Past Events:
Lee
Ann Brown & Abigail Child
Moving
the Image
Tuesday, March 28
Seminar: 5:30 PM 462 ICC • Reading: 8:00 PM ICC Auditorium
In addition to many magazine and anthology publications, Lee Ann Brown
is the author of two full-length collections of poetry, The Sleep
That Changed Everything and Polyverse. Brown is currently
collaborating with her husband Tony Torn on SOP DOLL! A Jack
Tale Noh Play. Abigail Child pushes the envelope of sound-image relations
with sensitivity, smarts, and ephemeral beauty. Her latest film, The
Future is Behind You, premiered at the New York Film Festival last
October.
Diran
Adebayo
Reading from His Fiction
Tuesday,
March 21
7:00 PM Philodemic Room, Healy Hall
British Council (USA) Writer in Residence
The British Council USA's UK Writer-in-Residence program is an ongoing
literature initiative at major American universities.
Diran Adebayo's magical ride onto the literary A-list began with the
release of his first novel, Some Kind of Black, winner of the
prestigious Betty Trask Award. His second novel, My Once Upon a
Time, moved the Daily Telegraph to declare: "This is a book
that sings...by turns rhapsodic, exhilerating and poignant." Adebayo's
residency is co-sponsored by the Program in African-American Studies
and the Humanities Initiative.
Christian
Bök
& Alice
Notley
Musical and Other Influences
Tuesday, February 28
Seminar: 5:30 PM 462 ICC • Reading: 8:00 PM ICC Auditorium
Christian Bök is the author of the bestselling Eunoia and Crystallography.
Bök has created artificial languages for two television shows:
Earth: Final Conflict and Amazon, and has earned accolades
for his sound poetry performances and conceptual artworks. Alice Notley
is the author of more than twenty-five books of poetry. Her poetic autobiography
Mysteries of Small Houses was a finalist for the 1998 Pulitzer Prize,
and her long poem Disobedience won the Griffin International
Prize in 2002.
Susan Stewart
Poetry
and the Feeling of a Thought
Tuesday, January 31
Seminar: 5:30 PM 462 ICC • Reading: 8:00 PM ICC Auditorium
Widely acclaimed poet and critic Susan Stewart
is the author of four books of poems, most recently The Forest and
Columbarium, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award in
2003. Her prose works include Poetry and the Fate of the Senses,
winner of the Christian Gauss Award for Literary Criticism and the Truman
Capote Prize in Literary Criticism.
Kenneth Goldsmith & Darren Wershler-Henry
Conceptual Poetics and Uncreative Writing
Tuesday, November 15
Seminar: 5:30 PM 462 ICC • Reading: 8:00 PM ICC Auditorium
Kenneth Goldsmith's writing has been called by Publisher's Weekly some
of the most "exhaustive and beautiful collage work yet produced
in poetry." Goldsmith is the author of eight books of poetry and
founding editor of the online archive UbuWeb.
Darren Wershler-Henry is the author of two books of poetry, NICHOLODEON:
a book of lowerglyphs, and the tapeworm foundry, which
was short-listed for the Trillium Prize. His most recent book is The
Iron Whim: An Archaeology of Typewriting.
Amiri Baraka & Rod Smith
Art and Politics: An Overview
Tuesday, October 18
Seminar: 5:30 PM 462 ICC • Reading: 8:00 PM ICC Auditorium
Poet, essayist, dramatist, political activist Amiri Baraka is widely
recognized as the central figure in the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s
and has been a tireless innovator and instigator ever since. Recent
additions to his extensive bibliography include Somebody Blew Up
America & Other Poems and The Essence of Reparations.
Poet and publisher Rod Smith's most recent books include Music or
Honesty and Poèmes de l'araignée. Peter
Gizzi has written that Smith is "submodernism's first genius."
John Kinsella & Juliana Spahr
Poetic (Dis)location
Wednesday, September 28
Seminar: 5:30 PM 462 ICC • Reading: 8:00 PM ICC Auditorium
Australian poet and editor, John Kinsella, is the author of more than
thirty books, including The New Arcadia, and Peripheral
Light: New and Selected Poetry. Juliana Spahr's poetry, according
to the New York Times, "reach[es] after the whole shebang."
Her collections of poems include This Connection of Everyone with
Lungs and Fuck You-Aloha-I Love You.
Ahdaf
Soueif
Maps of Letters: A Conversation
Friday, September 9
4:00 PM ICC (Inter-Cultural Center)
Co-sponsored by the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, the Marino
Family International Writers' Workshop
Ahdaf Soueif, born in Cairo, Egypt, is one of the most widely read Arab
fiction writers in English. Her most recent novel, Maps of Love,
was short-listed for The Booker Prize in 1999. She will discuss the
role of the writer in society as it relates to the emergence of the
Anglo-Arab novel form.
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