New PennSound podcast: 20-minute excerpt of my discussion with Pierre Joris on Paul Celan's experience of the Shoah: https://jacket2.org/podcasts/pierre-joris-celan-and-shoah-20-minutes
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Paul Auster recording
Paul Auster at PennSound performs the first two pages from "The Book of Illusions": http://media.sas.upenn.edu/pennsound/authors/Auster/Auster-Paul_03_1st-2-pgs-Bk-of-Illusions_UPenn_4-11-01.mp3
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Goldsmith says Shia LaBeouf isn't a good plagiarist
http://entertainment.time.com/2014/02/12/shia-labeouf-plagiarism-performance-art-scandal/#ixzz2tAVkA6Uq - Shia LaBeouf Isn’t a Very Good Plagiarist, Says the Plagiarist He’s Been Plagiarizing. MoMA poet laureate Kenneth Goldsmith: "If he were in my class, he would have gotten a very bad grade."
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
student responses to Elie Weisel's "Night"
Here are excerpts from two students’ responses to reading Elie Wiesel’s Night in my course called “Representations of the holocaust”:
I guess my frustration comes from my confusion about what my relationship should be towards this book. I feel a little out of sorts as a reader. I think of a memoir as closer in relationship to a novel than a textbook, and so I’ve been expecting of it some of the attention and creativity of form that a novel shows. But is that wrong of me? Is a holocaust memoir addressing something too sacrosanct to employ the same devices that a novel or creative memoir about another topic does? I really don’t know, and I feel disappointed with myself for feeling disappointed by the form of the narrative.
Some events initially seemed too perfectly metaphorical to be reality. But I had to remind myself that such things did happen. In such extreme circumstances, there is no metaphor and there is not the unimaginable—we are forced to accept that it is reality and we are forced to imagine the unimaginable, as terrible as it is, for that is the only way we can attempt to empathize.
I guess my frustration comes from my confusion about what my relationship should be towards this book. I feel a little out of sorts as a reader. I think of a memoir as closer in relationship to a novel than a textbook, and so I’ve been expecting of it some of the attention and creativity of form that a novel shows. But is that wrong of me? Is a holocaust memoir addressing something too sacrosanct to employ the same devices that a novel or creative memoir about another topic does? I really don’t know, and I feel disappointed with myself for feeling disappointed by the form of the narrative.
Some events initially seemed too perfectly metaphorical to be reality. But I had to remind myself that such things did happen. In such extreme circumstances, there is no metaphor and there is not the unimaginable—we are forced to accept that it is reality and we are forced to imagine the unimaginable, as terrible as it is, for that is the only way we can attempt to empathize.
Monday, February 10, 2014
experimental radio host/producer featured in new podcast
Benjamen Walker featured in new Kelly Writers House podcast: https://jacket2.org/commentary/benjamen-walker-and-year-sound . Part of the University of Pennsylvania's "year of sound."
Sunday, February 09, 2014
PennSound roundtable on Tuesday Feb 11 at noon
PennSound roundtable - noon - Tuesday, Feb 11. in the Meyerson Conference Center, 2nd floor of Van Pelt Library, Penn. http://humanities.sas.upenn.edu/13-14/dhf_pennsound.shtml
video of Jackson Mac Low's 75th
The Jackson Mac Low 75th Birthday Festschrift, September 20, 1997 - video of the event - has now been added to PennSound's Jackson Mac Low page: http://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Mac-Low.php
Rachel Blau DuPlessis with her new book
Rachel Blau DuPlessis with her new book, "Interstices": http://www.amazon.com/Interstices-Rachel-Blau-Duplessis/dp/1930068646
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