平特五不中

Event

Poetry Matters: Poetic Attention

Thursday, April 18, 2024toFriday, April 19, 2024
Thomson House 3650 rue McTavish, Montreal, QC, H3A 1Y2, CA
Price: 
Free

In the spirit of fostering conversation and collaborative thinking, Poetry Matters is pleased to host a free event April 18-19 at 平特五不中鈥檚 Thomson House (space accessible) on the topic of 鈥減oetic attention,鈥 leading from the work of Lucy Alford (Forms of Poetic Attention, Columbia UP, 2020). Bringing together academic and poetic communities, the event explores the enigmatic concept of poetic attention. From different standpoints, we consider what this idea might mean and achieve in our days of the attention economy.

All are welcome! Click to register.

Segments will include

A panel discussion on poetic attention with Poetry Matters and 平特五不中鈥檚 Laboratory for Attention and Social Cognition;

A keynote lecture from Sarah Wylie Krotz, Director of the Centre for Literatures in Canada at the University of Alberta, "On slowness and symbiosis: following lichens;"

Workshops in creative practice and attention;

Work from Montr茅al-based visual artist Kevin Jenne. Drawing on tapestries and family traditions of music, he has created an artistic style he calls 鈥渋ntrinsic illumination.鈥 He has exhibited paintings across Canada and internationally at sites such as New York, Chicago, and Bejing, and developed work for a number of charitable organizations in Montr茅al, including the Montr茅al Children鈥檚 Hospital, the Cummings Centre, and Art for Healing;

And readings from several poets

  • Louise Dupr茅, born in Qu茅bec, has published more than twenty books, which have received many awards and been translated into several languages. Her books Plus haut que les flammes (Beyond the flames) and La main hant茅e (The Haunted Hand) received the Governor General鈥檚 Award. Dupr茅 is a member of the Academy of Letters of Quebec and of The Royal Society of Canada, and in 2014 was appointed to the Order of Canada for her contributions to Quebec literature as a poet, novelist, playwright, essayist, and professor.
  • Trinidadian poet and artist Joel Anthony Harris was recently shortlisted for Into the Void鈥檚 Poetry Prize. Harris鈥 work has appeared in publications such as The Heavy Feather Review, PRISM, the Berkeley Poetry Review, and Anthropocene. He has also contributed to two books, The Alpha Barrier of North South Dialogue and The Twilight of America's Omnipresence.
  • Lee Kathryn Hodge is a writer and visual artist whose work has appeared in Granta, Thrush, Heavy Feather Review, Euphony, Heartwood, The William & Mary Review, Oberon, Clinch Mountain, After Hours, Mouth, and The Tulane Review. Her chapbook We Make Shapes from Shapes was published in 2023, and she is a current doctoral candidate at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
  • Chad Norman lives and writes in Truro, Nova Scotia. In 1992 he was awarded the Gwendolyn MacEwen Memorial Award for Poetry. His poetry has appeared in journals, magazines, and anthologies around the world, and his new book, Parental Forest, will appear in Spring 2024 (AOS Publishing Montreal). Norman鈥檚 poem, 鈥淭he Shoulds鈥 will be included in the Lunar Vagabond Collection, part of a time capsule scheduled for a Lunar Codex lift-off to the moon this coming November.
  • Derek Webster鈥檚 new collection of poems, National Animal will be published by Signal Editions, V茅hicule Press, April 2024. Mockingbird (2015) was a finalist for the Gerald Lampert Award for best first book of poems in Canada. Webster received an MFA from Washington University in St. Louis, and is the founding editor of Maisonneuve magazine. He lives in Montr茅al and Toronto.

We look forward to welcoming you! Click to register.


Poetry Matters
/poetrymatters/
We can be reached at pm.mcgill [at] mcgill.ca

Poetry Matters at 平特五不中 works on unceded land which has long served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations. We honour their longstanding stewardship of the lands and waters on which we gather, and we respect the continued connections with the past, present and future in our ongoing relationships with Indigenous and other peoples within the community of Tiohti脿:ke (Montr茅al).

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