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.

Storm and Golden Sky

FRIDAY 26th February 2016. Storm and Golden Sky at the Caledonia. Lizzie Nunnery and Scott Thurston. Up the stairs (at the back of the barroom, above the pub name, above) at the Caledonia pub, Catharine Street, in the Georgian Quarter, Liverpool, £5, 7.30 pm spot-on start (but slightly later start than previously)!

 

Will Montgomery: February Preview

Will graduated from Emmanuel College, Cambridge, with a degree in English in 1987. After a period outside academia, he took the Literature, Culture, Modernity MA at Queen Mary, University of London, receiving the Marjorie Thompson award for outstanding academic achievement in 1999. He remained at Queen Mary for his AHRB-funded PhD, which was devoted to the writing of contemporary American poet Susan Howe. He subsequently taught poetry, modernist literature and critical theory at Queen Mary and at Southampton University. In January 2007 he joined Royal Holloway as RCUK research fellow in contemporary poetry and poetics. He is director of the department’s Poetics Research Centre and a co-organizer of that group’s POLYply reading and performance series.

Recent publications include The Poetry of Susan Howe (Palgrave, 2010) and the essay collection Frank O’Hara Now (Liverpool UP, 2010), which he co-edited with Robert Hampson. He is currently working on a study of short form in modernist and contemporary US poetry, and co-editing an edited collection on field recordings and literature. Will also works with audio, making field recordings, sound art and music.

Follow this LINK to hear some of his sound work, including pieces with Other Room reader Carol Watts.

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.

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

Myths of the Modern Woman

Sat, 30 Jan 2016 4.00 PM – 6.00 PM Tickets: £3/2 – Bluecoat, School Lane, Liverpool

 

Myths of the Modern Woman – an afternoon of readings and discussion curated by Sandeep Parmar, academic, poet and author of The Reading Mina Loy’s Autobiographies: Myth of the Modern Woman. The event features contributions from poets Zoe Skoulding, Sara Crangle, Joanne Ashcroft, Robert Sheppard and artist Melissa Gordon.

Parmar has programmed Myths of the Modern Women in response to Loy’s writing and to Melissa Gordon’s enduring fascination with Loy’s play ‘Collision’ (1916). Gordon’s exhibition Fallible Space, an installation determined by the script of ‘Collision’ provides the backdrop for the afternoon. The event will be introduced by Sandeep Parmar followed by poetry readings by Skoulding, Crangle, Ashcroft and Sheppard. The readings will be followed by a round table discussion and drinks in the Bluecoat bar.

Mina Loy (1882-1966) is recognised today as one of the most innovative modernist poets, numbering Gertrude Stein, Marcel Duchamp, Djuna Barnes and T.S. Eliot amongst her admirers.

About the Poets:

Robert Sheppard’s History or Sleep: Selected Poems has just been published by Shearsman, and showpieces work from the last 30 years. Last year he also published his ‘autrebiographies’ Words Out of Time and this yearThe Drop will appear from Oystercatcher. He is Professor of Poetry and Poetics at Edge Hill University, and is also a critic of contemporary poetry.

Sara Crangle is a Reader in English at the University of Sussex. She edited Mina Loy’s unpublished short prose works for a volume titled Stories and Essays of Mina Loy (Dalkey Archive Press 2010). She has published writing on Loy’s associates Gertrude Stein, James Joyce, Wyndham Lewis and members of Dada, and is currently working on a book with the working title, Mina Loy: Anatomy of a Sentient Satirist (forthcoming, Edinburgh University Press). She started her first book of poetry, Wild Ascending Lisp (Critical Documents 2008), whilst on a research trip to explore the Loy archive at Yale.

Zoë Skoulding is primarily a poet, though her work encompasses sound-based vocal performance, collaboration, translation, literary criticism, editing, and teaching creative writing. She lectures in the School of English at Bangor University, and has been Editor of the international quarterly Poetry Wales since 2008. Her recent collections of poems are The Museum of Disappearing Sounds (Seren, 2013), Remains of a Future City (Seren, 2008), long-listed for Wales Book of the Year 2009, and The Mirror Trade (Seren, 2004). Her collaborative publications include Dark Wires with Ian Davidson (West House Books, 2007) and From Here, with Simonetta Moro (Dusie, 2008). She is a member of the collective Parking Non-Stop, whose CD Species Corridor, combining experimental soundscape with poetry and song, was released on the German label Klangbad in 2008. You Will Live in Your Own Cathedral is a multimedia soundscape, video and poetry performance with Alan Holmes that has been presented across Europe in several languages.

Joanne Ashcroft has had poems published in journals, pamphlets, and in The Other Room anthology 2015. Her pamphlet Maps and Love Songs for Mina Loy won the Poetry Wales Purple Moose 2012 and is published by Seren. Most recently she has a collaborative work with Patricia Farrell, Conversational Nuisance available as a zimZalla object. Several of her ‘Charm’ poems can be read in the current edition of The Wolf and in Litter (online). Joanne is currently a research student at Edge Hill University, studying ‘sound and transformation’ in the work of three contemporary innovative poets.

