Jul 28, 2015

Who's Afraid of Black Indians?, a SkyBlue article by Chi Sherman

This is the SkyBlue article, which previewed her July 29 visit to the Eiteljorg Museum::

Who's Afraid of Black Indians? 

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Jul 27, 2015

Book fair opportunity Oct. 17 at Greenwood Public Library

From Greenwood Public Library:

Greenwood Public Library will be holding an author fair on Oct. 17th 2015, from 2-4 pm.  We are seeking authors who would be interested in participating.  The library would provide a table at no charge.  Authors would be responsible for creating any displays or decorating and selling their own books.  If think you might like to participate, please reply to this message and further information will be forthcoming.  If you have any questions, please feel free to ask.  You may also contact Valerie Moore by email at vmoore@greenwoodlibrary.us, or either of us by phone at 885-5036.

IU prof discusses poetry as a weapon by militant Islamist groups

From Biz.news.com

A new weapon of militant Islamist groups is … poetry?

In the West, the pen is ‘mightier than the sword’. In the East, the pen and the sword ‘are one’. Islamist extremists probably have no idea they are tapping into ancient Eastern wisdom with their latest recruitment tool – poetry. Given the barbarism behind these groups’ activities, it can seem like a hideous oxymoron and torture of language even to talk of their words as they attempt to glorify violence, savagery and death as ‘poetry’. Here, Prof Asma Afsaruddin, chair of the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at Indiana University, Bloomington, looks at the literary tradition militant Islamist groups are appropriating for, as she succinctly puts it, ‘their own inglorious ends’ . They are increasingly turning to poetry, using the richness beauty and mesmerising effects of the Arabic language to lure young men into their ranks. Not surprisingly, I haven’t read any ‘poetry’ emanating from these sources that approximates anything close to memorable literature. – Marika Sboros



Islamic militants
Picture: YouTube

The Conversation – Militant Islamist groups have a number of strategies for recruiting vulnerable young men to their cause. They produce videostap into social media andwrite fiery pamphlets with overblown rhetoric.
But they’re also increasingly turning to poetry: with its rich vocabulary, the Arabic language lends itself easily to rhyme and rhythm, which can have a mesmerizing effect.
Poetry is also deeply ingrained in pre-Islamic and Islamic Arab culture, and it’s this literary tradition that contemporary militants hope to mine as they attempt to lure new members into their ranks.
The tone and tenor of militant poetry mirrors verses from the period known as the Jahiliyya, in Arabic, which refers to the era before the rise of Islam in the seventh century.
Pre-Islamic tribes often had their own special poet – a sha‘ir, in Arabic – who was believed to be endowed with magical verbal powers, and whose poetic virtuosity could be used to defend tribal honour. Their poems sought to vilify the enemy, while praising and lifting the spirits of their own tribes.

Jul 22, 2015

Call for collaborative poetry (ISFPC members only)

The following is from a blog by the Indiana State Federation of Poetry Clubs. Complete website info is here: http://www.isfpc.org/blog/join-in-a-collaborative-poem




A callout to all ISFPC Members from Mary Couch, Premiere Poet:

For our Fall Rendezvous this year, we have the pleasure of Joyce Brinkman as one of our guest presenters doing a program on Collaborative Poetry. 

Joyce and I have decided to do a collaborative poem with the ISFPC Membership prior to the Rendezvous to be read on Friday night as a taste of what can be accomplished by a group of poets. (This poem may also be part of the Bicentennial Birthday Book that Brick Street Poetry is preparing for 2016) 

If you are interested in being part of this poem (whether you are attending Rendezvous or not), please send your name and email to either Joyce Brinkman at joycebrinkman@yahoo.com or Mary Couch atmacouchpoet@att.net  no later than July 31st. Once we have a list of those wishing to participate, we will send you the information as to the theme, form  and where your part in the poem will be located. This should be a fun project and also give everyone an inkling as what to expect on Saturday when Joyce presents her program.  

Thanks to everyone who wants to join in the project.

IndyGo and poetry

The following article appeared on WFYI's website on July 21, 2015. The implication for poets and/or spoken-word artists is murky. Details are lacking on how they can participate. Note: I made the fifth paragraph bold for emphasis.

