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Valerie Andrews is a writer, editor, and seminar leader specializing in Jungian psychology and the inner life of home. She's a graduate of the Guild for Spiritual Guidance and the editor of the digital magazine Reinventing Home: Culture, Creativity, Character. She's also a contributor to many journals and magazines and was the host of the PBS documentary featuring Thomas Moore, author of Care of the Soul. She is the author and editor of A Passion for This Earth (Harper Collins 1994)and Sanctuary: The Inner Life of Home (Editor) (Chiron Publications 2024)Interview Date: 7/19/2024 Tags: Valerie Andrews, sanctuary, refuge, memory, abused women, safe home, unsafe home, deep listening, Joe Brainard, Community, Personal Transformation, Psychology, Death & Dying
Aproveitei uma lembrança de Joe Brainard para deambular sobre a popularidade e os números Sigam no Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/robertogamito/
Aproveitei uma lembrança de Joe Brainard para deambular sobre o primeiro cigarro Sigam no Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/robertogamito/
Lee Klein's website https://www.litfunforever.com Buy the book here https://www.saggingmeniscus.com/catalog/like_it_matters Notes Recently read Always Crashing in the Same Car: A Novel After David Bowie by Lance Olsen 36 Ways of Writing a Vietnamese Poem by Nam Le The Third Realm by Karl Ove Knausgaard Autoportrait by Eduoard Leve, Autoportrait by Jesse Ball, I Remember by Joe Brainard, Alphabetical Diaries by Sheila Heti The Material by Camille Bordas (Colorin' Colorado story on New Yorker podcast) Percival Everett bender (Telephone, Erasure, I Am Not Sidney Pointier, Dr. No). Looking forward to Backwardness by Garielle Lutz (currently reading) – also The Complete Gary Lutz Jose Trigo by Fernando del Paso and Ute av Verden by Knausgaard The Red Handler by Johan Harstad (Max, Mischa & Tetoffensiven) Horse Latitudes by Morris Collins Anxious Pleasures: A Novel After Kafka by Lance Olson White Mythology by W.D. Clarke Much Ado About Everything: Oration on the Dignity of the Novelist by Gary AmdahlAnnihilation by HouellebecqStill need to get to The Fraud and the new Enard Reread Dracula in October, finally read some Trollope
Aproveitei uma lembrança de Joe Brainard para deambular. Sigam no Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/robertogamito/
In this episode, Elizabeth, Hannah, and Steven are thinking about prose poems -- how do they differ from other short forms, like flash fiction or the micro-essay? Poets discussed include Baudelaire, Lydia Davis, Ross Gay, Joe Brainard, Russell Edson, Harryette Mullen, and more. Please take our survey here (https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/Poetry2024).
The group gathers at the Writers House's Wexler Studio to discuss "The Austrian Maiden" and "Joe Brainard's Painting Bingo" by Richard Padgett.
What is National Poetry Writing Month?Welcome, art enthusiasts and wordsmiths alike, to another episode of Create Art Podcast! We are diving headfirst into the enchanting world of poetry as we celebrate National Poetry Writing Month (NaPoWriMo). This annual event, which takes place every April, encourages poets and aspiring writers around the globe to embrace their creativity and commit to writing a poem each day for the entire month.The Beauty of National Poetry Writing Month:NaPoWriMo, similar to its prose-centric counterpart National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo), is a celebration of the written word and the boundless creativity that can flow when one dedicates themselves to a daily practice. Poets of all levels of expertise are invited to take part, from seasoned wordsmiths to those just dipping their toes into the vast ocean of verse.Create Art Podcast has always been a haven for artists to share their creative processes, and NaPoWriMo offers a unique opportunity for poets to reflect on their craft. With a daily commitment to producing poetry, participants discover new facets of their writing style, experiment with various forms, and explore uncharted emotional territories.Prompt for todayFinally, our optional prompt for the day honors the “ones” in the number 11. Today, we'd like to challenge you to write either a monostich, which is a one-line poem, or a poem made up of one-liner style jokes/sentiments. Need inspiration? Take a look at Joe Brainard's poem “30 One-Liners” or Frank O'Hara's “Lines for the Fortune Cookies.”Poem for TodayThings The South Taught This Yankee 11 April 24 Texas: If offered a beer, you drink it, even if you hate beer because you don't turn down hospitality It's always bigger in Texas, whatever it is Armadillos that you run over are funnier in sombreros and cans of the beer that you hate, take a picture Playing Me and Bobby magee and breaking out into the Peanuts theme song is only done in Mexican bars Don't mess with Texas Not all who live in Texas are bigoted christians, some are as heathen as you are Remember the Alamo, and watch out for Ozzy's piss and freshly chewed bat heads The bigger the belt buckle the smaller the dick Everyone is armed, don't start a fight Y'all ain't from here is a warning shot Grits made with cherries are delicious Pickled Okra is a food group I am more man that you could ever be and more woman than you could ever have This ain't Burger King, you get it my way or you don't get the damn thing North Carolia: Maddog and nighttrane make for an interesting morning Don't go into an Airborne bar unless you are Airborne Outer Banks = OBX, don't ask why, there isn't an airport there Anything you can do I can do better, hold my beer Say it with me FayetteNam Virginia: The war of Northern Aggression If you ain't from here you are a carpet bagger You are not a resident unless you were born here, don't care if you pay taxes Its's a commonwealth not a state 95 is a parking lot...
