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see facebook.com/differx/posts/10158173011597212
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If I am writing about the word “asemic”, I am thinking about patience and persistence. I am thinking about failure as a source of energy, as that which keeps an absurdist idea of enlightenment alive and almost thriving. Standing in the absurd center of the asemic universe, we are surrounded by unexamined exits and entrances, unexplored starting-points, multiple escape-routes leading out in all directions.
We need to synchronize our watches, then throw them all away. We need to get on the same page of the same map-book, then throw all the maps away. We need to set our compasses, and throw them away. We must promise each other to get together, at some unspecified time and place, later in our lives, to define our terms and make public our consensus definitions. Until then, we have some exploring to do, some making and some thinking, some reading and some writing.
Tim Gaze wrote, in an email responding to my recent texts (05.21.2021), that “asemic is an absolute state, whereas desemantizing is a process or matter of degree”.
He also wrote in the same email that he “consciously let go of asemic writing several years back”.
On January 27, 1998, I wrote to Tim, saying “the asemic text would seem to be an ideal, an impossibility, but possibly worth pursuing for just that reason.”
Desemantized writing is not an ideal, is not an impossibility. It is a very specific kind of writing, produced for very specific reasons. To desemantize writing is to intentionally make it less readable, less capable of participating in the language-game of giving information.
We might aspire to the absolute state of asemic writing, producing beautiful and/or provocative failures in our quest, but we achieve desematized writing, to one degree or another, whenever we choose to do so.
In response to my recent texts, John M. Bennett wrote (05.20.2021) “i like ‘desemanticized’ better than ‘asemic’ myself; the latter term was always a bit misleading, even downright wrong sometimes, I thought; except perhaps in a few situations…”
In the late 1990s, “asemic” was not the word I wanted or needed, but it was the best I had at the time. For the past 20 years or so I have been exploring alternatives to the word “asemic”. For now, and for my purposes (which are not necessarily the same purposes as those of some likely readers of this text), “desemantized” (or “desemanticized”) is an improvement, a step in the right direction. It is a provisional solution to a problem.
These days, the term “asemic writing” is very widely used, and is surely in no danger of being discarded or replaced. My thoughts about the term “desemantized writing” will circulate, if at all, within the context of the global asemic writing community. As I write this, in the late spring of 2021, the theory and practice of asemic writing are not in any sense dead, the possibilities have not been exhausted. The Sisyphean struggle to attain the absolute state of asemic writing, absurd though it may be, continues to yield moments of existential fulfillment, and perhaps every now and then even a kind of happiness.
My hope for my recent writings is that they might invigorate an increasingly faceted vision of the world of all things asemic.
jim leftwich, may 2021
issue sixty-one of Otoliths, the southern autumn 2021 issue has gone live, featuring paintings, drawings, music, essays, vispo, fiction, fact, poetry, photography, & vispo, from Laurent Grison, Sanjeev Sethi, Olchar E. Lindsann, Brandstifter & Texas Fontanella, Louise Landes Levi, Linda M. Walker, Demosthenes Agrafiotis, John Bradley, Sarah-Jane Crowson, Doren Robbins, Andrew Topel, Clive Gresswell, Elaine Woo, Heller Levinson, Judith Skillman, Jack Galmitz, Patrick Cahill, Cecelia Chapman & Jeff Crouch, Paul Dickey, C.S. Fuqua, Clara B. Jones, Nicholas Alexander Hayes, Anna Cates, Jim Meirose, Joann Renee