Open Access
Featured Posts
Director of the press Azad Ashim Sharma and Head Editor Kashif Sharma-Patel reflect upon six years of the87press. They touch upon the development of the press within the context of the British poetry scene, the perils of professionalisation, structural problems for independent presses, the embattled problem of representation and much more.
Tom Branfoot reviews “rock flight” by Hasib Hourani (Prototype, 2024) reflecting on the tension between language and action in the Palestinian struggle for self-determination.
Four poems by Clifton Gachagua formed by collages of (mis)rememberings, full of nostalgia, jubilation, music and heartbreak: "I know I have not learnt anything since my reincarnation, / might as well have been sleepwalking, relying on old memories."
Essays
Rouzbeh Shadpey’s lyric essay attempts to triangulate thirst, hope, and illness on the page proffering a fragmented meditation on futility and its metaphor: the fountain.
Hadeel Jamal translates two excerpts from Ghassan Kanafani’s “Palestinian Literature of Resistance Under Occupation, 1948-1968” (1968) which provides analysis on the Palestinian artist’s role in resistance and its global dimension. The excerpts shed light on the deep emotional and cognitive solidarity between Palestinians and other oppressed peoples – which is as relevant now as ever.
Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou finds hope, humour, resistance and strength are found in abundance in the Mosaic Rooms' latest exhibition to spotlight four Palestinian artists, In the Shade of the Sun.
An exploration of the role of digression, deferral, unrealised action, and impatience in literature and aesthetic experience, via Flaubert, Shklovsky, Feldman, and Hejinian.
This essay describes some of the early attacks on Marx by right-wing economists. It considers some of the consequences of the rejection of the labour theory of value and the development of an increasingly mathematized economic theory of marginal utility. What are the implications of this shift from a critical theory of the lives of producers to an econometric and nominalist theory of the habits of consumers? What does it mean for poetry?
In this creative critical essay, Hannah Hutchings-Georgiou reflects on the latest work of artist Andy Robert, whose work blurs the line between abstract and figurative, and explores themes of migration, belonging and the concept of the image itself.
Richard Capener reviews Poetic Fragments from the Irritating Archive by Karenjit Sandhu in which the archive disrupts and is disrupted, a non-site enabling embodied intensities
Our editor Kashif Sharma-Patel reviews New Weathers (ed. Anne Waldman and Emma Gomis) a collection of lectures dealing with the ecological crisis, social organisation, transgressive identity and the role of poetics
M. Elijah Sueuga’s latest column piece looks at Hew Locke’s animated parade of figures installed at the Tate Britain, meditating on anticolonialism and the politics of artistic compromise
M. Elijah Sueuga contemplates Tigran Hamasyan's live jazz performance at the Barbican considering the history of jazz, ancestry, and deracination
So Mayer’s review of ‘The Books of Jacob’ looks at how Olga Tokarczuk explores Jacob Frank as a border-dweller; as a Jew who converted to both Islam and Christianity; as a Messiah who numinously embodies the Divine in the material plane; and as a patriarch whose body subversively expresses queer and trans desires.
This essay situates Joe Luna's poem Development Hell both within and outside of the tradition of katabasis, in the process positing a new, 'cacobatic' literary mode
In this long-read, Azad Ashim Sharma explores race, avant-gardism, and methodologies of literary criticism.
An extract from Mira Mattar's astonishing novel 'Yes, I Am A Destroyer' with a response from Kashif Sharma-Patel.
Marie Buck's essay is a reply, critique and contextualisation of Joe Luna's 'Writing for Freedom', published last week on the Hythe.
Joe Luna considers the claims made for and on behalf of poetry by the radical Bay Area press, Commune Editions.
Who is the 'esoteric' Marx? How is his thought distinct from that of traditional Marxism? Drawing on Marx's critique of value, this lecture offers an overview of the esoteric Marx and considers the implications of his critique for theories of domination, abstraction and crisis.
Summer is a time for leisure and to be with friends. In poems, the idea of summer and seasonal change can be a herald of hope for the future. During a global pandemic, what do we do with our hopes? Within all the new and old restrictions, poems can nourish our fantasies, desires, anticipate the world beyond.
In praise of the shoes I walked into the last decade in by Latifa Akay
Part of a continued essay series about notions of tenderness, radical or otherwise, by Andy Spragg.
Four poems by Clifton Gachagua formed by collages of (mis)rememberings, full of nostalgia, jubilation, music and heartbreak: "I know I have not learnt anything since my reincarnation, / might as well have been sleepwalking, relying on old memories."
Leo Li presents us with five poems on dichotomies and the possibilities in-between: “Behind us, / the spongiform city where I’d always thought / I belonged mouldered in silent balm.”
These three poems by Remi Graves explores homonyms, (mis)gendered bodies, alienation and disappearance: “a boi walks into a wood— / ouch!”
An intimate reflection on mental health, identity, and the complexities of antidepressant use, expressed through a blend of prose and poetry.
Assemblages is a provision of space; a space for work, a building of memory, inspirations and ideas where one can create art, where one can escape and where one can host a myriad of philosophies
Sometimes the pain, or sadness, is balder than you think. Three new poems from Yĕ Yĕ.
Three poems that argue for literature as a form of political commitment and reflect on the ambivalences of writing from outside the disastrous zone.
Set firmly within contemporary Britain, these four pieces look at the linkage between power, media, and financial institutions, and explore their impact upon displaced people, the impoverished, and the working class. The poems discuss how narratives are controlled, how power is wielded with a view to maintaining the status quo, often at the negation of human life and the health of wider society itself.
