Outside-in / Inside-out
A Symposium / Poetry Festival on Outside and Subterranean Poetry
University of Glasgow, Centre for Contemporary Arts
and Glasgow Women’s Library: 5-7 October 2016
CALL FOR PAPERSInspired by the recently published fifth volume of Poems for the Millennium, Barbaric Vast & Wild: A Gathering of Outside & Subterranean Poetry from Origins to Present, this symposium will open up views to poetry past, present, and potentially future with the question: Is there something in poetry ‘outside’ (economically, racially, nationally, formally, etc.) and ‘subterranean’ (suppressed by political and poetic hegemonies) that may lie at the heart of the most vital poetic practice? In their new groundbreaking gathering, Jerome Rothenberg and John Bloomberg-Rissman have assembled a wide range of poems and related language works, in which outside/outsider and subterranean/subversive positions challenge the boundaries of poetry. Poetic form and substance may be rethought from these new perspectives as fundamental and generative; as the editors write: ‘conditions of outsideness may create … a field for the invention of new or special forms and modes of language.’
Outside-in / Inside-out will address the disparate realms of poetry created by, or emerging from, the condition of being outside dominant and official positions. Like Barbaric Vast & Wild, we encourage presentations on moments in the history of outside/subterranean poetry; yet ultimately we will pitch these findings towards contemporary poetry practices. For us, the terms ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ must include ideas not only discussed among successful poets and academics solely within a university setting; therefore the symposium will be held in venues with varying access to public audiences and participants, including the University of Glasgow, the Glasgow Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA), and the Glasgow Women’s Library. In our symposium, ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ also imply modes of formal presentation that may subvert the typical conference format. If the participant wishes, he or she may replace or modify so-called critical/scholarly work with so-called ‘creative’ or performance work, and vice versa. In order to generate many approaches to the framework of outsideness, the three-day symposium will include a mix of panel presentations, roundtable discussions, workshops, and (two evenings at the CCA) readings and performances.
We are fortunate to be able to supplement these events with three exhibitions:
1) the history of Concrete poetry as an outside art through the archives of Bob Cobbing and Hansjörg Mayer 2) the Concrete poetry of two Scottish poets, Ian Hamilton Finlay and Edwin Morgan and 3) ‘The Homeless Library’, a poetry and art collaboration by homeless people in Manchester.
An exciting line-up of poets, researchers, and curators have already confirmed attendance, including among others Charles Bernstein, Sean Bonney, Andrea Brady, Julie Carr, Phillip Davenport, Gerrie Fellows, Bronac Ferran, Alec Finlay, Sara Guyer, Pierre Joris, Tom Leonard, Gerry Loose, Aonghas MacNeacail, Peter Manson, Maggie O’Sullivan, Sandeep Parmar, Holly Pester, Nicole Peyrafitte, and Jerome Rothenberg.
The conference organisers invite proposals for ten to twenty-minute creative and/or scholarly papers and performances. Possible topics for presentations include, but are not limited to:
Problems of defining ‘outside’ in poetry and poetics: What is ‘outside’? What is ‘inside’? Can one become the other? How do ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ differ from each other? Are ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ useful terms for exploring poetics? What are the values and risks involved in recuperating ‘outside’ poetry?
Sociological and historical analyses of styles and movements of ‘outside’ poetry or poetry produced from cultural, political and economic marginalization.
Historical instances of ‘outside’ poetry and poetics: A tradition of the outside or subterranean poets, e.g. William Langland, William Blake, John Clare; 18-19th Century women’s poetry; Pre-20th Century working class poetry; The relationship of ‘outside’ or ‘subterranean’ poetry to movements such as Romanticism and Modernism; Barbaric Vast & Wild and the politics of anthologies
The relationship between ‘outside’ poetry and formal experiment and/or experimental art, e.g. Concrete poetry, Text Art, New Media poetries.
Readings of non-poetic material and ephemera as poetry.
The role of archives and distribution in the formation of ‘outside’ and ‘subterranean’ poetry.
Formally and politically subversive gestures of ‘outside’ poetry and poetics: e.g. ‘nomad’ poetics
Poetry which may be considered ‘outside’ or ‘subterranean’ such as:
– Art brut
– Women’s work
– Popular and newspaper poetry
– Works responding to conditions of deliberate, self-imposed exile
– Works created out of/responding to outsider-ness due to physical and mental circumstances, disability, race, sexuality, homelessness, economics, class, gender, political stance, etc.