'Montañesas' es el primer disco de Casapalma, el dúo cántabro formado por Irene Atienza y Yoel Molina, donde siguen uniendo folclore con música electrónicaEscuchar audio
Los Casapalma lanzan 'Montañesas', la librería de Inés Martín Rodrigo, la memoria de Joe Brainard en el Ateneo y el centenario de Victoria de los Ángeles.Escuchar audio
Este mês estreiam nas salas portuguesas os filmes Mal Viver e Viver Mal, de João Canijo, onde triunfam as mulheres e o amor que nunca se aprendeu nem cedeu ao toque. Discos novos há muitos, do EP de Angel Olsen ao novo álbum dos portugueses Cave Story e um punhado de críticas arrebatadoras ao novo disco dos Everything But The Girl. Nos livros, Pedro Mexia escolhe 'Lembro-me', de Joe Brainard e Georges Perec, um livro escrito por dois autores distintos, mas com a mesma escrita fragmentária e o mesmo mote, publicado pela Cutelo. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Erin's editing work includes the feature films: Good Time, Italian Studies, and Funny Pages, as well as the short films, Rejoice In The Lamb, and the acclaimed, Power Signal. Power Signal is one of Erin's several collaborations with Producer/Director Oscar Boyson, including short video projects on artist Joe Brainard and singer Jack Antonoff, along with video mashups and commercial work. The two are also planning an upcoming feature-length version of Power Signal.
Er is alweer een heel jaar verstreken, maar er is nu alweer een nieuwe aflevering van Boven de Boekhandel! De boekverkopers van Hijman Ongerijmd hebben een jaar lang keihard gelezen om jou nu de beste boeken van het jaar te kunnen tippen. Verwacht in deze bomvolle aflevering oblongprentenboeken, eeuwen bestrijkende romans en duizelingwekkende encyclopedieën. Een jaar aan boekentips, live, Boven de Boekhandel! De boeken die je voorbij hoorde komen in deze aflevering: - Stargate - Ingvild H. Rishøi | €22,50 - Ongevraagd advies - Ester Naomi Perquin | €19,95 - Kassa 19 - Claire-Louise Bennett | €23,50 - Reis door de tijdperken - Aina Bestard | €21,99 - Companion piece - Aina Bestard | €22,99 (EN) | €22,50 (NL) - Encyclopedieën van de val - Marc Kregting | €27,50 - De straatwaarde van de ziel - Roel Bentz van den Berg | €22,99 - Planktonium - Jan van IJken | €49,99 - De vogel en de componist - Fernand Rochette | €24,90 - Het lied van ooievaar en drommedaris - Claire-Louise Bennett | €23,50 - Ik herinner me - Joe Brainard | €20,- - In het droomhuis - Carmen Maria Machado | €24,99 - Weerlicht - Jante Wortel | €22,50 - Pleegkind - Claire Keegan | €17,99 - Diepdiepblauw - Nikki Dekker | €22,99 www.hijmanongerijmd.nl
City Lights celebrates the publication of "Get the Money!: Collected Prose (1961-1983)" by Ted Berrigan, published by City Lights Books. With Edmund Berrigan, Anselm Berrigan, Erica Kaufman, Hoa Nguyen, and Nick Sturm. This event was originally broadcast via Zoom and hosted by Peter Maravelis and moderated by Garrett Caples. You can purchase copies of "Get the Money!: Collected Prose (1961-1983)" directly from City Lights at a 30% discount here: https://citylights.com/get-the-money/ “Get the Money!” was Ted Berrigan's mantra for the paid writing gigs he took on in support of his career as a poet. This long-awaited collection of his essential prose draws upon the many essays, reviews, introductions, and other texts he produced for hire, as well as material from his journals, travelogues, and assorted, unclassifiable creative texts. "Get the Money!" documents Berrigan's innovative poetics and techniques, as well as the creative milieu of poets–centered around New York's Poetry Project–for whom he served as both nurturer and