Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Toby Fitch's Slightly Impromptu Launch Speech for Pam Brown’s Stasis Shuffle
at AVANT GAGA #51, Sappho Books, Glebe, Sydney. 14 Dec 2021


Welcome back to the book launch part of the night. No one was invited to give a launch speech, partly because this event is less of an analytical space and more a performative one, and I wasn’t invited to either because I’m sure Pam didn’t want to impose, but I’m going to say a few words anyway to give this excellent book, Stasis Shuffle, a polite nudge into the world …

Pam Brown is an adept, probably the best in Australia, at writing poetry using very subtle surface effects. Accumulating observations, found language, punning, and self-conscious questioning, building each poem fragment upon fragment, she is able to critique a vast array of things, across politics and culture, including, most centrally in my opinion, how we see and interpret the real. The opening poem of the book, ‘(best before)’, in one of its fragments, alludes to this poetic process:


the
it's-interesting
bla-bla

question is -

   is your slowly accreting poem
morphing into a larger cloud yet -

  a major poem
         ghosting in to sydney
    past the heads,
making its way to ashfield
   
            darker & darker
 birds swirling around in it -
         leaves
              rubbish & debris
full of menace & meaning?

(what to answer -
       nup
         or 
         I wish?)

It’s difficult to say what any one Pam Brown poem is about, because they are always about lots of things, as the best poetry is. Their multiple meanings are found in the rubbish and debris of each poem, as she undercuts the inclination of poems and poets to be deemed “major”, preferring a much more “interesting” poetics of the minor, the fragmentary, and the “slowly accreting”. Once you “get” how a Pam Brown poem operates laterally, you start to see the “darker & darker / birds swirling around in it / … full of menace & meaning”.

To give you an idea of her use of form, Stasis Shuffle is in three parts, each with their own titles, titles that are thematic but that also work as metacommentary. The middle section, called ‘pressure’s on’, is the most formal of the book with its 6 thin double sonnets across 6 pages, which are cleverly disjunctive and pressurised in their use of bricolage and the restrictions of the sonnet form, restrictions that she also manages to elude by doubling the sonnet form to 28 lines. This light middle section acts as a neat divider between the first and third sections, which are each full of poems in Pam’s more signature accretive, fragmentary, discursive late style.

The first section is titled ‘one idea on each dragée’, a dragée being “a bite-sized form of confectionary with a hard outer shell—often used for another purpose in addition to consumption”. And here they are being used for another purpose: we have another metaphor for what’s going on in the poems, each fragment becomes a dragée, a morsel, that you can savour, turn over in your mouth-brain. Or, with the poems becoming bags-full of dragées, you can, like I did, binge on the lot all at once. But of course Pam’s dragées are not all sweet—she eschews all those cloying narrative and lyric conventions, preferring sardonic asides and ruminations: “whatever happens / don’t read me / any rumi poems / at my sick bed”.

The final section is the title section of the book, Stasis Shuffle, a title that alludes to the pandemic, isolation, the congealing of thought and body under various restrictions both local and global, contemporaneous and of a lifetime. The title also alludes to the urge or desire to move, to shuffle, within such restrictions. And so the book, while being about many things, is definitely concerned with living and observing and experiencing time. And time has been particularly discombobulated since the beginning of 2020. So, as ever, with Pam’s work, her timing is up to the minute.

To finish, I thought I’d read all the little dragées from the book that concern time. I read the book from woe to go, picking out all such instances and accreting them, in order of appearance, into a kind of index poem about time in Stasis Shuffle. It’s called

Nostalgic Block
(a supercut of all mentions of time in Pam Brown’s Stasis Shuffle)

