfici (1914); Canti orfici e altre liriche (1928). A great deal of his work appeared posthumously: Inediti (1942), Taccuino (1949); Canti orfici e altre scritti (1952); Lettere (1958); Taccuinetto fiorentino (1960); Opere e contributi (1972).

  2. Sandro Penna
    (June 12, 1906 – January 21, 1977)

    Born in Perugia in 1906; died in Rome in 1977. A somewhat isolated figure in modern Italian poetry, Penna is generally described as the one working-class poet among the intellectuals of the Hermetic school. Major works: Una strana gioia di vivere (1956); Croce e delizia (1958); Un po' di febbre (1973); Tutte le poesie (1970); Stranezze (1976); Il viaggiatore insonne (1977); Confuso sogno (1980).

  3. Nelo Risi
    (April 21, 1920- )

    Born in Milan in 1920. A qualified doctor, but writer by vocation, he spent most of World War II in Russia, and was subsequently interned in Switzerland. His work concerns itself mainly with “the dilemma of the individual in an age of mass-consciousness.” Major works: L'opere e i giorni (1941); L’esperienza (1948); Polso teso (1956); Pensieri elementari (1961); Dentro la sostanza (1966); Amica mia nemica (1976); Poesie scelte 1943-1975 (1977); I fabbricanti del 'bello' (1982); Le risonanze (1987); Mutazioni (1991); Il mondo in una mano (1994); Altro da dire (2000); Ruggine (2004); Di certe cose. Poesie 1953-2005 (2006); Né il giorno né l'ora (2008).

  4. Giuseppe Ungaretti
    (February 8, 1888 – June 2, 1970)

    Born in Egypt, at Alexandria, in 1888; died in Milan in 1970. He served as an infantryman in World War I, an experience which confirmed him in his vocation as a poet. With Montale and Quasimodo, one of the “big three” of twentieth-century Italian poetry. Major works: Il porto sepolto (1917); Allegria di naufragi (1919); L'allegria (1931); Sentimento del tempo (1933); Il dolore (1947); La terra promessa (1950); Il taccuino del vecchio (1960); Vita d’un uomo (1969).

  5. Leonardo Sinisgalli
    (March 9, 1908 – January 31, 1981)

    Born in Montemurro in 1908; died in Rome in 1981. His background in physics and graphic design led him to formulate a poetry of detached understatement, in opposition to the frenzied aesthetics of his contemporaries. Major works: Cuore (1927); Ritratti di macchine (1935); Quaderno di geometria (1935); Vidi le muse (1943); Fiori pari, fiori dispari (1945); Belliboschi (1948); La vigna vecchia (1952); L'età della luna (1962): Poesie di ieri (1966); Mosche in bottiglia (1975); Dimenticatoio (1978).

  6. Alfonso Gatto
    (July 17, 1909 – March 6, 1976)

    Born in Salerno in 1909; died in a road accident near Orbetello in 1976. He was imprisoned in Milan in 1934 for opposition to the Fascist regime, and was active in the Resistance during World War II, experiences which informed much of his later poetry. Major works: Isola (1932); Poesie (1941); La spiaggia dei poveri (1944); Nuove poesie (1949); La forza degli occhi (1954); La madre e la morte (1960); Rime di viaggio per la terra dipinta (1969); Desinenze (1977); Poesie (1998); Tutte le poesie (2005).

  7. Vittorio Sereni
    (July 27, 1913 – February 10, 1983)

    Born in Luino, Lago Maggiore, in 1913; died in Milan in 1983. Fought as an infantry officer in Greece and Sicily, where he was taken prisoner. His initial adherence to Hermeticism was succeeded by a more realistic approach to war and post-war austerity. Major works: Frontiera (1941); Diario d’Algeria (1947); Un polvere d'anni di Milano (1954); Gli strumenti umani (1965); Poesie scelte 1935-1965 (1973); Stella variabile (1981); Tutte le poesie (1986); Il grande amico. Poesie 1935-1981 (1990); Poesie (1995).

  8. Camillo Sbarbaro
    (January 12, 1888 – October 31, 1967)

    Born in Santa Margherita, Liguria, in 1888; died at Spoleto in 1967. Generally seen as an adherent of the turn-of-the-century Crepuscular school, Sbarbaro’s melancholic self-absorption in fact has more in common with later poets of disillusionment such as Montale or T. S. Eliot. Major works: Resine (1911); Pianissimo (1914); Truccioli (1920); Liquidazione (1928); Rimanenze (1956); Primizie (1958).

  9. Luciano Erba
    (September 18, 1922 - August 3, 2010)

    Born in Milan in 1922; died in Milan in 2010. Scholar, translator and critic, Erba’s elaborately ironic undercutting of traditional poetic language and attitudes helped him to build up a biting commentary on post-war Italian values. Major works: Linea K (1951); Il bel paese (1955); Il prete di Ratanà (1959); Il male minore (1960); Il prato più verde (1970); Il nastro di Moebius (1980); Il cerchio aperto (1983); Il tranviere metafisico (1987); L'ippopotamo (1989); Il variar del verde (1993); L'ipoteci circense (1995); Negli spazi intermedi (1998); Nella terra di mezzo (2000); Poesie 1951-2001 (2002); Si passano le stagioni (2003); Un po' di Repubblica (2005); Remi in barca (2006).

  10. Mario Luzi
    (October 20, 1914 – February 28, 2005)

    Born in Castello, Tuscany, in 1914; died in Florence in 2005, shortly after being elected Italian Senator-for-life. An early exponent of the hermetic movement, whose motto “letteratura come vita” (literature as life) dominated Italian literature in the 1930’s, his later work is less liable to assume the capacity of poetry to palliate suffering. Major works: La barca (1935); Avvento notturno (1940); Quaderno gotico (1947); Onore del vero (1957): Il gusto della vita (1960); Tutte le poesie (1979); Per il battesimo dei nostri frammenti (1985); Viaggio terrestre e celeste di Simone Martini (1994); Dottrina dell'estremo principiante (2004).

