Sharon Kivland – READING NANA

READING NANA. An experimental novel, 2017

ISBN 978-1-910055-30-4
MA BIBLIOTHÈQUE,
140 mm x 205 mm, 104 pages, perfect-bound
£10.00

Emile Zola’s novel Nana is re-read and re-written,ghost-written, condensed according to soft furnishings, lighting effects (including metaphor), other women, death and dying, cats, anti-semitism, money, smell, and many other categories. More here.

Edge Poetics

Beds

A Symposium on Innovative and Speculative Creative Writing Practices in Higher Education

4th November 2017

10.00-17.30, with a public reading at 18.00

Venue: University of Bedfordshire, Luton Campus

With keynotes from Professor Robert Sheppard (Edge Hill University) and Nicholas Royle (Manchester Metropolitan University), and contributions from Dr Helen Marshall (Anglia Ruskin University) and Dr Daniel Watt (Loughborough University).

In the late essay, ‘Literature and Life’, Gilles Deleuze expands on ideas from his earlier work about the ways literary writing can open up ‘a kind of foreign language within language, which is neither another language nor a rediscovered patois, but a becoming-other of language, a minorization of this major language, a delirium that carries it off, a witch’s line that escapes the dominant system.’

Till relatively recently, Creative Writing in Higher Education has been dominated by a set of techniques and tropes derived from realism, and also by the expectations of mainstream literary fiction. Increasingly, however, aspects of innovative and speculative poetics are finding their way into the classroom.

This one-day symposium will ask: what are the benefits for the pedagogy of Creative Writing of writing practices drawn from experimental and fantastic traditions; and what does it mean to be a writer interested in such traditions who also teaches Creative Writing in academe?  Is there a value in teaching students to find the kind of delirium Deleuze writes of? It will bring together writers, teachers of Creative Writing, and others with an interest in the field, to discuss these questions.

Suggested topics for papers might include but are not limited to:

Creative Writing pedagogy and innovation; Creative Writing pedagogy and writing in genre; all forms of creative writing that work at the borders of genre in the Creative Writing classroom; blurred lines between theory and creative practice

Conference organisers Tim Jarvis, Keith Jebb, and Lesley McKenna (University of Bedfordshire) invite abstracts of 350 words for 20-minute papers; please submit along with a short biographical note, by 4th August 2017, to edgepoetics@gmail.com.

William Rowe Collected Poems Launch

WR

18 May at 18:30–22:00. May Day Rooms, 88 Fleet St, London, EC4Y 1DH.

Four poets will read from their new books of anti-capitalist poetry. Helen Dimos’s No Realtor Was Compensated for This Sale takes readers out of socially controlled time into real time. Stephen Mooney’s Ratzinger Solo mixes the voices of Trump, Pope Benedict XVI, and Han Solo in order to investigate crossovers of how they present themselves as characters immune to criticism. William Rowe’s Collected Poems assert resistance against oppression as a necessary form of art. Verity Spott’s forthcoming Click Way Close Door Say exposes ways in which the language of institutional care traps us.

Free.

Otoliths issue forty-five

strata S.A. 6

Karl Kempton, Thomas Fink, Maya D. Mason, John Xero, John M. Bennett, D.J. Huppatz, Daniel de Culla, Seth Copeland, Texas Fontanella, Jim Leftwich, Robert Lee Brewer, Jim Hanson, Olivier Schopfer, William Repass, Steve Dalachinsky, Kyle Hemmings, Craig Cotter, Jon Cone, Dah Helmer, Michael Farrell, Peycho Kanev, Richard J. Fleming, Cecelia Chapman, Jeff Crouch, Jack Galmitz, Philip Byron Oakes, J.J. Campbell, Sanjeev Sethi, Tom Montag, Darren C. Demaree, Hart Broudy, Neil Leadbeater, Volodymyr Bilyk, Stephen C. Middleton, Aidan Semmens, Karen Greenbaum-Maya, Sneha Subramanian Kanta, Bill Wolak, Pete Spence, Clara B. Jones, Andrew Topel, Andrew Taylor & David Spittle, Marietta McGregor, Faleeha Hassan, Diane Keys, Jesse Glass, Kenneth Rexroth, Katrinka Moore, Daniel Y. Harris, osvaldo cibils, Thomas M. Cassidy, Eileen R. Tabios, David Lohrey, Edward Kulemin, Jared Chipkin, Lakey Comess, Baron Geraldo, Shataw Naseri, Logan K. Young, AG Davis, hiromi suzuki, Hugh Tribbey, Anne-Marie Jeanjean, Caleb Puckett, Drew B. David, Jeff Bagato, Márton Koppány, Louise Landes Levi, Jill Chan, Alain Robinet, Raymond Farr, Dennis Andrew Aguinaldo, Willie Smith, Joe Balaz, M A McDonald, Jim McCrary, Sian Vate, Heath Brougher, Owen Bullock, differx, Lynn Strongin, Marcello Diotallevi, Robbie Coburn, Carol Stetser, Chris Brown, Richard James Allen, Grzegorz Wróblewski, Jeff Harrison, David Harrison Horton, Sjoerd van der Weide, Joel Chace, Indigo Perry, Simon Perchik, Richard Kostelanetz, David Baptiste Chirot, Timothy Pilgrim, Nicole Pottier, Natsuko Hirata, Massimo Stirneri, Rebecca Eddy, Josh Smith, major stafford sternwall, John Pursch, Sheikha A., Mercedes Webb-Pullman, Jared Pearce, Keith Nunes, Jake Goetz, Allen Forrest, sean burn, Richard Skelton, Tom Beckett, Shloka Shankar, Seth Howard, Tony Beyer, Sam Langer, Bob Heman, Cherie Hunter Day, Aurélien Leif,  Catherine Fletcher, Johannes S. H. Bjerg, Pragya Vashishtha, Paul Pfleuger, Jr., Pam Brown, & Marilyn Stablein. Available here.

