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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20090305T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20090305T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:Powell Reading
DESCRIPTION:D. A. Powell's books of poetry include Tea (Wesleyan\, 1998)\
; Lunch (Wesleyan\, 2000)\; and Cocktails (Graywolf\, 2004). The latter w
as a finalist for the PEN West\, Lambda\, Publishers' Triangle and Nation
al Book Critics Circle Awards. Chronic\, his fourth US collection\, will
appear in February of 2009. The New York Times wrote of Powell's work\,
"No accessible poet of his generation is half as original\, and no poet a
s original is this accessible." Among his many honors\, Powell has receiv
ed a Paul Engle Fellowship from the James Michener Center\, a fellowship
from the National Endowment for the Arts\, an Academy of American Poets P
rize\, and the Lyric Poetry Award from the Poetry Society of America. His
work has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies\, including New E
ngland Review\, the Washington Post\, Poetry\, the Norton anthology Hybri
d Forms and Best American Poetry 2008. D. A. Powell has taught at Columb
ia University\, the University of Iowa\, New England College\, Sonoma Sta
te University\, and San Francisco State University\; and for three years
he served as the Briggs-Copeland Lecturer in Poetry at Harvard University
. Powell currently teaches in the English Department at the University of
San Francisco.Co-sponsored by Watzek Library Special Collections Refres
hments will be served.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
D. A. Powell's books of poetry include
Tea (Wesleyan\, 1998)\; Lunch (Wesleyan\, 2000)\; and <
em>Cocktails (Graywolf\, 2004). The latter was a finalist for the PE
N West\, Lambda\, Publishers' Triangle and National Book Critics Circle A
wards. Chronic\, his fourth US collection\, will appear in February of 20
09.
The New York Times wrote of Powell's work\, "No accessible po
et of his generation is half as original\, and no poet as original is thi
s accessible." Among his many honors\, Powell has received a Paul Engle F
ellowship from the James Michener Center\, a fellowship from the National
Endowment for the Arts\, an Academy of American Poets Prize\, and the Ly
ric Poetry Award from the Poetry Society of America. His work has appeare
d in numerous journals and anthologies\, including New England Review
\, the Washington Post\, Poetry\, the Norton anthology Hybrid Forms and B
est American Poetry 2008.
D. A. Powell has taught at Columbi
a University\, the University of Iowa\, New England College\, Sonoma Stat
e University\, and San Francisco State University\; and for three years h
e served as the Briggs-Copeland Lecturer in Poetry at Harvard University.
Powell currently teaches in the English Department at the University of
San Francisco.
Co-sponsored by Watzek Library Special Collectio
ns
Refreshments will be served.
UID:20090306T030000Z-1@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090224T184437Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1-powell-reading
LAST-MODIFIED:20090225T024437Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/13_D.A._Powell_by_Trane_DeVore_resize.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/13_D.A._Powell_by_Trane_DeVore_resize.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Caption...
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20090402T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20090402T203000
LOCATION:Council Chambers
SUMMARY:Why Read? Lecture by Mark Edmundson
DESCRIPTION:Lecture: Why Read? \; A prize winning scholar\, Mark Ed
mundson has published a number of works of literary and cultural criticis
m including Teacher: The One Who Made the Difference\, Why Read?\, Nightm
are on Main Street and Literature Against Philosophy\, Plato to Derrida.
He has written for Raritan\, the New Republic\, the New York Times Magazi
ne\, the Nation\, and Harper's where he is a contributing editor. Mark Ed
mundson is NEH/Daniels Family Distinguished Teaching Professor at the Uni
versity of Virginia.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Lecture: Why Read?
\; A pr
ize winning scholar\, Mark Edmundson has published a number of works of l
iterary and cultural criticism including Teacher: The One Who Made th
e Difference\, Why Read?\, Nightmare on Main Street and Literature Against Philosophy\, Plato to Derrida. He has w
ritten for Raritan\, the New Republic\, the New Yor
k Times Magazine\, the Nation\, and Harper's where he is a
contributing editor. Mark Edmundson is NEH/Daniels Family Distinguished T
eaching Professor at the University of Virginia.
UID:20090403T023000Z-18@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090312T184625Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/18-why-read-lecture-by-mark-ed
mundson
LAST-MODIFIED:20090324T005109Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/22_mark_edmundson_photo.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:18
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/22_mark_edmundson_photo.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Caption...
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Lecture by Mark Edmundson
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20090930T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20090930T163000
LOCATION:Miller 102
SUMMARY:Petrarch and the Birth of Connoisseurship
DESCRIPTION:Faculty Colloquium with Karen Gross\, Assistant Professor
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Faculty Colloquium with Karen Gross\, A
ssistant Professor
UID:20090930T223000Z-78@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090917T110358Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/78-petrarch-and-the-birth-of-c
onnoisseurship
LAST-MODIFIED:20090918T165255Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:78
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Francesco Petrarca (1304-74) was particularly appreci
ative of the visual arts\, recording his reactions to ancient monuments i
n his letters and even owning works by Giotto and Simone Martini. \;
Consequently\, art historians have often sought in Petrarch the advent of
modern art criticism. \; This talk explores what was–and wasn't–
so innovative in Petrarch's observations and also muses on how the visual
arts may have shaped Petrarch's own literary creations.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:faculty event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091005T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091005T163000
LOCATION:Miller 102
SUMMARY:Dr. Craig Kallendorf: The Use and Abuse of Rhetoric in Shakespear
e's "Othello"
DESCRIPTION:This talk begins by sketching out the system of persuasive rh
etoric that was known to every schoolboy in Shakespeare's England. \;
The body of the talk shows how various persuasive devices–status theor
y\, enthymemes\, internal versus external proof–are used by Iago to man
ipulate Othello\, so that the play ends as an object lesson in what happe
ns when a good man forgets the rules of the argumentative game. \; Th
is reading of the play is one that would have made sense in Shakespeare's
day\, but still has the power to speak to us as well. Dr. Craig Kallend
orf teaches in the Department of European and Classical Languages at Texa
s A&\;M University and is the author of Virgil and the Myth of Venice:
\; Books and Readers in the Italian Renaissance.In coordination with
Exploration &\; Discovery's event scheduled for October 6. \;http
://www.lclark.edu/news/story/?id=2171 (http://www.lclark.edu/news/story/?
id=2171)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: This talk begins by sketching out the s
ystem of persuasive rhetoric that was known to every schoolboy in Shakesp
eare's England. \; The body of the talk shows how various persuasive
devices–status theory\, enthymemes\, internal versus external proof–a
re used by Iago to manipulate Othello\, so that the play ends as an objec
t lesson in what happens when a good man forgets the rules of the argumen
tative game. \; This reading of the play is one that would have made
sense in Shakespeare's day\, but still has the power to speak to us as we
ll.
Dr. Craig Kallendorf teaches in the Department of European an
d Classical Languages at Texas A&\;M University and is the author of <
em>Virgil and the Myth of Venice: \; Books and Readers in the Italian
Renaissance.
In coordination with Exploration &\; Disc
overy's event scheduled for October 6. \;http://www.lclark.edu/news
/story/?id=2171
UID:20091005T223000Z-81@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090917T124433Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/81-dr-craig-kallendorf-the-use
-and-abuse-of-rhetoric
LAST-MODIFIED:20090928T175535Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:81
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n This talk begins by sketching out the system o
f persuasive rhetoric that was known to every schoolboy in Shakespeare's
England. \; The body of the talk shows how various persuasive devices
are used by Iago to manipulate Othello\, so that the play ends as an obj
ect lesson in what happens when a good man forgets the rules of the argum
entative game. \; This reading of the play is one that would have mad
e sense in Shakespeare's day\, but still has the power to speak to us as
well.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091005T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091005T200000
LOCATION:Albany Quadrangle\, Gordon Smith Hall
SUMMARY:An Occasion for Poetry: Mary Szybist and Michele Glazer
DESCRIPTION:http://www.lclark.edu/events/info/?id=2166 (http://www.lclark
.edu/events/info/?id=2166)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:http://w
ww.lclark.edu/events/info/?id=2166
UID:20091006T020000Z-82@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090917T125235Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/82-an-occasion-for-poetry-mary
-szybist-and-michele
LAST-MODIFIED:20090917T202846Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:82
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Fall Reading sponsored by the Library of Congress\, C
enter for the Book\, The Oregon Center for the Book\, The Witter Bynner F
oundation\, and Lewis &\; Clark College. \; Reception to follow th
e Readings.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091012T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091012T173000
LOCATION:Watzek Library\, Pamplin Room
SUMMARY:Charles and Gail Entrekin: On Writing\, Publishing\, Activism\, a
nd Advocacy
DESCRIPTION:http://entrekinfoundation.org/index.html (http://entrekinfoun
dation.org/index.html)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:http://entrekinfoundation.or
g/index.html
UID:20091012T233000Z-101@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090918T093825Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/101-charles-and-gail-entrekin-
on-writing-publishing
LAST-MODIFIED:20090918T163825Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:101
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Charles Entrekin is the author of Red Mountain (2007)\, In This Hour (1989)\, Casting for the Cutthroat<
/em> (1980)\, and All Pieces of a Legacy (1975). \; Gail Ent
rekin's books of poems include Change (Will Do You Good) (2005)\
, You Notice the Body (1998)\, and John Danced (1988).&
#160\; The Entrekins currently serve as Co-Directors of the Entrekin Foun
dation\, a funder of nonprofit programs for the environment\, children\,
and the arts.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091020T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091020T200000
LOCATION:Albany Quadrangle\, Gordon Smith Hall
SUMMARY:One Man King Lear Performed by Johnny Stallings
DESCRIPTION:http://johnnystallings.com/kinglear.html (http://johnnystalli
ngs.com/kinglear.html)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:http://johnnystallings.com/kinglear.html
UID:20091021T020000Z-400@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20091014T095621Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/400-one-man-king-lear-performe
d-by-johnny-stallings
LAST-MODIFIED:20091014T165621Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:400
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Stallings first performed his solo version of <
em>King Lear in the Spring of 1978\, \;thanks to a CETA grant fr
om the Metropolitan Arts Commission of Portland. \; Keith Scales dire
cted. Since then he has performed in schools\, theaters\, prisons\, and&#
160\; at the \;Cornelia Connelly Theater in New York.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091022T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091022T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Reading by J.C. Hallman
DESCRIPTION:http://www.jchallman.com/ (http://www.jchallman.com/)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:http://www.jchallman.com/
UID:20091023T020000Z-83@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090917T125947Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/83-a-reading-by-jc-hallman
LAST-MODIFIED:20090917T200012Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:83
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:J.C. Hallman is the author of a variety of fiction an
d nonfiction \; In 2009\, he published a story collection\, The H
ospital for Bad Poets\, with Milkweed Editions\, and edited\, Th
e Story About the Story\, a collection of pieces on literature by wr
iters themselves: \; "criticism" combined with personal essay. \;
In 2010\, he will publish\, In Utopia\, a book about modern uto
pian movements and the history of utopian literature.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091026T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091026T200000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center\, Council Chambers
SUMMARY:A Reading by Tom Krattenmaker
DESCRIPTION:http://tomkrattenmaker.com/?page_id=2 (http://tomkrattenmaker
.com/?page_id=2)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:http://tomkrattenmaker.com/?page_id=2
a>
UID:20091027T020000Z-84@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090917T130610Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/84-a-reading-by-tom-krattenmaker
LAST-MODIFIED:20091029T184637Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:84
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Associate Vice President for Public Affairs and Commu
nications at Lewis &\; Clark College\, Tom Krattenmaker is also an awa
rd-winning writer specializing in religion in public life. \; His fir
st book\, Onward Christian Athletes\, with Rowman and Littlefiel
d Publishers\, is due for release in October 2009.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091104T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091104T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Reading by Chase Twichell
DESCRIPTION:http://www.ausablepress.org/b_chase.html (http://www.ausablep
ress.org/b_chase.html)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:http://www.ausablepress.org/b_chase.html
UID:20091105T030000Z-85@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090917T132301Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/85-a-reading-by-chase-twichell
LAST-MODIFIED:20090917T202301Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:85
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Chase Twichell's books of poetry include\, The Sn
ow Watcher (Ontario Review Press\, 1998)\, The Ghost of Eden (1995)\, Perdido (1991)\, The Odds (1986)\, and N
orthern Spy (1981). \; In 1999\, she founded Ausable Press.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091201T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091201T163000
LOCATION:Miller 105
SUMMARY:The Scaffold in the Marketplace: Johnson\, Hawthorne and the Roma
nce of Authorship
DESCRIPTION:http://www.english.ucla.edu/people/facpages.asp?person_id=35
(http://www.english.ucla.edu/people/facpages.asp?person_id=35)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:http://www.english.ucla.edu/people/facpages.a
sp?person_id=35
UID:20091201T233000Z-86@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20090917T133556Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/86-the-scaffold-in-the-marketp
lace-johnson-hawthorne
LAST-MODIFIED:20091103T200841Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:86
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Helen Deutsch\, Professor of English at UCLA\, will b
e discussing Samuel Johnson\, Nathaniel Hawthorne and each author's relat
ion to (and anxieties about) the literary marketplace.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100204T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100204T170000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center\, Council Chambers
SUMMARY:"The Gift and the Commons: Creativity and the Public Good"
DESCRIPTION:The Gift\, Lewis Hyde's groundbreaking study of creativity\,
explores the meaning of art in a market driven society. \; Hyde asks
questions central to the lives of artists as well as teachers and others
who serve the public good: \; How do we discover work that satisfies
beyond financial compensation? \; What is the artist's role in a cons
umer culture? \; What are our norms for reciprocity and how do gifts
create bonds in communities? \; Hyde's current project extends these
questions to the realm of the "cultural commons" – "that vast store of
unowned ideas\, inventions\, and works of art we have inherited from the
past\, and that we continue to create." \; As we debate "intellectual
property\, "cultural piracy\," and what counts as shared "cultural liter
acy\," these issues take on renewed urgency.In coordination with Explorat
ion and Discovery
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The Gift\, Lewis Hyde's groundbr
eaking study of creativity\, explores the meaning of art in a market driv
en society. \; Hyde asks questions central to the lives of artists as
well as teachers and others who serve the public good: \; How do we
discover work that satisfies beyond financial compensation? \; What i
s the artist's role in a consumer culture? \; What are our norms for
reciprocity and how do gifts create bonds in communities? \; Hyde's c
urrent project extends these questions to the realm of the "cultural comm
ons" – "that vast store of unowned ideas\, inventions\, and works of ar
t we have inherited from the past\, and that we continue to create." 
\; As we debate "intellectual property\, "cultural piracy\," and what cou
nts as shared "cultural literacy\," these issues take on renewed urgency.
In coordination with Exploration and Discovery
UID:20100205T000000Z-469@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20091029T101157Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/469-the-gift-and-the-commons-c
reativity-and-the-public
LAST-MODIFIED:20100105T222422Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:469
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Lewis Hyde is a poet\, essayist\, translator\, and cu
ltural critic with a particular interest in the public life of the imagin
ation. \;He is the author of The Gift \;(1983) and
Trickster Makes This World \;(1998).
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100217T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100217T203000
LOCATION:Agnes Flanagan Chapel
SUMMARY:Three Days Before the Shooting
DESCRIPTION:ABOUT THIS BOOK At his death in 1994\, Ralph Ellison left be
hind roughly two thousand pages of his unfinished second novel\, which he
had spent nearly four decades writing. Long awaited\, it was to have bee
n the work Ellison intended to follow his masterpiece\, Invisible Man. Fi
ve years later\, Random House published Juneteenth\, drawn from the centr
al narrative of Ellison's unfinished epic.Three Days Before the Shooting
… gathers together in one volume\, for the first time\, all the parts o
f that planned opus\, including three major sequences never before publis
hed. Set in the frame of a deathbed vigil\, the story is a gripping multi
generational saga centered on the assassination of the controversial\, ra
ce-baiting U.S. senator Adam Sunraider\, who's being tended to by "Daddy"
Hickman\, the elderly black jazz musician turned preacher who raised the
orphan Sunraider as a light-skinned black in rural Georgia. Presented in
their unexpurgated\, provisional state\, the narrative sequences form a
deeply poetic\, moving\, and profoundly entertaining book\, brimming with
humor and tension\, composed in Ellison's magical jazz-inspired prose st
yle and marked by his incomparable ear for vernacular speech. Beyond its
richly compelling narratives\, Three Days Before the Shooting … is per
haps most notable for its extraordinary insight into the creative process
of one of this country's greatest writers. In various stages of composit
ion and revision\, its typescripts and computer files testify to Ellison'
s achievement and struggle with his material from the mid-1950s until his
death forty years later. Three Days Before the Shooting … is an essent
ial\, fascinating piece of Ralph Ellison's legacy\, and its publication i
s to be welcomed as a major event for American arts and letters. ABOUT T
HE EDITORS John F. Callahan is Morgan S. Odell Professor of Humanities a
t Lewis & Clark College in Portland\, Oregon. His writings include a no
vel\, A Man You Could Love. He is the editor of the Modern Library editio
n of The Collected Essays of Ralph Ellison and is the literary executor o
f Ralph Ellison's estate. Adam Bradley is a Lewis &\; Clark alumni (1
996) and Associate Professor of English at the University of Colorado at
Boulder. He is the author of the forthcoming Ralph Ellison–in–Progres
s\, a critical study of Ellison's unfinished second novel.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: ABOUT THIS BOOK
At his death
in 1994\, Ralph Ellison left behind roughly two thousand pages of his unf
inished second novel\, which he had spent nearly four decades writing. Lo
ng awaited\, it was to have been the work Ellison intended to follow his
masterpiece\, Invisible Man. Five years later\, Random House published Ju
neteenth\, drawn from the central narrative of Ellison's unfinished epic.
Three Days Before the Shooting … gathers togeth
er in one volume\, for the first time\, all the parts of that planned opu
s\, including three major sequences never before published. Set in the fr
ame of a deathbed vigil\, the story is a gripping multigenerational saga
centered on the assassination of the controversial\, race-baiting U.S. se
nator Adam Sunraider\, who's being tended to by "Daddy" Hickman\, the eld
erly black jazz musician turned preacher who raised the orphan Sunraider
as a light-skinned black in rural Georgia. Presented in their unexpurgate
d\, provisional state\, the narrative sequences form a deeply poetic\, mo
ving\, and profoundly entertaining book\, brimming with humor and tension
\, composed in Ellison's magical jazz-inspired prose style and marked by
his incomparable ear for vernacular speech.
Beyond its richly com
pelling narratives\, Three Days Before the Shooting …
is perhaps most notable for its extraordinary insight into the creative p
rocess of one of this country's greatest writers. In various stages of co
mposition and revision\, its typescripts and computer files testify to El
lison's achievement and struggle with his material from the mid-1950s unt
il his death forty years later. Three Days Before the Shooting … is an essential\, fascinating piece of Ralph Ellison's legacy\
, and its publication is to be welcomed as a major event for American art
s and letters.
ABOUT THE EDITORS
John F. Callahan is Mo
rgan S. Odell Professor of Humanities at Lewis & Clark College in Portl
and\, Oregon. His writings include a novel\, A Man You Could Love. He is the editor of the Modern Library edition of The Collecte
d Essays of Ralph Ellison and is the literary executor of Ralph
Ellison's estate.
Adam Bradley is a Lewis &\; Clark alumni (19
96) and Associate Professor of English at the University of Colorado at B
oulder. He is the author of the forthcoming Ralph Ellison–in–Prog
ress\, a critical study of Ellison's unfinished second novel.
UID:20100218T033000Z-923@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100107T115113Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/923-three-days-before-the-shoo
ting
LAST-MODIFIED:20100107T200327Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:923
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Co-editors John F. Callahan and Adam Bradley will rea
d from Three Days Before the Shooting: \; The Unfinished Second N
ovel by Ralph Ellison. \; Released by Random House January 2010.
\n
\nBook signing and reception immediately follow
ing the reading
\nLewis &\; Clark College Bookstore and
Trail Room
\nTempleton Campus Center
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100301T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100301T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Creative Nonfiction Reading by Susan Kirschner
DESCRIPTION:Susan Kirschner is a Senior Lecturer in the Humanities at Lew
is &\; Clark College\, where she teaches creative non-fiction. \;
She has written essays on Virginia Woolf\, Alice Walker\, and pedagogy\,
and her current project is a memoir about her family's life in pre-WWII A
ustria\, and their flight on the eve of war.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Susan Kirschner is a Senior Lecturer in
the Humanities at Lewis &\; Clark College\, where she teaches creativ
e non-fiction. \;She has written essays on Virginia Woolf\, Alice Wa
lker\, and pedagogy\, and her current project is a memoir about her famil
y's life in pre-WWII Austria\, and their flight on the eve of war.
