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Creative Waikato Big Space

131 Alexanda St, Hamilton

Thursday 27 August

6pm

 

 

Jack says, "I once read that more people write poetry in New Zealand than play rugby. Whether or not that's true, the fact remains that it's one of the things we're keenest on (and best at) as a nation". 

"For myself, all I can say is that it's the best way of sorting through feelings, thinking things through, and making sense of the universe that I know of. It's not so much that I choose to write it as that I have to".

 

Quotes on poetry:

 

Once you’re caught on the plateau of your own “poetic practice” (your “voice,” if you prefer), no further progress is possible. Even Rainer Maria Rilke wrote a series of secular hymns extolling the cleansing properties of conflict in the opening days of World War I before he came to his senses. 

Poetics may sound a bit tedious at times, a distraction from the sheer fun of monkeying around with language. … At its best, though, it is meant to act as an antidote to such systems for normalising the aberrant and abhorrent. In a sense, then, Shelley was quite right when he called poets the “unacknowledged legislators of the world.” It’s a dirty job, but someone’s got to do it.  

— Jack Ross, “Trouble in River City: How I learned to stop worrying and trust poetics."  Poetry NZ 47 (2013): 93-103. 

 

 

Jack will be in conversation with Mark Houlahan about his writing and will read from his work and take questions from those present.

 

 

 

 

Jack Ross 

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