– Introduction –
suspension of conditioned reflexes, the essayist finds relief in identification with terrain, some elective topography capable of bearing the weight of the metaphor that must be imposed upon it. Vision is out there and we will walk, hobble, swim or crawl, to find it. The special place might, for Partou Zia, be a flint field at the end of the land. A soft-focus garden running down to the Thames for Joanna Kavenna. A busy urban road for Gabriel Josipovici. An aircraft coming down on a motorway embankment for Anakana Schofield. Geography is destiny, but ‘reality’ is a tight bone cage: the cell of the skull from which consoling sets are conjured. The writer’s task is to recognise the place that is writing you; triggering the voices, giving you permission to continue.
I began my own long and frustrating engagement with London by quoting from A Vision by W. B. Yeats. And I’ve never, in more than forty years, found good reason to go beyond that. ‘The living can assist the imagination of the dead.’ We are ventriloquised, confirmed in our fantasies. This is what we must do and we are doing it. ‘To drift into the poetic is in itself work,’ Zia says. Kavenna shares my belief that writing is rewriting. We receive and record the stories that press in upon us, across the boundaries of sleep and mortality. ‘I was troubled by bad dreams and these had an intensely tactile and auditory quality, and often seeped into the ensuing day, like a miasma. In my dreams the dead were alive.’ It is not Kavenna talking to us, it is ix