THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE GAP IN THE WORK OF JAMES K. BAXTER

2013 
In 1967, New Zealand poet James K. Baxter reflected on his beginning as a poet with the statement that what happens is either meaningless to me, or else it is mythology‘ and that in his personal mythology first there was the gap, the void‘. While the first of these comments has been frequently cited in connection to Baxter‘s work, few critics have taken its extreme implications seriously. This thesis also takes the second statement as crucial to understanding Baxter‘s creative process and the links his poetry makes between otherwise disparate experiences. These statements are a starting point for a study which maps out the consistencies and continuities underlying Baxter‘s vast literar output throughout his career as a poet. It considers Baxter‘s poetry alongside his published prose and unpublished papers in order to demonstrate the underlying patterns which characterise Baxter‘s output throughout his diverse career. The thesis first develops a framework for identifying the presence of gaps in Baxter‘s writing, tracing a network of symbolic and mythic relationships that comprise his evolving personal mythology of the gap. Having established this framework, I show how Baxter's engagement with the gap‘ evolves throughout his work. The thesis demonstrates the significance of gaps not only as central motifs in Baxter‘s work, but as a crucial part of the poet‘s creative process. Baxter‘s purposeful approach to poetic mythologising relies on notions of absence, division and descent: the gaps‘ out of which poems emerge. These gaps simultaneously create and are created by the temporary mythologising self‘ at the centre of the creative process. This is the poet as creator, shaping chaos‘ into cosmos‘ through
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