– Works which dispense with genre boundaries or operate meaningfully across them
– Works in dialects and ‘nation languages’
– Ancient prophetic writing
– Song forms such as ballads, rap, popPlease send an abstract of up to 300 words by 15th April 2016 to: outsidepoetry@gmail.com <mailto:outsidepoetry@gmail.com>. We will endeavour to respond by 31st May 2016. https://outsidepoetryfestival.wordpress.com/
Projects
Yellow Lines Drawn on Sheets of A4 Paper and then Placed in a Box – Episode 2
Second video in the series from James Davies, Other Room co-organiser –
Will Montgomery recording from The Other Room (February 2016)
Don’t forget that all other videos from this event and others are available in the middle column.
if p then q Pub Chat interview
I’d say if you thought of Minimalism, Language Poetry and Conceptual Poetry you’d be coming to the right sort of place.
Pub Chat interview with if p then q at The Poetry School’s Campus website HERE
Mark Leahy’s ‘his voice’ from February 2016 The Other Room
Video of Mark Leahy’s recent performance at The Other Room –
Writing in Practice – Volume 2
Now available at NAWE – http://www.nawe.co.uk/DB/current-wip-edition-2/editions/writing-in-practice-vol.-2.html
Poem Talk 97 on Larry Eigner
PoemTalk #97—a discussion of three poems by Larry Eigner with Daniel Bergmann, Ron Silliman and Michael Kelleher:
Yellow Lines Drawn on Sheets of A4 Paper and then Placed in a Box – Episode 1
A performance of James Davies’ project Yellow Lines Drawn on Sheets of A4 Paper and then Placed in a Box is now available. More episodes to follow.
The Recluse now seeking submissions
We are now accepting submissions for The Recluse 12! All work must be submitted via email to info@poetryproject.org with “Recluse” in the subject line. Please title your word file submission with your last name and the word “Recluse.”
The Recluse is published annually each Spring, and edited by the staff of The Poetry Project. For PDFs of past issues, visit our website. With issue 10, The Recluse moved from print to an online journal.
We suggest that people read an issue or two before submitting work! We are primarily interested in poetry and translations, but will consider other work as well.
Burnt Poetry: Ivor Davies and Destruction
Conference details and late call for papers about the current exhibition on Ivor Davies’ work.
See poster below.

The Anchored Terset
Not quite ‘new’ as these articles claim, remember:
frog
pond
plop!
but of interest, especially the generator that riffs on the NPL acronym, Get tweeting – Minimalism’s sticky end.
More at NORTHERN POETRY LIBRARY
And some opinions at The Guardian – yes!
B S Johnson Journal – Call for papers
Via Joe Darlington
Call for papers – The B.S. Johnson Journal – Issue 3 – Truth
The B.S. Johnson Journal is pleased to announce the new theme for our forthcoming issue : “Truth”. Johnson struggled with questions of truth his entire life and we now invite research papers, journalistic essays, creative writing, reviews and reminiscences all struggling with the same issue. These might entail readings and reassessments of Johnson’s work from contemporary theoretical perspectives, pieces utilising historical or archive research, or new works that have been created based on or responding to Johnson’s work and insights.
Johnson produced a lot of fictional and programmatic efforts aimed at telling the “truth” in the hope that it would make up for the “chaotic” nature of life. Johnson’s now famous assertion that firstly, “the two terms novel and fiction are not … synonymous” and that, secondly, he chose “to write truth in the form of a novel”, have led critics to call his position doctrinaire and solipsistic, if not boring. The third issue of The B.S. Johnson Journal seeks to see how Johnson’s quest for truth in novels extends to his short stories, poetry, journalistic pieces and films.
Julia Jordan, in her introduction to B.S. Johnson and Post-War Literature – Possibilities of the Avant-Garde (2014), points out the paradoxical tension in Johnson’s prose between dogmatism and elusiveness. This reminds us that we need a systematic reading of the treatment and presentation of Truth in Johnson’s work. Indeed, if we take the truth to mean what happened to the author – as he invites us to do in his quoting Beckett in the preface to Albert Angelo: “There is nothing else, let us be lucid for once, there is nothing else than what happens to me” – then Johnson’s prose becomes irrelevant for anyone but himself. Or does it?
