Jas H. Duke

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Jas Heriot Duke (1939-1992) was a cult figure in the Australian performance poetry scene. He worked much of his life in Melbourne Board of Works and began writing poetry in 1966. He was influenced by Dada, Expressionism and experimental movements. He writes "I started performing poems as a timid person with a stutter but the spirit of the times soon converted me into a bellowing bull."

During the 60s he travelled in to the UK and Europe and participated in the underground publishing and filmaking scenes in Brighton and London. Returning to Australia in 1972 he worked as a draughtsman and continued publishing and preforming, writing a novel about his travels entitled Destiny Wood.[1]

Duke's writings included translations of French and Eastern European Modernist poets but he is best remembered for his sound poems. Nicholas Zurbrugg describes his work as "the voice played like a human saxaphone". His collected poems are published by Collective Effort press in Melbourne as Poems of War and Peace. He died June 19, 1992.

[edit] Bibliography

Poetry

  • Poems of War and Peace (Collective Effort, 1989)
  • Dada kampfen um leben und tod: A prose poem [Dada fight for life and death] (Wayzgoose, 1996)

Novel

  • Destiny Wood (circa 1976)

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Pi O, "Jas H. Duke" Pp. 172-3 in A Salt Reader (Folio, no date) ISBN 0-646-12445-5