Friday, April 30, 2010

Friday Lester

A Post Moot report is coming, but in the meantime, here's a Friday Lester picture:

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Post Moot


I'm so very excited to be heading off to the post_moot convocation at tomorrow for four days of poetry + performance + friends + awesomeness! The photoset from post moot 2006 will give you an idea of what I'm (happily) in for.

Participants:

Stan Apps • Oana Avasilichioaei • Mike Basinski • Holly Bass • John M. Bennett • Black Took Collective • Sean Bonney • Tammy Brown • Mairéad Byrne •  cris cheek • Daniel Citro • A.M.J. Crawford • Jordan Dalton • Maria Damon  • Ian Davidson •  Ryan Downey • Lara Glenum • Alan Golding •  K. Lorraine Graham • Duriel Harris • Carla Harryman • Jeff Hilson • Jen Hofer  • Josef Horaçek  • William R. Howe •  Jade Hudson • Christine Hume •  Peter Jaeger • Mark Jeffery • Bonnie Jones • Pierre Joris • Adeena Karasick  • KBD sonic collective • Brian Kincaid • A. J. Patrick Liszkiewicz •  José Luna •  Dawn Lundy-Martin •  Mel Nichols •  Hoa Nguyen • Chris Mann • Monica Mody  • K. Silem Mohammad • Laura Moriarty • Judd Morrissey •  Erin Mouré • Jason Nelson  • Mel Nichols • Tom Orange • Jessica Ponto  • Luke Roberts  • Jaime Robles • Ric Royer • Linda Russo • Lisa Samuels •  Standard Schaefer • Jonathan Skinner •  Danny Snelson • Todd Seabrook  • Jessica Smith • Rod Smith  • Kate Sopko • Rodrigo Toscano • Lawrence Upton • Catherine Wagner • Mark Wallace  • Dana Ward • Barrett Watten • Brian Whitener  • Steve Willey • Tyrone Williams • Ronaldo Wilson

Friday, April 16, 2010

Friday Lester



Lester has a thing for pulling paper over his head.

Sunday, April 04, 2010

I'm participating in two off-site readings at AWP this year--come say hello

To those of you who are heading to AWP this week, I hope to see you at the conference or at an off-site event. Mark is also participating in a panel on "Hybrid Aesthetics and its Discontents" on Friday morning, which I'll be at, as well as the Flarf and Conceptual Poetry Panel on Saturday morning. And finally, I'm reading in two off-site events, so do come say hello:


Wednesday, 7:00PM-10:00PM: Dusie Pussipo Stonecoast Femiganza
Location: at Packing House Center for the Arts, 835 E. 50th Ave. Denver, CO 80216
Cost: FREE! Everybody welcome!
Featuring: Bronwen Tate, Ann Bogle, Jennifer Karmin, Marthe Reed, Annie Finch, Amy King, Cara Benson, Mackenzie Carignan, Danielle Pafunda, Deborah Poe, Ana Bozicevic, Teresa Carmody, Kate Durbin, Megan Volpert, Sarah Rosenthal, Krystal Languell, K. Lorraine Graham, Carmen Gimenez Smith, Robin Reagler, Cheryl Pallant, Shanna Compton, Lara Glenum, Deb Marquart, Elizabeth Searle, and Mel Nichols.

Saturday: 3:30PM-6:00PM Flarf & Conceptual Writing @ MCA Denver
Location: Museum of Contemporary Art Denver
Cost: $5 (includes cost of admission to museum)
A group reading in coordination with the Saturday 9am AWP panel on Flarf & Conceptual Poetry. Reception to follow in rooftop cafe. Conceptual Cocktails & Flarftinis will be served.
Featuring: Christian Bök, Brandon Downing, K. Lorraine Graham, K. Silem Mohammad, Mel Nichols, Vanessa Place, Mathew Timmons, Christine Wertheim

Saturday, April 03, 2010

I Style My Hair With Surf Wax


My anthology arrived yesterday--I'd forgotten that there is a whole visual art section, which is exciting. I'm especially taken with "Starfish," the mixed-media piece by Hope Atherton, whose work is completely new to me. But I'm not going to try and do a mini review of the anthology now. I am going to attempt to respond to some of the comments left on the previous post. What a lot of you are suggesting, and I agree, is that the distinctions between suburban/urban aren't so clear cut--but some of you also point out that imaginary constructions of suburban/urban have real material ramifications. Looking through the anthology I think that an interrogation of some of these imaginary constructions is relevant to some of what the poems in here are doing.

