Showing posts with label Passings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Passings. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 02, 2008

John Ashbery
on the PBS Newshour

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Two views of the
MLA Offsite marathon

116MB MP3
of the event
(URL good for 14 days only)

Plus Al Nielsen’s slideshow

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Dale Smith
on the future of poetry

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137 proverbs & figures of speech
translated from the Vietnamese
by Linh Dinh

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Remembering Landis Everson

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The third best selling poet of all time

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Lorca’s bed is a popular destination

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An index
to 221 Poets & Writers articles
on individual writers

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Pound, Walcott & Homer

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The labors of love
vs.
the labor of adjuncts

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John Allman’s Lowcountry

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Morris Dickstein
on Mailer, Paley & Vonnegut

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Librarian to the stars

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On first seeing through the eyes
of North Andover’s poet laureate

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The poet laureate of Illinois

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Granta
a legend in its own mind

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The “urban poet” of Colorado Springs

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Moderation rules at the MLA

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Narendra Modi’spedestrian poetry

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Alice Quinn
on 20 years as poetry editor
of The New Yorker

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“The best new journals” –
School of Quietude edition

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New selecteds from the School of Q

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William Logan
on Murray, Pinsky, McPherson,
Wright, Jamie & Hass

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More in common with fiction writers” –
a look at the poetry of Matthea Harvey

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A truly weird look back
at poetry 2007

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Cowboy poet Roddy Nichols has died

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Estonian poet Jaan Kross has passed away

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Bush signs biggest dollar increase
to the NEA budget since 1979

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Screen writers losses exceed $150M

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Poetry book launch, Indian style

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Armenia honors Peter Balakian

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A New Jersey psychologist
engages Antiguan history in her poetry

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Curing an arts addiction

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Philosophy 2.0

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Invoking Marx in Chinese journalism

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This blog received
448,218
visits in 2007

Monday, December 31, 2007

What kind of year was 2007? If you judge by the books that came out – Rae Armantrout’s Next Life, Alice Notley’s In the Pines, collected editions of Whalen & Kyger, lots of good & great books, that whole shebang – 2007 was a good, even terrific year. But if you look at the loses the literary community sustained, it was a very bad year indeed.

Do the math. If there are – just to pick numbers that are plausible, reasonable – 10,000 publishing poets in English who have careers roughly of 50 years between the time when they first begin to turn up in print or in ezines and when they pass on, then we are very quickly going to live in a world in which 200 of these poets die every year. That we don’t quite have such numbers already has much to do with the degree to which the numbers skew young, not because many poets publish for a year or two then stop – tho that certainly is the case – but because the vast expanse of writers is to a significant degree fed by the unprecedented (if not unwarranted) growth in college level creative writing degrees. Still, looking back over any given year sometimes is just appalling when you think of the poets and writers who now are gone. Just a few of the voices we lost in 2007 include Tillie Olsen, Gene Frumkin, Michael Benedikt, Artie Gold, Emmett Williams, Nancy Shaw, Kurt Vonnegut, Sarah Hannah, Grace Paley, Mary Ellen Solt, Michael Hamburger, Darrell Grayson, Sekou Sundiata, Dmitri Prigov, Sandy Crimmins, Harvey Goldner, Gloria Helfgott, Liam Rector, Ralph J. Mills, Jr., Carol Bly, Siv Cedering, Margaret Avison, Aura Estrada, Tom Cuson, Bill Griffiths, Mary Rising Higgins, Sargon Boulus, Herschel Baron, Landis Everson, Norman Mailer, Jane M. Cooper, Sandy Taylor, Liam O’Gallagher, Diane Middlebrook, John Moritz, Sylvester Pollet & Vincent Ferrini. To this add many important musicians, such as Leroy Jenkins, Eric von Schmidt, Andrew Hill, Rod Poole, Luciano Pavarotti, Max Roach, Tommy Makem, Art Davis, Frank Morgan, Karlheinz Stockhausen & Oscar Peterson. To these lists, add the other important cultural workers who passed on as well, such as philosophers Jean Baudrillard & Richard Rorty, artists Sol Lewitt, R. B. Kitaj, Sigmund Laufer, Jeremy Blake & Theresa Dunan, filmmakers Ousman Sembène, Ingmar Bergman & Michelangelo Antonioni, photographer Fred McDarragh, columnist Molly Ivins & Elizabeth Hardwick, who co-founded the New York Review of Books.

