The Other Room 17
Now available. Featuring:
The first Openned Table at Café 1001 is today, Saturday 5th June. It begins at midday. Check here for more information.
Tuesday 8th June, 8pm
Admission £4
Komedia, 44 Gardner Street, Brighton BN1 1UN
Friday 11th June, 8pm
With music from Mathew Cunningham.
COACHWERKS, 19 Hollingdean Terrace, Brighton BN1 7HB
Admission £5 (waged) / £3 (unwaged)
Saturday 5th June, 8pm
7 Fountayne Rd, Tottenham, Greater London N15 4QL
Admission is free.
New reader:
New readers:
Sunday 6th June
Performances 1, 3 & 4.30pm
Installation 1 - 5pm
A Site-Specific Installation and Performance (for Esther Williams and the Lost Olympics; and for Jane Holloway and Elizabeth Jesser Reid). In part an homage to Esther Williams who would have represented the US as a swimmer in the 1940 Summer Games had they not been cancelled, and an examination of women’s physical education at the moments of the founding of Bedford and Royal Holloway Colleges. This site-specific installation and performances will involve translations of archive material into writerly, filmic and choreographic practices. Project conceived and directed by Redell Olsen, Royal Holloway, University of London in collaboration with Libby Worth, Royal Holloway, University of London; Gillian Wylde, Dartington College of Art; Ruth Livesey, Royal Holloway, University of London.
Jane Holloway Hall, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX
To book tickets please contact Caroline Mann with the time of which performance you would like to attend. Due to the size of the space there is a limit of 40 audience members for each performance. Those wanting to attend performances should meet at the Windsor Building.
Each performance with the walk down will last around 20 minutes. The walk down is over uneven ground and includes steps etc. The audience will need to stand in the hall or walk around but there is not seating. If anyone is infirm or cannot manage the walk then please contact Libby Worth for alternative arrangements.
John Hall:
With wonderfully patient intelligence, and without ever succumbing to polemic, Jon Clay puts to work the lexicon of Deleuze (and Guattari) on a question that has haunted modernist poetics: what is it that poems do when you read them, especially when they are “difficult”? Very carefully, he sets out the terms and, just as carefully, he demonstrates their practicality through reading poems, many of them “recalcitrant”, by contemporary UK-based poets, including Andrea Brady, the late Douglas Oliver, J.H. Prynne and Denise Riley. His close readings confirm the validity both of the method – one that is necessarily self-unsettling – and of the poems thus encountered.
This book is a very welcome contribution to the poetics and pragmatics of reading. It shows how it is possible to say what it is that poems do and how this is not the same as saying what they (seem to) say, all the while arguing that another(’s) reading would be a different reading and thus call, perhaps, for another writing.
£48.96, Continuum, May 2010 (208 pages)
ISBN 978-0826424242
Available via the Bookshelf
Now available to view in Online > ePubs, featuring:
Plus a set of regular new features:
Available in full-colour PDF or an easy-to-print black and white version.
This is the first book by Prynne since Triodes in 1999 to depart from the sequence of reiterated stanzaic blocks into a suite of more freely shaped individual lyrics. It's the first since Bands Around the Throat in 1987 to give individual lyrics each with its own title. The dimensions of the object point a comparison with Brass, 1971.
£10 + £4 P&P, Barque Press, May 2010 (22 pages)