Player FM - Internet Radio Done Right
12 subscribers
Checked 8M ago
Ditambah ten tahun yang lalu
Kandungan disediakan oleh PennSound. Semua kandungan podcast termasuk episod, grafik dan perihalan podcast dimuat naik dan disediakan terus oleh PennSound atau rakan kongsi platform podcast mereka. Jika anda percaya seseorang menggunakan karya berhak cipta anda tanpa kebenaran anda, anda boleh mengikuti proses yang digariskan di sini https://ms.player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Aplikasi Podcast
Pergi ke luar talian dengan aplikasi Player FM !
Pergi ke luar talian dengan aplikasi Player FM !
Podcast Berbaloi untuk Didengar
DITAJA
<
<div class="span index">1</div> <span><a class="" data-remote="true" data-type="html" href="/series/all-about-change">All About Change</a></span>


How do we build an inclusive world? Hear intimate and in-depth conversations with changemakers on disability rights, youth mental health advocacy, prison reform, grassroots activism, and more. First-hand stories about activism, change, and courage from people who are changing the world: from how a teen mom became the Planned Parenthood CEO, to NBA player Kevin Love on mental health in professional sports, to Beetlejuice actress Geena Davis on Hollywood’s role in women’s rights. All About Change is hosted by Jay Ruderman, whose life’s work is seeking social justice and inclusion for people with disabilities worldwide. Join Jay as he interviews iconic guests who have gone through adversity and harnessed their experiences to better the world. This show ultimately offers the message of hope that we need to keep going. All About Change is a production of the Ruderman Family Foundation. Listen and subscribe to All About Change wherever you get podcasts. https://allaboutchangepodcast.com/
PennSound Podcasts
Tandakan semua sebagai (belum) dimainkan
Manage series 69180
Kandungan disediakan oleh PennSound. Semua kandungan podcast termasuk episod, grafik dan perihalan podcast dimuat naik dan disediakan terus oleh PennSound atau rakan kongsi platform podcast mereka. Jika anda percaya seseorang menggunakan karya berhak cipta anda tanpa kebenaran anda, anda boleh mengikuti proses yang digariskan di sini https://ms.player.fm/legal.
PennSound Podcasts are hosted by PennSound's co-director, Al Filreis. PennSound was created in 2003 in order to produce new audio recordings and to preserving existing audio archives of poets reading their own work and discussing poetry and poetics - and to make these available to everyone through free downloadable sound files. PennSound is a project of the Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing at the University of Pennsylvania
…
continue reading
75 episod
Tandakan semua sebagai (belum) dimainkan
Manage series 69180
Kandungan disediakan oleh PennSound. Semua kandungan podcast termasuk episod, grafik dan perihalan podcast dimuat naik dan disediakan terus oleh PennSound atau rakan kongsi platform podcast mereka. Jika anda percaya seseorang menggunakan karya berhak cipta anda tanpa kebenaran anda, anda boleh mengikuti proses yang digariskan di sini https://ms.player.fm/legal.
PennSound Podcasts are hosted by PennSound's co-director, Al Filreis. PennSound was created in 2003 in order to produce new audio recordings and to preserving existing audio archives of poets reading their own work and discussing poetry and poetics - and to make these available to everyone through free downloadable sound files. PennSound is a project of the Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing at the University of Pennsylvania
…
continue reading
75 episod
Alla avsnitt
×P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Parts of parts: an interview with Larry Price 54:23
54:23
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai54:23
In Episode 78 of PennSound podcasts, poet Larry Price joins Al Filreis and William Fuller for an interview in the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House to discuss his new book 1/0, as well as some of his earlier work. The three discuss various influences on Price's poetry, including his love of Shakespeare and his former work as a performance artist, which are both reflected in the theatrical, monologic quality of his work.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 If we just had enough heart: an interview with Evie Shockley 54:40
54:40
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai54:40
In Episode 77 of PennSound podcasts, poet Evie Shockley sits down in the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House for an interview about her work with Al Filreis, Tyrone Williams, Aldon Nielson, and William J. Harris. In this wide-ranging conversation, Shockley, Filreis, Williams, Nielson, and Harris discuss the scope and trajectory of Shockley's poetry, from her 2011 book the new black, to her more recent books semiautomatic (2017) and suddenly we (2023). Shockley talks about the influences of various poets on her work, including Amiri Baraka, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Harryette Mullen, among others.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 A placeholder for memory: an interview with Sally Van Doren 44:59
44:59
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai44:59
In Episode 76 of PennSound podcasts, Sally Van Doren joins Al Filreis in the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House for a discussion of her newest book, Sibilance (LSU Press, 2023). Van Doren reads aloud from her work, and the two discuss the practices of visual art and asemic writing that structure her life as an artist and inform her approach to poetry.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Backwards and in circles: an interview with Willard Spiegelman 1:09:47
1:09:47
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:09:47
