Here are my picks for events at the Associated Writers and Writing Programs (AWP) conference in Minneapolis in the U.S. from April 9 to 11. Below are events for the first full day of the conference, Thursday, April 9. Offsite events at the end of this post.
9:00 am to 10:15
am
Room 200
F&G, Level 2
R110. So You’re
a Writer. (Sha na na na, sha na na na na) Get a Job!. (Beth Concepcion, L.P.
Griffith, James Lough, Jonathan Segura) What job am I going to
get with my degree? Administrators hear that question and often answer,
“Teaching.” But not all writers want to teach. For those who do, full-time
positions are dwindling. Fortunately, there are more creative job opportunities
than ever before for talented writers. This panel discussion will show poets,
storytellers, and essayists how to earn a paycheck by channeling their
expertise into careers such as reviewing, copywriting, news, social media, and
promotional writing. A practical topic of
interest to anyone hoping to make a living in a field related to writing.
Room L100
F&G, Lower Level
R126A.
Discovering the Diverse Voices in Blue
Lyra Review. (Matthew Silverman, Lucille Lang Day, EJ Koh, Ken Lamberton,
Tim Tomlinson) The poetry editor and four contributors to Blue Lyra
Review, an online and print journal founded in 2012, will read their work.
Coming from California, South Korea, New York, Arizona, and Georgia, writing in
the fields in poetry, fiction, translation, and nonfiction, they exemplify the
journal’s mission to feature writers from ethnically, culturally, and
geographically diverse backgrounds, paying special homage to Jewish writers and
other underrepresented communities. BLR has published more than 200 writers and
growing. I don’t know all these writers,
but any magazine that publishes Lucy Lang Day is on to something.
10:30 am to
11:45 am
Auditorium Room
2, Level 1
R129. Rejection!
Everything You Always Wanted to Know (but Were Afraid to Ask). (Jill
Bialosky, Rob Spillman, Melissa Stein, MB Caschetta, David Baker) Top editors from W. W. Norton, Tin House, and
the Kenyon Review join emerging writers (including a literary-rejection blog
author) to dish about exactly how submissions are evaluated, what it’s like to
rebuff so many labors of love, the mysterious hierarchy of rejection slips,
whether and how the best work really gets published, tips to avoid surefire
rejection—and how to maintain faith in your work and your voice even when
rejections keep piling up. Audience questions encouraged! Another practical session on a topic of interest.
Room 211
A&B, Level 2
R145. Flat Lands
and Open Waters: Reading Hybridity into the Midwest. (Nickole Brown, Re'Lynn Hansen, Madelon Sprengnether, Alison Townsend, Rochelle Hurt) The paradigm of form has
shifted to include hybrid works such as the poem novella, the lyric essay, the
prose poem, and flash nonfiction. How do the challenges and rewards of living
in the flatlands yield to a fluidity and hybridity in writing? These Midwestern
authors, all published by the White Pine Press Marie Alexander series featuring
prose poem and hybrid forms, will read work and discuss the confluence of
aesthetics between living/writing from the midlands and having an openness to
form. Nickole Brown is an important poet
to hear, and the topic is very relevant to this conference’s setting.
12:00 pm to 1:15
pm
Room 200 D&E, Level 2
R169. A Lifetime of Experience in One Hour: The Art of the Craft Talk. (Zack Rogow, Wilton Barnhardt, Sena Jeter Naslund, Wesley Brown) With the rise of low-residency programs and writing institutes, craft talks have become an important medium to inspire and to transmit methods to the next generation of writers. Experienced faculty members from low-residency programs will discuss their ideas on what makes a compelling craft talk. How do you generate a theme or question? What techniques, aids, or tools help in presentation? How do you create a talk that is dynamic and useful to students and stays with them in their lives as writers? A panel I organized with three faculty from low-residency programs who are renowned for virtuoso craft talks.
Room 101 J,
Level 1
R167. Page Meets
Stage Tenth Anniversary Showdown Hosted by Taylor Mali. (Taylor Mali, Mahogany Browne, Nikola Madzirov, Richard Blanco, Bao Phi) Academic poets can’t read, and
slam poets can’t write. For ten years, the Page Meets Stage reading series in
NYC has been refuting that tired claim. Taylor Mali returns to AWP for the
fourth year in a row with a new combination of poets—ostensibly two each from
page and stage—who will answer one another, poem for poem, in an ongoing effort
to prove, as Horace said over 2,000 years ago, that the poetry most deserving
of our approbation is that which can delight and instruct at the same time. Richard Blanco is amazing, and Page Meets
Stage is always a strong event.
