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Entries by Openned (2106)

Saturday
Apr282007

Don't Start Me Talking

From Everyone's Cup Of Tea: 'It's a risk for liars to improvise if people are going to ask them fundamental questions, and situational control gives all sorts of scope for manipulation. You buy a fish or a fruit, you can tell what you're getting: packaging dissembles (and what 'truths' they're forced to tell are data shaped by ludicrous anxieties about diet inculcated by the culture industry and government). Despite the phrase, nothing does what it says on the tin. In the 1980s boom, capitalist lies about profitability became epidemic, it actually ucked up their ability to function as capitalists! In this context, truth and immediacy become explosively subversive. I think the basic weakness in most mainstream middle-class poets is hypocritical sexuality and collusion in class society -- they wouldn't dare write automatically because of what it might reveal. They fear chaous because it'll make them look uncool. My plan was always to live a life I wasn't ashamed of so that everything that comes out is vital. That's why the idea of fiddling about with the words, desperately seeking substitutes and improvements -- 'polishing a poem' -- seems petty. I was pleased when Prynne mentioned he wrote at one blow, I'd thought his poems had that kind of gestural grace and unanswerability.' 'When you're revolting against everything and wearing a bog chain around your neck and a flasher's mac with OUT TO LUNCH painted on the back and bicycling of te work washing dishes at the Cambridge School of Languages and gobbing at schoolkids on the pavement as a gesture of pop absurdity, as I was in 1978, poetry had better be absolutely mind-blowing or you're not going to sit still for it, are you?' From Brandoshat: Don't Start Me Talking ed. Tim Allen & Andrew Duncan (Salt) 'In many ways, this is a historic book and tremendously exhilarating to read. I can't get enough ot it - I keep rereading bits of it. It's a series of interviews with contemporary poets - who are all innovative and able to talk about it. There are so many ideas running through it that it's hard to keep up at times, and it has been of tremendous encouragement to a poet like myself who often feels himself to be rather on the fringe of the innovative community.' From Salt: 'Main description: Named for a Sonny Boy Williamson song, this is a collection of interviews with 20 modern poets. The subjects are Kelvin Corcoran, Simon Smith, Michael Haslam, David Chaloner, Elisabeth Bletsoe, David Greenslade, Alexander Hutchison, Peter Manson, Harry Gilonis, Andrew Crozier, Tim Allen, Out to Lunch, Tony Lopez, Sean Bonney, David Miller, R.F. Langley, John Hall, Nick Johnson, Robert Sheppard, and Eric Mottram. The stress is on reflexive poets whose thoughts on language and artistic procedures shed new light on modern culture and on the interpretation of poems.'

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Friday
Apr272007

'Central' by Kai Fierle-Hedrick

'Central' by Kai Fierle-Hedrick has been added to the Poetics of The Foundry issue. You can view it here.

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Friday
Apr272007

The Argotist Online

'The Argotist Online... is devoted entirely to poetry and poetics. It publishes non-mainstream poetry, and features essays and interviews related to it. By non-mainstream, I mean poetry that is aware of the plasticity of language and which places connotation and ambiguity over denotation and precision of meaning. This sort of poetry invites interpretation and allows for plurality of meaning as opposed to hermeneutic closure.' Link Another great repository of accomplished work.