Boswell, hiromi suzuki, William Doreski, Bart Plantenga, Tony Rauch, Pete Spence, Ryan Quinn Flanagan, David Miller, Ian Ganassi, Cecelia Chapman, GTimothy Gordon, Adam Fieled, Jim George, Gavin Lucky, Joseph Salvatore Aversano, Guy R. Beining, Ron Riekki, John McCluskey, Cameron Lowe, Grzegorz Wróblewski, Greg Hill, Lynn Strongin, Mary Corbin, Josie/Jocelyn Deane, Isabel Gómez de Diego, Jim Leftwich, Dave Read, Remi Seamon, Karl Bachmann, Dennis Hinrichsen, Nina Živančević, Texas Fontanella, Charles Freeland, John M. Bennett & Adam Roussopoulos, Hazel Smith, George Myers, Jr., Daniel F Bradley, Peter J. King, Rosella Quintini, Mark DuCharme, Sreemanti Sengupta & Snigdhendu Bhattacharya, Mary Cresswell, Kenneth Rexroth, John Gallas, Bob Lucky, Heath Brougher, Daniel de Culla, Nathan Whiting, Carol Stetser, Mike Callaghan, John Levy, Jake Goetz, Tony Beyer, Simon Perchik, John M. Bennett, Hugh Tribbey, S. K. Kelen, harry k stammer, Jeff Bagato, Jeff Harrison, Luis Cuauhtémoc Berriozábal, Richard Kostelanetz, Tim Pilgrim, Paul Ilechko, Martin Edmond, J. D. Nelson, John Sweet, Megan Wildhood, Aysegul Yildirim, Magdelawit Tesfaye, Bob Kotyk, Elmedin Kadric, Michael Neal Morris, Randee Silv, Eric Hoffman, David Lohrey, Sophia Archontis, Sheila E. Murphy, Keith Nunes, M.J. Iuppa, jeremy witherington, John J. Trause, Michael J. Leach, Tom Beckett, Alison J Barton, Diana Magallón, Mark Pirie, Penelope Weiss, Olivier Schopfer, Keith Polette, Keith Higginbotham, Marilyn Stablein, Bob Heman, Hrishikesh Srinivas, Fotis Begetis & Jack Galmitz, Katrinka Moore, Sam Langer, Paul Pfleuger, Jr, Michael Brandonisio, Jane Simpson, Cherie Hunter Day, Alex Glynne, Javant Biarujia, & Stephen Nelson
Issue sixty of OTOLITHS, the southern summer, 2021, is now live. Rounding out fifteen years of the journal, it maintains the eclectic & exciting mix of visuals & text that has graced it since its beginning. Included in this issue are Christian ALLE, Constant Laval Williams, Sanjeev Sethi, Seth Leeper, Kelsey Swancott, hiromi suzuki, DS Maolalai, Louise Landes Levi, Diana Magallón, Jonathan Minton, S. K. Kelen, Lynn Strongin, Arrowsmith Forge, Pete Spence, Kon Μarkοgiannis, Jim Leftwich, Michael Leach, Mark Danowsky, Timothy Pilgrim, John Stickney, Jack Galmitz, Doug Bolling, Michael Sikkema, Kristin Garth, Kyle Hemmings, Joanna Walkden Harris, Pete Spence, Elaine Woo, Craig Cotter, Charles Borkhuis, Mary Kasimor, Kyle Seibel, Vernon Frazer, Judith Skillman, Owen Bullock, Grzegorz Wróblewski, Nathan Whiting, Seth A. Howard, Jeff Crouch, Ian Goodale, Barnaby Smith, Chidambar Navalgund, Shloka Shankar, Jeff Harrison, John M. Bennett, Adam Rousopoulos, J. D. Nelson, Darrell Petska, Karl Kempton, Jenny Enochsson, Jen Schneider, Ryan Scott, Nico Vassilakis, Doug Jones, Olivier Schopfer, Tom Montag, Simon Perchik, Luis Cuauhtémoc Berriozábal, AG Davis, Naomi Buck Palagi, Scott Helmes & Carol Stetser, Tony Beyer, Tom Beckett, Cecelia Chapman, Vera Constantineau, Eric Hoffman, Bruno Neiva, Clara B. Jones, Dave Read, Bob Lucky, gobscure, Harvey Huddleston, Isabel Gómez de Diego, Oormila Vijayakrishnan Prahlad, Richard Kostelanetz, Kathup Tsering, M.J. Iuppa, Penelope Weiss, Joseph Salvatore Aversano, David Lohrey, Lewis LaCook, George Myers, Jr., Nathan Anderson, Jake Sheff, Johannes S. H. Bjerg, Keith Nunes, Jeff Bagato, Kell Nelson, Anna Cates, Elmedin Kadric, Andrew Pascoe, Toby Fitch, Marcia Arrieta, Jim Meirose, Joel Chace, John Levy, Marilyn Stablein, K.S. Ernst & Sheila E. Murphy, Natsuko Hirata, Alan (Chong) Lau, Alberto Vitacchio, Claudia Serea, Steven Fraccaro, Bob Heman, Randee Silv, Valeria Sangiorgi, Mark Pirie, Casey Bush, Carla Bertola, horace p sternwall, Michael Brandonisio, Kirsty Lewin, Eve Rifkah, Paul Pfleuger, Jr., Vassilis Zambaras, Edward Kulemin, Thomas Fink, Maya D. Mason, Zebulon Huset, Robert Knight, Kristian Patruno, Adam Rosenkranz, Peter Yovu, Guy R. Beining, & with a cover photo by Daniel de Culla which incorporates a cover photo of issue fifty-seven.
