Showing posts with label Essay Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Essay Press. Show all posts

Friday, January 8, 2010

Carla Harryman Interview





In talking with Charles Bernstein a couple nights ago (he gave a great reading here at Evergreen this week, & was good to see him, & Leonard Schwartz, who I hadn't talked to since taking the semester off), I found myself on the receiving end of a lot of insight regarding teaching / discussing the ideology of the classroom (and ideology generally) in the classroom.  Thanks much to Charles, who helped me add some needed texts to my syllabus.  It was a serendipitous discussion, as we're both teaching at moment, both classes circling around politics and pedagogy.  A couple current texts came up for discussions along these lines--both, we agreed, are some of the best new books of late.  One was, as I mentioned in another post, Disaster Suites by Rob Halpern.  The other, Carla Harryman's Adorno's Noise.  

I've long been struck by how little attention Harryman's work is given compared to her male counterparts.  Not that Harryman isn't a major influence for contemporary artists.  But yet again, Harryman and The Grand Piano are not usually mentioned in the same sentence.  Google these via Boolean search and you'll wind up with approximately 177 unique entries.  For Barrett Watten, you get nearly 400, same volume.  Not that lack of some vast popular/viral takeover is indicative of anything to any degree of interest beyond a passing one on this topic, but I've read Adorno's Noise, released last year by Essay Press, about a dozen times now, and still very much discovering things, getting a kind of static shock from it--even "Orgasm," an essay of all of about 50 words.  The work, like Harryman's other work, is extremely difficult to place, exacting, precise in its deliberations.  It's not just that my background is in philosophy of music; the book really is, beyond everything else it is, a study in the form of the essay (which makes Essay Press the best possible home for it, in my estimation). 

Well, I'm liking Bucharest at moment, at least the American Studies Program at the University there, specifically its undergraduate journal, Intersections.  There's a nice interview with Harryman in this latest issue.  Harryman's somewhat politic to linger on genre here as to why it is difficult to "place" her work.  Part of what I love--what's influenced my work a great deal--is this genre concern, where essay for Harryman deliberately meets poetry and prose, and where the written is embodied on the page and in the literal performance of much of her work (Neo-Benshi, and other poets theater conventions).  The difficulty of placement is an act of political resistance, and so one would, and should, and want to expect that work such as Harryman's is going to remain occulted by more commercialized texts (tho, think of how many options the bookseller has when trying to file the newly acquired Harryman book!).   Gender, quite simply, as has been discussed so often, is one culprit in Harryman's (at times) backgrounding.  Not just the gender divide within the Language Poetry culture of the 70s and 80s, but more generally, and now: we just love our male-identifying(ed) poets.  Can't seem to get enough of them.  

Well, glad to see this interview.  Glad it is so rich as well--thinking of using some of it along with Adorno's Noise in my classroom this year.  

Friday, December 18, 2009

ANNUAL FUCK THE HOLIDAYS SMALL PRESS GIVEAWAY SPECIAL OFFER EXTRAVAGANZA

             image of limited edition artist book, PRESSING, by Wheelhouse Chapbook Designer, Kate Robinson, available thru Wheelhouse Press

From now until the end of the year I, on behalf of Wheelhouse Magazine & Press, will be listing small presses in need of YOUR help.  Of course all presses all the time are in need of your help, including the most successful presses, i.e., those small hubs that continually make books that we love and about which you're liable to say: how do they do it?  Well, almost always by the seat of their pants.  That's how.  

Since Wheelhouse is predominantly an online venture--with our first letterpressed chapbooks about to be published this upcoming summer--we don't have anything physical to offer as a holiday special, or gift for the holidays, etc.  Not that you shouldn't give yourself the gift of our current, past, and upcoming issues and online chapbooks.  So, we figured we'd alert you to holiday offers that other small presses we love are offering.  These books are usually inexpensive, and now they are really inexpensive.  So, see below.  Take advantage of the b-shit holiday season, tell it to fuck off by getting something from each of the below presses.  We did, and we're f-ing poor--and seasonally depressed.   

