Archive for the ‘ Reading Series ’ Category

c/c reading 003: rachel levitsky and valerie mejer

c/c reading 003:

(Saturday, 7 May 2011)

Rachel Levitsky

Valerie Mejer

 

We’d like to enthusiastically invite you to the third installment of the c/c reading series.  This bilingual reading from Rachel Levitsky’s book NEIGHBOR, and it’s Spanish translation Vecino by Valerie Mejer, will present a specific focus on the process of translation in regards to site-specific details, and the particular intimate challenges of translating a given locale.  This event will also feature a reading of the poets play within NEIGHBOR and will conclude with an opportunity for discussion/Q&A.

Thanks and we look forward to seeing you there!

- Jamie Townsend & Nicholas A. DeBoer

Fergie’s Pub

1414 Sansom St (5:30pm to 7:30pm)

($5 suggested donation)

 

Poet and painter Valerie Mejer was born in Mexico City.  Her book of poetry De Elefante a Elefante, was awarded the Spanish International Prize “Gerardo Diego 1966″.  She is also the author of de la ola, el atajo (Amagord, Spain 2009) Geografías de Niebla (2008) and Esta Novela Azul (2004).  Her poems in English have appeared in England in Poetry London and in the U.S. in the Hunger Mountain Review, Nimrod and The American Poetry Review among others.  She has translated poetry collections by C.D. Wright, Charles Wright, Forest Gander and Pascale Petit and is currently working on an anthology of selected poems by the Australian poet Les Murray.

Rachel Levitsky‘s second poetry collection NEIGHBOR was published by Ugly Duckling Presse in 2009.  Her first novel, The Story of My Accident is Ours will be published by Futurepoem in 2011.  Levitsky teaches Writing and Literature at Naropa University’s Summer Writing Program, Bard Prison Initiative and Pratt Institute.  She is found and member of Belladonna* Collaborative–a hub of feminist avant-garde literary action.

c/c reading 002 introductions

On the 2nd of April, 2011, we had the distinct pleasure of introducing Julia Bloch, CJ Martin and Rob Halpern for c/c002.  Below is the text of those introductions.  Audio from event forthcoming.

OPENING REMARK: “the sound described as ‘dangerous’ was in fact merely unknown.  It had all the easily divisible patterns but also different ones, whose function it was their hope and glory, a tight-lipped vigilant ranging across a terra of hard dark shadows, to eliminate.” [George Albon, "Cosmophagy" Empire Life, 67) [JT]

JULIA BLOCH: There is a way, an obsession in my own work, where I want to capture natural light.  It’s the fleeting impulse of color that stretches at dusk, what photographers call the ‘golden’ or ‘magic hour’.  This is the dialog, or at least where I’d like to come in, for in Julia’s work, there is identification, a curious linger.  She writes, “Shopping lights string the street/under a grayly, darkening sky” … or … “Diffracting you gently/as you spill some ash/on my skirt”.  The work is adjusted, unfiltered, filtered, a set of apertures flit with soft and hardening grays, a proximity to your self that knows.  When I read Julia’s work, I slow down, finding myself in line with her senses, sketching out the hairs of my arms standing up.  In The Selfist, she writes, “The narrow fortune, this/hand in absentia.  Descent/or any kind, plus ascent.  I feigned a story but it’s/all mine, all my mouth.”  I wonder then, if the perception I have is narrow enough to be a fortune, if the hand on the pillow is really there.  Is the suffering of my natural life, just a descent matching its ascent.  Within each line and flex, I hope to find out, if I too can see that space, as she does.  Please, let us welcome, Julia Bloch. [ND]

