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Poets in the (Think) Tank: ROCKPILE Symposium

IPS Conference Room 1301 Connecticut Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC, United States

In anticipation of what is sure to be a music and poetry extravaganza at Busboys and Poets November 4, ROCKPILE artists David Meltzer and Michael Rothenberg host an open discussion on art and activism, poetry, music and the troubadour tradition, censorship and the academy, community and collaboration.

ROCKPILE is a collaboration between David Meltzer, legendary poet, musician, and essayist, and Michael Rothenberg, poet, songwriter and editor of Big Bridge Press. In the tradition of the troubadour and with the spirit of improvisation and collaboration, the duo will journey through eight U.S. cities and perform poetry, composed on the road, in a spontaneous fusion with local musicians in each city. Washington DC is the fourth stop of the ROCKPILE  journey.

David Meltzer was an important figure in the 1950s San Francisco Renaissance and appeared in Donald Allen’s “The New American Poetry,” a seminal work of that era. “Beat Thing” a book-length, poetic journal, published by La Alameda Press in 2004, won the Josephine Miles PEN Award in 2005. His books, Reading Jazz, Writing Jazz and No Eyes, Lester Young all reflect his deep connection and dedication to music throughout his career.  His complete publication history is at http://meltzerville.com/.

Michael Rothenberg is a poet, songwriter, and editor and publisher of Big Bridge magazine online at www. bigbridge.org. His poetry books include The Paris Journals (Fish Drum Press), Monk Daddy (Blue Press), Unhurried Vision (La Alameda/University of New Mexico Press) and most recently CHOOSE, Selected Poems (Big Bridge Press). He is also editor for the Penguin Poet series, which includes selected works of Phillip Whalen, Joanne Kyger, David Meltzer and Ed Dorn.  He has recently completed the Collected Poems of Phillip Whalen for Wesleyan University Press. Complete publication history can be found at http://epc.buffalo.edu/authors/Rothenberg m/

Fred Joiner is a poet living in Washington, DC's Historic Anacostia neighborhod. He works as a systems administrator for a small progressive consulting company. He collaborates frequently with jazz musicians and his poems have appeared in Callaloo, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Warpland: A Journal of Black Literature and Ideas, and Fingernails Across the Chalkboard: Poetry and Prose on HIV/AIDS from the Black Diaspora.

Sarah Browning will moderate this event. If you can't make it on November 3rd, be sure to attend ROCKPILE's other DC events: 11/1 at The Writers Center in Bethesda, and 11/4 at Busboys and Poets.

Bees Swarm and Nowak Speaks: The Art of Extraction

IPS Conference Room 1301 Connecticut Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC, United States

The progressively spectacular art of the renowned Beehive Collective is coming to DC to join forces with the powerful social justice poetry of Mark Nowak. The theme of this blend of sight and sound display will address the true cost of coal and how regular people are challenging its impact.

The Beehive Collective is appreciated internationally for its educational graphics campaigns, at a regional level for its stone mosaic murals and apprentice program, and locally for its dedication to the revitalization of the old Machias Valley Grange Hall, a landmark building in their small, rural town. The Hive has been going and growing since 2000, at full speed! Their most recent campaign is exposing the cost industry’s strip mining injustices in the Appalachia.

Mark Nowak, Director of the Rose O'Neill Literary House at Washington College, will read from his recent book, Coal Mountain Elementary. A singular, genre-defying treatise from one of America's most innovative political poets, Coal Mountain Elementary remixes verbatim testimony from the surviving Sago, WV miners and rescue teams, the American Coal Foundation's curriculum for schoolchildren, and newspaper accounts of mining disasters in China with photographs of Chinese miners taken by renowned photojournalist Ian Teh.

This event is cosponsored by Foreign Policy In Focus, Split this Rock, and SALSA. A suggested donation of $5 would be appreciated for the travel and lodging expenses of the Beehive Collective but no one will be turned away for lack of funds. You can register for the event here.

 

Poetry Discussion: ‘The Earth in the Attic,’ by Fady Joudah

The Writer\'s Center 4508 Walsh Street, Bethesda, MD, United States

A discussion led by poet and translator Yvette Neisser Moreno, will feature The Earth in the Attic, by Fady Joudah, an award-winning poet, translator of Mahmoud Darwish, and member of Doctors without Borders. Joudah will be a featured poet at the 2010 Split This Rock Poetry Festival. The Earth in the Attic won the Yale Series for Younger Poets in 2007.

This event is sponsored by The Writer's Center and Split This Rock, and is free and open to the public.

 

The Writer's Center cultivates the creation, publication, presentation, and dissemination of literary work. We are an independent literary organization with a global reach, rooted in a dynamic community of writers. www.writer.org

Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness invites poets, writers, artists, activists, dreamers, and all concerned world citizens to Washington, DC, for four days of poetry, community building, and creative transformation, March 10-13, 2010. Featuring Sinan Antoon, Jan Beatty, Cornelius Eady, Martín Espada, Andrea Gibson, Fady Joudah, Wang Ping, Patricia Smith, Arthur Sze, Quincy Troupe, Bruce Weigl, and many more. Readings, workshops, panel discussions, film, a book fair, and public action. www.SplitThisRock.org

The Writer’s Center is wheelchair-accessible. For more information, please email Yvette at yvettenm (at) verizon (dot) net, or call 301-879-1959. The Earth in the Attic is available for purchase for $16 at The Writer’s Center and Busboys and Poets.

