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The Citizen | Bloodaxe Books
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Roy Fisher

The Citizen

and the Making of 'City'

Roy Fisher

EDITED BY PETER ROBINSON

Publication Date : 24 Feb 2022

ISBN: 9781780375960

Pages: 65
Size :216 x 138mm
Rights: World

When Roy Fisher told Gael Turnbull in 1960 that he had ‘started writing like mad’ and produced ‘a sententious prose book, about the length of a short novel, called the Citizen’ he was registering a sea change in his work, finding a mode to express his almost visceral connection with Birmingham in a way that drew on his sensibility and a wealth of materials that could last a lifetime. Much later in his career he would say that ‘Birmingham is what I think with.’ This ‘mélange of evocation, maundering, imagining, fiction and autobiography,’ as he called it, was written ‘so as to be able to have a look at myself & see what I think.’

All that was known of this work before Fisher’s death in 2017 is that fragments from it had been used as the prose sections in City and that – never otherwise published – it was thought not to have survived. This proved not to be the case, and in The Citizen and the Making of City, Peter Robinson, the poet’s literary executor, has edited the breakthrough fragment and placed it in conjunction with the first 1961 published version of Fisher’s signature collage of poetry and prose, along with a never published longer manuscript of it found among the poet’s archive at the University of Sheffield, and some previously unpublished poems that were considered for inclusion during the complex evolution of the work that Robinson tracks in his introduction.

By offering in a single publication the definitive 1969 text, two variant versions of City, its prose origins in The Citizen and continuation in Then Hallucinations, as well as some of the poetry left behind, this landmark publication offers a unique insight into Roy Fisher's most emblematic work. It is supplemented with an anthology of Fisher’s own comments on City and a secondary bibliography of criticism on his profound response to changes wrought upon England’s industrial cities in the middle of the 20th century.

‘Robinson has given us a book well worth studying – and not just for what it tells us about Fisher.’ – William Wootten, Literary Review, on The Citizen

'The Citizen and the Making of 'City' adds significantly to the growing body of material on Roy Fisher’s poetry in which Peter Robinson has been a major presence. It is to be hoped that the opening of the archive at Sheffield University will encourage more scholars to engage critically with Fisher’s work.' - Simon Collings, The Fortnightly Review

‘This new publication from Bloodaxe offers us a clear sense of the history and background to the writing of 'City', the poem that put Fisher’s work firmly in the frame of post-war contemporary British poetry: permanency and movement are central to a life’s work-in-progress.’ – Ian Brinton, Litter magazine, on The Citizen

‘This landmark publication, edited with an extended introduction by Peter Robinson, offers in a single volume the definitive 1969 text of Roy Fisher’s 'City', alongside two variant versions of it, its prose origins in The Citizen and its continuation in the form of ‘City II’ under the heading ‘Then Hallucinations’… Fisher’s descriptive powers come to fore when he writes about the industrial landscape of the city: pithead gears, dyeworks, railway sidings, goods yards, gasworks and factory districts that are deserted after five o’clock in the evening. You can almost smell the coal in the coal yards.’ – Neil Leadbeater, Write Out Loud

'... I find these poems a frail, exposed but powerfully achieved vision of civic grandeur at large among its parks, corner shops, and ruins, and a no less powerfully reimagined vision of the modern poet, lurking down the nearest side-street, 'Cold like a fish, and comfortless and true'.' - David Wheatley, Poetry Birmingham Literary Journal, on the versions of 'City' in The Citizen and the making of 'City'

'This new volume from Bloodaxe does so much to burnish the stature of ‘City’, presenting us with potential avenues that Fisher didn’t explore, tracing a journey from the poem’s first iteration as an extended prose narrative of just under a hundred pages through uncollected lyrics and no fewer than three different texts (including a typescript) of the suite we now know well, culminating in the authoritative edition published as part of Fisher’s 1968 collection.' -  Jonathan Gharraie, Annulet: A Journal of Poetics, on The Citizen and the making of 'City'

'Peter Robinson’s book allows us to view the complete process of both composition and assemblage of what has been called Fisher’s ‘small epic’, the early masterpiece that is City, for this we are in Peter Robinson’s debt.' - Ian Pople, The High Window, on The Citizen and the making of 'City'

'City's subject matter is urban, the technique a blend of the surreal, expressionist, realist and cubist, the whole thing almost cinematic in its abrupt transitions and dislocations… Most of the lineaments of Fisher's mature work are present in City…a remarkable achievement for a writer in his twenties. He sets out to write about an actual city but to "dissolve" its particulars and make them strange, until it becomes as much an inner perceptual field as a post-industrial Midlands wasteland… 'There is no poet alive whose work has challenged or interested me more.' – August Kleinzahler

'Fisher stands outside, or alongside, whatever else is happening, an English late modernist whose experiments tend to come off. He is a poet of the city – his native Birmingham, which he describes as "what I think with". He is a redeemer of the ordinary, often a great artist of the visible… His range is large: he suits both extreme brevity and book-length exploration; his seeming improvisations have a way of turning into architecture. The best place to start is The Long and the Short of It. It might look and sound like nothing on earth at first, but then it becomes indispensable.' – Sean O'Brien, The Guardian

Roy Fisher: The Long and the Short of It

Roy Fisher reads a selection of poems from The Long and the Short of It: ‘The Thing About Joe Sullivan’ (from 1965), ‘The ‘Entertainment of War’ (1957), 'The Nation’ (1984), ’Talking to Cameras’ (1991), ‘Birmingham River’ (1991), ‘For Realism’ (1965) and ‘It Is Writing’ (1974). Pamela Robertson-Pearce filmed him at his home in Earl Sterndale, Derbyshire, in October 2008. The audio of Fisher playing jazz piano is from Tom Pickard’s film, Birmingham’s What I Think With (Pallion Productions, 1991). This film is from the DVD-anthology In Person: World Poets, filmed & edited by Pamela Robertson-Pearce & Neil Astley (Bloodaxe Books, 2017).
 

Ireland & EU: Click here to order from Books Upstairs in Dublin

USA: Click here to order from Indiebound or Bookshop.org

  

BOOKS BY Roy Fisher

Slakki

Roy Fisher

Slakki

New & Neglected Poems

Publication Date : 20 Oct 2016

Read More   amazon.co.uk
Standard Midland

Roy Fisher

Standard Midland

Publication Date : 23 Jun 2010

Read More   amazon.co.uk
The Long and the Short of It (new edition)

Roy Fisher

The Long and the Short of It (new edition)

Poems 1955-2010

Publication Date : 25 Oct 2012

Read More   amazon.co.uk

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Roy Fisher's The Citizen discussed on BBC Radio 3

Roy Fisher's The Citizen discussed on BBC Radio 3

The late Roy Fisher's recently-discovered prose work The Citizen discussed by Naush Sabah in her piece on Birmingham for BBC Radio 3's The Essay. Plus reviews.

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