IndyGo On-Board With Art

JILL SHERIDAN  
Could a poem appear in this space?
Using public spaces to engage people in the arts is the goal of IndyGo’s new Art in Transit program.  Over the next decade IndyGo will partner with the Arts Council of Indianapolis finding and funding art pieces that connect transit and culture.
Bryan Luellen, IndyGo director of public affairs, says IndyGo wants to take advantage of its current growth with projects that will make a mark.  
"We’re building infrastructure and we want to demonstrate to the community that we want to use this infrastructure to both transport people and make an impact on the community." said Luellen.
Luellen says the program will explore alternative art projects like performance as well as traditional ones like murals.  
"It could be spoken poetry, it could be written poetry," explained Luellen, "the Arts Council has been doing a great job over the past couple years to really double down in their commitment to all types of art, not just visual art."
Earlier this month, the IndyGo board of directors approved $500,000 in transit advertising revenue for the initiative.  There are also plans to apply for local and national grant funds to support the program. 

Jul 15, 2015

A brief history of the Indiana Poet Laureate


INDIANAPOLIS – You don’t have to rhyme your words to be the state’s next poet laureate.
But you do have to travel near and far, as a modern day bard, promoting the values of verse.
That and perhaps be willing to risk a little disrespect from the legislative body that created the job in the first place.
If you let me explain, it will cause you no pain.
Last week the Indiana Arts Commission issued a call for Indiana's next official poet laureate, to be named in January, and invited anyone to submit a nomination.
The two-year gig is currently filled by George Kalamaras, an English professor with a wonderful, web-based magazine, The Wabash Watershed.
The site offers an online tutorial on Indiana poets, a chronicle of Kalamaras' lyrical tours of the state and details of his poetry contest whose winners get a prize paid from the small stipend that comes with the title of laureate.
An added bonus are videos of his at-home poetry readings with his beagle, Bootsie, in tow.
“I want my poems to say welcome, welcome, welcome,” Kalmaras says, noting the universal appeal of a poetry-loving dog.
He's the state's fourth official poet laureate.
The first was Joyce Brinkman, a longtime lover of politics and poetry who served in the General Assembly for a decade.
In her tenure, she closed the legislative session by reading poetry written in homage to retiring lawmakers. When she left the Legislature, she was declared poet laureate by affirmation of her colleagues.
She was flattered but underwhelmed. For decades, lawmakers handed out the title willy nilly.
“It would just happen when anybody had a whim to do it,” she said.
Brinkman brought some rhythm and rhyme to the process.
In 2005, she convinced legislators to pass a law turning over the task of selecting the poet laureate to the Arts Commission. And she got them to attach this mission to the title: To advance the appreciation of poetry statewide.
Her successors - all well regarded, published poets - have done so in impressive ways.
One of them, Norbert Krapf, pushed for collaboration among poets, artists and musicians. With courage and candor, he wrote poetry about the sexual abuse he suffered, while growing up in southern Indiana, at the hands of a Catholic priest.
Another poet, Karen Kovacik, traveled the state to boost the Poetry Out Loud program, urging high school students to give voice to poetry they loved. She came up with a humorously titled blog, No More Corn, to feature accomplished poets who’ve sprung from this farm-fields-filled state.
Kalamaras has carried on the tradition of making poetry feel relevant. His latest contest invited people to write about history and social justice, and what those notions mean to them as Hoosiers.
At this year's Arts Day at the Statehouse – when advocates hope to convince lawmakers of the importance of the arts in Indiana – Kalamaras was invited to address the General Assembly with a poem.
He’d picked “Gray Barn Rising”, a poem so clearly about Indiana which begins, “Somewhere inside me, a gray barn is rising.”
Only, the reading didn’t happen.
He was crowded out by other legislative business, his poetry slammed.
“They forgot about him,” Brinkman said.
She wants to make sure Indiana doesn’t forget its need for a poet laureate. She asked me to make sure I direct readers to the Indiana Arts Commission's website - www.in.gov/arts - for details on how the next one will be picked.
The choice likely will be a published poet, with a depth of experience in educational program development. But, Brinkman insists, the title isn’t meant to be exclusionary.
“My feeling is that everybody can be a poet,” she said. “We’re the only creatures that write. We are the scribes of the world.”