catalyst. Highlights include his journals from the '60s, depicting his early poetic discoveries and bohemian activities in New York; the previously unpublished “Some Notes About ‘C, ‘” an account of his mimeo magazine that serves as a de facto memoir of the early days of the second-generation New York School; a moving and prescient obituary, “Frank O'Hara Dead at 40”; book “reviews” consisting of poems entirely collaged from lines in the book; art reviews of friends and collaborators like Joe Brainard, George Schneeman, and Jane Freilicher; and his notorious “Interviews” with John Cage and John Ashbery, both of which were completely fabricated. "Get the Money!" provides a view into the development of Berrigan's aesthetics in real time, as he captures the heady excitement of the era and champions the poets and artists he loves. Among the most significant American poets of the later 20th century, Ted Berrigan (1934–1983) was a leading force behind the second-generation New York School. Born in Providence, RI, Berrigan attended various local schools, then enlisted in the Army and was stationed in Korea in the aftermath of the Korean War. In the late '50s on the G.I. Bill, he enrolled in the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma, where he earned a B.A. and M.A. During this period he met his younger poetic and artistic comrades Ron Padgett, Dick Gallup, and Joe Brainard, all four of whom moved to New York City. In the early '60s, he was married to the poet Sandy Berrigan, with whom he had two children, David and Kate. He later married the poet Alice Notley and, after periods in Buffalo, Chicago, New York, Bolinas, London, and Essex, settled with her and their sons, Anselm and Edmund, in New York City, where they eventually all became fixtures of the scene around St. Mark's Poetry Project. Berrigan published a magazine, C, in the 60s, and individual volumes by poets under the imprint C Press. His books of poetry include "The Sonnets (1964, 1967, 1982, 2000)", now published by Penguin, "Collected Poems (2007)" and "Selected Poems (2011)," both published by the University of California. This event was made possible by support from the City Lights Foundation: citylights.com/foundation
Our fearless queens select and dissect favorite poems--to say why and how poems endure.I Remember is a 1970 memoir written by author and artist Joe Brainard, depicting his childhood in the 1940s and '50s in Oklahoma as well as his life in the '60s and '70s in New York City. Brainard followed I Remember with I Remember More (1972) and More I Remember More (1973), both published by Angel Hair. Read Olivia Laing's short, fabulous review of Joe Brainard's book I Remember in The Guardian here. Of it, Laing says, “The Bible aside, I can't think of a more original or lovely book.”Ada Limon's poem “The Contract Says We'd Like the Conversation to be Bilingual” appears in Limon's book The Carrying, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Poetry. You can read the whole poem here. Hear Terrance Hayes read “Talk” and "The Blue Terrance" at the Folger Library here. Alexander Pope's sonnet "Sound and Sense" can be read here. James L. White's prose poem “An Ordinary Composure” appears in The Salt Ecstasies and you can read it on a blog here. Rick Barot, “Wooden Overcoat” was featured on The Slowdown, and you can listen to that episode here. And you can read the whole poem here. Watch Maggie Anderson read from her work here (with Mira Rosenthal; ~16 min). While I couldn't find “Let the Boats Drift” online, I can recommend “Let Evening Come,” which you can read here. Read Larry Levis's “In the City of Light” here.