CJ MARTIN: CJ Martin is here (huzzah!) — here in Philly, here in the CITY (spelled large, as Olson would say), which is really any city, the space his beautiful Vigilance Society chap explores as a conglomeration.  In the first issue of ON: Contemporary Practice, Andrew Rippeon aptly describes CJ’s work as a ‘poetics of the pile’.  After reading and thinking through CJ’s arresting, thorny lyrics I have personally amended that description to a ‘poetics of the compost heap’; I know that it doesn’t immediately sound like it but I mean this is the most most flattering way possible (especially as someone who tries to plant, till, and grow in the CITY).  Over the phone and through online chat CJ has talked with me (bearing my standard ADD style) effortlessly and eloquently on everything from Kurt Schwitters and Alvin Lucier to parenting practices, cross-species linguistics, and the political import of noise.  Reading CJ’s work and speaking with him over these last 6 months has radically shifted and refocused my conception of poetic assemblage methods; of deep reading and annotation as a discipline, a way to approach the poem through a measure of actual experience and honest living.  I think it’s vital for us all, especially those of us who endeavor to write, to recognize that ‘composed’ is just a short step away from ‘compost’ and, really, one of the most honest and self-effacing (or actualizing) ways to approach the “composition” of a poem is to let the materials of it, and their natural correspondences (being adjacent to or on top of/beneath, etc) create their own, life-giving, nutrient-rich loam.  Language as active notation of living in the heap of reality, without the ragged edges stamped down. And when something roots itself in or shoots through, when a form of growth begins, it is not through a measure of our will, but, perhaps instead, a sign of our care. Please welcome CJ Martin. (JT)

ROB HALPERN: There have been a lot of things said about Rob Halpern’s writing recently and for good reason (it’s made it daunting for me, as an admitted huge fan to express its effects in a way that seems unique and genuine). I think over the past couple years we’ve really seen the impact and influence Rob’s beginning to have on a whole generation of writers in regards to redrawing those lines around what is “sayable”, in fact what is “necessary”, in verse today. As a writer of cross-genre work, and I use this term in the sense of finding connective tissues, semi-permeable membranes stretching between seemingly entrenched and self-contained schools of thought (here I’m thinking specifically of Rob’s excellent essay “Restoring ‘China’” (Jacket) where he carefully examines the complex intersections of language poetry and new narrative in regards to community concerns), Rob has facilitated the kind of vital exchange between different (and often estranged) modes of writing, necessary toward building and sustaining artistic solidarity. Plus there’s the sheer beauty, depth, and range of his work; shifting from a variety of rich narrative verse & constrained intertextual explorations of the body as a socio-political product in “Rumored Place” & “Imaginary Politics”, to the tightly wound, yet endlessly unfolding paratactical verse of Snow Sensitive Skin” w/ Taylor Brady, to “Disaster Suites”, where to sing out into a starless night becomes both a method of self-location and erasure. In short Rob always brings us the body’s mind — the mind, in all its furious and sublime mobility as a body part; integrated, inclusive, unseparated. At the recent “Somatics, Movement and Writing Conference” in Michigan Rob presented a somatic exercise where he asked participants to “Imagine an architectural structure” then “Within that imagined space as it appears in yr sensorium, imagine an organ from within yr own body” — when I think about Rob, as the vital participant in poetry’s movement forward (into whatever comes next) that he is, I imagine both a brain and a heart in this room, seamlessly pirouetting together. Please welcome Rob Halpern. (JT)

c/c reading 002: rob halpern, cj martin, julia bloch

c/c reading 002: (Saturday, 2 April 2011)

Rob Halpern
CJ Martin
Julia Bloch

 

 

Fergie’s Pub
1214 Sansom St. (6:30pm to 8:30pm)
($5 suggested donation)

ROB HALPERN is the author of several books of poetry, including Rumored Place (Krupskaya) and Disaster Suites (Palm Press, 2009). He’s also the co-author of the book-length poem Snow Sensitive Skin (together with Taylor Brady, Atticus/Finch Books, 2007), which is currently being reissued in an expanded edition by Displaced Press. A new book of poems, Music for Porn, is forthcoming (Nightboat Books, 2011). His essays appear in a range of journals and anthologies, including Biting the Error: Writers Explore Narrative, Modernist Cultures, ON: Contemporary Practice, and Journal of Narrative Theory.  His work on Georges Perec, including translations of Perec’s early essays on aesthetics and politics, can be found in Chicago Review and Review of Contemporary Fiction. A founding member of the Nonsite Collective, he lives in San Francisco and Ypsilanti, where he teaches at Eastern Michigan University.

