Lock, Fran

Fran Lock (c) Fran Lock

Fran Lock is an author and a some-time itinerant dog whisperer living in Kent, England. She has published numerous chapbooks and thirteen poetry collections, most recently the critically acclaimed collection “Hyena! Jackal! Dog!” (Pamenar Press 2021), “Hyena!” (Poetry Bus Press 2023), which was shortlisted for the 2023 T.S. Eliot Prize. Fran is Commissioning Editor and maid of all work at the radical arts and culture cooperative Culture Matters, where she edited the mammoth anthology “The Cry of the Poor” (2021). She is also a member of the new Editorial Advisory Board for the Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry and teaches online at the Poetry School.

Festival Content

POETRY TALK: KAYO CHINGONYI & FRAN LOCK

repair was a form of resistance

Atelierraum | 7/5 Tickets

This conversation brings together two of the most celebrated and headstrong poets of today’s British poetry scene:

Fran Lock (born 1982) writes political poems in an emphatic manner that start with the body and read like condensed essays where thoughts collide. One of them is a late-capitalist diatribe dedicated to the late poet Sean Bonney who died young as a form of solace; it expresses hope that somewhere a language exists “for the conditions and the thoughtless finitude of fear.” In another text, Lock considers the possibility of “repair” while also posing existential questions about writing itself: “if writing moves me neither further from my pain nor closer to my death, then where and when is this writing but inside of pain, inside of death?”

The early poems of Kayo Chingonyi (born 1987 in Mufulira, Zambia) recount coming of age in a satellite town north of London and an initiation in the absence of the “original culture” (as the author notes). He speaks of the influence of music (“The songs we wanted to hear/ lived on tapes of pirate radio sets/ or in the first-hand crackle of vinyl”), the color of James Brown’s scream, and his beginnings as a “garage emcee” until the emergence of Eminem ruined everything. The more recent poems move from Zambia to Leeds to London, outlining a genealogy of his family that stretches back to his pregnant great-grandmother. At the same time, a short, very intimate sonnet cycle recounts the history of the emergence and spread of the AIDS virus, which the poets’ parents fell victim to.

 

Lock, FranChingonyi, Kayo

WRITING CLASS

You can´t poet this

Kuppelhalle | 9/7 € Tickets

Writing Class addresses classism, which over the last decade has been debated in the German-language literary discourse, especially in relation to various forms of autobiographical essays. For the first time, we are bringing a number of poetic positions on this debate, which has also been held in international poetry for years, to the big stage. Four poets have been invited who approach this topic in very different manners:

Dianišková, VeronikaLock, FranPetrović, RadmilaXiaoqiong, Zheng