Research as Poetic Rumination: Twenty-Six Ways of Listening to Light

Auteurs-es

  • Carl Leggo University of British Columbia

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.11575/jet.v33i2.52566

Résumé

I search for a poetics of research in long walks on the dike where I listen to light, smell the line of a heron startled into slow motion by my presence, taste the screeches of eagles and hawks, poke with the roots of alders and aspens into the black earth, see the scent of the seasons. In my walking and researching, I hear ducks laughing in the slough along the dike, and my research question laughs with the ducks: What are the ducks laughing about? I do not ask the question in order to answer the question; I ask the question, again and again, in order to know the question. My research is really about opening my ears and eyes and tongue and skin and nose and lungs and heart and spirit, to learn to laugh with the ducks.

Biographie de l'auteur-e

Carl Leggo, University of British Columbia

Carl Leggo is a poet and associate professor in the Department of Language Education at the University of British Columbia where he teaches courses in English curriculum, composition, gender, and narrative research. He has studied at Memorial University of Newfoundland (BA, BEd), University of New Brunswick (MA, MEd), and University of Alberta (PhD). His second collection of poems titled View from My Mother's House has just been published by Killick Press. He is currently conducting research in television literacy, creative writing, and ·autobiographical approaches to educational research.

Publié-e

2018-05-17

Numéro

Rubrique

Articles