Showing posts with label passing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label passing. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Monday, September 14, 2009

Tuesday, September 08, 2009

Auden’s “September 1, 1939”
70 years later

Auden on David Jones’ Anathemata

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Barbara Jane Reyes on
Raúl R. Salinas

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Pierre Joris,
promoting Diasporic Avant-Gardes
edited by Carrie Noland & Barrett Watten

With a 20% discount offer
(an $18 savings!)

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Fernando Perez
on poetry vs. baseball

But can he hit a curveball?

Perez’ career stats

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Please don’t apologize for pissing me off”

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For Harry Potter with gratitude.
Truman Capote January 1978”

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P. Inman,
talking at the Other Room

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John Yau on Michael Gizzi

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T’he American Avant-Pastoral:
Ezra Pound, Louis Zukofsky, Ronald Johnson

Joshua Corey’s PhD dissertation, downloadable

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Jameson’s Atwood

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Pierre Joris’ recording
of KRCB’s David Bromige tribute

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LaChiPo” – a listserv
for Latino/Chicano poetics

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Poems from Uche Nduka

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Palindrome poems

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Bookishly appy with your iPhone

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The 10 most-pirated e-books

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Bed bugs in your review copy?

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Book Cell

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A gallery of images of
Eliot the editor

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Joyce Johnson’s Door Wide Open

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Eileen Myles on Can Xue:
needing to go wild to survive

Myles on poetry, madness
& Jimmy Schuyler

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Orhan Pamuk’s “Distant Relations”

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Naked Girls Reading

The naked book club

An article thereon

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Is a return to prudery in the offing

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Judd Morrissey’s
The Last Performance

Project information

Goat Island Performance

Morrissey’s website

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LitFUSE 2009:
a poetry festival near Yakima, WA
with George Bowering, Carolyne Wright, Charlie Potts
& much more

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Vispo on the road

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Advancing Feminist Poetics & Activism:
September 24 & 25 @ CUNY

The participants
(a stunningly all-star cast)

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Nada Gordon’s Interests

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Antique Roadshow” for books

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The half-read book

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How to prune your book collection

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Jane Satterfield back in the UK

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Michael Palmer:
“We must count in Babylon”

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Eliot Weinberger, modernist

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Rachel Loden’s Dick of the Dead

Rachel Loden & Kevin Prufer

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Allen Ginsberg’s Ted Kennedy

Joyce Carol Oates on Teddy

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Phillysound focuses on Garrett Caples

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September 18 in Lawrence, KS,
Stacy Szymaszek & Megan Kaminski
at the Wonder Fair

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Gertrude Stein’s
Tender Buttons
& Three Lives
online

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Who killed the bookstore in Salisbury, UK?
Oxfam!

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A map of indie bookstores
in the Bay Area

In list format

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Michael Theune reignites the poetry wars
using the old sucker punch
of denying any SoQ/post-avant split
to then attack the post-avant

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Dean Young
on the Tony Hoagland-effect

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Translating quietist poetry into Arabic

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Ange Mlinko:
“The flexibility of language is its greatest asset”

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Jerome Rothenberg:
a return to the book

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“When I see books
I see an outdated technology

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A site just for library book sales

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MFA poems with barcode traces?

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How not to sell your novel

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Introducing Botsotso

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Michel Foucault’s
Speaking and Seeing in Raymond Roussel
(reg. req.)

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Economy & the haiku

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Poetry & Self-Exile
(reg. req.)

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September 12 in Baltimore:
Doug Lang & Tina Darragh

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Lorine Niedecker in Brazil

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Meaning & the modern

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Michael Greenberg’s short essays

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Little Fibonacci poems

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Nick Cave:
The Death of Bunny Munro

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The other Munro
removes book from Giller competition

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Awards, literary & otherwise

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Hugo Ball & language poetry

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Charles Bernstein talking with Ken Jacobs

The Day the Moon Gave Up the Ghost

Painted Air:
The Joys and Sorrows of Evanescent Cinema”

Jacobs reading “Painted Air”

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Remembering The Holy Barbarians

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James Finnegan’s
Ars Poetica Library 2009

By way of explanation

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Google offers 1,000,000 ebooks

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Shakespeare’s Sonnet XXX

Waiting for William

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Close-reading of non-existing texts

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Charles Alexander:
The book stops here

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Jeanie Thompson’s
The Seasons Bear Us

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Talking with Dick Jones

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A blog on the WPA Writers Project

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Wanting to be the Christo & Jeanne-Claude
of the written word
(Isn’t that what Kenny G does?)

