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Ken Evans's avatar

Hi Victoria, me back again, taking issue with you sticking up for the British in poetry - which is a first, for me, I think! I suspect 'borders' in poetry, and of course, almost everything, got blown away by the explosion in online and digital around two decades ago. It was and is, an overwhelming show of power. It feels now a bit like arguing for an 'Olde England' of thatched pubs and Morris dancers on the green, to limit the poetry prize to these (increasingly small, shoddier and marginalised) lumps of rock.

To the idea of 'democratising' the process of who are chosen as tojudge - I think a vogueish, media-savvy 'commentator on the mores of our times', but a poetry outsider, like a Paxman used to be, or maybe a Rory Stewart (whatever you think of either, personally) has obvious attractions, but how much poetry are they really reading when not paid to pronounce on it? Would their authority in the subject be undermined, and therefore trust in their judgements debased?

And of course, look no further than Trump for where democracy (albeit a highly manipulated 'democracy') can get us. A triumvirate of very different 'authorities' does at least offer some chance of 'checks and balances' on the result (though taking onboard what you say about the 'mean' and 'consensus' drift, being a possibly deleterious effect). No perfect way to do this, as no competition is perfect, in poetry and art more than most things, naturally.

My positive from the poem is, in terrible times, the judges had a collective desire to see the times expressed in poems engaging with the issues of the day - even the second-placed 'Axe' seems to speak, albeit more metaphorically, to the disgruntled 'binary' we find ourselves in) ,rather than being hermetically sealed in a more conventionally 'Poet-y' set of poems. The reaction to Auden's 'September 1st, 1939' at the time, was laudatory - no less than E.M Forster getting behind it - for the way it captured the political and psychological moment, and it has rarely gone far away ever since, but as you know, Auden disowned it and wouldn't have it in his 'Collected', for being trite and itself 'dishonest'. I think this winning poem great for at least trying (though in your view failing) to capture something of the crises of our times, but of course, decades on, will it seem crass, over-simplified or performative, to audiences, not to mention the poet themselves?!

Suchandrika Chakrabarti's avatar

Really enjoyed your insights into the judging processes and prize culture!

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