Philip Terry and Ken Edwards book launches

REALITY STREET launches two books in London next week:

PHILIP TERRY: tapestry
Taking as its starting point marginal images in the Bayeux Tapestry, which have been left largely unexplained by historians, Terry retells the story of the Norman Conquest from the point of view of the tapestry’s English embroiderers. Combining magic realism and Oulipian techniques, this is a tour de force of narrative and language.
KEN EDWARDS: Down With Beauty
A series of linked dialogues, dramatic monologues and short fictions exploring the themes of exile, the aftermath of war, paranoia, improvised music and nothingness. The collection is completed with the full text of Nostalgia for Unknown Cities, previously published separately.
Both authors will read from their books.
21st May, At the Blue Bus, 7.30pm at The Lamb (in the upstairs room), 94 Lamb’s Conduit Street, London WC1, £5/£3 conc
The books will be on sale at the special launch price of £10 each.

Syndicate #3 Swarm

Tuesday 21st May, 6.45pm – 9pm
Inspace, 1 Crichton Street, Edinburgh EH8 9AB

Syndicate hopes you’ll join us on 21st May for multimedia poetry, electronic music, zesty discussion over carbonated drinks and performances from Pierre Joris, Nicole Peyrafitte, Samantha Walton and Sean Williams under the theme: SWARM.

Pierre Joris has moved between the US, Great Britain, North Africa, France & Luxembourg for 50 years, publishing some 50 books of poetry, essays & translations. Recent publications include Meditations on the Stations of Mansur al-Hallaj (Chax Press, 2012) and Diwan Ifrikiya: The University of California Book of North African Literature (Volume 4 in the Poems for the Millennium series), co-edited with Habib Tengour. Forthcoming are Barzakh (Poems 2000-2012) from Black Widow Press, & The Collected Late Poems of Paul Celan, translated & annotated by Joris, from Farrar, Strauss & Giroux. He lives in Sorrentinostan, a.k.a. Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, with his wife, multimedia performance artist and writer Nicole Peyrafitte. For more information: www.pierrejoris.com/blog.

Nicole Peyrafitte, is a Gasco-Rican pluridisciplinary artist born and raised in the Gascon-French Pyrenees. Her eclectic background & her experiences in shaping identity across two continents & four languages informs her multifaceted works. Peyrafitte’s texts, voice, paintings,videos, & cooking were displays in, among others: Ninon; The Bi-Continental Chowder/La Garbure Transcontinentale; Whisk Don’t Churn. Her latest projects are “Basil King: MIRAGE,” a 2012 film she co-directed with Miles Joris-Peyrafitte, & “Bi-Valve: Vulvic
Spave/Vulvic Knowledge,” a series paintings, bi-lingual texts & performance (Stockport Flats, 2013). Her solo or collaborative work has been presented and/or performed in such venues as The Metropolitan Museum, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, the University of Bordeaux, Birbeck College at the University of London, Poets House NYC, The Poetry Project NYC, Festival Occitania in Toulouse, Estivada de Rodez. For more information: www.nicolepeyrafitte.com.

At Syndicate, Joris and Peyrafitte will be performing: 

DOMOPOETICS: Personal & Shared Artistic Practices

Domopoetics is a performance that meanders dialogically between Pierre Joris’ poems, translations & thinking, & Nicole Peyrafitte’s drawings & videos, voice- & textual work.

Joris’ nomadic writerly processes & their insistence on a “barzakh” — a navigable archipelago of “in-betweens” — & Peyrafitte’s concept of “Vulvic space” — a homeomorphic topology or transformable conceptual space enhancing the exchanges between self & other(s) — come together in what can be called a “diastolic flux.” Theoretically describable as moving between a somewhat Deleuzian energy of plateaus & stages & a more Irigaray-ian awareness based on difference and infiltration, while always anchored in a processual practical poetics & art making, the couple’s collaboration started in the early 90s, & includes a range of duo multimedia performances, many book covers & illustrations, & the raising of two sons.

Samantha Walton is a poet and one third of Syndicate. Her recent project comes out of a creative residency at the ESRC Genomics Forum working on the relationship between lyric poetry and the life sciences and co-generating TTAGGG – an open source poetry sequence – with the help of social science researchers.

