Modern and Contemporary American Poetry

This past Fall I had the opportunity to participate in one of the largest poetry experiments in history. The University of Pennsylvania staged a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on Modern and Contemporary American Poetry. Capably guided by Al Filries, the course lasted ten weeks and had an innovative slant to things, with poets like William Carlos Williams, Gertrude Stein, Lorine Niedecker, Charles Bernstein, Rae Armantrout, Anne Waldman and other “outside” American poets included. Missing were poets like Charles Olson, Michael McClure, Robert Duncan, Robin Blaser, Nathaniel Mackey, Brenda Hillman and other poets who have inspired me and informed my work. Of those missing, Olson’s absence was the most egregious in my view and spoke volumes about what the instructors feel has been the main thrust of post-war American poetry. In many ways, I think this is a mistake, over-valuing the intellect at the expense of a deeper gesture. I have covered this in some of my essays. The heart has 100 times the energy of the brain and while I value the intelligence of all the poets covered in ModPo, I think one comment on the discussion board was telling. The author said she was interested in “getting back to content.” It reminds me of the joke, described as old when I saw it as Morris Berman told it. “What do you get when you cross a deconstructionst with a mafioso? A deal you can’t understand.”

There were 36,000 students around the world signed up for this course, including Senator Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, and the discussion forums were lively and thought-provoking to say the least. I drove my family to Minneapolis and Chicago and back, so they could meet Ella Roque, the new addition to the family, and was a little preoccupied during the early part of the course. At one point, when the folks running it stated that you can’t over think a poem, I realized the group gathered was not after poetry in canadian cialis pharmacy the same way I was, so lost a little interest there as well. My poetry education has come mostly from poets and not academic types, but I found Al Filries to be a credible and welcoming host, the course itself to be a remarkable experiment in education and an inspiration. I would like to create something similar for Cascadia poetry and am working on that idea.

I have pasted in below a recent email from Al Filries and the University of Pennsylvania and, if you can, please consider supporting their efforts:

Al Filries & his TA’s & the KWH

Dear Paul Nelson,

Hello to you, and all ModPo people.

Every day since around the middle of our course – and often more than once daily – I have received notes in the mail, email messages, tweets, etc., asking me how a ModPo’er can help support what we’re doing at the Kelly Writers House. I’ve responded each time – happily, proudly – with such information in the forums, on Facebook, by email. So let me now put the information for everyone right here in one place.

Yes, the Writers House is always open to all, as many ModPo people have discovered when they visit. Yes, all our programs are free; we never charge a cent for our seminars, workshops, talks, performances, mini-courses, writing groups. Yes, we are – passionately, devotedly – a non-profit center for the literary arts. We can only do what we do with the support of donations from people who admire the project and want to help.

So, not surprisingly, as the year nears its end, and as the holidays approach, I as founder and Faculty Director of the Kelly Writers House am spending my days asking friends of the House to help us. I haven’t yet asked you, my new ModPo pals, but in fact, as I’ve said, many of you have asked me. So I modestly now ask: if you want to help, and feel that you can, even a little, I hope you will click on the link below and support our crazy, heartfelt efforts to spread the good word about interesting writing and talented writers.

http://writing.upenn.edu/wh/support/onlinegift

On that page you will see that you have options. You can support one of several projects.

The Student Recruitment Fund helps us reach out to pre-college students who are geographically dislocated and/or attending underfunded schools – and who are talented writers. We find these talented young people through their teachers and parents and our own contacts with summer writing programs, etc., and we then actually recruit them to come to Penn and become part of the Writers House community. (Several of the ModPo TAs came to Penn, in fact, because of our outreach.) The Student Recruitment Fund is all about providing access, and since that’s been a fundamental part of the ModPo experiment I thought you might like to help with this innovative project.

There’s also the Digital Poetries Fund. We urgently need help with that – the fund that enables PennSound and Jacket2 and PoemTalk and our webcasts. (Those undertakings cost more than you might think.)

