Call for Papers - "Poetry of the Eighties"

Reposted from the Buffalo Poetics List. I am trying to get back into the habit of blogging from the list more frequently as an alternative to my current practice of forgetting about it until there are 300+ to sort through. Then it's skim subject lines and delete with no have time to read posts that interest me ~ the reason I subscribed in the first one. 

Why did I chose this one? Random chance. Short notice, you say. Indeed, deadline extended to March 15, I cannot but agree. If you have a topic in mind, how long will it take to write 300-500 words? Not long at all. If you don't have one in mind, any notice would be too short.

Do you have topic preferences? Let me know. If a topic interests both of us, I'll give it a try. 

 

Poetry & Poetics of the 1980s - Call for Proposals from the National Poetry Foundation, University of Maine, June 27-July 1, 2012. The deadline for proposals has been extended to March 15, 2012. Direct 300-500 word proposals for 20 minute papers to NPF_Paideuma@umit.maine.edu

The Editorial Collective of the National Poetry Foundation invites paper and panel proposals for the next in our sequence of "decade" conferences, to be devoted to The Poetry and Poetics of the 1980s, American and international, and to be held from Wednesday to Sunday, June 27-July 1, 2012, on the flagship campus of the University of Maine System in Orono, Maine.

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PIW: A short history of Polar exploration


A short history of Polar exploration, Poetry International Web

The snowlines, moving in, and light failing fast
as aurora borealis throbs there like a walrus heart,
all the land so wide, so all around; so vast as to
haunt. Mythology, the oil flares far away. Lightning
down the pipeline, a shiver down the spine of Alaska.
The Arctic poppy, ambergris, a narwhal tusk, and all
the massive muskoxen delineate the one soft curve
when moving. Further out the pack ice is a camel caravan.

A snooker table built from blocks of ice (we do not
want the men to go insane, have hooked up mirrors
at the cabin doors, to catch what little sun there is,
this for the worst of the scurvies.) At night my dreams
are green, blue, gold: hues I cannot see out there. The bear
is white, the land is too. Nothing to name into existence.

© 2004, Luke Davies

Poem of the weekLuke Davies page on PIW (listen to the poet) and more about Australian poetry and poets

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Guardian Review: New Poetries V

Edited by Michale Schmidt and Eleanor Crawforth, reviewed by Nicholas Lezard. Don't you love the opening? Sets the tone. Sometimes I get so occupied with keeping track of local poetry events that I lose track of the other reason Picnic stayed virtual when IRL folded its tent: to read more poetry from everywhere.  I may not be a legal Poetryland resident but am a fair dab at the lit game, informed consumer and trained reader. 

 These editors know their onions when it comes to poetry

Come off it, I can hear many of you cry. An anthology of new poetry – no, worse, new poetries – for £12.95? That's two bottles of OK wine, or a good main course at a gastropub. Like a confit of duck leg or something. I know, poetry is a hard sell. And I must confess that I picked this up with more of a sense of duty than of pleasure, and maybe a nagging sense of guilt that I had done, once again, absolutely nothing for National Poetry day. 

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Reminder - Oct27 Fixed & Free Poetry, features Merimeé Moffitt

Billy Brown reminds area poets and poetry lovers,

... of the October 2011 Fixed and Free poetry reading, Thursday, October 27, 6:45-9 pm, at The Source, 1111 Carlisle SE with featured poet Merimeé Moffitt.


ALL donations gathered at this special Fixed and Free reading will be donated to the new Albuquerque Poet Laureate Program (APLP) which is planning to name Albuquerque's first Poet Laureate on April 1, 2012! So, please bring some extra money and give generously

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Sunday Poetry: CoB Oct23 & Duende Oct30

(download)

Via Billy Brown (and Elaine Schwartz) who writes...

Friends, I am forwarding this as requested by Gary Brower, one of the Duende organizers. The featured poet, Howard McCord, is a major American poet. Please see the embedded flyer for details. This event looks so good, maybe I'll skip my Madrigal Singers rehearsal to attend!


Gary reading at 2009 Picnic, accompanied by John Bullock

Embedding the flyer is an experiment. My primary blogging platform does not accept documents. The alternate platform does and, furthermore, will post to the other platform. The experiment is to post Billy's message, document and all, to the alternate with reposting command coded into "To:" line. My apologies if all this sounds unnecessarily convoluted. If it works, then I have a major blogging time saver. If not, the Duende flyer will arrive in a separate post.

