Charlotte Wetton’s first pamphlet I Refuse to Turn into a Hat-Stand won the Michael Marks Awards 2017. She has performed at Aldeburgh and Ledbury festivals and came second in the StAnza Slam. Her work has appeared on BBC Radio 3 and at the Manchester Festival of Libraries. She received a New Writing North award in 2019 and is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Manchester. Say hi to her on twitter at @CharPoetry
About Accessioning
Astute, precise, and unsettlingly calm, Accessioning is an index of lives encased in museum glass, and then brought to life.
Through poems about fossilised fruit seeds and the sofa where Emily Brontë died, Wetton questions how we curate the lives of those living and dead in a pamphlet about looking, processing, and memorialising. Whether considering preserved wedding-cakes, a non-existent art exhibition or a human scream, these poems speak to the impossibility of containment and question our ability to map and categorise.
This is a pamphlet of poems about the stories that we tell ourselves, the memories that we construct, and the ways that we value and devalue people, animals and objects alike.
You can read more about Accessioning on the publisher's website here. Below, you can read two sample poems from the collection.
From Accessioning, by Charlotte Wetton
Specimen Drawers
Ilfracombe Museum
Private Tour
My mother asked if she could,
for a moment, lie
on the small hard sofa
where Emily Brontë died.
They said no.
No comments:
Post a Comment