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Issue fifty-nine, the southern spring issue of Otoliths, is now live. It contains work by Ruggero Maggi, Lynn Strongin, Jim Leftwich, Joseph Salvatore Aversano, Jim Meirose, John M. Bennett, Thomas M. Cassidy, osvaldo cibils, Sanjeev Sethi, Mark Pirie, Demosthenes Agrafiotis, Jennifer Hambrick, Jen Schneider, Pete Spence, Heath Brougher, Rob Stuart, Ivan Klein, Jim McCrary, József Bíró, Jack Galmitz, Robert Ronnow, Kristin Garth, Scott MacLeod, Vaughan Rapatahana, Daniel de Culla, Adam Day, S. K. Kelen, Mike James, Texas Fontanella, Seth A. Howard, Serena Piccoli & William Allegrezza, Elaine Woo, Hugh Tribbey, Joanna Walkden Harris, Mike Harriden, Isabel Gómez de Diego, Mark DuCharme, hiromi suzuki, harry k stammer, Cecelia Chapman, Jeff Crouch, Bruno Neiva, Clara B. Jones, Eric Hoffman, J. D. Nelson, Sheila E. Murphy, Olivier Schopfer, Miriam Borgstrom, Jack Foley, Baron Geraldo & Associates, Pat Nolan, Adriána Kóbor, AG Davis, Volodymyr Bilyk, Andrew Brenza, red flea & old beetle, Joe Balaz, Kenneth Rexroth, Rosaire Appel, Jeff Harrison, Diana Magallón, Andrew Topel, Oormila Vijayakrishnan Prahlad, Christopher Barnes, Dave Read, Dale Jensen, Carol Stetser, Thomas Fink, dan raphael, Michael Farrell, Jessie Janeshek, T. W. Selvey, Chris Arnold & Francesca Jurate Sasnaitis, Andrew Taylor, Zebulon Huset, Ramsay Randall, Kenneth Howard Doerr, Penelope Weiss, Gavin Lucky, David Lohrey, Khaloud Al-Muttalibi, Barbara Daniels, Doren Robbins, J. Crouse, Simon Perchik, Karl Bachmann, Jeff Bagato, Wes Lee, Judith Skillman, Roger Mitchell, Grzegorz Wróblewski, Tom Beckett, Charles Wilkinson, Michael Basinski, Stephen Nelson, Bob Lucky, Jude VC, Tony Beyer, Stuart Wheatley, Jürgen O. Olbrich, Christian ALLE, Stu Hatton, Nick Nelson, R L Swihart, Kathleen Reichelt & Rich Ferguson, Dah, Daniel f. Bradley, Michael Ruby, Magdelawit Tesfaye, Eileen R. Tabios, Michael Spring, Les Wicks, Susan Connolly, Luis Cuauhtémoc Berriozábal, Elmedin Kadric, Angela Costi, Pamela Miller, John Levy, Jay Buchanan, Keith Higginbotham, Douglas Barbour, Kathup Tsering, Jill Cameron, Peter Yovu, Marilyn Stablein, Paul Pfleuger, Jr., Richard Kostelanetz, Michael Brandonisio, Katrinka Moore, Rosalinda Ruiz Scarfuto, Aurora Scott, Bob Heman, Keith Nunes, Jane Joritz-Nakagawa, Kristian Patruno, Chris Gutkind, Jane Simpson, & M.J. Iuppa.
LIBRO NCARISTA
Poesía y poesía visual
Español
147 páginas
Roberto Net Carlo (Mayagüez, Puerto Rico 1954). Poeta y artista que propaga su obra extensa y alucinante como Roberto Ncar en Facebook, es un “vallejiano urbano” según Rafael Acevedo. Sobre Ncar, dice Ana Lindner: “Tratando de establecer un orden en su propio caos existencial, convida vida a esta conjunción de imagen y palabra, entre la realidad contextualizada y el lenguaje pérfido en su función expresiva: logra, así, una poética mordiente mediante la reelaboración permanente de nuevos dispositivos poéticos puestos en la escena de lo cotidiano.” Una cotidianidad que incluye una visión aguda de los estragos del colonialismo en su tierra natal. El libro incluye algunos poemas visuales.
Verlo aquí:
https://www.lulu.com/en/us/shop/roberto-net-carlo/libro-ncarista/paperback/product-zwjk9e.html
https://library.osu.edu/finding-aids//rarebooks/TIP/TIP_%2002_04_2007%20-%2002_11_2007.pdf
Soup & Sound Inaugural Poetry Series event April 24
Featuring a great group of poets:
John M. Bennett (from Columbus, Ohio), Steve Dalachinsky (NY all the way!), Bruce Andrews, Ron Kolm, and violinist/poet Sarah Bernstein.