I'll add a few more presses in separate posts, including (since they did not fit in the taglines below), Taup. Sky, Cuneiform Press, BlazeVox, and the new artist book poetry collective BLACK RADISH BOOKS, which, among the first titles will be yours truly's Occultations, and books by Susana Gardner, Nicole Mauro, Jill Stengel, Cara Benson, and several others.  For now:

WHEELHOUSE PRESS FUND:  

If you live in or around Seattle, do think about donating to the Wheelhouse PRESS fund. PRESS is a literary series of events, performances, conferences, devoted to the intersection of socially engaged text arts and radical politics.  We regularly have guests read, perform, and collaborate, and of course this costs money.  

If interested in donating--come to one of our events!  They are all announced here and thru Facebook.  Next up is CA Conrad, beginning March 4th, ending March 7th, at The Evergreen State College.  You can also contact me by email for token donations.

BELLADONNA BOOKS:

HOLIDAY SALE



Belladonna Book announces BIG HOLIDAY SALE

Buy 4 chaplets, get 1 free!

FREE SHIPPING for orders of $100.00 or more.

Hurry... there are only 6 complete Elders Series left!

Chapbooks are extremely limited (editions of 125) and sell out quickly, never to be seen again in this form.

Also, please consider donating to Belladonna Series and toward the beautiful publication of brilliant avant-garde and multidimensional feminist writing.


PALM PRESS:

Amazing titles, including the recently published Disaster Suites by Rob Halpern, Landscapes of Dissent by Kaia Sand and Jules Boykoff, The Shunt by David Buuck, and the forthcoming Armies of Compassion by Eleni Steccoplous.  Get them here.

ESSAY PRESS:

Essay Press is offering the following end-of-year specials for our Facebook friends: 1) Buy 2 (two) titles on-line via PayPal & we will chose a third book from our catalogue for you at no extra charge. -OR- 2) Mail order only: '6 for 56.' Receive all SIX Essay Press titles for $56.00 (includes all shipping & handling).  Website: http://www.facebook.com/l/28aff;www.essaypress.org Mail orders (check or money order):  Essay Press 208 utica Street Ithaca, NY 14850


CHAX PRESS:

From Charles: 

"Thanks to all who have supported Chax Press. Facebook Friends helped us get through to this point, and I hope you will help us now! All contributions welcome and tax deductible. Visithttp://www.facebook.com/l/28aff;chax.org/donate.htm, or send to 411 N 7th Ave Ste 103, Tucson AZ 85705.". Event: Chax Press Annual Fund: HELP! What: Fundraiser Start Time: Today, December 16 at 10:00pm End Time: Monday, February 1 at 12:00am Where: 411 N 7th Ave Ste 103, Tucson, AZ 85705 To see more details and RSVP, follow the link below: http://www.facebook.com/n/?event.php&eid=220722659680&mid=193c257G23e5f212G45083c3G7

FROM PORTABLE PRESS AT YO-YO LABS, FORTHCOMING:
)((eco (lang)(uage(reader)) 
Edited by Brenda Iijima

Published by Portable Press at Yo Yo Labs (www.yoyolabs.com)

Forthcoming August 2009

How can poetic language engage a global ecosystem under duress? How do poetic forms, structures, syntaxes and grammars contend or comply with the forces of environmental disaster? Can language innovation proactively forward the cause of living sustainably in a world of radical interconnectedness? How do issues of geography, race, gender and class intersect with the development of individual or collective ecopoetic projects?

In this collection of essays, poets offer responses to these and other questions concerning poetry and ecological ethics.

