Thursday, March 21, 2024

Scott Thurston's Inaugural Lecture: KINEPOETICS March 2024 (video + my introduction)

 

Diary 19 Tuesday March Week 12 2024

 I did some light proof-reading [breaking news: the book The Necessity of Poetics (which contains my inaugural) will be published by Shearsman] though I was largely keeping my powder dry. Patricia came thru’, en route to ‘town’, a sunny day.

          I journeyed to Manchester, battled with the Metro, and emerged unscathed at MediaCity UK, which gleamed over the Blue Peter Garden. Inside the lobby of Salford University, a giant Thurston-head announced, with Ozymandian pretensions, the evening event. A large screen showed the film Scott had made a while back. I found the model for these exhibits flexing his dancing muscles in the studio. There was a bit of technical flannel to be negotiated.

          Eventually, a large crowd filled the auditorium – some people I knew, of course – and we commenced, my introduction, and Scott’s inaugural ‘lecture’. Dividing the piece into 5 ‘rhythms’, he nevertheless retold his career chronologically, which sounds like a very standard inaugural strategy – BUT he moved throughout (about 45 minutes, I’m guessing) and spoke a rehearsed ‘text’, and included improvised passages, of both speech and movement. Fortunately, it was filmed, by the University and by Joanna.

          I chaired the Q and A, I handed Scott a present from the University of Salford, and a note he’d made of people to thank. Which he did.

          Scott said it, and did it, with panache, passion and conviction.

          Patricia watched it online. And here it is again, for anyone who missed it. (It runs for a couple of minutes before the 'show' begins!)



And this is my introduction: 

Good evening, everybody, both here at Salford University, and those of you watching online. My name is Professor Robert Sheppard and it is my great pleasure tonight to introduce Scott Thurston on his elevation to the professoriate as Professor of Poetry and Innovative Creative Practice as he presents his inaugural ‘lecture’, ‘Kinepoetics: an embodied journey through poetry, dance and therapy.’

Scott is going to speak and demonstrate that ‘journey’ himself, so I am not going to offer a resume or assessment of that progress. In any case, I can speak for poetry and innovation, but not for dance and therapy. But I do have the perspective of having known Scott – as a good friend, excellent student, supportive colleague, experimental fellow-poet and enthusiastic collaborator – over a long period of time. I know of no other case where somebody has studied both A Level and been supervised for a PhD by the same person. But I do know of the robust processes that are used by universities to elevate professors, and the necessary past successes and achievements that are essential to meet the rigorous criteria adopted. I also know that some of Scott’s achievements are highly visible – what could be more visible than dance? – but some are quite invisible. I’m thinking of the work Scott does day to day as a teacher, lecturer, research supervisor, coordinator and administrator, and his work as an editor of the academic periodical he and I co-founded the Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry. To take just one, what might be thought minor, part of that: as a writer of references for students for courses and colleagues for teaching posts, Scott’s work is exemplary. Never have I come across such detailed advocacy on behalf of candidates, written with obvious care and time-consuming attention. And I know that that care and attention is replicated in his marking and supervision of research. As editor of the journal, I also know that he really does get down with the nitty-gritty of responding to articles in preparation for publication. Hardly anyone sees this work, invisible labour at its most important to the visible life of the university and the visible viability of an academic journal, and of academia itself. Somewhere within and between these professional commitments, his scholarly work on poetry and poetics, his pedagogic innovations in the still-evolving subject area of Creative Writing, and most importantly, his own creative practice, which includes poetry and movement, gets done. And now, don’t forget, the extension of this work – working with Joanna and others – into therapeutic practice. How he manages still to be one of the nicest human beings I know is a mystery, perhaps even a miracle. After all, academics as a tribe do have a bit of a reputation!! I’ll move on.

Move on to a compelling concluding anecdote. Many years ago, (as Noel Coward used to say) so-last century, long before all I’ve just mentioned, Scott and I were sitting in the Alexandra pub in Wimbledon, chewing over the poetic fat, perhaps trying to foster literary techniques or strategies for what would suffice. I turned to Scott and asked, ‘What are we going to do about the poetic revolution, then?’ Before he could answer, before he could begin to gather the thoughts to answer, a fellow poet (who shall remain nameless) burst into the pub, bursting the bubble of our concentration, and proceeded to commit ‘conversational nuisance’, as Samuel Beckett once put it, all over us, long enough for the question to die a death. We’ve often wondered what we might have discussed, decided or even plotted that evening if we hadn’t had been interrupted – and whether it would have mattered. One answer to that question – though perhaps we are dealing more with poetic evolution than revolution – lies in what we are about to receive: Scott’s ‘embodied journey through poetry, dance and therapy’: ‘Kinepoetics’.

