“I write myself a letter / instead of writing you,” the musician Arthur Russell wrote. What kinds of writing does the epistolary—writing a poem using the device of a letter—make possible? How does the epistolary poem capture or communicate the space it traverses between sender and addressee? How do the fictions of distance, elapsed time, or intimacy between the sender and the addressee change what’s possible for a poem to say—or how it’s possible for a poem to refuse to explain itself? We’ll use this Dis/Courses session to explore the curious permissiveness of the letter. We’ll read work in or about the epistolary by Ovid, Catullus, Bernadette Mayer, Sam D’Allesandro, Dodie Bellamy, John Keene and Shiv Kotecha, and we’ll practice writing epistolary poems—to ourselves, to each other, and to recipients dead or imaginary.
Events
Reading
Reading
Myung Mi Kim & Eleni Sikelianos
Reading
Launch for Beautiful Aliens: A Steve Abbott Reader
Master Class
LYING HOLDS THE PLEASURE / OF RUINING A FORM — Master Class with Elaine Kahn
Reading
Elaine Kahn with Coco Gordon Moore & Bridget Talone
Dis/Course
PERMISSIVE DISTANCE: ON THE EPISTOLARY POEM with Kay Gabriel
Dis/Course
Spring 2020 Dis/Course: Void and Terrain
Reading
Deborah Landau & Rachel Zucker
Workshop
Straight Lines, Knots, Quarter Turns — Repeat: Movement as a Mode of Thought — Free 10-Session Workshop with Rebekah Smith and Asiya Wadud
Reading
LINEAGE: Anne Carson, Wo Chan, Cathy Linh Che
Reading
ANONYMOUS MANIFESTO
Reading