Friday, December 5, 2008

The Poetic Research Bureau presents...

DODIE BELLAMY & VANESSA PLACE
Saturday, December 20 2008 at 5:00pm

@ The Poetic Research Bureau
3702 San Fernando Blvd
Glendale, CA 91206

Doors open at 4:30pm
Reading starts at 5:00pm

$5 donation requested

Dodie Bellamy's chapbook, Barf Manifesto, is recently out from Ugly Duckling Presse. Other books include Academonia, Pink Steam and The Letters of Mina Harker. Her book Cunt-Ups won the 2002 Firecracker Alternative Book Award for poetry. In January, 2006, she curated an installation of Kathy Acker's clothing for White Columns, New York's oldest alternative art space. She lives in San Francisco with writer Kevin Killian and three cats. She teaches, among other places, in the MFA in Creative Writing Program at Antioch, Los Angeles.

Vanessa Place is a writer and lawyer, and co-director of Les Figues Press. She is the author of Dies: A Sentence (Les Figues Press), a 50,000-word, one-sentence prose piece; the post-conceptual novel La Medusa (Fiction Collective 2), and, in collaboration with appropriation poet Robert Fitterman, Notes on Conceptualisms (Ugly Duckling Presse (forthcoming)). Her nonfiction book, The Guilt Project: Rape and Morality will be published by Other Press in 2010.

Upper Limit Los Angeles

Friday, October 17, 2008

The PRB Recommends...



UNTITLED:
SPECULATIONS ON THE EXPANDED FIELD OF WRITING

Friday October 24th to Saturday October 25th
At REDCAT, The Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater
631 West 2nd Street, Los Angeles CA 90012

The fifth in an annual series of experimental writing conferences at REDCAT, “Untitled” is a two-day conversation about writing which in some manner exceeds the printed page. While we are familiar with visual artworks constituted as a set of instructions, secrets written by visitors in a book, or one artist erasing of another artist's work, what would be their equivalents in the literary world?

“Untitled” is a common title of contemporary art works and also refers to the incipient moment of a new text or idea; it was chosen to convey a sense of openness and process. A variety of writers and artists will discuss the use of language and words and/or their object status, the book and the letter, the question of the "emptiness" vs. the fullness of language as a poetic medium, the pictorial versus the narrative, the incorporation of extra-linguistic symbols and signs (maps, diagrams, formulas, etc.), the question of conceptual writing, and words off the page – performed, sited, projected, incanted, or invoked.

Among the participants is Kenny Goldsmith, an “uncreative” writer who labels himself the “most boring writer in the world” and writes books that include everything he said for a week (Soliloquy, 2001), every move his body made during a thirteen-hour period (Fidget, 1999), and a year of transcribed weather reports (The Weather, 2005).

Artist Young-Hae Chang is part of a “corporate” web art group known as Heavy Industries, whose short Flash texts have mesmerized the art world with their combination of graphic boldness and acute commentary on culture, politics and commerce, yielding a new kind of literary cinema.

Currently teaching in the Writing Program at CalArts, Salvador Plascencia’s first novel, The People of Paper, takes place in the Chicano disapora. Reflecting on the nature of literary characters, some of his people are literally made of paper, and other characters get paper cuts from them.

The conference will include two panels on the topic of “Litterality,” examining how writers use what we normally consider non-linguistic elements, such as symbols, diagrams, maps, or scores placed in the context of writing. We will also look at invented writing systems, and what it might mean to think about the book as an object rather than as a collection of words or sentences.

As in the art world, many kinds of appropriation have been undertaken by experiemental writers in the last several years. The panel on “Appropriation and Citation” will look a these practices, asking questions about whose work and what material gets appropriated, cited or resurrected, who owns texts, and if there is a difference between appropriation and citation.

A panel on “The Meaninglessness or -fulness of Language” will examine language as a vehicle of meaning. Rather than look at what texts say, it asks if language simply taken on its own is empty, saturated with meaning, both, or something else.

The fifth panel on “the concept of conceptual writing," looks at the use of writing not to convey meaning or tell stories but to convey concepts, asking how this might be similar, or not, to the work of conceptual artists in the visual arena.

In addition to the five panels, there will be two evening readings. The participants in the conference are Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries, Latasha Diggs, Johanna Drucker, Kenneth Goldsmith, Robert Grenier, Douglas Kearney, Steve McCaffery, Julie Patton, Salvador Plascencia, Jessica Smith, Brian Kim Stefans, Stephanie Taylor, Shanxing Wang, and Heriberto Yepez.

Organized by Matias Viegener and Christine Wertheim of the Writing Program at CalArts, and funded by The Annenberg Foundation. See Redcat.org for schedule and ticket information, or email untitled.writing@gmail.com.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Make Now Needs Volunteers

Hi all!

I am getting together the manuscripts for next year, there will be a lot, and need some helping organizing, editing, designing, etc. I think it will be impossible to complete these tasks on time if i do it on the lonesome.

