Memaparkan catatan dengan label Liz Hall-Downs. Papar semua catatan
Memaparkan catatan dengan label Liz Hall-Downs. Papar semua catatan

Jumaat, 30 Ogos 2019

Moonlight Musings
















How exciting to see the new ‘interactive’ Moonlight Musings hosted by Magaly get such a great response. There will be more!

Meanwhile this is the regular version, where we invite discussion in the comments but don’t ask you to write any creative pieces on the topic (unless you're overwhelmingly inspired to do so – in which case you might care to share them at a future Poetry Pantry).


Today I am wondering: 

What Name Are You Making?

As a writer, do you use your own name?

Or – in some cases – which of your own names do you use?

Do you write under your real name or a pseudonym?

Does every writer face the decision whether to use their own name or a pen-name? Or does it never occur to some of us to be known as anything but ourselves?

I was still a schoolgirl when I started to speak about choosing ’writer’ (or, even more daringly, ‘poet’) as a profession. Some people asked if I was going to take a pen-name. The question surprised me; I hadn’t thought of such a possibility. When I did, I quickly decided that I wanted to stand behind what I wrote, and that seemed to mean using my own name. I wanted to write so honestly that I could face being called on it. (Whilst understanding that truth and fact are not necessarily the same, and aiming for authenticity in my fictions too.)

But I didn’t like the surname I was born with. Luckily, my writings as Rosemary Robinson appeared only in school magazines. By the time I wanted to go more public, I had a married name: Nissen. 

So I did use my own name, legally mine, just not the one I was born with. (I felt a bit sorry sometimes that schoolteachers and classmates who knew me as Rosemary Robinson would never find out I had fulfilled the writerly promise they once saw in me – but not sorry enough to use the old name.)

That was all right until, many years later, I divorced and remarried.

The complications of changing one's name

In a women writers’ group recently, someone asked about the wisdom of hyphenating her name after a forthcoming marriage – her name as a writer, that is – or sticking to a byline she’s already known by, and using different names in public and private. 

‘Stick with what you’re known as,’ most people advised. It did seem like good advice. I’d received the same myself, after remarrying. 

‘You’ve already got a name,’ my poet friends said, meaning a name as a poet. ‘You’d be mad to change it.’ Not only had I been widely published in magazines and anthologies as Rosemary Nissen, and established the name as a performance poet, I’d had two books published with that authorship.

I considered the distinguished Australian poet Judith Rodriguez. As a young woman she started being published, to some notice, as Judith Green. On marrying she changed her name both privately and professionally to Rodriguez, and went on to great acclaim. When she and her first husband divorced after many years of marriage and she married fellow-poet Thomas Shapcott, she continued to write and publish as Judith Rodriguez. I'm sure it never occurred to her to do anything else. It was a very big name by then, very well established.

On the other hand, the younger poet Liz Hall, who had also made a name for herself (if not quite to the same degree) hyphenated her name on marrying and became Liz Hall-Downs. Similarly, poet and children's author Paty Marshall, well-known by that name, on marrying a second time became Paty Marshall-Stace. It seemed to work for them.

Andrew Wade and I moved interstate soon after marrying, where no-one had heard of me as a poet, and everyone knew us as Mr and Mrs Wade. Hyphenating seemed the way to go.

It wasn’t the best idea, professionally. Melbourne people still thought of me as Rosemary Nissen and Murwillumbah people knew me as Rosemary Wade. And, having moved from a major city with a thriving poetry scene to a small country town with none, I embraced the online poetry world instead. That didn’t help. 

I almost disappeared! When I sometimes reconnected with people I’d known previously in literary circles (other than close friends) it wasn’t uncommon for them to say, 

‘Oh – Rosemary NISSEN! NOW I get it.’

Gradually I made a name as Rosemary Nissen-Wade, and there are people now who understand that Rosemary Nissen and Rosemary Nissen-Wade are the same. But it’s taken two decades! Meanwhile some editors who knew me back when, and also know I’m now Rosemary Nissen-Wade, have still published me as Rosemary Nissen (without consultation). Others, who didn’t know me before, have put my name in the index under W instead of N, though I thought the hyphen would have ensured otherwise (so again I disappear).

Perhaps I should have expected it. My husband Andrew was christened Ewart Wade, by which name he was known as a film editor and as a writer and publisher for the Australian film industry. He told me he'd hated his first name and got sick of people spelling it Uitt or pronouncing it ee-wart, so he changed it legally to Andrew (because he had a girlfriend at the time whose children said he looked like an Andrew) – and promptly disappeared for many people. Later, as Andrew E Wade, he was a journalist and a children's author. Because of the name change, it was as if there were not only two different careers but two different people having them.


