{
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"createdAt": "2025-05-30T23:34:00+01:00",
"description": "Going to a poetry slam in Durham, because 2025 is the Year of Appreciating Art.",
"path": "/stream/slam-of-the-north",
"publishedAt": "2025-05-30T23:34:00+01:00",
"site": "at://did:plc:swxoj3wjlwodcqs5ipmvgnug/site.standard.publication/3mnv7gbn3czno",
"tags": [
"Shows",
"Poetry",
"Durham"
],
"textContent": "Out at Slam in the North (I think that’s what it was called) tonight in Durham at the Assembly Rooms. This was I think my first time going to a... poetry slam? Spoken word competition?Fifteen people or so got up and read a poem of theirs, and then there was an interlude and they came back and read a second poem each, but in reverse order. Then a panel of three judges came up with scores and two of the universities won: Durham and Sheffield.During the interval the three judges did some poetry. Two of the judges were so-so, and the third judge, who was from Newcastle, was much better. Is it okay to say that some poetry is so-so and that some is much better? The only way I know to talk about poetry criticism is to say that one's own is rubbish.I felt a little bit out of place when we first arrived — most of the competitors were young women and I’m just some middle class white guy — but the space was welcoming and there was a sort of excited tension amongst the readers that drew me in. I even snapped my fingers at one point.I’m glad that I went, and I want to go to another. Two hours of folks trying to translate their Personal Experience into language with as little filter as possible is something that I get vanishingly little of these days — but which I think is fundamental to appreciating life among people.",
"title": "Slam of the North",
"updatedAt": "2025-06-05T11:39:29+01:00"
}