UID:20100302T030000Z-473@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20091029T111930Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/473-a-creative-nonfiction-read
ing-by-susan-kirschner
LAST-MODIFIED:20100224T211421Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/38_Susan_Kirschner_FA07.rev.1373936431.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:473
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/38_Susan_Kirschner_FA07.rev.1373936431.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Susan Kirschner is a Senior Lecturer in the Humanitie
s at Lewis &\; Clark College\, where she teaches creative non-fiction.
\;She has written essays on Virginia Woolf\, Alice Walker\, and ped
agogy\, and her current project is a memoir about her family's life in pr
e-WWII Austria\, and their flight on the eve of war.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100315T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100315T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:CANCELLED - A Colloquium with Shaye Areheart\, Editor\, Random Ho
use
DESCRIPTION:Shaye Areheart is an editor at Random House. \; She direc
ts her own imprint\, Shaye Areheart Books\, which publishes a range of fi
ction\, both literary and commercial. \; Her list of authors includes
: \; Chris Bohjalian\, Alice Hoffman\, Pauls Toutonghi\, Lisa Unger\,
Gillian Flynn\, Mary McGarry Morris\, Katharine Weber\, Alison Winn Scot
ch\, Alicia Brian\, and Keith Donohue. \; She lives in New York City.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Shaye Areheart is an editor at Random H
ouse. \; She directs her own imprint\, Shaye Areheart Books\, which p
ublishes a range of fiction\, both literary and commercial. \; Her li
st of authors includes: \; Chris Bohjalian\, Alice Hoffman\, Pauls To
utonghi\, Lisa Unger\, Gillian Flynn\, Mary McGarry Morris\, Katharine We
ber\, Alison Winn Scotch\, Alicia Brian\, and Keith Donohue. \; She l
ives in New York City.
UID:20100316T020000Z-1300@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100224T101002Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1300-cancelled-a-colloquium-wi
th-shaye-areheart
LAST-MODIFIED:20100315T203403Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/9679_shaye_areheart.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1300
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/9679_shaye_areheart.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Photo Credit: Jamie Bernanke
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:As a result of travel complications associated with w
inter storms on the east coast\, "A Colloquium with Shaye Areheart" is ca
ncelled.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100329T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100329T200000
LOCATION:Smith Hall
SUMMARY:Poetry Readings by Matthew Dickman and Carl Adamshick
DESCRIPTION:Matthew Dickman's first collection of poetry\, All American P
oem \;(Copper Canyon Press\, 2008)\, received the American Poetry Rev
iew/Honickman First Book Award. \; In addition\, Dickman has received
fellowships for his work from the Michener Center for Writers\, the Verm
ont Studio Centers\, and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown.  
\;He lives and works in Hudson\, New York. \; Carl Adamshick has pub
lished poems in Beloit Poetry Journal\, American Literary Review\, Rhino
and Mid-American Review. He lives in Portland\, Oregon. [2008].
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Matthew Dickman's first collection of p
oetry\, All American Poem \;(Copper Canyon Press\, 2008)\, r
eceived the American Poetry Review/Honickman First Book Award. \; In
addition\, Dickman has received fellowships for his work from the Michene
r Center for Writers\, the Vermont Studio Centers\, and the Fine Arts Wor
k Center in Provincetown. \;He lives and works in Hudson\, New York.
\;
Carl Adamshick has published poems in Beloit Poetry J
ournal\, American Literary Review\, Rhino and Mid-American Revie
w. He lives in Portland\, Oregon. [2008].
UID:20100330T020000Z-1406@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100308T112455Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1406-poetry-readings-by-matthe
w-dickman-and-carl
LAST-MODIFIED:20100308T192455Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/9831_carl_adamshick.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1406
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/9831_carl_adamshick.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Carl Adamshick
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Poets Matthew Dickman and Carl Adamshick will offer r
eadings from their respective works.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100331T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100331T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Pete Rock
DESCRIPTION:Peter Rock is an Associate Professor of Creative Writing at R
eed College in Portland\, Ore. He has been with Reed College since 2001.P
eter Rock was born and raised in Salt Lake City\, Utah. He is the author
of the novels The Unsettling\, The Bewildered\, The Ambidextrist\, This i
s the Place\, and Carnival Wolves. Rock attended Deep Springs College\, r
eceived a BA in English from Yale University\, and held a Wallace Stegner
Fellowship at Stanford University. He has taught fiction at the Universi
ty of Pennsylvania\, Yale\, Deep Springs College\, and in the MFA program
at San Francisco State University. His stories and freelance writing hav
e both appeared widely. He is the recipient of a National Endowment for t
he Arts Fellowship.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Peter Rock is an Associa
te Professor of Creative Writing at Reed College in Portland\, Ore. He ha
s been with Reed College since 2001.
Peter Rock wa
s born and raised in Salt Lake City\, Utah. He is the author of the novel
s The Unsettling\, The Bewildered\, The Ambidextrist\, This is the Place\
, and Carnival Wolves. Rock attended Deep Springs College\, received a BA
in English from Yale University\, and held a Wallace Stegner Fellowship
at Stanford University. He has taught fiction at the University of Pennsy
lvania\, Yale\, Deep Springs College\, and in the MFA program at San Fran
cisco State University. His stories and freelance writing have both appea
red widely. He is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fell
owship.
UID:20100401T020000Z-1301@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100224T102658Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1301-a-fiction-reading-by-pete
-rock
LAST-MODIFIED:20100224T182658Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/9680_peterock.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1301
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/9680_peterock.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Pete Rock
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Pete Rock is an Associate Professor of Creative Writi
ng at Reed College in Portland\, Oregon. \; He is the author of the n
ovels The Unsettling\, The Bewildered\, The Ambidex
trist\, This is the Place\, and Carnival Wolves.&#
160\; He is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship
.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100401T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100401T200000
LOCATION:Smith Hall
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Lewis & Clark College Alum Nick Lantz
DESCRIPTION:Nick Lantz is a writer living in Madison\, Wisconsin. His fir
st book of poetry\, We Don't Know We Don't Know\, (http://www.nick-lantz.
com/Nick_Lantz/We_Dont_Know.html) won the Breadloaf Writer's Conference B
akeless Prize and was recently published by Graywolf Press. His second bo
ok\, The Lightning That Strikes the Neighbors' House\, was selected by fo
rmer U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky for the Felix Pollak Prize in Poetr
y and will be published by the University of Wisconsin Press in April 201
0. He received a BA in Religious Studies from Lewis &\; Clark College
in Portland\, Oregon and an MFA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
He was the 2007-2008 Jay C. and Ruth Halls Poetry Fellow at the Wisconsi
n Institute for Creative Writing. His work has been published in journals
such asMARGIE\, Mid-American Review\, Southern Review\, Locuspoint\, Gul
f Coast\,andPrairie Schooner.Refreshments will be served.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Nick Lantz is a
writer living in Madison\, Wisconsin. His first book of poetry\, We Don't Know We Don't Know\, won the Brea
dloaf Writer's Conference Bakeless Prize and was recently published by Gr
aywolf Press. His second book\, The Lightning That Strikes the Neighbors' House\, was selecte
d by former U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky for the Felix Pollak Prize i
n Poetry and will be published by the University of Wisconsin Press in Ap
ril 2010. He received a BA in Religious Studies fro
m Lewis &\; Clark College in Portland\, Oregon and an MFA from the Uni
versity of Wisconsin-Madison. He was the 2007-2008 Jay C. and Ruth Halls
Poetry Fellow at the Wisconsin Institute for Creative Writing. His work h
as been published in journals such asMARGIE\
, Mid-American Review\, Southern Review\, Locuspoint\, Gulf Coast\,andPrairie Schooner
span>.
Refreshments will be
served.
UID:20100402T020000Z-475@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20091029T113240Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/475-a-poetry-reading-by-lewis-
clark-college-alum
LAST-MODIFIED:20100401T195420Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:475
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:NIck Lantz\, winner of the 2010 Felix Pollak Prize\,
will read from his recently published collection of poems. \;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100413T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100413T170000
LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, Room 105
SUMMARY:English Honors Presentations by Asher Katz and Kit Shields
DESCRIPTION:English honors students Asher Katz and Kit Shields will prese
nt their papers to faculty\, students\, and the community. \; Please
join us in celebrating their work. \; In addition\, this will be a un
ique opportunity for freshman\, sophomore\, and junior students to learn
more about what pursuing an honors project entails.Refreshments will be s
erved.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: English honors students Asher Katz and
Kit Shields will present their papers to faculty\, students\, and the com
munity. \; Please join us in celebrating their work. \; In additi
on\, this will be a unique opportunity for freshman\, sophomore\, and jun
ior students to learn more about what pursuing an honors project entails.
Refreshments will be served.
UID:20100413T230000Z-1562@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100412T093558Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1562-english-honors-presentati
ons-by-asher-katz-and-kit
LAST-MODIFIED:20100413T192718Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1562
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:English honors students Asher Katz and Kit Shields wi
ll present their papers to faculty\, students\, and the community. \;
Please join us in celebrating their work. \; In addition\, this will
be a unique opportunity for freshman\, sophomore\, and junior students t
o learn more about what pursuing an honors project entails.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public|student events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100417T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100417T150000
LOCATION:Evans Music Auditorium
SUMMARY:Songbird - Student Composition Recital
DESCRIPTION:The concert features an exciting new collaborative project in
volving students in the Composition and English programs. \; Faculty
members Doug Erickson (Special Collections Head/Archivist)\, Mary Szybi
st (Assistant Professor of English)\, and Michael Johanson (Assistant Pr
ofessor of Music) developed this collaborative project\, in which studen
ts in Professor Johanson's Beginning Composition class worked with the s
tudents of L&\;C Professor Szybist's Poetry class. \; The compose
rs set students' poems to music\, and it is these works that will be pre
miered at the concert. Student\, faculty\, and guest perfomers will appe
ar on this recital. \; Featured guest and faculty perfomers are sopr
ano Renéee Favand\, soprano Barbara Skipworth\, and pianist Lourdes Joh
anson. The concert will also feature works by students studying private
composition. The concert is free and open to the public. \; A small
reception will follow the concert. Some of the featured pieces include:
"My Night Before a New Year": poem by Sydney Viles \; Composer:Ryan
Morrow Performers: Barbara Skipworth\, soprano\; Renato Fabbro\, piano
"Drive": poem by Kelly Aldinger Composer: Jerred Blanchard Performers:
Barbara Skipworth\, soprano\; Renato Fabbro\, piano "Shortness of Breat
h": poem by Brad Jonas Composer: Patrick Beaulieu-Hardin Perfomers: Bar
bara Skipworth\, soprano\; Renato Fabbro\, piano "One Afternoon in the C
olumbia River Gorge": poem by Lauren Furnish Composer: Joshua Rolv Dunha
m Performers: Renée Favand\, soprano\; Renato Fabbro\, piano
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The concert features an exciting new co
llaborative project involving students in
the Composition and Engl
ish programs. \; Faculty members Doug Erickson (Special
Collec
tions Head/Archivist)\, Mary Szybist (Assistant Professor of
Engli
sh)\, and Michael Johanson (Assistant Professor of Music) developed this<
br /> collaborative project\, in which students in Professor Johanson's
Beginning
Composition class worked with the students of L&\;C P
rofessor Szybist's Poetry
class. \; The composers set students
' poems to music\, and it is these works that
will be premiered at
the concert.
Student\, faculty\, and guest perfomers will a
ppear on this recital. \; Featured
guest and faculty perfomers
are soprano Renéee Favand\, soprano Barbara
Skipworth\, and pian
ist Lourdes Johanson.
The concert will also feature works by
students studying private composition.
The concert is free and op
en to the public. \; A small reception will follow the
concert
.
Some of the featured pieces include:
"My Nigh
t Before a New Year": poem by Sydney Viles \; Composer:Ryan Morrow
Performers: Barbara Skipworth\, soprano\; Renato Fabbro\, piano
"Drive": poem by Kelly Aldinger
Composer: Jerred Blanchar
d
Performers: Barbara Skipworth\, soprano\; Renato Fabbro\, piano<
br />
"Shortness of Breath": poem by Brad Jonas
Composer: P
atrick Beaulieu-Hardin
Perfomers: Barbara Skipworth\, soprano\; Re
nato Fabbro\, piano
"One Afternoon in the Columbia River Gor
ge": poem by Lauren Furnish
Composer: Joshua Rolv Dunham
Pe
rformers: Renée Favand\, soprano\; Renato Fabbro\, piano
UID:20100417T210000Z-1575@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100415T101734Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1575-songbird-student-composit
ion-recital
LAST-MODIFIED:20100415T171943Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1575
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:You are cordially invited to come join in on the fun
as students in the Lewis &\;
\nClark Composition program present
their latest musical creations!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public|student events
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100420T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100420T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:Senior Poetry Readings
DESCRIPTION:Senior Lewis &\; Clark College English majors will be read
ing original works of poetry.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Senior Lewis &\; Clark College Engli
sh majors will be reading original works of poetry.
UID:20100421T020000Z-870@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100105T142945Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/870-senior-poetry-readings
LAST-MODIFIED:20100105T222945Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:870
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Senior Lewis &\; Clark College English majors will
be reading original works of poetry.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100427T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100427T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:Senior Fiction Readings
DESCRIPTION:Senior Lewis &\; Clark College English majors will be read
ing original works of fiction.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Senior Lewis &\; Clark College Engli
sh majors will be reading original works of fiction.
UID:20100428T020000Z-871@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100105T143114Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/871-senior-fiction-readings
LAST-MODIFIED:20100105T223146Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:871
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Senior Lewis &\; Clark College English majors will
be reading original works of fiction.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100428T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100428T170000
LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, Room 102
SUMMARY:Lewis & Clark Literary Review Annual Student Readings
DESCRIPTION:Please join in the celebration of the 2009-2010 Literary Revi
ew students at their annual reading of works published in this year's Lew
is &\; Clark Literary Review. \; All are welcome. \; Light ref
reshments will be served.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join in the celebration of the 2
009-2010 Literary Review students at their annual reading of works publis
hed in this year's Lewis &\; Clark Literary Review. \; Al
l are welcome. \; Light refreshments will be served.
UID:20100428T230000Z-1567@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100413T122634Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1567-lewis-clark-literary-revi
ew-annual-student
LAST-MODIFIED:20100419T180209Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1567
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join in the celebration of the 2009-2010 Liter
ary Review students at their annual reading of works published in this ye
ar's Lewis &\; Clark Literary Review. \; All are welcome.
\; Light refreshments will be served.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100928T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100928T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Author Lee Montgomery
DESCRIPTION:Lee Montgomery is the author of The Things Between Us\, A Mem
oir (Free Press\, August 2006)\, Whose World Is This? Stories (University
of Iowa Press\, September 2007)\, and Searching for Emily: Illustrated (
Nothing Moments Press\, October 2007). The Things Between Us received the
2007 Oregon Book Award in creative nonfiction and Whose World Is This? t
he 2007 John Simmons Iowa Short Fiction Award. She has an undergraduate
degree in Biology from Antioch College and an MFA in creative writing fro
m the Iowa Writer's Workshop. She was the fiction editor at the Iowa Revi
ew\, the editor of the Santa Monica Review\, and editor of Transgressions
: The Iowa Anthology of Innovative Fiction (University of Iowa Press)\, A
bsolute Disaster: Fiction from Los Angeles (Dove Books)\, and the upcomin
g Woof! Writers on Dogs (Viking Penguin\, September 2008). Montgomery's
fiction has appeared in Black Clock\, Iowa Review\, Denver Quarterly\, St
ory Magazine\, Black River Review\, the Santa Monica Review and the Antio
ch Review. Nonfiction has been published in Alaska Quarterly\, the Americ
an Book Review\, Boston Magazine\, Travel Holiday\, 'Scape\, The Hollywoo
d Reporter\, Tin House\, Paris Passion\, Boston Phoenix\, the Oregonian\,
Willamette Week New England Monthly\, the Antioch Review and the antholo
gy The Honeymoon is Over (January 2007\, Warner Books). Whose World is Th
is? was also nominated for the 2008 Ken Kesey Award in Fiction. She is t
he editorial director of Tin House Books and the executive editor for Tin
House magazine. She lives with her husband and their two bizarre dogs in
Portland\, Oregon. \; Free and open to the public. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Lee Montgomery is the author of The
Things Between Us\, A Memoir (Free Press\, August 2006)\, Whose
World Is This? Stories (University of Iowa Press\, September 2007)\
, and Searching for Emily: Illustrated (Nothing Moments Press\,
October 2007). The Things Between Us received the 2007 Oregon Bo
ok Award in creative nonfiction and Whose World Is This? the 200
7 John Simmons Iowa Short Fiction Award.
She has an undergra
duate degree in Biology from Antioch College and an MFA in creative writi
ng from the Iowa Writer's Workshop. She was the fiction editor at the Iow
a Review\, the editor of the Santa Monica Review\, and editor of Tran
sgressions: The Iowa Anthology of Innovative Fiction (University of
Iowa Press)\, Absolute Disaster: Fiction from Los Angeles (Dove
Books)\, and the upcoming Woof! Writers on Dogs (Viking Penguin\
, September 2008).
Montgomery's fiction has appeared in
Black Clock\, Iowa Review\, Denver Quarterly\, Story Magazine\,
Black River Review\, the Santa Monica Review and the Antioch Rev
iew. Nonfiction has been published in Alaska Quarterly\, the Ame
rican Book Review\, Boston Magazine\, Travel Holiday\, 'Scape\, The Holly
wood Reporter\, Tin House\, Paris Passion\, Boston Phoenix\, the Oregonia
n\, Willamette Week New England Monthly\, the Antioch Review and the anthology The Honeymoon is Over (January 2007\, Warner
Books). Whose World is This? was also nominated for the 2008 Ke
n Kesey Award in Fiction.
She is the editorial director of T
in House Books and the executive editor for Tin House magazine.
She lives with her husband and their two bizarre dogs in Portland\, Orego
n.
\;
Free and open to the public.
\;
p>
UID:20100929T020000Z-2938@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100909T121029Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/2938-a-fiction-reading-by-auth
or-lee-montgomery
LAST-MODIFIED:20100909T192422Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/13552_lee_montgomery_pic.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:2938
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/13552_lee_montgomery_pic.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Lee Montgomery
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English is pleased to announce a re
ading by author and Oregon Book Award Winner Lee Montgomery.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101014T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101014T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Kevin Prufer
DESCRIPTION:KEVIN PRUFER's fifth book\, IN A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY\, will soo
n be published by Four Way Books. \;His most recent collection\, NAT
IONAL ANTHEM (Four Way Books\, 2008)\, was named one of the five best poe
try books of 2008 by PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. \;He's also co-editor of NEW
EUROPEAN POETS (Graywolf Press\, 2008)\, Editor-at-Large of PLEIADES: A
JOURNAL OF NEW WRITING\, and Professor in the Creative Writing Program at
The \;University of Houston.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
KEVIN PRUFER's fifth book\, IN A BEAU
TIFUL COUNTRY\, will soon be published by Four Way Books. \;His most
recent collection\, NATIONAL ANTHEM (Four Way Books\, 2008)\, was named
one of the five best poetry books of 2008 by PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. \;He
's also co-editor of NEW EUROPEAN POETS (Graywolf Press\, 2008)\, Editor-
at-Large of PLEIADES: A JOURNAL OF NEW WRITING\, and Professor in the Cre
ative Writing Program at The \;University of Houston.
UID:20101015T020000Z-2939@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100909T130807Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/2939-a-poetry-reading-by-kevin
-prufer
LAST-MODIFIED:20100909T201148Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/13553_kevin_prufer_pic.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:2939
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/13553_kevin_prufer_pic.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Kevin Prufer
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n The Department of English welcomes poet Kevi
n Prufer whose most recent collection\, NATIONAL ANTHEM (Four Way Books\,
2008)\, was named one of the five best poetry books of 2008 by PUBLISHER
S WEEKLY.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101028T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101028T200000
LOCATION:Watzek Library Atrium
SUMMARY:Oregon Poet Laureate Celebration
DESCRIPTION:The Lewis &\; Clark College Community and the general publ
ic is invited to a reception for the Oregon Poet Laureates exhibit on Oct
ober 28th at 7:00 pm in Albany Quadrangle\, Smith Hall. The reception wil
l feature readings by Paulann Petersen and Lawson Inada\, as well as virt
ual readings through recordings of past poet laureates. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The Lewis &\; Clark College Communit
y and the general public is invited to a reception for the Oregon Poet La
ureates exhibit on October 28th at 7:00 pm in Albany Quadrangle\, Smith H
all. The reception will feature readings by Paulann Petersen and Lawson I
nada\, as well as virtual readings through recordings of past poet laurea
tes.