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

Camarade 61

7pm – Free Entry – Apiary Studios: 460 Hackney Rd, E2 9EG.
A stand alone Camarade poetry event in London to mark the beginning of 2016, the 61st event of it’s type curated by the Enemies project. Featuring: 
 
Tim Atkins & JJ Mars
Lavinia Singer & Ella Frears
John Canfield & Joe Turrent
Simone Gilson & Claudia Juhre
Liddy Gilbert & James Caley
Maren Nygard & Eley Williams
Sarah Kelly & Iris Colomb
Prudence Chamberlain & SJ Fowler
Farhana Khatun & Freya Harwood Bond
Molly Bergin & Megan Haycock
Olga Kolesnikova & Richard Scott
Susie Campbell & Mike West
Keely Laufer & Emma Mackilligin
Julia Lewis & Annabel Banks
Clover Peake & Giovanna Coppola

Hi Zero 40 – Peter Manson, Holly Pester,Xelis de Toro

Hi Zero Number 40 of the New Year 2016 will feature readings/performances by the following poets:

Peter Manson

Peter Manson lives in Glasgow. His books include “Poems of Frank Rupture” (Sancho Panza Press), “English in Mallarmé” (Blart Books), “Adjunct: an Undigest” and “For the Good of Liars” (both from Barque Press), and “Between Cup and Lip” (Miami University Press, Ohio). Miami UP also publish his book of translations, “Stéphane Mallarmé: The Poems in Verse”. More Mallarmé to follow, probably. A double-sided broadside, “the science of poetry • the poetry of science” by Manson and Linus Slug, appeared from ninerrors in 2015.petermanson.wordpress.com for more.

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Holly Pester

Holly Pester lives in London and teaches at the University of Essex. Her collection of poetry, gossip and archive fanfiction called, ‘go to reception and ask for Sara in red felt tip’ was published by Book Works in 2015. She is currently working on a sound poetry album of Lullabies made in collaboration with fellow poets and artists to be published by Test Centre in late 2016.

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Xelís de Toro

Xelís de Toro is a Galician (Spain) writer and performer based in the UK. He has published 5 novels and more than 10 children’s books in Galician, Spanish and Catalan. In recent years his text work has transmutated and spilled into stages and streets in the shape of live art, performance and spoken word. He has published a bilingual collection of poetry in English / Galician called ‘The Book of Invisible Bridges\ (Pighogpress, 2012). His spoken word performances comprise poetry, vocal improvisation and body movement.

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And take place on Wednesday 27th January, 2016.

Plus the usual music from a thing, books, bar and people, all taking place upstairs at the Hope & Ruin, just down from the train station on Queen’s road, Brighton.

Doors at 7:30pm for an 8:00pm start. £4.

https://www.facebook.com/events/539596539532777/

Perception documentary

A message from Paul Taylor…

Hello all, my name is Paul and I am currently a student at the University of Salford where I am studying a MA degree in television documentary production. I am currently making a documentary titled Perception, which aims to explore the different ways we view and interpret time in our lives.

I am looking for a range of different contributors who have experiences or views relating to this idea and I am very interested meeting with creatives, particularly poets and spoken word artists.

If you have previously written anything surrounding the theme of time or if it is an area you have often wondered about/one that interests you, it would be great to hear from you.

You can contact me at p.taylor8@edu.salford.ac.uk

 Thank you for your time.

 Paul Taylor

Verbose

Verbose is a monthly spoken word night at Fallow Cafe, 2A Landcross Road, Manchester, M14 6NA, showcasing the best poetry and prose the Rainy City has to offer. Each month sees special performances by featured guests from various writing collectives and independent publishers, along with an open mic, when anyone can get up and read their work. The first event of 2016 is on Monday 25 January, with special guests and an open mic. Free entry, doors at 7.30pm.

The headliners are from the Edge Hill Writers’ Group: Ailsa Cox, Jim Hinks and John D Rutter. Their colleague Billy Cowan will be reading on the open mic. As a special post-Xmas gift, the gang will also be giving away copies of their Cheltenham Literature Festival anthology, which features best-selling novelist Carys Bray – first come, first served! More at the Verbose site.

 

Support Shady Dealings with Language

Organising a second batch of Shady events with such wonders as Sharon Kivland, Karen Di Franco, Nathan Jones and Holly Pester.

Throw a few quid in the pot if you want to support such a fantastic idea, and I’ll bring events to Sheffield, Bristol, Liverpool and London,  working with the above artists and writers and a fist full more who are probing language through their arts practice.

2014 was the first year of Shady Dealings With Language. With 19 artists, writers, musicians, academics, filmmakers, poets, publishers, performers, I organised interdisciplinary day and evening events for four cities across England and Scotland to demonstrate and assess the intersections of art, writing and performance in contemporary art practices.

In 2016, with your support and the influence of Sharon, Karen, Nathan and Holly, I’ll do the same.

I’m writing up our Arts Council England grant application now. We’ll get a grant if I can prove with cold hard cash that you’re all interested in supporting and attending these events.

So if you can turn in the price of a pint, or even a pint of milk to contribute to equipment hire, printing and fees I’d be v grateful and I’ll get this beast on the road.

Thanks very much
Claire Potter

https://www.gofundme.com/hpgkbphg

PS
Have a look at what went on in 2014 here.