If anyone is interested in gaining some small press publishing experience, let me know. You do not have to be in the Los Angeles area, though that would help.

Ara Shirinyan

Sunday, September 7, 2008

The Poetic Research Bureau presents...


Bill Luoma & the Backyard BBQ
Saturday, September 13, 2008 at 2:00pm

Please join us for a special afternoon of backyard poetry, food and conversation on Saturday, September 13, as we welcome poet Bill Luoma.

@ The House of Ara
1305 Romulus Dr.
Glendale, CA
91205

Bill Luoma is the author of Works and Days, Western Love, Dear Dad, and Swoonrocket. Recent work has appeared in Abraham Lincoln. He lives in Berkeley.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Monday, August 18, 2008

The Poetic Research Bureau presents....

A Book Release Party for Doug Nufer

We Were Werewolves published by Make Now Press

Sunday, August 24 2008, 6:30pm

@ The Poetic Research Bureau
3702 San Fernando Rd.
Glendale, CA 91206

Doors open at 6:30pm
Reading starts at 7:00pm

Note the later than usual starting time!

Doug Nufer writes prose and poetry as a rule, some of which he performs alone or with musicians or dancers, some of which has appeared in Bird Dog, Golden Handcuffs Review, and Monkey Puzzle. His novels include Never Again (Black Square), Negativeland (Autonomedia), On the Roast (Chiasmus), and The Mudflat Man/ The River Boys (soultheft). His recent book is a collection of Oulipian poetry, We Were Werewolves (Make Now).

WE WERE WEREWOLVES uses constraints to open up the English language to deeper and darker humours than any your basic run-of-the-mill prosaic verse can begin to imagine. The insistent permutations of alphabetical sounds, the severe word love run through film noir-based tonalities, & the small-to-epic scale of reordering found in so many of these Nuferian arrangements lay bare a gleeful prosody of the nervoussystem. Pleasure level herein: mighty high.
- Anselm Berrigan.

Triumph of the Exegetes

A professor of negative anthropology and a philosophy of mind professor walk into a bar.

Oof! Who'd guess limbo could be this difficult?

Putting the Cartesian before the horse, Dr. K orients Dr. B: "So here we are. Why the long fascia?"

Dr. B: "It's still a bar in principle. It's your jokes that need a rider."

Dr. K: "Well, on the condition that we've moved beyond all this human guff, I say you make us breakfast."

Dr B: "Ok, I'll be eggs. You be bacon."

Barkeep: "We don't serve breakfast here."

Doctors: "Pish! We're not breakfast! We're poets!"

'Keep: "Then why am I fed up?"

Good question. Other queries needing answers that may be addressed this weekend:

---"Aaron, you're new novel is called The Mandarin. Are we talking oranges or tyranny?"
---"Franklin, you've unpacked Armed Forces from its working title Emotional Fascism. Now can you tell us what Donald Fagen was talking about when he wrote "Brooklyn owes the charmer under me"?
---And alternately: "Is shame a relationship, a procedure or a unit? And if a unit, is self-possession also a unit, and is it divisible by the shame unit?"
---And again: "You've got good pipes, but how's your foundation?"
et cetera etcetera & etc

Well c'mon.

Aaron Kunin is the only fella we know who asserts that 'idea' is a trisyllable. The ideas in his new book The Mandarin are even stranger. They dispose of the objective world like Jakob Apfelböck disposing of the parental stink; it keeps coming back! Help him kill it off this weekend so we can can get back to bar and be done with these zombies and their bookbags.

Franklin Bruno is the only fella we know who thinks Shangri-la is "undercooked", but he's also famous for his quotations. Here's one: "Being a man, for me, is a bit like being a finite set." Okay, but does the new math sing? Does the drummer have a boyfriend? Can I have the setlist?

Enough questions. The gig is almost up.


AARON KUNIN & FRANKLIN BRUNO
Saturday, August 16 2008 at 5:00pm

@ The Poetic Research Bureau
3702 San Fernando Blvd

Doors open at 4:30pm
Reading starts at 5:00pm

$5 donation requested

Aaron Kunin is a poet, critic, and novelist. He is the author of a collection of small poems about shame, Folding Ruler Star (Fence Books, 2005); a chapbook, Secret Architecture (Braincase, 2006); and a novel, The Mandarin (Fence, 2008). He is assistant professor of negative anthropology at Pomona College and lives in Los Angeles.

Franklin Bruno
is the author of a book of criticism (Armed Forces) and a chapbook of poems (MF/MA). His poems have appeared in The Hat, Faucheuse, Vanitas, and the anthology Intersections: Innovative Poetry from Southern California (Green Integer). He has taught philosophy at UCLA, Pomona College, Northwestern University, and Bard College. A native Southern Californian, he keeps leaving Los Angeles, and keeps coming back.


***

The PRB: While Paul counts the almonds, we steal the cashews.