Room 200
H&I, Level 2
R171.
Adaptation. (Shawn Otto, Thomas Pope) A panel whose members have a dozen film
adaptations between them talk about the process: what filmmakers look for, the
differences between novels and films, and the business side of how movies do
and don't get made. Is there something a novelist can do to improve the chances
of selling movie rights? What sorts of novels make good and bad movies? Should
you try adapting your novel for film? Should you take the money and run? How
does the narrative structure of film differ from novels? Not many AWP panels on screenplays, so worth a try.
1:30 pm to 2:45
pm
Ballroom A,
Level 1
R190. The Pink
Tuxedos. (Carol Muske-Dukes, Rita Dove, Sophie Cabot Black) The poem-doo-wop singers, The Pink
Tuxedos, appeared as a special event at AWP in Palm Springs in 2001. Their new,
re-styled performance will reprise that earlier presentation (Great Poems sung
to doo-wop melodies—i.e. Donne's, "Batter My Heart, Three Person'd
God" to the tune of "One Summer Night", etc.). New arrangements
by composer Reena Esmail include Plath's "Daddy" sung to "Dream
Lover", Wordsworth's "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud" to Marvin
Gaye's "I Heard It Through the Grapevine," and beyond. The
performance will feature a guest appearance by Marilyn Nelson. This sounds really fun!
Scott James
Bookfair Stage, Level 1
R195. Word and
Music with Kim Addonizio, Peter Kline, Sam Ligon, Gary Copeland Lilley, and
Brittany Perham. (Kim Addonizio,
Brittany Perham, Sam
Ligon, Peter Kline) Nonstop
Beautiful Ladies, a word and music group featuring poet and fiction writer Kim
Addonizio; poets Peter Kline, Gary Copeland Lilley, and Brittany Perham; and
fiction writer Sam Ligon performs intersections of language, music, and song to
celebrate their latest books. Blues, spoken word, guitars, harmonica, and
bringing down the holy spirit! Another
fun event, with the inimitable Kim Addonizio.
Room 200
F&G, Level 2
R203. The Making
of Originals: Translation as a Form of Editing. (Susan Harris, Karen
Emmerich, Bill Johnston, Valzhyna
Mort, Rowan Ricardo Phillips) When is translation a form of editing? For
various reasons—multiple versions of texts, different standards in editing,
needs of publishers—translators often find themselves in the position of
revising and shaping the original text. Four translators discuss their
experiences in rewriting and editing, collaborating with authors, and
establishing definitive texts, and suggest approaches to producing a “new
original.” Good topic, good panel.
Room L100
H&I, Lower Level
R221. The Big
No: Taboo and Black Sexuality in Contemporary American Poetry. (Kyle
Dargan, Kima Jones, Chet'la Sebree, Kevin Simmonds, Lamar Wilson) Historically, African American
artists’ depictions of sexuality have conformed to or been forced to confront
what scholar Evelyn Higginbotham refers to as the politics of respectability.
This panel will examine how contemporary African American poets, though clearly
writing on the other side of the sexual revolution, continue to wrestle with
the ways in which their work troubles the political divisions between honest,
expansive sexual expression and the idea of social respectability. Provocative topic, sounds worthwhile.
3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Room L100 A,
Lower Level
R249. Intimate
Communities: How to Form and Keep a Writing Group That Works . (Daisy
Hernandez, Minal Hajratwala, Kristin Naca, Lorraine Lopez,
Julie Iromuanya) While writing groups are often seen as pit stops on the
way to the MFA or as a post-MFA transition experience, they can be challenging
to create and sustain. Five authors in poetry, fiction, and nonfiction share
practical strategies for forming an in-person or online group, dividing time
wisely, and critiquing fairly. They discuss how groups were essential in
drafting, revising, and publishing their books, and how to create a stellar
mini-community even if you live far from a literary epicenter. Writing groups are key to sustaining a
career for many authors, and this sounds useful.
