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Thursday
May052011

New From Barque Press

New from Barque Press:

J. H. Prynne - GEORGE HERBERT, LOVE [III]: A Discursive Commentary
'Herbert for his part has put into suspense these "unchangeable rules" because the completeness of God's love for man is offered as a perfect and equitable freedom on both sides: but service once freely entered into is ordered by just these rules of divine equity. The example and model for the alternative, non-conditional sense of then and where it leads, is the unreckoned offering by Love of God's unreserved and unqaulified loving-kindness towards men. There are some traditional interpretative schemes in which God's love is conditional, upon sincere contrition, full repentence, upon justification through faith, and eventual sanctification. But in Herbert's scheme the invitation is unencumbered by reckoning: there are no special premiums or discounts or forward contracts, it is an offer made out of pure love - and, as such, hard for the guest to believe or accept because hard for him to comprehend. Yet it is not an indifferent act, because it is motivated by God's will towards man, that man should return a pure love, if so he wills, as the matching response to God's willed offering.' (excerpt from the Commentary, p. 69)

£10.00 (£2 P&P), April 2011 (92 pp.)

Tim Atkins - Petrarch
'Tim Atkins' translations of fourteenth-century Italian scholar and poet Franciso Petrarcha’s sonnets (in Petrarch) open an entirely different kind of functional space within the gap between media, and inject it with wit, contemporary vulgarity, and not a little libido. ...Love here is for men, women, and poems. Atkins pulls the poetry of his friend and lover into messy interfaced languages of multiple historical moments ("I won the Eurovision poetry prize in 1341"), employing a criss-crossing gang of references as company (Bach, YouTube, Henry James, Futurism...). If there is a systemic translation methodology employed across the various, non-chronologically arranged sonnets, I have yet to discover it; the sharpness of the poems allows them to stand solidly outside of any framework, while taking place at high volume, with nerve, emotion, and wit all equally maximized.' Eddie Hopely, Poetry Project Newsletter 233 (Dec 2010)

£10.00 (£2 P&P), April 2011

ISBN 978-1-903488-78-2

Wednesday
May042011

Xing the Line

Wednesday 11th May, 7.30 - 10.30pm

  • James Davies
  • Carol Watts

The Apple Tree (upstairs), 45 Mount Pleasant, WC1X 0AE

Admission £5 (waged) / £3 (unwaged)

Wednesday
May042011

The Other Room Readings (6th April)

Recordings of readings and interviews from The Other Room on 6th April are now available online:

Tuesday
May032011

Poetry Centre Digital Archive

Poetry Center Digital Archive makes available significant portions of early audio recordings from the Poetry Center's American Poetry Archives collection, supplemented by select archival texts and images. New files will be added incrementally as recordings are prepared and as we proceed through the collection from the 1950s onward.
Tuesday
May032011

Hi Zero #THREE

£3.30

Featuring poems from:

  • Jennifer Cooke
  • Harry Gilonis
  • Edmund Hardy
  • Sarah Kelly
  • Laura Kilbride
  • Ed Luker
  • Joe Luna
  • John Wilkinson

E-mail hizeroreadings@gmail.com to order.

Monday
May022011

Fuck the Festival

Monday
May022011

Writers Forum

Saturday 7th May, 4 - 6pm (arrive at 3.30pm)

Betsey Trotwood, Farringdon, London EC1

Admission is free.

Monday
May022011

Writers Forum Workshop (North)

Saturday 7th May, 2 - 5pm

WF(N) is an opportunity for innovative/experimental poets to present their work for feedback in a mutually supportive atmosphere. Ideally, please bring along copies of the work you intend to read for the other group members. Anyone who wants to come along but doesn’t want to read is also very welcome.

Victoria Family & Commercial Hotel, 28 Great George Street, Leeds LS1 3DL

Admission is free, all welcome.

Facebook event
Sunday
May012011

The Xenotext: A Progress Report

Thursday 5th May, 6 - 6.50pm

Birkbeck Centre for Poetics welcomes Christian Bök.

The Xenotext is my nine-year long attempt to create an example of 'living poetry'. I have been striving to write a short verse about language and genetics, whereupon I use a 'chemical alphabet' to translate this poem into a sequence of DNA for subsequent implantation into the genome of a bacterium (in this case, a microbe called Deinococcus radiodurans - an extremophile, capable of surviving, without mutation, in even the most hostile milieus, including the vacuum of outer space). When translated into a gene and then integrated into the cell, my poem is going to constitute a set of instructions, all of which cause the organism to manufacture a viable, benign protein in response - a protein that, according to my original, chemical alphabet, is itself yet another text. I am, in effect, engineering a life-form so that it becomes not only a durable archive for storing a poem, but also an operant machine for writing a poem - one that can persist on the planet until the sun itself explodes...

Birkbeck University, London (venue TBC)

Admission is free, all welcome.

Read an Observer article about the project.

Saturday
Apr302011

CRS

Friday 6th May, 7pm

  • Jonny Liron
  • Joe Luna
  • Marianne Morris
  • Sophie Robinson

Judith E. Wilson Drama Studio, 9 West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DP

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