'A stream of words' - the Antwerp Quay Poem as interrogation of urban open form, polyphony and radical dialogue




Ameel Lieven

PublisherRoutledge Journals, Taylor & Francis

2022

Textual Practice

TEXTUAL PRACTICE

TEXTUAL PRACT

36

7

1175

1194

20

0950-236X

1470-1308

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2021.1903545

https://doi.org/10.1080/0950236X.2021.1903545

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/53708280



This article examines polyphony and open form as key concepts connecting literary theory and urban planning. It focuses on Peter Holvoet-Hanssen's Quay Poem, an in-situ poem painted in 2011 on the floodwalls of the Antwerp quays during Holvoet-Hanssen's tenure as city poet. The long poem in public space provides important insights into how literary city texts and the discourses of urban development draw ultimately on similar narrative structures, in close dialogue with past layers of urban meaning and in the shadow of future material transformations. The poem gestures also to insights planning can gain from literary forms of storytelling, in particular in the way Holvoet-Hanssen's poem produces a remarkable openness of form; in the way it articulates a radical variety of different voices; and in the way it continues to speak after the text itself has disappeared from the public built environment.

Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 23:32