2011-2014 CALENDAR
2016 CALENDAR
February 4-5 EILEEN MYLES > + Feb. 4 poetry reading
2015 CALENDAR
December 14-15 FRED MOTEN > + Dec. 14 poetry reading
2014 CALENDAR
December 15-16 ANN LAUTERBACH > + Dec. 15, 8pm poetry reading
May 12-13 ANNE WALDMAN > + May 12 Poetry Reading, 8pm, Maison de la poésie de Paris : Anne Waldman & Patrick Beurard-Valdoye
2013 CALENDAR
FINAL SYMPOSIUM Dec. 11-12 COLE SWENSEN > + Dec 11 Poetry Reading, 8pm, Maison de la poésie de Paris : Cole Swensen & Nicolas Pesquès
Sept. 26-27 CLARK COOLIDGE> + Sept. 26, 8 pm Poetry/Music Reading, CLARK COOLIDGE & THURSTON MOORE, Maison de la poésie de Paris
April 11-12 MARJORIE WELISH > + April 11, 7:30 pm Poetry Reading MARJORIE WELISH & JACQUES ROUBAUD, Galerie éof, Paris
2012 CALENDAR
December 13 & 14 LISA ROBERTSON> Thursday December 13 7:30pm poetry reading with Lisa Robertson, Anne Parian and Pascal Poyet, galerie éof, Paris.
September 27 & 28 REDELL OLSEN
March 22 & 23 CHARLES BERNSTEIN
2011 CALENDAR
September 29-30 VANESSA PLACE at Université Paris Est Marne-la-Vallée
June 30 July 1 CAROLINE BERGVALL at Université Paris Est Créteil
June 15 DAVID ANTIN at Université Paris Est Marne-la-Vallée
Flash Labels by NBT
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
"Swensen reminds us that the old fashioned approach to extraneous (non-lyrical) data invading the text is called research." Ron Silliman on Cole Swensen's Ours/ Le Nôtre
Here's the beginning of the essay. The entire essay can be read on Ron Silliman's blog, by clicking on the icon below.
“All conceptual writing is allegorical writing” argue Rob Fitterman & Vanessa Place in Notes on Conceptualisms, a fascinating little book with painfully small type. At the core of Cole Swensen’s Ours, published last year by the University of California Press, is the allegory of the garden, French gardens to be exact, and especially the work of André Le Nôtre (1613-1700), the “father,” to use Swensen’s term for it, “of the French formal garden.” Le Nôtre’s work most famously includes Versailles, as well as Chantilly, Saint-Cloud, Sceaux, Vaux-le-Vicomte & the Tuileries, where he himself was born, the son & grandson of royal gardeners. Le Nôtre, of course, means ours in French, but this isn’t the most important dimension of the pun tucked into the book’s title. Rather it is the logic of the garden, or of a certain type of garden, & the logic of the poem, our art. Or of a certain type of poem, the sort that Cole Swensen might be called upon to write. And beyond that, possession (or at least possessiveness) of the earth itself, such as royalty might imagine to be their “divine right.”
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