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Mark Nowak
On Bill Griffiths, Skeptical Militancy, & “Ghost Town”
Griffiths, who sadly passed away last year, is author of a wide array of sonic-social gems. From his posthumously published Pitmatic: The Talk of the North East Coalfields to a 275-page selected poetry collection The Mud Fort, Griffiths’ work unearths a lexicon that leverages everything from Old Norse to Orgreave. Another recent publication, The Salt Companion to Bill Griffiths, initiates the process of assessing (and celebrating) the career of, as Robert Sheppard calls him, “a national treasure.” Fernanda Teixeira de Medeiros’ essay, “‘& that/that divide’: poetry and social commentary in Bill Griffiths,” examines the poet’s work as “skeptical militant”—“never obvious, never propagandistic, never simplistic…combining inventiveness with sharp social criticism.” Focusing on Griffiths’ poem “The Breed” she analyzes the poem’s (& the title term’s) dialectic of noun (breed as a class marker) and verb (to produce offspring, to give birth), showing how the poem presents (in three-line stanzas) “a chord made up of the notes of biological discourse, social intolerance, [and] sterility and violence…” To give Harriet readers unfamiliar with Griffiths’ verse a sense of his writing, here’s a brief excerpt from the seventeen-stanza poem: Unable to guard the world-egg properly The thing that doesn’t work, How can a lady be touched All the exhibits are cased, The Salt Companion gathers more than a dozen writings on Griffiths, including outstanding pieces by Eric Mottram, Paula Claire, John Seed, and others—as well as an interview with the poet conducted by Will Rowe. (For those needing a Griffiths interview fix immediately, here’s a link to one conducted in Wembley Park in 1993.) Yet it is the poems themselves collected in The Mud Fort that provide the best barometer of the “skeptical militant” that is Bill Griffiths. More often than not, I find myself deeply attuned to what I above called the “sonic-social” that Griffiths’ employs. At the very end of the book, for example, two poems (“Ballad of Orgreave” and “In the Coral Year”) provide a stunning critique of the Thatcher-led neoliberal privatization (and ensuing collapse) of the British coal industry: To a land The historical, global implications of these policies and praxes are likewise critiqued in a poem (“The Mineral World,” excerpted below) that pushes beyond the local, the Thatcher-era coal industries, to something closer to Neruda’s “United Fruit Co.”: The search for aluminum But I began with The Specials, because “Ghost Town” is not merely a tune on the collapse of certain capitalist models and their forced replacement with yet more severe capitalist models; “Ghost Town” is also a 2 Tone address to the Toxteth riots of July 1981, a “sonic-social” akin to Linton Kwesi Johnson’s “It Dread Inna Inglan” and akin to Griffiths’ brilliant 4-page montage-poem on the seventh month of 1981, “The Toxteth Riots”: unemployment is not a defect “Mercyside Chief Constable Ken Oxford denied the rioting had anything to do with race. ‘It was exclusively a crowd of black hooligans intent on making life unbearable and indulging in criminal activity,’ he said.” First you contain Shifting languages, shifting speech acts, shifting rhythms, but never shifting from the sonic-social skeptical militancy that infuses so much of his work, Griffiths’ “The Toxteth Riots” speaks to the concluding question of The Specials’ song: “Why must the youth fight against themselves?/Government leaving the youth on the shelf…” It is a relief finally And after the riots Mr Oxford set up the The institution facing the future. Comments |
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