Contributors include: Tyrone Williams, Leslie Scalapino, Laura Elrick, Julie Patton, Jonathan Skinner, Peter Larkin, Marcella Durand, Tracie Morris, Karen Anderson, Jill Magi, Tina Darragh, Catriona Mortimer-Sandilands, Jed Rasula, James Sherry, Jack Collom, Evelyn Reilly and Brenda Iijima.


LITMUS PRESS:

BHARAT JIVA

kari edwards

2009 • 132 pp. • $15.00
ISBN: 978-0-9819310-0-5

Original cover art by Frances Blau

Transdada Blog

CAConrad reflects on kari edward's Bharat jiva on PhillySound.
Mortified before kari's Bharat jivaNovember 27, 2009

Tim Peterson reports on the book launch for Bharat jiva and 
NO GENDER
 on Mappemunde Blog; October 14, 2009

Bharat jiva is named an SPD Best-Seller for 
September/October 2009.

SPD

UGLY DUCKING PRESSE

AWESOME New Books Here:

BLOOD PUDDING PRESS:

Holiday sale on many titles here.

CY PRESS:

Many incredible chapbooks here

NO TELL BOOKS:

Get them while you can here.


DELETE PRESS:

Beautiful artist books by wonderful poets here

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Books Received

Books recently received:

Making Marks (a+bend press), Robin-Tremblay-McGaw 
Try Magazine (August Issue), featuring work by Rob Halpern
Eeel on Reef (Black Goat), Uche Nduka
Our Insalvagable (Vigilance Society), Thom Donovan
Adorno's Noise (Essay Press), Carla Harryman
When You Bit... (Otoliths), Adam Fieled

Rumor has it that waiting for me at home (Olympia, WA) are new works from Jules Boykoff, Kaia Sand, Mark Wallace, and K. Lorraine Graham.

Needless to say I'll be busy.  While catching up on some rather urgent work, my breaks will be devoted to digging deeply into these works.  The works listed above I've given a cursory read. All are excellent in their own way.  Each represents the myriad possibilities and motifs essayed by independent presses.  Nduka's work, though I'm unfamiliar with some of the cultural narratives he seems to be working with, is sonically and otherwise amazing, and in need of review.  Same needs be said of Donovan's small, beautifully made cycle letterpressed by Vigilance Society - one of the more extraordinary collectives (they use all recycled materials in the printing of their chapbooks).  And for Adorno's Noise, which, as usual, I'm coming late to. Essay Press and Carla Harryman, as many reviewers have already noted, have collaborated to again reinvent the essay, the poetical investigation into, out of, and through all the static.  My PhD thesis was very much engaged with Adorno and Schoenberg, and so interest piqued, I managed to read through the book once during my time at Bard.  I taught "Orgasm," one of the incredible essays in this incredible book (pdf link in a separate post below).  Here Adorno, Schoenberg, and the noise of this now, a noise that both occults and is occulted by what David Buuck (The Shunt) calls "war dash time," is neither represented nor dialectically wrestled with. No, something beyond dialectic is occurring in the essays, the fractured language fallout.  This music needs further space.  So, another blog post, once I settle into bad habits at home.  For now, find this work and let it read you.  Kudos to Catherine Taylor, Stephen Cope, and Essay Press for releasing this work.

Lastly, very much intrigued by Try Magazine.  This, the first issue I've read, is so far rather mind blowing.  No bullshit design opens up to Rob Halpern's hand-written draft introduction to his forthcoming work, Music for Porn.  The intro draft is immediately followed by a devastating poem from same.  Laura Elrick and Rodrigo Toscano's pieces are fantastic - one is a reprint, first appearing in our (Wheelhouse's) PRESS anthology, Toscano's "Strikes & Orgies."  More on Try soon.  The mag and Adorno's Noise go oddly well together.  

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Friday, August 21, 2009

Adorno's Noise - discussion to come

Adorno's Noise, Carla Harryman's much anticipated book of trying, out from Essay Press, has just landed in my palms.  More soon on this deeply important work, but for now: read one essay here (Organism).