Launch party for David Gaffney novel All The Places I’ve Ever Lived

1726516_orig

As well as the usual author reading and book signing, this extra-special event will have live entertainment, Mexican vegan food and free wine.Also on the reading part of the bill for the official launch party is cutting-edge poet Tom Jenks (one third of Manchester’s premiere experimental poetry night The Other Room).

There will also be music courtesy a DJ set by members of Monkeys In Love – think Italian horror movie soundtracks, industrial musicals and other exotica – plus a live set by the band Hot Shorts, featuring critically acclaimed and award-winning writers Chris Killen and Lara Williams (formerly of girl group PINS).

The event takes place at The Wonder Inn on Shudehill in the centre of Manchester, on Thursday 18 May 2017, at 6.30pm. Entry is free.

Transcultural poetry and performance workshop with Mamta Sagar and Nia Davies

lightbox

Date – Thu 18 May 2017

Time – 10.00 am

Duration – 2 hours

Cost – Free

Disabled access? – Yes

Venue – New Adelphi Building, Studio Theatre, University of Salford, University of Salford, University Road, Salford M5 4WT

This poetry performance workshop with Indian poet Mamta Sagar and Nia Davies explores at poetry as a tool of expression and transformation across cultures and languages. Participants will be encouraged to explode their notions of poetry and text by using visual and performance arts as well as experimental ‘translation’ and ‘transcreation’ possibilities.

Suitable for all, whatever your experience or background. Activities will include creative research, exploring multilingualism, performance practice, visualizing words and metaphors drawing, doodling, audio and video work.

The workshop will culminate in a performance and installation to be presented, at the performance venue. The workshop will be followed by a group reading/performance designed and produced at the workshop.

Mamta Sagar is a Kannada poet, playwright and translator from India teaching creative writing to the film, visual arts,design and literature students in Bangalore. Nia Davies is a poet and editor of Poetry Wales. She is doing practice based research in poetry and performance at Salford University.

More here.

FRONT HORSE

Front

Saturday, May 13 at 7 PM – 11 PM. Sneinton Hermitage Community Centre
Hermitage Walk, Nottingham, NG2 4GN

Poetry performances by Sarah Hayden, Calum Gardner, Tom Betteridge
Musical performance by Linda Kemp, Paul Hegarty, Food People
Artist moving image by Matt Wright

Join us for the launch event for the first issue of the little magazine FRONT HORSE, featuring work by Tara Masterson Hally, Vicky Sparrow, Jane Goldman, Greg Thomas, Catalina Stanislav, Alice de Bourg & Aoife Flynn, Tom Betteridge, AMJ Seville, Gary Zhexi Zhang, Suzanne van der Lingen, Colin Herd, Emilia Weber, Matthew Hamblin & Esme Armour, Jake the Snack, and Saskia McCracken

All profit from sales of magazine will go to the Nottingham Women’s Centre

Admission free. Venue is wheelchair accessible.
BYOB (Drinks will be available on donation basis)

 

SJ Fowler: Mayakovsky

Mayakovsky poster v2

Mayakovsky : a play
Tickets on Sale : Rich Mix Theatre
35-47 Bethnal Green Rd, London E1 6LA

Tickets for Friday June 9th 7.30pm
Tickets for Saturday June 10th 7.30pm
Tickets for Sunday June 11th 7.30pm

Tickets now on sale for Mayakovsky, a play commissioned as part of the Revolution 17 season, marking the centenary of the Russian Revolution. Mayakovsky is part of a night entitled Land of Scoundrels, which features new works of innovative and post-dramatic theatre, intertwined and overlapping across one evening, from the likes of Viennese playwright Petra Freimund and Belarus Free Theatre member and dramaturg Larry Lynch, amidst a stunning original set designed by material engineer and artist Thomas Duggan.

