Clare Shaws fourth collection Towards a General Theory of Love shows that poetry can say as much as about who we are and especially how we feel as psychology. They also feed each other. Harry Harlows famous experiments on baby monkeys changed the course of psychology. They proved that we need care, contact and love and they inflicted profound and lasting suffering on their subjects. Clare Shaws poems in Towards a General Theory of Love are driven by the same furious need to understand the experience of love and its absence. Harlows findings, attachment theory, mythology and art are set alongside stories of attraction, grief and desire. The book is inhabited by the character of Monkey, who shows by example how early attachments and trauma may shape us, but how ultimately the individual like the reader will come to realise her, his or their own general theory and practice of love.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
Publication Date: 26 May 2022
Publisher: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781780376042
About Clare Shaw
Clare Shaw was born in Burnley in 1972. Their first two collections with Bloodaxe were Straight Ahead (2006) which attracted a Forward Prize Highly Commended for Best Single Poem and Head On (2012) which according to the Times Literary Supplement is 'fierce memorable and visceral'. Their later collections are Flood (2018) a New Writing North Read Regional title in 2019 and Towards a General Theory of Love (2022) which won a Northern Writers' Award and was a Poetry Society Book of the Year. Their poetry is widely anthologised including 100 Queer Poems (Penguin Random House 2022) and the National Trusts Nature Poems (2023). It is also set to music illustrated and staged and has featured multiple times on Radio 4s Poetry Please and Radio 3s The Verb. In 2021 Clare wrote the libretto for the community opera Daylighting which premièred at the Royal Academy of Music and was shortlisted for an Ivor Novello Award for Community and Engagement. They have also written for theatre and radio and as a mental health educator and trainer they have published numerous resources in the field of mental health. Clare lives on the hills above Hebden Bridge and in 2022 co-wrote and presented Radio Fours Weathering the Storm which explored the relationship between art resilience and the landscape of the Calder Valley. A passionate advocate for accessibility in poetry and for poetry as a tool of personal and social change Clare has founded or directed numerous poetry initiatives including the Kendal Poetry Festival Wonky Animals the Lost Things Project and more. They have held poetry residences in numerous settings including festivals conferences hospitals factories landfill sites and bogs; and they collaborate with artists and academics in other disciplines including photography folk music film conservation and design. Clare lectures at the University of Huddersfield and is a regular tutor for Wordsworth Grasmere The Royal Literary Fund and The Arvon Foundation. Variously described as 'electrifying' and as 'one of the best readers on the scene' Clare performs across the UK and beyond.