Not everyone of these were people whose work I approved of or liked. I thought Hardwick had a pernicious impact on virtually everything she touched and said so in print. Baudrillard and I argued over the impact of celebrity on critical thinking. He was also the least considerate person I’ve ever met.

But some of these writers, like Artie Gold & John Moritz, I’ve long thought of as friends. I’ve slept in Gene Frumkin’s house & eaten his food – he was a fine writer & a wonderful guy. Others I’d met or at least seen in person, from Olsen – who may very well have been the first author to have given me a book as a gift – to Sembène. Many, even the non-writers, had an important influence on me in ways they themselves could scarcely have imagined. When I was a student at UC Berkeley, I used the school’s student rental program to get Kitaj’s portrait of Robert Duncan, which hung on my living room wall for a full school year. Lewitt’s sculptures are objects I’ve stared at long & hard because I sense that their aesthetic is very close to my own. So, in a completely different way, is the music of Leroy Jenkins.

Not everyone died at the end of a long & fruitful life the way Olsen & Ferrini did. Rod Poole got into an argument with a woman who nearly ran him over in a Mel’s Drive-In parking lot & her husband got out of the car & stabbed him to death. Dasuram Mahji, who wrote in the Dravidian tongue of Kui, died of cholera at the age of 35. In the 21st century. Orissa, the state where he lived in India, is one of that nation’s wealthiest. Darrell Grayson, who came to poetry while in prison, was executed by the state of Alabama in July. African-American, he’d been tried by an all-white jury & defended by a lawyer with no experience in criminal trials. Existing DNA evidence was never tested. In the 21st century.

Perhaps saddest of all, five people listed above took their own lives: Sarah Hannah, Liam Rector, Landis Everson & the artists Theresa Duncan & Jeremy Blake, a couple that also happened to live in the rectory at St. Marks Church. Of these, only Everson’s death makes even the slightest sense – he was not young & his ability to write had been cut off due to the effects of a stroke. But even he had recently had a book manuscript rejected by the publisher of his first book – disappointing certainly, but hardly the sort of thing that should cause anyone to walk out into the woods with a gun.

I have written before, and I almost certainly will write again, on the importance of recognizing & treating depression. It’s common enough in society as it is – but in the arts it’s an epidemic. One of the reasons I was so very glad to see Ken Rumble talk of his own challenges with this on CA Conrad’s blog awhile back is that bringing this up & bringing it out of the closet is the first step in dealing with it, both personally & in society. This is not to suggest that everybody should become macrobiotic, or that that is a program that will treat even a fraction of the depression that is out there, but it does apparently work for some, and getting help is absolutely essential for anyone in this condition.

It will be forty years, really, before we can intelligibly begin to talk about all the great writers & artists who were born in 2007 as well. Almost without question, that list will be much longer than the ones above. That’s the good news.¹ And that’s one other reason why the arts of the next generation won’t look remotely like the ones of this, or of any of the previous generations as well. If I’m around then, I’ll be 101 (and intolerably cranky). But since not one of my male ancestors ever made it to 75, I’m not going to worry about that.

 

¹ I was intrigued, reading Stanley Kunitz’ 1977 Paris Review interview the other day, to see him already talking back then about the impacts of the expansion in the number of poets over even the 1950s – this phenomenon is not new & Kunitz is right when he notes that it’s not just more writers, it’s more good writers as well, which is an infinitely trickier question to sort through in the long run.