my body will know what to do with the vaccine in two weeks’ time
warm winter night all wrong I borrowed history I’ve been to 1981
autumn started in the dark finally got you to sleep around 4 a m
by late morning you’re lying in a park the other side of the equinox
it’s maundy thursday morning not monday thursday morning
mournful maundy a shadow showing the time before quantum physics
brought telepathy to imagery that time you licked a saltbush
next time quantum physics might try different senses
it’s spooky knowing how it ends in advance goodbye january
too soon in the night blood red and blue moon coming much later
in the early hours five gadgets in this room display the time
the city’s lake fountain turned off every day before 11 & after 2
across some years it’s sIll holidays here progress is a phantasm
in full bloom illusion you spent ages learning to love
life’s more fun when you don’t know what the hell you’re doing
coming down with mondayitis as soon as tomorrow
so the apparent stability of the everyday isn’t actual, right?
it’s summer solstice it gets late early walking back around ten thirty
talking to yourself all the way in the dark seen any lately?
suddenly collected by a rogue wave trapped in an air bubble
woke up face down watching time dribble down the wall
as we stretch together into a timeless misery delay’s okay
the bus meanders arriving late in another city of spare parts
it’s happy new year again seven months since january
twenty-something years since that time in paris meanwhile
an instant harmony on imaginary pavements one year’ll be great
the next year you’ll have to travel through and then slam the door
on external memory is this 2003 again
memory seafoam
memory seafoam
take your time
saving daylight
memory seafoam
nostalgic block
memory seafoam
time & continuity
memory seafoam
memory seafoam
this is the way the portal works
prime time’s grotesque flash back july is the psycho month
keeps on aching telescopic nightlight robbery this afternoon
I shuffle in my room’s stasis from flux until sunrise a while ago
the other night at the reading everyone seemed under pressure
last week a friend recommended ‘aesthetic trauma’
                                             happy xmas suckas!
the sustained breath of time shared & ceremony invoked etcetera
cultural becoming anticipates futures inscribed in the present
& counters what we mean when we mean ‘pastime’
a myth machine retronymical everything’s different now
you bluesky the content & short lines get you
to the next day evolution leads to



Return to Reviews, or Pam Brown site



Saturday, August 21, 2021

Endings & Spacings



   fragmented poems from the lost months
   between the summers of 2019 and 2021
   what's 'summer'? a climate anachronism

   ---

   parts of the poems
   emanated from
   a nocturnal space
   not always 'at night'

   ---

   presented together -
   some underthinking
   a series of contingencies
   a small event -
   an uneven booklet
   endings & spacings

               never_never_books@gmail.com

            photo by pb - road crosses - west perth 2019

Friday, August 6, 2021

Required reading

  
across the fly screen
	                   insects & I
           chase the breeze
as the big day shrinks
                   the cool is coming on

the book is sitting there,
                      its blue cover
         clashing 
with the tea towel's orange,
                    stranded 

they've had their
                         heydays,
the fading teatowel, 
          the book of poems   
                               translated
      & re-translated

an aesthetics of the surface
                    sliding towards
      evening,     only one language
spoken here
    
 fructose to coma -
            undissolved granules
                        spuming
   in a grubby glass
                on the table top

the poems say
           more
               than I want them to,
no clarity really,       can't decide
          which way to read them

everything left
                      as it is,
       the fridge compressor 
                              gurgles


      Pam Brown  -   from Missing up (Vagabond Press 2015)







Sunday, July 19, 2020

VLAK Magazine, Issue 5, 2015


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VLAK Magazine, Issue 3, 2012



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VLAK Magazine Issue 2, 2011



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Monday, May 18, 2020

This time of pandemic brings my mother's young life closer to me, now, as I'm about to turn 72 in a week or so and we are living in such a difficult time.



                          my mother, Jeanette Barclay Brown (née Vinnicombe),on the left - her toes in the sun


                           mum, on the left, in February 1952

In the late 1940s, the Commonwealth Government Health Department took over the Heatherton Sanatorium in Cheltenham, Melbourne, in order to address a tuberculosis epidemic.In the early 1950s, the increase in the number of people suffering from tuberculosis created a need for additional beds. To alleviate overcrowding at Heatherton two new modern hospital blocks were built on the site. One was known as "North Block", where female patients were accommodated and the other was called "South Block" where male patients were housed. Children infected with tuberculosis were hospitalised in Wing 2. The sanatorium housed around 300 tuberculosis patients. A five-storey nurses’ home was built. Tuberculosis reached its peak in the late 1950’s and the patient intake was on the decline by 1958.

My mother was one of the long term tuberculosis patients. She was in her 30s. She had surgery to remove the damaged upper lobe from one of her lungs. These are photos of mum in confinement in 1952 - getting some outdoor sun and air (with other women, several of whom became her lifelong friends). She would send cheerful photos to me and my brother and sister. I only knew mum from photographs and felt toys that she made and would send me. My brother and sister lived with our maternal grandparents. At this time my dad was oceans away for some years in the U.K. obtaining a military promotion. I lived with my paternal great aunt and uncle in Brisbane from the age of 18 months until I was six. When we reunited, in spite of her trials (& whatever unknown troubles to come), the mother I met was determined to look after & nurture us kids. I loved her dearly.

                                               Pam Brown, Sydney, 18th May 2020


click on the photos to enlarge