\;
UID:20101029T020000Z-3240@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100917T131800Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3240-oregon-poet-laureate-cele
bration
LAST-MODIFIED:20101019T174105Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/14455_poet_laureates.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3240
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/14455_poet_laureates.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Paulann Petersen
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Lewis &\; Clark College Community and the gene
ral public is invited to a reception for the Oregon Poet Laureates exhibi
t on October 28th at 7:00 pm. The reception will feature readings by Paul
ann Petersen and Lawson Inada\, as well as virtual readings through recor
dings of past poet laureates.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101104T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101104T163000
LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, Room 105
SUMMARY:Faculty Colloquium with Professor Rachel Cole
DESCRIPTION:"Pearl Prynne: Witch-Baby or a New Model of American Personho
od?" In the first half of The Scarlet Letter\, Hawthorne's narrator—an
d her own mother—describe little Pearl as a demon child\, warped by the
dark passion in which she was conceived. Critics\, too\, find her diffic
ult to deal with: a generic oddity\, a peculiarly flat character in a nov
el otherwise remarkable for its psychological depth. Later in the novel\,
however\, in scenes set apart from her mother (and which many readers ha
ve ignored) Pearl is depicted as a remarkably normal\, happy little girl.
What's Hawthorne's interest in Pearl? Is she really so alien? One of Haw
thorne's rare failures? Or does she represent a new way of being human\,
one that avoids the sort of troubles that plague her parents and promises
a solution to some of America's most pressing social problems?
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: "Pearl Prynne: Witch-Baby or a New Mode
l of American Personhood?"
In the first half of The Scarlet Letter\, Hawthorne's narrato
r—and her own mother—describe little Pearl as a demon child\, warped
by the dark passion in which she was conceived. Critics\, too\, find her
difficult to deal with: a generic oddity\, a peculiarly flat character in
a novel otherwise remarkable for its psychological depth. Later in the n
ovel\, however\, in scenes set apart from her mother (and which many read
ers have ignored) Pearl is depicted as a remarkably normal\, happy little
girl. What's Hawthorne's interest in Pearl? Is she really so alien? One
of Hawthorne's rare failures? Or does she represent a new way of being hu
man\, one that avoids the sort of troubles that plague her parents and pr
omises a solution to some of America's most pressing social problems?
UID:20101104T223000Z-3241@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100917T132254Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3241-faculty-colloquium-with-p
rofessor-rachel-cole
LAST-MODIFIED:20101014T194232Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/36_Rachel_Cole_FA07.rev.1373936431.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3241
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/36_Rachel_Cole_FA07.rev.1373936431.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Rachel Cole
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Lewis &\; Clark College Department of English will
host a faculty colloquium with Professor Rachel Cole. \; The title o
f Dr. Cole's talk is "Pearl Prynne: Witch-Baby or a New Model of American
Personhood?"
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101109T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101109T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Erin Ergenbright
DESCRIPTION:Erin Ergenbright is a writer and writing teach in Portland\,
Oregon. \; The co-author of The Ex-Boyfriend Cookbook (with Thisbe Ni
ssen)\, and a founder of the Loggernaut Reading Series\, she earned her M
FA at the University of Iowa's Writer's Workshop\, where she was a James
Michener-Paul Engle fellow. \; Erin is the recipient of a grant from
the Oregon Arts Commission and residencies from Caldera Arts and Soapston
e\; her writing has appeared in The Believer Magazine\, Tin House\, Portl
and Monthly\, The Oregonian\, The May Queen: Women on Life\, Love\, Work
and Pulling It All Together in Your Thirties (J.P. Tarcher)\, Alone in th
e Kitchen with an Eggplant: On Cooking for One and Dining Alone (Riverhea
d Books)\, Colorado Review\, Indiana Review\, Paste Magazine\, Oklahoma R
eview\, Dislocate and elsewhere. Currently\, Erin teaches fiction at Lew
is &\; Clark College.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Erin Ergenbright is a writer and writin
g teach in Portland\, Oregon. \; The co-author of The Ex-Boyfrien
d Cookbook (with Thisbe Nissen)\, and a founder of the Loggernaut Re
ading Series\, she earned her MFA at the University of Iowa's Writer's Wo
rkshop\, where she was a James Michener-Paul Engle fellow. \; Erin is
the recipient of a grant from the Oregon Arts Commission and residencies
from Caldera Arts and Soapstone\; her writing has appeared in The Be
liever Magazine\, Tin House\, Portland Monthly\, <
em>The Oregonian
\, The May Queen: Women on Life\, Love\, Work an
d Pulling It All Together in Your Thirties (J.P. Tarcher)\, Alon
e in the Kitchen with an Eggplant: On Cooking for One and Dining Alone (Riverhead Books)\, Colorado Review\, Indiana Review
\, Paste Magazine\, Oklahoma Review\, Dislocate and elsewhere. Currently\, Erin teaches fiction at Lewis &\;
Clark College.
UID:20101110T030000Z-3487@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20101014T130843Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3487-a-fiction-reading-by-erin
-ergenbright
LAST-MODIFIED:20101103T165556Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/13547_erin_ergenbright_2.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3487
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/13547_erin_ergenbright_2.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Erin Ergenbright
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join faculty\, staff\, and students for a fict
ion reading by Professor Erin Ergenbright
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:faculty|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101116T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101116T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:Author Mark Christensen
DESCRIPTION:About the AuthorMark Christensen\, a native of Oregon\, is a
journalist and author of several books\, both fiction and non-fiction. Hi
s published works include THE SWEEPS: Behind the Scenes of Network TV\, B
UILD THE PERFECT BEAST\, and most recently THE SO-CAL SPEED SHOP\, winner
of the Dean Bachelor Award for Best Automobile Book of 2006. His freelan
ce writing has appeared in numerous publications\, among them Wired\, TV
Guide\, Rolling Stone and the LA Times Sunday Magazine. In 1994\, "The Or
egonian" named his novel\, ALOHA\, as the best by a northwestern writer t
hat year. A father of two children\, Mark lives with his wife in Laguna B
each\, California.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: About t
he Author
Mark Christensen\, a native of Oregon\, is a journalist and author of several books\,
both fiction and non-fiction. His published works include TH
E SWEEPS: Behind the Scenes of Network TV\, BUI
LD THE PERFECT BEAST\, and most recently THE SO-CAL
SPEED SHOP\, winner of the Dean Bachelor Award for Best Automob
ile Book of 2006. His freelance writing has appeared in numerous publicat
ions\, among them Wired\, TV Guide<
/strong>\, Rolling Stone and the LA Times Sunday Magazine. In 1994\, "The Oregonian" name
d his novel\, ALOHA\, as the best by a northwes
tern writer that year. A father of two children\, Mark lives with his wif
e in Laguna Beach\, California.
UID:20101117T030000Z-3629@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20101109T102532Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3629-author-mark-christensen
LAST-MODIFIED:20101109T184133Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/15172_acid_christ.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3629
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/15172_acid_christ.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:In Acid Christ (Schaffner)\, Mark Christense
n offers a candid chronicle of the life and times of cultural icon Ken Ke
sey\, the literary wonder boy and countercultural guru whose cross-countr
y bus trip inspired The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101122T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101122T163000
LOCATION:Pamplin Society Room- Watzek Library
SUMMARY:Colloquium with Martin Harries
DESCRIPTION:Martin Harries is an associate professor of English at New Yo
rk University (NYU)\, where he teaches courses on theater\, modernism\, a
nd theory. He is the author of numerous articles and reviews and of two b
ooks\, Forgetting Lot's Wife: On Destructive Spectatorship (Fordham Unive
rsity Press\, 2007) and Scare Quotes from Shakespeare: Marx\, Keynes\, an
d the Language of Reenchantment (Stanford University Press\, 2000). Harr
ies received his PhD in comparative literature from Yale University and h
is AB in English from Columbia University. He is a member of the Modern L
anguage Association. A Mellon Fellowship in the Humanities supported his
graduate work. Before teaching at NYU\, he was on the faculty at Princeto
n University.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Martin Harries is an associate professo
r of English at New York University (NYU)\, where he teaches courses on t
heater\, modernism\, and theory. He is the author of numerous articles an
d reviews and of two books\, Forgetting Lot's Wife: On Destructive Sp
ectatorship (Fordham University Press\, 2007) and Scare Quotes f
rom Shakespeare: Marx\, Keynes\, and the Language of Reenchantment (
Stanford University Press\, 2000).
Harries received his PhD in co
mparative literature from Yale University and his AB in English from Colu
mbia University. He is a member of the Modern Language Association. A Mel
lon Fellowship in the Humanities supported his graduate work. Before teac
hing at NYU\, he was on the faculty at Princeton University.
UID:20101122T233000Z-3243@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100917T132618Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3243-colloquium-with-martin-ha
rries
LAST-MODIFIED:20101108T223621Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/15166_martin_harries.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3243
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/15166_martin_harries.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Photo by Tony Rinaldo
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:New York University Professor of English Martin Harri
es will lead a colloquium entitled "Beckett and Medium Around 1960". 
\; The event is free and open to the public.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101201T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101201T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:Professor Emeritus Vern Rutsala
DESCRIPTION:Vern Rutsala was born in 1934 in McCall\, Idaho. He moved to
Portland\, Oregon in the early 1940s where he attended Milwaukie High Sch
ool. Rutsala received his BA from Reed College in 1956 and an MFA from th
e University of Iowa in 1960. He taught English at Lewis &\; Clark Col
lege in Portland\, Oregon from 1961-2004. As a poet\, Rutsala has publis
hed over 700 poems in poetry journals including Atlantic Monthly\, Times
Literary Supplement\, New Yorker\, Midland\, Poetry\, Harper's\, American
Poetry Review\, Chicago Review\, Mississippi Review\, Nebraska Review\,
Seneca Review\, and New Letters. Rutsala has penned sixteen books of poet
ry\, and has been featured in numerous anthologies. Poetry prizes receive
d by Rutsala include the Carolyn Kizer Poetry Prize (twice)\, a Pushcart
Prize\, a fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation\, an Oregon Masters
fellowship\, two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts\, t
he Juniper Prize for his book\, the Oregon Book Award\, the Richard Snyde
r Prize\, the Kenneth O. Hanson Award\, the Akron Poetry Prize\, and a fi
nalist selection for the National Book Award for The Moment's Equation.
The latest issue of Hubbub\, is devoted to the work and life of Vern Ruts
ala. In addition to Marvin Bell\, writers such as Maxine Scates\, Mark Ja
rman\, Charles Baxter and Christopher Howell\, among many others\, pay ho
mage to Rutsala in poetry and prose in the journal. Refreshments will be
provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Vern Rutsala was born in 1934 in McCall
\, Idaho. He moved to Portland\, Oregon in the early 1940s where he atten
ded Milwaukie High School. Rutsala received his BA from Reed College in 1
956 and an MFA from the University of Iowa in 1960. He taught English at
Lewis &\; Clark College in Portland\, Oregon from 1961-2004.
A
s a poet\, Rutsala has published over 700 poems in poetry journals includ
ing Atlantic Monthly\, Times Literary Supplement\, New Yorker\, Midland\,
Poetry\, Harper's\, American Poetry Review\, Chicago Review\, Mississipp
i Review\, Nebraska Review\, Seneca Review\, and New Letters. Rutsala has
penned sixteen books of poetry\, and has been featured in numerous antho
logies. Poetry prizes received by Rutsala include the Carolyn Kizer Poetr
y Prize (twice)\, a Pushcart Prize\, a fellowships from the Guggenheim Fo
undation\, an Oregon Masters fellowship\, two fellowships from the Nation
al Endowment for the Arts\, the Juniper Prize for his book\, the Oregon B
ook Award\, the Richard Snyder Prize\, the Kenneth O. Hanson Award\, the
Akron Poetry Prize\, and a finalist selection for the National Book Award
for The Moment's Equation.
The latest issue of Hubbub\, is devot
ed to the work and life of Vern Rutsala. In addition to Marvin Bell\, wri
ters such as Maxine Scates\, Mark Jarman\, Charles Baxter and Christopher
Howell\, among many others\, pay homage to Rutsala in poetry and prose i
n the journal.
Refreshments will be provided.
UID:20101202T030000Z-3244@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100917T132807Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3244-professor-emeritus-vern-r
utsala
LAST-MODIFIED:20101109T180236Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/14064_rutsala.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3244
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/14064_rutsala.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Vern Rutsala
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us for an evening of poetry with Lewis &a
mp\; Clark College Professor Emeritus Vern Rutsala.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110208T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110208T163000
LOCATION:Lewis &\; Clark College Bookstore\, Templeton Campus Center
SUMMARY:Bookwarming for Jerry Harp
DESCRIPTION:Jerry Harp will read from and discuss his new book\, For Us\,
What Music? The Life and Poetry of Donald Justice \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Jerry Harp will read from and discuss h
is new book\, For Us\, What Mu
sic? The Life and Poetry of Donald Justice
\;
UID:20110208T233000Z-4638@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110202T111702Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4638-bookwarming-for-jerry-harp
LAST-MODIFIED:20110204T220141Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/17301_foruswhatmusic.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:4638
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/17301_foruswhatmusic.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join us in celebrating the publication of our own Pro
fessor Jerry Harp's new book\, For Us\, What Music? The Life and Poetry of Donald Justice
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110304T151500
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110304T161500
LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, Room 105
SUMMARY:Cancelled: Mark Edmundson
DESCRIPTION:Mark Edmundson is a professor of English at the University of
Virginia. A prizewinning scholar\, he has published a number of works of
literary and cultural criticism\, including Literature Against Philosoph
y\, Plato to Derrida: A Defense of Poetry. He has also written for such p
ublications as The New Republic\, The New York Times Magazine\, The Natio
n\, and Harper's\, where he is a contributing editor.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Mark Edmundson is a professor of Englis
h at the University of Virginia. A prizewinning scholar\, he has publishe
d a number of works of literary and cultural criticism\, including Literature Against Philosophy\, Plato to Derrida: A Defense of Poetry
strong>. He has also written for such publications as The Ne
w Republic\, The New York Times Magazine\, The Nation\, and Harp
er's\, where he is a contributing editor.
UID:20110304T231500Z-4436@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110127T125007Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4436-cancelled-mark-edmundson
LAST-MODIFIED:20110303T194247Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/17406_mark_edmundson.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:4436
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/17406_mark_edmundson.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Mark Edmundson
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Due to unforeseen circumstances\, Mark Edmundson will
be unable to lecture in Portland this week. \; Our deepest apologies
and please continue to check this website for updates on a possible resc
heduling of this event as well as those upcoming.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110309T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110309T200000
LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, Room 105
SUMMARY:John Howard Griffin Documentary Film Showing
DESCRIPTION:John Howard Griffin (June 16\, 1920 - September 9\, 1980) was
an American journalist and author much of whose writing was about racial
equality. He is best known for darkening his skin and journeying through
Louisiana\, Mississippi\, Alabama\, and Georgia to experience segregatio
n in the Deep South in 1959. He wrote about this experience in his 1961 b
ook Black Like Me.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:John Howard Griffin (Jun
e 16\, 1920 - September 9\, 1980) was an American journalist and author m
uch of whose writing was about racial equality. He is best known for dark
ening his skin and journeying through Louisiana\, Mississippi\, Alabama\,
and Georgia to experience segregation in the Deep South in 1959. He wrot
e about this experience in his 1961 book Black Like Me.
UID:20110310T030000Z-3783@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20101215T110901Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3783-john-howard-griffin-docum
entary-film-showing
LAST-MODIFIED:20110127T210618Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3783
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English will be hosting a documenta
ry film showing about the life of author John Howard Griffin. \; He i
s best known for darkening his skin and journeying through the Deep South
to experience segregation in 1959. He wrote about this experience in his
1961 book Black Like Me
em>.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110314T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110314T183000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading by John Casteen
DESCRIPTION:John Casteen (John T. Casteen IV) grew up in Charlottesville\
, Virginia. He has also lived in Connecticut\, Maine\, and Iowa. He lives
in Earlysville\, Virginia\, with his wife\, Laurie Casteen\, and their c
hildren. A graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop\, Casteen has contribute
d opinion and analysis pieces on gun policy\, environmental policy\, and
professional ethics to \;Slate.com\, \;The Washington Post\, 
\;The Chronicle of Higher Education\, \;The Virginia Quarterly Review
\, and other magazines and newspapers. His poems and criticism have appea
red in \;Ploughshares\, \;The Southern Review\, \;Shenandoah\
, \;The Paris Review\, and other literary journals. For ten years\,
Casteen was self-employed as a designer and builder of custom furniture.
He is now Visiting Assistant Professor at Sweet Briar College\, where he
founded and directs the Sweet Briar Undergraduate Creative Writing Confer
ence. He has also taught at The University of Virginia\, and since 2005 h
as served on the editorial staff of The Virginia Quarterly Review.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: John Casteen (John T. Casteen IV) grew
up in Charlottesville\, Virginia. He has also lived in Connecticut\, Main
e\, and Iowa. He lives in Earlysville\, Virginia\, with his wife\, Laurie
Casteen\, and their children. A graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop\,
Casteen has contributed opinion and analysis pieces on gun policy\, envir
onmental policy\, and professional ethics to \;Slate.com\,&#
160\;The Washington Post\, \;The Chronicle of Higher Edu
cation\, \;The Virginia Quarterly Review\, and other ma
gazines and newspapers. His poems and criticism have appeared in \;Ploughshares
\, \;The Southern Review\, \;Shen
andoah\, \;The Paris Review\, and other literary journa
ls. For ten years\, Casteen was self-employed as a designer and b
uilder of custom furniture. He is now Visiting Assistant Professor at Swe
et Briar College\, where he founded and directs the Sweet Briar Undergrad
uate Creative Writing Conference. He has also taught at The University of
Virginia\, and since 2005 has served on the editorial staff of The V
irginia Quarterly Review.
UID:20110315T003000Z-3652@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20101112T092725Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3652-poetry-reading-by-john-ca
steen
LAST-MODIFIED:20110221T181736Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/15221_casteen_author_s.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3652
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/15221_casteen_author_s.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Photo: Michael Bailey Photography
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The English Department invites you to join us for a r
eading by poet and Sweet Briar College Professor of English\, John Castee
n. \; Refreshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110330T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110330T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:John Callahan and Pauls Toutonghi Reading
UID:20110331T020000Z-4438@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110127T125436Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4438-john-callahan-and-pauls-t
outonghi-reading
LAST-MODIFIED:20110128T193723Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/28_callahan.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:4438
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/28_callahan.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:John Callahan\, Odell Professor of Humanities\,
Lewis & Clark College
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English for an evening
of fiction reading with our own Pauls Toutonghi\, Assistant Professor of
English and John Callahan\, Odell Professor of Humanities. \; Refresh
ments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110406T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110406T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Author Don Waters
DESCRIPTION:Don Waters' story collection\, Desert Gothic\, won the Iowa S
hort Fiction Award. Stories from the collection have been anthologized in
Pushcart Prize XXXIII (http://www.pushcartprize.com/) and Best of the We
st 2009 (http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/excerpts/exhorbep.html). He's rece
ived fellowships from the Christopher Isherwood Foundation and the Lannan
Foundation (http://www.lannan.org/)\, as well as other honors. - His r
ecent essays and book reviews have appeared in Tin House (http://www.tinh
ouse.com/)\, The Believer (http://www.believermag.com/)\, High Country Ne
ws (http://www.hcn.org/)\, the San Francisco Chronicle\, and the New York
Times Book Review. - Waters was born and raised in Reno\, Nevada and n
ow lives in Portland\, Oregon with his partner\, author Robin Romm (http:
//www.robinromm.com/).
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Don Waters' story collection\, Desert Gothic\, won the Iowa Sh
ort Fiction Award. Stories from the collection have been anthologized in
Pushcart Prize XXXII
I and Best of the West 2009. He's received fellowships from th
e Christopher Isherwood Foundation and the Lannan Foundation\, as well as other honors.
-
His recent essays and book reviews have appeared in Tin House\, The Believer\, High Country News\, the San Francisco Chronicle\, and the New York Times Book Review.
