Archivi categoria: experimental poetry

some texts by mg

word for / word : TLP
zswound : assume that and medium stone
private : find a hall
coupremine : quaestio LXIV + enhance 14-21
textimagepoem : hegy paths
forward/text : new tools to fight disease
p.f.s.post : first platform 2
textimagepoem : fakeflick3
fhole : he went insane…
shampoo : enhance 001, 002, 005
forward/text : enhance 003, 006, 007, 008
coconut : enhance 024-030
sos-art.com : cutaneous
sous rature #1 : 4 PH(e)rASE frozen leds
iepi (and harriet) : four texts
pganickz.livejournal.com : enhance 41

chaps:
dusie : a gunless tea
tir aux pigeons : cdk

Promemoria: STASERA presso la libreria Empirìa: COLLANA CHAPBOOK

Roma, giovedì 23 aprile 2009, ore 19:00

presso la Libreria Empirìa
in via Baccina 79 (rione Monti):

Presentazione della
collana ChapBooks
delle edizioni Arcipelago

11chaps
(Poesia e prosa di ricerca : http://gammm.org/index.php/chap/)

Interventi critici di
Paolo Giovannetti e di Gherardo Bortolotti (direttore della collana con Michele Zaffarano)

Leggono
Alessandro Broggi, Marco Giovenale, Andrea Inglese, Adriano Padua

______________________________________________________________________
Edizioni Empirìa, via Baccina 79 – tel. 0669940850 – email: info [at] empiria [dot] com

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jpg della locandina: qui

scheda descrittiva della collana: qui

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The death of Franklin Rosemont

text by Séamas Cain
(from the Spidertangle newsgroup)

 

Franklin Rosemont, surrealist poet, artist, historian, street speaker,
& labor activist, died of an aneurysm on Sunday, April 12th in
Chicago, Illinois. He was 65 years old. With his partner & comrade,
Penelope Rosemont, & lifelong friend Paul Garon, he co-founded the
Chicago Surrealist Group, a remarkable presence in the art & activism
landscape of Chicago for forty years.

Rosemont did not separate scholarship from art, or art from political
& social revolt. His books of poetry include “The morning of a machine
gun” (Chicago : Surrealist Editions, 1968); “The apple of the
automatic zebra’s eye” (Cambridge, Massachusetts : Radical America,
1971); “Lamps hurled at the stunning algebra of ants” (Chicago :
Surrealist Editions & Black Swan Press, 1990); & “Penelope” (Chicago :
Surrealist Editions, 1997).

Rosemont was a leading figure in the reorganization of America’s
oldest labor press, the Charles H. Kerr Company. Under the mantle of
the Kerr Company, Franklin edited & printed the work of some of the
most interesting & important figures in the development of the
political left: C.L.R. James, Martin Glaberman, Staughton Lynd, David
Dellinger, Cornelius Castoriadis, Sam Dolgoff, Paul Goodman, Grace Lee
Boggs, Paul Avrich, Augustin Souchy, Mother Jones, Lucy Parsons,
Benjamin Péret, Utah Phillips, Paul Buhle, T-Bone Slim, George
Woodcock, and, in a new book released just days before Franklin’s
death, Carl Sandburg. In later years, Franklin Rosemont created &
edited the Surrealist Histories series at the University of Texas
Press, in addition to continuing his work with the Kerr Company &
Black Swan Press.

Franklin Rosemont was a friend & valued colleague of such persons as
Studs Terkel, Mary Low, the poets Philip Lamantia, Diane di Prima,
Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Dennis Brutus, the painter Leonora Carrington,
& the historians David Roediger, John Bracey, & Robin D.G. Kelley.

I first encountered Franklin Rosemont face-to-face during the Chicago
protests of August 1968. Then & since, I found him to be an amazing
blend of contradictions, at once cordial yet cantankerous, amiable yet
dismissive, spontaneous & enthusiastic yet grim, social yet
unmistakably self-absorbed, creative yet singularly overpowering.
Indeed, he was a unique personality.

My condolences & solidarity to Penelope Rosemont, the Chicago group &
its affiliates.

Séamas Cain
http://alazanto.org/seamascain
http://seamascain.writernetwork.com
http://www.mnartists.org/Seamas_Cain

Jean-Marie Gleize, Sorties

Jean-Marie Gleize, Sorties, collection Forbidden Beach, Editions Questions Théoriques, mars 2009.

« La poésie, c’est d’abord, pour nous, lapoésie, grand totem historique qui continue, à travers école et médias, de s’imposer comme expressivité, harmonie, sincérité, visions. La repoésie d’aujourd’hui, qui cherche dans le quotidien les traces d’un chant essentiel, n’est rien d’autre que son avatar nostalgique. Quant à la néopoésie, apparemment plus en phase avec le présent, elle vise surtout, sous de nouveaux atours techniques et spectaculaires, à multiplier les “féeries”. Depuis la fin du xixe siècle et Rimbaud, quelques auteurs ont tenté de libérer la poésie d’elle-même, pour la reconcevoir. Ils l’ont pensée avant tout comme une manière de comprendre la réalité, ils ont cherché les outils, conceptuels, verbaux, formels de cette nouvelle entente. Les 52 textes et interventions rassemblés dans Sorties supposent donc qu’il y a un dehors, et un après. Et non une seule façon de sortir ou de s’en sortir, mais une pluralité de gestes, de postures, de dispositions à l’échappée, liée aux différentes façons de concevoir une refonte de l'”industrie logique”. Vastes chantiers postgénériques que ce livre décrit en contexte et dans leurs visées “politiques”. Il s’agit d’insoumission, d’actes et d’actions.»

Pour plus d’informations sur les éditions Questions Théoriques, consultez le site http://questions-theoriques.blogspot.com/)

the RUNBOOK project: download the march issue

RUNBOOK////// mars/téléchargeable////// march/downloadable

invit-mars


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PARTICIPANTS // PARTICIPANTS

Christophe Marchand-Kiss / José Maria Gonzalez / Antonio Gallego / Daniel Pacheco / Yûichi Yokoyama / Sebastian Dicenaire / Roberto Martinez / Françoise Quardon / Fabienne Courtade / Liliane Giraudon / Mathieu Brosseau / Edgar Endress / Catherine Weinzaepflen / Claire Chevrier / Dominique Quélen / Onaka Yudanaka / Anonyme / Éric Watier / Colette Tron / Esther Salmona / Dietrich Heißenbüttel / Isabelle Pelissier / Jean-Gabriel Massardier / Éric Houser / Esther Sherrow / Gabrielle Manglou / Mathieu Renard / Bertrand Limbour / Charlie Cerisier / Francis Léonési / Massimo Pellegrini / Christiane Veschambre / Juliette Agnel /

http://despaysages.fr/runbook.html