  11. Giorgio Orelli
    (May 25, 1921 - )

    Born in Airolo in 1921. He studied Italian literature with Gianfranco Contini at Fribourg, then went to teach in Bellinzona, where he has been living since 1945. He is considered by many the greatest poet of Italian Switzerland. Major works: Né bianco né viola (1944); Poesie (1953); Nel cerchio familiare (1960); L'ora del tempo (1962); Sinopie (1977); Spiracoli (1989) Rückspiel-partita di ritorno (1998); Il collo d'anitra (2001); Sagt es den Anseln-Ditelo ai merli (2008).

  12. Elio Pagliarani
    (May 25, 1927 - )

    Born in Viserba, near Rimini, in 1927. Teacher, editor, journalist, Pagliarini’s poetry attempts to replace the conventions of the Romantic lyric with a neo-realist but linguistically complex presentation of the lives of ordinary people. Major works: Cronache e altre poesie (1954); La ragazza Carla e altre poesie (1962); Lezione di fisica e Fecaloro (1968); Rosso Corpo Lingua oro pope-papa scienza-Doppio trittico di Nandi (1977); Esercizi platonici (1985); La ballata di Rudi (1995).

  13. Lucio Piccolo
    (October 27, 1901 - May 26, 1969)

    Born 1903 in Palermo. Died in 1969 at his Sicilian property at Capo d’Orlando. Like his more famous cousin Tomasi di Lampedusa, lived out of the mainstream of Italian cultural life. Major works: Canti barocchi (1956); Gioco a nascondere (1960); Plumelia (1967).

  14. Eugenio Montale
    (October 12, 1896 - September 12, 1981)

    Born in Genoa in 1896; died in Milan in 1981. His poetry, perhaps the most influential in twentieth-century Italian literature, constantly circles back to his childhood on the coast of Liguria. Largely self-educated, he lost his job as an editor in 1938 as a result of anti-fascist opinions, and supported himself afterwards with occasional journalism and translation. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1975. Major works: Ossi di seppia (1925); Le occasioni (1939); La bufera ed altro (1956); Satura (1971); Diario del '71 e del '72 (1973); Quaderno di quattro anni (1977); Altri versi (1980); L'opera in versi (1980).

  15. Salvatore Quasimodo
    (August 20, 1901 - June 14, 1968)


  16. Born in Modica in 1901; died in Milan in 1968. His Nobel prize for literature in 1959 was awarded mainly for the wartime poems collected in Giorno dopo giorno [Day after day] (1943-46), an advance on the austere Hermeticism of much of his early work. The life of the Sicilian countryside and the classical Mediterranean past are two interests which constantly resurface in his poetry. Major works: Acque e terre (1930); Òboe sommerso (1932); Erato e Apòllion (1938); Ed è subito sera (1943); Giorno dopo giorno (1947); La vita non è sogno (1949); Il falso e vero verde (1954); La terra impareggiabile (1958): Tutte le poesie (1960); Dare e avere (1966).



Blurb:

Kendrick Smithyman's Campana to Montale. Versions from Italian – an impressive anthology of Italian Modernist poetry in English translation – is not only a celebration of poetry translation but also of poetry itself. Smithyman's translations – or, rather, versions, as he defined them – keep company with those penned by virtuosi of the word like Samuel Beckett and T.S. Eliot; Derek Mahon and Paul Muldoon; Charles Wright and John Updike; Billy Collins and Bill Manhire; and, of course, the godfather of poetry translation, Robert Lowell. Campana to Montale. Versions from Italian is an essential part in the jigsaw puzzle - Atua Wera, Last Poems, Imperial Vistas Family Fictions, and now the magnificent online edition of Collected Poems 1943-1995 - which is gradually revealing to us the true extent of the lifework of one of New Zealand's greatest poets.

Kendrick Smithyman, poet and critic, was born in Te Kopuru, in the far north of New Zealand, on October 9th, 1922. He attended school and teachers college in Auckland before wartime service in first the Artillery, then the RNZAF, from 1941 to 1945. His first poems were published in the 1940s, and he came to be regarded as one of the country's most complex yet prolific poets. He was also the author of the first full-length critical book on New Zealand poetry, A Way of Saying (1965). In 1963 he joined the Auckland University English Department, and he worked there as a Senior Tutor until his retirement in 1987. He won the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry with his 1985 book Stories About Wooden Keyboards. In 1986 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of Auckland, and in 1990 he received an OBE. He died on December 28th, 1995.

Jack Ross, poet and literary translator, is Lecturer in English at the School of Social and Cultural Studies, Massey University (Albany Campus).

Marco Sonzogni, poet and literary translator, is Senior Lecturer in Italian at the School of Languages and Cultures, Victoria University of Wellington.

ISBN: 88-7536-264-5

Є20.00 £17.50 $28.00

Abstract:

For the most part, this re-issue of my 2004 edition of this set of translations from the Italian Modernists by NZ poet Kendrick Smithyman reproduces the text of the original publication. However this second edition, co-edited with Dr Marco Sonzogni of Victoria University, includes corrections to the text of the poems, as well as a greatly expanded, 5,000-word version of my original introduction, entitled “The Poem Within: Kendrick Smithyman the Poet-Translator”. It also includes an essay by Italian scholar Sonzogni, comparing (favourably) Smithyman’s abilities as a translator with some of the others in the field.

The original edition of this book got a very favourable critical reception in New Zealand from (among others) C. K. Stead (“I know what I’ll be reading this summer.” Sunday Star-Times (5/12/04): C8). It was thanks to Dr. Sonzogni’s contacts in his home country, Italy, that we were able to issue it in this new form, in a series devoted to literary translation and foreign-language poetry.

Online Text:

Joker Edizioni

Samples:

The Imaginary Museum

Available:

Edizioni Joker
via Crosa della Maccarina 28/B
15067 Novi Ligure (AL)-ITALIA
Tel/Fax 0143.322383
www.edizionijoker.com
info@edizionjoker.com



Reviews & Comments:

  1. Alistair Paterson. "Campana to Montale: Versions from Italian." Books and Magazines in Brief. Poetry NZ 42 (2011): 108.

    This is a relatively large collection of poems not so much translated as restructured by the author from the work of 15 Italian poets who were writing and publishing throughout a large part of the twentieth century. The collection was complete in 1993 when Smithyman submitted it unsuccessfully to Auckland University Press and then Carcanet in Manchester. AUP and Carcanet's loss was a distinctive gain for the Writers Group, which should congratulate itself on acquiring and publishing such a fine set of adaptations from the work of very important Italian poets. Jack Ross has done a wonderful job of putting the poems together and thus offering us a truly impressive book.

