Posts Tagged ‘al-Husayn ibn Ahmad ibn Khalaway’
Attention Span 2009 – Jennifer Scappettone
Some works that rocked my taxonomies this twelvemonth:
Hélène Cixous | Ex-Cities | Slought Books | 2006
On cities & revenance, the struggle of the year. “I have known for a long time that one does not go anywhere. It is the cities or the countries that come or do not come to you. Cities are fateful letters. They only arrive lost.”
Manfredo Tafuri | The Sphere and the Labyrinth, read for the second time | MIT | 1987
His books keep blowing me away. Once one has clarified the assumptions, nearly every sentence delivers a mordant perception. “The change wrought by Canaletto upon the urban context of Venice attests to the profound reality of this city for the eighteenth century; to the fact…that the most devastating manipulations are legitimate on an urban organism that has become merely an object at the disposal of the fantasy of a tourist elite.”
Roberto Saviano | Gomorrah | Farrar, Straus and Giroux | 2007
Anyone who wears clothes or deposits trash should read it. Matteo Garrone’s adaptation onto film is equally recommended for the dialect and the architecture. Creepier than neorealism (appropriately, as we’re headed the other way politically).
AES+F (Tatyana Arzamasova, Lev Evzovich, Evgeny Svyatsky, Vladimir Fridkes) | The Feast of Trimalchio | Biennale di Venezia | Video | 2009
Tableaux surrounding the Roman plutocrat from the standpoint of Moscow could have been easy high jinks, like Fellini’s. But assumption of the day’s affect of sacral conversation (of videogames that is) makes them mesmerizing. Best viewed against backdrop of live cruise ships hastening the demise of a sinking cosmopolis: this was perhaps unconsciously the festival’s most site-specific work.
Jia Zhangke | The World | Office Kitano | 2004
Makes fateful cinematic diptych with the above, from Beijing.
George Oppen, ed. Stephen Cope | Selected Prose, Daybooks, and Papers | University of California | 2007
If only Pound could get the message in heaven: “You should have talked / To women”—& much more. Can’t wait to teach Oppen again.
Rob Halpern | Disaster Suites | Palm Press | 2009
Keeps making lyric gutsy. Timely, down to the afterword which wishes the work’s own ephemerality.
David Larsen, ed. and trans. | Names of the Lion by al-Husayn ibn Ahmad ibn Khalawayh | Atticus/Finch | 2009
David Larsen | neo-benshi performance of the 2004 Wolfgang Petersen film Troy at Flarf Video Festival | May 2009
500 odd epithets for the creature, including “‘Who Destroys Capital’ (?)”64 Want all my history like this, as serial translation.
Rob Fitterman & Vanessa Place | Notes on Conceptualisms | Ugly Duckling | 2009
When two wits like these team up for “thinkership” a primer’s bound to be implosive. A pocketbook that begs for more such pocketbooks.
Tan Lin | Reading from | Segue Series | http://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Segue-BPC.html | April 2009
Tons more feed for thought, after filing a piece for boundary 2.
Walter Benjamin & Theodor Adorno | The Complete Correspondence, 1928-1940 | Harvard | 2001
Resisted for a long time, out of loathing for fetishization of biographical being—then torn through in a day, destroyed. The intimate content of research drives its criticality tumultuously home.
Plus several conversation circuits:
Al Filreis, ed. | PoemTalk | Poetry Foundation, PennSound & Kelly Writers House podcast | http://poemtalkatkwh.blogspot.com/ (subscribable through iTunes) | 2008-, monthly
You get the writer uttering and writers that read disagreeing live. Amazing for modeling close reading, & makes even the dreariest commutes curious.
Herman Melville | “A Utilitarian View of the Monitor’s Fight” & other poems | annotations brought on by Wild Orchids, a new review, Ed. Sean Reynolds
Incredible that only specialists (i.e. “Americanists”) seem to read Melville’s body of verse. The journal, out of Buffalo, will be reintroducing glorious pages to consciousness.