Maureen Hayden covers the Indiana Statehouse for CNHI's newspapers and websites. Reach her atmhayden@cnhi.com. Follow her on Twitter @MaureenHayden

Indiana Authors Award 2015

From the Eugene and Marilyn Glick  Indiana Authors Award website:

Poets Marianne Boruch and Adrian Matejka to receive national and regional awards from Library Foundation, three Emerging Author finalists selected

INDIANAPOLIS — For the first time, two poets have been selected as winners of the Indiana Authors Award. Purdue University professorMarianne Boruch is the winner of the $10,000 National Author prize given by the 2015 Eugene & Marilyn Glick Indiana Authors Award.Adrian Matejka, Lilly Professor/Poet-in-Resident at Indiana University-Bloomington, has been named the Regional Author winner, earning him a $7,500 prize. The National and Regional winners, along with finalists in the Emerging Author category, will be honored at the seventh-annual Indiana Authors Award Dinner on October 10, 2015, at the Central Library in Indianapolis.

“I am grateful to be invited into the company of previous Indiana Authors Award winners such as Susan Neville, Barbara Shoup, Michael Martone, Helen Frost and many others,” said Boruch. “Thanks to the late Eugene and Marilyn Glick for bringing attention to writing and reading as an art and act of courage and invention, and for honoring the ancient notion of the library —  a lightning bolt and beloved storage unit for human culture.”


Marianne Boruch
This annual award program recognizes Indiana authors’ contributions to the literary landscape in Indiana and across the nation. The Eugene & Marilyn Glick Indiana Authors Award is a program of The Indianapolis Public Library Foundation and is funded through the generosity of The Glick Fund, a fund of Central Indiana Community Foundation.

Award nominations were submitted from across the state in early spring. Any published writer who was born in Indiana or has lived in Indiana for at least five years was eligible. An eight-member, statewide Award Panel selected the National and Regional winners and the three Emerging Author finalists from the pool of publicly nominated authors.

National Author – $10,000 prize: A writer with Indiana ties, but whose work is known and read throughout the country. National authors are evaluated on their entire body of work. This award recipient will also designate a $2,500 grant for the public library of his or her choosing.
2015 winner: Marianne Boruch

Adrian Matejka
Regional Author – $7,500 prize: A writer who is well-known and respected throughout the state of Indiana. Regional authors were evaluated on their entire body of work. This award recipient will also designate a $2,500 grant for the public library of his or her choosing.
2015 winner: Adrian Matejka

Emerging Author – $5,000 prize: A writer who has published no more than two books during his/her lifetime. The title(s) must have been published within the last 10 years. Emerging authors were evaluated on these specific works. The award recipient will designate a $2,500 grant for the public library of his or her choosing. The Emerging Author winner will be named at the Oct. 10 Award Dinner.


The only other poets to win Indiana Authors Awards are Norbert Krapf (Regional 2014), Miocah Ling (Emerging 2011), and helen Frost (Regional 2011).

Note that the Emerging Artist Award will be announced later. One of the finalists, Skila Brown, specializes in novels in verse.

Skila Brown
BrownSkila Brown is the author of “Caminar,” a novel in verse set in 1981 Guatemala, about a boy who survives the massacre of his village and must decide what being a man during a time of war really means. Forthcoming books include the picture book “Slickety Quick: Poems About Sharks” and the verse novel “To Stay Alive: Mary Ann Graves and the Tragic Journey of the Donner Party,” all from Candlewick Press. She holds an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She grew up in Kentucky and Tennessee, lived for a bit in Guatemala, and now resides with her family in Indiana.
For more information, visit www.skilabrown.com.

Jul 9, 2015

Seeking Submissions: Poetic Portions. Deadline Aug. 15, 2015.

This message from Norma Gardner:
Norma Gardner and Mary Godsey editors of…
"Poetic Portions"
We are now accepting submissions of 4 to 5 poems for Poetic Portions to be published by Raindrop Press.

Send poems that best represent you as a poet.