I write about Scott’s recent Turning: Selected Poems here: Pages: Scott Thurston's TURNING ; my endorsement and a link (robertsheppard.blogspot.com) and there’s an interview I conducted with Scott in 2019, as part of my guest editing of Stride: Guest editor Robert Sheppard: 8 | Stride magazine

My inaugural lecture may be read here: Pages: Robert Sheppard: Inaugural Lecture PART 1: Poetics as Conjecture and Provocation

Friday, March 08, 2024

Online reading for the Runnymede International Literature Festival (set list)

Runnymede International Literature Festival 13–22 March 2024


This year’s festival began with an online event curated by Robert Hampson, with readings by Cat Chong, and the Liverpool-based poets  Sarah Crewe and Robert Sheppard on Wednesday 13 March.


I enjoyed reading, and enjoyed Cat's and Sarah's reading, but I would have enjoyed a live reading more, and missed people, books and drinks - but no matter. Here's some notes I made for my bit of the reading.


I have been working on transpositions of canonical English sonnets for some years (I’ve finished now) and they have been published as The English Strain (See here: Robert Sheppard - The English Strain (shearsman.com) and Bad Idea. A third volume of versions of Romantic sonnets (see here: Pages: ‘An overdub of The Dancing Girl by Letitia Elizabeth Landon’ from British Standards is published online in The Nest issue of A) Glimpse) Of) (robertsheppard.blogspot.com) will be published by Shearsman (that's breaking news by the way), but I going to read from the middle book BAD Idea where I took Michael Drayton’s 1619 sonnet sequence Idea (Idea is the ideal woman of the sequence) and used it to pay homage to Drayton, but also to tell the parliamentary story of brexit. Here’s Drayton’s most famous sonnet undone and redone by me! Bo is Johnson and The Cum is Cummings… 

I then read 'Since there’s no help…'

As you can hear (I continued) I was in danger of running out of poems, so I added a coda. Written in a different mode, but now spoken by Idea herself, 'Idea’s Mirror' utilizes some of the sonnets Drayton dumped along his way to his final version. There’s 14 of them, written around and during the 2019 election, 'Idea’s Mirror' (These are both from Bad Idea which I wrote about here: Pages: Robert Sheppard: links to all SIX Bad Idea poems (Drayton versions) on Stride (with Drayton's originals) and you may buy here: 'Bad Idea' by Robert Sheppard (102 pages) | Knives Forks and Spo (knivesforksandspoonspress.co.uk))

 


 

Now for more recent work, I said. This is a poem I wrote in November: I read 'Pretend-sleep'.

Here’s another short one, a response to a wartime photograph by Lee Miller. Both photograph and poem are called ‘Revenge on Culture’.

Staying with photographs: this long poem was published in The Long Poem Magazine and is based on the photographs that Tricia Porter took of ‘the area’ called then Liverpool 8. I’ve since been in touch with Tricia Porter and was interested that when the photos were originally exhibited, they were accompanied by poetic prose texts (which she sent me). I saw them in an exhibition at the Bluecoat. And I’ve used the catalogue… 

I write about this piece in some detail, with one of the photos, here: Pages: My poem THE AREA is published in The Long Poem Magazine number 30 (background and links) (robertsheppard.blogspot.com)

I'm going to finish with something different. I’m assembling poems about music and this is a new one. It came out of the experience of having radiotherapy to the accompaniment of a music radio station. This piece of music was a surprise! I read the poem 'Radio Therapy' (two words, I emphasised, since the audience could not see the text.)

*


The rest of the festival featured poets from Royal Holloway’s Poetic Practice programme and Poetics Research Centre and themes related to the Words from the Wild exhibition





There were also two in-person events at Royal Holloway’s Egham campus, curated by Caroline Harris and Briony Hughes . An evening of poetry film and sound art on Monday 18 March in the Event Space (next to the Exhibition Gallery in the Davison Building) featured premieres from Susie Campbell and Hen Campbell and Tanicia Pratt, sound from Rowan Evans and Will Montgomery, plus Zakia Carpenter-Hall and Hannah Harding.  

 

On Friday 22 March, there were readings in the exhibition itself, linked to its different sections, including by Camilla Nelson and Caroline Harris. That would look to be the photograph above.