The poets will work with and against various sounds and musicians including saxophonist/improviser Jack Wright, trombonist Jen Baker, and percussionist/cook/curator Andrew Drury.
https://www.facebook.com/events/504482256345612/?ref=22
Thursday, April 24 at 8:00pm
Location: near the Sterling St. 2/5 subway stop in Brooklyn, NY
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In questi anni recenti, oltre a lavorare in numerosi ambiti verbovisivi, e ovviamente nelle aree della poesia concreta e visiva, del glitch, della fotografia, del collage e della mail-art, Jim Leftwich ha ospitato materiali altrui, organizzando veri e propri archivi in rete, tutti o quasi tutti legati ai molti blog a cui collabora, ma soprattutto alle sue pagine http://www.flickr.com/photos/textimagepoetry/ e http://textimagepoem.blogspot.com e ai vari festival e iniziative (collab fests, o marginal arts festivals) di arte e di scritture sperimentali ai quali ha preso parte, a Roanoke (Virginia), la città in cui vive.
L’accumulo di materiali, altrui e propri, che questi anni di lavoro (e i precedenti) hanno portato è impressionante. Molti – degli anni 2005-07 – sono archiviati in un’apposita pagina allestita grazie a John M. Bennett dalla Ohio State University: http://library.osu.edu/finding-aids/rarebooks/TextImagePoemArchive.php.
Molti altri, specificamente di Leftwich, sono spread all over the world, diffusi ovunque nel mondo sia in forma cartacea (spedizioni, invii) sia in blog e siti i più diversi. Anche una superficiale ricognizione su google testimonierà della straordinaria diffusione di opere di Leftwich, o di sue collaborazioni (collab works).
Da circa due anni, da luglio 2011 ad oggi, anche con periodi in cui l’attività di postaggio è quantitativamente minore, Jim Leftwich sta inoltre pubblicando sul suo già ricchissimo e generoso spazio flickr una serie intitolata Pansemic Playhouse. Si può prendere visione dei vari “set” che la compongono a partire dalla pagina citata sopra:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/textimagepoetry/sets/?&page=1
Una playhouse è una casa giocattolo, una casa dei giochi. Nel progetto e idea di una simile casa “pansemantica” molti elementi assai felicemente e positivamente convergono. Per ragionarne, direi di tenere presente sullo sfondo, come elemento differenziale, l’orizzonte della “asemic writing”, ossia della scrittura asemantica. Leftwich, per altro, è stato uno dei primi statunitensi a occuparsi di asemic writing in maniera sistematica, a partire dagli ultimi anni del Novecento (in colloquio con John Byrum e Tim Gaze).
In Pansemic Playhouse, al contrario che nella scrittura asemantica, e – davvero – in rapporto differenziale netto con questa, Leftwich espone/sovraespone, accumula e moltiplica immagini e materiali anche casualissimi (classico e ritornante è lo scatto assolutamente random da cellulare) in cui tutto è semantico, tutto acquista un rilievo di senso, in qualche modo. E, questo, non volontaristicamente, ma come una sorta di emersione (data per oggettiva anche se conscia del fatto che oggettiva non sarà mai) dell’evidenza di senso di ogni nostra percezione. (Insisto: a specchio e differenza dei percorsi asemantici di alcuni segni grafici).
Leftwich è perfettamente cosciente del ‘brutto’ e del ‘non riuscito’ in alcuni scatti e immagini, ma quel che a lui interessa è il versante ‘costruttivo’ dello sguardo stesso di chi apre immagini e sequenze. Al centro del meticoloso progetto di una casa/catasta pansemantica sta insomma un’idea legata all’affioramento non casuale ma quasi cronometrico, prevedibile, inevitabile, di un costante microrilievo di senso, una traccia aggiunta possibile, che sta dunque proprio al fondo di ogni – veramente ogni – cosa ed esperienza). (Tutto ciò ha in parte anche interessanti – pur se non inediti – risvolti etici).
Il progetto di flusso visivo che conserva numerose versioni di uno stesso frame è in fondo analogo al sistema di varianti moltiplicate (e variazioni non necessariamente infinitesimali) apprezzabile nel vasto progetto testuale – e visivo – di Six Months Ain’t No Sentence, per adesso diviso in 50 libri gratuitamente scaricabili dall’indirizzo differxhost seguente: https://app.box.com/s/l76xlrg78e5s8evbi4c4. Altro tassello del colossale lavoro di sperimentazione di Leftwich.
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alcuni link aggiornati:
http://jimleftwichtextimagepoem.blogspot.it/2013/09/pansemic-playhouse-1-600-jim-leftwich.html
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