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'Sydney Spleen takes Baudelaire’s concept of spleen as melancholy with no apparent cause, characterised by a disgust with everything – and combines it with a contemporary irony so as to articulate the causes of our doom and gloom: corporate rapacity, climate change, disaster capitalism, the plague, neo-colonialism, fake news, fascism, and how to raise kids in a world fast becoming obsolete. The backdrop of this collection of poems is sparkling Sydney and its screens, through which the poet mainlines global angst. Fitch’s ‘spleen poems’, with their radical use of form and tone, are as much an aesthetic experience as a literary one – translation becomes homage, satire, song; essays become lyrics, rants, dreams. What is a poem when ‘no one believes in the future now anyway’? Nor is the collection lacking in humour. Sydney Spleen mocks everything in its crystal glass, yet still finds real moments of connection to cherish.'
Source : publisher's blurb
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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Ben Hession Reviews Sydney Spleen by Toby Fitch
2022
single work
review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , no. 28 2022;
— Review of Sydney Spleen 2021 selected work poetry'Sydney Spleen is the latest collection of poetry by Toby Fitch. Its title alludes to Charles Baudelaire’s volume of prose poems, Paris Spleen. Whilst for Baudelaire, there was a desire to import the expansiveness and consequent wider palette of nuances of prose into poetry, Fitch, in his collection, utilizes a mix of styles, including prosaic lyricism and a continuation of his experimentations with form and language as seen in Rawshock and Bloomin Notions of Other and Beau. The latter, in turn, owe more to the likes of Mallarmé, with their intrinsic strategies of deconstruction being explored in Fitch’s essay, Aussi/Or. The poems in Sydney Spleen are an acutely intimate response to a period of personal challenges for Fitch, with many focusing on the effects of a city wracked by the concurrent disasters of the 2019-2020 bushfires, the COVID-19 pandemic. Fitch writes with disarming candour, and his skill in intimating his experiences capture the unease that for many permeates the recent cultural memory.' (Introduction)
-
Unhappiness and Related Fields
2022
single work
review
— Appears in: Meanjin , Autumn vol. 81 no. 1 2022; Meanjin Online 2022;
— Review of Trigger Warning 2021 selected work poetry ; Cities 2021 selected work poetry ; An Academic’s Tour of Hell 2021 selected work poetry ; Take Care 2021 selected work poetry ; Sydney Spleen 2021 selected work poetry -
Warnings, Consequences and Laments
2021
single work
review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 28 August 2021; (p. 18)
— Review of Sydney Spleen 2021 selected work poetry ; Whisper Songs 2021 selected work poetry ; Trigger Warning 2021 selected work poetry -
‘A Creepy Little Walk’ : Toby Fitch’s Lyricism and Versatility
2021
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 435 2021; (p. 45)
— Review of Sydney Spleen 2021 selected work poetry'Sydney-based poet and editor Toby Fitch has spent much of the last decade traversing the field of radical French modernist poets, especially Arthur Rimbaud and Guillaume Apollinaire. That engagement ignited Fitch’s imagination. He began inverting, recombining, mistranslating, and mimicking their techniques in his own poetry. In his new collection, Sydney Spleen, he has made a sophisticated, fresh move that enhances his signature playfulness and tongue-in-cheek poetic antics.' (Introduction)
-
‘A Creepy Little Walk’ : Toby Fitch’s Lyricism and Versatility
2021
single work
review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , September no. 435 2021; (p. 45)
— Review of Sydney Spleen 2021 selected work poetry'Sydney-based poet and editor Toby Fitch has spent much of the last decade traversing the field of radical French modernist poets, especially Arthur Rimbaud and Guillaume Apollinaire. That engagement ignited Fitch’s imagination. He began inverting, recombining, mistranslating, and mimicking their techniques in his own poetry. In his new collection, Sydney Spleen, he has made a sophisticated, fresh move that enhances his signature playfulness and tongue-in-cheek poetic antics.' (Introduction)
-
Warnings, Consequences and Laments
2021
single work
review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 28 August 2021; (p. 18)
— Review of Sydney Spleen 2021 selected work poetry ; Whisper Songs 2021 selected work poetry ; Trigger Warning 2021 selected work poetry -
Unhappiness and Related Fields
2022
single work
review
— Appears in: Meanjin , Autumn vol. 81 no. 1 2022; Meanjin Online 2022;
— Review of Trigger Warning 2021 selected work poetry ; Cities 2021 selected work poetry ; An Academic’s Tour of Hell 2021 selected work poetry ; Take Care 2021 selected work poetry ; Sydney Spleen 2021 selected work poetry -
Ben Hession Reviews Sydney Spleen by Toby Fitch
2022
single work
review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , no. 28 2022;
— Review of Sydney Spleen 2021 selected work poetry'Sydney Spleen is the latest collection of poetry by Toby Fitch. Its title alludes to Charles Baudelaire’s volume of prose poems, Paris Spleen. Whilst for Baudelaire, there was a desire to import the expansiveness and consequent wider palette of nuances of prose into poetry, Fitch, in his collection, utilizes a mix of styles, including prosaic lyricism and a continuation of his experimentations with form and language as seen in Rawshock and Bloomin Notions of Other and Beau. The latter, in turn, owe more to the likes of Mallarmé, with their intrinsic strategies of deconstruction being explored in Fitch’s essay, Aussi/Or. The poems in Sydney Spleen are an acutely intimate response to a period of personal challenges for Fitch, with many focusing on the effects of a city wracked by the concurrent disasters of the 2019-2020 bushfires, the COVID-19 pandemic. Fitch writes with disarming candour, and his skill in intimating his experiences capture the unease that for many permeates the recent cultural memory.' (Introduction)