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Tag Archives: literature

National Book Awards Finalists Announced: Poetry

11 Thursday Oct 2012

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2012, Article, award, books, contest, Ferry, Finalist, Huntington, literature, National, news, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, reading, Seibles, Shapiro, Wheeler, writers, Writing

Let’s support the 2012 National Book Award Finalists for Poetry. Find the rest at the National Book Award Website.

David Ferry, Bewilderment: New Poems and Translations (University of Chicago Press)

Cynthia Huntington, Heavenly Bodies (Southern Illinois University Press)

Tim Seibles, Fast Animal (Etruscan Press)

Alan Shapiro, Night of the Republic (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Susan Wheeler, Meme (University of Iowa Press)

Michelle Bonczek Wins Chapbook Contest

07 Sunday Oct 2012

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2012, Article, Bonczek, Book, books, Chapbook, contest, Internet, literature, love, manuscript, mentor, Michelle, Monkey, news, online journal, Orange, personal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poetry editor, poets, Publishing, reading, Win, workshop leader, writers, Writing

Just wanted to send out a congratulations to Michelle Bonczek, our poetry editor, mentor, and workshop leader here at The Poets Billow, for winner the Orange Monkey Chapbook contest with her manuscript The Art of the Nipple. 

Poetry at 100

07 Sunday Oct 2012

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books, Lit. Journal, literature, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, reading, reading poetry, Writing

When Poetry Was an Olympic Event: Great Article from The New York Times

04 Thursday Oct 2012

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Article, books, Event, Internet, literature, New York Times, Olympics, poem, Poet, Poetry, reading, reading poetry, Writing

The torrent of sports poetry inspired by the London Olympics continues unabated: NPR even hosted Poetry Games, in which listeners voted on a selection of verse with an athletic theme by celebrated poets from various countries. But few people today recall that poetry, just like the 100 meters, was an official Olympic competition from 1912 to 1948. Sadly, the names of the medal winners are not listed on the International Olympic Committee’s rosters. And many of the winning poems in the so-called Pentathlon of the Muses — which had to be “inspired by the idea of sport” — have mysteriously vanished as well, perhaps, as critics have suggested, because of their dubious literary quality.
Read the rest of the article

Deadline Extended for Atlantis Poetry Award

01 Monday Oct 2012

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2012, atlantis, award, awards, contest, literature, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poetry award, poetry awards, poets, Prize, reading, reading poetry, Writing

The Poets Billow’s Atlantis Poetry Award Deadline has been extended to October 15th. You still have two weeks to submit your poems for the prize and receive comments on your work.

https://thepoetsbillow.org/poetry-awards/the-atlantis-award/

Natasha Trethewey on Her Revision Process

08 Saturday Sep 2012

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Article, elegy, father's elegy, final draft, hoyt, Laureate, literature, natasha trethewey, poem, Poet, poet laureate, Poetry, revision, revision process, Trethewey, Writing

This is a really insightful article on revision. Here’s an excerpt:

How Poet Laureate Natasha Trethewey Wrote Her Father’s ‘Elegy’

By Alex Hoyt

Now, the reader seeing the final draft doesn’t know that I have my own secret journal in which I feel “silenced” by my father. The work of the poem is following certain paths and not others. I have to decide whether or not I’m going to reveal to an audience this side of my relationship with my father. When I write notes in my journal, I’m just trying to scribble down as much as possible. Later on I decide whether to follow some of those first impressions or whether to abandon them.

Writing [by hand] frees up a mode of thinking that allows me to consider more things without censorship, the way I would censor if I were typing. If I start writing on a computer, I feel that it’s official. When I’m actually writing by hand, I get more of a sense of the rhythm of sentences, of syntax. The switch to the computer is when I actually start thinking about lines. That’s the workhorse part. At that point, I’m being more mathematical about putting the poem on the page and less intuitive about the rhythm of the syntax.