BTW, Gary will also be reading at this Sunday's Church of Beethoven (COB), 10:30-11:30.

His reading is part of an October-long set of features at COB: "Double Tongue: Theme and Variation," with the following simple premise: Poets respond with words to music. Gary will be responding to the piece, "John's Book of Alleged Dances," by John Adams.

Gary's ten short poems have the same titles Adams gave to his movements: Judah to Ocean, Toot Nipple, Dogjam, Pavane: She's so Fine, Rag the Bone, Habanera, Stubble Crochet, Hammer & Chisel, Standchen: The Little Serenade.

COB Co-Artistic Director James Shields describes Pulitzer Prize winning composer John Adams as "sort of the new Dean of American Music (Copeland being maybe the first dean).  "John's Book of Alleged Dances" is like a set of musical haikus, ranging in character from whimsey to scathing sarcasm to intense sweetness and lyricism. Each movement is a short exploration of a single musical character ... from the funky to the sublime."

ABQ Poetry Fundraiser TONIGHT Oct 4, 7pm at Winnings

Female_power_poetry

A last-minute notice via Billy Brown. I'm assuming "Winnnings" refers to Winning Coffee Co. Re-posting policy is WIGSIWIP or What I Get Sent Is What I Post (minus excess exclamation marks)

Celebrate Female Power!  Come out TONIGHT to Winnings: help NM Nurse-Midwives raise money to enable them to better serve NM women on Medicaid. 

See attached embedded image, click to view larger version. Is there an FB event page for this? If so sharing to the Picnic wall would be most appreciated. If not, then maybe next time.

October Broadsided: Hot off the Virtual Presses


Getting on top of October Broadsiding early, often and as redundantly as bearable.... one hopes there is a future for art and poetry spam. Coals to Newcastle again, I am starting with poets.

Dear Vectors and Friends of Broadsided,
We need your help! You're already reading and sharing Broadsided, which is critical to getting literature and art on the streets. But consider a donation.
Your gift of $5, $50, or even $500 will help immensely. Until now, Broadsided has been funded by its editors and run entirely by the donated time of its staff and contributors. We'd like to do more, and with your help, we can. Visit our help page and use the convenient PayPal button.
With Thanks,  The Broadsided Editorial Team

comp
"Searching for Poems on Grief" 
Poem by Lisa Ortiz
Art by Kevin Morrow

~ Visit www.broadsidedpress.org to get the full broadside

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Joy Harjo Poetry Prize, Oct 1 deadline

Just in from Elaine Schwartz 

2011 JOY HARJO POETRY PRIZE &  RICK DEMARINIS SHORT FICTION PRIZE

$1250  1ST and $250  2ND  Plus Publication

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

JUDGES:    
Alison Hawthorne Deming/ POETRY
Luis Alberto Urrea/ FICITON

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

GENERAL GUIDELINES
Contest Deadline is October 1st. Send up to 3 poems (100 line limit/one poem per page) or a short story (5000 word limit/double-spaced) in 12 point font  

Unpublished work only: no prior ezine or paper publication allowed. No author name may appear anywhere on manuscript.  Enter as often and in as many genres as you wish.  

Multiple submissions are permitted, but writers must inform us of acceptances elsewhere.  Finalists considered for publication.  

All winners published in CUTTHROAT and announced on website, in POETS & WRITERS and in the AWP CHRONICLE. For further information, go to:  www.cutthroatmag.com or call 970-903-7914.  No relative or staff member  or students of judges for CUTTHROAT are eligible to enter .

Online:  Go to our website, www.cutthroatmag.com   and click on the contest button.  On the contest page are guidelines.  Click on our submissions manager to enter your contest submission.  Pay online. There is a $17 reading fee. 

By Mail: Include a cover sheet with name, address, phone & email, SASE for announcement of winners and a $15 reading fee per submission made to Raven’s Word Writers Center postmarked by Oct. 1, 2011. See our web site for complete guidelines: www.cutthroatmag.com

Superdooper Superhero Poetry Contest

Superdooper Superhero Poetry Contest... Write now!
Local Poets Guild is sponsoring a poetry competition in conjunction with 516 ARTS and their exhibition: Superheroes: Icons of Good, Evil & Everything in Between which opens Saturday, October 1, 6-8pm. 

