Celebrating the launch of "Peripheral Writing," this issue's feature edited by Tan Lin: http://chax.org/eoagh/issuesix/tanlin.html, which includes:
Chris Funkhouser / Alejandro Crawford / E. Shaskan Bumas / Chris Alexander / Jeremy Sigler / Danny Snelson / Jennifer Moxley / Jerrold Shiroma / Juliana Spahr / Ben Lerner / Bernadette Corporation / Kit Robinson / Frances Richard / Diana Hamilton / Dan Machlin / Mashinka Firunts / Josef Kaplan / Brian Kim Stefans / Jonathan Skinner / Bruce Andrews / Kristen Gallagher / Chris Nealon / Diana Kingsley / Darren Wershler / Katherine Jaeger / Matthew Landis / Mina Pam Dick / Kieran Daly / Lee Ann Brown / Michelle Taransky / Edward Hopely / Jeremy James Foxtrot Thompson / Danielle Aubert / Amy Wright / Rachel Zolf / David Buuck / Mark Nowak / Patrick F. Durgin / Louis Asekoff / Rebecca Mertz / Paolo Javier / Amanda Raczkowski & Joseph Reed / Steve McLaughlin / Gordon Faylor / Sara Wintz / Prageeta Sharma
on Feb 1 at 6:30 PM
in the James Gallery
at CUNY Graduate Center
365 Fifth Avenue, NYC
(Free Admission)
Join us on Feb 1 at the James Gallery for a launch event hosted by Tim Peterson (Trace) featuring poetry readings and multimedia artworks/performances from the forthcoming Issue 6 of EOAGH, including:
Alejandro Crawford
Ana Bozicevic
Andrew Levy
Amy Wright
Bruce Andrews
Chris Alexander
Diana Kingsley
E. Shaskan Bumas
Filip Marinovich
Jeremy Sigler
Jesse Seldess
Jonathan Skinner
Josef Kaplan
Kristen Gallagher
Marc Nasdor
Michael Scharf
Paolo Javier
Rebecca Mertz
Tan Lin
Traver Pam Dick
Vincent Katz
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Tan Lin's Introduction for Peripheral Writing:
This issue looks at how and in what spaces writing takes place, i.e. the ambient environment of reading as well as the ecology of writing practices. If the amount of text being generated today is voluminous and threatens to transform a once-visual era into one structured by data and various communications protocols, the site specificity of the EOAGH cluster is distributive and ethnographic, like a reblog. What would a site-specific ethnography of writing look like? In an environment of re-circulated PDFs, scripting languages, the built environment, e-commerce, photo sharing as a discursive practice, network architectures, and the social more generally conceived, forms of non-writing comprise a re-distribution within the sphere formerly known as poetry. From this generic standpoint, the spaces poetry is said to occupy, or drift in create shared or communal references and appropriations. A few authors are a few allusions. Although individual authors are listed, a page functions best without them.
Tim had initially inquired about an issue of ambience, as a literary idea, and this section of EOAGH tries to site ambience, where ambience is understood as a medium rather than a genre. Non-writing is one of the forms such a medium might take. For this particular issue I asked individuals to:
send anything that is PERIPHERAL to their current writing (these could be actual words) or current writing practice (more generally), i.e. not immediately sensitive to a desire to do writing or intended to "be" writing.
It can be an image, a text you've read and not really thought about, a thought about something that you didn't write about etc etc etc.
It can be a series of linked items or it can be a single item, anything really but unconstrained by a desire to make it into something that it is not.
It should not have much to do with you, at least textually speaking.
I'm hoping this project might continue beyond the strict bounds of the invitation, with further entries submitted post February 1.