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Entries in UK Events (173)

Friday
Mar112011

ConVersify: Poetry, Politics and Form

Saturday 10th - Sunday 11th September 2011

The University of Edinburgh supported by The Roberts Fund and in collaboration with the Scottish Poetry Library, organised by Lila Matsumoto, Greg Thomas and Samantha Walton.

This two day postgraduate led conference will bring together poets and researchers to engage in a conversation about experimental, innovative and alternative approaches to poetic form. While many poets self-report that political objectives underlie their practice, in the realm of, but not limited to, ideology critique, the assertion or negation of identity and/or a confrontation with mainstream publishing, charges of elitism, passivity and inaccessibility can be levelled. Taking this point of tension as our catalyst, and adopting a trans-historical perspective, we wish to consider what “experimental” poetry is, and what it is for.

We are calling for twenty minute papers which: discuss poetry of any period or genre which challenges or aims to challenge convention through formal innovation and/or interaction with political, social and cultural realities; explore the labels we use to denote “experimental”, “avant-garde” or particular stylistic modes of verse; question whether political objectives and/or antagonisms can be articulated or furthered through radical approaches to composition and language; consider how readers engage with experimental poetry. Inseparable from these themes is the issue of what we perceive as 'the political', what counts as a political act and whether the writer has a responsibility to assert political agency; we are particularly interested in papers in which these questions are at the forefront of discussion.

Please send 250 - 300 word abstracts for 20-minute papers as a word attachment to conversifyconference@gmail.com by Monday 16th May 2011. There will also be evening poetry readings in town - please mention when you submit your abstract if you would be interested in reading.

19 George Square, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9LD

Website
Wednesday
Mar092011

R:FEST 11

R:FEST 11 (Runnymede International Literary Festival) is currently running. A full programme of events is now available to download as a PDF (75 KB).

Wednesday
Mar092011

CRS: Laura Kilbride & Josh Stanley

Saturday 12th March, 7.30pm

  • Laura Kilbride
  • Josh Stanley

Erasmus Room, Queens' College, Silver Street, Cambridge CB3 9ET

Sunday
Mar062011

CRS: Ian Patterson & Marjorie Welish

Friday 11th March, 7.30pm

  • Ian Patterson
  • Marjorie Welish

Judith E. Wilson Drama Studio, Faculty of English, Cambridge University, Cambridge

Admission is free, all welcome

Tuesday
Mar012011

Allen Fisher Cambridge Reading

LATE NOTICE Wednesday 2nd March, 4pm

Allen Fisher, 'Complexity Manifold':

The Complexity Manifold talks set out with a polemic question: how do British poets approach composition in the twenty-first century? What the dominant paradigm for the cultural realm continues to be engaged in can be characterised as complicit and regressive, and this has pertained since it mattered in Britain, after the late 1950s or 1980s, and continues to provide inappropriate comprehension of most situations you could imagine. You read any newspaper and you will find it difficult to find any poetry worthy reading once, never mind rereading, and thus a dilemma for engaged cognition and perspective. If that doesn't characterise a problem for poetry, or more like a cluster of problems, then what does? The dilemma stems from a cluster, but it is informed by misappropriated paradigms as the norms.

GR06/7, English Faculty Building, 9 West Road, Cambridge University, Cambridge CB3 9DP

All welcome.

Monday
Feb282011

Writers Forum Workshop (North)

Sunday
Feb272011

Counting Backwards #5

Recordings and reviews of Counting Backwards #5 are available here.

Friday
Feb252011

Sean Bonney & Maggie O'Sullivan Reading

Wednesday 2nd March, 6 - 7pm

  • Sean Bonney
  • Maggie O'Sullivan

Clephan Building, Rooms 2.32/2.33, De Montfort University, The Gateway, Leicester LE1 9BH

Admission is free but booking is required.
Tuesday
Feb222011

"To Open Eyes": Black Mountain College Into the 21st Century

Friday 3rd - Saturday 4th June, 2011

Founded in 1933 in Black Mountain, North Carolina, Black Mountain College was not your garden variety college compared to other institutions of higher learning in the United States at the time. Indeed, Black Mountain was as much a vortex of avant-garde art performances, experimental lifestyles, political radicalism, macho theatrics, utopian architectural dreaming, and collective manual labor as it was a college of liberal arts. Black Mountain College was where people gathered “to open eyes” as Josef Albers, teacher at BMC, put it.

Following up the 75th anniversary of the founding of BMC, we seek to gather a small group of scholars, artists, philosophers, musicians, architects and others interested in Black Mountain College to explore the ways the legacy of Black Mountain College continues to resonate across contemporary postmodern culture. Papers are to cover a wide range of subjects, including Black Mountain's relationship to:

  • The Bauhaus (Josef and Anni Albers)
  • Painting (Dan Rice, Robert Motherwell, Elaine and Willem de Kooning)
  • Music (John Cage)
  • Dance (Merce Cunningham)
  • Architecture (Buckminster Fuller, Walter Gropius)
  • Poetry (Robert Creeley, Charles Olson, Robert Duncan, Denise Levertov)
  • Visiting Speakers (Albert Einstein, Thornton Wilder, Norbert Wiener)
  • Publishing (*Black Mountain Review*)
  • Pedagogy (John Andrew Rice, John Dewey, Theodor Dreier)

Abstracts of no more than 500 words should be submitted to Daniel Kane and Paul Betts, by Friday 15th April.

Notification will be made by Tuesday 3rd May.

3rd June - University of Sussex, Brighton BN1 9RH (keynote)

4th June - Landsdowne Hotel, Lansdowne Place, Brighton BN3 1HQ

via Keston Sutherland

Thursday
Feb172011

Albion Beatnik Reading

Thursday 24th February, 8 - 11pm

  • Amy De'Ath
  • Sean Bonney
  • Dominic Lash
  • David Stent

Albion Beatnik Bookshop, 34 Walton Street, Oxford OX2 6AA

Admission £5

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