In Episode 75 of PennSound podcasts, Willard Spiegelman sits down with Al Filreis at the Kelly Writers House's Wexler Studio for a discussion on the underappreciated 20th century poet Amy Clampitt. The duo embark on a long exploration of Spiegelman's biography on Clampitt, Nothing Stays Put: The Life and Poetry of Amy Clampitt (Knopf, 2023). Spieigelman reveals the challenges he faced connecting the dots on simple elements of Clampitt's biographical record, noting gaps in Clampitt's earlier life that she avoided discussing with even her close friends and family.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Advance and retreat of energy: an interview with Gail Scott 1:02:43
1:02:43
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:02:43
In Episode 74 of PennSound podcasts, Christy Davids talks with Montréal writer Gail Scott about her recent release Permanent Revolution (Book*hug Press, 2021), a compilation of new and revised essays, including work that originally appeared in Scott's foundational feminist text, Spaces Like Stairs (Women's Press, 1996). The revolutionary character of richly polysemous, multiply path-winding texts is a recurrent thread in this conversation. Davids and Scott also query the role of feminist theory, including that which it avows to do, as well as that which it actually does, and for whom.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 I will wear the mask: a conversation with Emily Abendroth and Jeff T. Johnson 1:18:31
1:18:31
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:18:31
In Episode 73 of PennSound podcasts, Jeff T. Johnson and Emily Abendroth exchange perspectives on how modular, nonlinear writing can open into enactive relationships that press readers and listeners alike beyond individual experience toward "critical empathy" and its relational tactics and strategies for living in common amidst social struggles that require collective reflection and navigation. The conversation is structured around a set of readings and commentary on material drawn from Johnson's Trouble Songs: A Musicological Poetics (punctum books, 2018) and Abendroth's Sousveillance Pageant (Radiator Press, 2021), two texts that employ complementary approaches to working across genres, formal and gestural structures, and disjunctive expressive modes.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 I am the city: a conversation with Jill Magi and Davy Knittle 44:37
44:37
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai44:37
In Episode 72 of PennSound podcasts, Davy Knittle and Jill Magi spoke over Zoom about Magi's book Speech (Nightboat Books, 2019). Their discussion moved through many aspects of the relationship between the city and the woven object, such as the intersection of textiles and architecture; how weaving, like walking, teaches us to live in communities; and walking, weaving, and poetry as fragmentary practices. They also discussed how language habits further spatial inequalities in cities, and poetry's capacity to introduce questions about the language of climate change, citizenship versus belonging, and our understanding of value.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Empathy under late capitalism: an interview with Danielle LaFrance 1:04:02
1:04:02
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:04:02
In Episode 71 of PennSound podcasts, Levi Bentley, Ted Rees, and Danielle LaFrance met in the Wexler Studio in November 2019 to discuss LaFrance's books Just Like I Like It and Friendly + Fire as a part of the Housework series. Their conversation touched on the gross and grotesque, "it" as ideology, abolishing the self and the "sovereign I," empathy in a late-capitalist world, and the discomfort of being both a participant in and host to parasitic social injustice.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Taking up space: an interview with Sarah Rose Etter 24:17
24:17
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai24:17
In Episode 67 of PennSound podcasts, Sarah Rose Etter joined Jacket2 editor Julia Bloch in the Wexler Studio last September for a short reading from and discussion of her debut poetic novel, The Book of X, which appeared in 2019 from Two Dollar Radio. Etter and Bloch talked about the impact of open poetics and visual art upon Etter's prose style, the feminist politics of speculative narrative, the process of fact-checking menstrual blood output, and the etymology of the book's governing image — among other things.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 'Some quality of song': an interview with Al Young 1:14:03
1:14:03
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:14:03
In Episode 70 of PennSound podcasts, Al Young, Tyrone Williams, and William J. Harris joined Al Filreis in the Wexler Studio to discuss Young and his work. The conversation covered the relationship between Young's poetry and the Black Arts Movement, the role of music and jazz in his writing, and other figures with whom he was acquainted, such as poets Ishmael Reed and Bob Kaufman. Young also gave readings of some of his poems: "A Dance for Militant Dilettantes," "Yes, the Secret Mind Whispers" (which was written in honor of Kaufman), and "January."…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 An openness to language: a conversation with Rodney Koeneke and Davy Knittle 38:02
38:02
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai38:02
In Episode 69 of PennSound podcasts, Davy Knittle hosted poet Rodney Koeneke in the Wexler Studio to discuss his book, Body and Glass (Wave Books, 2018). Their conversation touches on Koeneke's writing process and use of pronouns as a "distancing technique," the role of poetry — particularly experimental forms — in America today, and how joy might emerge from work about loss. In the podcast, the two also examine the traditions that poetry assembles for itself, drawing comparisons between modernists like Joyce and contemporary poets.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Not-me-ness: a conversation with Eileen Myles and Davy Knittle 46:13
46:13
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai46:13