-
Waters was born and raised in Reno\, Nevada and now lives in Portlan
d\, Oregon with his partner\, author Robin Romm.
UID:20110407T020000Z-5034@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110208T151158Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5034-a-fiction-reading-by-auth
or-don-waters
LAST-MODIFIED:20110314T211412Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/17793_don_waters.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5034
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/17793_don_waters.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:photo: Marcus Beck
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English for a fiction r
eading by author and Iowa Short Fiction Award winner\, Don Waters. \;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110412T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110412T200000
LOCATION:Portland State University\, SMU 238
SUMMARY:Professor Harp to Speak at Portland State University
DESCRIPTION:Jerry Harp is a poet\, critic and author of three books of po
etry: Creature\, Gatherings\, and Urban Flowers\, Concrete Plains. With
Jan Wiessmiler he co-edited A Poetry Criticism Reader and his study of
cognition in the Renaissance\, "Constant Motion": Ongian Hermeneutics an
d the Shifting Ground of Early Modern Understanding\, was published by H
ampton Press. He teaches at Lewis &\; Clark College.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Jerry Harp is a poet\, critic and autho
r of three books of poetry:
Creature\, Gatherings\, and Urban Flow
ers\, Concrete Plains. With Jan
Wiessmiler he co-edited A Poetry C
riticism Reader and his study of
cognition in the Renaissance\, "C
onstant Motion": Ongian Hermeneutics
and the Shifting Ground of Ea
rly Modern Understanding\, was published
by Hampton Press. He teac
hes at Lewis &\; Clark College.
UID:20110413T020000Z-5503@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110318T120535Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5503-professor-harp-to-speak-a
t-portland-state
LAST-MODIFIED:20110318T190535Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/18363_jerryharp08internet.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5503
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/18363_jerryharp08internet.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Jerry Harp
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The MFA Creative writing Program at Portland State Un
iversity presents a lecture with Jerry Harp\, Professor of English at Lew
is &\; Clark College. \; Professor Harp will discuss his recently
released book entitled\, For Us\, What Music? The Life and Poetry of
Donald Justice. \; This event is free and open to the public.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public|Portland
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110413T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110413T220000
LOCATION:Armstrong Lounge\, Frank Manor House
SUMMARY:Paradise Lost Readings on the 13th\, 14th\, and 20th
DESCRIPTION:Come read Paradise Lost with other fans of Paradise Lost! Rea
dings from 6-10 pm on April 13th\, 14th\, and 20th. Apples provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Come read Paradise Lost with other fans
of Paradise Lost! Readings from 6-10 pm on April 13th\, 14th\, and 20th.
Apples provided.
UID:20110414T010000Z-5839@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110413T113413Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5839-paradise-lost-readings-on
-the-13th-14th-and-20th
LAST-MODIFIED:20110413T183438Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5839
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Learn about the Fall of Man while eating apples in th
e cozy and stylish Manor House lounge! We will be reading Paradise Lost t
ogether from 6-10 pm on April 13th\, 14th\, and 20th. \;
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110415T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110415T160000
LOCATION:Watzek Library\, Hoffman Gallery of Art
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading by Geoffrey O'Brien
DESCRIPTION:Geoffrey O'Brien is the author of "Metrolpole\," "Green and G
ray\," and "The Guns and Flags Project\," all from the University of Cali
fornia Press\, and coauthor (in collaboration with the poet Jeff Clark) o
f "2A" (Quemadura\, 2006). He is an Assistant Professor in the English De
partment at UC Berkeley and also teaches for the Prison University Projec
t at San Quentin State Prison.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Geoffrey O'Brien is the author of "Metr
olpole\," "Green and Gray\," and "The Guns and Flags Project\," all from
the University of California Press\, and coauthor (in collaboration with
the poet Jeff Clark) of "2A" (Quemadura\, 2006). He is an Assistant Profe
ssor in the English Department at UC Berkeley and also teaches for the Pr
ison University Project at San Quentin State Prison.
UID:20110415T220000Z-4440@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110127T130003Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4440-poetry-reading-by-geoffre
y-obrien
LAST-MODIFIED:20110208T182030Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/17178_obrien-author.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:4440
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/17178_obrien-author.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Geoffrey G. O'Brien
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English Department for a reading by p
oet and University of California Berkeley Assistant Professor Geoffrey O'
Brien. Refreshments will be served.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110419T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110419T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:Senior Poetry Reading
DESCRIPTION:Please join the Department of English for a reading of origin
al works of poetry by Lewis &\; Clark College senior English majors.&#
160\; Refreshments will be provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the Department of English f
or a reading of original works of poetry by Lewis &\; Clark College se
nior English majors. \; Refreshments will be provided.
UID:20110420T020000Z-3246@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100917T133519Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3246-senior-poetry-reading
LAST-MODIFIED:20101215T192803Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3246
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English for a reading o
f original works of poetry by Lewis &\; Clark College senior English m
ajors. \; Refreshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110420T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110420T160000
LOCATION:Watzek Library\, Pamplin Society Room
SUMMARY:"A Jane Austen Education" with Author William Deresiewicz
DESCRIPTION:Literary critic and author William Deresiewicz will be readin
g from his book\, A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About
Love\, Friendship\, and the Things That Matter.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Literary critic and author William Dere
siewicz will be reading from his book\, A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love\,
Friendship\, and the Things That Matter.
UID:20110420T220000Z-5033@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110208T150303Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5033-a-jane-austen-education-w
ith-author-william
LAST-MODIFIED:20110221T182019Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/17404_a_jane_austen_education.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5033
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/17404_a_jane_austen_education.rev.1373936425.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English Department for a reading and
discussion with author William Deresiewicz from his book\, A Jane Austen Education. Refreshments
will be served.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110421T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110421T160000
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading by Carl Adamshick
DESCRIPTION:Carl Adamshick is the winner of the 2010 Walt Whitman Award a
s well as the recipient of an Oregon Literary Fellowship from Literary Ar
ts \;and has been featured in \;Poetry in Motion. His poems have
appeared in numerous journals\, including the \;American Poetry Revie
w\, the \;Harvard Review\, and American Poet. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Carl Adamshick is the winner of the 201
0 Walt Whitman Award as well as the recipient of an Oregon Literary Fello
wship from Literary Arts \;and has been featured in \;Poetry in Motion. His poems have appeared in numerous journals\, i
ncluding the \;American Poetry Review\, the \;Harvar
d Review\, and American Poet.
\;
UID:20110421T220000Z-5865@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110420T113721Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5865-poetry-reading-by-carl-ad
amshick
LAST-MODIFIED:20110421T160234Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5865
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join us in Gregg Pavilion for a reading by Carl Adams
hick\, recipient of the 2010 Walt Whitman Award.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110426T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110426T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:Senior Fiction Reading
DESCRIPTION:Please join the Department of English for a reading of origin
al works of fiction by Lewis &\; Clark College senior English majors.&
#160\; Refreshments will be provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the Department of English f
or a reading of original works of fiction by Lewis &\; Clark College s
enior English majors. \; Refreshments will be provided.
UID:20110427T020000Z-3247@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20100917T133755Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3247-senior-fiction-reading
LAST-MODIFIED:20110127T211022Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3247
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English for a reading o
f original works of fiction by Lewis &\; Clark College senior English
majors. \; Refreshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110427T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110427T183000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:2011 English Honors Recipient Andrew Lyle to Give Presentation
UID:20110428T003000Z-5892@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110425T145047Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5892-2011-english-honors-recip
ient-andrew-lyle-to-give
LAST-MODIFIED:20110425T215047Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5892
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:On Wednesday\, April 27\, English Honors student Andr
ew Lyle will present his paper entitled\, Customs and Customers in Tw
o Novels by Hawthorne\, to faculty\, students\, and the community.&#
160\; We hope you will join us to celebrate his work. \; In addition\
, this will be a great opportunity for freshman\, sophomore\, and junior
majors to learn more about what pursuing an honors project entails. \
; Refreshments will be served. \; We look forward to your attendance.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public|student news
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110913T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110913T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Author Keith Scribner
DESCRIPTION:Keith Scribner's third novel The Oregon Experiment (http://ke
ithscribner.com/books/the-oregon-experiment/) \;was released by Alfre
d A. Knopf (Random House) in June 2011. His two previous novels\, publish
ed by Riverhead Books (Penguin)\, are The GoodLife (http://keithscribner.
com/books/the-goodlife/) \;and Miracle Girl (http://keithscribner.com
/books/miracle-girl/). The GoodLife appears in translation\, was selected
for the Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Writers series\, and was a N
ew York Times Notable Book of the Year. His fiction and nonfiction have
appeared in The Daily Beast\, \; \;TriQuarterly\, American Short
Fiction\, Quarterly West\, The North Atlantic Review\, \; \;the S
an Jose Mercury News\, the Baltimore Sun\, and the anthologies Flash Fict
ion Forward (W.W. Norton) and Sudden Stories: The MAMMOTH Book of Miniscu
le Fiction. He received both Pushcart and O'Henry Prize Honorable Mention
s for his short story\, "Paradise in a Cup" (TriQuarterly\, #121). Scrib
ner received his BA from Vassar College and MFA from the University of Mo
ntana. He was awarded Wallace Stegner and John L'Heureux Fellowships in F
iction at Stanford University\, where he went on to teach in the Creative
Writing Program as a Jones Lecturer. He currently lives in Oregon with h
is wife\, the poet Jennifer Richter (http://jenniferrichterpoet.com/)\, a
nd their children. He teaches in Oregon State University's MFA program an
d is a fellow at OSU's Center for the Humanities.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Keith Scribner's third novel The Oregon Experime
nt \;was released by Alfred A. Knopf (Random House) in June 2011.
His two previous novels\, published by Riverhead Books (Penguin)\, are <
a href="http://keithscribner.com/books/the-goodlife/">The GoodLife
60\;and Miracle Gi
rl. The GoodLife appears in translation\, was selected for the Barnes
and Noble Discover Great New Writers series\, and was a New York Times N
otable Book of the Year.
His fiction and nonfiction have appeared
in The Daily Beast\, \; \;TriQuarterly\, American Short
Fiction\, Quarterly West\, The North Atlantic Review\, \;&#
160\;the San Jose Mercury News\, the Baltimore Sun\, and the anthologies
Flash Fiction Forward (W.W. Norton) and Sudden Stories: The MAMMOTH Book
of Miniscule Fiction. He received both Pushcart and O'Henry Prize Honorab
le Mentions for his short story\, "Paradise in a Cup" (TriQuarterly\, #12
1).
Scribner received his BA from Vassar College and MFA from the
University of Montana. He was awarded Wallace Stegner and John L'Heureux
Fellowships in Fiction at Stanford University\, where he went on to teac
h in the Creative Writing Program as a Jones Lecturer. He currently lives
in Oregon with his wife\, the poet Jennifer Richter\, and their children. He teaches in Oregon Stat
e University's MFA program and is a fellow at OSU's Center for the Humani
ties.
UID:20110914T020000Z-7098@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110901T164852Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/7098-a-fiction-reading-by-auth
or-keith-scribner
LAST-MODIFIED:20110901T234914Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:7098
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English for an evening
with Author Keith Scribner. \; All events are free and open to the pu
blic.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public|Portland|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111004T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111004T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
SUMMARY:A Reading of "Birds of Paradise" by Diana Abu-Jaber
DESCRIPTION:Please join the Department of English for a reading of Birds
of Paradise \;by author Diana Abu-Jaber. Diana Abu-Jaber was born in
Upstate New York and lived there until she was 7 when her family moved t
o Amman for two years. Her father is Jordanian and her mother is American
\, and she has lived between America and Jordan ever since. She received
her doctorate in English literature from the State University of New York
. She has taught literature and creative writing at the University of Mic
higan\, the University of Oregon\, and UCLA. \; She is most recently
the author of Birds of Paradise\, \;an Indie Books Pick\, as well as
of the award winning memoir\, The Language of Baklava\, \;the best-se
lling novels Origin \;and Crescent\, which was awarded the 2004 PEN C
enter USA Award for Literary Fiction and the American Book Award. Her fir
st novel Arabian Jazz \;won the 1994 Oregon Book Award and was a fina
list for the PEN/Hemingway Award. A frequent contributor to NPR\, she te
aches at Portland State University and divides her time between Portland
and Miami. \;"Abu-Jaber makes us wonder about more that what will h
appen to one girl with a guilty secret. What\, after all\, does it mean t
o be a family? Is love really 'exchangeable\, malleable'? We can't help t
urning pages full of stunning prose to find out." (Sarah Nelson - \;O
Magazine \;)"Diana Abu-Jaber's gorgeous novel explores the ways a mo
dern family can break down and be reborn. She writes with a precise\, alm
ost poetic distillation of feeling\, heightened in contrast to the ripe\,
exuberant landscape and the unsettled feelings of a family in limbo." (A
my Driscoll - \;Miami Herald \;)"With \;Birds of Paradise\, A
bu-Jaber has made an amazing\, gigantic leap into rare air\, that hazy st
ratosphere we jokingly call The Big Time. Her novel is that worthy\, and
that beautiful." (Christine Selk - \;The Oregonian \;)"The Muirs'
absorbing story builds to a thoroughly satisfying climax." (Sue Corbett
- \;People Magazine \;) \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the Department of English f
or a reading of Birds of Paradise \;by author Diana Abu-Jabe
r.
Diana Abu-Jaber was born in Upstate New York and l
ived there until she was 7 when her family moved to Amman for two years.
Her father is Jordanian and her mother is American\, and she has lived be
tween America and Jordan ever since. She received her doctorate in Englis
h literature from the State University of New York. She has taught litera
ture and creative writing at the University of Michigan\, the University
of Oregon\, and UCLA. \; She is most recently the author of Birds
of Paradise\, \;an Indie Books Pick\, as well as of the award w
inning memoir\, The Language of Baklava\, \;the best-selling
novels Origin \;and Crescent\, which was awarded t
he 2004 PEN Center USA Award for Literary Fiction and the American Book A
ward. Her first novel Arabian Jazz \;won the 1994 Oregon Boo
k Award and was a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway Award.
A frequen
t contributor to NPR\, she teaches at Portland State University and divid
es her time between Portland and Miami.
\;"Abu-Jaber mak
es us wonder about more that what will happen to one girl with a guilty s
ecret. What\, after all\, does it mean to be a family? Is love really 'ex
changeable\, malleable'? We can't help turning pages full of stunning pro
se to find out." (Sarah Nelson - \;O Magazine \;)
"Diana Abu-Jaber's gorgeous novel explores the ways a modern family
can break down and be reborn. She writes with a precise\, almost poetic d
istillation of feeling\, heightened in contrast to the ripe\, exuberant l
andscape and the unsettled feelings of a family in limbo." (Amy Driscoll
- \;Miami Herald \;)
"With \;Birds of Par
adise\, Abu-Jaber has made an amazing\, gigantic leap into rare air\, tha
t hazy stratosphere we jokingly call The Big Time. Her novel is that wort
hy\, and that beautiful." (Christine Selk - \;The Oregonian \;)
em>
"The Muirs' absorbing story builds to a thoroughly sat
isfying climax." (Sue Corbett - \;People Magazine \;) \;
UID:20111005T020000Z-7759@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110930T113802Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/7759-a-reading-of-birds-of-par
adise-by-diana-abu-jaber
LAST-MODIFIED:20111003T211255Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/24534_images.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:7759
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/24534_images.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English in the Manor Ho
use\, Armstrong Lounge on Tuesday\, October 4 at 7PM for a reading of Birds of Paradise \;by author Diana Abu-Jaber. \;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111027T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111027T163000
LOCATION:Diane Gregg Pavilion
SUMMARY:Diane Wakoski & Matthew Dickman: A Dialogue
DESCRIPTION:Please join Diane Wakoski and Matthew Dickman in a public dis
cussion of their lives\, work\, and art. \;They will take questions
from the audience as they engage in a conversation about their works and
their days as poets. \;Please come with your questions. \;This
event is free and open to the public.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join Diane Wakoski and Matthew D
ickman in a public discussion of their lives\, work\, and art. \;The
y will take questions from the audience as they engage in a conversation
about their works and their days as poets. \;Please come with your q
uestions. \;This event is free and open to the public.
UID:20111027T223000Z-7585@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20110919T144409Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/7585-diane-wakoski-matthew-dic
kman-a-dialogue
LAST-MODIFIED:20110919T215859Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/23842_dickmanwakoski-300x207.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:7585
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/23842_dickmanwakoski-300x207.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join poets Diane Wakoski and Matthew Dickman i
n a public discussion of their lives\, work\, and art. \;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111115T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111115T163000
LOCATION:Miller 105
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:A Faculty Colloquium with Professor Jerry Harp
DESCRIPTION:A Faculty Colloquium with Professor Jerry Harp"Only in Time":
Jorie Graham's Theological Poetics of Evolution \;The last century
has seen a revolution in theology no less than in other disciplines.
0\; As Bernard Lonergan noted\, one crucial shift in twentieth-century th
eology was from a classic view of culture to historical-mindedness. \
; The former works with the assumption of a singular ideal. \; The la
tter not only accepts but even celebrates the many forms that human cultu
res assume. \; In a larger framework\, evolutionary theory has come t
o dominate human inquiry. \; As Walter J. Ong put the matter\, "evolu
tionary views have deeply penetrated our present thinking in almost every
conceivable field." \; Such views have moved theologians to search f
or new modes of language to speak of the divine. \; In this search\,
strong poets—those wizards of language—may be of help. \; Thus\,
in this presentation I shall set out a basic framework of evolutionary th
eology within which to discuss the work of Jorie Graham\, in whose recent
books one can discern a search for the divine in a Darwinian cosmos.
0\; In this engagement with Graham's work\, I seek to extend the evolutio
nary framework within I begin.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: A Faculty Colloquium with Professor Je
rry Harp
"Only in Time": Jorie Graham's Theological Poetics of
Evolution
\;The last century has seen a revolution in
theology no less than in other disciplines. \; As Bernard Lonergan no
ted\, one crucial shift in twentieth-century theology was from a classic
view of culture to historical-mindedness. \; The former works with th
e assumption of a singular ideal. \; The latter not only accepts but
even celebrates the many forms that human cultures assume. \; In a la
rger framework\, evolutionary theory has come to dominate human inquiry.&
#160\; As Walter J. Ong put the matter\, "evolutionary views have deeply
penetrated our present thinking in almost every conceivable field." \
; Such views have moved theologians to search for new modes of language t
o speak of the divine. \; In this search\, strong poets—those wizar
ds of language—may be of help. \; Thus\, in this presentation I sha
ll set out a basic framework of evolutionary theology within which to dis
cuss the work of Jorie Graham\, in whose recent books one can discern a s
earch for the divine in a Darwinian cosmos. \; In this engagement wit
h Graham's work\, I seek to extend the evolutionary framework within I be
gin.
UID:20111115T233000Z-8510@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20111108T141200Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/8510-a-faculty-colloquium-with
-professor-jerry-harp
LAST-MODIFIED:20111110T212843Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/25627_jharp.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:8510
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/25627_jharp.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Jerry Harp
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English for a fall seme
ster faculty colloquium with published poet and and Lewis &\; Clark Co
llege Professor of Humanities\, Jerry Harp\, who will give a talk entitle
d\, "Only in Time": Jorie Graham's Theological Poetics of Evolution.<
/em>
\nRefreshments will be provided. \; Free and Open to the Pu
blic
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|faculty|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111130T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20111130T163000
LOCATION:Watzek Library\, Pamplin Society Room
SUMMARY:Dixon Award Presentations by 2011 Co-winners Casey Newbegin and W
arren Kluber
DESCRIPTION:2011 Dixon Award Presentations English majors Warren Kluber
and Casey Newbegin are recipients of the 2011 Hillary and Adam Dixon Awar
d. \; The $2\,500 travel award is granted annually to junior English
majors wishing to conduct research associated with their English studies.
Drawing upon her archival experience in Watzek Library's Special Collec
tions\, Casey Newbegin perused the personal papers of Leonard Woolf (Virg
inia Woolf's husband) at the University of Sussex in Brighton. Among the
questions Casey hoped to answer: How did Leonard's support\, care\, and c
riticism during Virginia's mental illness affect her writing? \;A d
ouble major in English and French\, Warren traveled to Gambia\, Mauritani
a\, and rural parts of Senegal to explore how local oral traditions\, esp
ecially those of the story-telling griots\, relate to the African novel:
to its "context\, influences\, and heritage." \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: 2011 Dixon Award Presentations
English majors Warren Kluber and Casey Newbegin are recipients of the 2
011 Hillary and Adam Dixon Award. \; The $2\,500 travel award is gran
ted annually to junior English majors wishing to conduct research associa
ted with their English studies.
