Three poems about absence: a creative response to Women鈥檚 History Month - A J Moore

AJ Moore鈥檚 creative work comprises sequences of poems about domestic objects which aim to create an alternative archive through which the personal becomes an expression of the political including issues of female identity and absence within them.

A stack of books, a fork wrapped in a tape measure and a candle.
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Introduction

In a widely-quoted 1990 interview, the poet Susan Howe observes that 鈥業f you are a woman, archives hold perpetual ironies. Because the gaps and silences are where you find yourself鈥�.

It is not news to anyone that official records are loaded with absence, with 鈥榞aps and silences鈥� surrounding not only women but the myriad individuals historically under-written or homogenised within, or written out of bureaucratic documentation 鈥� perhaps due to their gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, sexuality, class, disability, neurodivergence (and any combination of these) 鈥� to give just a handful of examples which in no way begins to scratch the surface of this issue.

My PhD critical research examines the work of authors including Howe, Maggie Nelson, Claudia Rankine and Jeff Hilson, whose incorporation/citation of materials from a variety of establishment sources which can deny identity (such as media coverage, police reports, bureaucratic documents and historical archives) shines a light on the absences and ideologies they perpetuate and initiates discussions about how and what we record.

The creative element of the project is an attempt to undertake an alternative documenting through everyday items which, I would suggest, can often tell us as much as (more than?) the received narrative. Comprising sequences of prose poems centred on domestic objects (at time of writing bread, candles, bookshelves and plates), it deliberately combines rigid, impersonal language with the informal lexicon of popular culture. Though not exclusively concerned with female identity, several of the poems speak specifically to subjects which 鈥� historically, in the present and likely in the future 鈥� consistently impact on the female experience.

The three poems below 鈥� which consider the weight loss industry, housework and inequality of opportunity 鈥� are inspired by a fusion of the private and the public, zeroing in on selected points from the past century, and are offered as a personal creative response to Women鈥檚 History Month.


Shaping

For anyone growing up in the 1970s and 1980s, it might have appeared that virtually all the female adults they knew (advertising agencies having yet to recognize the untapped financial potential of targeting weight-conscious men) were on some sort of diet. In this golden age of 鈥榗utting down鈥�, the slimming bread ruled. The go-to choice for those reluctant to forego the traditional calorie-heavy loaf entirely, its delicate, feathery ubiquity was relentlessly peddled in soft-focus commercials typically featuring bucolic landscapes, hot air balloons, female models with body shapes which conformed to constructed ideals, and a male voice-over. When one studies contemporaneous advertising materials, 鈥榬eal鈥� women and their voices are conspicuous by their absence.

This poem sets out to interrogate the weight loss industry of the era as both a gendered and a class-specific space, targeting an audience of women with the disposable income and time to invest in its specialist food items, recipe books and classes.

Shaping. A poem by Alison Moore.

 (m4a, 577KB)

Transcript

Shaping

housekeeping won鈥檛 stretch to splintered church hall鈥檚 draughty weigh-ins but borrowed planner pledges spiral bound salvation [with mix 鈥榥鈥� match flip segments] cheerless tallied mealtimes mapped in topaz citrine blush revisiting nightly [with Nationwide school office drama] the edgy post mortem of *what was saved* breakfasts pack-ups bank holiday suppers evaluated benchmarked by BHS one-piece鈥檚 brown floral yardstick each serenely hijacked by this incarnation鈥檚 grapefruit halves fragile slices scant alpine-fresh foretastes of fibre shakes flakes whisper [re]renewed optimism light-baked strip-lit shelved between Mothers Pride庐 Sunblest庐 stale last-ditch sacrament of low-cal assurance skimmed milk tea stocked up [Thursdays] from Challenge endorsed consecrated in clipped gallant RP *don鈥檛 forget* and *be smarter* and *scale down* then you too can fly


That dining out glamour

In 1971, Ann Oakley conducted her seminal study The Sociology of Housework, which addressed 鈥榞aps and silences鈥�, in established sociological practice and in society more generally, by considering housework as actual work (rather than 鈥榤erely as an aspect of the feminine role in the family鈥�). Key among Oakley鈥檚 findings were the impact of housework on her participants (feelings of 鈥榝ragmentation鈥�, 鈥榤onotony鈥� and 鈥榣oneliness鈥� were commonplace), as well as the punishing nature of weekly hours put in by the women 鈥� for most totalling 鈥榖etween seventy and eighty-nine鈥� 鈥� way above the average working week in paid employment. Oakley鈥檚 research chimed with an already growing sense that the domestic objects in some of these poems 鈥� particularly those set in my childhood in the 1970s and early 1980s 鈥� seemed to exude feelings of isolation, despite being apparent symbols of a cosy, happy family life.

The following poem is very much rooted in the era of Oakley鈥檚 study, and is partly based on my own experience of the handing on of housework skills.

Candles. That dining out glamour

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Transcript

That dining out glamour

but it鈥檚 raining again so instead tutored housecraft rookie home economics soft cloth initiation naive satisfaction of sponging and sticking its musty-sweet clash [alkyl sulphate gum arabic] pacific sconce shining painstaking collation of Co Op and Green Shield shared ritualised primping of revered wedding gift鈥檚 three branched unburned hauteur [in embossed EPNS] for more humble unuse improvised half-term bonding鈥檚 wan silverplate stratum layered unaware insight of 77-hour week鈥檚 contact hungry routine gnawing wonted monotony foam cleansed fragmentation coated lifted infused with cathartic intrusion [Jimmy Young Maxwell House庐] makeshift weekday patina on centuries鈥� tarnish swabbed buffed up brushed out reapplying the gleam and


Hers for the reading

This final poem considers the inequality of opportunity faced by all working class young people of my grandmother Anne鈥檚 generation (she was born in 1916), many of whom were eligible for grammar school scholarships but didn鈥檛 attend as this wasn鈥檛 help enough to counteract prohibitive uniform and equipment costs and the loss of wage contributions to family finances. I鈥檓 including it here as the situation for women must have been doubly challenging: as well as being denied educational ambition, they might (as in Anne鈥檚 case) have been working full- or part-time while simultaneously 鈥� like the women of Oakley鈥檚 study 鈥� shouldering almost total responsibility for childcare and housework with no modern appliances to lighten the load.

Through the lens of Anne鈥檚 experience, this poem examines the determination, stamina and unshakeable belief in one鈥檚 right to learn necessary for those excluded by inadequate provision and class bias.

Bookshelves. Hers for the reading

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Transcript

Hers for the reading

of pre-Butler exclusion鈥檚 retrospective soft-cover DIY education double-stacked library surplus from Collins and Gollancz the fag-melted dust-bloomed clear laminate refuge of Christie and Allingham Sayers and Marsh their easy uncatalogued proud co-existence with OU natural history Say it in Russian treasured disparate gifts from adoring godchildren [a perpetual calendar stranded in May unremarkable pieces of beach-scavenged rock] on patched up re-revarnished mass-produced oak ingested devoured in insomniac down-time from caregiving homemaking swing shifts at Batchelors stalwart cut-price custodian of armchair polymath鈥檚 hands-bound boundless third-hand holdings self-homeschooled desire the unceasing *life鈥檚 what you make it* lifelong appetite refusal of bitterness unread ambition

Sources:

Susan Howe interview with Edward Foster, Talisman (1990)

Ann Oakley, The Sociology of Housework (Oxford, Cambridge MA: Blackwell, 1985)

 'The world was hers for the reading'- Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

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