There is no specific theme.  Rhymed and free verse and all forms and styles will be considered.  Simultaneous submissions and previously published poems are acceptable. (Please indicate the publication for proper credit.)   Send immediate notice of a poem under simultaneous submission becoming unavailable.  The author retains all future rights to poems following publication.  Payment is one contributor copy.
We accept submissions by postal mail or electronically by e-mail.  Paste each poem into the body of the e-mail.  Always type your name, address, phone, E-mail address at the top of each page.  E-mail your submission to njgardner2@att.net  and godseymary@att.net  You may also send via postal mail to:  Attn: Norma Gardner, PO Box 664, Greenwood, IN 46123. Always keep a copy of your work.  Deadline for submitting to our launching edition is August 27, 2015.
Please forward this message to
anyone  who writes poetry.


On Tutoring Children: Notes to Self

This week, I spent two evenings tutoring local homeless children on poetry, specifically rhythm and rhyme. (Other aspects of poetry, such as simile and metaphor, were covered in other weeks.

The ages ranged from age 5 to teens in high school. Though they were grouped by age, I noticed wide gaps in reading and writing levels. Still, most seemed eager to learn, especially the younger ones, the ones who had not yet acquired the patina of cool detachment.

When setting the task of writing a poem, I encouraged them to be creative, I told them about internal rhymes, slant rhymes, or about not rhyming at all.

One of the youngest participants wrote about his wish to live in a mall, where  ...

       "my car is yellow,
       and I drink Mello"
[a reference to Mello Yello soft drink.]"

A slightly older boy mentioned "living in a mansion/where I can do dancin'."

In one of the poems I read to them, I intentionally left out the last line and waited for them to come up with the missing line, based on the anticipated rhyme.

The older kids were difficult to reach. They seemed to perk up when I threw in song or hip-hop lyrics, but that did not inspire them to take chances with their own writing. Instead, they wanted to argue whether song lyrics can be poetry or whether an Etheridge Knight poem was racist.

A major blessing of this experience was also a curse. The school had volunteers to help the kids. They were a great help in keeping the kids focused and anticipating disruptive behavior, but at times they wanted to "help" the kids by doping the thinking for them. And sometimes the "help" was contradicting what I wanted the kids to do. ("No, you can't use that word for a rhyme." "You can't say that's you favorite food. That's nasty!" "That doesn't make sense.") 


Adonis at DePauw's Kelly Writers Series


From DePauw University's website:  http://www.depauw.edu/academics/departments-programs/english/visitingwritersseries/fall-2015/



Poet
Adonis
September 30, 2015
7: 30 pm
Thompson Recital Hall
(Green Center for Performing Arts)
 Adonis is the author of numerous collections of poetry, including Adonis: Selected Poems (2010, translated by Khaled Mattawa), Mihyar of Damascus: His Songs (2008), If Only the Sea Could Sleep(2002), and The Blood of Adonis (1971), which won the International Poetry Forum’s Syria-Lebanon Award. Adonis is also the author of the seminal work An Introduction to Arab Poetics(2003).

Adonis has won the first ever International Nâzim Hikmet Poetry Award, the Norwegian Academy for Literature and Freedom of Expression’s Bjørnson Prize, the Highest Award of the International Poem Biennial in Brussels, and the Syria-Lebanon Best Poet Award. In 1983 he was elected into the Stéphané Mallarmé Academy.
 
Breaking with the tradition of formal structure in Arabic poetry, Adonis experiments with free verse, variable meters, and prose poetry as he engages themes of exile and transformation, in a voice at once playful and prophetic. In a 2010 interview with Charles McGrath for the New York Times, Adonis stated, “I wanted to draw on Arab tradition and mythology without being tied to it,” adding, “I wanted to break the linearity of poetic text — to mess with it, if you will. The poem is meant to be a network rather than a single rope of thought.” Publishers Weekly described Adonis’ collection Mihyar of Damascus: His Songs as a “seminal, startling, volatile, founding work of Arabic-language modernism."

Adonis has taught at the Sorbonne, Damascus University, and the Lebanese University. He lives in Paris.

Jul 7, 2015

Nominate a poet for the state laureateship


Indiana has had four official poet laureates: Joyce Brinkman, Norbert Krapf, Karen Kovacik, and George Kalamaras, whose term ends this year. You can help choose the next laureate by nominating someone to the post. Here's the link to do so:
http://www.in.gov/activecalendar/EventList.aspx?view=EventDetails&eventidn=221761&information_id=216083&type&syndicate=syndicate

Who are you nominating?