A discarded painting in a roadside clean-up, forgotten bones in a research archive, and Lexington, the greatest racehorse in US history. From these strands of fact, in 'Horse' Geraldine Brooks weaves a sweeping story of spirit, obsession and injustice across American history. And… Meet writer and artist Joe Brainard, whose series of 'I Remember' memoirs broke new literary ground in the 1960s and early 1970s, and have inspired poets and writers ever since. Guests: Geraldine Brooks, Pulitzer Prize winning author of 'Horse' Ken Bolton, poet, author of 'Salute' and 19 other books of poetry published since 1977… and devoted fan of Joe Brainard Our Random Reader - Kortin Other books that get a mention: 'Phosphorescence' by Julia Baird and 'The Hush' by Sara Foster currently sit on Sarah's Tsundoku. Michaela mentioned 'White Fragility' by Robin DiAngelo in her interview with Geraldine Brooks. Music composed by Quentin Grant SOCIAL MEDIA HANDLES Geraldine Brooks: Insta: @ozbrooks100 Facebook: Geraldine Brooks Twitter: @GeraldineBrooks Hachette: Insta:@HachetteAus Facebook: Hachette Australia Books Twitter: @HachetteAusSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A discarded painting in a roadside clean-up, forgotten bones in a research archive, and Lexington, the greatest racehorse in US history. From these strands of fact, in 'Horse' Geraldine Brooks weaves a sweeping story of spirit, obsession and injustice across American history. And… Meet writer and artist Joe Brainard, whose series of 'I Remember' memoirs broke new literary ground in the 1960s and early 1970s, and have inspired poets and writers ever since. Guests: Geraldine Brooks, Pulitzer Prize winning author of 'Horse' Ken Bolton, poet, author of 'Salute' and 19 other books of poetry published since 1977… and devoted fan of Joe Brainard Our Random Reader - Kortin Other books that get a mention: 'Phosphorescence' by Julia Baird and 'The Hush' by Sara Foster currently sit on Sarah's Tsundoku. Michaela mentioned 'White Fragility' by Robin DiAngelo in her interview with Geraldine Brooks. Music composed by Quentin Grant SOCIAL MEDIA HANDLES Geraldine Brooks: Insta: @ozbrooks100 Facebook: Geraldine Brooks Twitter: @GeraldineBrooks Hachette: Insta:@HachetteAus Facebook: Hachette Australia Books Twitter: @HachetteAusSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Episode 38: A Lesser Divide describes a one-line poem that inspires the reading of some one-line poems by Joe Brainard and also includes the first installment of Poetry Court where Shaun overuses the gavel and Bill makes a valiant defense.
Tantalize, Memory: Our kiki with David Trinidad continues! Buy David's new book, Digging to Wonderland, at your favorite indie bookstore -- or buy it here from Loyalty Books, a Black-owned independent bookseller in Washington, DC.Gypsy Rose Lee (born Rose Louise Hovick, January 8, 1911 – April 26, 1970) was an American burlesque entertainer famous for her striptease act whose memory was adapted into the 1959 stage musical Gypsy. You can watch here some footage of her performing an abbreviated (and very clean) version of her famous routine, "The Psychology of a Stripteaser" in the 1943 film Stage Door Canteen (~5 min).John Yau's new book, Joe Brainard: The Art of the Personal, will be released September 2022 from Rizzoli International Publications. For more about Brainard, visit the website dedicated to his work here. A great retrospect about Joe Brainard appeared in Artforum. Larry Rivers has a great portrait of Frank O'Hara here. According to this website Roger (1954 - 1982) was an American gay porn star who appeared in pornographic movies in the 1970s. After an early career as a model and go-go boy from age 17, he appeared as a "Discovery" centerfold in "Blueboy" magazine, Roger appeared in many film loops of the pre-condom era, co-starring with other notable porn stars of the time, including Al Parker, Jack Wrangler, Chuck Samson, and Bruno. Roger was also a popular stage performer in gay nightclubs and theaters. Roger left the adult film industry in 1980 and in 1982, en route to Las Vegas, perished in a car accident. In 2000, an imposter posing as Roger appeared on a number of Yahoo! groups, but was soon exposed as a fraud. He told stories of having attended Al Parker's memorial service in 1992, remaining in touch with co-star Jack Wrangler, and maintaining a monogamous relationship since the late 1980s while living in a suburb of Chicago. All of this information was completely false.Hear David read his poem "Ode to Dick Fisk" here (at Naropa).Read more about Elaine Equi here. Watch Rachel Blau DuPlessis talk about the "exuberant sexual and lexical energy and gay will to power" of Frank O'Hara's Second Avenue here (~6 min)Sei Shōnagon (清少納言, c. 966–1017 or 1025) was a Japanese author, poet, and a court lady who served the Empress Teishi (Sadako) around the year 1000 during the middle Heian period. She is the author of The Pillow Book (枕草子, makura no sōshi).Want to read more about Sexton, faith, and love? Your wait is over. Read Sylvia Plath's poem "Edge" here. If you want to know what Hart Crane looks like, click here.