C.J. MARTIN is the author of Two Books (Compline, forthcoming 2011), WIW?3: Hold me tight. Make me happy (Delete Press, 2009), Lo, Bittern (Atticus/Finch, 2008), and CITY (Vigilance Society, 2007). He is also a contributing editor for Little Red Leaves and LRL e-editions, and he teaches at TX State University-San Marcos.

JULIA BLOCH lives in Philadelphia, where she co-curates the Emergency Reading Series, works as coeditor of Jacket2, and is completing a Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania. Recent poetry appears in P-Queue, Aufgabe, and Peacock Online Review; her book Letters to Kelly Clarkson is forthcoming this year from Sidebrow Books.

c/c reading 001: dodie bellamy, david buuck & corina copp

c/c reading 001: (Sunday, 20 March 2011)

Dodie Bellamy

David Buuck

Corina Copp

 

Fergie’s Pub

1214 Sansom St (700pm to 900pm)

(Free – $5 suggested donation)

DODIE BELLAMY‘s latest chapbook is Whistle While You Dixie, from Summer BF Press. Her Ugly Duckling Presse chapbook Barf Manifesto was named best book of 2009 under 30 pages by Time Out New York. Other books include Academonia, Pink Steam and The Letters of Mina Harker. Her book Cunt-Ups won the 2002 Firecracker Alternative Book Award for poetry. Forthcoming in April is the buddhist by Publication Studio. She lives in San Francisco with writer Kevin Killian and three cats.  She also runs the popular blog, Belladodie.

DAVID BUUCK lives in Oakland. He is the founder of BARGE – the Bay Area Research Group in Enviro-aesthetics – and co-founder and editor of Tripwire, a journal of poetics. Recently published and forthcoming work can be found in Cannot Exist, Tarpaulin Sky, Sous Rature, Capitalism Nature Socialism, Elective Affinities, With+Stand, and elsewhere. Information and samples can be found at David’s official website.

CORINA COPP is a playwright, poet, and wishful thinker living in Brooklyn. Recent work includes essays on Jean Day, Hannah Weiner, and Sarah Ruhl; and texts that can be found soon or now in Cambridge Literary Review, Cannot Exist, The Brooklyn Rail, Jacket2, SerieAlfa, Wild Orchids, Supermachine, Aufgabe, 6×6, and Antennae. Plays: Tell Only One (Small Press Traffic Poets Theater Festival, Jan. 2011); WALTZ (CSC/E. 13th St. Theater, July 2010, directed by Meghan Finn), and A Week of Kindness (Ontological Incubator/Brick, 2008, co-created with Kelly Kivland). Author of Play Air (Belladonna* 2005), Carpeted (Faux Press, 2004), and Sometimes Inspired by Marguerite (Open 24 Hours 2003), with new chapbooks forthcoming from minutes BOOKS and Ugly Duckling Presse. She’s performed her own work and that of others in London, NYC, and elsewhere. CC is the recent editor of The Poetry Project Newsletter and co-curator of The Twenty-Five Cent Opera of San Francisco.

new reading series through con/crescent press

In our popular duress…we would, indeed, like to invite you to a new, ongoing reading series here in Philadelphia.

The c/c reading series grows out of our desire to provide a space. Space that emerges from the unique intimacy of contemporary writing.

c/c will present writers on a semi-regular schedule throughout the year. It will aim to foster dialog between local and visiting writers, focusing on community ties and the expansiveness of the creative act.

We are looking forward to this beginning. An exploration of states of quantum consciousness and consciousness of the body. Spaces both personal and universal.

Come join us celebrate writers who make us want to write, that make us think its impossible, but also the most important thing in the world.

