Oz Hardwick is Professor of English at Leeds Trinity University (UK), where he leads the Creative Writing programmes. He has published eight poetry collections – most recently the Lithium Codex (Hedgehog, 2019) – and has edited several anthologies. His work has been published internationally in journals, and has been performed in diverse contexts with music, film, and a range of voices.

www.ozhardwick.co.uk

Shaping loss

Prose poetry and the elegiac mode

‘Loss,’ writes David Kennedy in his thought-provoking study, Elegy, ‘may, in fact, be inextricable from our general experience,’ and he goes on to note ‘contemporary poetry’s overwhelmingly elegiac mood.’ With Kennedy’s discussion in mind, this paper discusses the author’s personal engagement with Richard Brautigan’s poetic prose in order to explore the ways in which prose poetry, through its restless formal hybridity – of which Lyn Hejinian notes that its ‘implication (correct) is that the words and ideas (thoughts, perceptions, etc. – the materials) continue beyond the work – provides the ideal arena to express the elegiac mode in a manner that reaches beyond the lyric or confessional.

Keywords: Prose poetry – elegy – loss – Brautigan – creative practise