The Other Room website rebooted!

The Other Room website has been running the whole duration we’ve been running our nights and has started to bulge and bulge. So we decided to do a bit of a spring clean in order to make it easier to navigate. We’ve also tidied up all those inevitable missed links which Mick Weller celebrates HERE.

If you’re old or new to the site have a look around our massive archive of blog/news posts, video archive from most of our readings, video and print interviews, book reviews, reviews of our events, poster archive and photos. Don’t forget of course to check out our upcoming events and annual anthology.

James, Scott & Tom

 

 

Neil Campbell, Rhys Trimble & Tim Allen at Verbose

Monday 23 May 2016, Manchester literature night verbose continues

Headliners from the fabulous Knives Forks and Spoons press: Tim Allen, Neil Campbell and Rhys Trimble.

Live literature night Verbose is back on Monday 23 May, with special guests from the fabulous Knives Forks and Spoons press and the usual open mic of prose and poetry performances – sign up for a three-minute slot by emailing verbosemcr at gmail dot com.

Run by Alec Newman, Knives Forks and Spoons has developed the biggest avant garde poetry list in the UK since its launch in 2010, publishing seminal international figures in experimental poetry together with many young poets and “outsider” practitioners. May’s Verbose welcomes Tim Allen, Neil Campbell and Rhys Trimble.

Tim Allen edited the magazine Terrible Work and is involved with the Peter Barlow’s Cigarette live literature events in Manchester. He has a number of poetry pamphlets to his name. Neil Campbell has been included three times in the brilliant Best British Short Stories series. He has three collections of short fiction, two poetry chapbooks and his first novel, Sky Hooks, is out in September. Rhys Trimble is a poet and shoutyman from Wales who enjoys poetry across languages. He has performed extensively across UK and Europe.

Verbose is hosted by Sarah-Clare Conlon at Fallow café, 2a Landcross Road, Fallowfield, M14 6NA. It’s free entry and doors are at 7.30pm. Verbose takes place every fourth Monday of the month.

 

Outside-in/Inside-out

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 PAPERS

Inspired 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, pop

Please 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/

Tony Lopez on his work for the Bury Text Festival

 ‘Works on Paper’ was commissioned in 2008. I stayed in Manchester and spent a few days visiting Bury just finding out about the place, people and history, including the library and archive. Of course Bury is a prime site in the Industrial Revolution both in terms of technical innovation and its rapid economic development as a manufacturing centre. I was particularly interested in Bury’s later position in the early twentieth century as a world-leading producer of paper. This makes sense when you realise that industrial paper production came about as a kind of diversification of the cotton industry after much earlier breakthroughs in mechanical weaving, John Kay’s flying shuttle, programmed looms and so on. They had cotton waste and rags, water and then steam power; factories with highly trained mechanics and inventive engineers, and were very well placed to respond to the explosion of print culture.

Discover more HERE at the Text Archive Blog and site which also includes news and articles by derek beaulieu, Helen White, Richard Pinkney & Holly Pester

Stephen Emmerson Family Portraits out now from if p then q

Family_Portraits_V1_Page_093
family_portraits_promo
Family Portraits
Published July 2015
104 pp
£12.00 including postage and packaging UK
£19.00 including postage and packing worldwide

About the book
Stephen Emmerson’s Family Portraits is a series of blank canvases which ask the reader to fill in the blank(s) or leave the canvas just the way they see it. The book includes 9 portraits of each of the following types: Father, Mother, Brother, Sister, Son, Daughter, Lover, Self-Portrait. The book also contains 8 lactose pills which can be taken to help see the portraits. Family Portraits is published as a lush hardback edition.

About the author
Stephen Emmerson’s publications include: ‘A never ending poem… (Zimzalla), Telegraphic Transcriptions (Dept Press / Stranger Press), No Ideas but in Things (Dark Windows Press), Albion (Like This Press), The Last Ward (Very Small Kitchen), Pharmacopoetics,(Apple Pie Editions) Stephen Emmerson’s Poetry Wholes (If P then Q), All my Pornography (The Red Ceilings), and Comfortable Knives (KFS).

samples and purchase details at the if p then q website HERE

“It’s all one enormous blancmange” – an interview with S J Fowler

“For me, poetry is about the human animal in wonderment about the very possibility of language at all. It should be about refracting and reflecting and mulching the endless and idiosyncratic world of language, its materials, its meaning and the expression of that which surround us all differently. The poet’s ‘gift’ is the skill, attention and uniqueness of this refraction.” SJ Fowler talks to Sabotage Reviews.

Brighton Noise Poets in The Wire

“A wave of outsider poets and musicians is threatening to breach the UK’s coastal defences with their DIY mixes of spoken word, broken noise and radical politics.”

There is an extensive profile of the Brighton scene in the latest print edition of The Wire magazine, featuring Keston Sutherland, Joe Luna and Verity Spott amongst others.

David Gaffney: A Pop Star Trapped in the Body of a Flasher

“My girlfriend told me she worked in an office where someone would fly a remote controlled helicopter about and someone else would play a trumpet. That went into a story and my girlfriend now says I stole it from her. ‘You’ve stolen my ideas’, she says. But I didn’t, I just stole her experiences, which I think is all right.”

Other Room reader David Gaffney talks about his work as part of the University of Chester’s Flash Interviews series.