Embracing the Invention

My friend Helen Patrice (fiction writer, non-fiction writer and poet) published as Helen Sargeant when she was young and single. It was her name, but she didn’t like the surname much. She didn’t particularly care for her married surname either, and it’s lucky she never used it for her writing because that marriage ended early. During the longish period before marrying a second time, she decided to select her own surname. She chose Patrice because (a) many women were choosing women’s names as surnames at the time, and (b) she fell in love with the name after seeing a newsreader whose first name was Patrice. She says she ‘test drove it’ for a couple of years, then adopted it legally.

I asked her what were the ramifications. She said:

‘Basically, having to start over. People not connecting the two identities despite it being no secret. Having someone tell me that I wrote like Helen Sargeant, who suddenly stopped writing, probably died.’ 

Like me, she has now forged her writing identity under the new name – and it’s on the covers of her published books – but it took a while.

Prominent spoken-word poet Tug Dumbly must have taken that name early in his career. In his recent book Son Songs, he describes that name as ‘the pseudonym that swallowed the man formerly – and in some parts still – known as Geoffrey Robert Forrester (which is a better literary name)'. Is there a tinge of regret inside those brackets? Tug Dumbly must have seemed like a great name for a performance poet when he adopted it, and he probably didn’t realise how respected a poet he would become. But he’s earned the acclaim and it’d be crazy to change such a well-known name now.

Blogging names

What of those who use pseudonyms on their blogs? Many who do so still let it be known who they really are. Others have always been more firmly anonymous, or at least pseudonymous, not revealing any personal details. 

I have the impression that most use their real names when they publish a book. I can think of several from this community who have done so.

In conclusion

Yes, I suppose it all comes down to what we intend to do with our writings, both in the short and long term. Yet how can we know from the beginning where this path will take us? 

If we want our work to be remembered, does it even matter what name it is remembered by? It’s Alice in Wonderland we love, whether it’s by Lewis Carol or the Rev Charles Dodgson. We don’t need to know the full name of Dr Seuss to be able to quote from his books. Would John Le CarrĂ©’s or George Orwell’s works chill us any more or any less under their authors' real names? There are many such examples. Pablo Neruda, Stendahl, Voltaire, Henry Handel Richardson, Mark Twain, James Herriot, Bob Dylan….

Meanwhile, a new performance venue in my little country town is flourishing. As a regular, I am becoming known simply as Rosemary. People who know me only from that context greet me by name in the street. Rosemary the poet. I love it!

And you?

What name are you making for yourself? What if your writing should achieve lasting fame – who would you want to be remembered as?


Note: I use myself and people I know here because I am familiar with those particular details. (Except for Paty Marshall-Stace, they have all previously been featured at Poets United.)

Jumaat, 8 Mac 2019

Thought Provokers

The #MeToo Collection 
by Liz Hall-Downs






















I featured an old friend and colleague, poet and muso Liz Hall-Downs in 'I Wish I'd Written This' back in January 2012: here, along with background stuff about herself and her career. 

Though when I say 'old', she's  quite a lot younger than me. Then again, age has little to do with the kinds of female experiences which have come to be known by the recent label #MeToo. Neither have such experiences always been so recent as the label. Has there ever been a time when these things have not happened?

No, I don't mean all men are misogynists and rapists, and I don't mean all women have experienced ... hmmm, hang on, I think all women have experienced some form of misogyny, some instance of feeling threatened, even if not the worst violence. That is rather the point of the #MeToo movement – that until women started speaking up, men (the good ones) didn't understand how all-pervasive the problem is.

OK, OK, but where's the poem? (do I hear you ask?)

Liz had an old poem, suddenly topical, accepted for publication recently. When she first wrote it and others like it in the nineteen-eighties, it was hard for them to find a market. This recent acceptance had her realise that she has a collection of pieces from that era which fit right into the #MeToo awareness. So she has gathered them together on her blog, along with brief notes about each.

The photo I've used of Liz in performance, is her current facebook profile pic. It seemed especially apt for this post, with that slogan!

I think Liz is an amazing poet; also she pulls no punches. It's quite a feat to make such searing, brilliant poetry out of the experiences she chronicles. But she's not glossing over anything. These pieces are raw, indignant – and thoughtful. They include some spot-on satirical depictions of male predators. Sadly, they have not dated.

Have a look and see. Read one or two, or all 20. Here.

Liz has generously made available scanned copies of her books for free download from the same site. Find the links among those at the top of the page. (There is also a Paypal link if you'd like to reward her with a donation, but that's harder to find. Click on WRITING ABOUT DISABILITY.)

Of course you have already noticed that I chose to post this on International Women's Day. It seemed appropriate! By another piece of serendipity, it's also Liz's birthday.


Material shared in “Thought Provokers’ is presented for study and review. Poems, photos and other writings remain the property of the copyright owners, usually their authors.