Jul 4, 2015

HELEN GAYNOR: Healing, Inspiring, Empowering: How Literary Therapy Transforms the Soul

(The following article contains conclusions and opinion of the author, and not necessarily that of the owner of this blog.)


This is an article submitted by Helen Gaynor:



Healing, Inspiring, Empowering: How Literary Therapy Transforms the Soul
We sit down, and open the pages of a well-loved book. From the first sentence, we are transported into a world where our senses are set on a heightened sense of awareness; our hearts and minds are instantly engaged, and soon this brave new world we are venturing into will become our universe in concept and absorb our psyche as we journey with our protagonists. Literature, popular fiction, non-fiction, poetry – our interconnectedness with the writing world is so intimate and infinite that books will always be a ritual from which we never part. But it’s not just about providing a pleasurable escape, a leisurely pastime, or even the inciter of revolutions and testament to manifestos – literature guides us in so many ways, and is often the door through which we travel in order to gain a greater understanding of ourselves. For what greater medium of expression of the very thing which makes us human is there than art?

We find ourselves unconsciously unraveling our own psychological experiences when we turn to books. Our protagonists disclose an overwhelmingly personal experience and as we travel with them, we too undergo revelations, pain, beauty, loss, rebirth. And perhaps this is why an art form as fluid as poetry in particular is such an ideal medium – as well as great writing – for literary therapy, or what is also known as bibliotherapy.

The Power of the Written Word
Used as a holistic, psychoanalytic, and cognitive form of therapy, bibliotherapy entails the use of books to help individuals work through particular mental and physical challenges like anxiety, depression, and PTSD by accessing a “safe” world through which they can express their struggles as well as find resolution within the text itself, and help specialists to identify particular problems. This can be used as a stand-alone therapy, but is also extremely effective in accompaniment with other treatments by helping individuals to work through their emotions and develop coping techniques, as well as provide a safe outlet which can be accessed infinitely.

Literature is a very unique outlet where we confide in ourselves. The malleability of words and their connotations release them from their inhibitions which is why novels, short fiction and poetry in particular are more “accessible” to people who struggle to express their emotions with more conventional word use. We explore words, we explore ourselves – without the confines of definition. Because of this, we can use bibliotherapy as a means to help understand and work through our emotions by reading and opening up a safe, inclusive discussion, and we can also harness the power of creativity itself and release ourselves through writing. The process of writing itself – one which has the potential to become a remarkable catharsis – is how many writers have burst through their own psychological cocoons and emerged, raw and beautiful, into a fresh new world ready to bear the light.

The Resonance of the Spoken Song
We can even venture further and give our voices a stronger appeal – poetry slams are powerful gatherings where social change takes place alongside personal epiphanies and experiences of pain and beauty. Performance poetry is bare, exposed, and it makes us vulnerable, and our experiences all the more poignant. And just as importantly, it opens up the floor for dialogue. When we have a safe environment to share our emotions with others and talk about them, then we have the chance to move through with recovery. And this is why creative communities are so vital – whether it’s online forums dealing exclusively with mental challenges, or expressive therapy venues themselves. We find like-minded people with diverse experiences, we forge friendships, we have a chance to speak, and we are supported as well as given the chance to show support for others. It’s this sense of community where individuals find solidarity with one another, whether it’s about confronting issues of abuse, race, religion, sexuality, the environment, and more.

While Indiana’s own poetry slam scene is not as emergent as it was a few years ago, it still retains a strong community within the greater arts spectrum with organizations such as VOCAB promoting great events throughout the region. And Indiana’s community for literature and therapy is building – from offering comprehensive literary programs to encouraging discussion about literature’s capacity as a therapeutic tool itself. Indiana – already heralded on the map as one of the most esteemed destinations when it comes to creative writing – is a great place to re-engage with this discussion.

Of course, it is difficult to argue against literature as therapy. From that integral moment when we open a book, our minds have already begun to transform. We have already begun to release ourselves, to lose ourselves in the wonders, the contours, the echoes and colors of words and meter, of how they dance and come to life, and how this beautiful new song resounds in our own hearts.