In Episode 68 of PennSound podcasts, Davy Knittle and Eileen Myles had a conversation at Myles's home in the East Village in New York City in August, 2018, for this PennSound podcast. Their discussion began in the midst of an exchange about Myles's 1991 collection Not Me and changes in their neighborhood at the time. Conversation topics spanned "not-me-ness," gender, capitalism, sexuality, perception, and observation, among others.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Always with, never about: a conversation with Dani Zelko and Jennifer Ponce de Léon 1:08:39
1:08:39
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:08:39
In Episode 66 of PennSound podcasts, Argentine poet Dani Zelko was joined in the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House by Jennifer Ponce de León to discuss North Border: forced migrations (Gato Negro, 2019), the latest installment of Zelko's Reunión project. Zelko and Ponce de León's conversation explores the Reunión writing procedure as a "reciprocal work," the book as a political object, migrant and feminist agencies, and artistic production as means to form community.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Become something with other people: an interview with Wendy Trevino 1:13:40
1:13:40
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:13:40
In Episode 65 of PennSound podcasts, Wendy Trevino joined hosts Levi Bentley and Ted Rees for this PennSound podcast, the first in a series of intimate conversations in Housework's transition from reading series to recording series. Conversation topics included Barack Obama's appearance in Best Experimental Writing 2016, post-arrest listmaking, "unequal collateral," the organizing-specific shifts of self, acknowledging messy comrade conflict, and further associations drawn from Trevino's 2018 collection Cruel Fiction.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 The poem is the memory: a conversation with William Corbett and Davy Knittle 44:47
44:47
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai44:47
In Episode 64 of PennSound podcasts, William Corbett visited the Kelly Writers House in October 2017 for a retrospective reading and conversation with Stan Mir in honor of the poet Michael Gizzi. During his visit, Corbett and Knittle had a conversation in the Wexler Studio about the work of New York School poet James Schuyler, whose Just the Thing: Selected Letters of James Schuyler Corbett edited (Turtle Point Press, 2009). In their conversation, they discussed Schuyler's early poems, his methods of perception, his fondness for children, his attention to New York and its qualities of light from his apartment window, and Corbett's long career of teaching Schuyler's poetry to undergraduate students.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 New writing through the Anthropocene: an interview with Allison Cobb and Brian Teare 56:39
56:39
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai56:39
In Episode 63 of PennSound podcasts, Allison Cobb and Brian Teare joined Julia Bloch, Knar Gavin, and Aylin Malcolm in the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House on April 2, 2019, following their lunchtime discussion with scholars and poets from Penn's Poetry and Poetics and Anthropocene and Animal Studies reading groups. Our discussion ranged from human embeddedness in the nonhuman world to the relationship between poetic duration and historiography to the role of affect in poetry that seeks to reckon with the ever-intensifying ecodisasters of our time.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Loving the self in the world: a conversation with Jared Stanley and Brian Teare 53:59
53:59
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai53:59
In Episode 62 of PennSound podcasts, the Reno, Nevada–based poet Jared Stanley visited Philadelphia and the Kelly Writers House in April 2017 during a book tour for the release of EARS, which Sam Lohmann in The Volta has called "a manifesto of interdependence and susceptibility, a theory of the senses, and a deliberate sequence of jokes about lyric address." In this PennSound podcast interview with Brian Teare, Stanley talks about how notions such as friendship, ethics, and animism inform the scope of his work.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Woken up in the sun: a conversation with Samantha Giles and Jenn McCreary 43:59
43:59
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai43:59
In Episode 61 of PennSound podcasts, Samantha Giles visited the Kelly Writers House during her reading tour last December to talk with Jenn McCreary about her new collection, Total Recall, which was published by Krupskaya Press and which Daniel Borzutsky has described as a book that "powerfully and strangely melds autobiography, poetry, ethnography, philosophical inquiry, and testimony." In this PennSound podcast, Giles talks about child-raising as "durational performance"; about studying with Juliana Spahr at Mills College; and about the role of research in the writing practice that produced Total Recall, which Giles tells us is "a book that centers itself around memory but when memory is impacted by trauma and the ways in which that trauma unwrites the memories in one's own brain."…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Dwell in an otherwise space: a conversation with Ted Rees and Ariel Resnikoff 1:12:34
1:12:34
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:12:34
In Episode 60 of PennSound podcasts, Ted Rees, who recently relocated from Northern California back to his hometown of Philadelphia, and Ariel Resnikoff, who recently relocated from Philadelphia back to his previous home in Northern California, met up at the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House in October to read from and talk about Ted's new book, In Brazen Fontanelle Aflame. Rees and Resnikoff explore the book's relationship to forgotten urban and rural landscapes in California, the felt effects of concentrations of capital and new wealth, and the question of how to "dwell in an otherwise space that is more interstitial," as Rees puts it, in these modern times.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 A place that is living: a conversation with Sue Landers and Christy Davids 1:00:13
