Om A Handwritten Modern Classic
Gertrude Stein in her 1926 lecture on Composition as Explanation wrote: 'the creator of the new composition in the arts is an outlaw, until [s]he is a classic ... In the tradition of Gertrude Stein, Finola Moorhead set about writing "A Handwritten Modern Classic" in 1977. The result is musings and criticisms on protestors clashing with police over freeways, political change, conservatism, Malcolm Fraser, what love can do for you, and whether the old hate the young. With discussions on the politics of suicide and unshaven armpits, one of Australia's most intriguing experimental writers has set her thoughts to writing, with mention of such famed writers as Socrates and Jane Austen, Coleridge and Tolstoy, as well as the battles between romanticism and jingoism in Australian writing. Written -- by hand -- in the tradition of European and American manifestos, this document challenges readers and writers alike not to fall for a romantic view of the world.
Vis mer