Drawing upon her archival experie
nce in Watzek Library's Special Collections\, Casey Newbegin perused the
personal papers of Leonard Woolf (Virginia Woolf's husband) at the Univer
sity of Sussex in Brighton. Among the questions Casey hoped to answer: Ho
w did Leonard's support\, care\, and criticism during Virginia's mental i
llness affect her writing?
\;A double major in English and F
rench\, Warren traveled to Gambia\, Mauritania\, and rural parts of Seneg
al to explore how local oral traditions\, especially those of the story-t
elling griots\, relate to the African novel: to its "context\, influences
\, and heritage."
\;
UID:20111130T233000Z-8589@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20111108T152011Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/8589-dixon-award-presentations
-by-2011-co-winners-casey
LAST-MODIFIED:20111117T221105Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:8589
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Senior English Majors and 2011 Dixon Award Winners\,
Casey Newbegin and Warren Kluber\, will present their research findings.&
#160\; Refreshments will be provided. \; Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:dixon|English|grant|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20120117
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20120118
LOCATION:Watzek Library
GEO:45.450919;-122.669177
SUMMARY:Charles Dickens: A Bicentennial Exhibit
UID:20120117T080000Z-9174@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120109T103415Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/9063-charles-dickens-a-bicente
nnial-exhibit
LAST-MODIFIED:20120109T183530Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/417/width/80/height/80/c
rop/1/27177_dickens.rev.1373936488.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:9174
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/417/width/80/
height/80/crop/1/27177_dickens.rev.1373936488.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-ALL-DAY:1
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:To celebrate the two hundredth anniversary of the bir
th of Charles Dickens in February 1812\, the Watzek Library and English D
epartment have collaborated on a substantial exhibit of British and Ameri
can first editions of Dickens and Wilkie Collins\, along with examples of
parts and periodical issues of the novels and other memorabilia. \;T
he exhibit focuses on A Christmas Carol\, Oliver Twist\, David Copper
field\, Our Mutual Friend\, The Mystery of Edwin Drood\, The Moonstone\,<
/em> \;and Dan Simmons's Drood. \;Other cases explore th
e topics of illustration\, serial publication\, the two American reading
tours by Dickens\, and issues of copyright in nineteenth century England
and America. Exhibit text by English faculty members Pauls Toutonghi and
Andrea Hibbard\, junior Dana Bronson\, and Watzek staff member Paul Merch
ant. Design by Jeremy Skinner.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120131T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120131T200000
LOCATION:Albany Quadrangle\, Smith Hall
GEO:45.451415;-122.668211
SUMMARY:Travel Writer and Nonfiction Author Julian Smith
DESCRIPTION:The Department of English is delighted to welcome author Juli
an Smith who will read from his most recent book\, \;Crossing the Hea
rt of Africa: An Odyssey of Love and Adventure. \; \; Julian Smi
th \; Julian Smith is an award-winning writer specializing in travel
and science. His articles and photographs have appeared in Smithsonian\,
Wired\, Outside\, National Geographic Traveler\, New Scientist\, the Los
Angeles Times\, the Washington Post\, and US News &\; World Report.
He is the author of travel guidebooks to El Salvador\, Ecuador\, Virginia
and the Four Corners\, and has won the country's top travel writing awar
d from the Society of American Travel Writers. With a background in the
natural sciences\, including a BA in biology and an M.S. in wildlife ec
ology\, Smith helped launch and edit Frontiers in Ecology and the Environ
ment\, an international peer-reviewed scientific journal. He has taught w
riting\, editing\, and literature at the College of Santa Fe and the Goth
am Writers Workshop. He lives in Portland\, Oregon with his wife and dau
ghter.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The Department of English is delighted
to welcome author Julian Smith who will read from his most recent book\,&
#160\;Crossing the Heart of Africa: An Odyssey of Love and Adventure.
\; \;
Julian Smith \
;
Julian Smith is an award-winning writer specializing in
travel and science. His articles and photographs have appeared in Smiths
onian\, Wired\, Outside\, National Geographic Traveler\, New Scientist\,
the Los Angeles Times\, the Washington Post\, and US News &\; World Re
port.
He is the author of travel guidebooks to El Salvador\, Ecua
dor\, Virginia and the Four Corners\, and has won the country's top trave
l writing award from the Society of American Travel Writers.
With
a background in the natural sciences\, including a BA in biology and a
n M.S. in wildlife ecology\, Smith helped launch and edit Frontiers in Ec
ology and the Environment\, an international peer-reviewed scientific jou
rnal. He has taught writing\, editing\, and literature at the College of
Santa Fe and the Gotham Writers Workshop.
He lives in Portland\,
Oregon with his wife and daughter.
UID:20120201T030000Z-8607@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20111108T152153Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/8607-travel-writer-and-nonfict
ion-author-julian-smith
LAST-MODIFIED:20120109T221115Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/25827_julian_smith.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:8607
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/25827_julian_smith.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Author Julian Smith
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English is delighted to welcome aut
hor Julian Smith who will read from his most recent book\, Crossing t
he Heart of Africa: An Odyssey of Love and Adventure. \; Refresh
ments will be provided. Free and open to the public
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120207T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120207T160000
LOCATION:Watzek Library\, then Smith Hall
GEO:45.450919;-122.669177
SUMMARY:Charles Dickens Birthday Celebration
DESCRIPTION:The celebration begins at 3:00 pm in the Watzek Library class
room\, with introductions from the exhibit curators. \; The exhibit f
ocuses on \;A Christmas Carol\, Oliver Twist\, David Copperfield\, Ou
r Mutual Friend\, The Mystery of Edwin Drood\, The Moonstone\, \;and
Dan Simmons's \;Drood. \;Other cases explore the topics of illust
ration\, serial publication\, the two American reading tours by Dickens\,
and issues of copyright in nineteenth century England and America. Exhib
it text by English faculty members Pauls Toutonghi and Andrea Hibbard\, j
unior Dana Bronson\, and Watzek staff member Paul Merchant. Design by Jer
emy Skinner. \; To schedule a personal tour\, contact merchant@lclark
.edu. The second part of the celebration will be a reading of excerpts f
rom Dickens in Smith Hall starting at 4:30pm. \; Appetizers\, cake\,
and beverages will be provided. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The celebration begins at 3:00 pm in th
e Watzek Library classroom\, with introductions from the exhibit curators
. \; The exhibit focuses on \;A Christmas Carol\, Oliver Twis
t\, David Copperfield\, Our Mutual Friend\, The Mystery of Edwin Drood\,
The Moonstone\, \;and Dan Simmons's \;Drood. \;
Other cases explore the topics of illustration\, serial publication\, the
two American reading tours by Dickens\, and issues of copyright in ninet
eenth century England and America. Exhibit text by English faculty member
s Pauls Toutonghi and Andrea Hibbard\, junior Dana Bronson\, and Watzek s
taff member Paul Merchant. Design by Jeremy Skinner. \; To schedule a
personal tour\, contact merchant@lclark.edu.
The second part of
the celebration will be a reading of excerpts from Dickens in Smith Hall
starting at 4:30pm. \; Appetizers\, cake\, and beverages will be prov
ided.
\;
UID:20120207T230000Z-9200@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120111T105224Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/9200-charles-dickens-birthday-
celebration
LAST-MODIFIED:20120126T201826Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/27214_toutonghi2_2009.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:9200
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/27214_toutonghi2_2009.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Pauls Toutonghi\, Assistant Professor of Englis
h and Exhibit Curator
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:To celebrate the birth of Charles Dickens in February
1812\, the Watzek Library and English Department welcome you to a birthd
ay celebration.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120222T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120222T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Thomas Pruiksma
DESCRIPTION:Thomas Pruiksma is a celebrated poet\, magician\, writer\, tr
anslator\, teacher\, and musician. He is most recently the author of Give
\, Eat\, and Live: Poems of Avvaiyar\, and he co-authored The Body and th
e Earth: Notes from a Conversation \;and A Feast for the Tongue: Fort
y Servings of Spoken Tamil with Helpings of Equally Spoken English. \
;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Thomas Pruiksma is a celebrated poet\,
magician\, writer\, translator\, teacher\, and musician. He is most recen
tly the author of Give\, Eat\, and Live: Poems of Avvaiyar\, and
he co-authored The Body and the Earth: Notes from a Conversation \;and A Feast for the Tongue: Forty Servings of Spoken Tamil wi
th Helpings of Equally Spoken English. \;
UID:20120223T030000Z-8608@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20111108T152246Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/8608-a-fiction-reading-by-thom
as-pruiksma
LAST-MODIFIED:20120220T231533Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/27594_tom-pruiksma1-300x270.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:8608
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/27594_tom-pruiksma1-300x270.rev.1373936426.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Thomas Pruiksma
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English for a reading b
y celebrated poet\, magician\, writer\, translator\, teacher\, and musici
an Thomas Pruiksma. \; Free and open to the public. \; Refreshmen
ts will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120312T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120312T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Sports Writing in the 21st Century
DESCRIPTION:Jeff Sullivan is a sports journalist who has covered baseball
\, football\, and basketball. He currently edits and writes the Seattle M
ariners site\, Lookout Landing – which is part of the broader SBNation
network of blogs. His work in the new world of online sports media has re
ceived attention\, awards\, and reprints from numerous media outlets\, na
tionally and internationally.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Jeff Sullivan is a sports journalist wh
o has covered baseball\, football\, and basketball. He currently edits an
d writes the Seattle Mariners site\, Lookout Landing – which is part of
the broader SBNation network of blogs. His work in the new world of onli
ne sports media has received attention\, awards\, and reprints from numer
ous media outlets\, nationally and internationally.
UID:20120313T020000Z-9873@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120209T131923Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/9873-sports-writing-in-the-21s
t-century
LAST-MODIFIED:20120307T184535Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/27984_unknown.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:9873
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/27984_unknown.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Jeff Sullivan
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English for a nonfictio
n reading by editor and sports journalist Jeff Sullivan.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:athletics|English
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120322T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120322T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Books\, Hours\, Saints\, Lives: On Lyric Medievalism
DESCRIPTION:Books\, Hours\, Saints\, Lives: On Lyric Medievalism This ta
lk is concerned\, in the first place\, with the way in which a handful of
contemporary American poets (Marie Howe\, B. H. Fairchild\, Suzanne Paol
a\, Rynn Williams) draw upon the Middle Ages to articulate something abou
t time–something that does not give itself easily to speech\, something
that makes itself felt in the very breaks of speech foregrounded by lyri
c poetry–as well as something about embodiment\, about the living\, dyi
ng bodies that all of us\, in one way or another\, are dragging around. T
hrough four movements–books\, hours\, saints\, lives–Howie will try t
o think\, and speak\, with these poets as they reveal the temporal and te
xtual complications of past bodies for\, and with\, our all-too-present\,
never-just-present lives. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Books\, Hours\, Saints\, Lives: On Lyr
ic Medievalism
This talk is concerned\, in the first pla
ce\, with the way in which a handful of contemporary American poets (Mari
e Howe\, B. H. Fairchild\, Suzanne Paola\, Rynn Williams) draw upon the M
iddle Ages to articulate something about time–something that does not g
ive itself easily to speech\, something that makes itself felt in the ver
y breaks of speech foregrounded by lyric poetry–as well as something ab
out embodiment\, about the living\, dying bodies that all of us\, in one
way or another\, are dragging around. Through four movements–books\, ho
urs\, saints\, lives–Howie will try to think\, and speak\, with these p
oets as they reveal the temporal and textual complications of past bodies
for\, and with\, our all-too-present\, never-just-present lives.
\;
UID:20120323T003000Z-10192@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120228T153908Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/10192-books-hours-saints-lives
-on-lyric-medievalism
LAST-MODIFIED:20120320T182217Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/28445_cary_howie_pic.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:10192
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/28445_cary_howie_pic.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English is pleased to welcome Cary
Howie\, Associate Professor of Romance Studies at Cornell University wher
e he teaches French and Italian literature\, critical theory\, and gender
studies. \; He is the author of Claustrophilia: The Erotics of E
nclosure in Medieval Literature (2007) and\, with Bill Burgwinkle\,
Sanctity and Pornography in Medieval Culture: On the Verge(2010)
. \; The title of his talk is "Books\, Hours\, Saints\, Lives: On Lyr
ic Medievalism."
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:arts|English|literary arts|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120405T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120405T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading with Jesus Barquet
DESCRIPTION:The Department of Foreign Languages and The English Departmen
t are pleased to invite you to a talk by poet and Professor of Spanish at
New Mexico State University Jesus Barquet. \; Barquet \, will presen
t both his work – and the work of other poets. \; His talk\, entitl
ed: \;The Youngest Poets of the Cuban Revolution\, will be a fascinat
ing look into the poetry of a nation.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The Department of Foreign Languages and
The English Department are pleased to invite you to a talk by poet and P
rofessor of Spanish at New Mexico State University Jesus Barquet. \;
Barquet \, will present both his work – and the work of other poets.
60\; His talk\, entitled: \;The Youngest Poets of the Cuban Revol
ution\, will be a fascinating look into the poetry of a nation.
UID:20120406T020000Z-10090@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120221T132100Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/10090-a-poetry-reading-with-je
sus-barquet
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20120403T185853Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:10090
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n The Department of Latin American Studies and
The English Department are pleased to invite you to a talk by poet Jesus
Barquet.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|lecture|multicultural|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120410T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120410T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by John Beer
DESCRIPTION:A Chicago resident\, John Beer is the author of the poetry co
llection The Waste Land and Other Poems (2010). \; Associative and
imaginative\, his work has been compared to that of John Ashbery. Poet L
ewis Warsh wrote that The Waste Land and Other Poems "embraces and distil
ls 'the bad dream' and all 'the muck' of the recent past\, but the moment
um of this book is full speed ahead." \; Beer's criticism has appe
ared in Verse\, the Denver Quarterly\, Chicago Review\, and other magazin
es. He is a theater columnist for Time Out Chicago.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: A Chicago resident\, John Beer is the a
uthor of the poetry collection The Waste Land and Other Poems (2
010).
\;
Associative and imaginative\, his work has be
en compared to that of John Ashbery. Poet Lewis Warsh wrote that The
Waste Land and Other Poems "embraces and distills 'the bad dream' an
d all 'the muck' of the recent past\, but the momentum of this book is fu
ll speed ahead."
\;
Beer's criticism has appeared in <
em>Verse
\, the Denver Quarterly\, Chicago Review\,
and other magazines. He is a theater columnist for Time Out Chicago<
/em>.
UID:20120411T020000Z-10461@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120321T132505Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/10461-a-poetry-reading-by-john
-beer
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20120321T202855Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/28459_john_beer.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:10461
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/28459_john_beer.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English invites you to a reading by
award-winning poet and columnist John Beer. \;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120416T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120416T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Senior Poetry Readings
DESCRIPTION:Please join faculty\, students\, and the community for readin
gs of original works of poetry by senior students. We look forward to you
r attendance at this much-anticipated event. Refreshments will be served.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join faculty\, students\, and th
e community for readings of original works of poetry by senior students.
We look forward to your attendance at this much-anticipated event. Refres
hments will be served.
UID:20120417T020000Z-9874@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120209T132240Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/9874-senior-poetry-readings
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20120406T205444Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:9874
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join faculty\, students\, and the community fo
r readings of original works by senior students. We look forward to your
attendance at this much-anticipated annual event. Refreshments will be se
rved.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|reading|student
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120418T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120418T163000
LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities 105
SUMMARY:SAAB Research Grant Presentation
DESCRIPTION:Come hear a presentation by senior English major and poetry s
tudent Casey Twining discussing her SAAB grant funded research of Elizabe
th Bishop. She will be exploring the unique eye of Bishop's as evidence f
or a post-modern displacement\, and especially Bishop's construction and
participation in her own synecdoche as she catalogs and describes all tha
t meets her famous eye. This synecdoche is especially relevant given her
penchant for impressionistic descriptions and her rhetorical devices of l
oss. April 18th in Miller 105 at 3:30.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Come hear a presentation by senior Engl
ish major and poetry student Casey Twining discussing her SAAB grant fund
ed research of Elizabeth Bishop. She will be exploring the unique eye of
Bishop's as evidence for a post-modern displacement\, and especially Bish
op's construction and participation in her own synecdoche as she catalogs
and describes all that meets her famous eye. This synecdoche is especial
ly relevant given her penchant for impressionistic descriptions and her r
hetorical devices of loss. April 18th in Miller 105 at 3:30.
UID:20120418T223000Z-10697@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120412T124222Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/10697-saab-research-grant-pres
entation
LAST-MODIFIED:20120418T193608Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:10697
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Senior English major Casey Twining will discuss her f
indings from a SAAB funded research project on Elizabeth Bishop.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|grant|open to the public|presentation|research|s
tudent
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120424T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120424T200000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Senior Fiction Readings
DESCRIPTION:Please join faculty\, students\, and the community for a read
ing of original works of fiction by senior students. We look forward to y
our attendance at this much-anticipated annual event. Refreshments will b
e served.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join faculty\, students\, and th
e community for a reading of original works of fiction by senior students
. We look forward to your attendance at this much-anticipated annual even
t. Refreshments will be served.
UID:20120425T020000Z-9875@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120209T132456Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/9875-senior-fiction-readings
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20120406T205931Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:9875
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join faculty\, students\, and the community fo
r readings of original works of fiction by senior students. We look forwa
rd to your attendance at this much-anticipated annual event. Refreshments
will be served.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|reading|student
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120425T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120425T200000
LOCATION:Smith Hall
SUMMARY:Literary Review Release Party
DESCRIPTION:Please join the Literary Review board and writers for a readi
ng of their original work and to celebrate the release of this year's pub
lication.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the Literary Review board a
nd writers for a reading of their original work and to celebrate the rele
ase of this year's publication.
UID:20120426T020000Z-9876@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120209T132736Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/9876-literary-review-release-p
arty
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20120412T183750Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:9876
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Literary Review board and writers for
a reading of their original work and to celebrate the release of this ye
ar's publication.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|reading|student
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120426T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120426T180000
LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, 105
SUMMARY:English Honors Presentations
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a celebration of this years English Honors
Thesis students. The following students will present their papers: \
; Karla Dechamps \;"Implications of Identity: The Green Knight of
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight" Molly Dickinson "Redefining the Lay-My
stic: Pearl and Vernacular Theology" Casey Newbegin "'These Frail Vesse
ls': Three Heroines in George Eliot and Henry James"
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join us for a celebration of thi
s years English Honors Thesis students. The following students will prese
nt their papers: \;
Karla Dechamps
\;"Implication
s of Identity: The Green Knight of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight"
Molly Dickinson
"Redefining the Lay-Mystic: Pearl<
/em> and Vernacular Theology"
Casey Newbegin
"'These Frail
Vessels': Three Heroines in George Eliot and Henry James"
UID:20120427T000000Z-10771@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120418T123133Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/10771-english-honors-presentat
ions
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20120424T224456Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:10771
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:A presentation from the English Honors Theses students.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:academic honor|English|open to the public|presentation|s
tudent
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120913T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120913T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:An Evening with Author Lois Leveen
DESCRIPTION:Please join the Department of English as we kick-off our 2012
-2013 Visiting Writer's Series with a fiction reading by author Lois Leve
en. \;This event is co-sponsored \;by Gender Studies and Ethnic
Studies. \;Refreshments will be provided. \; Free and open to t
he public.THE SECRETS OF MARY BOWSER \; \; \; A powerful de
but novel\, based on a true story\, about a female slave who spies for th
e Union during the Civil War. \; \; \; "Deftly integrating
historical research into this gripping tale of adventure\, love\, and nat
ional conflict\, Leveen brings Mary to life and evenhandedly reveals the
humanity on both sides of America's deadliest war." –Publisher's Weekly
\; \; \; Leveen earned degrees in history and literature f
rom Harvard\, the University of Southern California\, and UCLA. She is a
regular contributor to Disunion\, the New York Times coverage of the sesq
uicentennial. \; For more information please contact the English d
epartment at english@lclark.edu.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the Department of English a
s we kick-off our 2012-2013 Visiting Writer's Series with a fiction readi
ng by author Lois Leveen. \;This event is co-sponsored \;by Gen
der Studies and Ethnic Studies. \;Refreshments will be provided.
0\; Free and open to the public.