Hosts Hakim Bellamy, Gary Jackson, and Lisa Gill correlated five superheroes with different categories of poetry and invite ALBUQUERQUE-AREA POETS to submit poems on the themes (listed below) to localpoetsguild@yahoo.com or lisa@516arts.org by October 1st at 5 pm. The prizes will be fantabulous, perhaps comix-al and include participation in a costumes-encouraged 516 WORDS: Superheroes Poetry, which will take place on Halloween weekend.

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Broadsided: Responses: Japan Earthquake and Tsunami 2011

RESPONSES

Japan Earthquake and Tsunami 2011

At Broadsided, we believe that art and literature belong in our daily lives. We believe they are not just decoration, but essential communication. They inspire and they demonstrate the vitality and depth of our connection with the world.

Moved by the plight of post-tsunami Japan, Broadsided artist Yuko Adachi sent us the image "Love Heals Japan" (see right) and asked if we would help her find writing to accompany it. We were inspired by her idea, and decided to ask other Broadsided artists if they had been similarly moved and, if so, if they'd be willing to share their work.

We posted that art, and asked writers to respond. Below are the collaborations that resulted, as well as a short note from the writers and artists about this process. We hope that you will download, print, and share these with your community.

Yuko has created a high-quality giclee print of her collaboration with Hugh Martin. You can purchase it on Etsy. All proceeds will go to the relief effort in Japan.

Click each image below for the pdf; scroll down for more information about each collaboration.




"How Love Heals"

Yuko Adachi & Deborah Fried-Rubin

Download the pdf (352kb)

Artist Yuko Adachi is a Tokyo-born artist who was raised in Japan, Paris, London, and the United States of America. She has been painting since she was a little girl and has been showing her works through solo and selected group shows internationally. Her painting was featured for the cover of Artscope, New England's Cultural Magazine (May/June 2007) and Takara Magazine, the Japanese Culture and Information Magazine in New England (2007 issues). In 2007, her work was awarded best in painting for "Healing Power of Art" by Manhattan Art International. Today, she lives and works in Boston. In 2010, she opened an artist studio store, "Planet MOMEKO," in Rpckport, MA. www.yukoadachi.com.

Writer Deborah Fried-Rubin is a second year graduate student in the Queens College MFA program, pursuing an interest in poetry after many years of practicing law. A recipient of Queen's College's Silverstein-Peiser Award for Poetry, her work has appeared in Why I Am Not A Painter, an anthology of MFA poetry from the NYC area, published by Argos Books. She lives on Long Island with her husband and three children.

QUESTIONING OUR RESPONSES

Why did this piece of art resonate for you or seem like it would give you an avenue into writing about Japan's earthquake and tsunami?
Deborah Fried-Rubin: Yuko Adachi's beautiful work automatically conveyed to me an image of one world, both fractured and unified. The lines reaching to circles illustrated trajectories of trauma engaging people across the globe, making the pain of one the pain of many. But the lines can also be seen as shooting from a place of brightness to reach circles of suffering. This back-and-forth reading reinforced the connectivity for me. The work also reminded me instantly of the kabbalistic concept of "shattered vessels" which humanity heals by acts of kindness, as well as teachings by the Ben Ish Chai, regarding the world as an orb spinning in space, constantly returning light to dark places. Yuko's saturated colors, both innocent and textured, felt like a hope for deeper understanding.

Why did this visual response come to mind when thinking about Japan's earthquake and tsunami?
Yuko Adachi: I wanted to create an image that is positive, gentle and healing for Japanese people and to those who purchse this print. The reddish bubbles are love energy that is being sent to Japan and the circle represents the Japanese flag as well as the earth energy and the ray of light shining upon it, to indicate that the sun will rise again! The suffering that Japan is experiencing aches my heart to the point of numbness but I want to thank you for your support and love that you are sending to Japan. We feel it!

What do you think is the role of art in regards to real-world, real-time events? In other words, what makes a "successful" occasional or political piece of writing or art?
Deborah Fried-Rubin: I hope art helps us make sense of the emotional content of "world" events, and shows us how to relate in our private capacities to make a cumulative impact. Because everything is ultimately reducible to millions upon millions of individuals, the best "political" poem is a personal one, with heart in it.
Yuko Adachi: An agile creative response with a purpose to the event that opens up our mind and willingness to make an effort to spread what we created and talk about it.