Boekenplankje van mei Op zoek naar nieuw leesvoer? Radio Savannah has got your back! Het nieuwste Boekenplankje zit bomvol inspiratie en leestips van Lola en Suzanne die rechtstreeks jouw eigen boekenplank op kunnen. Wil je meekletsen met Lola en Suzanne? Laat het ons weten op Instagram, Twitter en Facebook en gebruik #RadioSavannah. Voor (lees)tips en fanmail zijn we ook te bereiken op info@savannahbay.nl. De Radio Savannah theme song werd gemaakt door Guflux. Het logo is gemaakt door Rike Blom. Benieuwd naar wat er nog meer op het Radio Savannah Boekenplankje staat? Check hier de onze aanraders! Deze maand op het boekenplankje George is een jongen. Om te zien tenminste. Want George weet zelf dat ze een meisje is. Ze houdt dit voor iedereen geheim. Totdat ze met de klas een toneelstuk van haar lievelingsboek gaan opvoeren. George wil supergraag de hoofdrol van Charlotte spelen. Maar ze mag van de juf niet eens auditie doen... omdat ze een jongen is. Samen met haar beste vriendin Kelly bedenkt George een plan. Zodat ze niet alleen Charlotte kan zijn - maar vooral zichzelf, voor eens en altijd. Vind het boek hier in de webshop. Zee nu is als de zee – grillig, woest en onvoorspelbaar, dreigend en uiteindelijk troostend. Het duurde even voor de mensen begrepen wat er aan de hand was. De zee komt de ene dag verder het strand op dan de andere. Een enkele strandwandelaar voelde wel dat er iets niet in de haak was. Maar wat? De zee wint elke dag een kilometer terrein. Polders aan de kust lopen vol en de boulevard van Scheveningen staat blank. De minister-president geeft een persconferentie en Defensie stuurt soldaten naar de dijken. Op Twitter roepen complotdenkers Actie!, de Action adverteert: Eenmalig! 4 reddingsvesten voor de prijs van 3! Wetenschappers komen van heinde en verre om dit zeldzame fenomeen te onderzoeken. Duitsland stelt sportzalen voor de geëvacueerde buren ter beschikking. De koning vertrekt naar zijn vakantiehuis in Mozambique. Maar waar moeten de herten heen? En hoe zal het de blijvers vergaan die hun kampement opslaan op de daken van kantoorgebouwen in de Randstad? Als de mensen geëvacueerd zijn en de laatste meeuwen hun heil elders zoeken, volgen wij activiste Arie, scholier Wilg en oceanograaf Paula van der Steen op hun tocht over de nieuwe zee, en ontdekken hoe het water hun kijk op de wereld fundamenteel verandert. Vind het boek hier in de webshop. Ik herinner me is de cultklassieker uit 1970 van auteur en kunstenaar Joe Brainard, over opgroeien in de jaren '50 in Oklahoma en zijn leven in de jaren '60 en '70 in New York City. Als autobiografie was Brainards methode briljant eenvoudig: specifieke herinneringen opschrijven wanneer ze naar de oppervlakte van zijn bewustzijn kwamen, elk voorafgegaan door het refrein ‘Ik herinner me' Bestel het boek via ons bestelformulier. Maxi Linder was een van de beroemdste prostituees van haar tijd. Ze was schaamteloos, welbespraakt, extravagant en onzelfzuchtig. Zeelieden en soldaten noemden haar liefkozend de ‘Zwarte Koningin van de West'. Accord beschrijft in deze bestseller niet alleen op overtuigende wijze een veelbewogen vrouwenleven, hij weeft ook diverse historische gebeurtenissen door het verhaal die van blijvende invloed zijn geweest op de geschiedenis van Suriname. In 2021 is het tien jaar geleden dat Accord overleed. Ter ere van zijn sterfdag verschijnt een nieuwe editie van zijn belangrijkste roman, met een voorwoord van Astrid H. Roemer en Esther Duysker. Vind het boek hier in onze webshop. In the first-ever Seven Seas history of the world's female buccaneers, Pirate Women: The Princesses, Prostitutes, and Privateers Who Ruled the Seven Seas tells the story of women, both real and legendary, who through the ages sailed alongside—and sometimes in command of—their male counterparts. These women came from all walks of life but had one thing in common: a desire for freedom.
Bert Govaerts schreef met Dubbelman een biografie van een man die ooit alomtegenwoordig was in de Nederlandse letteren: Marnix Gijsen. Christophe Vekeman leest een Amerikaanse cultklassier: Ik herinner me van Joe Brainard. Koen Van Synghel stelt de laureaat van de Pritzker Prize voor: Diébédo Francis Kéré.