1:00:13
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:00:13
In Episode 59 of PennSound podcasts, Christy Davids returned to the Wexler Studio at Kelly Writers House earlier this year to chat with Sue Landers, whose 2016 book Franklinstein represents a documentary-poetic engagement with the Germantown neighborhood of Philadelphia. As she notes in this interview with Davids, Landers's work makes an argument against dehistoricized nostalgia as a documentary-poetics mode and instead toward a historically, politically alert poetic attitude toward our attachments to place. In this PennSound podcast, Landers and Davids draw out the significance of particular passages from Franklinstein and discuss what they have to teach us about the politics of mapping, memory, and place-based history.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Through the door: a conversation with Rachel Levitsky and Davy Knittle 53:05
53:05
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai53:05
In Episode 58 of PennSound podcasts, Davy Knittle hosted poet Rachel Levitsky in the Wexler Studio to discuss her project during her residency at LMCC's Process Space on Governor's Island, "Mother of Separation." Their conversation centers on the role of space, scale, and queerness in Levitsky's work. Conversation topics spanned movement and desire, person-making, and gaps in cities.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Breaking down that I: a conversation with Trish Salah and Christy Davids 25:13
25:13
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai25:13
In Episode 57 of PennSound podcasts, Christy Davids and Trish Salah visited Kelly Writers House on February 10, 2017, for a reading and conversation. Davids and Salah talked about lyric form, origin stories, and the "problems of the self" before Salah read passages from Lyric Sexology, Vol. 1, and Wanting in Arabic. Shortly after this reading, Salah presented research from her current research project, Towards a Trans Minor Literature, an inquiry into the aesthetic and political projects of trans, transsexual, genderqueer, and two-spirit writers.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Soundtrack of your life: an interview with erica lewis 57:49
57:49
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai57:49
In Episode 56 of PennSound podcasts, Christy Davids visited Kelly Writers House on October 24, 2016, to talk with erica lewis, who was passing through Philadelphia to give a reading in Jason Mitchell's Frank O'Hara's Last Lover series in between stops in Pittsburgh and Brooklyn. While in the studio, lewis read some work and talked about her box set trilogy, a three-part project that engages with pop music as memory device and formal procedure, reconsiders "the confessional" as a poetic mode, and delves into female family history in poems that are by turns performative, intertextual, and intensely sonic.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Adhered to them these extra meanings: Mike Hennessey picks five PennSound recordings 57:02
57:02
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai57:02
In Episode 54 of PennSound podcasts, Michael Hennessey, one of the founding participants of the PennSound archive, joins Al Filreis in the Wexler Studio to discuss Mike's top 5 PennSound picks.
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Forms of ritual: an interview with CAConrad 1:01:07
1:01:07
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:01:07
In Episode 55 of PennSound podcasts, CAConrad returned to the Kelly Writers House on January 27, 2016, to visit the Wexler Studio to speak with Julia Bloch and to read from ECODEVIANCE: (Soma)tics for the Future Wilderness, which appeared from Wave Books in 2014, as well as a number of new works generated from his ongoing performative and pedagogical practice of somatics and ecopoetics.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 To go forward: an interview with Brian Teare 1:04:19
1:04:19
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:04:19
In Episode 53 of PennSound podcasts, Brian Teare came back to the Kelly Writers House on October 30, 2015, to speak with Jaime Shearn Coan about his new collection of poetry, The Empty Form Goes All the Way to Heaven, published in 2015 by Ahsahta Press. Shearn Coan describes Teare's collection as one that imagines "how to language what is un-languageable." In this PennSound podcast, Teare and Shearn Coan talk about writing out of chronic illness, the book's engagement with the work of American abstract painter Agnes Martin, and how poetry explores what sorts of shared communal narratives are possible.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 To open things up: an interview with Jerome Rothenberg 1:06:55
1:06:55
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:06:55
In Episode 52 of PennSound podcasts, on September 10, 2015, Jerome Rothenberg re-visited the Kelly Writers House to give an evening reading. A few hours earlier, Ariel Resnikoff and Al Filreis met Rothenberg in the Wexler Studio for an extended interview/conversation that ranged across many epochs, poetic modes, and topics. Among them: the new young German poets of the mid- to late 1950s; the world of Jewish mystics Rothenberg discovered as a young poet; his time as a Masters student studying Dickinson and Whitman with Austin Warren at the University of Michigan in the early 1950s; "the four great Jewish objectivist poets"; Armand Schwerner; somewhat sudden access to major commercial presses for his anthologies in the late 1960s; Robert Duncan's recommendation of Gershom Scholem; Paul Celan; and Rothenberg's forays into the problem of representing the unsayable of genocide.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Trouble the pronoun: an interview with Brent Armendinger 54:28
54:28
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai54:28