Again, what I'm doing here is writing through some preliminary thoughts, thinking through these ideas as I write and as we all converse.

A large part of my interest in the coding of shared cultural references stems from the fact that growing up, I either lived in a very small town in Maine (graduating high school class had less than 100 people), or I lived outside of the United States--sometimes in isolated places like Papua New Guinea, and sometimes in huge, urban places. In high school and later in college,  I'd obsess about dumb things like how I'd read Naguib Mahfouz and Paul Bowles but not much Shakespeare, and I assumed this was because I'd had an education inferior to that of my peers. I was rather uptight. And getting back to Riot Grrrl music--I was listening to it, but I almost never went to shows, even when I was in college in DC. I was too spaced out, too uptight, taking ridiculously heavy course loads, spending 10-12 hours a week in Chinese class, and leaving the country whenever I could. Pam described her experiences with the Riot Grrrl scene as being peripheral--which is what mine were--and like her I also got the sense that it was an inclusive, coalition-building community.

Ana's comment about how, to quote her directly "city/authentic - suburb/inauthentic might not be the most useful or functional binary anymore"  resonates with me. I'm pretty wary of authenticity to begin with--in part for some of the reasons Ana goes on to mention: "one might conclude that only people who can't afford to make a choice are authentic, unadulterated. Unstained by having the privilege of choosing a brand."

The suburbs are actual places where many people live, grow up and experience the world. Now that I live in a suburb, I'm especially interested in cultural reference points and, yes, consumption choices of everyone else who also lives here--not surprisingly, some people are here because of their ability to choose and some people are here because they can't afford to make a choice.

Before I moved to Carlsbad and the San Diego area in general, I'd never really lived in a suburb, though I guess I did live in Gaithersburg, MD for a year. When I was 13, the distant Maryland suburbs of DC seemed like an exciting place because I could actually get to DC on my own via the Metro.

Pam and Joseph, in their comments, spoke a bit about the ways in which the differences between suburban and urban in LA--and I'd also include San Diego county--are collapsing, maybe have collapsed. The OC has urban density and cultural diversity with the infrastructure of something that feels more like a traditional suburb. San Diego has that same density (though not nearly on the same scale) and infrastructure, but it's not nearly as diverse as the OC or LA--it's significantly whiter, though that demographic is shifting.

What I'm getting to now is an idea Patrick and Pam articulated well. Patrick said: "Pam's remarks on appropriation illuminate the ways in which authenticity and sub-/urban imaginaries have material ramifications. I want to add a personal observation: that it works both ways." And he continues: "The temporary center serves as a figure ground relationship to the authenticity of one's relative privilege. If one marks their origins as suburban in some way, the "urban" becomes fated: the ground to the figure of purchasing power. And one strives to transform that into purchase on one's power of self-determination, despite it all. The point seems to understand that that privilege exists, for whom and how is it exercised."

Yes. For my 8th-grade self, the suburbs were cool because the suburbs were close to the city and offered a way to the urban. I marked my origins, somewhat arbitrarily, as rural, even though the were really a weird combination of rural and and global. Expat communities rework class in complex ways that, of course, imply colonialism: people who'd never be able or want to have servants can have servants, make more money, eat fancier food, and interact with people of a class they'd never be able to interact with at home. I was in school with then President Salinas de Gortari's son and went to a lot of ridiculous parties in everyone's huge houses in Polanco. My family didn't have a maid, but our apartment at Number 5 Plaza Carlos Finlay had a maid's room--my brother lived there over the summer before going back to live with my mom for the school year.

Ana's description of  how how "living in a very uniform Italian suburb in Long Island, after many years in Brooklyn, and this experience has actually jumpstarted [her] thinking about kitsch" also resonates with me. To be autobiographical, again: I went through a year in DC of maintaining a Stevie Nicks haircut, and I've always loved crochet ponchos and bell-sleeved shirts. Last year, I cut my hair short, but instead of it looking cool I decided that I looked like a perky soccer mom--not that I even really know what that means. I've at last embraced the beachy blondness of my hair, which I style with a product I've used since DC called "surf wax." Of course, it isn't really surf wax, and I don't surf, though I think that this summer will finally be the summer that I learn.