  2. Anna Forsyth. "Book Review: Campana to Montale by Kendrick Smithyman." Best Light Communications (4/5/11):

    I must say straight away, that the depth of thought and care which has been given to this book is touching. When you can feel the love, you can’t help but linger for just a bit longer, out of respect for the author and editors if nothing else.

    I don’t speak any Italian, and aside from in the introduction, there is not too much for me to have to grapple with. Having the original language alongside would have been nice, but reading the English versions of the poems places the poem in a new context.

    Ross makes the point that ‘translating poetry is, strictly speaking, impossible.’ It is more of an envisioning and a fresh context that invites the reader into the world of the original.
    ...
    A great insight into an important school of poetry that deserves access.

  3. David Herkt. "Summer's Last Cicada." Landfall Review Online (1/7/11):

    Campana To Montale is a substantial and noteworthy addition to the corpus of Italian poetry in English. It is focused, yet comprehensive within those bounds. It gives a clear insight into more than half a century of writing. It is not the work of a dilettante. But Smithyman’s texts also produce far more questions than have been answered, even in the excellent essays by Ross and Marco Sonzogni that introduce and accompany the Edizione Joker edition.

    Was such a labour really the product of a casually caused reaction? Was Smithyman’s involvement with Italian modernist poetry and poetics merely a matter of chance? Was it sustained purely by a hunt-and-peck exercise in dictionary translation much like doing a cryptic crossword in two languages? No matter how beguiling these questions might be, currently we have no real answers beyond the body of work. And such questions also avoid an obvious observation: these poems are some of Smithyman’s finest work.

  4. Farrell Cleary. "A Kiwi voice for Italian poetry." Società Dante Alighieri di Auckland Newsletter (Ottobre / October, 2011) 7:

    While some may look askance at the prospect of reading 200 pages of Italian poetry “Englished” by someone who knew no Italian, Marco Sonzogni provides convincing reassurance that Smithyman’s versions can hold their own as translations with anything previously published.

    He draws our attention to Smithyman’s transformation of Eugenio Montale’s L’anguilla/The Eel, where “flogging through the deeps”, “from creek to stream” and “a buried stump” could be describing eeling expeditions near Dargaville. In fact, Smithyman’s painstaking work with dictionaries and other earlier translations produces surprisingly accurate English versions.

  5. David Groves. "The Italian job." New Zealand Books: A Quarterly Review vol. 21, no. 3, issue 95 (Spring 2011) 27:

    It seems a useful working hypothesis that the extraordinary flowering of Smithyman's third period – with the domestic Imperial Vistas Family Fictions and the regional (but not national or provincial) Atua Wera – is directly related to the loosening up of discourse and the crossing of temporal, spatial and cultural boundaries that he practised imaginatively in his translations. In addition, Montale's switch from the dense imagistic mode of his earlier epiphanies to his later sardonic manner, and the shift of Quasimodo from his earlier intricate and allusive compression to the more relaxed style and social themes of his later work, may have exercised a particular influence on Smithyman's own development. If so, this book is an important contribution to the study of one of our finest poets.

  6. Richard Taylor. "From Campana to Montale." Richard, You MUST try to be more focused - (12/2/14):

    From Campana to Montale: Versions from the Italian is an excellent addition to the library of anyone interested in Smithyman or contemporary (and other) Italian poetry, which has a long and rich tradition: longer than that of the English or many other nations. It is wonderful that a great New Zealand, and indeed world, poet, has made this huge effort to translate these varied and often mysterious poets. I thank Margaret Edgecumbe, Smithyman himself, Jack Ross and Sonzogi for this production.





Wednesday

11 Views of Auckland (2010)


Cover image: Graham Fletcher /
Cover design: Brett Cross & Ellen Portch

11 Views of Auckland. Edited by Jack Ross & Grant Duncan. Preface by Jack Ross. Social and Cultural Studies, 10. ISSN 1175-7132. Albany: Massey University, 2010. ii + 210 pp.

Contents:

  1. Cluny Macpherson, "Auckland’s Pacific Narratives"

  2. Graeme MacRae, "The Bay that Was, a Park that Isn’t and the City that Might Have Been"

  3. Ann Dupuis, "Shutting the Gates: Auckland’s Urban Development in Transition?"

  4. Warwick Tie, "Between Itself: The Political Economy of the Metropolis"

  5. Eleanor Rimoldi, "Auckland City: Public Life and Civil Society"

  6. Isabel Michell, "Auckland City: Becoming Places"

  7. Jennifer Lawn, "Soft-boiled in Ponsonby: The Topographies of Murder in the Crime Fiction of Charlotte Grimshaw and Alix Bosco"

  8. Peter Lineham, "The Religious Traditions of the North Shore: Pluralism and Unity"

  9. Jack Ross, "The Stokes Point Pillars"

  10. David Ishii, "Immigration settlement: Never Just about Language"

  11. Grant Duncan, "The Making of the Super City"



Samples:

Social and Cultural Studies

Available:

Dot Cavanagh
School Receptionist
College of Humanities and Social Sciences
Massey University
Private Bay 102 904
North Shore Mail Centre
Auckland

RRP: $NZ 20 (+ $2 postage & packing)




Reviews & Comments:


  1. Graeme Beattie, "11 Views of Auckland." Beattie's Book Blog (7 February 2011):

    The College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Albany Campus, Massey University, are happy to invite you to celebrate the publication of 11 Views of Auckland: An anthology of essays by members of the College, Volume 10 in our ongoing Monograph Series "Social and Cultural Studies."

    The book will be launched by Massey University’s Vice-Chancellor, The Hon Steve Maharey, at a special launch price of $15 [RRP: $20], in the Study Centre Staff Lounge, East Precinct, Albany Campus, Auckland, on Thursday 17th February from 5.00-6.30 p.m.