Two new poems from Will Harris: words overtaking thought, dripping down the back of my jeans, impeding movement.
Two new poems from Alycia Pirmohamed about how particular bodies take up space in particular landscapes.
This workshop, sponsored by Mosaic Rooms and Makan Rights, explored the relationship between an array of literatures and solidarities, resulting in a collectively written poem.
Poems drawn from an unfinished sequence on hydrocarbons and containment, where the geographical coordinates have been removed.
A selection of poems - sounded-out, with yous, helical - from Tom Betteridge's forthcoming book Dog Shades (JUST NOT, 2023)
These poems, paying notice to un-idyllic trees in urban landscapes, probe at the uneasy but productive identifications between humans and nature made possible by language. The first, about a poplar on Peckham Rye, reinscribes the site of Blake’s vision of Ezekiel in an examination of literary legacy; the second explores perception and the trouble with anthropocentric metaphor through an observation of leaves that linger around streetlights.
'Elsewhere and until' feels through and with climate grief, hatred of golf, the colour pink, e-waste, the Sublime, procrastination, and leisure.
These are extracts from a long unfinished poem about Raipur and its many offerings of postindustrial sublime.
Through Lagnajita Mukhopadhyay's 'Identification', though it may be described as a body being lost at sea—she has reverted into being a “boat”: a carrier floating in the in-between, finally free from earthly bounds and psychological deterrents.
Drifting through the desert of "a real damn shame of a crisis," Ed Luker went to Mexico last April and found a way to push through all the bad feelings
Two meditations on the hysterics (and ironies) of faith by Priyanka Voruganti
These five units by makalani bandele linger in sonic and syntactical experiments utilising musical conversations and algorithmic contingency.
T. Person’s monumental Everscapes began, in 2020, as a collection of automatic writings set in the queue for a club. The queue is a lustrous backdrop for desire, anticipation, loss and memory.
A selection of poems from participants of a workshop held at AP Berlin
‘Digits After Orph’ is gridded atop Rilke's Sonnets to Orpheus, to amplify the contrast, that sequence being one of presence (and other things), this one of absence (and other things), exploring some realities and mindsets and speculating on them.
An eviscerating poem about Imperial Chemical Industries by Dom Hale
‘Antique, gritty, I left England, never to be seen again.’
Bhanu Kapil deploys the broken form or mood of a ghazal to evoke memories of leaving a country, then returning to it (England) after many years.
A series of definitions from Tom Crompton: ‘Undilutable slang truth.’
Poems from a workshop conducted at Camden Art Centre in response to Jesse Darling’s ‘Enclosures’ exhibition; a poetic practice of duration and modernist perambulation working through metal skeletons, surveillance capitalism and fragility
Three sharp poems from neo-surrealist Ronnie McGrath: ‘Ra’s astrological earth child/ revolutionary mouth of some architectonic geometry’
Poetry
The second lecture extends our line of inquiry into societal nature relations as it pertains to the problem of energy. At the heart of the relation between capital and climate lies energy. Fossil fuels have been the dominant source of energy powering economic expansion since the industrial revolution. This fossil-fuelled economic development, as we now know for certain, has been responsible for the lion’s share of CO2 emissions in the atmosphere, leading to global warming, rising sea levels, ocean acidification and extreme weather events.
The second lecture extends our line of inquiry into societal nature relations as it pertains to the problem of energy. At the heart of the relation between capital and climate lies energy. Fossil fuels have been the dominant source of energy powering economic expansion since the industrial revolution. This fossil-fuelled economic development, as we now know for certain, has been responsible for the lion’s share of CO2 emissions in the atmosphere, leading to global warming, rising sea levels, ocean acidification and extreme weather events. This lecture draws on work in the Energy Humanities, a cross-disciplinary field of scholarship that highlights the essential contribution that the insights and methods of the humanities bring to bear on the study of our carbon-fuelled modernity and the vital question of transition to cleaner, more sustainable forms of energy. Turning also to recent work on Marx and the critique of energy, including the After Oil collective on ‘petroculture’,Andreas Malm on ‘fossil capital’, and Timothy Mitchell on ‘carbon democracy’, we will develop a theoretical language for the age of carbon modernity.
This four-part lecture series asks what we can learn from Marx about the climate crisis: its origins, its impacts, and what possible solutions we might seek in the face of increasingly inadequate government efforts to mitigate the escalating devastation worldwide. Developments Marx criticized in early industrial capitalism have had enormous consequences for the planet’s eco-systems, not least in the form of carbon-fuelled climate change. But a century and a half has passed since the early industrial period. What could Marx have to teach us about environmental crisis in the twenty-first century? Was he not a developmentalist and leading proponent of industrial modernization? Did the socialist economies of the twentieth century not pursue a productivist model that churned out CO2 at rates on par with the capitalist world-economy? And what of China, an ostensibly communist country and one of the biggest polluters in the world?
Final lecture talking about the class relation: what it is, how its reproduced, and how the dynamics of its reproduction have important implications for how we conceive of the production of gender, the ascription of race, and the changing horizons of cycles of struggle.
Who is the 'esoteric' Marx? How is his thought distinct from that of traditional Marxism? Drawing on Marx's critique of value, this lecture offers an overview of the esoteric Marx and considers the implications of his critique for theories of domination, abstraction and crisis.
This first lecture from 'Marx After Growth' offers an overview of Marx's method and the core categories of his critique: from the commodity, labour and value to the general formula for capital, the general law of capitalist accumulation and the reproduction of the class relation.
Lectures
Bad Tenderness by Andrew Spragg
Part of a continued essay series about notions of tenderness, radical or otherwise, by Andy Spragg.