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Performance Poetry and Counter-Public Spheres: Geoff Goodfellow and Working-Class Voices
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Morrisson, Mark (Author)
Title
Performance Poetry and Counter-Public Spheres: Geoff Goodfellow and Working-Class Voices
Abstract
This article explores the role of poetry in working-class counter-public spheres by examining the work of South Australian working-class performance poet Geoff Goodfellow. Goodfellow's performances at venues like construction sites, maximum security prisons, and pubs create a public space for groups of people usually seen as excluded from literary culture and from the institutions of the dominant public sphere. Goodfellow's readings allow for communal self-reflection and deliberation on such subjects as domestic violence, labour issues, racial questions, and other topics significant to the changing nature of working-class life and identity, and they have had an impact upon corporate and governmental policy in areas like prison reform and labour disputes. His performances suggest the need for working-class studies not only to examine literature by working-class writers, but also to explore issues of reception and performance, and to ask how this literature functions in the social contexts of its production.
Publication
Labour History
Issue
79
Pages
71-91
Date
2000
DOI
ISSN
0023-6942
Short Title
Performance Poetry and Counter-Public Spheres
Accessed
3/16/24, 4:29 PM
Library Catalog
JSTOR
Extra
Publisher: Australian Society for the Study of Labour History, Inc.
Notes
Citation
MORRISSON, Mark, 2000. Performance Poetry and Counter-Public Spheres: Geoff Goodfellow and Working-Class Voices. Labour History. Online. 2000. No. 79, p. 71–91. DOI 10.2307/27516730. [Accessed 16 March 2024].
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