  2. Jennifer Little, "Urban myths and marvels evoked in Auckland essays." Massey University Website. (18 February 2011):

    Murders, motorways and migrants are some of the subjects of a new book, 11 Views of Auckland, by Albany-based academics from the University’s College of Humanities and Social Sciences.
    ...
    Each is a unique exploration on an aspect of Auckland’s past or present, its complexities and contrasts, penned by academics from sociology, history, English, linguistics, public policy, anthropology and political studies at the University’s Albany campus.

  3. Steve Matthewman, "Review: Jack Ross and Grant Duncan (eds.) (2010) 11 Views of Auckland. Albany: Massey University." New Zealand Sociology vol. 26, issue 2 (2011): 117-19:

    This co-edited book is the tenth in Massey University’s Social and Cultural Studies series. The series aims to collect high quality multidisciplinary work organised around a particular theme or research methodology. Here we have eleven scholars with backgrounds in anthropology, education, fine arts, literary and religious studies, social policy and sociology, offering their views of New Zealand’s most multicultural city. Each chapter has its specific point of entry and object of study: a people (tangata o te moana nui a Kiwa), a suburb (Freemans Bay), an architectural style (gated communities, skyscrapers), an island (Waiheke), literature (crime fiction, commemoration), an activity (city governance, immigration, religious practice and walking).
    ...
    As with any multi-authored collection there are a range of writing styles displayed. In this publication some are straightforwardly academic (Peter Lineham), others more personal reflection (Graeme MacRae), while yet others merge these two positions (David Ishii). Still, all fall within the scope of Massey’s series which is to offer arts scholars interesting material which avoids unnecessary jargon. Inevitably your judgement of a book will be marked by what you bring to it and what you want out of it. Approaching it as a teacher I was immediately gratified to see chapters like Cluny Macpherson’s one on ‘Auckland’s Pacific Narratives’ that I can use when stood in front of cohorts of visiting American students. Although I hope this comprehensive overview reaches a wider audience because some popular myths deserve to be punctured. As Cluny demonstrates, the Pacific migration of common sense knowledge is actually the sixth migratory wave. As a researcher I was interested to see Ann Dupuis’ work on gated communities (although my own “Gated Life” project remains stubbornly in the bottom drawer). I should also add that I found this volume as easy to read for pleasure as it was for work. Jack Ross promises the reader a ‘quick fix’ rather than ‘a complete immersion’, but I found it much more satisfying than that.

  4. Sarah Coddington, "Lecturer wants poems written on bridge pillars." North Shore Times (Tuesday, 15 March, 2011): 30:

    It seems poems gracing pillars of the mighty Auckland Harbour Bridge and telling tales of North Shore's past were never meant to be.

    Massey University English lecturer Jack Ross spent many hours collating poems for a Shore art-based project that never went ahead.
    ...
    "The first criterion to qualify for a spot was you had to be dead. It was very hard to choose poets and you needed a diversity of people with a connection to the Shore," he says.


[Sarah Coddington, "Lecturer wants poems written on bridge pillars"
(North Shore Times (Tuesday, 15 March, 2011): 30]




Authors Graeme MacRae, Grant Duncan, Jack Ross, Eleanor Rimoldi, David Ishii, Cluny Macpherson and Warwick Tie at the book launch yesterday. (Absent were Ann Dupuis, Jennifer Lawn and Isabel Michell)
[17 February, 2011]

Complete Review:
Jennifer Little. "Urban myths and marvels evoked in Auckland essays." Massey University Website. (18 February 2011):

Murders, motorways and migrants are some of the subjects of a new book, 11 Views of Auckland, by Albany-based academics from the University’s College of Humanities and Social Sciences.

Edited by English lecturer Dr Jack Ross and public policy lecturer Associate Professor Grant Duncan, the book is printed and published by the University.

The essays are by no means gushing endorsements for the metropolis – home to an estimated 1.25 million people, or about a third of the nation’s population.

Each is a unique exploration on an aspect of Auckland’s past or present, its complexities and contrasts, penned by academics from sociology, history, English, linguistics, public policy, anthropology and political studies at the University’s Albany campus.

That the writers all live and work in Auckland is pertinent to the spirit of these essays, which evoke personal experiences and insights within the framework of their particular discipline.

Thoughtful commentaries on urban experiences include Dr Isabel Michell’s Auckland City: Becoming Places. She describes the pleasures and perils of being an inner city pedestrian who suffers “near hits, noise and air pollution, and the annoying experience of what might be called pedestrianas interruptus: the sudden cessation of footpath in favour of road.”

She reflects on the need for “life in or between buildings”, lamenting the lack of appealing public spaces through which a diverse muster of humanity can flow or congregate.

English and Media Studies lecturer Dr Jennifer Lawn delves into crime fiction set in Auckland as pathway into the links between real crime, place and urban experience in Soft-boiled in Ponsonby: The Topographies of Murder in the Crime Fiction of Charlotte Grimshaw and Alix Bosco.

Real crimes, reported and sensationalised in the media, can provide a backdrop or echo for imagined ones. "Grimshaw's Auckland is scarcely fit for human habitation; it is waterlogged, slimy, rotting, hostile to the scale and pace of the human frame – yet curiously sublime, even daemonic...” she writes.

Anthropologist Dr Graeme MacRae traces a fascinating history of his neighbourhood in Freeman’s Bay in The Bay that Was, a Park that Isn’t and the City that Might Have Been. He traces its evolution from community-oriented council housing to hub of commercial development and victim of “social cleansing.”

Sociologist Associate Professor Ann Dupuis reflects on the emergence of gated communities, and Dr Warwick Tie explores the link between aesthetics and economics in relation to downtown Auckland’s glass-walled Metropolis building as a symbol of precarious corporate ethos in Between Itself: The Political Economy of the Metropolis

Associate Professor Grant Duncan adds a poetic touch from the vantage point of a bus passenger in his essay The Making of the Super City. "The bus climbs steeply to the apex of the Bridge, a place where every traveller gets a fleeting million-dollar view, and this ride impresses itself as one of the great ways to experience the brutal velocities, the pounding sensations and the beautiful vistas from unexpected windows that create the way the hapless denizen takes part in the life of the city – just another body going along with the city's great lava-flows of traffic that congeal and contest within the channels designed for them by anonymous planners."

