with Faye Latham. Erasure, imposter syndrome, and Tipp-Ex.

First broadcast 3 March 2023

Faye Latham⁠ is a writer, visual poet and rock climber based in the Lake District. In January 2020 she was awarded the ⁠Literature Wales Bursary for Writers Under 25⁠ to support the development of her poetry, which resulted in her work being published in journals and magazines including ⁠UKClimbing.com⁠, Lumin Journal, The CTC Rewilding Anthology, and the Cambridge Literary Review. In 2021 she was awarded a grant with the Society of Authors and her pamphlet Ruin/Nation was highly commended in the ⁠Poetry Wales Pamphlet Competition⁠. Faye is also one of the organisers of ⁠Kendal Mountain Festival⁠

Her first ⁠poetry collection is called British Mountaineers ⁠and in it she uses a style called erasure poetry. This involves taking writing composed by someone else and erasing large parts of it so that what remains creates a poem. British Mountaineers was originally a text by the ⁠mountaineer Frank Smythe, who was a well-known climber active in the 1920s and 1930s⁠. Faye and I talk about how creating something new from Smythe’s text felt to her like a process of ‘unfinishing’ it – of showing that the tale he told was not the end of the story. 

We also talk about how Faye turned to poetry partly because she found it hard to finish novels, and about a possible erasure project for the future that has an environmental focus. At the end of the episode we get on to chatting about different forms of erasure/ unfinishing, such as the toppled statue of Edward Colston, and the Banksy artwork (now called Love is in the bin) that involved one of his paintings being shredded just after being sold. 

Links of interest:

British Mountaineers: ⁠https://www.littlepeak.co.uk/catalogue/british-mountaineers-international-orders_73/⁠

Frank Smythe: ⁠https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Smythe ⁠

Sarah J Sloat's book Hotel Almighty: ⁠https://www.sarahjsloat.com/publications/

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