Creatures in the family
Issue 4/2002 | Archives online, Authors, Reviews
Riina Katajavuori (born 1965) writes a poetry of quick shifts, cinematic cut, changes in point of view: in a translator’s note for Five from Finland (Reality Street Editions, London 2001), I said that they ‘incorporate voices, observations and acts of speech from the street, television, radio, lectures and books. These hums and buzzes are then distanced by being framed as laconic and ironic propositions.’
That observation still holds true for her new book. Koko tarina (‘The whole story’, Tammi, 2001). Ironic titles seem to be in vogue in contemporary Finnish poetry (e.g. Kai Nieminen’s Lopullinen totuus. Kaikesta, ‘The ultimate truth. About everything’, Tammi, 2002): while these eighty-some pages of poetry cannot literally tell any ‘whole story’, they show that Katajavuori’s work has become more expansive. It delineates a contemporary sphere of urban life in a more richly detailed way, employing an overall syntax that seems less discontinuous than before.
The poems’ visual and emotional content transmits itself through a lens of wider focus. What is seen there, is often wistful:
they would have to find their way out of this moment, it would soon be morning. its tumult and hordes on their way to work, the streets black with them: the first shifts. the second, the third
and nothing would hold
That is the ending of a poem circling around the themes of attraction, memory, disillusion – a triad that recurs in other parts of the book, resolving itself in elegiac chords of loss.
Personal, socio-political, cultural relationships are highlighted in sharp and even macabre scenes, as in Fathers and sons:
There are fathers who toss kittens one at a time against a concrete wall. The sons stand by, alert as silver spoons, watch closely, shout: BULL’S EYE!
In the original Finnish, the boys shout ‘MAALI!’ – literally, ‘GOAL!’ – but since at least half of the world’s Anglophone readers are not soccer fans, and the action described does not involve kicking but throwing, I have taken the liberty of substituting ‘BULL’S EYE!’ The rest of the poem provides further instances of negative inter-generational ‘masculine’ conditioning, then ends on a masterfully grotesque note:
Tomorrow, at the streetcar stop, they’ll tell the fathers to jump like rabbits. And the whole world’s fathers obey and jump, jump hilariously. with jutting incisors.
Thus, the mass murderer of one species of soft vulnerable creature impersonates another species of soft vulnerable creature. The poem resonates far and wide, as a sharp summing-up of a powerful strain of Disneyfied ‘warrior’ culture.
The first and last poems in the book, set off from the main text by italic typography, are praises of one of the most basic joys in life, that is to say, food – somewhat reminiscent of Pablo Neruda’s Odes to simple things. They work as a frame to a rich and various Pan shot of the Katajavuori’s world, in which anger, despair, humor, irony, affection and disaffection tumble and iridesce in a way that shows this poet in full command of her word art.
Tags: poetry
No comments for this entry yet
Leave a comment
Also by Anselm Hollo
In the woods - 30 June 2008
Question time - 30 June 2006
Romantic and political - 30 June 2004
Intense whispering - 30 June 2003
Epic labours - 30 September 2000
-
About the writer
Poet, translator and teacher of creative writing and poetry Anselm Hollo (1934–2013) was born in Helsinki but moved to England in the 1960s and later to Boulder, Colorado. Among the writers he has translated are the poets Paavo Haavikko and Pentti Saarikoski and prose writers Rosa Liksom and Leena Krohn.
© Writers and translators. Anyone wishing to make use of material published on this website should apply to the Editors.