Vanessa Guignery (2009) invites us to see beyond the autobiographical truth Johnson wants to lend to his work, to consider instead the phenomenological dimension of which she finds evidence in Johnson’s short story “What Did You Say The Name of the Place Was?”. We therefore invite Johnson’s readers to read beyond the author’s dogmatic judgements to question the resonance of Truth in his work :
– – How do Johnson’s most solipsistic art productions manage to engage the reader or spectator ?
– – What does Johnson’s engagement with Truth tell us about his view of the role art should or could play in Society ?
– – Can his will to tell the Truth be related to the Zeitgeist of the 1960s ?
– – Can Truth be relayed in third-person pronoun narratives ? How does it compare with first-person narratives ?
– – Can self-consciousness be synonymous for truth ?
– – Where does Johnson’s truth locate itself ?
Please submit your work for consideration, along with any enquiries, to the editors at bsjjournal@gmail.com by Monday 2nd May, 2016. We look forward to hearing from you!
Vicki Bennett & Gregor Weichbrodt: February Preview
At our next event on February 17th Vicki Bennett & Gregor Weichbrodt’s collaborative written work The Fundamental Questions will be performed by members of the audience. Bennett & Weichbrodt won’t be present on the night but we’ve put together a couple of tasters to show where they’re coming from and it’s a good good place. The Fundamental Questions is available either as a pdf download – HERE or as a print book – HERE
You have 7 days left to listen to BBC Radio 3’s The Late Junction featuring Bennett’s main project People Like Us – HERE. People Like Us is at http://peoplelikeus.org/
We’ve featured Weichbrodt’s Google translation of Kerouac’s On the Road on our blog before. Check that out and other great things at http://ggor.de/
As usual the event is at the magnificent Castle Hotel on Oldham Street, Manchester. See the flier in the middle column for further details. Our other performers are Will Montgomery and Mark Leahy.
The Curly Mind
The second issue of The Curly Mind is now online and contains poems by The Other Room’s Scott Thurston.
Mark Leahy: February event preview
Mark Leahy will perform ‘his voice’ at our next event on February 17th. As usual the event is at the magnificent Castle Hotel on Oldham Street, Manchester. See the flier in the middle column for further details. Our other performers are Will Montgomery and Vicki Bennett & Gregor Weichbrodt. Bennett & Weichbrodt won’t be present on the night, instead their work will be performed by members of the audience.
Here is part of a description of ‘his voice’ from Mark Leahy’s excellent website:
“A body of text gathered via online searches for “his voice sounded like” was edited to develop two- or three-word phrases. These phrases were then used to search Twitter. In the live event the outcome of this search process is converted to audio using text-to-speech software. This audio is delivered via headphones to the performer who attempts to speak it to the audience.”
Read more about this project and the many others that Mark has been involved in – HERE
Writing Shed app
A Message from Manchester-based Keith Lander…
I am writing to you in the hope that some of you might be able to help me. For the past 18 months I have been developing an app called ‘Writing Shed’ that currently works on the
Apple iPad and will soon work on Mac laptop/desktop computers. ‘Writing Shed’ is a combination word processor and work management application designed to help writers of Poetry, Short Stories, Novels and Scripts to type, edit and keep track of their work. In terms of functionality it is similar to the Scrivener application if you know that. The app is entering the final stage of testing for which I need up to 100 real users to try it out. The app is very stable, so what I’m looking for is feedback on how usable it is, what’s missing, and so on. If you feel that you could assist by using the app for up to sixty days then I would like you to get in touch with me by email at keith@writing-shed.com letting me know what you would use the app for. All you need for testing is an Apple iPad running IOS9. You can find out about Writing Shed by browsing the User Guide on http://www.writing-shed.com. I look forward to hearing from some of you.
Best
Keith
Videos from Out of Everywhere 2 launch
Recordings from our last event, a launch for Out of Everywhere 2: Linguistically innovative poetry by women in North America & the UK
Elizabeth Jane Burnett
Sophie Mayer
Christine Kennedy
Craig Dworkin and James La Marre discuss the making of the Eclipse archive
James La Marre: Hey, everyone, and welcome to another one on one. Today, I’m in Salt Lake City sitting with Craig Dworkin — poet, writer, and professor at the University of Utah. He’s also the founding senior editor at Eclipse, an online archive of poetry. How are you doing today, Craig?
More HERE at Jacket

