Archivi tag: announcement

messaggi ai poeti (#11)


vediamo se riesco a spiegarmi:


Kenny Goldsmith’s “The Weather” [by Charles Bernstein: Second edition]

here:

http://epc.buffalo.edu/authors/bernstein/blog/archive/weather-2011.html


Journées Jean-Marie Gleize, Nioques-Outside #1

Journées Jean-Marie Gleize, Nioques-Outside #1

En hommage aux dix années de direction du Centre d’études poétiques par Jean-Marie Gleize et à l’occasion des vingt ans de la revue Nioques, deux journées de lectures, de conférences et de projections de films sont organisées les vendredi 28 et samedi 29 mai 2010 à l’ENS Lyon.

Vendredi 28 mai
à partir de 15h (Salle Festive)

Jean-Marie Gleize
Zancarini Jean-Claude
Wedell Noura
Auclerc Benoît  Bérard Stéphane  Beurard-Valdoye Patrick
Bonnet Vincent
Bret Cyrille
Burty David
Cohen-Cheminet Geneviève
Courtoux Sylvain
de Francesco Alessandro  Gobille Boris
Hanna Christophe  Joseph Manuel
Leibovici Franck
Mainardi Cécile
Petit Elodie
Quintyn  Olivier
Quintane Nathalie
Renault Emmanuel
Weinzaepflen Gilles

Lectures de textes (in absentia):
Giovenale Marco
Zaffarano Michele
Marzaioli Giulio

Samedi 10h-18h
(Salle Festive)

Matin: 10h00-12h00
Séance cinéma
Christoffel David Sans-Titre
Michot Jacques-Henri Sans-Titre
Eric Pellet: Noir-Ecran (34 minutes) et Objet-Lumière (17 min)

Après-midi:
14h-14h30: Philippe Labaune et le Théâtre du Verseau : extrait de Tarnac
14h30-16h00: Séminaire Christophe Hanna, Franck Leibovici, Olivier Quintyn
16h00-17h00: Séance cinéma
Marion Naccache: CONEY ISLAND (LAST SUMMER), 2009 (63 min)
17h00-18h00: Table ronde organisée par Luigi Magno autour du numéro spécial de la revue Faire-Part consacrée à Jean-Marie Gleize.

Comité d’organisation:
Johann Defer
Alessandro de Francesco
Christophe Hanna
Anthony Manicki
Noura Wedell

http://revuenioques.blogspot.com
Nioques-Outside est une association qui se propose d’organiser des lectures et manifestations en lien avec le travail de création et de recherche de la revue Nioques.

Avec le soutien des laboratoires Triangle et Cerphi.

Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon
Site René Descartes
15, Parvis René Descartes
69007 Lyon

!!! “W” _ year 2010 _ by KSW !!!

W2010
: pdf available for download

W2010 features poetry and fiction by Jonathon Wilcke, Nikki Reimer, Tony Power, Tomasz Michalak, Donato Mancini, Heather McDonald, Tiziana La Melia, Reg Johanson, Scott Inniss, Ray Hsu, Emily Fedoruk, Kim Duff, Cris Costa, Stephen Collis, Edward Byrne, Michael Barnholden, Anne Ahmad and Sonnet L’Abbé.

Edited by Anne Ahmad, Stephen Collis, Kim Duff, Emily Fedoruk, Donato Mancini, Tomasz Michalak, and Tony Power.

W2010 is published both in a limited edition print run, and as a free pdf downloadable from the KSW website.

to download W2010 visit :  http://www.kswnet.org/fire/w_magazine.cfm

ABOUT THE NEW W:

“W2010 announces a new formation—both for the magazine and the Kootenay School of Writing. KSW, the more venerable of the two, is 25 years old this fall; W is ten. A new collective structure is in place for the School: a cluster of semi-autonomous yet intersecting “pods” (or “cells” if you prefer a more radical conception), each with its own projects or “areas of influence” (readings / pedagogy / publication, etc). W2010 begins a new conception of the magazine as an annual: this first issue gathers work from the present collective (or perhaps we should now say collectives) written this year; future annual issues will be announced with a themed call, for which work will be gathered and published on-line over the course of the year (see below for the call for the next issue). We hope work will be written dialogically as an issue accumulates: an initial selection of material will be posted, and then responses / extensions / contestations /emendations, etc, as they come; at the close of a year/issue, a print run of at least a “selection” of the year’s material will ideally then be issued.

The work in W2010 might surprise some familiar with the magazine and the School. For starters, there is some fiction here. We are doing our cultural work at a time of unprecedented pressures, as the “long neoliberal moment” (to borrow Jeff Derksen’s phrase)  grinds on, responding to the current market crisis not by a return to some sort of neo-Keynsean economics, but rather, with bailouts for the rich and amped up privatizations. Meanwhile the public sphere—already just a pool of faint light beneath one last sputtering streetlamp—seems set to finally wink out altogether. In Vancouver, this has a lot to do with the Olympics, its hundreds of new security cameras, its 1 billion dollar security budget, and its “safe assembly areas” (outside of which we can imagine the majority of the city as an “unsafe assembly zone”). Beside this we have the provincial government’s concerted efforts to privatize, expropriate, expel, and otherwise suppress a still-vital cultural sector. In such an environment, we feel it is essential to broaden and strengthen affinities, working towards something of a cultural front to face “a world that seems to hold together only through the infinite management of its own collapse” (The Coming Insurrection 7). From deep in the collapse, we reach out.”