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Ted Hughes's Gaudete: an immersive drama

Ted Hughes's Gaudete: an immersive drama

Released Sunday, 5th May 2024
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Ted Hughes's Gaudete: an immersive drama

Ted Hughes's Gaudete: an immersive drama

Ted Hughes's Gaudete: an immersive drama

Ted Hughes's Gaudete: an immersive drama

Sunday, 5th May 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

This is the third episode of the podcast to focus on Ted Hughes's Gaudete, the book which distinguished British composer Stuart MacRae described in his programme note to his setting of eight parts of the poem as: 'Part film scenario, part novel, part poetry collection, it passes through a series of different states and modes of expression, from the hallucinatory prose-poem of the Prologue, through the interconnected narrative poems of the text’s main body, to the Epilogue, which consists of a short prose introduction followed by forty-five short poems – some of the most abstract and dense in Hughes’s entire oeuvre. Despite the relative directness of the narrative section’s style and form, the Epilogue poems – and indeed the book as a whole – do not yield their meanings easily; one might even describe them as abstruse. Their power lies in the ability to communicate, through sudden and powerful images that confront the reader with shocking clarity, the most profound, surprising and elemental propositions.' (1)

   In this podcast Mike Wilson reflects on the dramatic pace of the piece, and how compelling and immersive the experience of reading Gaudete can be, and the meaning of the title: Gaudete = Rejoice. 

   Mike Wilson is Professor of Drama and Creative Arts at Loughborough University. Mike is an expert on Grand Guignol, a form of theatre which alternates short pieces depicting horror and the erotic which was originally performed at the Grand Guignol theatre in Paris. Mike is also an expert on storytelling and folklore, and is director of Loughborough University’s Storytelling Academy which has pioneered Applied Storytelling: using storytelling for social purposes such as exploring strategies to cope with loneliness, and using storytelling as a tool for reconciliation and co-operation between individuals and organisations with opposing or competing aims or views. 

      Mike’s many publications include Storytelling and Theatre: Professional Storytellers and Their Art, published by Palgrave in 2005; Grand Guignolesque: classic and contemporary horror theatre, co-edited with Richard J Hand and published in 2022 by the University of Exeter Press; and The Midnight Washerwoman and other Lower Breton Tales, , a collection of Mike’s translations, published this year by Princeton University Press in their Oddly Modern Fairytales series. For detailed information on Mike's publications please go to https://publications.lboro.ac.uk/publications/all/collated/eamw4.html and for further information on the work of the Storytelling Academy please go to https://storytellingacademy.education/

   (1): https://www.wisemusicclassical.com/work/35874/Gaudete--Stuart-MacRae/


 If you would like to find out more about the Ted Hughes Society, you can visit the society’s website at thetedhugessociety.org, or you can email me, Mick Gowar, at [email protected]


The opening and closing music is from Beethoven's String Quartet No 14, opus 131, performed by the Orion String Quartet. (The extract is reproduced under Creative Commons licence IMSLP: Creative Commons Atribution Non-commercial No Derivative 3.0.) 


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