Monday, January 31, 2011
Black Radish Books @ AWP, A Mnemonic: F19
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Eileen Tabios on Schaeppi's Sonja & Black Radish Books
Friday, January 28, 2011
Announcements: Schaeppi, Brolaski, Conrad, & Donovan
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Feeling We's Way Thru Michael Cross's Haecceities
Friday, January 21, 2011
Speaking of Mills...
Rebecca Brown on Kathrin Schaeppi's Sonja Sekula
Peaches & Bats 7
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Two Labor Day Links
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Persons
Spring Course 2011 (description)
Faculty: David Wolach wolachd@evergreen.edu
Days & Times: 5-7p Wed & 4-6p Sat
Location: TBA
Enrollment: 24
Web Site: Course Blog: http://blogs.evergreen.edu/wolachd/ David's Public Text Arts & Politics Blog:http://davidwolach.blogspot.com/
This course will focus on creative writing, but it will examine other art forms (critical writing, performance, visual arts and activist movements) that are concerned with the reclamation of public, lived spaces in the wake of increasing privatization and corporatization--creating "landscapes of dissent." From the investigation of institutions of education to artistic-activist collaborations, from treating the body as site of resistance to discussing its use and misuse as object to be commodified, we’ll ask whether art, and very often poetry, as poet and critic Thom Donovan writes, can “model the commons — how might [art and poetry] provide experiments in the practical organization against anti-democratic social hierarchies and the expropriation of labor, land, and natural resources?” We'll respond to this and similar questions by building individual text arts portfolios and by collaborating in small groups on more sustained text arts projects that seek to experiment, dissent and intervene.
Since one important function of this course will be to develop projects that can serve to both investigate and confront neoliberal (often corporate) enclosures, we'll be moving from the abstraction of the page to the streets. We'll therefore interrogate the “artistic” and "poetic" in relation to the “political,” stretching our understanding of both activism and creative writing. We will do this both by making our own creative works and by looking at the examples provided by other writers, visual artists, and scholars, such as Jules Boykoff & Kaia Sand, CA Conrad & Frank Sherlock, Robert Kocik & Daria Fain, Kristin Prevallet, Laura Elrick, Amy Balkin, Sylvia Federici, Juliana Spahr, Stephanie Young, Jacques Ranciere, Karl Marx, George Oppen, Brenda Coultas, Tonya Foster, Stephen Collis, The Situationists, Nonsite Collective, and several others. This course will build on some of the material introduced in “Experiments in Text: Transgressive Art & Transgressive Bodies” (Winter 2011), but it is notnecessary to have taken the previous course—nor is it necessary to have any prior experience in creative writing, art, or literary-critical theory. This is an all-level course.
Friday, January 14, 2011
Marathon Reading: The Maximus Poems
Locations, times, and readers are listed below. (Readers are listed in scheduled order, which is subject to change.)
For a compendium of Olson resources, including links to recordings, interviews, essays, and other documents, see the Olson pages at SUNY Buffalo's Electronic Poetry Center and the Poetry Foundation.
Occultations Reviewed in the New Press 1
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Washington State Book Awards
The Three P's For a Fair Budget: Party, Performance, Picket
The First Annual Fair Budget Fair
From today's inbox:
Brought to you by the Olympia Coalition for a Fair Budget
THE FIRST ANNUAL FAIR BUDGET FAIR
...an urgently needed community response to the continuing -and worsening- cuts to the state budget
Saturday 1/15 11:00am --- 8:00pm Sunday 1/16
The Eagles Hall (bottom floor)
805 4th Ave E
Olympia, WAThe governor's new budget proposal calls for the elimination of Basic Health, the only source of healthcare for 66,000 people as well as eliminating healthcare for 27,000 children. 49,000 people with disabilities will lose state assistance. K-12 education is losing $2.2 billion, and higher education is under attack again too, with higher costs and lower quality.
Community groups, artists, musicians, activists, and anybody else who wants to participate are coming together to inform and get informed about the cuts and to make plans for saving our jobs, and all the public services so many of us need and rely on. There will also be information about local resources for meeting our needs as funding for state programs are whittled away.
COME JOIN US FOR EDUCATION, DISCUSSION, ART, MUSIC, POETRY, AND A RALLY TO ACTION!
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
It's January of the New Year: ALL HANDS ON DECK
Sunday, January 9, 2011
"To School An Intelligence And Make It A Soul..."
Friday, January 7, 2011
Imaginary Syllabi
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Nonsite Collective & SF Camerawork Residency
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
IWW Halo? I'll Take Two
New Series @ The Common: Brown, Spahr, Fitterman
Juliana Spahr lives in Berkeley. Her next book, A Megaphone: Some Enactments, Some Numbers, and Some Essays about the Continued Usefulness of Crotchless-pants-and-a-machine-gun Feminism (co-edited with Stephanie Young) went to the printer this week
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
More Blood Sport
It's easy to die transgressing out there. What to do?
Hold It
Monday, January 3, 2011
Stephen Vincent's New Haptic Book
In advance, without exactly knowing where, I decided go to 20 different sites and make 2 haptic drawings for each site.