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Tag Archive

Poetry News For June 25, 2008

Poetry News:

  1. I love reworking, I love editing, love love love revision, revision, revision, revision. [not safe for work] —
  2. A poet reconciling verse and living
  3. Mike Watt, Lee Ranaldo, more set James Joyce to music
  4. Karen S. Williams June 30 Poetry Workshop, Reading and Booksigning - Open to the Public [Detroit: WCCC campus on the East Side] —
  5. Report: 2 million artists in US, many struggling
  6. So far, Ostriker sounds the same yearning note that Cobain does elsewhere in the journals
  7. A new survey says men are more likely than women to share their creative works online, even though both sexes participate in creative activities at roughly equal rates

LOL I think if Persephone was a guy who was kidnapped by a big powerful God, then male-Persephone’s difficulties would be looked upon as a “heroic journey” rather than victimhood. Joseph Campbell stuff was 20 years ago for me (ask me about the Harmonic Convergence! haha) so let me know if I have this correct. Separation, initiation/ordeal, coming back — that’s the 3 parts of the journey right?

I was thinking about all this when I revisited How to trivialise women’s poetry by Eva Salzman:

“Male poets grappling with life and death issues in their writing are dragon-slayers. Women embarked on such odysseys are rarely granted similarly heroic status. Instead, they’re victims, a less noble assignation which handily renders them more vulnerable to any criticism embedded with ulterior motives, and more susceptible to being undervalued and misunderstood, except in the context of a tragedy and/or their role as mother. Is this an avoidance of any serious examination of Plath’s work? Sadly this lack of critical engagement is how most women poets are viewed, or are not viewed, as is more the case. It’s no doubt naïve to want ability and talent to be the king-makers’ main criteria.”

(Yes I’m still thinking about Pluto and Plath and that Gurlesque article from yesterday and my comments about it and Plath’s “Tulips” — that poem where it is wintertime and the country of health is far far away and springtime Tulips are oppressive.)

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If you can spare some prayers for my father-in-law that would be great thank you.

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Poetry News For March 26, 2008

Poetry News:

  1. April approacheth, and stalking in its shadow is NAPOWRIMO
  2. “It’s always important to have poems that will offend people,” she joked.
  3. Exhibition in Petersburg Marks 70th Anniversary since Death of Poet Osip Mandelstam
  4. This Saturday she returns to Boston’s Opera House to perform Homeland, an epic poem wrapped in a rock concert
  5. Appeal launched for ladies’ tomb
  6. She is considered one of the most widely read of American experimental poets
  7. On Small Press Poetry Publishing
  8. The sun shines on Detroit ad exec’s free verse novel
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Poetry News For January 24, 2008

Poetry News:

  1. Burmese poet held for insulting poem
  2. One of the best Burns Nights I ever went to, the host left books of Burns poems round the table and just waited for people to relax [and Win a Year's Supply of Haggis on Burns Night at Scot Bingo yum] —
  3. People Of the Chapbook
  4. Ted Berrigan and Jim Dine’s “Fragment for Jim Brodey.”
  5. Giants Haiku: Super Bowl Edition
  6. Delhi refuses to let France honour Taslima in India
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If you've clicked on a tag, you will see posts from my blog that have featured that tag. At the bottom of the page is a list of all the tags I've ever used on this blog. -- Jilly