Friday, December 28, 2007

The brand new image of
Melvin B.
Tolson

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Marjorie Perloff on John Ashbery

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Carol Bly has died

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Siv Cedering has passed away

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Merry Christmas:
Chicago Sun-Times
slashes book section

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Jenny Holzer opts for
other, better poets

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Amy Goodman
talks with
Lawrence Ferlinghetti

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New reading videos
by Paul Hoover & Mark Young

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A prize that should go
to Joanne Kyger
by acclimation

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Time to start thinking
about your campaign for
Poet Laureate of the Blogosphere

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Didi Menendez’
portraits of American poets

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A new poetry web site
from Cuba

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Credit crisis goes
from bad to verse

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Sunken Garden
covers the world of poetry
all the way from A to B

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Granta publishes its 100th number
& includes some poetry

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Sir Gawain
keeping his cool

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Simon DeDeo
polls his readers

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The Maltese poet Dun Karm
finally makes it into Italian

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blah blah blah purple monkey dishwasher

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Looking back at 2007

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Magda Szabó has died

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Art jargon

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18th century moving pictures

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Michael Dirda on Peter Gay’s Modernism

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Baryshnikov’s Beckett

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Jazz pianist Oscar Peterson has died

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A different model
for a poetry marathon,
this one in Chennai

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Plus a January 1st marathon
in Baltimore!

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Thom Donovan’s
epic review
of Hannah Weiner’s Open House

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Rod Smith’s Deed

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Philadelphia vs. Ho Chi Minh City:
a 2000 interview with Linh Dinh

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Jalal Toufic’s
Undeserving Lebanon
(PDF)

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Talking with Steve McCaffery

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Wall Street Inferno
from the 19th Century Brazilian epic
Wandering Guesa

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585 reviews
indexed
from the ezine
Jacket

Number of my solo books
that Jacket has reviewed
over its entire history:
zero

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Sandy Taylor,
founder of Curbstone Press,
has died

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Iranian poet
Jaleh Esfahani
has died

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Emory Sekaquaptewa,
who documented the Hopi language,

has died

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Mary Jo Bang’s Elegy

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The two sides of Robert Pinsky

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One-line poems
on the cusp of the 17th century

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The ten books
of the T.S. Eliot shortlist

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a very great poet
incomparably the greatest we have
on this side of the
Atlantic

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The two poetries:
Lowell vs. Ashbery

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“modernist poetry in English was launched
by a pair of Americans living in
London
who had little but contempt
for the complacent, hide-bound literary scene”

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Using your own name
in your poems

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Doug Messerli
on Inger Christensen

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Social networking
& Punjabi poetry

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Kaya Oakes’ Telegraph

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Drive, he said

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TV brings poet brothers back together

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A Yiddish poet
in
Elkins Park

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Ted Hughes:
better off dead?

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How many poets use
performance enhancing drugs?

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Jonathan Lethem:
The King of Sentences

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A profile of Paul Portugés

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Bones of our wild forefathers

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Gordon Lish as Freddy Kreuger?
The Cutting of Raymond Carver

“Beginners”:
Raymond Carver’s draft
Gordon Lish’s edit

Letters from Carver to Lish

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A review of
Balikbayang Mahal: Passages from Exile

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Pudding & trifles
with the
Mann Booker Prize jury

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The anti-social Mr. Naipaul

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When Oulipo goes bad

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This year’s buzzwords

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Jamaican love poetry

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The selected poems
of Breyten Breytenbach

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From poetry to Slanguage
to theater

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The poetry paintings of Barry Spacks

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The first-ever translation
of Hungarian poetry into Punjabi

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David Byrne
talks with Thom Yorke
about the theory of distribution

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Charles Shere on
Stockhausen

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The LA Times obit for saxman
Frank Morgan

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A history of history

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Peter Schjeldahl on
junk art at the
New Museum

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Pipilotti Rist
among the butoh dancers of
Japan

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Survival strategies
for emerging artists

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The third marathon
of the winter season
is of course
the granddaddy (& grandmother)
of them all,
January 1
from 2:00 PM until the cows come home
down 2nd Ave
at the Poetry Project
at St Marks Church, New York


(
Two questions:
is there anyone who will be reading
at the MLA offsite,
the Woodland Pattern January Marathon
& at St Marks?

And
are there any other poetry marathons
taking place between
Christmas & February 1?)