Interview with the poet Maggie Smith, whose new collection of poems, is Goldenrod (One Signal). This week's Write the Book Prompt, suggested by my guest, Maggie Smith, is based on the work of Joe Brainard, who wrote the book I Remember. The book is essentially prose poetry, and each line begins with the words “I remember.” Maggie says that the idea is that if you do that over a couple of pages in a big rush without editing yourself or self-censoring, or even trying, you may find yourself connecting ideas you might not have otherwise. She says to consider “first thought, best thought,” and then use the material to mine through for new poems and projects. This same book was recommended in an earlier prompt suggestion from Lauren Fox, so I'm betting it's a great exercise to try! But to put another spin on it, since Lauren also mentioned this for a prompt and perhaps you've already tried it, I'll additionally suggest that you try writing lines that begin with the words “I miss…” Good luck with your work in the coming week, and tune in next week for another prompt or suggestion. Music Credit: Aaron Shapiro 695
In today's circle, we are sitting with Maureen Kures and talking about one of the most courageous and important topics, death. That may seem strange for a podcast about being the change - but is it? I personally think this conversation is essential for living our lives and giving ourselves fully. Maureen will share powerful stories about her experience working as a nurse and the wisdom she gained about the beauty of the end of life and why it's important to talk about it now. What's in this episode for you: 13:30 Why death is so scary to talk about and what generally opens us up 20:00 A heart-breaking story that illustrates what can happen when we wait too long before we have the conversation 24:30 The possibility that arises when we proactively plan for our death 26:00 Some great ideas on how to make the process enjoyable 34:30 The one thing we should all do ASAP Poem: “Death” by Joe Brainard. Death is a funny thing. Most people are afraid of it and yet they don't even know what it is. Perhaps we can clear this up. What is death? Death is it. That's it. Finished. Finnito. Over and out. No more. Death is many different things to many different people. I think it is safe to say however that most people don't like it. Why? Because they're afraid of it. Why are they afraid of it? Because they don't understand it. I think that the best way to understand death is to think about it a lot, try to come to terms with it, try to really understand it. Give it a chance. Sometimes it helps if we can try to visualize things. Try to visualize for example someone sneaking up behind your back and hitting you over the head with a giant hammer. Some people prefer to think of death as a more spiritual thing, when the soul somehow separates itself from the mess and goes on living forever somewhere else. Heaven and hell being the most traditional choices. Death has a very black reputation. But actually, to die is a perfectly normal thing to do. It's so wholesome. Being a very important part of nature's big picture. Trees die, don't they? And flowers. I think it's always nice to know that you're not alone even in death. Let's think about ants for a minute. Millions of ants die every day and do we care? No. And I'm sure that ants feel the same way about us. But suppose— just suppose that we didn't have to die. That wouldn't be so great either. If a 90-year-old man can hardly stand up. Can you imagine what it would be like to be a 500-year-old man? Another comforting thought about death is that 80 years or so after you die, nobody who knew you will still be alive to miss you. And after you're dead, you won't even know it. Who's in circle with us: Maureen Kures, RN is the CEO of www.RadiantMourning.com. She is on a mission to guide families to decide, document, and discuss their final chapter plans to bring peace for those who live on. Now she facilitates family conversations and leads virtual group workshops to replace drama, trauma, and chaos with calm, ease, and peace. Connect with Maureen through, www.radiantmourning.com, Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. Pick up the talking piece: What came up for you as you listened to this episode? I'd love to hear your reflections. Send me an email at podcast@humconsulting.ca.
Hey, hey, hey! Welcome to episode #27 of the Getting Stoned Podcast
Read by Craig RobertsProduction and Sound Design by Kevin Seaman
Charlamos con el profesor y escritor guipuzcoano Aritz Galarraga sobre "Gogoan dut", original libro de memorias y reflexiones escrito a la manera del estadounidense Joe Brainard....
Charlamos con el profesor y escritor guipuzcoano Aritz Galarraga sobre "Gogoan dut", original libro de memorias y reflexiones escrito a la manera del estadounidense Joe Brainard....
Birgithe Kosovic udgiver sin nye bog "Det, du ikke vil vide", som hun kalder det, en dokumentarroman, for det er nemlig forholdet til hendes far, der er i fokus. Kosovics far kom til Danmark fra det tidligere Jugoslavien som 21-årig og stiftede familie på Vestegnen, hvor Birgithe Kosovic voksede op. Det var en voldsom og konfliktfyldt opvækst, hvor faderens vrede styrede familien. Derfor stiller forfatteren sig nu nogle helt centrale spørgsmål: Hvad vil det sige at høre til? Hvordan knytter man sig til en, der bliver ved med at være vred? Hvad skal der til for at opnå et vellykket integration. For seks år siden stoppede faderen al kontakt med hende og hendes bror, og romanen kredser om forklaringer på bruddet. Birgitte Kosovic er live i studiet for at fortælle mere om sin roman og erindringerne om sin barndom. I 1975 udgav den amerikanske forfatter Joe Brainard, erindringssamlingen "Jeg kan huske", som hurtigt er blevet en moderne klassiker. Den har længe været yndet inspiration på skriveskoler for sin simple form: Alle tekster indledes nemlig med "jeg kan huske" og danner bro mellem de personlige og universelle erindringer. Hør med, når vi bringer et interview med en af oversætterne, Palle Sigsgaard om bogen. Vært: Nanna Mogensen. Medvirkende: Birgithe Kosovic og Palle Sigsgaard.
