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Jarkko
Laine:
Timeless time

Jarkko Laine
Photo
Irmeli Jung
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Pertti Lassila on Jarkko Laine's new poems
Names or cultural references suffice to convey meaning
to the reader: classics, movie stars, brand names, myths and Joe
Bloggs coexist in them. In this sense, Jarkko Laine's poems are
'cultural' and testify to a belief in a shared cultural reality
and in the existence of a shared civilisation. Furthermore, they
assert, in an Eliotian spirit, that the canon of 'great books' and
great works is still alive. In the manner of a learned humanist,
Laine is not afraid to appear pedantic but is willing to emphasise
his points with italics or footnotes whenever necessary.
Since
publishing his first collection of poems, Muovinen buddha
('The plastic Buddha', 1967) at the age of twenty, Laine has produced
a great deal of poetry and prose, short stories in particular. His
youthful first book was a hit because it imported elements of popular
culture and American Beat writings into Finnish poetry. Those were
new at the time, since the dominant style of the Sixties was still
one of polished and consciously aesthetic modernism.
After
his early countercultural 'underground' phase, Laine expanded the
thematics of his poetry and evolved a virtuosic command of linguistic
inventiveness. In his new collection, Jumala metsästää
öisin eli Jobin kirjaan meidän on aina palaaminen
('God hunts at night, or, we must always return to the Book of Job',
Otava, 2005), the first person or speaker of the poems is a literary
figure to whom reality often reveals itself through the medium of
literature. These poems rest on an optimistic view of the possibility
of connection between human beings across time and space. Culture
and art offer a means of both communication and comprehension of
reality.
The final
line in the poem 'Greek delights' 'I am a long way from home,
a reflection of my world' conveys a multiplicity of reference
in a small space. In a foreign country, the stranger is indeed a
reflection of his own world, but he also reflects everything he
experiences; ultimately, the subject's own world may just be a reflection.
The initial
scene of the poem 'Inside the hospital' is a patient's angiography.
By means of learned associations, the poem proceeds to questioning
the ability of language to depict things. The poem's worn-out imagery
and the patient's worn-out heart, seen by the physician as a shadow
image, enter into an ambiguous relationship.
The associative
possibilities contained in a single word can open up quite splendidly.
The poem 'Standing at the bar' deals with a familiar poetic theme,
the passage of time, the past in memory's present. With a couple
of words, 'government council', 'Bismarck', the seemingly conventional
text suddenly reveals a perspective from the historical past towards
the present. The era of Russian domination (1809-1917) and the time
when bourgeois women wore a bracelet named after the Iron Chancellor
Bismarck are connected to Laine's own generation's fundamental political
experience, the Vietnam War.
The collection
ends with a poem titled 'Job's story'. It is a lyrical interpretation
of one of Western literature's core works; as the subtitle of Laine's
book reminds us, anyone pondering the role and fate of man may sooner
or later find themselves poring over it.
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