He asks the reader to look beyond the potentially "sleep-inducing boredom" that the subject of local government may invoke to the basic relevance of urban policy making; ""How do people, politics and social trends shape the places we inhabit and the ways we experience life, move about and get things done in the city?"

The book is the 10th monograph in a series started by the former School of Cultural and Social Studies.

Dr Ross’ quirky essay describes his involvement in a thwarted art project to engrave poetry on Auckland’s harbour bridge supports. He says he hopes the book will provoke readers with its “truthful depiction of how the city seems to each of us right now,” that will “grow in value as Auckland’s various futures unfold and interlock.”

Vice-Chancellor Steve Maharey, who launched the book, praised its rich, diverse content and described it as “a time capsule of Auckland today that will become a valuable reference point for how the city changes and evolves.”


[Graham Fletcher: "Untitled,"
from Lounge Room Tribalism (2009-2010)]




Tuesday

Kingdom of Alt (2010)


Cover image: "Model forest", by Bronwyn Lloyd

Kingdom of Alt. Short Stories and a Novella by Jack Ross. ISBN 978-1-877441-15-8. Auckland: Titus Books, 2010. [iv] + 240 pp.

Contents:


Marginalia

Trauma: Journal
Haiku Diary
The Isle of the Cross
The Purloined Letter
Notes found inside a text of Bisclavret
Finding His Stash
Before the Disaster

Coursebook found in a Warzone: A Whodunit


Cover design: Brett Cross

Blurb:

Is writing about staying on the sidelines, or getting involved - marginal observation, or "skyline operations" (Auden)? This book offers a series of takes on the possibility of a truly engaged literature. Not all the conclusions it comes to are entirely pessimistic.

"You'll all have your own story about how you first encountered the magic kingdom of Alt. As a teenager growing up in the depths of the Auckland suburbs, I believe that discovery saved my life."
- Roger Horrocks

Titus Books
ISBN 978-1-877441-15-8




Abstract:

This is a collection of seven short stories, together with a longer, 100-page novella. The stories are grouped in a section called “Marginalia,” since they're all (more or less) concerned with the subject of notes and jottings written in the margins of more conventional texts. In the case of “Notes found inside a text of Bisclavret,” the frame is a dual-text translation of an Old French poem about a werewolf by Marie de France, which is adorned by various notes telling a somewhat more contemporary story. The other stories are concerned with diaries and journals (“Trauma: Journal” and “Haiku Diary”); a long-lost novel by Melville (“The Isle of the Cross”); a forged letter by Baudelaire, and its links to The Protocols of the Elders of Zion (“The Purloined Letter”); a heap of print-outs of internet pornography, (“Finding His Stash”); and an examination report on a Masters Thesis (“Before the Disaster”). All the stories (with the exception of “Finding His Stash”) have been previously published (in part or in full) in periodicals or online.

Online Texts:

Banned Books

Crisis Diaries

Samples:

Notes found inside a text of Bisclavret

Publisher:

Titus Books
1416 Kaiaua Road
RD3
Pokeno 2473
Waikato
New Zealand
email: titus.books.akl@gmail.com
mobile: 027 865 3958
http://titus.co.nz/catalogue.xhtml

Available from:

Atuanui Press

RRP: $NZ 40.00



Reviews & Comments:

  1. Scott Hamilton, "Literature in the Age of Twitter." Reading the Maps (17 September 2010):

    The two books being launched by Titus next Thursday at the Alleluya Cafe on Auckland's K Rd are both, in quite different ways, testaments to Brett [Cross]'s style of publishing. Kingdom of Alt is a volume of short stories by Jack Ross, a writer Titus has supported since its inception. With their baroque structures, explicit and sometimes bizarre sex, extreme but seldom gratuitous violence, and innovative use of page layout, variations in font, and illustrations, Jack's books have all too often been easy for reviewers to ignore or to misunderstand. They have also frequently been expensive to publish. Titus has nevertheless stood by Jack, and there are signs now that the critical tide might be turning. It is certainly gratifying for me to see that Paula Green and Harry Ricketts' handsome new survey, 99 Ways into New Zealand Poetry, devotes considerable attention to Jack's work.

  2. Bronwyn Lloyd, "Jack Ross's Kingdom of Alt." Launch speech at Alleluya Café (Thursday 23rd September 2010):

    Jack’s maniacal tendencies are well known to those of us who know him so it should come as no surprise to his friends to learn that in the process of researching his novella which features the story of a man who teaches two literature courses in the midst of a war-torn city that Jack invented two entire university papers, ‘Crisis Diaries’ and ‘Banned Books’, complete with an anthology of readings, extensive lecture notes, and a fully navigable blog for each course that you as readers can access via the links on the copyright page of Kingdom of Alt to add to your reading experience ...

  3. Elmar Ludwig, "Review of Kingdom of Alt." brief 41 (2010): 103-5.

    It's a technique that Ross often employs, this layering or intercutting of narratives, and as a reader you find yourself becoming attuned to a number of vibrations, like someone listening to a complex piece of music while also being aware of the sound of a floor-sander in a room next door.
    ...
    It is a sad fact that today Universities are no longer centres of learning but money generating machines, producing graduates for the job market ... One wishes that these coldly rational institutions would crumble, their foundations eroded by termites with diamond-tipped mandibles. Ross is such a termite, both subversive and industrious in his literary activities, I would willingly sign up for his fictitious courses if I were not about to unplug my computer and travel to other shores.

  4. Lisa Samuels, "What Happens Next: Review of Kingdom of Alt." Landfall Review Online (1 April, 2011).

    If Jack Ross has not read J.G. Ballard’s The Atrocity Exhibition, someone should get it for him. Kingdom of Alt has some of the anarchic qualities of that confrontational work, but they are more dispersed: Kingdom of Alt is a collection of tales and takes which present entanglements of real-life events and imaginary fictions in order to score or scarify with traumas those experiencing the real live events. The narrators include variously: a twenty-something female university student, a thirtyish divorcee taking evening poetry classes and constructing weird ‘death films’ out of video fragments, a middle-aged man, Jack Ross himself as the speaking author, as well as other points of view, sometimes fragmentary, sometimes unified.