In Episode 51 of PennSound podcasts, the Los Angeles-based poet Brent Armendinger visited Philadelphia and the Kelly Writers House in April 2015 during a book tour for the release of The Ghost in Us Was Multiplying, which Bhanu Kapil has described as a book that "traces the index of an intense need: the kind of contact that can't be assuaged by touch alone." Armendinger read from the book and then spoke with Brian Teare about queerness and medicalization of the body, about how poetry can explore the relationship between ethics and desire, about metaphor and embodiment, and more.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Any point can connect to any other point: an interview with Emji Spero 54:19
54:19
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai54:19
In Episode 50 of PennSound podcasts, Emji Spero, an Oakland-based artist and poet exploring the intersections of writing, book art, installation, and performance, visited Philadelphia and the Kelly Writers House in April 2015 to talk about their book almost any shit will do, which uses found language from mycelial studies, word-replacement, and erasure to map the boundaries of collective engagement. In this interview at the Wexler Studio, Spero spoke with Gabriel Ojeda-Sague, a poet living in Philadelphia and author of the chapbooks JOGS (Lulu, 2013) and Nite [chickadee]'s (GaussPDF, 2015), about personal trauma, queer longing, surveillance states, public/private access, the Baltimore riots, and a new work on violence as the static and quotidian. The interview concludes with a ten-minute collaborative reading by both poets from almost any shit will do.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 All sorts of education: an interview with William J. Harris 1:22:01
1:22:01
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:22:01
In Episode 49 of PennSound podcasts, this interview tracks William J. Harris' genesis and early development as a poet and intellectual. Harris' artistic and cultural education occurs during the late '50s, the '60s and the early '70s and takes place primarily in and around academic institutions: the liberal college, Antioch, which is in his hometown of Yellow Springs, Ohio, and the nearby black state university, Central State, in Wilberforce, and the story, if not exactly concluding, comes to "a momentary stay against confusion" at Stanford University in Northern California where he did his MA in creative writing and a PhD in English.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 An intangible third: an interview with Rachel Zolf 1:00:10
1:00:10
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:00:10
In Episode 48 of PennSound podcasts, on March 18, 2015, Canadian poet Rachel Zolf visited Philadelphia and the Kelly Writers House and came into the Wexler Studio to record a conversation with Brian Teare. Zolf and Teare discussed Zolf's most recent book, Janey's Arcadia, which Teare described in his introduction to Zolf's reading at Temple University in November 2014 as a work that "situates us in a Canadian national history in which the ideology of nation building prescribes genocide for indigenous people, and enlists all its settler-subjects in the campaigns of conversion, dislocation, assimilation, and disappearance." Zolf created a film, a sound performance, and a number of polyvocal actions related to Janey's Arcadia and has written recently about the "mad affects" generated by the reading/audience event.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 The split life: an interview with Yosuke Tanaka 26:10
26:10
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai26:10
In Episode 47 of PennSound podcasts, the poet and translator Yosuke Tanaka visited Philadelphia and the Kelly Writers House in late 2014. The purpose of his visit was threefold: to join a scientific conference on cell biology; to see the Writers House in person after spending much time there virtually as a participant in the open online course called "ModPo"; and to sit down in the Wexler Studio with Ariel Resnikoff to talk about contemporary Japanese poetry.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 I'll Drown My Book: Conceptual Writing by Women 19:35
19:35
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai19:35
In Episode 43 of PennSound podcasts, Amaris Cuchanski has edited and now introduces a 20-minute excerpt from a one-hour recording made of an October 17, 2012, event at the Kelly Writers House featuring conceptualist writing by women, celebrating the publication of I'll Drown My Book. This excerpt is episode 43 in the PennSound podcast series. You can hear the entire recording — and indeed watch a video recording — of the event by visiting the Kelly Writers House web calendar entry and by visiting the speak PennSound page created for the audio recordings, which have there been segmented.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 HOT TEXTS: Erín Moure's reading at a 2012 Belladonna* event 23:03
23:03
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai23:03
In Episode 41 of PennSound podcasts, on February 20, 2012, Erín Moure traveled from Calgary, Alberta, to read at a Belladonna* event, part of the "HOT TEXTS" project. She read with Rachel Levitsky and Christian Hawkey, and was introduced by Emily Skillings. Skillings and Krystal Languell hosted the event, which took place at The Way Station in Prospect Heights Brooklyn. Episode #41 of the PennSound podcasts series, hosted and edited by Emily Harnett, features a twenty-minute excerpt from the reading after a three-minute introduction.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 On reading and teaching the modern long poem: an interview with Eric Weinstein 37:17
37:17
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai37:17
In Episode 46 of PennSound podcasts, Eric Alan Weinstein and Al Filreis spent some time in the Wexler Studio of the Kelly Writers House talking about the problematics of the modern long poem. Can it be taught? Why is it so challenging, despite its central importance? The discussion is intentionally general at first, but soon Eric and Al turn to Eliot's The Waste Land, and in particular to two modally quite distinct passages from the poem.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Face to face: a conversation with Alan Golding, Orchid Tierney, Bob Perelman and Ron Silliman 58:22
