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Our Patch

How is Australian sovereignty being acted out at home and abroad in the second century of federation? In this agenda setting book, Suvendrini Perera brings together leading thinkers to map the imaginative and political space claimed as  'Our Patch'. Contributions by Tim Anderson, Ruth Balint, Anthony Burke, Maxine Chi, Maria Giannacopoulos, Suvendrini Perera, Henry Reynolds, Jon Stratton, Dinesh Wadiwel and Irene Watson. To order, please contact Network Books at 08 9266 3717 with your order details. ...
Sunday, 19th May 2013
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Altitude BirdIssue 44
Features reviews by Kathleen Broderick, Linn Miller, Christine Choo, Bill Thorpe, David Ritter, Eve Vincent, Stephanie Bishop, Alison Miles, Richard Kay, Amanda Day, Bernard Whimpress, Mads Clausen, Marion May Campbell, Sylvia Alston, Catie Gilchrist, Eva Chapman, Lucy Dougan, Stephen Lawrence and Nathanael O'Reilly. Click here for more details.


Altitude

Altitude BirdPopular Music: Practices, Formations and Change - Australian Perspectives
The papers collected here in this special edition of Altitude offer a brief snapshot of popular music research broadly connected with Australia. The essays demonstrate the variety of theoretical and methodological approaches used by researchers in the fields of popular music studies and cultural studies to explore themes of popular music practice, formation and change in an Australian context. Click here for more details.



 
 
 
 

On Reflection

By David Musgrave, Carindale: Interactive Publications, 2005, 82 pages, paperback, $27.00. Reviewed by Tim Metcalf in the February 2006 issue.

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Opening the door on David Musgrave's book-as-mentalistic-floor-plan, we are met by the host in his transient flesh and distorted self-image. He shows us smart, sonnet-like poetic pieces juxtaposed with single paragraph prose pieces rather like diary entries. These short texts alternate through the 80 pages like endless reflections in two mirrors facing each other up and down the echoing plaster hallway.

One of the subtitles, 'A 20-20 Vision', describes this process. Other infinitely productive oppositions thus created include imaginative freedom versus work; calm and refuge versus angst and failed relationships; progress versus recursion; deep engagement with the inner world versus superficial engagement with the outer world; the apprehension of life versus death. These polarities are neither strict nor obvious: it would be an error to portray them as dualistic. Rather, they are complementary, contemplative, not judgemental. Sometimes they bounce off each other, and are equal assertions of a daily truth; at other times one dominates the other: the vision is not perfectly 20-20, but I feel no need to correct it, for then I might see so well that I see nothing in a series of perfect reflections. Perhaps that is a way of saying I want not to see myself in the bottom of this pond. I want to see the author.

The left hand pieces are poetic, but not always poems. Occasionally they are thoughts elaborately rendered, 'the names of multiplied obsessions/speckling the refrigerator door'. Some shards in the mirror are fragments of John Kinsella, Russell Drysdale, Jeffrey Smart. There is a kind of sparsity that is part banality of the suburb, part lack of real action in life; but there is colour too: the bus window chops up the scenery like a mechanised futurist, but Musgrave is more like a minimalist fauvist. Sometimes the colour, especially adjectival colour, is too strong for my taste:

Death is my friend, he will come to me whispering
tinkerbell sunset flamingo thrills.
These lines reveal another defining feature of what Michael Sharkey, on the back cover, so precisely terms 'fin-de-20th-siecle decadence'; 'decadence' being a word Musgrave himself uses, a quality that comes through strongly in this book. This is a detachment from suffering in the safe, reliable, and complacent city; a mental consequence of safety and good health, removing, as it were, a resistance to the mind spinning on and on. Even his father's death does not seem to disturb him particularly (not that one expects or demands any form of grief). There is no engagement with his father's possible world of suffering, or his mother's, and no re-examination of his own make up and propensities. It is this that leads to the strangeness of his description of himself as 'unaccountably' sobbing one night.

'After a few weeks of the cycle of videos, remembrance, comfort and pain, he decides it is time to return to his own home and resume the practice of everyday life', in which 'his grief remains unrecorded'.