THE SECRETS OF MARY BOWSER
\; \; \; A powerful debut novel\, based on a
true story\, about a female slave who spies for the Union during the Civi
l War.
\; \; \; "Deftly integrating historical
research into this gripping tale of adventure\, love\, and national confl
ict\, Leveen brings Mary to life and evenhandedly reveals the humanity on
both sides of America's deadliest war." –Publisher's Weekly
\; \; \; Leveen earned degrees in history and literature
from Harvard\, the University of Southern California\, and UCLA. She is a
regular contributor to Disunion\, the New York Times coverage of the ses
quicentennial.
\;
For more information please contac
t the English department at english@lclark.edu.
UID:20120914T020000Z-12751@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120904T141808Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/12751-an-evening-with-author-l
ois-leveen
LAST-MODIFIED:20120913T184716Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/30,0,270,239/31670_leveen.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:12751
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/30\,0\,270\,239/31670_leveen.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the Department of English as we kick-off
our 2012-2013 Visiting Writer's Series with a fiction reading by author L
ois Leveen. \;This event is co-sponsored \;by Gender Studies an
d Ethnic Studies. \;Refreshments will be provided. \; Free and o
pen to the public.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120924T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120924T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House-Armstrong Lounge
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Jennifer Grotz
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a poetry reading from \;The Needle\, \;th
e newest collection of work by critically acclaimed poet \;Jennifer G
rotz. Refreshments will be provided. Free and open to the public. \;
Jennifer Grotz is a critically acclaimed poet and Associate Professor of
English at the University of Rochester. Her newest book of poems\, call
ed The Needle\, grapples with poetic traditions in both Poland and Americ
a during the twentieth-century. \;NPR named it \;one of the best
five books of poetry published in 2011. \; The Washington Post prais
ed The Needle and Grotz in their review of the book: \;"Where many wr
iters look inward and mine their private landscapes\, Grotz sees the obje
cts and scenes around her… . Attentiveness brings her poems—and the w
orld—alive."
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Join us for a poetry reading from \
;The Needle\, \;the newest collection of work by critically
acclaimed poet \;Jennifer Grotz. Refreshments will be provided. Free
and open to the public. \;
Jennifer Grotz is a critically acc
laimed poet and Associate Professor of English at the University of Roche
ster.
Her newest book of poems\, called The Needle\, gra
pples with poetic traditions in both Poland and America during the twenti
eth-century. \;NPR named it \;one of the best five books of poetr
y published in 2011. \;
The Washington Post praised
The Needle and Grotz in their review of the book: \;"Where m
any writers look inward and mine their private landscapes\, Grotz sees th
e objects and scenes around her… . Attentiveness brings her poems—and
the world—alive."
UID:20120925T010000Z-12937@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120911T144618Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/12937-a-poetry-reading-by-jenn
ifer-grotz
LAST-MODIFIED:20120913T184630Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,6,222,228/31819_grotzweb.rev.1373936427.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:12937
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,6\,222\,228/31819_grotzweb.rev.1373936427.jp
g
X-LIVEWHALE-CONTACT-INFO:For more information please contact the English
department at english@lclark.edu
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join us for a poetry reading from The Needle\, the newest collection of work by critically acclaimed poet \;Jenni
fer Grotz. Refreshments will be provided. Free and open to the public.
60\;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120927T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120927T163000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center
GEO:45.44918;-122.670969
SUMMARY:Tess Gallagher and Alice Derry: A Dialogue
DESCRIPTION:The Department of English is delighted to welcome you to a di
alogue of poets Tess Gallagher and Alice Derry. This event is sponsored b
y Mountain Writers Series. Learn more about the poets. (http://www.mounta
inwriters.org/events/special.html)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The Department of English is delighted
to welcome you to a dialogue of poets Tess Gallagher and Alice Derry. Thi
s event is sponsored by Mountain Writers Series. Learn more about the poets.
UID:20120927T223000Z-13023@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120917T101748Z
URL:http://www.mountainwriters.org/events/special.html
LAST-MODIFIED:20120921T164344Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,35,151,186/31903_tess_gallagher.rev.1373936428.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:13023
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,35\,151\,186/31903_tess_gallagher.rev.137393
6428.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Tess Gallagher
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English is delighted to welcome you
to a dialogue of poets Tess Gallagher and Alice Derry. This event is spo
nsored by Mountain Writers Series.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121016T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121016T163000
LOCATION:Lewis and Clark Bookstore
SUMMARY:Book Warming for Evel Knievel Days by Pauls Toutonghi
UID:20121016T223000Z-12968@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120912T131425Z
URL:http://paulstoutonghi.wordpress.com/evel-knievel-days/
LAST-MODIFIED:20120917T200422Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/11,0,190,179/31854_pauls_toutonghi.rev.1373936428.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:12968
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/11\,0\,190\,179/31854_pauls_toutonghi.rev.13739
36428.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Pauls Toutonghi
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:All are invited to a bookwarming for Evel Knievel
Days\, a novel by Lewis &\; Clark College Assistant Professor of
English Pauls Toutonghi. \; Pauls will read from his novel and answe
r questions. \; Please come join the discussion. \; Refreshments
will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121022T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121022T200000
LOCATION:Stamm
SUMMARY:Panel Discussion on US Immigration Issues
DESCRIPTION:On October 23\, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and undocum
ented immigrant Jose Antonio Vargas is coming to campus to relay his insp
iring story and get students talking about the immigration issues in this
country. Prepare for Vargas' visit at this informal panel discussion hos
ted by Pluralism &\; Unity Board on October 22. Professors Tim Mechli
nski and Elliott Young\, Kayse Jama from Portland's Center for Intercultu
ral Organizing\, and LC Border Studies program alum Grace Schoenlank will
speak on political and social issues surrounding immigration followed by
a Q&\;A session. The session will be very casual–our aim is to pro
vide students and community members with background and context for Varga
s' visit and engage in dialogue about immigration. Also\, free pizza!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: On October 23\, Pulitzer Prize winnin
g journalist and undocumented immigrant Jose Antonio Vargas is coming to
campus to relay his inspiring story and get students talking about the im
migration issues in this country. Prepare for Vargas' visit at this infor
mal panel discussion hosted by Pluralism &\; Unity Board on October 22
.
Professors Tim Mechlinski and Elliott Young\, Kayse Jama from Portland
's Center for Intercultural Organizing\, and LC Border Studies program al
um Grace Schoenlank will speak on political and social issues surrounding
immigration followed by a Q&\;A session.
The session wil
l be very casual–our aim is to provide students and community members w
ith background and context for Vargas' visit and engage in dialogue about
immigration.
Also\, free pizza!
UID:20121023T020000Z-13730@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121022T091953Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/13730-panel-discussion-on-us-i
mmigration-issues
LAST-MODIFIED:20121022T162342Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,94,565,659/33045_antonio_jose_vargas.rev.1373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:13730
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,94\,565\,659/33045_antonio_jose_vargas.rev.1
373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:In preparation for Jose Antonio Vargas' upcoming visi
t\, the Pluralism &\; Unity Board hosts an informal panel discussion o
n immigration.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121023T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121023T200000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center
GEO:45.44918;-122.670969
SUMMARY:A Talk by Jose Antonio Vargas: Journalist\, Activist\, and Undocu
mented Immigrant
DESCRIPTION:Born in the Philippines and sent to live with his grandparent
s in Silicon Valley in 1993\, Vargas began living a double life since dis
covering his green card was fake when he was 16 years old. Vargas has wr
itten profiles for The New Yorker\, served as a senior contributing edito
r at the Huffington Post\, and was part of the Pulitzer Prize winning tea
m that covered the 2007 massacre at Virginia Tech. Vargas now runs Define
American\, a nonprofit organization that seeks to elevate the conversat
ion around immigration. This event is hosted by the Office of Multicultu
ral Affairs (OMA). To gain knowledge around the relevancy of issues surr
ounding undocumented citizenship and immigration\, join OMA's Pluralism
and Unity Board for a forum discussion—Beyond Borders: US Immigration's
Past\, Present\, and Future\, on October 22nd in Stamm at 7pm.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Born in the Philippines and sent to liv
e with his grandparents in Silicon Valley in 1993\, Vargas began living a
double life since discovering his green card was fake when he was 16 yea
rs old.
Vargas has written profiles for The New Yorker\, ser
ved as a senior contributing editor at the Huffington Post\, and was part
of the Pulitzer Prize winning team that covered the 2007 massacre at Vir
ginia Tech. Vargas now runs Define American\, a nonprofit organization t
hat seeks to elevate the conversation around immigration.
This event is hosted by the Office of Multicul
tural Affairs (OMA).
To gain knowledge around the relevancy
of issues surrounding
undocumented citizenship and immigration\, j
oin OMA's Pluralism and Unity Board for a forum discussion—Beyond Borde
rs: US Immigration's Past\, Present\, and Future\, on October 22nd in Sta
mm at 7pm.
UID:20121024T020000Z-13731@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121022T093117Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/13731-a-talk-by-jose-antonio-v
argas-journalist-activist
LAST-MODIFIED:20121022T163117Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/33045_antonio_jose_vargas.rev.1373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:13731
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/33045_antonio_jose_vargas.rev.1373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Vargas has worked as an acclaimed journalist and now
runs Define American\, a nonprofit dedicated to elevating the conversati
on around immigration in the US.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121026T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121026T173000
LOCATION:Hoffman Art Gallery
GEO:45.45054;-122.668438
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by D. A. Powell
DESCRIPTION:Join us for homecoming weekend and a reading by award winning
poet D. A. Powell. Free and open to the public. \;D. A. Powell's boo
ks include Tea\, Lunch\, Cocktails and Chronic. Chronic was named one of
the Best Books of the Year by The Los Angeles Times\, The Kansas City Sta
r\, and Publishers Weekly. A finalist for both the Publishers Triangle an
d the National Book Critics Circle Awards\, the volume of political and p
ersonal poems went on to receive the Northern California Book Award and t
he Gold Medal in Poetry from the California Commonwealth Club. Additional
ly\, Chronic received the Kingsley Tufts Prize in Poetry from Claremont C
ollege and was Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. \
; Critic Stephen Burt\, writing in the New York Times\, said of D. A. Po
well "No accessible poet of his generation is half as original\, and no p
oet as original is this accessible." Powell's work appears in numerous a
nthologies\, including Norton's American Hybrid\, Legitimate Dangers: Poe
ts of the New Century and two volumes of Best American Poetry. His recent
poems appear in The New Republic\, Granta\, American Poetry Review and A
Public Space. With David Trinidad and a cast of hundreds\, Powell is co-
author of By Myself: An Autobiography (Turtle Point\, 2009). \; In 1
995\, with Katherine Hazzard\, D. A. Powell co-founded and edited Electro
nic Poetry Review\, a pioneer cyberspace journal\, which published work f
rom an aesthetically broad field of contemporary poets\, including Louise
Glück\, Heather McHugh\, James Tate\, Claudia Rankine\, Brenda Hillman\
, Carol Frost\, Carl Phillips and Campbell McGrath. He now co-edits Lo-Ba
ll with poet T. J. Difranceso. D. A. Powell's honors have included fello
wships from the Millay Colony\, the Guggenheim Foundation\, the National
Endowment for the Arts and the James Michener Foundation. In 2010\, he wa
s Harvard's Phi Beta Kappa Poet. And in 2011\, Powell gave the Theodore R
oethke Memorial Reading at University of Washington. A former Briggs-Cop
eland Lecturer in Poetry at Harvard University\, Powell has taught at Col
umbia University\, The Iowa Writers' Workshop\, Davidson College and New
England College. He teaches at University of San Francisco.Of Powell's la
test volume\, Elissa Schappelle wrote in Vanity Fair's "Hot Type\," "With
his typical wry eroticism\, an eagle eye for the places where men conver
ge\, and a compass that points always to desire\, poet D. A. Powell leads
us on a tour through aUseless Landscape\, or A Guide for Boys\, from gay
bars to bathhouses and into the backwoods."Useless Landscape\, or A Guid
e for Boys is Powell's fifth collection of poems. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Join us for homecoming weekend and a re
ading by award winning poet D. A. Powell. Free and open to the public.
60\;
D. A. Powell's books include Tea\, <
em>Lunch
\, Cocktails and Chronic. Chronic
was named one of the Best Books of the Year by The Los Angeles Times
\, The Kansas City Star\, and Publishers Weekly. A
finalist for both the Publishers Triangle and the National Book Critics
Circle Awards\, the volume of political and personal poems went on to rec
eive the Northern California Book Award and the Gold Medal in Poetry from
the California Commonwealth Club. Additionally\, Chronic receiv
ed the Kingsley Tufts Prize in Poetry from Claremont College and was Fina
list for the National Book Critics Circle Award. \; Critic Stephen Burt\, writing in the <
em>New York Times
\, said of D. A. Powell "No accessible poet of his
generation is half as original\, and no poet as original is this accessib
le." Powell's work appears in numerous anthologies\, including No
rton's American Hybrid\, Legitimate Dangers: Poets of the Ne
w Century and two volumes of Best American Poetry. His rece
nt poems appear in The New Republic\, Granta\, Amer
ican Poetry Review and A Public Space. With David Trinidad
and a cast of hundreds\, Powell is co-author of By Myself: An Autobio
graphy (Turtle Point\, 2009).&#
160\;
In 1995\, with Katherine Hazzard\, D. A. Powell co-f
ounded and edited Electronic Poetry Review\, a pioneer cyberspac
e journal\, which published work from an aesthetically broad field of con
temporary poets\, including Louise Glück\, Heather McHugh\, James Tate\,
Claudia Rankine\, Brenda Hillman\, Carol Frost\, Carl Phillips and Campb
ell McGrath. He now co-edits Lo-Ball with poet T. J. Difranceso.
D. A. Powell's honors have included fellowships from the Millay
Colony\, the Guggenheim Foundation\, the National Endowment for the Arts
and the James Michener Foundation. In 2010\, he was Harvard's Phi Beta Ka
ppa Poet. And in 2011\, Powell gave the Theodore Roethke Memorial Reading
at University of Washington.
A former Briggs-Copeland Lecturer i
n Poetry at Harvard University\, Powell has taught at Columbia University
\, The Iowa Writers' Workshop\, Davidson College and New England College.
He teaches at University of San Francisco.
Of Powell's latest volume\, Elissa Schappelle wrote in Vani
ty Fair's "Hot Type\," "With his typical wry eroticism\, an eagle eye for
the places where men converge\, and a compass that points always to desi
re\, poet D. A. Powell leads us on a tour through aUseless Landscape\, or A Guide for Boys\, from gay bars to bathhouses and into the b
ackwoods."
Useless Landscape\, or A Guide for Boys
is Powell's fifth collection of poems. \;
UID:20121026T233000Z-12948@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120912T103113Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/12948-a-poetry-reading-by-d-a-
powell
LAST-MODIFIED:20120913T184805Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/238,0,1416,1178/31873_powell.rev.1373936428.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:12948
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
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jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:D.A. Powell
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join us for homecoming weekend and a reading by award
winning poet D. A. Powell. Free and open to the public. \;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|hoffman gallery|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121101T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121101T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:The Noise of Almost Nothing - Author Hillel Schwartz
DESCRIPTION:Hillel Schwartz is a poet\, translator and independent schola
r who focuses on cultural history in his publications. His most recent wo
rk is entitled Making Noise: From Babel to the Big Bang and Beyond and wa
s published in October of 2011. This work focuses on the cultural history
of noise in the West including examinations of urban noise\, voices\, fo
lklore\, hearing loss\, isolation and noise control. \; Schwartz des
cribes this talk as "an exploration in word\, music\, and image across th
ree centuries and three continents of that which is (almost) inaudible an
d therefore incredibly noisy."
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Hillel Schwartz is a poet\, translator
and independent scholar who focuses on cultural history in his publicatio
ns. His most recent work is entitled Making Noise: From Babel to the
Big Bang and Beyond and was published in October of 2011. This work
focuses on the cultural history of noise in the West including examinatio
ns of urban noise\, voices\, folklore\, hearing loss\, isolation and nois
e control. \;
Schwartz describes this talk as "an exploration
in word\, music\, and image across three centuries and three continents
of that which is (almost) inaudible and therefore incredibly noisy."
UID:20121102T020000Z-12950@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20120912T105324Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/12950-the-noise-of-almost-noth
ing-author-hillel
LAST-MODIFIED:20120921T163825Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/331,0,1319,988/31837_hillel_somewhat_smiling.rev.137393642
8.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:12950
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/331\,0\,1319\,988/31837_hillel_somewhat_smiling
.rev.1373936428.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Hillel Schwartz
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us for a noisy (or perhap
s noiseless) evening with author Hillel Schwartz. This event is co-sponso
red by the Art department. Refreshments will be provided. Free and open t
o the public. \;
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:arts|English|lecture|open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121113T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20121113T203000
LOCATION:Smith Hall
GEO:45.451415;-122.668211
SUMMARY:Johnny Stallings Presents "King Lear"
DESCRIPTION:This is an encore performance of Johnny Stallings' solo versi
on of King Lear. Stallings first performed his solo version of King Lear
in the spring of 1978\, thanks to a grant from the Metropolitan Arts Comm
ission of Portland. Since then\, he has performed in schools\, theaters\,
prisons\, and at the Cornelia Connell Theater in New York. Stallings'&#
160\; performance of King Lear is a no-frills version that will amaze and
fascinate. Without trivial things like sets\, props\, costumes\, and oth
er actors cluttering up the stage\, you'll find your brain forced to conc
entrate on nothing but the words themselves\, which–according to Johnny
–is not such a bad thing: "It's arguably the best poetry in any languag
e\," he says reverently. It takes great skill to make Shakespeare this ap
proachable\, and above all else\, his grasp of the language is impeccable
. Stallings glosses over sections of King Lear with summary asides\, and
handles the dialogue scenes by simply moving to different parts of the ro
om\, distinguishing the different characters with only the smallest varia
tions in posture and tone. The result should be clumsy and awkward\, but
the precision of his line readings\, combined with his quirky sense of hu
mor\, makes it fluid. In prior years\, this has been a standing-room-onl
y event. \; Please arrive early to get a seat. \; Refreshments t
o be provided.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: This is an encore performance of Johnny
Stallings' solo version of King Lear. Stallings first performed
his solo version of King Lear in the spring of 1978\, thanks to a grant
from the Metropolitan Arts Commission of Portland. Since then\, he has pe
rformed in schools\, theaters\, prisons\, and at the Cornelia Connell The
ater in New York.
Stallings' \; performance of King Lear is a
no-frills version that will amaze and fascinate. Without trivial things
like sets\, props\, costumes\, and other actors cluttering up the stage\,
you'll find your brain forced to concentrate on nothing but the words th
emselves\, which–according to Johnny–is not such a bad thing: "It's a
rguably the best poetry in any language\," he says reverently. It takes g
reat skill to make Shakespeare this approachable\, and above all else\, h
is grasp of the language is impeccable. Stallings glosses over sections o
f King Lear with summary asides\, and handles the dialogue scenes by simp
ly moving to different parts of the room\, distinguishing the different c
haracters with only the smallest variations in posture and tone. The resu
lt should be clumsy and awkward\, but the precision of his line readings\
, combined with his quirky sense of humor\, makes it fluid.
In pr
ior years\, this has been a standing-room-only event. \; Please arriv
e early to get a seat. \; Refreshments to be provided.