 

Need help unblocking your writing try the 20 lines project blog

26 Sunday Aug 2012

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blog, books, contest, Internet, literature, online journal, poem, Poetry, Prompt, reading, reading poetry, Writing

http://anexerciseindiscipline.wordpress.com/

Listen to this Poets Journey

09 Monday Jul 2012

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abusive stepfather, american music award, art, Article, books, celebrities, entertainment, Internet, Lit. Journal, literature, music, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, reading, reading poetry, teen motherhood, Writing

Joy Harjo’s ‘Crazy Brave’ Path To Finding Her Voice

In Crazy Brave, Joy Harjo recounts how her early years — an abusive stepfather, the hardships of teen motherhood — suppressed her artistic gifts and nearly broke her. “It was the spirit of poetry,” she writes, “who reached out and found me as I stood there at the doorway between panic and love.”

Joy Harjo has released four CDs, and won a Native American Music Award for Best Female Artist of the Year for her album, Winding Through the Milky Way.

Joy Harjo has released four CDs, and won a Native American Music Award for Best Female Artist of the Year for her album, Winding Through the Milky Way.

View caption Hulleah Tsinhnahjinnie

 
 

Hospitals Using Poetry to Help Their Patients

29 Friday Jun 2012

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art, Article, Health, Healthcare, Internet, Lit. Journal, literature, mary rizzo, medicine, new jersey hospitals, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poetry therapist, reading, reading poetry, research, Writing

N.J. medical professionals increasingly turn to poetry, literature to improve patient care

“We see literature as a way for health care workers to reconnect to the humanities of their patients, to see through someone else’s eyes and to understand their patient’s perspectives,” said Mary Rizzo, associate director of the council who runs “Literature & Medicine: Humanities at the Heart of Healthcare” in six New Jersey hospitals.

“Through studying literature, we learn to be better diagnosticians, better observers, better interviewers, better clinicians,” said Nancy Gross, who moderates the program at Overlook.

In hospitals across New Jersey and around the country, medical professionals are increasingly turning to poetry, novels and other forms of literature to help improve patient care. From book clubs to writing seminars to today’s Poetry and Medicine Day in Newark, hospitals are encouraging their staff to seek out literature to help increase empathy, learn about new cultures and improve communication among their team.

“Art always enriches life,” said Julia DiGioia, a physician at Overlook who is a member of the book program. “These are human stories. They give us a deeper appreciation of life and a new appreciation of what our patients can endure and triumph over.”

Diane Kaufman, a psychiatrist at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey in Newark, sees poetry and writing as integral to her work. As founder of Creative Arts Healthcare, she works with colleagues across the hospital to celebrate the arts.

Today, they present the third-annual “Poetry in Medicine Day,” a program featuring a morning lecture by a nationally renowned poetry therapist, workshops with five authors who have written about medical issues and discussions about using stories and poetry in clinical practice.

“Medicine is a creative endeavor,” Kaufman said. “Sometimes we split ourselves apart. This is a way to bring ourselves together and to announce out loud that we have a creative community here.”

Kaufman says studies show the use of arts — music, photography, paintings, writing — can help patients in their recovery.

 

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Poetry and Healthcare

28 Thursday Jun 2012

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access, art, Article, books, education, Health, Healthcare, hospital, Internet, Lit. Journal, literature, medicine, online journal, personal development activities, poem, Poet, Poetry, politics, reading, reading poetry, research, science, Society, Writing

Fiona Sampson
The Healing Word

Fiona Sampson pioneered the development of writing in health care in the UK. Her publication The Healing Word – a practical guide to poetry and personal development activities, commissioned by the Poetry Society, researches the nature and effects of poetry and healing activities based on actual accounts by workers and users in the health care system. Especially noteworthy are her “Ten Commandments” for good practice in running a poetry project in a healthcare setting. These include:

making sure there is supervision in order to provide a briefing and debriefing support system for the poet;

avoid a competitive environment;

ensure confidentiality with all participants’ writing.

As in any project, being clear about the remit equals good management. However, she suggested that future residencies could benefit from a project manager such as the Poetry Society. Especially in healthcare, poets are working alongside health professionals with very specific outcome models, so the more professionally managed a project is the better. “At the moment we know arts and poetry in healthcare is good because it’s about access… we could also advocate that people are taking part in a prestigious artistic endeavour”, says Sampson.

More at The Poetry Society

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