Four weeks into our collective Great Pause, the Bafflers examine “Red Shift,” Ted Berrigan’s iconic New York School poem. This close reading – distinguished in part by our own Sparrow having been Berrigan’s student - proceeds from the astrophysical definition of “redshift” to speculations into what attributive meanings to which Berrigan might allude. This includes a broad look into the nature of time as surfaced in the poem and in part depth charged in Berrigan situating the poem “at 8:08 p.m.” (the Eight-Fold Path, I-Ching and Hubble’s insights into an exploding universe). We touch on his forebearers – Allen Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara and John Ashbery - as well as Berrigan’s friends and allies, including Joe Brainard, Dick Gallup and Ron Padgett (including a nod to the latter’s memoir TED). We look to his nineteenth-century antecedents in the Transcendentalists and Whitman as well as how Berrigan self-identified as a late Beatnik. We touch on the role the song “California Dreaming” plays in the work and Berrigan’s working-class poetics, among other ruminative forays, including the Esopus River, the poets Jorie Graham, Bernadette Mayer, Lewis Warsh and Robinson Jeffers, as well as what existential insight might be disguised in a Harris Tweed jacket. SPECIAL FEATURE: We embed a recording of Berrigan reading the work at Naropa University, 1982, from EXACT CHANGE Yearbook 1995 no. 1 (Ed. Peter Gizzi). ADDENDUM: 1. The chronological early publishing history of THE SONNETS is correctly listed below: C Press — c1963. Mimeograph edition Grove Press — c1967 United Artists — 1982 (With seven additional sonnets not in original) 2. This podcast includes speculation around Berrigan's financial straits and schemes as well as the circumstances around his death. We regret and ask forgiveness for any inaccuracies, and please listen with an open heart.
Co-hosts Kate Wolf and Medaya Ocher speak with author Monique Truong about her new multi-voiced novel The Sweetest Fruits; aptly titled given its sensuality, and special attention to cuisine. Monique explains her decision to write in the voices of three women - one Greek, one African-American, and one Japanese - all of whom were central figures in the life of globetrotting 19th century author, Lafcadio Hearn, who was born in Greece and is best known for his books about Japan. Giving voice to amazing souls that history and patriarchal culture have put under erasure. Also, Stephen Van Dyck, author of People I've Met From the Internet, returns to recommend Joe Brainard's groundbreaking I Remember from the 1970s.
Co-hosts Kate Wolf and Medaya Ocher speak with author Monique Truong about her new multi-voiced novel The Sweetest Fruits; aptly titled given its sensuality, and special attention to cuisine. Monique explains her decision to write in the voices of three women - one Greek, one African-American, and one Japanese - all of whom were central figures in the life of globetrotting 19th century author, Lafcadio Hearn, who was born in Greece and is best known for his books about Japan. Giving voice to amazing souls that history and patriarchal culture have put under erasure. Also, Stephen Van Dyck, author of People I've Met From the Internet, returns to recommend Joe Brainard's groundbreaking I Remember from the 1970s.
