Wednesday, December 09, 2009
Morning drive time...
An Evening of Harold Pinter's Poetry - benefit for the Homeless in LA
It’s a role Sands couldn’t refuse. In 2007, Pinter himself was planning to read the poems at a women’s shelter in London, but illness had weakened his speaking voice. He asked Sands to take over—and then proceeded to coach the actor on every line and pause.
“He was feeling his mortality very keenly and wanted these poems to reveal his interior,” remembers Sands.
Full Story Here
Tuesday, December 08, 2009
Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy uses Christmas verse to attack British society - Times Online
ON the first day of Christmas there is no partridge or pear tree but just a buzzard on a branch watching a British soldier far from home.
This is the ode to Christmas in Britain from our new poet laureate. Carol Ann Duffy uses her festive offering as a stinging commentary on much that is wrong in the country and the world today.
Full Story Here
Sunday, December 06, 2009
Sunday slipping away
I watched an episode of Modern Family on ABC tonight and it cracked me up. I've never seen it before and it was pretty funny.
I've thought about some new years resolutions today. I'm not big on new years resolutions but I've got a couple of things on my mind that I'll blog about later in the week.
I did crank out another set of poetry submissions today... a task that is not on my list of fun things to do, but I've resolved this fall to get better about it. Going back to a time when I was persistent, the results were truly positive.
Sadly, I feel the weekend like sand in an hour glass down to a final trickle of granules.
Heard a good metaphor lately?
Saturday, December 05, 2009
Poetry book by ‘Bostonian’ Poe sets auction record - BostonHerald.com
"NEW YORK — A rare copy of Edgar Allan Poe’s first book has sold for $662,500, smashing the previous record price for American literature.
The copy of 'Tamerlane and Other Poems' had been estimated to sell Friday for between $500,000 and $700,000 at Christie’s auction house in New York City.
The previous record is believed to be $250,000 for a copy of the same book sold nearly two decades ago."
Friday, December 04, 2009
Your Brain on Poetry
Travis Nichols, the Editor at the Poetry Foundation has a really intriguing piece in the Huffington Post this week about poetry and the brain. Pictured on the left is Henry Molaison who affectionately was known to many involved in his life as just H.M.
Late last year Molaison passed away. Molaison’s claim to fame relates to his memory capacity, or lack thereof. I won’t go into the entire history, but he underwent brain surgery in the 1950’s and as a result had the inability to form new memories. During his post surgery years, he was studied profusely in search for clues to our memory process. Even in death, medical science has turned to his brain for more answers to the mystery of how and where memories are created as well as retrieved. Scientists hope to be able to map the memory process by observing slices of M.H.’s brain.
Nichols claims that what Dr. Jacopo Annese, who is doing the slicing is exploring the greatest poetic mystery of all time. Nichols talks about some poetry that is less about telling stories and more about using poetry that engages a readers brain while he/she is reading, that utilizes sound patterns or other techniques to create Cognitive Poetics.
Nichols uses the example of an poet not just saying, “When I made out with so-and-so, I did the happy dance!” Instead, that poet would use language that would allow a particularly attentive reader go beyond by just reading, but come to experience their mind doing the happy dance, thus creating a memory associated with it.
Nichols sees this kind of writing as experimental, which he notes is not unlike the path Dr. Annese is pursuing.