"The Horse of Higashi-Matsushima"

Yuko Adachi & Hugh Martin

Download the pdf (312kb)

Artist Yuko Adachi is a Tokyo-born artist who was raised in Japan, Paris, London, and the United States of America. She has been painting since she was a little girl and has been showing her works through solo and selected group shows internationally. Her painting was featured for the cover of Artscope, New England's Cultural Magazine (May/June 2007) and Takara Magazine, the Japanese Culture and Information Magazine in New England (2007 issues). In 2007, her work was awarded best in painting for "Healing Power of Art" by Manhattan Art International. Today, she lives and works in Boston. In 2010, she opened an artist studio store, "Planet MOMEKO," in Rpckport, MA. www.yukoadachi.com.

Writer Hugh Martin is a veteran of the Iraq war and a graduate of Muskingum University. He now attends the MFA program at Arizona State University and his chapbook, So, How Was the War? (Kent State UP, 2010) was a winner of the 2009 Wick Chapbook Competition. Recent work has appeared or is forthcoming in Alaska Quarterly Review, Willow Springs, Nashville Review, Mid-American Review, Third Coast, River Styx, American Poetry Review, and War, Literature & the Arts.

QUESTIONING OUR RESPONSES

Why did this piece of art resonate for you or seem like it would give you an avenue into writing about Japan's earthquake and tsunami?
Hugh Martin: The piece of artwork is a small, yet beautiful and important reminder that we need to keep Japan in our thoughts. I'd already drafted a poem about the picture of the horse, but the piece of art, focusing more on the disaster to the country as a whole, was a powerful juxtaposition to the specific, more concrete death of the horse, which ultimately leads us to the human deaths and the temporary graves.

Why did this visual response come to mind when thinking about Japan's earthquake and tsunami?
Yuko Adachi: I wanted to create an image that is positive, gentle and healing for Japanese people and to those who purchse this print. The reddish bubbles are love energy that is being sent to Japan and the circle represents the Japanese flag as well as the earth energy and the ray of light shining upon it, to indicate that the sun will rise again! The suffering that Japan is experiencing aches my heart to the point of numbness but I want to thank you for your support and love that you are sending to Japan. We feel it!

What do you think is the role of art in regards to real-world, real-time events? In other words, what makes a "successful" occasional or political piece of writing or art?
Hugh Martin: I think all art should help us acknowledge and be more aware of disaster, both in the sense of the collective and the personal. Art can help heal those who were victims; it can help those who were distant better understand.
Yuko Adachi: An agile creative response with a purpose to the event that opens up our mind and willingness to make an effort to spread what we created and talk about it.


"Children at Play"

Cheryl Gross & Susan Cohen
11" x 12"
Ball point, ink, handmade paper.

Download the pdf (424kb)

Artist Cheryl Gross has an MFA in New Forms from Pratt. She writes: "When asked about my work, I always equate it with creating an environment transforming my inner thoughts into reality. Much like an architect or urban planner, that reality and humor becomes the foundation of the work. Beginning with the physical process, I work in layers. Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, my urban influence has indeed added an "edge" to my work. Coming from a totally vertical and intense environment, I now live in Jersey City, NJ." www.cmgross.com

Writer Susan Cohen is author of the forthcoming book of poems, Throat Singing, and two chapbooks. Her poems have appeared in Poetry International, River Styx, Southern Poetry Review, Verse Daily and elsewhere. She lives in Berkeley and is two-time winner of the National Association of Science Writers Science in Society Award.

QUESTIONING OUR RESPONSES

Why did this piece of art resonate for you or seem like it would give you an avenue into writing about Japan's earthquake and tsunami?
Susan Cohen: I found "Children at Play" wildly imaginative, yet so strange and disturbing. When I made myself address it, that sense of being disturbed turned into a deep grief. I had a nephew who died a few years ago at sea and whose body later washed ashore, so I'm especially haunted by the idea of children in the waves. As I wrote, I realized I was hearing sounds of bicycles and surf and kids playing before supper, that the visual image had a strong aural effect on me. Was that triggered by the incongruous bird perched on the bicycle? I don't know, but I found myself wanting to intone or chant, which made this poem very different from those I usually write. Why did this visual response come to mind when thinking about Japan's earthquake and tsunami?
Artist:-->

What do you think is the role of art in regards to real-world, real-time events? In other words, what makes a "successful" occasional or political piece of writing or art?
Susan Cohen: Real-world events disappear so quickly and completely from the news. Perhaps art contains the capacity to focus our attention at least a little longer. Artist:-->



"sliding house/meditation for after an earthquake"

Ira Joel Haber & Lisa L. Moore
10 1/8" x 7 7/8"
Ink and crayon on notebook paper.

