When words and phrases formulate themselves in my mind, I occasionally sense I’ve been visited by divine inspiration. Language is outside me and floods itself into my consciousness. I am the docile audience for life’s forces. I watch paragraphs take shape. Other times, though, I am a world-maker: sentences are sutured together deep inside me and I firmly, aggressively, choreograph their dance.

‘Imagination is a theatre of sorts,’ writes Alison Croggon. Her reflections offer us a thinking-through of thought-making, thought-creation; a play between memory and invention, how feeling shapes itself into words. For some artists, imagination is visual: ‘thought is so much closer to image than to language,’ reflects ‘Vita’ in Ceridwen Dovey’s novel In the Garden of the Fugitives. Not so for Croggon. Croggon’s internal theatre is ‘a place of rhythm and touch,’ it ‘bears the imprints’ of every conversation, every experience, she has had. She offers us a meditation on consciousness, how a mind makes itself apparent to itself.

But the spaces Croggon describes are not always solitary. She imagines a peopled one too, a meeting of multiple minds, multiple theatres of imagination, ‘inarticulable galaxies.’ She writes: ‘we become ourselves by becoming other, strange and familiar at once.’ There are images and sounds in this theatre, and sometimes there are words too, but not always. For Croggon, she finds herself extending out towards others, a never-quite-reaching, residing in places of the perpetually-unknowable, ‘beautiful reminders of all the worlds that are not me.’

 

 


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