Tomas Gustafsson og Åsmund Ådnøy snakker om bøker de har lest i det siste. I dag: Bøker som du kan ta fram og lese når du har knapt med tid og/eller konsentrasjon. Dette er bøkene de snakker om i podcasten: Svetlana Aleksijevitsj - Krigen har intet kvinnelig ansikt A league of their own (film) Evita (film) Johnnie Allen - Born to Be a Loser: The Jimmy Donley Story Karl Ove Knausgård - Min kamp 4 Joe Brainard - Jeg husker Édouard Levé - Selvportrett Joan Didion - De magiske tankers år Ina Strøm - Alt dette er Tokyo Abroad in Japan (YouTube-kanal) Kate Fox - Watching the English Henry Marsh - Gjør ingen skade Gaston Dorren - Lingo: En språkreise gjennom Europa
'Death' by Joe Brainard read by Sue Tompkins. 'Death' appears in 'The Collected Writings of Joe Brainard' published by Library of America in 2012. A transcript can be found at https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/58250/death-56d23c74e8276 More from Sue Tompkins can be found at www.themoderninstitute.com/artists/sue-tompkins
'Life' by Joe Brainard read by Sue Tompkins. 'Life' appears in 'The Collected Writings of Joe Brainard' published by Library of America in 2013. A transcript can be found at https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/life More from Sue Tompkins can be found at https://www.themoderninstitute.com/artists/sue-tompkins
Eine Spontanfolge beim sonntäglichen Schreibtreffen. Nina Dreist brachte die Joe Brainard Übung mit und wir alle schwelgten in Erinnerung. For science! ;)
In all of his conversations, James has never found anyone who approached the craft of writing with the scientific common sense of Julie Lekstrom Himes. They discuss her debut novel, MIKHAIL AND MARGARITA, and the tremendous amount of work she put into her research in order to understand Russian culture, tracing it all the way to its origins. Plus, Michael Reynolds, Editor-in-Chief of Europa Editions. - Julie Lekstrom Himes: https://www.europaeditions.com/author/204/julie-lekstrom-himes Julie and James Discuss: Grub Street Fine Arts Work Center Jim Shepard SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN Margot Livesey Hannah Tinti Daniel Wallace New York State Summer Writers Institute THE MASTER AND MARGARITA by Mikhail Bulgakov THE WHITE GUARD by Mikhail Bulgakov A YOUNG DOCTOR'S NOTEBOOK by Mikhail Bulgakov LIE DOWN IN DARKNESS and THE CONFESSIONS OF NAT TURNER by William Styron THE QUIET AMERICAN by Graham Greene I REMEMBER by Joe Brainard - Europa Editions: https://www.europaeditions.com/ Michael and James Discuss: Edizioni E/O THE ELEGANCE OF THE HEDGEHOG by Muriel Barbery OLD FILTH by Jane Gardam THREE WEEKS IN DECEMBER by Audrey Schulman Elena Ferrante MIKHAIL AND MARGARITA by Julie Lekstrom Himes - http://tkpod.com / tkwithjs@gmail.com / Twitter: @JamesScottTK Instagram: tkwithjs / Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/tkwithjs/
Hi guys! Thank you so much for all the nice reach arounds. Just kidding. Thanks for reaching out, wishing me well & sending me all the healing thoughts. Great news - I didn't get horrible news from my cardiologist! I'm still not the picture of health, but there's a game plan. So it'll be a long process for me, but I should start feeling a bit more like myself soon. I will be back next week, recording you a new episode. That's my biggest goal. I've missed you all very much, and thanks for putting up with me. I really appreciate the love and support. LINKS: Catullus: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catullus Anna Akhmatova: https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/anna-akhmatova The Akhmatova book I read from: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/poems-of-anna-andreevna-akhmatova-anna-akhmatova/1122976878?ean=9780393300147&pcta=n&st=PLA&sid=BNB_DRS_Core+Shopping+Textbooks_00000000&2sid=Google_&sourceId=PLGoP17&k_clickid=3x17 Joe Brainard: http://www.joebrainard.org/BIO_MAIN.htm (he's hot)
"With history piling up so fast, almost every day is the anniversary of something awful." - Brainard LINKS: Buy "I Remember" here: http://granarybooks.com/book/13/Joe_Brainard+I_Remember/ The film about Joe Brainard available here: http://www.joebrainardfilm.com Follow me on Twitter here: https://twitter.com/Robyn_ONeil Follow me on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/robyn_oneil/ More on Fireflies (Lightning Bugs) here: http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/bugs/firefly/ My apologies.
Human Beings. That's it. LINKS: Catullus: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catullus Anna Akhmatova: https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poet/anna-akhmatova The book I read from today: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/poems-of-anna-andreevna-akhmatova-anna-akhmatova/1122976878?ean=9780393300147&pcta=n&st=PLA&sid=BNB_DRS_Core+Shopping+Textbooks_00000000&2sid=Google_&sourceId=PLGoP17&k_clickid=3x17 Joe Brainard: http://www.joebrainard.org/BIO_MAIN.htm (he's hot) Question of the Day Podast w/ James Altucher & Stephen J. Dubner: http://www.earwolf.com/show/question-of-the-day/
Joe is Ron Padgett's intimate and affectionate biography-memoir of his friend of four decades, artist-poet Joe Brainard.