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y separately published work icon Legibility : An Antifascist Poetics multi chapter work   criticism  
  • Author:agent John Kinsella http://www.poetrylibrary.edu.au/poets/kinsella-john
Issue Details: First known date: 2022... 2022 Legibility : An Antifascist Poetics
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'This Pivot book provides a wide-ranging and diverse commentary on issues of legibility (and illegibility) around poetry, antifascist pacifist activism, environmentalism and the language of protest. A timely meditation from poet John Kinsella, the book focuses on participation in protest, demonstration and intervention on behalf of human rights activism, and writing and acting peacefully but persistently against tyranny. The book also examines how we make records and what we do with them, how we might use poetry to act or enact and/or to discuss such necessities and events. A book about community, human and animal rights and the way poetry can be used as a peaceful and decisive means of intervention in moment of public social and environmental crisis. Ultimately, it is a poetics against fascism with a focus on the well-being of the biosphere and all it contains.' (Publication summary)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Cham,
      c
      Switzerland,
      c
      Western Europe, Europe,
      :
      Palgrave Macmillan ,
      2022 .
      image of person or book cover 5468376990881792639.jpg
      This image has been sourced from Amazon
      Extent: 225p.
      Note/s:
      • Publication date 8 June 2022

      ISBN: 9783030857417

Works about this Work

“Road Closed” : Reading as Resistance in Antifa Poetics Verity Oswin , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: TEXT : Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , vol. 28 no. 1 2024;

— Review of Legibility : An Antifascist Poetics John Kinsella , 2022 multi chapter work criticism
'In the recent NSW floods our local council ran out of “Road Closed” signs. On side roads farmers painted their own on sheets of tin. Only the main highway to town was interpolated with an official yellow sign in the middle of the bitumen. When the waters subsided, no-one took the sign down. On swerving around the barricade every morning I was acutely conscious of breaking a code. I was surprised at how much power the words exerted – in ignoring the sign I transgressed the norms of its legibility. In John Kinsella’s new book Legibility: An Antifascist Poetics, published in the Palgrave series “Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics”, Kinsella employs the term “legibility” to refer to more than just the “readability” of a text. Whether a text is “legible” he argues is contingent upon the reader being versed in the customs, conventions and codes inherent to its creation. His interest is pragmatic – understanding the structures and systems intrinsic to the creation of “signs and inscriptions” of ruling discourses “is pivotal to the ability to resist them” (p. 15).' (Introduction)
“Road Closed” : Reading as Resistance in Antifa Poetics Verity Oswin , 2024 single work review
— Appears in: TEXT : Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs , vol. 28 no. 1 2024;

— Review of Legibility : An Antifascist Poetics John Kinsella , 2022 multi chapter work criticism
'In the recent NSW floods our local council ran out of “Road Closed” signs. On side roads farmers painted their own on sheets of tin. Only the main highway to town was interpolated with an official yellow sign in the middle of the bitumen. When the waters subsided, no-one took the sign down. On swerving around the barricade every morning I was acutely conscious of breaking a code. I was surprised at how much power the words exerted – in ignoring the sign I transgressed the norms of its legibility. In John Kinsella’s new book Legibility: An Antifascist Poetics, published in the Palgrave series “Modern and Contemporary Poetry and Poetics”, Kinsella employs the term “legibility” to refer to more than just the “readability” of a text. Whether a text is “legible” he argues is contingent upon the reader being versed in the customs, conventions and codes inherent to its creation. His interest is pragmatic – understanding the structures and systems intrinsic to the creation of “signs and inscriptions” of ruling discourses “is pivotal to the ability to resist them” (p. 15).' (Introduction)
Last amended 8 May 2024 12:22:39
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