EOAGH Issue 5
SATURDAY, OCT 3 @8 PM
Unnameable Books
600 Vanderbilt Ave, Brooklyn
This event co-sponsored by Chax Press
8:00
Amy King
8:15 Jeremy James Thompson
8:30
Mark Lamoureux
8:45
Christie Ann Reynolds
9:00 Eric Lindley
9:15
Bill Marsh
9:30
Adeena Karasick
9:45 Matthew Rotando
SUNDAY, OCT 4 @ NOON
Unnameable Books
600 Vanderbilt Ave, Brooklyn
This event co-sponsored by Chax Press
12:00 Glenn Mott
12:15 E.J. McAdams
12:30
Sara Wintz
12:45
Geoffrey Olsen
1:00 Karin Randolph
1:15 Filip Marinovich
1:30 Andrew Levy
1:45 Kate Colby
2:00 Pattie McCarthy
2:15 Graeme Bezanson
2:30 Chelsea Hodson
2:45 break
3:00 Gregory Laynor
3:15 Kristi Maxwell
3:30 Laura Goldstein
3:45 Gregory Vincent St. Thomasino
4:00 Paige Taggart
4:15 James Belflower
4:30 Christopher Stackhouse
4:45 Leah Souffrant
5:00 Joel Lewis
5:15 Sean Casey
5:30 Kristen Gallagher
5:45 Lawrence Giffin
6:00 Michael Kelleher
6:15 Rajiv Mohabir
6:30 Nick Piombino
6:45 break
7:00 Michael Rerick
7:15 N. M. Hoffman
7:30 Paul Siegell
7:45 Robyn Art
8:00 Penelope Bloodworth
8:15 Rick Snyder
8:30 Amanda Deutch
8:45 Stephanie Gray
9:00 Will Edmiston
TUESDAY, OCT 6 @6PM
Martin Segal Theater
365 Fifth Ave NYC
This event is co-sponsored by the Center for the Humanities,
the GC Poetics Group, and Chax Press
6:00
Dorothea Lasky
6:10
Kate Broad
6:20
Uche Nduka
6:30 John Harkey
6:40
Thomas Fink
6:50
CA Conrad
7:00
Benjamin Miller
7:10
Vincent Katz
7:20
Louis Bury
7:30
Anne Tardos
7:40
Emily Moore
7:50
Ari Banias
8:00
Paolo Javier
8:10 Stefania Heim
8:20
Kimberly Lyons
8:30
Emily Beall
8:40
Julian Brolaski
8:50
Sueyeun Juliette Lee
EOAGH: A Journal of the Arts presents Issue 5 in late
September 2009. A print edition of the journal will be available soon
through Chax Press. For ordering or subscription information, contact editor
Tim Peterson at [email protected]
EOAGH: A Journal of the Arts is concerned with reading as a process, the productive chaos of investigative poetic work. These acts of attention explore the close listening inherent not just in writing but also in being written. Inspired by Whitman's assertion that "Reading is a gymnast's act," we see readings as embodied, interdisciplinary responses that engage with one's environment through ekphrasis, phenomenology, queering, conceptual multiplicity, density and difficulty.We seek poetry, prose,
articles, and readings that address these concerns in contemporary avant-garde,
experimental, and innovative writing.
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