By JENNIFER
LEWANDOWSKI
Reporter Assistant Editor
The fall lineup for the UB's bi-annual poetry and prose series, "Wednesdays
at 4 PLUS," promises an eclectic mix of both up-and-coming writers and
those entrenched in the literary scene for decadesa group whose collective
work cuts across lines of race, ethnicity, gender, language and politics.
The series, presented by the Poetics Program, will run from Wednesday
through Nov. 30.
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PINSKY |
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ROTHENBURG |
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KIM |
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LAUTERBACH |
Among the featured artists in the series will be former U.S. Poet Laureate
Robert Pinsky and Jerome Rothenberg, a literary radical and considered
a major force in American poetry.
Author of "Jersey Rain," "The Figured Wheel: New and Collected Poems
1966-1996"which was nominated for the Pulitzer Prizeand "The Want
Bone," Pinsky will give the Silverman poetry reading at 8 p.m. Nov.
9 in 250 Baird Hall on the North Campus.
Pinsky was named the U.S. Poet Laureate and poetry consultant to the
Library of Congress in 1997. The New Jersey native, who teaches in the
graduate writing program at Boston University and is poetry editor of
the weekly Internet magazine Slate, is the recipient of an American
Academy of Arts and Letters award, Poetry magazine's Oscar Blumenthal
prize and the William Carlos Williams Award.
Rothenberg will give a poetry reading at 4 p.m. Oct. 3 in the Center
for the Arts Screening Room on the North Campus, and will lecture on
"Poems for the Millennium" at 4 p.m. Oct. 4 in 438 Clemens Hall, North
Campus.
An acclaimed poet and translator, and editor of the groundbreaking
anthologies "Technicians of the Sacred" and "Poems for the Millennium:
The University of California Book of Modern Poetry," Rothenberg is noted
as a pioneer in both performance poetry and ethnopoetics, having helped
organize the first international symposium on ethnopoetics in 1975.
A prolific author of more than 50 books, he is a professor of visual
arts and literature at the University of California at San Diego. His
visit will be sponsored by the McNulty Chair/Center for the Americas
Residency in celebration of his 70th birthday.
The series will open with a reading by Korean poet Myung Mi Kim.
Author of "Under Flag," "The Bounty" and "Dura," and considered one
of the most important voices in contemporary American poetry, Kim will
give a poetry reading at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Screening Room in the
Center for the Arts on the North Campus. Kim, who came from Korea to
the United States at the age of 9, is acting chair and an assistant
professor of creative writing at San Francisco State University.
Bruce Andrews, an associate professor in Fordham University's political
science department, will give a poetry reading at 4 p.m. Nov. 28 in
the Center for the Arts Screening Room, and host an open conversation
at 12:30 p.m. Nov. 29 in 438 Clemens Hall. Andrews, whose work helped
redefine the edginess of American poetry, is the author of "Ex Why Zee,"
"Divesture-A," "I Don't Have Any Paper So Shut Up" (or "Social Romanticism")
and "Getting Ready to Have Been Frightened."
Luis Rodriguez, author of "Gang Days in L.A.," his memoir of coming
of age in East Los Angeles that won a Carl Sandburg Literary Award and
a Chicago Sun-Times Book Award, will give a poetry and prose reading
at 8 p.m. Sept. 28 in Allen Hall on the South Campus. The presentation,
sponsored by Just Buffalo literary center, will cost $4 for members,
$5 for students and seniors, and $6 for the general public. The El Paso,
Texas-born author, whose works include the memoir "Always Running: La
Vida Loca" and poetry books "Poems Across the Pavement" and "The Concrete
River," is the founder of Youth Struggling for Survival and is a founding
member of the League of Revolutionaries for a New America and Rock a
Mole, which produces hip-hop, jazz and rap artists, and urban youth
arts festivals in Los Angeles.
In celebration of the publication of her book "If in Time: Selected
Poems 1975-2000," Ann Lauterbach will give a poetry reading at 4 p.m.
Oct. 17, as well as host a conversation at 4 p.m. Oct. 18, in the CFA
Screening Room. The recipient of a MacArthur fellowship in 1993, she
is director of the graduate creative writing program and a professor
in the Division of Languages and Literature at Bard College. Lauterbach,
whose column "The Night Sky" has appeared regularly in American Poetry
Review, is the author of "Many Times, But Then," "Before Recollection,"
"Clamor" and "On a Stair."
Among the other highlights of the series will be a poetry reading
Nov. 14 and a talk Nov. 15 by UB poetics graduate Juliana Spahr, now
co-editor of Chain and assistant professor of English at the University
of Hawaii at Manoa.
For a complete list of events, visit http://epc.buffalo.edu/poetics/calendar/fall01.html.
All events will be free and open to the public, unless otherwise noted.
For more information, call 645-3810 or email mdunlap@acsu.buffalo.edu.
"Wednesdays at 4 PLUS" is sponsored, in part, by the James H. McNulty
Chair, Department of English (Dennis Tedlock); the Samuel P. Capen Chair
of Poetry and the Humanities (Robert Creeley); the David Gray Chair
of Poetry and Letters, Department of English (Charles Bernstein); the
Melodia E. Jones Chair in French, Department of Modern Languages and
Literatures (Gerard Bucher); Susan Howe, UB English and poetics professor;
the Just Buffalo literary center; the Poetry Society of America, and
Poets and Writers, with funding through a grant from the New York State
Council on the Arts.
Support for the series also is provided by the Center for the Arts,
the Department of Media Study, Robert Bertholf, curator of the Poetry
and Rare Books Collection, and Talking Leaves Books.