Monday, December 17, 2007


"On Whether or Not The Pig is Indigenous to the New World"

from “I Hear America Cooking”

My own theory is that the pig landed near Miami circa 1542
and left the same day in a rented DeSoto
Sometime later, the pig arrived in the SW
and enjoyed the distinction of being
the only adventurer of European origin
to be both domesticated and savoured in that region.

In Greenland the Inuit use jackhammers
in order to break through the ice
and bury their dead
my own climate has the morality of a chainsaw

“The white man will freeze to death in the arctic,
if left to himself,” the elder said
after translation, “but now with schooling
some Inuit too have frozen.”


                           
John Moritz

                                      1946 – 2007


Sunday, December 16, 2007

Photo of Lewis MacAdams courtesy of Friends of the LA River

Lewis MacAdams
on the collected poems
of Philip Whalen & Joanne Kyger

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Giorno Poetry Systems:
the podcast

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Re (re)reading Queneau

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Audio selections from the Sackner Archive

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The Latin American Notebook
of William S. Burroughs

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Why was Marina Tsvetaeva
such a neglectorino?

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Neeli Cherkovski
on Phil Whalen

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Diane Middlebrook
has died

A final interview

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Laura Huxley
has died

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A portrait of Anne Stevenson

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Charles Bernstein’s
galleries of video miniportraits
of poets, artists, filmmakers, etc.

Series 1: Scalapino, Bergvall,
Lakoff, Gross, Bonvicino, Hills, Glazer

Series 2: Drucker, Grenier,
Joris, Lehto, Curnow, Sherry

Series 3: Lauterbach, Mac Cormack,
McCaffery, Berssenbrugge, Piombino, Tuttle

The latest
is of Rod Smith

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In bed with Lorca

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Hershman R. John,
swallowing turquoise

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Jenny Holzer at Mass MoCA

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The final issue of Origin,
Sixth Series
is ready for download
(PDF)

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Talking with Bob Hass
in the Wall Street Journal

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Lloyd Schwartz
talking about
Elizabeth Bishop
(PDF)

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Remembering Martin Carter

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Nuala Dhomhnaill
in a bi-lingual edition,
translated from the Irish
by Paul Muldoon

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Performing Howl

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A profile of
Gwyneth Lewis

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A memoir of slammin
in
San Francisco

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Mochedisi,
becoming a household name
in African praise poetry

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Robert Pinsky
playing with Jill Rosser’s skull

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Drive-by poetry

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Sir Gawain
and his contemporaries today

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What is poetry for?

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Melville’s America

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Bruce Jackson:
The Story is True

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The Johnston County witch hunt

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Guantanamo poetics reach the U.K.

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When pols write poetry

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A profile of Bill Chene

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Ted Hughes
as translator & Shakespeare scholar

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Kenn Nesbitt,
zany poet

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An open mike
in Pahrump Valley

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Three poets laureate
in close proximity

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From web to book

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Go ask Alice

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Uploading the hidden archive

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Against writers’ archives

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The highest-selling
contemporary manuscript ever
is Beedle the Bard

The buyer
was
Amazon!

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Bookstore sales are up
only 0.3%
for the first ten months of 2007

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In France,
”free” is verboten

While indies here push governors
to collect e-taxes

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Knol thyself

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A contestable history of Latin

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Poetics of the dictionary

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Changes loom
at the moribund NYRB

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The studios aren’t budging
in the writers’ strike

So the writers guild
tries a different strategy

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SymbioticA
has its ear to the ground

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Underground art in Chelsea

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Poop art

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Dead flies & pickled cows
to the Tate

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Fernando Botero’s Abu Ghraib

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Lost art

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Deal making to steal the Barnes

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Kenneth Baker
on the life of Picasso

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The etchings of Lucien Freud

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Bob Dylan & electricity

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A memory of Stockhausen

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National identity
in postmodern Japanese dance

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What bad music do you listen to?

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A profile of Terry Eagleton

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Lost in Translation no more

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This year’s MLA offsite reading
with over 50 poets
will be
Friday, December 28
from
7:00 to 9:30pm
at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago
112 S. Michigan Avenue, in the Ballroom