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Women
Poets at Barnard Presents a Multimedia Reading by Stephanie
Strickland and by Language Arts Poet Joan Retallack, Nov.
7
Contact:
Petra Tuomi, Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-7907
James Griffith, Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-1139
New York, NY, October 22, 2002Stephanie Strickland,
a poet and hypertext pioneer, and Joan Retallack, a poet
who uses grammatical symbols and typographical errors in
her work, will give the final reading for the fall in this
years Women Poets at Barnard series on Thursday,
November 7, at 7 p.m. in the Julius S. Held Lecture Hall
of Barnard Hall (117th Street and Broadway).
Strickland is a leader in exploring the poetic possibilities
of hypertext. In 1998, she published a hypertext version
of her poem, True North, which won a Salt Hill
Hypertext Prize. In 1999, her Web poem, Ballad of Sand
and Harry Soot, won first prize in the Boston Review
Poetry Contest. Her hypertext work can be found at stephaniestrickland.com.
Strickland will read from her latest work, published this
year, titled V. It is the first work of poetry to
be published simultaneously in print and on the Internet
as one piece. Two parts of the poem, V: WaveSon.nets/Losing
Luna, were published in print as an invertible
volume with two beginnings. The third section, V: Vniverse,
exists in cyberspace at vniverse.com.
Strickland received her bachelors degree from Harvard
University, an M.F.A. from Sarah Lawrence College and an
M.S. from Pratt Institute. She has been awarded grants from
the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment
for the Humanities and from the New York State Creative
Artists Public Service, and Yaddo and MacDowell Colony Fellowships.
Her poetry has been printed in The Paris Review,
Grand Street, The Kenyon Review, Ploughshares and
Boston Review, to name a few.
Retallack will read from a new work, Memnoir. As
a leader in postmodern poetry, she rarely allows her poetry
to follow traditional rules of form, content or grammar.
"At the point where most poets stop, she takes off
into shifts of imagination," wrote poet and
member of the Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres, Rosmarie
Waldrop, on Retallacks Errata 5uite, which
brings together the errata slip with the five line of a
musical staff to explore language as the place of all human
experience.
Her ongoing serial poem, WESTERN CIV, continues to
appear in various formats and her WESTORN CIV CONTD,
AN OPEN BOOK, consists of cardboard, grommets, movable
images, handmade paper, collage and text. In 1994, Retallack
published Icarus FFFFFalling, a collaboration with
Ovids Metamorphoses and her students at Bard
College who were assigned to photograph Icarus falling.
In How To Do Things with Words, she tries to answer
poetically the questions on the relationship between saying
and doing that J.L. Austin asked in his philosophical book
of the same title. The opening lines of the poem The
Woman in the Chinese Room, from Retallacks How
demonstrate her style:
Intersperse entries & numerals from notebooks
(back to Chicago (Chinese story in tact (quotes
from assordid pm sages
= Manual text ?
She is captive in China
" " " " a moment in history
" " " to a sense of history
Retallack is the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor
of Humanities and co-director of the Workshop in Language
and Thinking at Bard College. In addition to her books of
poetry, criticism and art, she has written essays for Poetics
Journal, Parnassus and The Washington Review of the
Arts. Her poetry has been anthologized in ONWARD:
Contemporary Poetry and Poetics, The Art of Practice, International
Anthology of Visual and Language Poetics and The
Best American Poetry, 1990. She has also been
awarded a Pushcart Prize, a Lannan Foundation Grant for
poetry, an American Award in Belles-Lettres, a Columbia
Book Award and a Gertrude Stein Award in Innovative North
American Poetry.
For more information about the Women Poets at Barnard
Series, please contact Saskia Hamilton at 212-854-2721.
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