58:22
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai58:22
In Episode 45 of PennSound podcasts, Al Filreis convened an hourlong conversation with Alan Golding, Orchid Tierney, Bob Perelman, and Ron Silliman. They began by reflecting on Golding's 1995 book From Outlaw to Classic: Canons in American Poetry twenty years later, beginning with a discussion about anthologies in the digital era, and soon talk shifted to Golding's assessment then of opposition to Language poets' anti-academic stance. Finally, the group discussed Golding's distinction between the Poundian long poem — mytho-informational — and Rachel Blau DuPlessis's Drafts.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 A way of witnessing: an interview with David Abel 1:23:39
1:23:39
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:23:39
In Episode 40 of PennSound podcasts, David Abel visited the Kelly Writers House recently in order to record his poems for PennSound, to check with us about our progress in digitizing a box of rare recordings on cassette he has given us for adding to the PennSound archive (including readings by David Rattray and Gene Frumkin), and to participate in a recording session of PoemTalk (on a poem by Muriel Rukeyser). Al Filreis spoke with David about his own poetry (particularly in Float, published by Chax in 2012), about his work as bookseller, convener of poetry communities (through readings series, etc.), librarian, and editor/publisher. They also discussed the poems and lives of Rattray and Frumkin.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Beauty hails us: an excerpted reading by Ann Lauterbach 10:17
10:17
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai10:17
PennSound podcast 39 is devoted to Ann Lauterbach — a nine-minute excerpt from a reading she gave at the Kelly Writers House in November of 2013. Allison Harris introduces and hosts. For a full video recording of the reading and/or a full audio recording, see the Kelly Writers House web calendar entry. Charles Bernstein introduced the event, and a few seconds of his remarks can be heard in the podcast.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 One great poetic mind through the mind of another: a lecture on Walt Whitman by Robert Duncan 16:33
16:33
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai16:33
Episode 38 in the PennSound podcast series presents a fifteen-minute excerpt from Robert Duncan's lectures on Walt Whitman presented at New College in three sessions between June 11 and 18, 1981. The full recordings are available on PennSound's Duncan page. The excerpt was edited by Nick DeFina and the podcast is introduced by Emily Harnett.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Poetry and architecture: a Bowery Poetry Club event 17:39
17:39
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai17:39
In Episode 37 of PennSound podcasts, at a Segue Series event at the Bowery Poetry Club hosted and curated by Trace Peterson on April 25, 2009, Robert Kocik, Benjamin Aranda, and Vito Acconci each speak for about twenty-six minutes about relations between poetry and architecture. Peterson wrote this about the event afterward: "People really turned out for this event: I counted over seventy in the audience including David Antin, Ellen Zweig, Gail Scott, Wystan Curnow, Eileen Myles, Andrew Levy, Abigail Child, Walter Lew, Jonathan Skinner, Jennifer Scappetone, Andy Fitch, and many Segue regulars. But a portion of the audience was people I had never seen before, people connected with architecture who would otherwise perhaps not have the experience of attending a poetry event."…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 All subjects are made new: Four introductions to John Ashbery across five decades 12:08
12:08
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai12:08
The 35th episode of PennSound podcasts presents an anthology of introductions to readings given by John Ashbery: Kenneth Koch in 1963, Susan Schultz in 1996, David Lehman in 2008, and Richard Howard in 1967. Nick DeFina selected and edited the introductions from Ashbery's PennSound page; Allison Harris hosts and introduces the podcast.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 To invent and reinvent: Introduction to Oulipo by Harry Matthews 16:26
16:26
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai16:26
In Episode 34 of PennSound podcasts, the Literature faculty and the Program in Writing and Humanistic Studies at MIT invited Harry Mathews to present on Oulipo in 1999. The audio has been segmented - making available separate links to audio recordings of his introduction, his remarks on the Oulipo group, a brief Q and A session, and several readings of lipograms and N+7 writing. As a service particularly to those who don't know much about Oulipo, Nick DeFina at PennSound has created an edited 15-minute excerpt of Mathews's general overview.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Sense memory: PennSound's 10th anniversary 11:38
11:38
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai11:38
In Episode 33 of PennSound podcasts, on November 18, 2013, Steve McLaughlin hosted a celebration of PennSound's 10th anniversary. After introductory remarks offered by Al Filreis, there were short talks each by Charles Bernstein, Michael Hennessey, Danny Snelson, Katie Price, Steve McLaughlin himself, and Benjamin Behrend. In this PennSound podcast, Hennessey's retrospective is featured (along with clips he prepared from various bits from the archive).…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Act to change men's lives and minds: an Alcheringa sound anthology 21:13
21:13
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai21:13