Download the pdf (420kb)

Artist Ira Joel Haber was born and lives in Brooklyn New York. He is a sculptor, painter, book dealer and teacher who sometimes writes poetry and movie reviews. His work has been seen in numerous group shows both in USA and Europe and he has had 9 one-man shows including several retrospectives of his sculpture. His work is in the collections of New York University, The Guggenheim Museum, The Whitney Museum, The Hirshorn Museum & The Albright-Knox Art Gallery. In 2004 he received The Adolph Gottlieb Foundation grant. Currently he teaches art at the United Federation of Teachers Retiree Program in Brooklyn. (View Ira's Work)

Writer Lisa L. Moore grew up hiking, skiing, trail riding and working on her family's ranch in the eastern foothills of the Canadian Rockies. After working as an arts journalist, Lisa went into academia and since 1991 has been teaching English and Women's and Gender Studies at The University of Texas at Austin. She is the author or editor of several books, including Experiments in a Jazz Aesthetic: Art, Activism, Academia and the Austin Project (Texas) and most recently Sister Arts: The Erotics of Lesbian Landscapes (MInnesota). She is the co-director, with Meta DuEwa Jones, of the Texas Institute of Literary and Textual Studies, which is offering a series of lectures, workshops, readings and symposia in 2011-12 on the topic of Poets&Scholars (more information here). Her poems have appeared in journals and anthologies including Sinister Wisdom, and she blogs at Sister Arts: Gardens, Poems, Art, Community.

QUESTIONING OUR RESPONSES

Why did this piece of art resonate for you or seem like it would give you an avenue into writing about Japan's earthquake and tsunami?
Lisa Moore: My poem started from a couple of awkwardly-translated sentences on a news report. A woman whose husband had just been found in the rubble was asked for a reaction and I was struck by the difference between watching her speak (in Japanese) and the rather bloodless subtitles: "I am relieved to see him, of course. But there are so many others still missing." Those words sounded so measured but the woman looked so distraught and desperate....not "relieved" at all. Those words and their inadequacy and what might be behind them rattled around in my brain for a few weeks and were called back to mind when I saw Ira Joel Haber's piece "Sliding House." The plainness and somber colors of the image combined with the terrifying movement of the house out of the frame seemed to capture that dissonance.

Why did this visual response come to mind when thinking about Japan's earthquake and tsunami?
Ira Joel Haber: I did this drawing in a notebook when I was living in San Diego teaching Art at UCSD. I lived in a very small apartment which was on a high hill. and had a patio overlooking the valley below. This drawing is of course about hanging, literally and figuratively. Some of my work, especially the work from 1969 to 1975 have a strong dose of catastrophe and destruction so this latest environmental disaster hit home.

What do you think is the role of art in regards to real-world, real-time events? In other words, what makes a "successful" occasional or political piece of writing or art?
Lisa L. Moore: I read a lot of eighteenth-century "occasional" verse composed for particular people or events, and the poems that last are the ones that speak with enough specificity to conjure the feeling of that moment in a way that grabs the reader even across centuries. Like Pope's "Epistle to Bolingbroke." Who cares about Bolingbroke? But the line "Hope springs eternal in the human breast" breaks my heart.
Ira Joel Haber: I can recall one work that I did in direct result of real world events and that was the Viet Nam war. The role of art with regards to the above is the same as any person's reaction should be.



"River Vessel"

Kevin Morrow & Mason Schoen

Download the pdf (300kb)

Artist Kevin Morrow is a native of Wisconsin who received his BFA in sculpture from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 2003. Soon thereafter, he received his MFA degree from the University of Auckland, New Zealand where he studied in the Contemporary Maori Department (Te Toi Hou). Upon completion, Morrow returned to the U.S. to live and work in Austin, Texas where he spent a year or so concentrating on earthworks. Morrow now lives and works in New York. Images of other work at
Mason Schoen: I don't know, really. Of course art should capture experience, perspective. In my opinion, successful poetry or prose leaves a reader feeling stranded and tethered at the same time. That's what I shoot for, but often miss. Artist:-->