Jumaat, 6 Januari 2012

I Wish I'd Written This

For Shelton, who always embraced ‘the seeming wonder of being alive’

and it’s comforting to know that though you’re gone
you’re never gone, have left the flowered
words on pages so even those not yet born
can know you – larrikin wit, friend to dips
and artists, patron of prisoners,
forgiver of sins

shelley, in my memory you’re always laughing,
your arm around my shoulders at the leinster arms,
eyes alight, crooning, ‘lizzie hall, have ya written us
any more of those wunnerful poems, girl?’
the more ‘respected’ elders might grope a young
poet’s tits, but all you ever cared for were the words
– their best order, exactitude, capacity for beauty –
and these you made in defiance of all
the sordid ugliness of the world

and there were wild parties at mountain view
me, dosed with tinctures brewed by your muse
and that filthy, filthy nyandi
the laughter and bullshit that accompanied
a case or three of VB, cold afternoons
by a woodstove as the wind whipped
all around, while you pulled books from shelves
to drop in my eager hands, never large enough
to hold all that self-taught wisdom at your command

‘to the sauna!’ you’d demand
and we’d rise, grab a beer
and shed our clothes, make poems
of the sweat and cedar boards
then run redskinned to the herb garden
to plunge into the old cold water bathtub,
a baptism

always, to me, you’ll be fitzroy’s king
barroom bard of underdog and crim,
of murdered girl, koori pride, throwing
your words to the street and the wind
for the price of a beer and a smile
while frontbar punters crowed ‘shelley,
mate, another poem, stay awhile’

and you do, to we who knew you,
stay, unforgettable, your tousled,
addled head, that childlike joy of living
spread across your gorgeous, defiant mug ...

i’ll bet you’re still on the lookout for adventures,
booze or drug, still spinning tall stories
to those mates you’d thought long lost, for you
will never be gone, and i expect to meet again
in poet’s heaven, (where you’ll be propping up
the bar, no doubt, and singing satchmo-style
to fallen angels), anon.

Liz Hall-Downs

dips = pickpockets
the leinster arms = a hotel in Collingwood, an inner city suburb of Melbourne. (In the USA — and, I gather, in the UK too — poetry performance venues tend to be coffee shops. In Australia they tend to be pubs.)
nyandi = koori word for marijuana
VB = Victoria Bitter beer
fitzroy = an inner city suburb of Melbourne
koori = what Aboriginal Australians in areas of south-eastern Australia call themselves
mug = face

This elegy is about a mutual friend, the much loved Australian poet Shelton Lea, affectionately known as Shelley to his friends. (Expect more about him in a future post.) She has brought him to life! The poem appears in the anthology All Travellers We: Poems for Shelton Lea (Melbourne, Eaglemont Press, 2008), available from Black Pepper Publishing and from Readings.


I first knew Liz as the young Melbourne performance poet recollected along with Shelley in the above poem. She wore lacey black mittens and carried a slim cane. ‘How elegant,’ I thought, ‘What individuality!’ — not realising the reason for them.

Her latest collection of poetry, My Arthritic Heart, was published in 2006. A review, which you can read in full here, says: 'The preface to My Arthritic Heart calls the book an autobiographical account of the poet's struggles with Rheumatoid Arthritis, but the poetry, like all good poetry, transcends its subject.' 

Yes, it’s wonderful stuff — searingly honest, powerful, even beautiful. Her own eloquent words on the book and its genesis, plus several of the poems, are here. At present there is one second-hand copy of the book available at Abe Books for whoever is first to grab it, and it is still available from the PostPressed website. 

I’m glad to know from Liz herself that she finds life good these days. She and her husband Kim Downs (writer, musician, technician and sculptor) live on a bush property in sub-tropical south-east Queensland and look after a number of native birds, particularly various kinds of parrots. Liz and Kim are both musicians. They were formerly two members of the Cathouse Creek trio; more recently have become SWAMPFISH, a roots-blues-alt-country duo. 


Online biographies say:

Liz Hall-Downs has been reading and performing poetry in public and publishing in journals, since 1983. She has been a featured reader at countless venues across Australia, has toured the USA, and has had work published and broadcast on TV and radio in both countries. As well as poetry, Liz writes fiction and essays and has worked as a community artist, writer-in-residence, editor and singer. 

To which I add: She holds the degrees of BA in Professional Writing and Literature and M. Phil. in Creative Writing from the University of Queensland. Currently, instead of poetry, she is working on a novel and enjoying her music and gardening.

Her earlier publications include Fit of Passion, book & cassette, with Kim Downs, 1997; Blackfellas Whitefellas Wetlands with B.R. Dionysius & Samuel Wagan Watson, published online 1996, released on audio CD, 2000; and Girl With Green Hair (still available from) Papyrus Publishing, 2000. (Click on poetry on the lefthand side.)

You can read more of her poems online at: 

http://www.othervoicespoetry.org/vol15/lhall-downs/index.html

http://www.thedrunkenboat.com/fitofpassion.html



Poems and photos used in ‘I Wish I’d Written This’ remain the property of the copyright holders (usually their authors).




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