Whether you can help a little or a lot – and even if you are unable to help at all – please know from me and your ModPo TAs that we are grateful for all the expressions coming from the ModPo community testifying to the fact that the Writers House as a center for poetry has come to mean something special to you. We created the Writers House in the first place so that people as diverse and as far-flung as you could find a way to enjoy exchanging ideas about writing.

Our doors are always open to you. Please visit!

With best wishes to all,

Al

You are receiving this email because pen (at) splab (dot) org is enrolled in Modern and Contemporary American Poetry. To stop receiving similar future emails from this class, please click here. Please do not reply directly to this email. If you have any questions or feedback, please post on the class discussion forums. For general questions, please visit our support site.
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Wanda Coleman Needs Your Help

Wanda Coleman

Poet, essayist, activist, literary presence Wanda Coleman has been
hospitalized with respiratory problems.  Her outpatient care will not be
covered by insurance, so she is asking viagra for cheap for assistance.  ***Donation checks
can be sent to: Wanda Coleman, P.O. Box 571, Lancaster, CA 93534.***

Here’s more information, c/o The Los Angeles Times:
http://www.latimes.com/features/books/jacketcopy/la-et-jc-poet-wanda-coleman-ill-20121122,0,1382926.story

And her page at the Poetry Foundation:
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/wanda-coleman

Hear the 2002 Paul Nelson interview with Wanda.

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Phrasings 2013 Call for Writers – Due December 8, 2012

Call for Writers: Chuckanut Sandstone Writers Theater and the Bellingham Repertory Dance Company announce the 2013 Phrasings Collaboration for Writers & Dancers

Deadline: It must be received on or before Saturday, December 8th , 2013. Follow the instructions given below very closely.

Our 6th annual collaboration and performance of Phrasings, of original modern dance choreographed with new poetry and stories will be presented in 3 shows on April 5th, 6th and 7th of 2013. Phrasings happens in Bellingham, WA at the Firehouse Performing Arts Center (14th and Harris).

 The Bellingham Repertory Dance Company has the reputation for producing fresh, engaging and diverse concerts that appeal to modern dance enthusiasts and first time audiences. The Company is a collective of accomplished dancers dedicated to bringing high-quality, vibrant contemporary dance to the Northwest. Response to Phrasings shows so far have been: “Fantastic! Unexpected!, Amazing to have both words and movement! Incredible dancers! I’m coming again tomorrow night!!

Choreographers in the company read the written submissions with a fresh perspective. They look for feelings, images or stories to convey through modern dance. Six or seven performance pieces will be chosen and will involve one or more dancers. Some writing will be selected to be read-only as part of the program. All winning submissions will be presented in a Phrasings 2013 chapbook.

We are looking for a wide range of poetry and all forms of writing to be selected for:

        Originality, and not previously published or performed.

        Vivid imagery – The content could be personal, pastoral, and/or tactile.

        Lyrical qualities – Give attention to rhythm and language.  

        Themes- The choreographers are highly innovative in their perspectives and engage with a wide          range of themes.

        None has ever been chosen that refers to dancing or has obvious dance content.

 

There are two forms of participation in Phrasings. Interested writers may submit to one or both approaches.

Approach One: Writing Submission – submit a finished piece of writing to be selected by a choreographer to incorporate into a new dance. Instructions (follow closely):

1.To submit:e-mail a pdf or MSWord document of submissions to chuckanutsandstone@gmail.com  Use this Subject line: Submission Phrasings 2013

2. Submit one copy of up to 3 poems and/or dialogue, essay or short story as a pdf or Word attachment. Do not put your name on the attachment. Limit yourself to pieces that are 1-3 pages in length.

3. Plus, in the body of the e-mail, please list the titles (or first lines) of the submissions and your name, phone number, buy cheapest cialis street address and e-mail address. Choreographers will select the submission that they want to work with from the pdfs.