Sean Williams is a sound designer, recordist, and electronic and electroacoustic music composer and performer. He is currently a Leverhulme scholar at the Reid School of Music in Edinburgh, documenting historic electronic music performance practice.

Tom Jenks: a preview

The Other Room is putting on a one off extra event on Saturday 18th May at The Town Hall Tavern, 20 Tib Lane, Manchester, M2 4JA. For a preview of Tom Jenks, who will be launching his new collection items at this event, try this film from the if p then q event at The Betsey Trotwood in London last September, or visit his website. For a preview of derek beaulieu, click here. A preview of Holly Pester will follow shortly.

Peter Riley and David Herd

Tapestry Room, Firth Court (Western Bank), University of Sheffield. 6pm Friday 17th May.

Peter Riley (born 1940) is a contemporary English poetessayist, and editor. Part-time M.A. thesis on Jack Spicer at the University of Keele, supervised by Roy Fisher. In 1978 he moved to the far, eastern, side of the Peak, getting a stone cottage in a small village called Bolehill which clung to the valley side overlooking the town of Wirksworth. Riley was an editor and major contributor to The English Intelligencer. He is the author of ten books of poetry, and many small-press booklets. He is also the current poetry editor of the Fortnightly Review and a recipient of the Cholmondeley Award in 2012 for “achievement and distinction in poetry”. Publishes also with Sheffield’s Longbarrow Press. His collections include Passing Measures, Selected poems 1966–1996 (Carcanet, 2000), Messenger Street (Poetical Histories, 2001) The Dance at Mociu (Shearsman, 2003), Alstonefield: a poem (Carcanet, 2003), The Day’s Final Balance: uncollected writings 1965–2006 (Shearsman, 2007), The Llyn Writings (Shearsman, 2007), Greek Passages (Shearsman, 2009), The Derbyshire Poems (Shearsman, 2010), andThe Glacial Stairway (Carcanet, 2011)

David Herd works in the area of modern literature, with emphasis on poetry and its relation to questions in politics and philosophy. His books include All Just (Carcanet, 2012), Enthusiast! Essays on Modern American Literature and John Ashbery and American Poetry. He is currently writing a book on modern poetry and the state of exception, editing a collection of essays on Charles Olson (Contemporary  Olson) and his chapbook, Outwith, will come out soon with Bookthug. His essays and reviews have been widely published in journals, magazines and newspapers. Recent writings on poetry and politics have appeared in PN Review, Parallax and Almost Island. Alongside Simon Smith he has collaborated with both Jack Hues and The-Quartet on the project ‘Rote-Through’, and with Sam Bailey, Evan Parker and Matt Wright on the project ‘Feedback’. He is a co-founder of the Sounds New Poetry festival and currently directs the Centre for Modern Poetry in the School of English.

Karen Mac Cormack & Steve McCaffery

The CPRC Birkbeck welcomes Karen Mac Cormack and Steve McCaffery.

Thursday 6th June 2013, 7.30 pm, with a reading of new work by both poets, and the launch of Karen Mac Cormack’s new Veer book, AGAINST WHITE

The Peltz room exhibition space in the School of Arts, Birkbeck College, 43 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PD. Click here for a map link. All welcome – free entry.

POLYply 25 > PROCESS

In the last POLYply until the autumn, Emma Conway presents new material from her serial project ‘bodies of work’; Ian Davidson reads new poems on geographic and social mobility; Juha Virtanen (and friends) re-encounter Allen Fisher’s early 1970s work Blood Bone Brain; Jennifer Walshe presents a process-oriented performance.
Thursday 9 May, The Centre for Creative Collaboration, 16 Acton Street, London WC1X 9NG. Free entry, 7pm.

Long Poem Magazine issue 9 launch

Tuesday, May 15th. Barbican Library, Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London, EC2Y 8DS.

Readers: Joe Cullen, Angela Cleland, Carrie Etter,
Derrick Porter, Helen Moore, Chrissy Williams, Martina Thomson, David Miller, Matt Haw, Patrick Early, Tim Dooley,
Ian McEwan. & Salah Niazi with David Andrew

Refreshments. Free Entry

Maintenant Camarade in Bristol

Avant garde poetry lends itself to collaboration as language does conversation. This Bristol edition of the Camarade series (previously at London’s Rich Mix and Manchester’s Cornerhouse venues) brings together pairs of formidable and innovative literary poets and art writers to create original, dynamic works for performance. Featuring brand new experiments in form from seven pairings of poets.