  5. Rowan McCormick, "Kingdom." [Email received 20/5/11]:

    When I was a young fellow I used to read (and re-read) Mad Magazine. First, I'd buy them. Then, I found that I could take them from the rubbish bin behind the Paper Plus in Milford. The humour went from Satire to Slapstick to Ironic to the plain Bizarre - it was all there, and you could move around, reading different things depending on your whim. A lot of it was above me - some 'in jokes' and the like - American Humour that I didn't quite get. I remember getting a Cracked magazine once, and flicking back and forth between two pages, each page referring the reader to the other, each advertising a Square Egg Maker. 'How can I get my hands on one of these - where is the effing order form?', I wondered.


Reading at the launch
(photograph: Cerian Wagstaff)

Complete Essay:
[reprinted by permission]

Bronwyn Lloyd. "Launch speech: Jack Ross's Kingdom of Alt." (23/9/10):

In a launch speech made by Roger Horrocks for Jack’s first collection of short stories, Monkey Miss her Now, published in 2004 by Raewyn Alexander’s imprint Danger Publishing, Roger said:

You’ll all have your own story about how you first encountered the magic kingdom of Alt. As a teenager growing up in the depths of the Auckland suburbs, I believe that discovery saved my life.

By this he meant the kingdom of Alternative fiction, film, art, underground comics and zine culture. When Jack heard Roger’s words he identified with them immediately and decided that this would be the title for his next collection of stories. And here it is.

I’m very pleased to have been asked to launch Jack’s latest book Kingdom of Alt, published by Titus Books. Kingdom of Alt is a collection of seven stories and a new novella, ‘Coursebook found in a Warzone: A Whodunit’.

The thing about alternative fiction is that you can’t neatly sum it up in a short speech and you shouldn’t even try. The reader is a collaborator, so what I might have to say about this book or any of Jack’s other books for that matter, will be completely different from what any other reader will have to say about it.

Jack’s books are writerly texts and readers need to be prepared to participate – to take part in a kind of performance and to go on an adventure where they might end up anywhere, everywhere and nowhere all at once. To quote Roger Horrocks again:

Once a character [in Jack’s stories] has walked out the door, he or she can end up anywhere in space, time or language.

As a reader you are encouraged to tag along, but I can tell you, you can find yourself in some pretty strange and disturbing places, so consider yourself warned.

As an initiate of Jack’s Kingdom of Alt for the past four years with my own sumptuously decorated chamber inside the palace, I’ve utilized a number of strategies and techniques when reading Jack’s books, particularly his trilogy of novels dealing with the subjects of insomnia, amnesia and blindness.

Multicoloured post-it notes were used to chart all the dismembered stories in Nights with Giordano Bruno, and I nearly composed a novel of my own on the side trying to nut out all the clues and ciphers so that I could play the sealed "game for one player" that was tucked inside the back of each copy of the book.

Pink clothes pegs and a retractable washing line were essential for reading the back to front text in my misprinted copy of The Imaginary Museum of Atlantis, and a magnifying glass came in very handy for reading the palimpsest text running beneath the main text of EMO.

So I’ve definitely embraced the idea of collaboration when it comes to Jack’s books although generally I don’t respond to his texts in words, but instead find myself making little models out of paper and card: a pop-up minotaur, a labyrinth made out of cardboard wine-bottle dividers, a concertina castle interior where a werewolf lives made from a fold-down six-pack carton, or, in this case, a 3D paper forest made with photocopies of illustrations by Gustave Doré.

I guess what I’m trying to tell you is that there are very few signposts. You need to find your own way into Jack’s Kingdom of Alt, but I will give a couple of tips to any brave new initiates who want to cross the drawbridge.

Don’t be put off by weird page layouts like this, from ‘Coursebook found in a Warzone: A Whodunit’:



Jack’s maniacal tendencies are well known to those of us who know him so it should come as no surprise to his friends to learn that in the process of researching his novella which features the story of a man who teaches two literature courses in the midst of a war-torn city that Jack invented two entire university papers, ‘Crisis Diaries’ and ‘Banned Books’, complete with an anthology of readings, extensive lecture notes, and a fully navigable blog for each course that you as readers can access via the links on the copyright page of Kingdom of Alt to add to your reading experience.

Another thing to note is that you should be suspicious of the subtitle of the novella, ‘A Whodunit’, because you may not necessarily be able to solve this whodunit and you might even find yourself wondering just what it is that got done!

The subject of marginalia unites the collection of seven stories that come before the novella in the book. There’s a little mouse called Max who hovers at the edge of one character’s tormented imagination before the spiders and bloodless corpses take over. There are the hidden clues in an allegedly counterfeit letter written by Baudelaire to his mother, and the scorching marginal notes written by an angry wife in the pages of her husband’s pornography collection. There are the creepy handwritten notes of a young anorexic woman in the margins of a poem about a wolfman cruelly treated by his wife, and in the story ‘The Isle of the Cross’ Jack takes the idea of marginalia one step further, with his character writing in the margins of a non-existent text, Herman Melville’s great lost manuscript ‘The Isle of the Cross’.

I’ll leave you to puzzle the rest out for yourselves when you buy a copy of the book and I’d now like to invite Jack to read a passage from ‘The Isle of the Cross’.


The author in repose
(courtesy: Emma Smith)







Wednesday

Exhibitions & Catalogues



[Fallen Empire (2012)]


Contents:

  1. Deadmans Block: Catalogue for Emma Smith's Pop-up Exhibition, New Lynn Community Centre, Active Recreation Hall, 18 April, 2026 (Auckland: Salt & Greyboy Press, 2026).
  2. Poetry and Place: Catalogue for the Poetry and Place Exhibition, Belconnen Art Centre, 25 August – 17 September 2017. ISBN 978-1-74088-460-0. (Canberra: University of Canberra, 2017).
  3. Korero: Poetry / Art Collaboration with Kirsty Black. Curated by Siobhan Harvey & Melissa Elliot (13 July - 2 August, 2012). (Howick: Uxbridge Creative Centre, 2012).
  4. Fallen Empire: Museum of True History in Collaboration with Karl Chitham and Jack Ross (20 June – 21 July 2012). (Dunedin: Blue Oyster Art Project Space, 2012).
  5. Lugosi’s Children, Curated by Bronwyn Lloyd (27 August – 1 October 2011). (Auckland: Objectspace, 2011) 2-3.
  6. One Brown Box: A Storybook Exhibition for Children, by Bronwyn Lloyd & Karl Chitham (6 November – 18 December 2010). ISBN-13: 978-0-9582811-8-8 (Auckland: Objectspace, 2010) 27-37.
  7. Len Castle. Mountain to the Sea: Ceramics / Poetry / Photographs. Ed. Tanya Wilkinson (Napier: Hawke’s Bay Museum and Art Gallery, 2008) 33.