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Thursday
Apr262007

Semina - where the novel has a nervous breakdown

From HOW2: SEMINA - WHERE THE NOVEL HAS A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN BOOK WORKS NEW OPEN SUBMISSION SERIES COMMISSIONING EDITOR: STEWART HOME Theme Semina takes its inspiration from a series of nine loose-leaf magazines issued by Californian beat artist Wallace Berman in the 1950s and 1960s. We are looking for experimental prose that draws inspiration from art as much as it does from literature; for writing with a radical and extremely selfconscious understanding of itself; work that takes itself both beyond and behind the mid-twentieth century après-garde and is inspired by groups such as Cobra, the Beats, Fluxus, Oulipo, the Letterists, and those involved with the new novel and Black Mountain, as well as the more recognizably post-modern experimentation associated with figures like Kathy Acker, Dennis Cooper and Lynne Tillman. We aim to publish work that will cross any and all genre boundaries, that is unable to recognise differences between poetry and prose, fiction and non-fiction, high brow and low brow, art and life; and that continually reforges the passage between formalism and sensuous activity. Themes that interest us include drugs, magic, the art world, life, death and transcendence; but above all we’re looking for unknown artists and writers willing to take risks with their prose and who demonstrate total disregard for the conventions that structure received ideas about fiction. Design Semina will have a series identity and a regular format drawn from Wallace Berman’s Semina magazine and verifax collages. We will commission and work with a designer on this project. The print-run will be up to 1,500 copies. Published works will be between 30,000 & 50,000 words or 72 & 128 pages. The Commission Commissioned and edited by artist and writer Stewart Home, the series will publish nine books, six of which will be selected by open submission, a further two commissioned by the editor, and a final title Blood Rites of the Bourgeoisie to be produced by Stewart Home. Three books will be published a year. The selection will be by Stewart Home and Book Works staff. How to apply Please return the attached form and send a sample of between 3000 & 5000 words of the proposed work, a CV, a registration fee of £10, and a stamped self-addressed envelope for your reply, before the deadline of 31 May 2007. If you want your submission and supporting material returned please include sufficient postage stamps. Submissions must be typed; hand written submissions or electronic files will not be accepted. Proposals should be text based, though this series may include illustrations. We are not looking for works that have already been written, we want to develop the book with you. Eligibility Proposals are welcome from all sections of society, including practitioners from different culturally diverse backgrounds. Selection and schedule The shortlist and selection from open submission for the first publications is scheduled for Summer 2007. We will write to let you know if your work has been short-listed and selected as soon as we can. If your work is short-listed we may then ring/contact you for further information or ask you to come and talk more about your proposal with us. We would expect the commissions to be underway from August, for publication in Spring 2008. Feedback Due to the volume of applications we receive each year we will not be able to give any specific feedback on individual proposals unless short-listed. However we do run free artists’ surgeries on a monthly basis, and are able to spend time discussing potential projects, offering help and advice on publishing and distribution of artists’ books at these sessions. Fee A commissioning fee of £500 will be paid to the selected artists/writers, plus 100 copies of their book. Book Works will be responsible for all production, publishing and marketing costs. The selected artists will be asked to sign an agreement with Book Works that will include a contract and detailed schedule for work. General information on Book Works Book Works commissions new work in collaboration with artists, writers, and designers; publishes and produces books, multiples, videos and internet/new media projects. It organizes exhibitions, installations, time based and performance works, discussions and events. It promotes and distributes its own publications and offers a resource about book publishing, production and distribution. It has a studio offering a range of printing and binding facilities and services. For full details about Book Works past/current projects please refer to our website: www.bookworks.org.uk Book Works 19 Holywell Row London EC2A 4JB Telephone: 020 7247 2203 Facsimile: 020 7247 2540 www.bookworks.org.uk

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Wednesday
Apr252007

Ron Athey: Performances in the U.K

Legendary performer Ron Athey returns to the UK this month and will be performing around the country between April and June 2007. Starting off at Chelsea Theatre, London, Ron and collaborator Dominic Johnson premiere their newly-commissioned piece Incorruptible Flesh (Perpetual Wound). Starting with a palate of ideas about sex, death and sparkle, the myth of Philoctetes is transplanted into the California deserts in the heat of August, creating rituals of transubstantiation in magickal excess. This performance will then travel to the Fierce Festival in Birmingham. Ron will also appear as part of a round-table discussion during the Sprit + Flesh UK tour with Fakir Musafar, Marisa Carnesky and Kira O’Reilly (Chaired by Lois Keidan of the Live Art Development Agency). In June, Ron will appear in Bristol at the Arnolfini performing Ecstatic as part of the Manuel Vason Performance Programme. INCORRUPTIBLE FLESH (PERPETUAL WOUND). 24-27 April and 1-2 May 2007. (Chelsea Theatre, London) 8pm. Tickets £12 (£8). For more information, and to book tickets visit: www.chelseatheatre.org.uk/ron.htm or call the box office: 0207 7352 1967 30 May 2007. (Custard Factory Theatre, Birmingham) 8pm. Tickets £8 (£6) To book tickets calls: 0121 236 4455 SPIRIT + FLESH UK ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION 22 May 2007 (Queen Mary, University of London) 6.30pm. Tickets free, but must be reserved in advance. To reserve tickets visit: http://www.switchtheatre.com/fakir/schedule_roundtable.html ECSTATIC 9 June 2007 (Arnolfini, Bristol) 8.30-9.30pm. Tickets: TBC Visit: http://www.arnolfini.org.uk/whatson/livedance.php?id=58

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Tuesday
Apr242007

Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest

'Since 1982 the English Department at San Jose State University has sponsored the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest, a whimsical literary competition that challenges entrants to compose the opening sentence to the worst of all possible novels.' Link

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Monday
Apr232007

Updated flyer

An updated e-flyer is available on the nights page.

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Monday
Apr232007

Torriano reading

Sunday April 29, 7.30pm Chris Gutkind and Valeria Melchioretto 99 Torriano Ave Kentish Town tube

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Monday
Apr232007

John M. Bennett

Link Rich, enticing website. Flies evade the screen and text implores speech. Bewdeeful.

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Sunday
Apr222007

Ian Sinclair video interview

'"I think more than any other city, London absorbs whatever horrors are enacted upon it," Sinclair insists. “We can swallow Millennium Wheels, Domes, all of these things. Whatever’s put up is absorbed into the story and narrative of London."' Link

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