UID:20121114T033000Z-14258@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121105T104826Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/14258-johnny-stallings-present
s-king-lear
LAST-MODIFIED:20121107T180513Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/33548_king_lear_2.rev.1373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:14258
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/33548_king_lear_2.rev.1373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-CONTACT-INFO:english@lclark.edu
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for an encore perf
ormance of Johnny Stalling's solo version of King Lear.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130131T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130131T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Crystal Williams
DESCRIPTION:Crystal Williams is the author of three collections of poems\
, most recently Troubled Tongues\, winner of the 2009 Naomi Long Madgett
Poetry Prize\, finalist for the 2009 Oregon Book Award\, and shortlisted
for the Idaho Prize. Widely anthologized\, her poems also appear in journ
als and publications like \;The American Poetry Review\, \;Tin Ho
use\, The Northwest Review\, 5AM\, \;The Sun\, \;Ms. Magazine\,Th
e Indiana Review\, \;Court Green \;andCallaloo\, among others. Ra
ised in Detroit\, Michigan and Madrid\, Spain\, she has just completed a
fourth manuscript\, titled \;Detroit as Barn. Crystal Williams holds
a Bachelor of Arts from New York University\, a Master of Fine Arts from
Cornell University\, and has received fellowships and grants from The Mac
Dowell Arts Colony\, Literary Arts\, the Oregon Arts Commission\, and Mon
ey for Women/Barbara Deming Memorial Fund. In 2011\, she was also appoint
ed Dean for Institutional Diversity at \;Reed College (http://www.ree
d.edu/)\, where she has been on faculty since 2000. In 2012\, she was app
ointed to the Oregon Arts Commission by Governor John Kitzhaber.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Crystal Williams is the author of three
collections of poems\, most recently Troubled Tongues\, winner
of the 2009 Naomi Long Madgett Poetry Prize\, finalist for the 2009 Orego
n Book Award\, and shortlisted for the Idaho Prize. Widely anthologized\,
her poems also appear in journals and publications like \;The Am
erican Poetry Review\, \;Tin House\, The Northwest Review\,
5AM\, \;The Sun\, \;Ms. Magazine\,The
Indiana Review\, \;Court Green \;andCallaloo\, among others. Raised in Detroit\, Michigan and Madrid\, Spain\, she
has just completed a fourth manuscript\, titled \;Detroit as Barn
. Crystal Williams holds a Bachelor of Arts from New York University
\, a Master of Fine Arts from Cornell University\, and has received fello
wships and grants from The MacDowell Arts Colony\, Literary Arts\, the Or
egon Arts Commission\, and Money for Women/Barbara Deming Memorial Fund.
In 2011\, she was also appointed Dean for Institutional Diversity at 
\;Reed College\, where
she has been on faculty since 2000. In 2012\, she was appointed to the O
regon Arts Commission by Governor John Kitzhaber.
UID:20130201T013000Z-13990@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121029T104125Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/13990-a-poetry-reading-by-crys
tal-williams
LAST-MODIFIED:20121203T211808Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,177,1179,1356/33295_crystalwilliams_v2_300_5x7.rev.13739
36429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:13990
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,177\,1179\,1356/33295_crystalwilliams_v2_300
_5x7.rev.1373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Crystal Williams
X-LIVEWHALE-CONTACT-INFO:english@lclark.edu
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for an evening wit
h poet Crystal Williams.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:diversity|English|humanities|literary arts|open to the p
ublic|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130205T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130205T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Non-Fiction Reading by David Wolman
DESCRIPTION:The End of Money For ages\, money has mean
t little metal disks and rectangular slips of paper. Yet the usefulness o
f physical money—to say nothing of its value—is coming under fire as
never before. Intrigued by the distinct possibility that cash will soon d
isappear\, author \;David Wolman sets out to investigate \;the fu
ture of money…and how it will affect your wallet.
David Wolman is a contributing editor at \;Wired (htt
p://www.wired.com/). He has also written for such publications as the
0\;New York Times (http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/02/12/opinion/
sunday/20120212-tahir-timeline.html)\, the \;Wall Street Journal (htt
p://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204136404577209241595751130.ht
ml)\, \;Time (http://business.time.com/2012/02/24/how-the-u-s-could-p
ressure-north-korea-tomorrow-quit-the-100-bill/)\, \;Outside (http://
www.outsideonline.com/outdoor-adventure/natural-intelligence/How-Wall-Str
eet-Can-Save-the-Earth.html?page=all)\, \; Newsweek\, \;Discover\
, \;Forbes\, \;New Scientist\, \;and \;Salon\, and his
60\;work appeared in \;Best American Science Writing 2009. A former F
ulbright journalism fellow in \;Japan \;and graduate of \;Sta
nford \;University's journalism program\, \;he now lives in \
;Portland\, \;Oregon\, where he received a 2011 Oregon Arts Commissio
n Individual Artist Fellowship. Wolman is also the author of A Left Hand
Turn Around the World (2005)\, and Righting the Mother Tongue: From Olde
English to Email \;(2008). \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The
End of Money For
ages\, money has meant little metal disks and rectangular slips of paper
. Yet the usefulness of physical money—to say nothing of its value—is
coming under fire as never before. Intrigued by the distinct possibility
that cash will soon disappear\, author \;David Wolman sets out to in
vestigate \;the future of money…and how it will affect your wallet.
Da
vid Wolman is a contributing editor at \; Wired. He has also written for such publications as the&
#160\; New York Times\, the \;
Wall Street Journal\, \; Time\, \; Outside\, \; New
sweek\, \; Discover\, \; Forbes\, \; New S
cientist\, \;and \; Salon\, and his \;work appea
red in \; Best American Science Writing 2009. A former Fulbri
ght journalism fellow in \;Japan \;and graduate of \;Stanford
\;University's journalism program\, \;he now lives in \;Port
land\, \;Oregon\, where he received a 2011 Oregon Arts Commission Ind
ividual Artist Fellowship. Wolman is also the author of A Left Hand T
urn Around the World (2005)\, and Righting the Mother Tongue: Fr
om Olde English to Email \;(2008). \; |
|
tr>
UID:20130206T020000Z-14312@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121106T135544Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/14312-non-fiction-reading-by-d
avid-wolman
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20130204T210120Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,30,391,421/33530_david_wolman.rev.1373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:14312
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
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29.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:David Wolman
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the English department for an evening with David
Wolman\, author of The End of Money
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:literary arts|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130226T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130226T163000
LOCATION:Miller 102
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:Cannibalism\, Necessity\, and the Late-Victorian Adventure Novel:
The Case of Dudley and Stephens
DESCRIPTION:Please join the English department for a faculty colloquium w
ith Professor Andrea Hibbard who will will explore the intersection of co
lonial adventure narratives and the sensational 1884 trial of Dudley and
Stephens\, two British sailors stranded at sea en route to Australia. Alt
hough the two were eventually rescued\, they were put on trial for killin
g and eating the ship's cabin boy. \;The literary and legal narrative
s converge in important ways and reveal the sides and the stakes in chang
ing definitions of masculinity\, ideals of Englishness\, and myths of emp
ire in the 1880s in Britain. Free and open to the public.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the English department for
a faculty colloquium with Professor Andrea Hibbard who will will explore
the intersection of colonial adventure narratives and the sensational 188
4 trial of Dudley and Stephens\, two British sailors stranded at sea en r
oute to Australia. Although the two were eventually rescued\, they were p
ut on trial for killing and eating the ship's cabin boy. \;The litera
ry and legal narratives converge in important ways and reveal the sides a
nd the stakes in changing definitions of masculinity\, ideals of Englishn
ess\, and myths of empire in the 1880s in Britain. Free and open to the p
ublic.
UID:20130226T233000Z-15685@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130204T133058Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/15685-cannibalism-necessity-an
d-the-late-victorian
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20130217T223356Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/929_Andrea_Hibbard_FA07.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:15685
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/929_Andrea_Hibbard_FA07.rev.1373936432.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Andrea Hibbard
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for a faculty coll
oquium with Professor Andrea Hibbard who will will explore the intersecti
on of colonial adventure narratives and the sensational 1884 trial of Dud
ley and Stephens\, two British sailors stranded at sea en route to Austra
lia. Although the two were eventually rescued\, they were put on trial fo
r killing and eating the ship's cabin boy. \; Free and open to the pu
blic.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130227T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130227T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Heather Spurling - SAAB Grant Presentation
DESCRIPTION:Please join us in celebrating John Steinbeck's 111th birthday
with a presentation by English major Heather Spurling who will discuss h
er SAAB grant research conducted over winter break. The presentation will
conclude with a reading of one of Steinbeck's short stories about the Sa
linas Valley.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join us in celebrating Joh
n Steinbeck's 111th birthday with a presentation by English major Heather
Spurling who will discuss her SAAB grant research conducted over winter
break. The presentation will conclude with a reading of one of Steinbeck'
s short stories about the Salinas Valley.
UID:20130228T030000Z-15858@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130212T150845Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/15858-heather-spurling-saab-gr
ant-presentation
LAST-MODIFIED:20130219T000149Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/207,0,1444,1236/35488_-1.rev.1373936430.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:15858
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/207\,0\,1444\,1236/35488_-1.rev.1373936430.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us in celebrating John St
einbeck's 111th birthday with a presentation by English major Heather Spu
rling who will discuss her SAAB grant research conducted over winter brea
k. The presentation will conclude with a reading of one of Steinbeck's sh
ort stories about the Salinas Valley.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130307T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130307T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Rain Dragon: A Fiction Reading by Jonathan Raymond
DESCRIPTION:Jonathan Raymond published his first novel\, The Half-Life in
May of 2004. Raymond also co-wrote the 2008 film Wendy and Lucy – whic
h \;starred Michelle Williams – as well as the HBO miniseries\, Mil
dred Pierce\, which starred Kate Winslet. Wendy and Lucy is based on a sh
ort story published in Raymond's 2008 collection\, Livability\, which won
the Oregon Book Award's Ken Kesey Award for Fiction. His most recent nov
el\, Rain Dragon\, was published in 2012.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Jonathan Raymond published his first no
vel\, The Half-Life in May of 2004. Raymond also co-wrote the 20
08 film Wendy and Lucy – which \;starred Michelle
Williams – as well as the HBO miniseries\, Mildred Pierce\, w
hich starred Kate Winslet. Wendy and Lucy is based on a short st
ory published in Raymond's 2008 collection\, Livability\, which
won the Oregon Book Award's Ken Kesey Award for Fiction. His most recent
novel\, Rain Dragon\, was published in 2012.
UID:20130308T030000Z-15989@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130218T133310Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/15989-rain-dragon-a-fiction-re
ading-by-jonathan-raymond
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20130219T001345Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,3,235,238/35618_6a00d83451fc7a69e2011570effc52970b-300wi
.rev.1373936430.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:15989
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,3\,235\,238/35618_6a00d83451fc7a69e2011570ef
fc52970b-300wi.rev.1373936430.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n Please join the English department for an ev
ening with author Jonathan Raymond who will read from his recently releas
ed novel\, Rain Dragon. \; Free and open to the public. 
\; Refreshments will be provided.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|fiction|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130318T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130318T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Poetry Reading with Karen Holmberg
DESCRIPTION:The English department is delighted to welcome \; award w
inning poet Karen Holmberg. Karen Holmberg's second book of poems\, Axis
Mundi\, won the John Ciardi Prize and will be published in 2012 by BkMk
Press. Her poetry has appeared in such magazines as Southern Poetry Revie
w\, Paris Review\, Nimrod\, West Branch\, Cave Wall\, and Cimarron Review
\, and her nonfiction has appeared in New England Review\, Indiana Review
\, and Black Warrior Review. She teaches poetry writing in the MFA progra
m at Oregon State University\, and currently serves as Director. \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The English department is delighted to
welcome \; award winning poet Karen Holmberg.
Karen Holmberg'
s second book of poems\, Axis Mundi\, won the John Ciardi Prize
and will be published in 2012 by BkMk Press. Her poetry has appeared in s
uch magazines as Southern Poetry Review\, Paris Review\, Nimrod\, Wes
t Branch\, Cave Wall\, and Cimarron Review\, and her nonfic
tion has appeared in New England Review\, Indiana Review\, and Black Warrior Review. She teaches poetry writing in the
MFA program at Oregon State University\, and currently serves as Director
. \;
UID:20130319T003000Z-14313@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121106T140013Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/14313-poetry-reading-with-kare
n-holmberg
LAST-MODIFIED:20121217T225320Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,34,225,259/33547_karen_holmberg.rev.1373936429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:14313
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,34\,225\,259/33547_karen_holmberg.rev.137393
6429.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Karen Holmberg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The English department is delighted to welcome \;
award winning poet Karen Holmberg who will read from her upcoming book o
f poems\, Axis Mundi.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|literary arts|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130319T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130319T163000
LOCATION:Miller Hall
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:Ice Cream Social
DESCRIPTION:The English Faculty is hosting an Ice Cream Social with Ben a
nd Jerry's ice cream in the Miller 4th Floor Lobby. Majors and anyone int
erested in the major is invited. Professors Jerry Harp\, Mary Szybist\, a
nd Pauls Toutonghi will be reading their works as will current English ma
jors. Join us to hear some fun readings and enjoy some ice cream! \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The English Faculty is hosting an Ice C
ream Social with Ben and Jerry's ice cream in the Miller 4th Floor Lobby.
Majors and anyone interested in the major is invited. Professors Jerry H
arp\, Mary Szybist\, and Pauls Toutonghi will be reading their works as w
ill current English majors. Join us to hear some fun readings and enjoy s
ome ice cream! \;
UID:20130319T223000Z-17040@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130312T113051Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/17040-ice-cream-social
LAST-MODIFIED:20130314T180702Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/36475_food-32107_640.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:17040
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/36475_food-32107_640.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the English Department for an Ice Cream Social w
ith Student and Faculty readings. Majors and LC undergraduates interested
in majoring in English are invited.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|reading|send-to-undergraduate|staff event|studen
t event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130423T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130423T163000
LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center
GEO:45.44918;-122.670969
SUMMARY:Faculty Bookwarming
UID:20130423T223000Z-17707@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130423T133435Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/17174-faculty-bookwarming
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20130423T203435Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/254/width/80/height/80/c
rop/1/src_region/0,0,951,951/36495_incarnadine.rev.1373935773.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:17707
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/254/width/80/
height/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,0\,951\,951/36495_incarnadine.rev.13739357
73.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:An event to celebrate Mary Szybist's lates book\, Incarnadine. \; Light refreshments will be provided. \;
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130423T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130423T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Senior Fiction Readings
DESCRIPTION:The Department of English invites faculty\, students\, and th
e community to one of our most anticipated annual events. \; Please j
oin us for readings of original works of fiction by senior students. 
\; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The Department of English invites facul
ty\, students\, and the community to one of our most anticipated annual e
vents. \; Please join us for readings of original works of fiction by
senior students. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
UID:20130424T020000Z-14384@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121107T095733Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/14384-senior-fiction-readings
LAST-MODIFIED:20121203T212118Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:14384
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English invites faculty\, students\
, and the community to one of our most anticipated annual events. \;
Please join us for readings of original works of fiction by senior studen
ts. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|fiction|humanities|open to the public|reading|st
udent event
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130425T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130425T200000
LOCATION:Smith Hall
GEO:45.451415;-122.668211
SUMMARY:Literary Review Release Party
DESCRIPTION:The Literary Review is Lewis &\; Clark's student-run liter
ary magazine. The magazine features poetry\, fiction\, and creative non-f
iction written by students from various majors. We'll be celebrating the
release of this year's edition with food and good company. Please join us
!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The Literary Review is Lewis &\; Cla
rk's student-run literary magazine. The magazine features poetry\, fictio
n\, and creative non-fiction written by students from various majors. We'
ll be celebrating the release of this year's edition with food and good c
ompany. Please join us!
UID:20130426T020000Z-14236@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121102T101802Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/14236-literary-review-release-
party
LAST-MODIFIED:20130420T054051Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,288,576,864/37618_litreviewcover.rev.1373936431.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:14236
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,288\,576\,864/37618_litreviewcover.rev.13739
36431.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the Literary Review editors and contributors in
celebrating the release of this year's edition!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|faculty|fiction|literary arts|s
tudent
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130430T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130430T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Senior Poetry Readings
DESCRIPTION:The Department of English invites faculty\, students\, and th
e community to one of our most anticipated annual events. \; Please j
oin us for readings of original works of poetry by senior students. \
; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The Department of English invites facul
ty\, students\, and the community to one of our most anticipated annual e
vents. \; Please join us for readings of original works of poetry by
senior students. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
UID:20130501T020000Z-14238@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20121102T111234Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/14238-senior-poetry-readings
LAST-MODIFIED:20121203T212200Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:14238
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English invites faculty\, students\
, and the community to one of our most anticipated annual events. \;
Please join us for readings of original works of poetry by senior student
s. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|fiction|open to the public|reading|staff|student
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130502T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130502T180000
LOCATION:Miller 105
SUMMARY:English Honors Presentations
DESCRIPTION:Please join the English department for presentations by honor
s students Jordan Buysse\, Marissa Fenley\, and Sarah Le Pichon.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the English department for
presentations by honors students Jordan Buysse\, Marissa Fenley\, and Sar
ah Le Pichon.
UID:20130503T000000Z-17708@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130423T133837Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/17708-english-honors-presentat
ions
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20130423T203837Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:17708
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for presentations
by honors students Jordan Buysse\, Marissa Fenley\, and Sarah Le Pichon.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130926T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130926T183000
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575
SUMMARY:Occupy Shakespeare: Shakespeare and/in the Humanities
DESCRIPTION:Marjorie Garber Harvard University \;Occupy Shakespear
e: Shakespeare and/in the Humanities \; There was a time when Shak
espeare's plays were not considered serious enough\, or appropriate for\,
study in libraries or universities. And there was a time\, a slightly la
ter time\, when Shakespeare's plays were considered the property of a sub
set of the learned class\, different from\, and distinct from\, the pract
itioners of applied or practical knowledge. Today the plays are part of c
ontemporary culture\, in popular music\, advertising\, and journalistic h
eadlines\; and they are also part of literary culture\, the culture of "t
he humanities." In fact\, for many people\, Shakespeare is the humanities
\, quoted\, cited\, and sung as an authority on philosophy\, statecraft\,
character\, love and death. What's next for Shakespeare studies\, in and
beyond the academy? What can the itinerary of "Shakespeare" in the last
hundred years tell us about the future of the humanities in the twenty-fi
rst century? \; Marjorie Garber is the William R. Kenan\, Jr. Prof
essor of English and of Visual and Environmental Studies at Harvard\, whe
re she has served as director of the Humanities Center and associate dean
of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. \; A member of the American Phi
losophical Society and a trustee of the English Institute\, she is past p
resident of the Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes and a con
tinuing member of its advisory board\, and has served on the board of dir
ectors of the ACLS. \; She is a scholar of Shakespeare\, Renaissanc
e literature\, and contemporary culture\, and has written extensively on
literary and cultural theory\, gender\, sexuality\, the arts\, and intell
ectual life. \; Her seventeen books include Vested Interests: \;
Cross-Dressing and Cultural Anxiety\; Shakespeare's Ghost Writers\; Vice-
Versa: \; Bisexuality and the Eroticism of Everyday Life\; Academic I
nstincts\; Dog Love\; Shakespeare After All (Phi Beta Kappa Christian Gau
ss Award)\; Patronizing the Arts\; and The Use and Abuse of Literature\;
as well as four volumes of collected essays. \; Since 1956\, the P
hi Beta Kappa Society's Visiting Scholar Program has been offering underg
raduates the opportunity to spend time with some of America's most distin
guished scholars. \; The purpose of the program is to contribute to t
he intellectual life of the institution by making possible an exchange of
ideas between the Visiting Scholars and the resident faculty and student
s. \; The 13 men and women participating during 2013-2014 will visit
100 colleges and universities with chapters of Phi Beta Kappa\, spending
two days on each campus and taking full part in the academic life of the
institution. \; They will meet informally with students and faculty m
embers\, participate in classroom discussions and seminars\, and give a p
ublic lecture open to the entire academic community. \; Now entering
its 58th year\, the Visiting Scholar Program has sent 611 Scholars on 5\,
004 two-day visits.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Marjorie Garber
Harvard Univers
ity
\;
Occupy Shakespeare: Shakespeare and/in th
e Humanities
\;
There was a time when Shakespe
are's plays were not considered serious enough\, or appropriate for\, stu
dy in libraries or universities. And there was a time\, a slightly later
time\, when Shakespeare's plays were considered the property of a subset
of the learned class\, different from\, and distinct from\, the practitio
ners of applied or practical knowledge. Today the plays are part of conte
mporary culture\, in popular music\, advertising\, and journalistic headl
ines\; and they are also part of literary culture\, the culture of "the h
umanities." In fact\, for many people\, Shakespeare is the humanities\, q
uoted\, cited\, and sung as an authority on philosophy\, statecraft\, cha
racter\, love and death. What's next for Shakespeare studies\, in and bey
ond the academy? What can the itinerary of "Shakespeare" in the last hund
red years tell us about the future of the humanities in the twenty-first
century?
\;
Marjorie Garber is the William R. Kenan\
, Jr. Professor of English and of Visual and Environmental Studies at Har
vard\, where she has served as director of the Humanities Center and asso
ciate dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. \; A member of the Am
erican Philosophical Society and a trustee of the English Institute\, she
is past president of the Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes
and a continuing member of its advisory board\, and has served on the bo
ard of directors of the ACLS. \;
She is a scholar of Sh
akespeare\, Renaissance literature\, and contemporary culture\, and has w
ritten extensively on literary and cultural theory\, gender\, sexuality\,
the arts\, and intellectual life. \; Her seventeen books include Vested Interests: \; Cross-Dressing and Cultural Anxiety\;
Shakespeare's Ghost Writers\; Vice-Versa: \; Bisexuality and
the Eroticism of Everyday Life\; Academic Instincts\;
Dog Love\; Shakespeare After All (Phi Beta Kappa Christian
Gauss Award)\; Patronizing the Arts\; and The Use and Abuse of Litera
ture\; as well as four volumes of collected essays.