 

 

 

 

 

Somehow Tenderness Survives: Remembering Dennis Brutus, Poet & Activist

Busboys and Poets, Langston Room 14th & V St NW, Washington, DC, United States

This tribute event will feature poetry and remembrances by poets Kenny Carroll, Elen Awalom, Holly Bass, and Sarah Browning, Sameer Dossani, former director of 50 Years is Enough, Neil Watkins of Jubilee USA Network, Dave Zirin, author of What's My Name, Fool? Sports and Resistance in the United States, and others. Audience members will also have an opportunity to offer their memories or to read a favorite poem by Dennis Brutus. Program to be followed by a screening of I Am a Rebel, a 50-minute documentary of Brutus’ life by the South African filmmaker Vincent Moloi.

Arts Event: With Eyes and Soul: Images of Cuba by Nancy Morejn

Mount Pleasant Neighborhood Library 3160 16th St NW, Washington, DC, United States

Poet and translator Yvette Neisser Moreno will be leading a discussion on Nancy Morejón, one of the foremost Cuban writers and a featured poet at the 2010 Split This Rock Poetry Festival. With Eyes and Soul features poems by Morejón (Spanish with English translations) and photos by renowned photographer Milton Rogovin, offering a multi-dimensional portrait of the landscape and people of Cuba.

Workshop by Kathy Engel: Everything is Translation: Poetry that Breaks Boundaries

IPS Conference Room 1301 Connecticut Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC, United States

We will each bring a favorite poem and our readiness to listen, to write, and to share our work. We will share poems we love and discuss why, talk about fear and censorship that gets in the way of telling our stories through poetry. Why poetry? we will ask. We will look inside the notion that everything is translation, even within one language, the ways in which we make assumptions about one another without understanding each other’s languages, and what can happen when we break open the assumptions and move inside the language. We will write using prompts that push us in language, form and narrative. We look at questions of identity, form, sound, story, magic, dream, research, journey, connection. Our time together as poets will be informed by an understanding that community is not separate from poetry and that community cannot exist without the sharing of all the stories, all the voices.

Sunday Kind of Love

Busboys and Poets 1025 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC, United States

Featuring Kathy Engel, author of Ruth’s Skirts and coeditor of We Begin Here: Poems for Palestine and Lebanon. The event will be hosted by Katy Richey and Sarah Browning.

Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation and Witness

Bell Multicultural High School 3101 16th Street NW, Washington, DC, United States

As the country continues to grapple with two wars, the economic crisis, and social and environmental ills, Split This Rock offers participants opportunities to speak out, make common cause, and explore the many ways poets are working for change through their writing, activism, and community work. Co-Director Sarah Browning said, “At times of crisis, poetry that looks directly at our world and struggles to understand, to bridge differences, to imagine other possibilities than those endlessly repeated by politicians and pundits is more important than ever.”

Conference: Congo Independence 50 Years Later: The Continuing Pursuit

True Reformer Building, Lankford Auditorium 1200 U Street, NW, Washington, DC, United States

On June 30, 2010, the Democratic Republic of Congo will celebrate its 50th year of independence from Belgian colonial rule. Celebrations will take place throughout the globe commemorating this golden anniversary. Not all Congolese are celebrating, however. Nor are peace and justice loving people as a whole, who value and respect a more united and elevated African continent. That ultimate independence and liberation of the Congo has yet to be achieved.

‘Howl’ in the City

Busboys and Poets 1025 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC, United States

In celebration of the landmark exhibition "Beat Memories: The Photographs of Allen Ginsberg," on view at the National Gallery of Art through September 17, Busboys and Poets and Split This Rock present “Howl” in the City at the Fifth and K Streets location of Busboys and Poets on July 23 and 24. Renowned poet Anne Waldman and musician Kyp Malone will perform, both accompanied by a quartet of musicians led by DC-based Matthew Hemerlein.

Benefit Event for Louisiana Bucket Brigade

Eatonville Restaurant 2121 14th Street NW, Washington, DC, United States

We know the power of poetry to demand change and to heal our world. On July 31, at Eatonville restaurant, we will be using that power to throw a benefit for the Louisiana Bucket Brigade, a grassroots 501(c)3 environmental health and justice organization that has been helping residents living near Louisiana refineries fight air pollution for years, and is now helping them track and respond to the BP Oil Disaster that is ravaging the Gulf.

A Poetry Reading Paying Homage To Death, Life, Home and Lust

IPS Conference Room 1301 Connecticut Avenue, NW, 6th Floor, Washington, DC, United States

Split This Rock and the Institute for Policy Studies co-sponsor a poetry reading by Palestinian writer/filmmaker Hind Shoufani, modatered by E. Ethelbert Miller

Sunday Kind of Love with Brenda Hillman

Busboys & Poets - 14th & V 2021 14th Street NW, Washington, DC

Sunday Kind of Love is hosted by Sarah Browning and Katy Richey, and co-sponsored by DC Commission on Arts and Humanities, Busboys and Poets, and Split This Rock. It takes place on the 3rd Sunday of every month. This month the first hour will feature readings by Brenda Hillman followed by the open mike. Admission is FREE; donations are encouraged and are split between the featured poets and Busboys' amazing wait staff. Also this month's event will be preceded by a Craft Workshop with Brenda Hillman at IPS in the conference room, from noon until 2:30.

Celebrate E. Ethelbert Miller’s 6th Inning with IPS and Provisions Library

Busboys and Poets 1025 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC, United States

We rarely get the opportunity to celebrate a living cultural icon. Yet, this opportunity has presented itself in the form of an amazing 60th birthday celebration for IPS Board Chair, E. Ethelbert Miller.

Writers Against War & Occupation In Afghanistan & Iraq

Lafayette Park 16th and Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC, United States

Come to a critical mass gathering for a show of unity in opposition to U.S. Wars and Occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq. A minute of silence will be observed for each year of each war (sixteen minutes), followed by our simultaneous reading of lines of poetry (probably lines from Whitman).