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Jonathan Gibbs

Jonathan Gibbs was shortlisted for the White Review Short Story Prize 2013. He has since published a novel, Randall or the Painted Grape (Galley Beggar Press).



Articles Available Online


Jessie Greengrass’s ‘Sight’

Book Review

February 2018

Jonathan Gibbs

Book Review

February 2018

Jessie Greengrass’s debut story collection caught my eye with its delightfully extravagant title, An Account of the Decline of the Great Auk, According to...

feature

May 2016

Cinema on the Page

Jonathan Gibbs

feature

May 2016

Film is a bully. It wants to make its viewers feel, and it has the tools to do so....

In Louis Henderson’s film I build my language with rocks (2017), veins of handwritten Haitian Creole spread across a printed French script, a palimpsest in the making A group of actors and poets pour over the pages of playwright and theorist Édouard Glissant’s 1961 play Monsieur Toussaint debating turns of phrase, contesting imagery, and teasing it line by line into present day Port-au-Prince A camera approaches, peering over shoulders, shooting the words bubbling from their hands   The film opens Louis Henderson’s show ‘Overtures’ at HOME Manchester Henderson is a British filmmaker living in France, and ‘Overtures’ is characteristic of his works to date, which explore the legacies of colonialism and the entanglement of technology and history The exhibition takes Haiti as its subject, and the Revolution of 1791 in which slaves and freed people of colour won independence from French colonial rule As a white European artist, Henderson’s intervention in this time and history has a charged, and under-interrogated, politics   Overtures follows Henderson’s collaboration with a group of Haitian artists, The Living and the Dead Ensemble, to translate and perform Monsieur Toussaint for Port-au-Prince’s Ghetto Biennale (2017) The play dramatises the dying days of Toussaint Louverture who, born into slavery, went on to lead the Haitian Revolution Louverture died a prisoner of France in 1803, a year before Haiti’s sovereignty, betrayed by his successor Jean-Jacque Dessalines Condemned to a cell in French Jura, and banned from writing, he nonetheless spent his final days penning his clandestine memoirs in an early Haitian Creole tongue, hiding the handwritten pages in a handkerchief bound to his head Henderson takes Louverture’s ghost as the protagonist of ‘Overtures’  In so doing, Louverture becomes a proxy through which Henderson can enact his critique of history   Monsieur Toussaint puts French into the mouths of some characters The project of Henderson with The Living and the Dead Ensemble is to ‘creolise’ the play, filtering out the sediments of colonial power that persist through language Monsieur Toussaint becomes slam poetry, the betrayal of Toussaint by Dessalines bouncing between actors in a rhythmic call-and-response of Haitian Creole The group worked collaboratively on this

Contributor

August 2014

Jonathan Gibbs

Contributor

August 2014

Jonathan Gibbs was shortlisted for the White Review Short Story Prize 2013. He has since published a novel, Randall or...

The Story I'm Thinking Of

fiction

April 2013

Jonathan Gibbs

fiction

April 2013

There were seven of us sat around the table. Seven grown adults, sat around the table. It was late. We had eaten, and we had...

READ NEXT

poetry

June 2013

Belly

Melissa Lee-Houghton

poetry

June 2013

When I was fifteen I took my two little cousins into town and had them wait outside the tattoo...

feature

July 2013

Occupy Gezi: From the Fringes to the Centre, and Back Again

Alexander Christie-Miller

feature

July 2013

Taksim Square appears at first a wide, featureless and unlovely place. It is a ganglion of roads and bus...

Prize Entry

April 2017

Remain

Ed Lately

Prize Entry

April 2017

The apology had been the most charged and contested gesture between us, the common element in arguments whose subjects...

 

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