In my favourite one of a number of delicious tight succinct pieces, he sees 'ash like butterflies' on a 'hellfire day', but they are not his father's, rather, it is a back-burn out of control.

Though there is a humorous self-mockery in some poems, all too often these domestic pieces end in the 'vacant mangled silence', the dreadful emptiness of nightclub relationships made even more difficult by the intellectualising aspect of the poet's mind, the literary academic within who dissects language and intention and ends up in the labyrinth, lost, alone and despairing beyond words. His 'negative optimism' leaves him fluctuating wildly between an imaginary world of poetry fed by that potentially distressing openness of mind that allows thoughts to be 'cast on the still lake of oblivion'; and the banality of everyday life, missing his de facto child, looking for love, and lying around watching various screens. Occasionally, either of these extremes get out of control, and slam the door on a piece; and other times the trope is a version of 'and then I woke up' (here it is 'and then I went to work').

Musgrave's yearnings are mythic: for love, for meaning, for the countryside; the latter, suffering as it does from the city's idealisation, becoming the vision portrayed in advertisements for new housing estates. In fact the bush is dry, snake-riddled and flyblown. The air is fresh but there are trees ruining the view. There is, therefore, a common a blind spot for Australian poets working in the cities, but who, like the rest of us, have internalised our national myths of the bush. The urban environment has produced their poetry: this environment clearly is an inspiration, a ceaseless font from which the poet drinks.

At first Musgrave's left hand is hard to read, one has to retrace and work at the pieces; but he controls the reader's revelation nicely, focussing in to both banality and 'imaginality', the two sides of his reflected face. The second subtitle of this book is 'A Novelty', and so it is. It reflects his life accurately in the end, and, perhaps unlike even its author, I prefer reading his sort of book immensely to watching that late-night televised dross he writes about.

Citation

  • Tim Metcalf. 'Review: On Reflection by David Musgrave' [online]. Network Review of Books (Perth, Australian Public Intellectual Network), February 2006. Availability: <please cite the web address here> ISSN 1833-0932. [accessed 19 May 2013].

Back Cover Blurb

  • This evocative collection sets poems side by side with prose poems that help enlarge the frame of reference for the author's subjects.

    The collection follows a young poet through his daily life, and the poem's subtitle of a Twenty-Twenty Vision is an apt description of the two sides of story we see -- both the creative, poetic side and the prose poetry fact side.

    Musgrave's writing is intelligent, incisive and probing, definitely work to be reflected on (no pun intended!)

    This collection will appeal to lovers of poetry that enjoy seeing the everyday life described through both intriguing verse and prose poetry.

Have You Also Read?

  • Bacchanalia

    imageBrett Dionysius, Carindale: Interactive Publications, 2003, 82 Pages, Paperback, $20.00
    Reviewed by Stephen Lawrence in the July 2004 issue.

    Here is another in the successful Interactive Press series of emerging writers. This press produces high-quality work -- although 11-point Georgia can be an unforgiving font to the reader's eye, and an incorrect web address at the rear of this book may confuse those interested in further exploring what the publisher has to offer. Brett Dionysius' second collection has a confident tone, evident in his earlier poetry, and he chooses sometimes confrontational subject-matter without apology. We are in southern Queensland (David Malouf territory) -- and Dionysius shows us very specific parts: Kurrilpa, Brisbane. We get a nice introduction to the flora and fauna of the area, and the semitropics ... read more.
     



 
Network Review of Books

Interactive Publications

  • IP began as a corporate publishing consultancy in Brisbane, Australia and still works as such. But it is most widely known for its award-winning literary publishing under its three imprints: Interactive Press, Glass House Books and IP Digital.Under its Director Dr David Reiter, internationally known for his own poetry and fiction, IP has moved to the forefront of New Publishing in Australia. A lean and mean enterprise, IP is determined to succeed where other small publishers have failed -- in the key areas of audience development, promotion and distribution. It also champions innovation in its professional and contractual relationships with authors and its wholehearted dedication to new forms of creative work.

NRB February 2006

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