For Episode 32 of PennSound podcasts, Nick DeFina and Amaris Cuchanski collaborated to present an anthology of seven recordings from among those produced in association with Alcheringa magazine by Dennis Tedlock and Jerome Rothenberg. For Jacket2's "Reissues" department, Danny Snelson has prepared a digital edition of the EP audio inserts that appeared with the magazine in each issue. Here are the seven recordings chosen for our podcast anthology: Jerome Rothenberg, "The Tenth Horse-Song of Frank Mitchell" (1971); Andrew Peynesta, "Once Long Ago," in the original Zuni language (1973); Jaime de Angulo, "Story of the Gilak Monster" (1975); Son House, "Conversion Experience Narrative" (1976); Awawo, Ogiepo, Asegieme, "Nigerian Songs of Ritual License" (1976); Reverend W.T. Goodwin, "Easter Sunrise Sermon" (1971); Hotoke-Oroshi, "Manifestations of the Dead" (1953).…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Loose with rare volumes: an interview with John Tranter 48:33
48:33
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai48:33
In Episode 31 of PennSound podcasts, John Tranter visited the Kelly Writers House in Philadelphia. He participated in the recording of an episode of PoemTalk (about a poem by Ray DiPalma — to be released later), and then took time to record a conversation with Al Filreis about the founding of Jacket and various related topics. This recording is episode #31 in the PennSound podcast series. During the discussion Filreis asked Tranter to read a few recent poems; three poems can be heard in the whole recording, but have also been segmented, as follows: "After Hölderlin, " "At the Tomb of Napoleon," and "Goats and Monkeys".…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Anselm Hollo, in memoriam: an anthology of Hollo recordings 17:17
17:17
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai17:17
Anselm Hollo, the widely admired Finnish poet and translator, died on January 29, 2013. Hollo translated poetry and belles-lettres from Finnish, German, Swedish and French into English and was one of the early translators of Allen Ginsberg into German and Finnish. Hollo taught creative writing in eighteen different institutions, among them SUNY Buffalo, the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and the University of Colorado at Boulder; and starting in 1985, he taught in the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa University. For the 30th episode of the PennSound podcasts series, Nick DeFina and Amaris Cuchanski have put together an anthology of Hollo recordings.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 The words were what interested him: a celebration of Hart Crane 20:46
20:46
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai20:46
In Episode 29 of PennSound podcasts, on the occasion of the publication by the Library of America of Hart Crane: Complete Poems and Selected Letters (edited by Langdon Hammer), Samuel R. Delany, Brian Reed and Charles Bernstein gathered at the Kelly Writers House to talk about Crane's life and poetry on January 24, 2007. The event was co-sponsored by the Writers House, Penn's Creative Writing Program, Temple-Penn Poetics, The Poetry Society of America, and Penn's Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing. The full recording is available at PennSound.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 A moment is everything: a Belladonna* anthology 17:48
17:48
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai17:48
In Episode 28 of PennSound podcasts, from the excitingly varied PennSound page hosting recordings from the Belladonna* reading series from 1999 to the present, PennSound podcasts now presents, for its twenty-eighth episode, an anthology of seven Belladonna* performances. The seven are: erica kaufman, "A Conventional Hero" and "PS 54"; Rae Armantrout, "Seconds"; Lydia Davis, "City People"; Rachel Levitsky, "In the Wee Hours"; Sharon Mesmer, "Gait Signatures"; Tim Trace Peterson, "Bricky"; Jennifer Moxley, "Taking My Own Advice After Skylar."…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Given just the work to be present in: Eight introductions to Creeley, 1961-1996 13:47
13:47
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai13:47
Episode 27 of PennSound podcasts features an anthology of eight introductions to Robert Creeley, culled from PennSound's many recordings of Creeley's readings over the years. The introductions are, in order: by Paul Carroll (Chicago, May 15, 1961), at the Berkeley Poetry Conference (Berkeley, July 22, 1965), by Ed Sanders (New York, October 24, 1966), in the Woodberry Poetry Room of Harvard (Cambridge, October 27, 1966), at MoCA Los Angeles in 1983, by Reed Bye at Naropa (Boulder, July 1984), by Diane Wakoski (Washington, DC, 1984), and by Susan Howe (Buffalo, October 11, 1996).…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Voices, one after another: a conversation with Kenneth Sherwood and Loss Pequeño Glazier 10:02
10:02
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai10:02
In Episode 26 of PennSound podcasts and as part of the LINEbreak series, co-editors of RIF/t, Loss Pequeño Glazier and Kenneth Sherwood, talk with Charles Bernstein about electronic publishing and the politics of editing the first online hypertext journal of poetry and poetics, RIF/t magazine. Their program was recorded in the Music Department at SUNY Buffalo in 1995. An audio recording of the full program (29 minutes) can be heard here: MP3. Some obvious context puts this remarkable discussion in relief: graphical browsers (such as Mosaic) were not readily available until 1994, and this discussion about, in part, an online poetry magazine, took place a year after that.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Already passing into something else: 40th anniversary celebration of Burning Deck Press 22:58
22:58
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai22:58
