The Linguistics of Light
Lisa Dart(Author)
Salt Publishing
Published on 28. April 2009
Book
Hardback
80 pages
978-1-84471-445-2 (ISBN)
Description
The Linguistics of Light journeys from the north Norfolk coast of England across a vast emotional landscape to Greece and beyond.
America is one of the imaginative and physical locations for some of the poems whilst others, for example, "Post-card of a Swan" begin with the small scale, but range in the ancient world and travel through theories of the universe to return to a confined, but comforting place: Einstein's kitchen on a rainy day.
These poems draw on science, on philosophy and on the bible for insight into our understanding of love, time and memory. Uncalled for, memory seems to: "come, flit land precise//on random things so that moments of the past return again and again and become, in Garra Rock, a kind of blueprint of the future."
In contrast, some of the sharp blue sunlight of Greece opens other questions of religion and science and, instead of observing a belief in God, the poem's narrator becomes "observant of the ordinary"; the ordinary life of peasants and goats, but this observation offers a different idea of sacrament, one that leads to an unexpected fusion of science and spirituality in the poem's final image.
Ordinariness: of traffic, in "Miles from Litlington"; of ironing, in "Winter Afternoon in Hampden Park", bring us full circle back to the south coast of England and, by so doing, complete the longing expressed in "Derek Jarman's Garden". The "shuttered - down, bleached emptiness" of Jarman's home near Dungeness which opens the whole volume, sets one of its major themes: the longing, both literal and metaphorical, for light.
Light is a predominant theme which resonates in many of the poems, including in the sequence which retell the paintings of the contemporary American painter Edward Hopper. Light, in these poems, can be enticing, compelling, mysterious, or spiritual or as in "Summertime", even an assault.
Throughout, poems also examine the often intimate, sometimes bewildering, relationship between language and the world, from the simplicity of "The Word" to the disturbing presence of madness, evoked with an equal simplicity, in "Why Words Might Not", to "The Words to Say it". This poem, in several parts, presses on the language we use for death, and our understanding of art and imagination. It is the pressure which informs the volume's title: The Linguistics of Light.
America is one of the imaginative and physical locations for some of the poems whilst others, for example, "Post-card of a Swan" begin with the small scale, but range in the ancient world and travel through theories of the universe to return to a confined, but comforting place: Einstein's kitchen on a rainy day.
These poems draw on science, on philosophy and on the bible for insight into our understanding of love, time and memory. Uncalled for, memory seems to: "come, flit land precise//on random things so that moments of the past return again and again and become, in Garra Rock, a kind of blueprint of the future."
In contrast, some of the sharp blue sunlight of Greece opens other questions of religion and science and, instead of observing a belief in God, the poem's narrator becomes "observant of the ordinary"; the ordinary life of peasants and goats, but this observation offers a different idea of sacrament, one that leads to an unexpected fusion of science and spirituality in the poem's final image.
Ordinariness: of traffic, in "Miles from Litlington"; of ironing, in "Winter Afternoon in Hampden Park", bring us full circle back to the south coast of England and, by so doing, complete the longing expressed in "Derek Jarman's Garden". The "shuttered - down, bleached emptiness" of Jarman's home near Dungeness which opens the whole volume, sets one of its major themes: the longing, both literal and metaphorical, for light.
Light is a predominant theme which resonates in many of the poems, including in the sequence which retell the paintings of the contemporary American painter Edward Hopper. Light, in these poems, can be enticing, compelling, mysterious, or spiritual or as in "Summertime", even an assault.
Throughout, poems also examine the often intimate, sometimes bewildering, relationship between language and the world, from the simplicity of "The Word" to the disturbing presence of madness, evoked with an equal simplicity, in "Why Words Might Not", to "The Words to Say it". This poem, in several parts, presses on the language we use for death, and our understanding of art and imagination. It is the pressure which informs the volume's title: The Linguistics of Light.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Illustrations
Not illustrated
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 11 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-84471-445-2 (9781844714452)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Lisa Dart was born in Cornwall, but grew up in Orpington, Kent in England. After working for both the Open University and the University of Sussex for many years, she combines writing poetry with her commitment to gifted children as Head of Curriculum Enhancement at St Bede's School. Her chapbook was published by Tall Lighthouse in 2005 and she was one of the four winners for the USA Grolier Prize 2004. Many of her poems have appeared in British poetry magazines. She has recently completed a doctorate in poetry and philosophy at the University of Sussex.
Content
Derek Jarman's Garden, Dungeness
First Naming
Eden
Postcard to my Brother
The Quietest Hour
Arkansas Spring
Mother
The Sabbath
Sunday School
The Word
Annunciation
Salome Holding the Head of Saint John the Baptist
Dead Fox
Arkansas in March
Something that Happened
Oxford, Again
Hopper's Canvas
summertime
couples
Rooms - Sea
Arriving in New York City
House at Dusk
Swans
Maltas Beach
Lilies
Breakfast on Saturday
Why Words Might Not
Even if the Big Questions are Hard to Answer
The Failing Light
Autumn
Salthouse Church
Nightingale
Winter Afternoon in Hampden Park
The Anchor
Remembrance Sunday
Garra Rock
Held
Kispum
Conundrum
Carrion
The Hour of the Wolf
Cobwebs
Between Things
The Words to Say It
My Father's Tin Box
The Fruit of Poetry
Postcard of a Swan
The Necessity of Judas
Where We Begin
The Words for Home
Summer afternoon at the Cuckmere
Miles from Litlington
First Naming
Eden
Postcard to my Brother
The Quietest Hour
Arkansas Spring
Mother
The Sabbath
Sunday School
The Word
Annunciation
Salome Holding the Head of Saint John the Baptist
Dead Fox
Arkansas in March
Something that Happened
Oxford, Again
Hopper's Canvas
summertime
couples
Rooms - Sea
Arriving in New York City
House at Dusk
Swans
Maltas Beach
Lilies
Breakfast on Saturday
Why Words Might Not
Even if the Big Questions are Hard to Answer
The Failing Light
Autumn
Salthouse Church
Nightingale
Winter Afternoon in Hampden Park
The Anchor
Remembrance Sunday
Garra Rock
Held
Kispum
Conundrum
Carrion
The Hour of the Wolf
Cobwebs
Between Things
The Words to Say It
My Father's Tin Box
The Fruit of Poetry
Postcard of a Swan
The Necessity of Judas
Where We Begin
The Words for Home
Summer afternoon at the Cuckmere
Miles from Litlington