John Kinsella
The collaboration between Russell West-Pavlov and myself has relied on two material actualities: proximity and interstices. These can be geographical — being in Tübingen — or they can be conceptual, an overlapping of ideas and interests. But they are both material in the sense that we configure them as ‘real’ and expect ‘real-time' occurrences. We might occasionally work with abstraction, and I certainly do in making poems, but ultimately our making relies on pragmatic and temporal actuality.
Proximity might seem to speak for itself, but it doesn’t. Our first shared qualification of ‘proximity’, as opposed to our own individuated notions, came about across the distance — on a link-up between Schull, West Cork and Tübingen Germany. There was a virtual proximity, and also the proximity of thinking and what we hoped might be achieved by sharing ideas and making discrete writings out of this.
So, collaboration was very much grounded in the dichotomy and paradox of distance and closeness. Apropos of this, when I have been in Tübingen, we find occasions and to meet and talk and walk and ‘congeal’ our ideas. Sometimes this has taken the form of notes, most often of conversation that shares ideals. When our working together was first mooted in 2016, we discussed the possibility of ‘mini essays’, and how they might form interludes to more explorative and discursive making in the greater context. And that’s what happened, I think.
Interstices are where we overlap in thinking, while sometimes holding quite different ways of seeing and interpreting. That necessarily comes through our different life experiences, our different ‘positions’ qua how we do and don’t interface with the world, in conjunction with our strong overlaps in political, ethical and social views. We also share certain experiences in a proximate ways (complex relationships with ‘Australia’, ‘authority’ etc, the rejection of values that inform our gender-ethnic-class statuses and so on), and this combination of difference and similarity creates those interstices from which we write. Our differences are as strong an informant of our sharing textuality as our similarities.
Though we have written at many tangents to our core ‘themes’, the focal points of our work till now have very much been orientated around time and place — both fundamental themes in both our work across the decades. In part, I am sure these interests are what drew us together. Further, a deep respect and interest around issues of the Global South, and resisting the abuses of capital, wealth and privilege, solidified our approach and ‘content’. And a major overlap on the Venn diagram of concerns is the environment in its spatial-temporal vulnerabilities around intactness.
Very often, in writing poems that relate to the foci of our book, I work in the overtly figurative and allusive. So, a poem that seems to be about, say, seeing or hearing a bird, or observing a tree, is also about the issues we tend to talk about between ourselves (via email, video link or in person). Sometimes I focalise a mutual concern/interest in a different way, and reflect over the independent threads that lead us to shared processing or a commonality that also emphasises difference:
Proximity Reciprocities and Contraindicationsfor RW-P
This is return. Used so much, by us. Too much?The meat ants have new volcanoes on their old rangeand, to mirror, sugar ants have raised funnels. Click?That’s taking liberties. Collecting wood, I hear machineryof hunting, of tree clearing, of breaking up. But weirdlythere’s a certain intactness, even if a bullet pierces.Membrane. The stench of herbicide on the air. And fromthe hefty paddocks of Victoria Plains, the defcon smellof pesticide. Early stages of crops. Protection. And NuSeedsigns proliferating in contrariness — their barren seed.In return we measure change: storm damage, erosion — drymore than wet. What’s left behind. Inside the house,compacted but at different points, new and overlappingand reconvened narratives. Those who’d have us gonebefore arriving again, though ‘before’ is as relevantas the self-seeded rare tree — where did the seedcome from? Dormant so long? Blow-in? Birdshit, claw, beak?Tail of kangaroo. Signs still here — tracks, scats. And ours.
Another type of poem is a response poem to an idea, text or situation that I send to Russell in the hope that it might prompt something back from him. And yet another is in response to something Russel has said or written, or that has arisen from a shared experience. Often those experiences have been based on walks or journeys around Tübingen in which Russell has imparted a piece of knowledge that has fascinated me, and created a potential for proximities and interstices for future response.
In the case of the following poem, Russell did (I think) include it in something he was working on — a tangent, but also a shared temporality and a placing it in a zone of mutuality. So, separate and overlapping. Ourselves, and a common body of idea-making and intertextuality. Both of us emphatically believe that no one owns ideas, and that ideas proliferate and overlap and are part of a greater body of thought and works that share a concern for ‘rights’, so having these ‘whispers’ of connection are every bit as important as the more overt textual blocks with our name below:
Failed Narratives of Extinct Volcanoes
On the ledgeof the extinct volcanofacing another extinct volcano —Georgenberg — sore thumb —alp-life with villagesand factories, small or largeas families: castle keep,bare-limbed foresttries to hold its ownin cold rain, not sleet,as lookout comes hometo roost, real citybelow. Rain easesinto mistranslation,generative phonologyof migration.Whose ‘spanneron the works’makes productionskilled, well-engineered?Winding down the cone —Achalm, yes — lathedmountains higheror high enough,down intoReutlingen,past oaks, wordfragmentation.
