ABSTRACT
Many writers and artists have been interested in the aesthetic beauty and the language of maps. Katherine Harman, author of You Are Here: Personal Geographies and Maps of the Imagination, argues that ‘part of what fascinates us when looking at a map is inhabiting the mind of its maker, considering that particular terrain of imagination overlaid with those unique contour lines of experience’ [Harman, Katherine. 2004. You Are Here: Personal Geographies and Other Maps of the Imagination. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 11]. This suggests a palimpsestic relationship that I too want to explore: between the personal experience that one gains from a particular place and the way that this experience, in turn, makes one read a place differently, more idiosyncratically, thus coming to influence one’s sense of identity. This palimpsestic relationship – juxtaposing the process of cartography with creative writing – forms one part of this article’s focus. But it is linked to a second concern, which relates especially to coastal regions, where there is forever a tussle between sea and land over sovereignty. It struck me that prose poetry captures a similar tension between the prosaic and the poetic. The palimpsestic and littoral qualities of prose poetry thus provide the twin foci of this article, which explores these attributes in relation to the sense of place in the north of England.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes on contributor
Anne Caldwell is a freelance writer, a lecturer in creative writing for the Open University, and a Ph.D. student of creative writing at the University of Bolton, U.K. She is a member of the International Poetry Studies Institute (I.P.S.I.) International Prose Poetry Project and the author of three collections of poetry. She worked for the National Association for Writers in Education in the U.K. for over 10 years. Her latest poetry collection is Painting the Spiral Staircase (2016, Cinnamon Press).