Jocelyn Spaar + Kayo Chingonyi

Spaar

May 1st, 7.30—9pm, Judith E. Wilson Drama Studio (basement of the English Faculty building), 9 West Road, Cambridge, CB3 9DP
Hosted by Sophie Seita
Everyone welcome!

Jocelyn Spaar is a poet, translator, artist, and curator living and working in New York. Her poems, drawings, and translations have appeared in Bridge, Gigantic, The Magazine of the Artist’s Institute, The Paper Nautilus, The Paris Review Daily, Stonecutter, Storychord, Vice, and elsewhere. She has translated work for Archipelago Books and New Directions, and, with Kit Schluter, translated Amandine André’s Circle of Dogs, which she also illustrated (Solar Luxuriance, 2015). She is the illustrator of Cream by Cecilia Corrigan (Capricious, 2016) and has exhibited her drawings, films, and text-based installations at the 2ANNAS film festival, Apt. 302, The Bridge PAI, Knockdown Center, NOoSPHERE Arts, Printed Matter’s NY Art Book Fair, and Ugly Duck. She most recently curated the exhibition Elective Affinities: A Library at the Hunter College Art Galleries.

Kayo Chingonyi was born in Zambia in 1987, and moved to the UK at the age of six. He is the author of two pamphlets, Some Bright Elegance (Salt, 2012) and The Colour of James Brown’s Scream (Akashic, 2016). His first full-length collection, Kumukanda, will be published in June 2017 with Chatto & Windus. In 2012 he represented Zambia at Poetry Parnassus, a festival of world poets staged by The Southbank Centre as part of the London 2012 Festival. He was awarded the Geoffrey Dearmer Prize and shortlisted for the inaugural Brunel University African Poetry Prize and has completed residencies with Kingston University, Cove Park, First Story, The Nuffield Council on Bioethics, and Royal Holloway University of London. He was Associate Poet at the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) from Autumn 2015 to Spring 2016, and has curated events for Stirling University, The Southbank Centre, Hackney Council, The Freeword Centre, among others.

Reading: Andrea Brady, Robert Hampson, Sophie Seita

RoyalHolloway

25th May, 19:00–21:00. 11 Bedford Square, London, WC1B 3RF.

Royal Holloway Poetics Research Centre and Kent Centre for Modern Poetry present readings by:

Andrea Brady, Robert Hampson, Sophie Seita

=============================================

Andrea Brady’s books of poetry include Vacation of a Lifetime (Salt, 2001), Wildfire: A Verse Essay on Obscurity and Illumination (Krupskaya, 2010), Mutability: scripts for infancy (Seagull, 2012), Cut from the Rushes (Reality Street, 2013), Dompteuse (Bookthug, 2014) and (Crater, 2016). She is Professor of Poetry at Queen Mary University of London, where she runs the Centre for Poetry and curates the Globe Road Poetry festival. Andrea is director of the Archive of the Now (www.archiveofthenow.org), the UK’s largest digital archive of performances by experimental poets. With Keston Sutherland she is co-publisher of Barque Press (www.barquepress.com)

Robert Hampson has had a long-term involvement with contempory innovative poetry as editor, critic and practitioner. He co-edited the magazine Alembic during the 1970s, and he and Peter Barry co-edited the pioneering collection of essays The New British poetries: The scope of the posible (Manchester University press, 1993). He co-edited Frank O’Hara Now (Liverpool University Press, 2010) with Will Montgomery and Clasp: late modernist poetry in London in the 1970s (Shearsman, 2016) with Ken Edwards. His own most recent poetry publications include Assembled Fugitives: Selected Poems 1973-1998 (Stride, 2000), Seaport (Shearsman, 2008), an explanation of colours (Veer, 2010), and sonnets 4 sophie (pushtika, 2015). Reworked Disasters (Knivesforksand spoons, 2013) was long-listed for the Forward Prize. He collaborated (with Robert Sheppard) on Liverpool (hugs &) kisses (2015).

Sophie Seita works with language on the page, in performance, and in translation. She has presented her work at the Serpentine Gallery (London), La MaMa Galleria (NYC), Company Gallery (NYC), SoundEye (Cork, Ireland), Neue Töne Festival (Stuttgart, Germany), Goethe-Institut New York, and elsewhere. Her publications include Les Bijoux Indiscrets, or, Paper Tigers (Gauss PDF, 2017), Meat (Little Red Leaves, 2015), Fantasias in Counting(BlazeVOX, 2014), 12 Steps (Wide Range, 2012), and i mean i dislike that fate that i was made to where, a translation of the German poet Uljana Wolf (Wonder, 2015). The recipient of various awards and fellowships for her creative and critical work, she also received a PEN/Heim Grant (2015) for her forthcoming translation of Wolf’s Subsisters: Selected Poems (Belladonna*, 2017). She is a Junior Research Fellow at Queens’ College, Cambridge, where she’s currently editing a facsimile reprint of The Blind Man (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2017) and finishing her first monograph on avant-garde little magazine communities.