And maybe the most common mode for me is when I am working in my own mental space, and observing things far removed from Russell’s physical location and life, and link some thought in the poem with something he has said or we have discussed. So, the poem is about completely different things — e.g. seeing an echidna and watching the films of Stan Brakhage (Russell and I have never discussed cinema, which makes the ‘linkage’ even more interesting to me... and as the poem below is also part of a completely separate series of poems it creates silent links for me that I find generative and hopefully ‘opening out’ for future discussions and interactions):
Liquid Flow of Echidna from Gravel to Grass Bank — Reflecting Stan Brakhage’s The Dante Quartet (1987) While Painting Eye-Images
To roll and sway and mergeis to paint the path and denythe tracks of pursuit, to crackpaint of script and rise and part,push aside marbling and viscosityof dry and wet, to roll uphillto sway an orthography a writingof blur and merge: qualitiesof sky and mouse-excavatedtailings to nose into sense fortermites deeper than old tunnelsthe awakening season for flameto a-priori its ways into tracesof aquifer-augmentation — yes, beneathhillside eroded; what reptilescrossed in ascent or insectswith pre-fossil wings, pauseand sample, test and surgea quartet out of crescentof declining sun dazzlein shadow of spines or spikesor inverted feathers — inside to flybodily further in from the bodyof valley while remaining so grounded, levitatingdespite ‘poor eyesight’ — such misnomers of biology,such occlusions of echidna-speakas close to ground they absorb and muffleour vibrations of passing or breathing hard:shock-absorber psyches framed byframes of universalised structures of art-speak,skincells, hair follicles, applique and palette frescoesof crossing over, of circumventing a branch,of refreshing trails laid over a rangeof terrains so specific you read‘only’ into the allegoriesthe metaphors of consequencefor life overlaying their space — add quick light,add flicker or flash, textureto hair root and shadow enfiladecosmos singing interiorbreaking of forms and refoldingto draw into a surface a logographyof constituents for all-time,shared prognosis, differingsignatures and tellings,ends of lines.
And a new one for Russell to respond to, re-process, depart from (‘riff off’), or to leave floating in its own terms of reference... he hasn’t seen this one yet! When we were walking with our sons (Russell sorted the walk), I noticed a log covered in moss that looked animal-like... maybe a massive dog emerging from the side of a ravine. I took photos and pointed it out to Russell, describing what it looked like to me. I said, I will be writing stories about this, and asked him to take a look. As soon as I saw the strange shape, it sparked with ideas and scenarios I have been working with in my recent poetry: the politics of metamorphosis, transition, shifts, mergings... along with my usual concerns for protecting habitats.
The place was the Seven Mills Forest near Stuttgart, and there is actually a working wood mill near where we entered, and near where I came across this was a hunter’s shooting platform, and that all bothers me. In a way, the animal-plant imagery is a kind of resistance, something beyond the human controls of the area. I did a series of poems and illustrations around the image, but when I got back to where we are staying in Tübingen I immediately wrote what follows. It's not dedicated, and I wasn’t thinking of it in terms of our collaboration when I wrote it, but we were there together, and sometimes such moments can become something else. And in the spirit of metamorphosis, it’s over to you, Russell:
Animal Log Is Cautious But Determined
These are not qualities of lurkor weirdness, not crypticbeyond cryptic colouration,but its emergence is cautiousand its transition remainsprivate though it revealsitself from the bank — mosshair, wood trunk torso,branch legs. Hear it speakover murmur of stream,hear it deny the huntera mortal point of aim.(April, 2023)
And maybe in writing we might think back to our 2019 walk in the Black Forest and our discussion over its fate... different places, if places in relatively close proximity (especially when compared with my writing of forests near where we live in the Western Australia wheatbelt), across time — one pre-pandemic, one post- (or still during, depending on definitions). One on a short visit from me, and the second at the start of a long stay. Both walks were with Russell as ‘guide’ and facilitator.
With Russ in Neckar Valley: mountain forest walk
The fork feeds backUp the hill to takeRiver away fromIts restrictionsRaptor whistle blackWoodpecker callBut without the tap tapTo decode, withoutThe ratcheting upTo grub the leaflessBeech which holdsDesigns on a tolerableSummer to come,Of tolerance, specsOf walkers’ passingInterest, collectiveBreath, body heatOf Kant’s working out.(December, 2019)
Or if that doesn’t spark, maybe we can reach back to our conversation around the horror of hunting towers on the edge of fields and forests, and deep in among the trees along the lines of traversal by pigs and deer. I have written many poems around these travesties and manipulations of desire lines, and they have become a focal point for an animal rights campaign involving German forests. What hope do I have? As Russell said on our recent walk, at least you are personally less likely to be shot than in a French forest, to which I glibly and lamentingly asked/replied: Ordnung?
Here’s one from a walk I just completed... and accompanying the poem is a series of photos taken from deep within the woods which will find their place in the resistance to violence against animals as well as humans, too. This poem refers to an exhibition of Daniel Richter’s paintings I saw the other day: barriers, ‘silent’ guard towers, open and closed zones, and deep ontological and physical threat.
Lament
Daniel Richter’s painted towerssurvey human linesof oppression: the watch,the fence, the zoneof destruction.The forest is an edgeto escape to or through,and the forest mythsentangle fate.The hunting towersof the forest are notthose towers, and yetthey perform a similarand equally deadly function.How you rate an animalin the schema of persecution,how qualify rights and history,will determine your perception,The lack of critiqueresounds with the movementsof swine and deer in the crepuscularvalley. In the folkish fantasyof woodsman architecture.Daniel Richter’s towersseem to be human linesof oppression: the watch,the fence, the zoneof destruction.(May, 2023)
Now it’s over to Russell, and I am looking forward to where he does and doesn’t go with this, and to what further conversations ensue. And whatever happens, he will take things through proximities and interstices that I will inevitably find surprising and generative! Here's a manifesto of a particular approach to collaborative poetics in medias res.
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