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Gloompot in Algiers

Talking with Paul Bowles, 1952

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A novel about poetry
“that’s actually about poetry”

Inside Nicholson Baker
you’ll find Nicholson Baker

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Can there be a “national literature”?

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Kooks & poets

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Discursive rules of the underworld

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Another WWI poet goes online

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Patricia Smith’s “Ethel’s Sestina”

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Fred & Susan Chappell reading

Fred Chappell’s “nested” poetry

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Doctorow’s pack rats

The collectors

blindness and insight

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Fat Ulu & Kumu Kahua’s
The Statehood Project

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Paul Siegell’s jambandbootleg

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Reconstructing Carver

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A Swiss army knife of contemporary fiction

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Arts offer an easy target
as states cut budgets

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Barry Schwabsky on Dan Graham

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Store,
by Kate Watson-Wallace/anonymous bodies

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The Plum Academy:
An Institute for Situated Practices

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John Clare:
identity theft in Union, NJ

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Must we vote for poets?

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Wendell Berry
& “The Peace of Wild Things”

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New star writer at
the House of Mouse

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The camera arts & Hollis Frampton

Frampton’s films on Ubuweb

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What’s not inside
Warhol’s time capsules?

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The appropriation show

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The curious success of
Simon Crump’s Neverland

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Motivations for creating derivative works

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Salinger “sequel” sucks,
says the judge

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Bedri Baykam
at Alphonse Berber Gallery

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Annie Leibovitz’ $24M debt
is due today

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Robert Frank’s “elevator girl” comes forward

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A Guy Webster retrospective

A gallery of his work

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Fighting over Frida

A gallery of attributed works

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Saving modernist architecture,
one house at a time

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Lola Schnabel’s gypsy jamboree

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Postmodern Bach

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The Gonzales Cantata

The trailer

Rachel Maddow, music critic

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Fred Frith:
The acoustic occupation of space

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Analyze you, categorize you

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Literate rockers

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Putting Yeats to music

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Joe Maneri has died

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Talking with Quentin Tarantino

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Top ten books about Lenin

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In a Materialist Way
Pierre Macherey’s selected essays
(reg. req.)

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Ray Brassier:
Alien Theory:
The Decline of Materialism
in the Name of Matter
(reg. req.)

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Corporate bulimia on Wall Street

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CLR James & African-American Liberation

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UC Faculty walkout – September 24

AAUP endorses walkout

Facebook page

Thursday, August 27, 2009

In 1973, the one prisoner with whom I worked whom I absolutely knew in my gut was railroaded was a North Carolina moonshiner by the name of Cecil Lovedahl. Part of a group of returning WW2 vets who had taken up the manufacture & distribution of hootch, which was not only illegal, but horning in on what an older coterie of politically connected moonshiners thought was their monopoly, Lovedahl found himself at the wrong end of a plot to break up his goup. He had been riding in the back seat of a car that was involved in a fatal accident, killing the driver. The local pols saw it as an opportunity to break up the newcomers and charged Lovedahl with murder, though nobody could say why anyone in the back seat of a car would murder the driver while speeding on a dark mountain road. To escape a worse fate, his attorney (I forget whether he was a public defender or court-appointed) pled Lovedahl guilty over his own protestations in court, and he received a life sentence. Inside, Lovedahl deteriorated & attempted suicide several times, up to & including swallowing a box of straight pins. He would have been quietly released a couple of years later except for the fact that the prosecutor had risen quite high in state politics, with some thoughts of going even higher.

In my job at the Committee for Prisoner Humanity & Justice, I managed to arrange an out-of-state parole plan for Lovedahl through the Delancey Street Foundation in San Francisco, but I still had to persuade the North Carolina political establishment, and especially that pol, that putting Lovedahl on the streets 2,500 miles from home wasn’t going to come back to haunt him. There was only one person I knew who might be able to accomplish this, so I called Ted Kennedy’s office in Massachusetts. Without even once asking “What’s in it for me?” Kennedy made the call, and Lovedahl got his parole. That might have been the end of the story but Lovedahl broke parole – after 20 years in prison, he found Delancey Street’s restrictions hard to take – & headed to Nevada, where he was arrested as a parole violator. An extradition hearing was held, but it was easy for the Washoe County public defender to show that Lovedahl should never have been convicted in the first place. Free so long as he remained in Nevada, Lovedahl stayed there the rest of his life.

I’ve always wondered just how many times over 46 years in the U.S. Senate Kennedy made those kinds of phone calls. He was not only the one senator in 1973 who might have made that gesture, he was also the only one who could have gotten that result. I fear that the same may have been true as recently as last week.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Wednesday, July 22, 2009