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Saturday
May222010

Table @ CafĂ© 1001

Last year a lot of poets and small press publishers on this list were very generous in donating a lot of books to the Openned Land For Lajee Reading (Oct 2009) so we could raise money to send to the Lajee Centre in Palestine.

An opportunity has come up that will allow us to say thank you to you all once more in a much more material way: the Openned Table @ Café 1001.

Openned is setting up a book table in conjunction with Café 1001 in London's East End.

Openned will have a presence at Café 1001 on the first Saturday of every month. The first event is on Saturday 5th June and runs from 12 - 6 pm.

Attendance is free as long as you bring one book to donate to Café 1001's Book Orphanage. The book orphanage is a large bookshelf in the main bar space where anyone can wonder in and read a book, for free, and then put it back on the shelf for the next person to read.

Alongside the selling of books on the Openned Table (which is in fact two tables, and more if we need it) there will also be some very short three-minute Openned Readings throughout the day.

This is a real opportunity for us as a community to claim a regular physical space in London for the exchange, and perhaps more importantly the sale, of our poetry. So please, if you are a poetry publisher or a magazine editor, interested in selling your books at the Openned Table, or even a poet interested in reading at the event or donating poetry books for free to the Book Orphanage, or for sale at the table, please Contact us. Priority will be given to those offering new works of poetry that have been published in little magazines or by small presses.

Lots has to be worked out in a short amount of time, such as how to get the books to Steve (located in Whitechapel, London) within two weeks and how to get the money back to the individual publishers that wish to sell books on the Openned Table. We are putting the word out now to give us time to organise this with interested parties.

Openned will be taking no cut from any of this activity. You set the rates. All money goes back to the publishers/poets. All we ask is that one book is donated to the Book Orphanage.

We hope to see you there.

Linus, Steve & Alex

Friday
May212010

Crossing the Line

Wednesday 2nd June, 7.30pm

  • Stephen Vincent
  • Mark Weiss

The Leather Exchange, 15 Leathermarket Street, London Bridge, London SE1 3HN

Admission £5 / £3 (conc.)

Thursday
May202010

Updated Philpott

Peter Philpott has updated his fantastic must-start-here web pages. Check out the full list of revisions.

Wednesday
May192010

Cambridge Reading Series

Friday 21st May, 7.30pm

  • Jow Lindsay
  • Posie Rider

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

Admission is free, all welcome, wine served.

Tuesday
May182010

Reminder: Two Readings Tonight

Tuesday
May182010

The Other Room 3 party coalition

Wednesday 2nd June, 7pm

  • Susana Gardner
  • Peter Manson
  • Nicole Mauro

The Old Abbey Inn, 61 Pencroft Way, Manchester, M15 6AY

Admission is free.

Monday
May172010

Openned Podcast #3 - ePublishing & the Future of the Small Press

Now available on the Online > Podcast page, featuring a discussion between Alex Davies and Steve Willey about ePublishing and the future of the Small Press.

A full transcript of this discussion is available for download.

Subscribe to the Openned Podcast.

Sunday
May162010

New from Knives, Forks and Spoons

2010 (43 pages)

ISBN 978-0-9565418-7-1

 

2010 (19 pages)

ISBN 978-0-9565418-5-7

 

2010 (48 pages)

ISBN 978-9565418-5-7

 

All publications: £5, Knives, Forks & Spoons Press.

Saturday
May152010

A Day Of Protest

Against Occupation:

At twelve today I went down to Nakba Commemoration 2010. A protest organised by Stop The War that took place opposite ten downing street. We were there, amongst other reasons, to commemorate the Nakba of 1948, to speak for the people of Palestine who are so often denied a voice, to keep the voice of Palestine firmly in the ear of con-dem-nation, and to demonstrate our solidarity with the people of Palestine who live under constant Israeli occupation. During the protest 20 copies of a pamphlet, which is still in the process of being written, called Slogans 1-5 (this time accompanied by subtitle: a message for the new coalition government) was distributed by myself and Tessa Whitehouse (who, it needs to be said, did most of the distributing). The idea was that if you attended the protest you got to have the publication. But more than that, the proper environment for this poem is the protest environment. It was about creating a politics of distribution where the poem (poetry) and the protest (a manifestation of politics) are not allowed to pretend that they inhabit hermetic spaces, somehow sealed off from one another, but where the two talk to one another, and for me at least, where the two complete one another. The poem completes at a point where political, poetic and socio-cultural space meet, where aesthetics and politics are redefined against one another. Better than all this though (because who knows if any of what I have just written actually happened) was that all the pamphlets were distributed and the protest felt like a success (to the extent that any protest in support of the Palestinian cause feels like a success, while there is still occupation, still no right to return, still the blockade of Gaza, still settlements, checkpoints, refugees etc.) Anyway, we were there and it was a truly encouraging experience, and indeed, a new experience for me, to see fellow protesters occasionally reading poems, which use the rhythms and the structures of pro-palestinian chants as their metrical and philosophic base, while the cacophony of the multi-vocal and multi-pitched chanting swelled around us, and directed itself towards the architecture of government. I realized today that despite the fact that some of these poems will be appearing elsewhere in other publications, and in other forms, that from now on the protest environment will be the main site of publication and distribution for this work.

For Occupation:

on in the day Tessa, I, and friend Adam Stark, joined many others outside the Mansion Building at Middlesex University Trent Park Campus to show solidarity with the students and lecturers at the Philosophy Department at Middlesex, who had staged a twelve day occupation of the Mansion Building to protest about the the abrupt closure of their excellent department, by a management more interested in profit margins than the right to education, the right to think and learn. You can read more about the campaign to save Middlesex Philosophy while signing a petition to save it here. Adam took some photos of the occupied mansion just before the occupiers, under great and sustained pressure and threat from management, a management who had decided that it was better to attempt to criminalise the staff and students involved in the occupation than to negotiate and enter into dialogue with them, finally walked out to great applause.

Adam's Photos

We were also there to hear Tariq Ali give a talk entitled Kentucky Fried Education: The Market Assault on Reason. One thing, out of the many things he said that will stay with me is that we can not afford to privatize our protests. We need to expand them, and to use his term, we need to nationalize them. This blog post is a small, small gesture towards the anti-privatization of protest (others have done, and continue to do, much much more). Clearly privatization has the ability to invade thought and poetry in the same way that it invades our universities. I really feel that poetry has a great role to play in the struggles ahead. I think that in all activities, readings, publications and writings, we should be looking out, outside of poetry, but also looking in, wanting to expand what poetry is and can be, and wanting to establish what I can only vaguely describe as connections. It is these connections that will be valuable to us all in the struggles ahead.

The occupiers promised that there would be more events and more spaces to gather in to show our solidarity in the coming weeks and months ahead. I think their website (which can be found here) will be as good a place as any to keep up to date with what is going on.

Steve.

Saturday
May152010

Arthur Shilling Returns

A message from Harry Godwin:

Dear All,

I have moved in & settled. While activities will be limited - baby is imminent - I am now accepting submissions for the next range of Arthur Shilling publications. I will be publishing 6 new booklets in the Autumn featuring (hopefully) woodcut cover art as well as the pocket-sized mini versions.

Due to a couple of requests I will also be making the entire Arthur Shilling back-catalogue available to buy (both as a collection & individually).

yours,

Harry.