4:30 pm to 5:45
pm
Ballroom A,
Level 1
R256. When
Poetry is About Something: Evaristo, Ostriker, and Weaver, Sponsored by the
African Poetry Book Fund / Prairie Schooner . (Chris Abani, Alicia Ostriker, Afaa Michael Weaver, Bernardine Evaristo) There's poetry,
and then there's important and necessary poetry. Bernardine Evaristo, Alicia
Ostriker, and Afaa Michael Weaver will read work that has emerged from an
engaged and intensely felt awareness of the world around them—within their
national borders and without. This work has earned them the respect of readers
around the world. Following the readings, there will be a conversation
moderated by Nigerian poet and fiction writer Chris Abani. This panel seems like it’s going to be informative.
Room M100 J,
Mezzanine Level
R280. Ut Cinéma
Poesis: Using Film in Poetry Workshops . (James Pate, Sandra Lim,
Lisa Fishman, Arda Collins, James Shea) Pasolini wrote poetry.
Frank O’Hara made a film. Poetry and film have long found inspiration in one
another. This panel of five poets explores ways to use film (Bergman,
Eisenstein, Maya Deren, Hirokazu Kore-eda, Trecartin) in poetry workshops. How
can film lead to writing exercises and discussions about poetic form, image,
repetition, sound, and juxtaposition? We also address new, evolving
technologies, such as iMovie and the iPhone, and consider how they might be
used in a poetry class. Interesting topic
on how poetry can reach a different audience.
6:30 pm to 8:00
pm
Room 203 A,
Level 2
R293. African
Poetry Book Fund and Prairie Schooner Reception. The African Poetry Book Fund
celebrates its new publications, Ladan Osman's The Kitchen Dweller's Testimony and the Eight New Generation
African Poets chapbook boxset. University of Nebraska-Lincoln Creative Writing
faculty, including Ted Kooser, Kwame Dawes, and Jonis Agee, will also read
excerpts from their work. Ladan Osman
gave a terrific reading at last year’s AWP in Seattle, introduced by Kwame
Dawes. Also former U.S Poet Laureate Ted Kooser will read.
OFFSITE EVENTS
6:30 to 9:30 pm
C'mere Honey: A
Live Performance, Book Launch & Party!
Honey, 205 E
Hennepin Ave, Minneapolis, MN 55414
URL:
http://www.honeympls.com/
Join Calypso
Editions, Carolina Wren Press, Drunken Boat, LNC, Manor House, Midway Journal,
Poetry International & Small Po[r]tions for a live performance &
worldwide book launch just blocks from the conference hotel. Join Marilyn Chin,
Patrick Rosal & Forrest Gander, among others. Good readers.
8:00 pm to 10 pm
Kattywompus Press reading
Kieran’s Pub,
Poetry Corner
85 N 6th St.,
Minneapolis
This reading
features new releases from Cornelius Eady and his band, Rough Magic; a new play
and prose poems by Christopher Shipman; poetry about music by Zack Rogow; Leah
Umansky‘s Mad Men poems; Robin Messing’s gentle wisdom; with drinks and dinner
available throughout the show.
On Thursday, April 9, 2015, from 3 to 4 pm, Zack Rogow will be signing copies of Shipwrecked on a Traffic Island and Other Previously Untranslated Gems by the French author Colette at the SUNY Press table, Booth 325. The book is cotranslated by Zack and by Renée Morel
Other recent posts about writing topics:
How to Get Published:
Part 1,
Part 2,
Part 3,
Part 4,
Part 5
Getting the Most from Your Writing Workshop:
Part 1,
Part 2,
Part 3,
Part 4,
Part 5,
Part 6,
Part 7
How Not to Become a Literary Dropout,
Part 1,
Part 2,
Part 3,
Part 4,
Part 5,
Part 6,
Part 7,
Part 8,
Part 9,
Part 10
Putting Together a Book Manuscript,
Part 1,
Part 2,
Part 3,
Part 4,
Part 5,
Part 6,
Part 7,
Part 8
Working with a Writing Mentor:
Part 1,
Part 2,
Part 3,
Part 4,
Part 5
Does the Muse Have a Cell Phone?:
Part 1,
Part 2,
Part 3,
Part 4,
Part 5
How to Deliver Your Message:
Part 1,
Part 2, Part 3,
Part 4,
Part 5,
Part 6
Why Write Poetry?
Part 1,
Part 2,
Part 3,
Part 4
Using Poetic Forms,
Part 1: Introduction;
Part 2: The Sonnet;
Part 3, The Sestina;
Part 4, The Ghazal;
Part 5, The Tanka