[2026]: Deadmans Block: Catalogue for Emma Smith's Pop-up Exhibition, New Lynn Community Centre, Active Recreation Hall, 18 April, 2026 (Auckland: Salt & Greyboy Press, 2026).

Reading Cold Mountain in interesting times (24-26/1/2026)


Samples:

Emma Smith: Dead Man’s Block (18/4/2026)










[2017]: [2012]: Dianne Firth, Poetry and Place: Catalogue for the Poetry and Place Exhibition, Belconnen Art Centre, 25 August – 17 September 2017. Textile Works by Dianne Firth, based on works by Canberra poets Jen Webb, Merlinda Bobis, Paul Hetherington, Subhash Jaireth, Penelope Layland, Paul Munden, Jen Crawford and Wiradjuri poet Jeanine Leane; and, from overseas, poems by Pamela Beasant (Scotland), Katharine Coles (US), Philip Gross (UK), Alvin Pang (Singapore) and Jack Ross and Elizabeth Smither (NZ). ISBN 978-1-74088-460-0. Canberra: University of Canberra, 2017. 10:







Canberra Tales





Samples:

Oz Quilt Network

Papyri

Pinterest

the ART MUSEum

The Imaginary Museum







Dianne Firth: Canberra Tales (Jack Ross)


Reviews & Comments:

  1. Helen Musa, "Arts / Dianne’s inspiration takes a lot of poetic licence." Canberra City News (August 30, 2017):



    Dianne Firth’s large-format, textile interpretation of Scottish poet Pamela Beasant’s work “Canberra”


    THE annual “Poetry on the Move” summit is one of the jewels in the crown of the University of Canberra, but last year’s event has led to a unique exhibition celebrating the beauty of our city.

    It’s been a good year for former UC professor and textile artist Dianne Firth, who was honoured with an Order of Australia Medal (OAM) in the Queen’s Birthday awards and now her show, “Poetry and Place”, is at the Belconnen Arts Centre.

    Inspired by her love of Canberra’s landscape and by contact with poets at the university’s Centre for Creative and Cultural Research, Firth invited poets from Australia and overseas who were in town for the summit to write about the beauty of our environment.

    Some of them got carried away and came up with many poems. One British poet declined, Canberra was too far from the hedgerows of England.



    Wiradjuri poet Jeanine Leane’s “Kamberra a Hundred Years On” as seen by textile artist Dianne Firth


    Firth, in turn, undertook to create large-format textile artworks titled according to the poems, using quilting, embroidery and dyeing techniques. She completed 14 in all.

    “I wanted equal numbers of Australian and overseas poets that would fit the gallery space,” she tells “CityNews”.

    “It had to hang together as a coherent piece.”

    From Canberra, she had words by Jen Webb, Merlinda Bobis, Paul Hetherington, Subhash Jaireth, Penelope Layland, Paul Munden, Jen Crawford and Wiradjuri poet Jeanine Leane. From overseas were poems by Pamela Beasant (Scotland), Katharine Coles (US), Philip Gross (UK), Alvin Pang (Singapore) and Jack Ross and Elizabeth Smither (NZ).

    After retiring as a professor of landscape architecture in 2013, Firth joined the Centre for Creative and Cultural Research, where there are lots of poets.

    “It was exposure to different ways of dealing with creativity … architects work with industrial designers and have different ways of looking at the world,” she says.

    “In seminars as people would read their poetry, I’d be ‘getting’ mood and colour and forms and shapes – their poems had a visual effect on me.”



    Textile artist Dianne Firth’s interpretation of local poet Subhash Jaireth’s “Ngambri (Black Mountain) Walking with Kobayashi Issa’s Snail”


    So when 2016’s “Poetry on the Move” came up, she talked to convener Paul Munden and head of research Jen Webb about the possibility of working through different media in response to the landscape in Canberra.

    “As a landscape architect I see Canberra in a particular way, so I wanted to try to help other artists see Canberra.”

    A long-time researcher, she headed to the National Library to read poetry about Canberra and found herself absorbed in some written by Judith Wright years ago where the birds were tweeting and the mist was rising over the valley.

    “But I wanted to shift the focus. This is a city of design, and even Walter Burley Griffin responded to its visual and physical attributes – I told them that.

    “I said to the visitors: ‘You’ve come to Canberra to visit, how did you experience nature?’ I left it with them.”

    She was dumbstruck when one poet responded: “I don’t think I like this city very much,” explaining that he preferred hedgerows, gnarly trees and the patina of age.

    “He was not able to see the landscape in the way I have been trained to.”

    An expert in non-figurative design, she was astonished to find that the poems, when they came in, were full of people, so it was an artistic challenge to her to find “the emotional sweep that dictates colour and form and line.”

    Some were clear.
    Canberra, so pale and open wide
    gardens groomed and architecture cool,
    wrote Beasant, in marked contrast to Jaireth’s encounter with Black Mountain:
    It’s no Mt. Fuji the mind scoffs but my body ignores the gibe
    Or the celebration in Leane’s:
    Beneath this century of concrete circles/ancient eternal archives hold/ Stories, Songs, Dance, History.
    Some poems hit her between the eyes, but with others, she had to go away and sleep on them to get a visual form translatable into textiles.

    Firth notes that in poetry there is a tradition of writing about artworks – Keats’ “Ode on a Grecian Urn” comes to mind – but she wanted to turn the concept back to front, to look at other ways of seeing the landscape of Canberra.

    “Poetry and Place”, Belconnen Arts Centre, until September 17.

