• 10 months ago
Transcript
00:00 I am Pragya and I bring to you excerpts from the ear-opener issue of Outlook titled Poetry as Evidence.
00:07 Poetry must be brought before general public. Poetry offers that scope that we get affected and we feel.
00:14 Poetry expands the scope of storytelling. It is evidence of others' lives, of our times.
00:21 We remain grateful to Amar Kanwar who worked with us and edited this issue,
00:25 and to everyone who gave us their poems and images, to the reporters who gathered the poems,
00:31 to the designers and researchers who made it all possible.
00:35 In the introduction to the ear-opener issue, guest editor Amar Kanwar writes,
00:40 "Poetry as evidence. In an AI-controlled, digitally manipulated, and market-choreographed landscape of ideas,
00:49 desires and feelings, who have I become now? Do I think what I think? Or perhaps it's not me anymore?
00:57 How to understand my inner self and its relationship with the outside world?
01:03 How to understand the day's events, the news of the city, the region, or of nations?
01:09 How to relate to the multiple disappearances of people, communities, languages, natural systems, ways of living and being?
01:18 Could the poet's mind and words help us come together and find other ways of thinking,
01:24 relocating senses that have become attenuated in order to comprehend again?
01:30 Could we subvert the mind game and reimagine the news?
01:34 What if we could imagine the morning newspaper written and conceived by poets,
01:40 rather than corporations, governments, political parties, and ideological projects?"
01:46 For the January 2024 special issue, I offered three sets of propositions to Outlook's team of researchers and reporters.
01:55 This issue consists of selections of poetry that respond to these propositions.
02:01 First, imagine the simultaneous viewing of multiple time.
02:06 Of obvious time, hyper-time, orphaned time.
02:10 Time that unexpectedly shoot off from beneath your feet and races away.
02:16 Time parallel and coexisting in two geographical memories.
02:21 One, sinking roots, the other, a smoke wisp attached to and forever trailing a body.
02:28 Imagine time that is filled with as many silences as with words.
02:34 Imagine the slow gathering together of time.
02:38 Moment by moment, evidence by evidence.
02:42 Imagine the formal presentation of poetry as evidence in a future war crimes tribunal.
02:48 Second, imagine the morning newspaper, headlines and couplets, black and white, but in verse.
02:55 Imagine that constellation of words, truth as told by the stars and birds,
03:01 translated by bread and transcribed by daughters.
03:06 Imagine the clash of silences, the sting and honey of the bee and the lamenting obituary.
03:13 Imagine night as day and day as night, the moon as witness and the sun a doctor.
03:20 Nurses as editors, poets as reporters and the village balladeer, the week's ombudsman.
03:28 Imagine traitors as lovers, outlaws as fathers and renegades as poets.
03:35 Imagine talking curtains and storytellers' tiffin boxes.
03:40 Imagine column becoming cups and rows becoming dogs.
03:44 Mountain dogs, river dogs, factory dogs, gutter dogs, tree dogs and kitchen sink dogs.
03:51 Imagine the color of that grey.
03:53 Imagine the formal presentation of poetry as news of the day.
03:58 Third, understanding how change takes place allows us to foresee, assess and even predict.
04:05 Can poetry help us understand the passage of time?
04:10 And if that were possible, even for one unique moment, could we then catch a glimpse of the future?
04:18 For this and more, read the year opener issue of Outlook.

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