I’ve identified myself on this blog as a
‘writer and academic’. Besides writing poetry, script and other works, I’m a teacher
of creative writing and English literature. I have a research specialism in
English Romanticism, and the intellectual, political and spiritual traditions
in which that literature participates. Particular interests here include
literary mythopoesis; the evolution of spirituality; mythological and religious
syncretism; literary esotericism and occultism; antiquarianism, archaeology and
folklore; the history of science; ecology; and the relationship between
literary culture and the social and political constitution.
Nothing wrong with that, you might think –
and to my mind, you’d be right. But for some writers, there is a tension and
even antipathy between the creative mind (as they conceive it) and the image of
an academic. There are some understandable concerns, of course – over
institutionalisation, for example, or being pigeonholed, or how much time
non-writerly duties might take up – but all of these would apply with any form
of employment. Beyond these, and more seriously even, there is a worry that the
academy simply speaks another language – one potentially damaging to the
writer. Something like this troubled Ted Hughes; he went so far as to link his
own essays in prose criticism to the collapse of his health. His letters, however, show that he didn’t consider this a necessarily universal
principle: he praises Marina Warner for being able to produce highly
imaginative writing and sophisticated criticism without the one crucifying the
other.
Academics, too, can be frosty about the
intellectual authority of creative writers – particularly in the university
system. Maybe some writers have themselves to blame for provoking that kind of
response; I’ve heard of a few such cases, though never encountered it first
hand. But such hostility from academics can also suggest a failure to
appreciate that imaginative writing is intellectual exploration by means of embodiment – that is, experiential
immersion – rather than argument; through
‘the blood & vital juices of our minds’, as Wordsworth has it, rather than
reasoning alone.
In my position, these issues remain live. But
although I bear Hughes’s warning in mind (which in turn echoes Robert Graves) about
staying true to whatever my calling is, poetry doesn’t so readily separate from
criticism, for me. The role of poet-critic is not a new one, after all – and
you don’t have to look far to find contemporary examples. Take Michael Donaghy,
for instance: besides his poetry, the posthumous collection of his prose in The Shape of the Dance opens a
channel to the critical thinking of one of the most skilled and influential of recent
poets. In a fundamental sense, all writers have
to be critics, insofar as they are readers interested in the making of
language, and what language makes – with the need to articulate that process
(however indirectly) for themselves.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge is one of the great
poet-critics – and human enough to have his doubts about the effects of such a
mix: at one point he worried that poetry and philosophy might cancel each other
out, and leave him an ‘inert mass’. Writing a doctoral thesis on Coleridge,
with his fears of this kind right in front of me, it crossed my mind that I,
too, was taking a risk. But I soon realised that for me, writing the thesis and
writing poems were intimately and inextricably connected, and shared a common
root and impulse. Studying Coleridge for A-Level, aged 17-18, woke me up to
what poetry could be with a wave of exultation: concentrating my reading, my
sense of identity, and my desire to create in ways that I still find startling.
When I came to write my thesis, twelve years later, it was as much an attempt
to understand and articulate that lasting excitement, as much as anything else.
Having things to say about Coleridge that I felt on my nerves as well as my
mind, fuelled a desire to intervene in the vast conversation prompted by his
works – whether scholarly or otherwise. In the early years of my doctorate, The Body in the Well was published, and
I worked as a scriptwriter for the BBC. There was, to my relief, no cancelling
out.
There’s no doubt that in the later stages
of the thesis, and its transformation into Coleridge
and the Daemonic Imagination, I wrote more about poetry than poetry itself. Amongst other things, however, that
process involved the working-through of my own poetics – and I wrote it as a
book for poets, and interested readers of all kinds, as much as for the academy;
to operate imaginatively, as well as analytically; as writing, as well as
scholarship.
Now, as I concentrate on my own poems
again, I would describe my activity as a poet and a critic – or, if you will, a
writer and academic – as a continuum: the modulation of the same desire to
speak and to know.