Belladonna | Elders Series | Belladonna | 2008-09
#1: E. Tracy Grinnell/Leslie Scalapino; #2: Rachel Levitsky/Erica Kaufman/Sarah Schulman/Bob Gluck; #3: Tisa Bryant/Chris Kraus; #4: Emma Bee Bernstein/Susan Bee/Marjorie Perloff; #6: Kate Eichorn/M. NourbeSe Philip/Gail Scott; #7: Cara Benson/Jayne Cortez/Anne Waldman; #8: Jane Sprague/Diane Ward/Tina Darragh. I edited the number left out here.
Despite my discomfort with the name (about which see Eichorn’s analysis in the preface to #6); my year’s most delirious cycle of discoveries, revisitations, reflections on the nature of dialogue, calls for more.
More Jennifer Scappettone here.
Attention Span 2009 – David Buuck
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Rodrigo Toscano | Collapsible Poetics Theater | Fence | 2008
Simply put, one of the most important steps-forward (& outward) in embodied politicized poetics & performance in years.
Bhanu Kapil | Humanimal: a project for future children | Kelsey Street | 2009
Bhanu Kapil | Rabbit Butoh, Bunny Butoh | Trafficker | 2009
Liberatory bio-perversity mediated through colonial memory, metabiology, & interspecies tongue-play.
Yedda Morrison | Girl Scout Nation | Displaced | 2008
Yedda Morrison | Darkness (chapter 1) | little red leaves | 2009
Ecopoetics, appropriation, class politics, & conceptual photography, via uncanny excursions through deforested gurl’hoods & art-choked hearts of darkness; field-guides & escape-routes for the yank-yank crises.
Tan Lin | Heath (plagiarism/outsource) | Zaesterle | 2008
Tan Lin | ambience is a novel with a logo | katalanche | 2008
Fan-chatter, reading-as-scanning, disco as method, celebrity-death as product placement; might just out-Warhol Kenny G. I is a cursor—you’ve been list-served.
al-Husayn ibn Ahmad ibn Khálawayh, trans. David Larsen | Names of the Lion | Atticus Finch | 2009
One of the most compelling translation/research projects I’ve seen in years. Philology as performative scholarship, transduced into a heroic list poem ripe for the growling.
Christina Peri Rossi, trans. Marilyn Buck | State of Exile | City Lights | 2008
Condensed lyrics written in 1972 while on the run into exile from Uruguay, torqued by translator Buck’s own forced-exile as a political prisoner in the federal prison in Dublin, CA.
Dennis Lee | yesno | Anansi | 2007
Dennis Lee | un | Anansi | 2003
Neologisms for neologics, composting pre-necro toxiholic bombbalm into ecopoetic anthropox. My thanks to Christian Bök for the turn-on.
The pamphlet is personal is political:
CA Conrad | (Soma)tic Midge | Faux | 2008
Anne Boyer | Art is War | Mitzvah | 2008
Dodie Bellamy | Barf Manifesto | Ugly Duckling | 2008
Dana Teen Lomax | Disclosure | Dusie | 2009
Fervent & fevered missives for those who think that conceptual writing practices somehow must preclude the embodied heat of class politics.
New Zines!
Model Homes (eds. Flis & Buck), President’s Choice (Zultanski), With+Stand (Thomas-Glass), Abraham Lincoln (Mohammad & Boyer), Bad Press Serials (Lindsay, Morris, & Stevenson), Fold (Timmons & Apps), Area Sneaks (Mosconi & Gonzalez), Cannot Exist (Gricevich), Try (Brazil & Larsen), ON (Cross, Donovan & Schlesinger), Plantarchy (Katko)…
A wealth of compelling new mags demonstrating once again that the counter-institutional is where the new(s) really happens.
Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick | Touching Feeling: Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity | Duke | 2003
“Paranoia is anticipatory.” RIP, Eve.
—Aug 15 09 : Oakland
More David Buuck here.
Written by Steve Evans
October 12, 2009 at 11:29 am
Posted in Attention Span 2009, Commented List
Tagged with al-Husayn ibn Ahmad ibn Khalaway, Anne Boyer, Bhanu Kapil, CA Conrad, Christina Peri Rossi, Dana Teen Lomax, David Larsen (trans.), Dennis Lee, Dodie Bellamy, Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Marilyn Buck (trans.), Rodrigo Toscano, Tan Lin, Yedda Morrison