 

Approach Two: Live Collaboration – a writer and choreographer will work side by side in creating something new. A writer will compose a piece of writing and a choreographer will make a dance simultaneously through a collaborative process shaped by their partnered artistic goals. The pair will decide together on how each of their work will be integrated and presented in the Phrasings performance. If you are interested in this form of participation,

Instructions (follow closely):

2.To submit:e-mail a pdf or MSWORD of submissions to chuckanutsandstone@gmail.com  Use this Subject line: Submission Phrasings 2013

2. Submit one copy of up to 2 poems and/or dialogue, essay or short story as a pdf or Word attachment. Do not put your name on the attachment. Limit yourself to pieces that are 1-3 pages in length.

3. Plus, in the body of the e-mail, please list the titles (or first lines) of the submissions and your name, phone number, street address and e-mail address.

4. In 400 words or less, write a short introduction that describes you, your ability to write by request, your degree of openness to how your works might be performed, and ways you envision collaborating with a choreographer. Some of the choreographers are interested in creating a piece together during December and January, and they will choose who to work with based on this introduction and the pieces that you send.

Receipt of your submission and outcomes with follow-up details will be sent via e-mail. Send your comments or questions to Carla Shafer, via e-mail to: chuckanutsandstone@gmail.com

 

check out: chuckanutsandstone.blogspot.com and http://www.bhamrep.org/calendar

 

 

Winning Phrasings 2012 Writers

Poets selected by choreographers:

Casey Gainor, poet (Bellingham) ~ Ella Mahler, choreographer ~ Collaborating on a new piece

Rick Hermann, poet (Bellingham) ~ Angela Kiser, choreographer ~ “breathwork”

Stephanie Hopkinson (Deming) ~ Annie, choreographer ~ “The day her life changed”

j.i. Kleinberg, poet (Bellingham)~ Vanessa Wallen, choreographer ~ “it’ll be all right”

Maria McLeod, poet (Bellingham) ~ Pam Kunz, choreographer ~ Collaborating on a new piece

Poets selected to read their original works:

Matt Brower, (Bellingham) “October” and “Teddy Bear Cove” (to read Friday, April 27th)

John Davis, (Bainbridge Island) “How to Survive Winter” and “Game on the Line” (to read Saturday, April 28th at 7:30 pm)

Brian Desmond (Tacoma) “Okinawa: All Things Silver” (to read Sunday, April 29th at 5 pm)

Denise DuMaurier (Bellingham) “Picnic Boat”(to read Saturday, April 28th at 5 pm)

Diane Stone (Clinton) “Spring” and “Because I want to” (to read Saturday, April 28th at 5 pm)

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CE Putnam Back in Cascadia!

C.E. Putnam

C.E. Putnam

One of the most inventive NW poets lives in Singapore these days, but is coming back to the NW. (Details in his email pasted in below).

C.E. Putnam was born in Seattle and has lived in three world capitals (London, Washington DC, and Bangkok). A former co-curator of the Subtext Reading Series, he maintains P.I.S.O.R. (The Putnam Institute for Space Opera Research) & founded FiftyCentsOffPress. Monkey Puzzle, Bird Dog, Pom2, Ixnay, 6ix, Pavement Saw, Tin Fish & Skanky Possum contain some of his writings. He currently lives in Seattle, but not for long. Click below to see Chris’ poems on the Rattapallax blog and to hear the interview conducted August 9, 2010 by Paul E Nelson. http://rattapallax.org/blog/tag/c-e-putnam/

From C.E.:

Hi Paul,
As you probably know, I’m going to be in town in December and am putting on a book release party on Saturday the 8th (details below). Hopefully, The Stranger will get the event posted soon. I’m wondering if you have any other suggestions for where else to send the details?   Hope you can make the event.
Thanks and Happy Thanksgiving and see you soon,
CE
Back Catalog Release Party
w/special guests Interrupture doing a mash up of the back catalog!
Saturday, December 8
7:30-10:30pm
(Reading at 8pm)
ABSOLUTLY FREE. OVER 21 ONLY.
College Inn Pub (in the snuggery)
4006 University Way NE
Seattle, WA 98105

btw/ Saturday is $4 whiskey nigh

~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–~~–
P.I.S.O.R (Putnam Institute for Space Opera Research)
The C.E. Putnam six book back catalog is now available!
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