  2. Stephen R. Randall, "Poetry and Place - Dianne Firth @ Belconnen Arts Centre." stephenrrandall (August 29, 2017):

    This exhibition has integrated fine Canberra focused artworks of Dianne Firth with matching poetry that illustrates and illuminates both Canberra and the artworks Ms Firth has created. The artworks are layered with fabric built on netting and many of them are views of the Canberra landscape seen through the trees that are all over our landscape.

    Below are some samples of the art, the poems and the gallery sheet and prices.




















Korero (2012)



[2012]: Korero: Poetry / Art Collaboration with Kirsty Black. Curated by Siobhan Harvey & Melissa Elliot (13 July - 2 August, 2012). (Howick: Uxbridge Creative Centre, 2012):


Except Once



Kirsty Black: Except Once (2012)

Samples:

Kirsty Black Studio

The Imaginary Museum

Uxbridge Creative Centre

Reviews & Comments:

  1. NZ Herald Events:

    When:

    • Thu 12 Jul, 6:30pm – 8:30pm
    • Fri 13 Jul, 9:00am – 4:00pm
    • Sat 14 Jul, 9:30am – 2:00pm
    • Mon 16 Jul, 9:00am – 4:00pm
    • Tue 17 Jul, 9:00am – 4:00pm
    • View all sessions

    Where:

    Uxbridge Creative Centre, 35 Uxbridge Rd, Howick Show map

    Restrictions:

    All Ages

    Tickets:

    • Free Admission

    Website:



    This collaborative exhibition illustrates a fusion between visual art and poetry. 20 artists from various disciplines, select from 20 carefully chosen poems on the theme of conversation, to use as inspiration for their artwork.

    The artists in the exhibition include Ingrid Anderson, Lisa Benson, Kirsty Black, Chris Dennis, Sue Dick, Matt Moriarty, Dom Morrison, Emily Pauling, Clinton Philips, Kirsten Pleitner, Ramon Robertson, Mark Russell, Kate Sellar, Brendon Sellar, Shona Tawhiao, Emma Topping, Wayne Trow, Jana Wood and Nicola Wright.

    The poets include Peter Bland, Albert Wendt, Riemke Ensing, Bernard Gadd, Sarah Broom, Robert Sullivan, Nicholas Reid, Jo Emeney, Sonja Yelich, Vivienne Plumb, Paula Green, Sue Reidy, Charles Hadfield, Jack Ross, Gus Simonovic, Maris O’Rourke and Siobhan Harvey.

    This exhibition is in memory of local poet Bernard Gadd. His son David Gadd, will award $1,000 to the best piece of art. Join us on opening night for a mulled wine and a vibrant and energetic evening of visual art and poetry readings.







[2012]: Fallen Empire: Maui in the Underworld, Kupe & the Fountain of Youth, Hatupatu & the Nile-monster: Three Play-Fragments from the Literary Remains of The Society of Inner Light. Attributed to Bertolt Wegener. Edited with an introduction by Jack Ross. Museum of True History in Collaboration with Karl Chitham and Jack Ross (20 June – 21 July 2012). Dunedin: Blue Oyster Art Project Space, 2012. 1-46:


Maui in the Underworld

Kupe & the Fountain of Youth

Hatupatu & the Nile-monster
:

Three Play-Fragments
from the literary remains of
The Society of Inner Light

Attributed to
Bertolt Wegener

Edited with an introduction
by Jack Ross


Samples:

Blue Oyster Art Project Space (1):
Karl Chitham & Dr Jack Ross, Fallen Empire (20/6-21/7/12)
Blue Oyster Art Project Space (2):
Chris Hargreaves, Serenity (20/6-21/7/12)
Blue Oyster Art Project Space (3):
Caroline McQuarrie, Artifact (20/6-21/7/12)

Works & Days






[2011]: Lugosi’s Children, Curated by Bronwyn Lloyd (27 August – 1 October 2011). (Auckland: Objectspace, 2011) 2-3:


Foreword



Samples:

Mosehouse Studio (21/8/11)

Mosehouse Studio (11/9/11)

Objectspace

The Imaginary Museum (16/8/11)

The Imaginary Museum (22/9/11)

Online Text:

Objectspace






[2010]: One Brown Box: A Storybook Exhibition for Children, by Bronwyn Lloyd & Karl Chitham (6 November – 18 December 2010). ISBN-13: 978-0-9582811-8-8 (Auckland: Objectspace, 2010) 27-37:


A Short History of Fairytales



Samples:

Mosehouse Studio

Objectspace

The Imaginary Museum (27/10/10)

The Imaginary Museum (5/11/10)

The Imaginary Museum (19/11/10)



Reviews & Comments:

  1. Graeme Beattie, "One Brown Box: A Storybook Exhibition for Children,” by Bronwyn Lloyd and Karl Chitham. Beattie's Book Blog (November 3, 2010):

    In this exhibition, designed primarily for children, Bronwyn Lloyd and Karl Chitham treat the humble brown box as a plain structure with unlimited imaginative potential while at the same time bringing together two of their primary enthusiasms: making up stories and making objects from paper and cardboard.

    One Brown Box is made up of adaptations of five classic children’s stories including The Princess and the Pea, The Twelve Dancing Princesses, and Hansel and Gretel, each told from the perspective of overlooked, minor and absent characters from the original tales, illustrated with large and small models made entirely from boxes and paper.

  2. "One Brown Box: A Storybook Exhibition for Children,” by Bronwyn Lloyd and Karl Chitham. The Big Idea (November 23, 2010):

    The exhibition of adapted tales is supplemented by a huge ‘I Spy’ game with objects galore and a display of folktales and fairytales from the collection of writer and bibliophile, Jack Ross, who has compiled a short history of the fairytale genre detailing the fascinating origins of these stories that are now so familiar to us.

  3. Matt Blomeley, "Objective lessons: A Review of the 2010 Objectspace Programme. Objectspace (December 16, 2010):

    One Brown Box: a storybook exhibition for children was a unique and charming exhibition that closed out the 2010 calendar, centred on fairy tales and the creative possibilities inherent within the humble and ubiquitous brown cardboard box.






[2008]: Len Castle. Mountain to the Sea: Ceramics / Poetry / Photographs. Ed. Tanya Wilkinson (Napier: Hawke’s Bay Museum and Art Gallery, 2008) 33:


Volcanic Glass



Samples:

South Pacific Books

The Imaginary Museum