A Prose-Poem From Tasmania

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RonPrice
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Location: George Town Tasmania
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A Prose-Poem From Tasmania

Post by RonPrice » June 29th, 2008, 8:07 pm

SWIRLING :arrow:

When I was working in a tin mine on the west coast of Tasmania in 1981/2 at one of the dirtiest but emotionally challenging jobs I’ve ever had, Salmon Rushdie was catapulted to literary fame. I think I may have come across his name on the morning news before going to work on the bus and usually in the dark and the rain, for it nearly always rained on the west coast of this beautiful island state of Australia. News of Rushdie and his Midnight’s Children(1981) was the beginning of his story in the narrative that is my own life and, over twenty-five years later, I still follow the writing and life of this acclaimed and controversial writer.

Yesterday I listened to an interview on ABC radio1 with this Indian-British novelist and essayist, this Muslim-born and self-proclaimed atheist around whom have been swirling literary and political issues, especially since the publication of his novel The Satanic Verses(1988). I had left the tin mine by 1988 and was living in what is arguably the most isolated city on the planet, Perth, Western Australia. The comparisons and contrasts between Rushdie’s writing and mine I found helped to place my own work in a useful personal perspective. This first of a series of prose-poems examines these comparisons and contrasts.-Ron Price with thanks to “The Book Show,” ABC Radio National, 21 April 2008, 10:05-11:00 a.m.

I tell stories, too, Salmon
but I don’t draw on the
deficit model of history1
in the same way as you.

I, too, subvert linear history
with spacial, sacred, circular
and fragmented models, far
more transnational, not the
discreet national-local story
here, more the flickering film
of a phenomenal world where
a sense of unity is demanding
fulfilment on a tide of desire
for an outward and political
form mounting to a flood, to
a climax in these tempestuous
times of troubles and woes.

Writing for me was a second
choice, too, Salmon, after I
realized I could not make a
career of baseball and life
wore me out with forty years
of endless talking and listening
among other slings and arrows
of life’s outrageous fortune.

1Camilla Nelson, “ Faking It: History and Creative Writing,” TEXT: Vol. 11, No.2, 2007.

Ron Price
22 April 2008
8)
-----------
(For The Studio Eight dot
TV Community: 30/6/08)
married for 46 years, a teacher for 35, a writer and editor for 14 and a Baha'i for 54(as of 2013)

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Lightning Rod
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Post by Lightning Rod » June 29th, 2008, 9:33 pm

Ron,

I find your posts fascinating
I must come to visit you in Tasmania
it sounds like the ideal place for me to live
it has Mania in the name...haha
plus you grow poppies there don't you?
but if I lived there they would have to call me a Tasmanian Devil

I'm going to move this post to Creative Writing, because I can.
"These words don't make me a poet, these Eyes make me a poet."

The Poet's Eye

RonPrice
Posts: 138
Joined: July 4th, 2007, 12:27 pm
Location: George Town Tasmania
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Yes, because I can....

Post by RonPrice » June 29th, 2008, 9:53 pm

I always appreciate someone who appreciates my prose-poetry. Living in this last stop on the way to Antarctica-if you take the western Pacific rim route has many delights. I won't list them here, Lightning Rod, but I will post a prose-poem just for you(and of course other readers here at the Studio Eight) about the Tasmanian tiger which I wrote only a few weeks ago.-Ron :arrow:
--------------
A PERILOUS EXISTENCE

On 7 September 1936 the world's last captive thylacine or Tasmanian tiger died in the Hobart Zoo. The thylacine is the only mammal to have become extinct in Tasmania since European settlement. I have spent a significant part of my life in northern Tasmanian, where many supposed sightings of the tiger have occurred since 1937.

Today, 20 May 2008, in a world first, scientists announced that they have extracted a gene from the extinct Tasmanian tiger and successfully inserted it into a mouse embryo. It is the first time a gene from any extinct animal has been brought back to life inside another living creature. Obtaining the thylacine gene, called Col2a1, was itself a major challenge, because DNA begins breaking down after death. However, the researchers from the University of Melbourne and the University of Texas, say the technology will not lead to the cloning of an entire Tasmanian tiger.1

When the last Tasmanian tiger died in 1936 my maternal grandfather was about to retire on a Canadian old age pension. His wife would die in three years and my mother was about to meet my father. The Baha’i community, which members of my family have been associated with in Canada now for fifty-five years, was, in September 1936, just beginning to conceive a plan to establish one centre in every state of the USA and in every country in Central and South America with ramifications to include every country on the European continent.2 By the end of that plan, a seven year plan from 1937 to 1944, my parents had met and married. On 23 July 1944 I was born, three days after an assassination attempt on the life of Hitler and four days before another planned assassination on his life. -Ron Price with thanks to 1Richard Macey, “Extinct gene brought back to life,” in the age.com.au, May 20, 2008; and 2 Shoghi Effendi, Messages To America, Wilmette, 1947, p.7.

Indeed, the field was immense,
the task gigantic, the privilege
immeasurably precious, but the
time was short, obligations sacred,
paramount and urgent to muster
all our force, our resources, our
faith, determination and energy
to set out, single-minded and
undaunted, to attain exertion’s
heights---as humanity entered
the outer fringes of the most
perilous stage of its existence
and as the thylacine was in the
last phase of its existence—or
so it seemed until the other day.

Ron Price
20 May 2008
---------------
That's all folks! :idea:
married for 46 years, a teacher for 35, a writer and editor for 14 and a Baha'i for 54(as of 2013)

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Doreen Peri
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Post by Doreen Peri » June 29th, 2008, 9:55 pm

Thanks for stopping by, Ron! I'm enjoying reading your writings.

Just a FYI ... the reason Lightning Rod is moving your post is because this particular forum called "The Poet's Eye" is for Lightning Rod's columns. So he's going to put this thread in the Creative Writing forum.

RonPrice
Posts: 138
Joined: July 4th, 2007, 12:27 pm
Location: George Town Tasmania
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In the Future I'll Go To Creative Writing

Post by RonPrice » June 29th, 2008, 10:22 pm

Thanks for the emphasis...I'll put future items in that section or other relevant sections as I slowly learn the navigational ropes here...thanks for your patience, courtesy and kindness.--Ron Price, Australia. 8)
married for 46 years, a teacher for 35, a writer and editor for 14 and a Baha'i for 54(as of 2013)

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