Poetry written in blood reissued
As the UK lifts its ban on gay blood donation, poet and essayist RJ Arkhipov tells Conor Marlborough about Visceral: The Poetry of Blood
As the UK lifts its ban on gay blood donation, poet and essayist RJ Arkhipov tells Conor Marlborough about Visceral: The Poetry of Blood.
According to its own figures, the Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service has just a four-day supply of O negative blood at any one time – well short of what it says it needs to safely manage the requirements of NHS Scotland.
In the most critical emergencies, when doctors must perform a transfusion, but do not know a patient’s blood group, O negative is the only kind that does not pose a lifethreatening risk of rejection.
As it happens, I have O negative blood, and the specially-issued gold donor card to prove it.
When I sit down with RJ Arkhipov in a bustling bistro in Edinburgh, I briefly take it out of my wallet for him to examine.
The topic is a fascination for self-described New Scot. Born and raised in Wales, the 29-year-old only settled in Edinburgh two years ago after the publication of Visceral – the collection of essays and poetry that he penned in his own blood.
Long-listed for the Polari First Book Prize in 2019, Visceral’s publishers have reissued the collection in a new paperback edition containing illustrations by French artist Fabien Ghernati.
Arkhipov tells me its dramatic origins lie in his time studying at the University of London Institute in Paris, when he stumbled upon the city’s bohemian set.
“I was surrounded by artists of every flavour, really fascinating and eccentric people – anarcho-communists, drag queens – everyone and everything you could imagine,” he recalls.
Invited to perform in at festival at 59 Rivoli, a celebrated squat for writers and artists, Arkhipov was understandably daunted.
“You can see the art on the front of the building – it spills out the windows and out onto the street,” he says.
"Artists there have a space to do whatever they like.”
He grins. “I was quite a mildmannered Welsh boy who just happened to find himself in Paris writing poetry.”
Searching for inspiration, Arkhipov was struck by a line attributed to Ernest Hemingway.
“Any English-speaking person who lives in Paris will sooner or later come across Hemingway and his writing because he spent so much time there,” he explains.
“There’s a line that's often attributed to him – ‘there is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed’. That was the first line that made me think this is a really interesting subject to explore.”
‘Inkwell’, the very first of Arkhipov’s blood poems, was completed minutes before he stepped on stage to perform it at 59 Rivoli.
Buoyed by its reception, and convinced there were greater depths to plumb in the subject, he threw himself into creating an entire collection of blood poems.
Arkhipov’s poetry is a delicious mix of the erotic and the macabre that examines the symbolic significance of blood in six chapters: Abjection, Ancestry, Faith, Intimacy, Mortality and Stigma.
The collection is regularly sprinkled with examples of concrete poetry, where typography conveys as much meaning as the words themselves.
In a poem called O, Arkhipov carves out his lines in concentric circles – a nod to Dante’s Divine Comedy that also neatly encapsulates its sanguine subtitle: ‘A Circulatory Story’.
But the 29-year-old has a playful side too.
The stanzas of one poem entitled ‘Baptism’ treat in-the-know readers to a delightfully naughty in-joke born out of his time in the French capital, exploring the cobbles and cornerstones of the infamous Rue du Temple.
Both the poem’s title, and the Parisian street it stands in ode to, conjure an element of what Arkhipov calls the “queering” of faith – a concept intended to inspect more traditional religious concerns of purity and probity.
Its final chapter, Stigma, rails against the rejection of “gay blood”, and explores, with uncomfortable force, how moments of intimacy are still haunted by fears around HIV/AIDS.
As Arkhipov writes in the afterword to Visceral’s new edition: “So much blood has been spilled in achieving the rights I enjoy today, the nonviolent spilling of my own blood to protest, in poetry no less, the bans on gay blood donation seems a fitting tribute to my LGBTQ forebears.”
Arkhipov’s frustration is one I share. The gold blood donor card I showed him has sat unused in my wallet for years.
Until now, gay men across Britain have been forbidden from donating blood without first abstaining from sex for at least three months.
The fact that I have been in a monogamous relationship for almost a decade was considered irrelevant.
Despite its origins as a protest, however, Visceral’s paperback edition now has much to celebrate.
Its release on Monday coincided with World Blood Donor Day and with the changes to rules in England, Wales and Scotland that allow gay men in long-term relationships to donate blood without restrictions.
For Arkhipov, who married his partner between the publication of Visceral’s first and second edition, the end of ban represents a culmination for his life and his work to date. He says: “So for me, for my poetry, it has all tied together.”
● Visceral: The Poetry of Blood went on sale in bookshops yesterday
Signed copies of the new paperback edition as well as limited edition bookplates can be purchased.