Thanks and we look forward to seeing you there!

further landscapes

FURTHER LANDSCAPES, a reading and community discussion

Taking the image of the “urban wasteland” or “third landscape” as a broad conceptual platform, this event will include readings and interactive audience discussion with poets & interdisciplinary writers/artists around the question: What does it mean to be currently engaged in writing around/about ecology while living in an urban/industrialized area?

Featuring: CAConrad, Tina Darragh, Marcella Durand, Brenda Iijima, Patrick Lucy, Hoa Nguyen & Jonathan Skinner

Saturday, 13 November 2010 [400pm to 700pm) @ Fergie’s Pub

For more information contact J Townsend at greybridge@gmail.com

CACONRAD is the author of The Book of Frank (Wave Books, 2010/Chax Press, 2009).  He is also the author of Advanced Elvis Course (Soft Skull Press, 2009), (Soma)tic Midge (Faux Press, 2008), Deviant Propulsion (Soft Skull Press, 2006) and a collaboration with poet Frank Sherlock titled The City Real & Imagined (Factory School, 2010).  The son of white trash asphyxiation, his childhood included selling cut flowers along the highway for his mother and helping her shoplift.

TINA DARRAGH‘s recent books include Deep eco pré, a collaboration with Marcella Durand freely available from Little Red Leaves, and The Elders Series #8 with Jane Sprague and Diane Ward (belladonna, 2009).  “No Rights Observed” – an opposable dumbs project report – will soon be available from Palm Press.

MARCELLA DURAND‘s recent books include Deep eco pré, a collaboration with Tina Darragh (Little Red Leaves, 2009), AREA (belladonna, 2008), and Traffic & Weather, a site-specific book-length poem written during a residency at the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council in downtown Manhattan (Futurepoem Books, 2008).  She is the 2010-2011 Fellow in Poetics and Poetic Practice for the Center for for Programs in Contemporary Writing at the University of Pennsylvania where she will be teaching a course in ecology and poetry.

BRENDA IIJIMA is the author of Around Sea (O Books, 2003), Animate, Inanimate Aims (Litmus Press, 2007), revv. you’ll-ution (Displaced Press, 2009) and If Not Metamorphic (Ahsahta Press, 2010) as well as numerous chapbooks and artist’s books.  She is also the editor of the eco language reader (Nightboat Books & Portable Press at Yo-Yo Labs, 2010)  Currently she is working on a body of work titled, Some Simple Things Said by and about Humans – a chronicle of how humans have used animals as surrogates.  She is also choreographing ecstatic creaturely movements and gestures.  She is the editor of Portable Press at Yo-Yo Labs.

PATRICK LUCY lives and writes in Philadelphia, where he is a member of the New Philadelphia Poets.  Recent work has appeared or is forthcoming in Gulf Coast, The Corduroy Mtn, Elimae, Elective Affinities and more.  He is the author of two chapbooks, LIVE FIELD: GROWTHS 1-5 (_Catch/Confetti press, 2009) and WILLIAM (con/crescent press, forthcoming).

HOA NGUYEN was born in the Mekong Delta, grew up in the DC area and studied poetics in San Francisco.  She is the author of 8 books and chapbooks, most recently Hecate Lochia (Hot Whiskey, 2009), Kiss a Bomb Tattoo (Effing Press, 2009) and Chinaberry (Fact-Simile, 2010).  Based in Austin, Hoa curates a reading series and leads a creative writing workshop.

JONATHAN SKINNER‘s poetry collections include With Naked Foot (Little Scratch Pad Press, 2009) and Political Cactus Poems (Palm Press, 2005).  He founded and edits the journal ecopoetics, which features features creative-critical intersections between writing and ecology.  Skinner also writes ecocriticism on contemporary poetry and poetics, his essay “Thoughts on Things: Poetics of the Third Landscape” appeared recently in the eco language reader (ed. Brenda Iijima).  Skinner teaches in the Environmental Studies Program at Bates College, in Central Maine, where he makes his home.