James Wilkes & David Berridge
Jeff Hilson & Marcus Slease
Mark Waldron & Tim Atkins
Patrick Coyle & SJ Fowler
Holly Pester & Emma Bennett
Daniel Rourke & Claire Potter
Chris McCabe & Tom Jenks

This is the 6th in the Camarade series and comes with the sub-heading ‘Enemies of the South’ – part of the Enemies project which is supported by the Jerwood Charitable Foundation and Arts Council England. More here.

Reading Series: Amid the Ruins

Organised by the Royal Holloway Centre for Research in Poetics.

  • 25 April: Adrian Clarke, Jennifer Cooke, Will Montgomery, Sophie Robinson
  • 22 May: Redell Olsen, Nisha Ramayya, Gavin Selerie, Lydia White
  • 18 June: Allen Fisher, Steve Willey, Kristen Kreider/James  (plus one – tbc)

Reading starts at 7.00 at the Daniel Blau Gallery, Hoxton Square, London .

Doors open at 6.30. Free

CUSP: THE EVENT

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Three Minute Theatre
Manchester
Thursday May 2nd
7.30
To celebrate the publication of CUSP: Recollections of Poetry in Transition (Shearsman Books) edited by Geraldine Monk, a collective autobiography of some of the UK’s most vital poets. 
Eight of the contributing poets will be reading poetry which has inspired them, from Sappho to Stein, from the Metaphysicals to the Beats plus a taster of their own poetry.
Starring Jim Burns, Frances Presley, Ian Davidson, David Annwn, Nicholas Johnson, Alan Halsey, Tim Allen and Geraldine Monk.
Geraldine Monk will be your MC for the evening so prepare to be entertained. 
What the reviewers said:
‘A joy to read’ Kevin King.  ‘An instructional read. Fun too.’ Charles Boyle. ‘Cusp is an enjoyable, exhilarating and annoying book which I recommend to all.’ Rupert Loydell. ‘A book to dip into and think about’ Steve Spence ‘  ‘A kind of angry nostalgia’ Notre Dame Review.
Venue Details:
Three Minute Theatre
Afflecks Palace,
Oldham Street
Manchester M4 1PW
(5 mins from Piccadilly train station).
Thursday May 2nd
7.30.
Entry £5/3cons

Poetry in Translation event

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Poetry in Translation: Peter Manson + Arne Rautenberg + Ken Cockburn
 
Wednesday 24th April, 7.30pm. The Edinburgh Bookshop, 219 Bruntsfield Place, Edinburgh EH10 4DH. Free.
 
Join us for an evening of poetry in translation and transformation. Peter Manson will read translations (from French) of poems by Stéphane Mallarmé from his recently published “The Poems in Verse by Stéphane Mallarmé” (Miami University Press). Arne Rautenberg and Ken Cockburn will read, among other pieces, from their new bilingual (German + English) publication “snapdragon” (Caseroom Press).
 

Marilyn Hacker and Rachida Madani

Thursday April 25, 7:30 -9:30 pm. The Bluecoat, School Lane, Liverpool, L1 3BX. Tickets £6/£4.

The great American poet Marilyn Hacker (“colloquial sublime” – Washington Post) is the author of twelve books of poems, including Names (Norton, 2009), Essays on Departure (Carcanet, 2006) and Desesperanto (Norton, 2003). Her essay collection Unauthorized Voices was published by the University of Michigan Press in 2010. She has published eleven volumes of translations from the French. For her own work, she received the American PEN Voelcker Award for poetry in 2010 and an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She is a Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets. She lives in Paris. Hacker’s bio/literary background is summarised here.

Rachida Madani was born (1951) and lives in Tangier. Her Contes d’une Tête Tranchée was published in 2001 in Morocco by Editions Al-forkane; the French text was published in France in 2005 by Les Editions de le Différence. Tales of a Severed Head was translated by Marilyn Hacker and published by Yale University Press in 2012.

With music by Dominic Williams.
e-mail:  liverpoolpoetrycafe1@gmail.com
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