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Booking information

Duration: five fortnightly sessions
Session Dates: 27th Sep, 25th Oct, 8th Nov, 22nd Nov, 29th Nov. (No class on 11th Oct)
Type: Course
Level: Open to all
Location: London

Details

Start date: Thursday 27th Sep 2012
Session times: Thursdays, fortnightly, 6.45-8.45pm
Cost:
Full cost:£69.00
60+:£62.00
Concs:£55.00

 

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Face to face

A Sense of Place

A place needn’t just be a physical landscape, a city or town or village or beach or lane or moor; it’s often a repository of memories, somewhere we feel compelled to return, either physically or imaginatively. In this course we’ll look at different ways of taking ourselves – and our readers – to locations that haunt, intrigue, delight and disturb us. We’ll look at work by poets who excel in creating a sense of place, including Seamus Heaney, John Siddique, Jackie Wills and Isobel Dixon.

Tutor:

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Catherine Smith

A writer of prose and drama as well as poetry, Catherine Smith teaches for the University of Sussex, the Arvon Foundation, and runs a creative writing enrichment group for youngsters; unsurprising for a poet whose own writing bustles with people of all kinds. Widely admired, her three poetry collections to date have been shortlisted for several prizes and in 2004, she was named among "the twenty most exciting poets to have published a first collection in the last ten years" as part of the PBS/Guardian's 'Next Generation Poets' promotion. It is Smith's ability to pique and sustain the reader's interest through direct address and, at times, queasy detail, which ensures the success of her work. Take 'How It All Started', the opener on this Archive recording: "Do you know this dream'", the poet queries, before feats of association lead to the potent image of "a soldier's / booted foot lying in a puddle": "how the rest of him wasn't there, just a stump / of bone". Throughout Smith's reading of these edgy, compelling poems, the curious and the disturbing are forever bubbling to the surface.

Much of this lively yet quietly insistent recording draws on Smith's third collection, Lip: a book praised by Daljit Nagra as "funny and intelligent - a unique comic-serious exploration of the conflicts between contemporary mores and physical desires".

 

About the venue

 

Access Information

The Poetry School has accessible parking with a front entrance drop-off point. The room used for classes is on ground level and there is adequate space for wheelchair users and an induction loop available upon request. There are fully equipped disabled toilets and an emergency assistance alarm is fitted. For further information please contact the office.


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