~ Robert Crowley
Saturday, July 31, 2010
What Can YOU Do In 20 Days? I Can Help Set Precedent Against Reclamation of Public Spaces
~ Robert Crowley
Friday, July 30, 2010
Stephen Vincent's Haptic
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Upcoming Readings-Performances
- The Joe Milford Poetry Show: Aug 28 (Time TBA) - radio reading & interview. Out of Georgia. For more info, visit the site, here.
- 20th Annual Subterranean Festival: Saturday Aug 28, 1pm (in the Cave) -- including: Druis Beasley, Cara Benson, Steve Cotten, Geof Huth, Maryrose Larkin with Eric Matchett, Sharon Mesmer, Wayne Montecalvo, Lori Anderson Moseman with Tom Moseman, Michael Peters, Richard Rizzi, R. Dionysius Whiteurs with Phillip Levine and David Wolach
- NPP Series Reading: Friday, September 3, 2010, 6pm - NPP Presents Carlos Soto Roman, Julie Doxsee, Frank Sherlock, & David Wolach. Fergie’s Pub, 1214 Sansom Street, Philadelphia.
JULY 31ST, 2010
2PM
sw corner of sixth and market, philly
poetry readings by
MAGDALENA ZURAWSKI
JOEY YEAROUS-ALGOZIN
HOLLY MELGARD
ROBBIE DEWHURST
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Bay Area Reflections 1
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Review of Occultations in Tarpaulin Sky, Daily S-Press feature
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Friday, July 16, 2010
Thom Donvan for Nonsite this Sunday / Yrs Truly July 25
Please join us Sunday, July 25th at 2 PM for the third installment of the Nonsite Collective's summer suite: David Wolach on "The Commons and the Body". Wolach will lead a discussion linking ideas around embodied art practices, the commons, and illness.
Through the lens of living with chronic pain, Wolach will draw out the relation(s) between the physico-socially "unfit" body and the aesthetically trans-gressive body. How might the affective and relational capacities of the body inflect our thinking about "the commons"? How can recent discussions on the paradoxes of "ownership", "property", and "architecture" inform how we speak about and treat "the body"?
David has posted some preliminary notes and questions here.
In addition, he has contributed a more sustained set of reflections to the Project on the Commons workbook, where he also introduces himself and his work.
We'll meet promptly at 2:00 pm on Sunday 7/25 at Nicole Hollis Studios to begin the discussion:
935 Natoma Street, San Francisco
between 10th and 11th Streets
and between Mission and Howard
close to the Civic Center BART Station
and the Van Ness MUNI station
Occultations in Big Other, Reed & McCreary in Dialogue's End
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Corporate Persons & Call to Action
The U.S. Supreme Court recently made one of its worst rulings in decades: It said that large corporations are legally considered "people" with the same Constitutional Rights as you or I to speak out - and spend money - in political campaigns.
That stunning ruling opened the floodgates for big business to influence our elections. BP or Goldman Sachs can now spend millions more to help elect candidates who will do their bidding in office.
But real people like you and me can still fight back - and if we act now, New York State can lead that fight.
Our State Legislature is about to vote on a law that would make all New York-based companies get shareholder approval before they spend money for political purposes. Can you e-mail your State Legislators right now to make sure they support this bill?
http://action.workingfamiliesparty.org/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=2081&tag=nycfr710
If this compaign finance reform bill passes, anyone who owns stock in a New York corporation will get to vote on what candidates or political causes that company can support. If a majority of shareholders vote against certain political spending, then the corporation can't do it.
This law -- proposed by Senate Majority Leader John Sampson and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver -- would give real people a say in corporate political spending without violating the Supreme Court's ruling. It's an important first step to limit corporate influence in our elections, and could become a national model.
And that's not all this reform bill does. It also requires all people or groups who spend over $1,000 to influence a New York election to publicly report their spending, and it will make it easier to investigate election irregularities.
Tell your elected officials to pass this bill now:
http://action.workingfamiliesparty.org/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=2081&tag=nycfr710
Out-of-control corporate spending is one of the most harmful parts of our political process, and one of the hardest to stop. Only a system of public financing of elections can truly limit the power of big special interests and restore our democracy -- but we need to take the first step now.
If you believe that corporations shouldn't have the same political rights as real people, will you take a moment to email your legislators and urge them to pass this law ASAP?
http://action.workingfamiliesparty.org/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=2081&tag=nycfr710
Thanks,
Dan Cantor
WFP Executive Director
Saturday, July 3, 2010
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New Poetry from Black Radish Books |
Occultations David Wolach $15 | paper | 168 pp. Black Radish Books ISBN: 9780982573129 Poetry. Joan Retallack writes that OCCULTATIONS enacts the "courage of paradoxical evocation." For David Buuck, such evocation helps us consider that "the body-in-crisis is not some theoretical abstraction but a lived condition, subject not only to the 'surveillance-industrial complex' but also to the limitations of language's ability to fully articulate 'what work this dying is.'" In (un)mapping its state of accelerated becoming, this (collective) body asks whether it can, through radical re-narration of its (re)constitution by neo-liberal capitalism and militarism, allegorize the wider catastrophic affects these logic-systems have on an ecosystem. "Is it possible," asks Laura Elrick, "to construct the parameters through which the practiced lie of control might be relinquished, through which, at the same time,the fault-lines out of whose collisions our lives are rent might be sense-d?" As place, the occulted recursively struggles to perform exploratory surgery on normative valuations of its capacities, on what is taken to be possible and what is not. LINK→ |