For Episode 25 of PennSound podcasts, Nick DeFina created this 20-minute audio selection from the five-volume set of recordings made at Brown University at the May 2001 celebration of (then) forty years of Burning Deck Press publishing of books, chapbooks and pamphlets, by, of course, Rosmarie and Keith Waldrop. We hope this excerpt entices you to listen to the whole, itself an aptly remarkable testimony to the range, longevity and generous persistence of the Waldrops in Providence. The Waldrops, of course, are no stranger to Jacket: we've published reviews, video clips, and (among many other items) Anne Dewey's essay on Olsonian poetics in Rosmarie's work.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 From the voice to the book: a presentation by Jerome Rothenberg 1:10:55
1:10:55
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai1:10:55
In Episode 24 of PennSound podcasts, Jerome Rothenberg on May 7, 2010, presenting at the Threads Talk Series (curated by Steve Clay and Kyle Schlesinger), mapped branches of book culture that are typically kept apart. Rothenberg reviews the differences between — and the need to bring together — speech and writing and printing, and he uses this summary as a way of freshly re-defining ethnopoetics. The title of the talk from which this podcast-length (18 mins.) excerpt is taken: "From the Voice to the Book, from the Book to the Voice: a Dialectic." The Threads Talk Series page at PennSound includes, of course, the full audio recording of the talk, the introduction by Steve Clay, and the 38 minutes of discussion that followed the talk.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Quality of world: Susan Howe interviews Charles Bernstein and Bruce Andrews in 1979 17:18
17:18
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai17:18
In Episode 23 of PennSound podcasts, on March 14, 1979, Bruce Andrews and Charles Bernstein visited the studios of WBAI in New York and were interviewed by Susan Howe, host then of the Pacifica Radio Poetry Show. This installment in the PennSound podcast series, introduced again by Amaris Cuchanski and based on editing done by Nick DeFina, features an excerpt from that interview focusing on a discussion of opaque as distinct from transparent language and of language's materiality.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 To isolate a space: a PhillyTalks conversation with P. Inman and Dan Farrell 21:58
21:58
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai21:58
Hosted by Amaris Cuchanski, Episode 22 of Pennsound podcasts includes a brief introduction, followed by a 21-minute excerpt from the conversation between P. Inman and Dan Farrell that took place at the Kelly Writers House on November 29, 1999, the 14th PhillyTalks event curated by Louis Cabri and technically produced by Aaron Levy. The entire recording includes links to audio segmented by poem and a link to a PDF copy of the program that had been distributed by Cabri before the event.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Ringing through his head: an excerpted 1972 conversation with Robert Creeley, Joanne Kyger, and Greg Hewlett 17:54
17:54
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai17:54
Hosted by Amaris Cuchanski, Episode 21 of PennSound podcasts features a 17-minute excerpt from a one-hour-and-23-minute recording of a conversation among Greg Hewlett, Robert Creeley, and Joanne Kyger in June of 1972. The whole discussion — and links to segments by topic — are available on PennSound's Joanne Kyger page.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Into the life of making books: an interview with Charles Alexander 28:07
28:07
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai28:07
In Episode 20 of PennSound podcasts, Charles Alexander, founder of Chax Press, joins Al Filreis at the Kelly Writers House for a discussion of his introduction to letterpress printing and his experience with small press.
In Episode 19 of PennSound podcasts, a PennSound Thanksgiving special, Al Filreis introduces recordings from the PennSound archive of poems giving thanks. The recorded readings include Amiri Baraka's "I Love Music (For John Coltrane)," Ted Berrigan's "Lovely," Robert Creeley's poem dedicated to Eddie Linden, Jerome Rothenberg's "A Letter to Paul Celan in Memory," Louis Zukofsky "Glad they were there," and William Carlos Williams "Light Hearted William."…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 A dream of history: an excerpted 1966 radio interview with John Ashbery 18:45
18:45
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai18:45
Rare it is that John Ashbery explains one of his poems. But, in a radio interview in 1966, he did that just. He read "These Lacustrine Cities" and then went line by line offering various sorts of explanations - paraphrase, sources for phrases and words, a sense of the process of composition. Here is a PennSound podcast, the 18th in our series, featuring this recording, which aired on WKCR.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 A spot of light on the curb: 100th birthday celebration of George Oppen 23:13
23:13
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai23:13
Episode 16 of PennSound podcasts features an excerpt from the 100th birthday celebration organized by Thomas Devaney to honor George Oppen at the Kelly Writers House on April 7, 2008. The event included short presentations, talks, readings, and remembrances by Michael Heller, Tom Mandel, Ann Lauterbach, George Economou, Stephen Cope, Al Filreis, Rachel Blau DuPlessis, Ron Silliman, Bob Perelman, and Thomas Devaney.…
P
PennSound Podcasts

1 Lower East Side poetics in the 60s: an interview with Dan Saxon 17:10
17:10
Main Kemudian
Main Kemudian
Senarai
Suka
Disukai17:10
In Episode 15 of PennSound podcasts, Dan Saxon joins Al Filreis at the Kelly Writers House for a conversation in June 2009. The two discuss Le Metro, a gathering place for Lower East Side poets and artists, and Saxon's magazine All Poets Welcome.
Selamat datang ke Player FM
Player FM mengimbas laman-laman web bagi podcast berkualiti tinggi untuk anda nikmati sekarang. Ia merupakan aplikasi podcast terbaik dan berfungsi untuk Android, iPhone, dan web. Daftar untuk melaraskan langganan merentasi peranti.