\;<
/p>
Since 1956\, the Phi Beta Kappa Society's Visiting Scholar Progra
m has been offering undergraduates the opportunity to spend time with som
e of America's most distinguished scholars. \; The purpose of the pro
gram is to contribute to the intellectual life of the institution by maki
ng possible an exchange of ideas between the Visiting Scholars and the re
sident faculty and students. \; The 13 men and women participating du
ring 2013-2014 will visit 100 colleges and universities with chapters of
Phi Beta Kappa\, spending two days on each campus and taking full part in
the academic life of the institution. \; They will meet informally w
ith students and faculty members\, participate in classroom discussions a
nd seminars\, and give a public lecture open to the entire academic commu
nity. \; Now entering its 58th year\, the Visiting Scholar Program ha
s sent 611 Scholars on 5\,004 two-day visits.
UID:20130927T003000Z-19728@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130903T162713Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/19728-occupy-shakespeare-shake
speare-andin-the
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20130910T175233Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/40277_marjoriegarber720x480.rev.1378250053.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:19728
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/40277_marjoriegarber720x480.rev.1378250053.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English is delighted to wel
come Marjorie Garber\, Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar and William R. Ken
an\, Jr. Professor of English and of Visual and Environmental Studies at
Harvard. \; \; Dr. Garber's talk\, "Occupy Shakespeare: Shakespea
re and/in the Humanities\," is free and open to the public. \; Refres
hments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:humanities|lecture|open to the public|visual arts
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131015T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131015T163000
LOCATION:Miller Hall
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:Literary Agent Betsy Amster
DESCRIPTION:The English department is sponsoring a unique opportunity to
meet with literary agent Betsy Amster who will be speaking about careers
and opportunities in writing and publishing on Tuesday\, October 15 at 3:
30pm in Miller 102. Amster is president of Betsy Amster Literary Enterpr
ises\, a literary agency that she opened in 1992. Before starting her own
business\, she spent 10 years as an editor at Pantheon and Vintage in Ne
w York and two years as editorial director of the Globe Pequot Press in r
ural Connecticut. She has also served as a frequent instructor at The Lof
t\, an acclaimed literary center in Minneapolis\, and has run publishing
workshops at Mediabistro\, the Squaw Valley Community of Writers\, and th
e UCLA Extension Writers' Program. \;Betsy Amster represents litera
ry fiction\, narrative nonfiction\, and general nonfiction in the areas o
f popular culture\, social issues\, psychology\, and parenting. Refreshm
ents will be provided. We look forward to seeing you there.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The English department is sponsoring a
unique opportunity to meet with literary agent Betsy Amster who will be s
peaking about careers and opportunities in writing and publishing on Tues
day\, October 15 at 3:30pm in Miller 102.
Amster is presiden
t of Betsy Amster Literary Enterprises\, a literary agency that she opene
d in 1992. Before starting her own business\, she spent 10 years as an ed
itor at Pantheon and Vintage in New York and two years as editorial direc
tor of the Globe Pequot Press in rural Connecticut. She has also served a
s a frequent instructor at The Loft\, an acclaimed literary center in Min
neapolis\, and has run publishing workshops at Mediabistro\, the Squaw Va
lley Community of Writers\, and the UCLA Extension Writers' Program.
\;Betsy Amster represents literary fiction\, narrative nonf
iction\, and general nonfiction in the areas of popular culture\, social
issues\, psychology\, and parenting.
Refreshments will be pr
ovided. We look forward to seeing you there.
UID:20131015T223000Z-20971@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20131009T115517Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/20971-literary-agent-betsy-ams
ter
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20131009T200829Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/273/width/80/height/80/c
rop/1/src_region/0,4,797,801/16166_betsy-amster.rev.1373935954.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:20971
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/273/width/80/
height/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,4\,797\,801/16166_betsy-amster.rev.1373935
954.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English Department in welcoming liter
ary agent Betsy Amster to hear about opportunities and careers in writing
and publishing on Tuesday\, October 15. \; Refreshments will be prov
ided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|humanities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131029T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131029T180000
LOCATION:Albany Quadrangle\, Smith Hall
GEO:45.451415;-122.668211
SUMMARY:An Evening of Poetry with Brenda Hillman
DESCRIPTION:Brenda Hillman Acclaimed Poet &\; Teacher Non-violent Ac
tivist Academy of American Poets Fellow \; "Hillman's voice echoe
s with otherness. Subject to continual breakdown—and breakthrough—her
voice is grounded in resistance and wonder\, absurdity and joy. Her poli
tical voice is pitch perfect and I want her to run for president…."—T
om D'Evelyn "Graced with Robert Duncan's tutelary spirit\, each poem tha
t Hillman writes creates its own experimental configuration….She writes
as if the lyric poem has a political calling." —Marjorie Welish "Lingu
istically\, spatially\, politically\, emotionally\, Brenda Hillman's bril
liant poems are some of the most thrilling poems we have. Our I.Q.s and o
ur Heart Q.s rise when we read her. Each line\, each poem\, each book\, e
xtraordinarily fresh and original\, is minted alive before our eyes." —
Sharon Olds Brenda Hillman has published eight collections of poetry\,
all from Wesleyan University Press: White Dress (1985)\, Fortress (1989)\
, Death Tractates (1992)\, Bright Existence (1993)\, Loose Sugar (1997)\,
Cascadia (2001)\, Pieces of Air in the Epic (2005)\, and Practical Water
(2009)\, \;for which she won the LA Times Book Award for Poetry\; an
d three chapbooks: Coffee\, 3 A.M. (Penumbra Press\, 1982)\; Autumn Sojou
rn (Em Press\, 1995)\; and The Firecage (a+bend press\, 2000). In August
2013\, her ninth collection of poetry\, Seasonal Works with Letters on Fi
re\, will be released. Hillman has edited an edition of Emily Dickinson's
poetry for Shambhala Publications\, and\, with Patricia Dienstfrey\, co-
edited The Grand Permisson: New Writings on Poetics and Motherhood (2003)
. She co-translated\, \;with Diallah Haidar\, Poems from Above the Hi
ll: Selected Poems of Ashur Etwebi\, one of Libya's most significant poet
s. \;In 2010 she co-translated Jeongrye Choi's book of poems\, Instan
ces\, released by Parlor Press (http://www.parlorpress.com/freeverse2011p
ressrelease).
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Brenda Hillman
Acclaimed Poe
t &\; Teacher
Non-violent Activist
Academy of American P
oets Fellow
\;
"Hillman's voice echoes with otherne
ss. Subject to continual breakdown—and breakthrough—her voice is grou
nded in resistance and wonder\, absurdity and joy. Her political voice is
pitch perfect and I want her to run for president…."—Tom D'Evelyn
"Graced with Robert Duncan's tutelary spirit\, each poem that
Hillman writes creates its own experimental configuration….She writes a
s if the lyric poem has a political calling." —Marjorie Welish<
br />
"Linguistically\, spatially\, politically\, emotiona
lly\, Brenda Hillman's brilliant poems are some of the most thrilling poe
ms we have. Our I.Q.s and our Heart Q.s rise when we read her. Each line\
, each poem\, each book\, extraordinarily fresh and original\, is minted
alive before our eyes." —Sharon Olds
<
p> Brenda Hillman has published eight collections of poetry\, all from W
esleyan University Press: White Dress (1985)\, Fortress
(1989)\, Death Tractates (1992)\, Bright Existence (19
93)\, Loose Sugar (1997)\, Cascadia (2001)\, Pieces
of Air in the Epic (2005)\, and Practical Water (2009)\,&#
160\;for which she won the LA Times Book Award for Poetry\; and three cha
pbooks: Coffee\, 3 A.M. (Penumbra Press\, 1982)\; Autumn Soj
ourn (Em Press\, 1995)\; and The Firecage (a+bend press\, 2
000). In August 2013\, her ninth collection of poetry\, Seasonal Work
s with Letters on Fire\, will be released. Hillman has edited an edi
tion of Emily Dickinson's poetry for Shambhala Publications\, and\, with
Patricia Dienstfrey\, co-edited The Grand Permisson: New Writings on
Poetics and Motherhood (2003). She co-translated\, \;with Dialla
h Haidar\, Poems from Above the Hill: Selected Poems of Ashur Etwebi<
/em>\, one of Libya's most significant poets. \;In 2010 she co-transl
ated Jeongrye Choi's book of poems\, Instances\, released by Parlor Press.
UID:20131030T000000Z-19543@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130829T135158Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/19543-an-evening-of-poetry-wit
h-brenda-hillman
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20131009T200844Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/40168_hillman7.rev.1377809620.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:19543
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/40168_hillman7.rev.1377809620.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Photo by Brett Hall Jones
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for an evening of
poetry with acclaimed poet\, teacher\, non-violent activist\, and Academy
of American Poets Fellow\, Brenda Hillman. \; Refreshments will be p
rovided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131111T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131111T183000
LOCATION:Manor House\, Armstrong Lounge
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Alan Shapiro
DESCRIPTION:Please join the English Department in the Manor House for an
evening with award-winning poet Alan Shapiro\, author of 11 books of poet
ry\, including the critically acclaimed "The Last Happy Hour\," and\, mos
t recently\, "Night of the Republic." \; Shapiro currently teaches at
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Refreshments will be pr
ovided. \; Born in Boston\, Massachusetts\, Alan Shapiro was educa
ted at Brandeis University. As the author of numerous collections of poet
ry\, Shapiro has explored family\, loss\, domesticity\, and the daily asp
ects of people's lives in free verse and traditional poetic forms. Poet-
critic JD McClatchy (http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/poet.html?
id=4520) observed in a review of Shapiro's Dead\, Alive and Busy (2000)\,
"Mr. Shapiro is a shrewd and sympathetic moralist. He never trivializes
his subjects with high-minded flourishes or stylistic gimmicks." Shapiro'
s later collections address the loss of his two siblings to cancer\, the
aging of his parents\, and the strains on a marriage. In describing the d
omestic details and loss portrayed in Shapiro's Tantalus in Love (2005)\,
poet Joshua Clover (http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/poet.html?id
=81898) commented\, "Such tightly framed tales of domesticity offer a sen
se of control parallel to Shapiro's formal facility\, reducing and clarif
ying the poem's field of action in defense against an abysmal multiplicit
y of things." In his memoirs The Last Happy Occasion (1997)\, nominated
for a National Book Critics Circle award\, and Vigil (1997)\, Shapiro has
written about the death of his sister and the role that poetry has playe
d in his life. Shapiro is also the author of a collection of essays on po
etry\, In Praise of the Impure: Poetry and the Ethical Imagination: Essay
s\, 1980–1991 (1993). Alan Shapiro has won the Kingsley Tufts Award\,
the Los Angeles Book Prize\, and a Lila Wallace–Reader's Digest Writers
' Award. During Bill Clinton's presidency\, Shapiro was invited to read h
is work at the White House. He read "On Men Weeping\," a poem about Micha
el Jordan winning a basketball championship. Shapiro has taught at Stanfo
rd University and the University of North Carolina\, Chapel Hill.  \
;(information from The Poetry Foundation)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the English Department in t
he Manor House for an evening with award-winning poet Alan Shapiro\, auth
or of 11 books of poetry\, including the critically acclaimed "The Last H
appy Hour\," and\, most recently\, "Night of the Republic." \; Shapir
o currently teaches at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. R
efreshments will be provided.
\;
Born in Boston\, Ma
ssachusetts\, Alan Shapiro was educated at Brandeis University. As the au
thor of numerous collections of poetry\, Shapiro has explored family\, lo
ss\, domesticity\, and the daily aspects of people's lives in free verse
and traditional poetic forms.
Poet-critic JD McClatchy observed in a review of Shapiro's Dead\, Alive an
d Busy (2000)\, "Mr. Shapiro is a shrewd and sympathetic moralist. H
e never trivializes his subjects with high-minded flourishes or stylistic
gimmicks." Shapiro's later collections address the loss of his two sibli
ngs to cancer\, the aging of his parents\, and the strains on a marriage.
In describing the domestic details and loss portrayed in Shapiro's T
antalus in Love (2005)\, poet Joshua Clover
commented\, "Such tightly framed tales of domesticity offer a sense of co
ntrol parallel to Shapiro's formal facility\, reducing and clarifying the
poem's field of action in defense against an abysmal multiplicity of thi
ngs."
In his memoirs The Last Happy Occasion (1997)
\, nominated for a National Book Critics Circle award\, and Vigil (1997)\, Shapiro has written about the death of his sister and the role
that poetry has played in his life. Shapiro is also the author of a coll
ection of essays on poetry\, In Praise of the Impure: Poetry and the
Ethical Imagination: Essays\, 1980–1991 (1993).
Alan
Shapiro has won the Kingsley Tufts Award\, the Los Angeles Book Prize\, a
nd a Lila Wallace–Reader's Digest Writers' Award. During Bill Clinton's
presidency\, Shapiro was invited to read his work at the White House. He
read "On Men Weeping\," a poem about Michael Jordan winning a basketball
championship. Shapiro has taught at Stanford University and the Universi
ty of North Carolina\, Chapel Hill.
\;
(informatio
n from The Poetry Foundation)
UID:20131112T013000Z-18970@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20130826T141932Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/18970-a-poetry-reading-by-alan
-shapiro
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20131009T200736Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/39999_alan_shapiro_photo__copy.rev.1377551755.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:18970
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/39999_alan_shapiro_photo__copy.rev.1377551755.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English Department in the Manor House
for an evening with award-winning poet Alan Shapiro\, author of 11 books
of poetry\, including the critically acclaimed "The Last Happy Hour\," a
nd\, most recently\, "Night of the Republic." \; Shapiro currently te
aches at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Refreshments wi
ll be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|reading
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140129T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140129T180000
LOCATION:Pamplin Society Room\, Watzek Library
GEO:45.450919;-122.669177
SUMMARY:Dixon Award Presentation by Taylor Wallau
DESCRIPTION:Please join the English department for a presentation by 2013
Dixon Award winner\, Taylor Wallau. \; Taylor used the award to trav
el to Concord and Boston\, Massachusetts to explore the connection betwee
n Ralph Waldo Emerson's "moments" of transcendence and the places in whic
h he experienced and wrote about them. \; Taylor also visited various
collections of Emerson's works to examine these primary materials. The
Dixon Award was established in 2002 by the Dixon Family Foundation\, than
ks to the generous efforts of alumni Hillary ('99) and Adam ('01) Dixon.&
#160\; Each year a junior English major is awarded a $2\,500 research and
travel grant to enrich his or her current studies in preparation for sen
ior year.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the English department for
a presentation by 2013 Dixon Award winner\, Taylor Wallau. \; Taylor
used the award to travel to Concord and Boston\, Massachusetts to explore
the connection between Ralph Waldo Emerson's "moments" of transcendence
and the places in which he experienced and wrote about them. \; Taylo
r also visited various collections of Emerson's works to examine these pr
imary materials.
The Dixon Award was established in 2002 by
the Dixon Family Foundation\, thanks to the generous efforts of alumni Hi
llary ('99) and Adam ('01) Dixon. \; Each year a junior English major
is awarded a $2\,500 research and travel grant to enrich his or her curr
ent studies in preparation for senior year.
UID:20140130T010000Z-23560@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140124T144846Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/23560-dixon-award-presentation
-by-taylor-wallau
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140124T225716Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:23560
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for a presentation
by 2013 Dixon Award winner\, Taylor Wallau. \; Taylor used the award
to travel to Concord and Boston\, Massachusetts to explore the connectio
n between Ralph Waldo Emerson's "moments" of transcendence and the places
in which he experienced and wrote about them. \; Taylor also visited
various collections of Emerson's works to examine these primary material
s.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:open to the public|student
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140207T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140207T210000
LOCATION:Newmark Theater
GEO:45.516623;-122.681325
SUMMARY:William Stafford Tribute at the Newmark Theater
UID:20140208T033000Z-23025@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140114T123402Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/21761-william-stafford-tribute
-at-the-newmark-theater
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140114T203402Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/481/width/80/height/80/c
rop/1/src_region/0,47,331,378/41186_9922909463_f1fd14be79.rev.1380144813.
jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:23025
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/481/width/80/
height/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,47\,331\,378/41186_9922909463_f1fd14be79.r
ev.1380144813.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Lewis &\; Clark College and Literary Arts present:
\nWilliam Stafford Centennial Celebration
\nF
eaturing Li-Young Lee and Ted Kooser
\nAppearances by Kim Stafford a
nd Paulann Petersen
\nHosted by Matthew Dickman
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140211T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140211T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:An Evening of Poetry with LC Alumna ('08) Corey Van Landingham
DESCRIPTION:Corey Van Landingham BA '08 is the 2013 winner of the Charl
es B. Wheeler Prize (https://ohiostatepress.org/index.htm?/books/series%2
0pages/poetry.html) for her poetry collection\, Antidote. \; The Ohio
State University Press will publish Antidote in November 2013. Van Landi
ngham has also received a \;Stegner Fellowship at Stanford University
(http://creativewriting.stanford.edu/about-the-fellowship). Van Landing
ham recently completed her MFA at Purdue University\, where she was a
poetry editor for Sycamore Review. She is the recipient of a 2012 AWP Int
ro Journals Award\, as well as scholarships from the Bread Loaf Writers'
Conference. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in AGNI\, Best New
Poets 2012\, Blackbird\, Colorado Review\, Crazyhorse\, Indiana Review\,
Kenyon Review\, The Southern Review\, and Third Coast. \; \;
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Corey Van Landingham BA '08 is the 20
13 winner of the Charles B. Wheeler Prize for her poetry coll
ection\, Antidote. \; The Ohio State University Press will p
ublish Antidote in November 2013. Van Landingham has also receiv
ed a \;Stegner Fellowship at Stanford University.
Van Landingha
m recently completed her MFA at Purdue University\, where she was a po
etry editor for Sycamore Review. She is the recipient of a 2012
AWP Intro Journals Award\, as well as scholarships from the Bread Loaf Wr
iters' Conference. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in AGNI
\, Best New Poets 2012\, Blackbird\, Colorado
Review\, Crazyhorse\, Indiana Review\, Kenyon
Review\, The Southern Review\, and Third Coast.
60\;
\;
UID:20140212T013000Z-21864@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20131104T104456Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/21864-an-evening-of-poetry-wit
h-lc-alumna-08-corey-van
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140114T203331Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,7,192,199/41469_34973_van-landingham-antidote-author_20a
42fa370ebf178b092ca8c41dadaf5.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:21864
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,7\,192\,199/41469_34973_van-landingham-antid
ote-author_20a42fa370ebf178b092ca8c41dadaf5.jpeg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for an evening of
poetry with Lewis &\; Clark alumna ('08) and Wallace C. Stegner Poetry
Fellow Corey Van Landingham. \; Van Landingham will read from her p
oetry collection Antidote (2013). \; Refreshments will be pr
ovided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140213T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140213T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Ismet Prcic
DESCRIPTION:A Fiction Reading by Ismet Prcic\, 2013 Oregon Book Award Wi
nner \; Ismet Prcic's brilliant and provocative debut novel is abo
ut a young Bosnian\, also named Ismet Prcic\, who has fled his war-torn h
omeland and is now struggling to reconcile his past with his present life
in California. He is advised that in order to move forward he must "writ
e everything." The result is a great rattle bag of memories\, confessions
\, and fictions: sweetly humorous recollections of Ismet's childhood in T
uzla appear alongside anguished letters to his mother about the challenge
s of life in this new world. And as Ismet's foothold in the present falls
away\, his writings are further complicated by stories from the point of
view of another young man—real or imagined—named Mustafa\, who joine
d a troop of elite soldiers and stayed in Bosnia to fight. When Mustafa's
story begins to overshadow Ismet's New World identity\, the reader is ch
arged with piecing together the fragments of a life that has become eeril
y unrecognizable\, even to the one living it.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: A Fiction Reading by Ismet Prcic\,
2013 Oregon Book Award Winner
\;
Ismet Prcic's
brilliant and provocative debut novel is about a young Bosnian\, also nam
ed Ismet Prcic\, who has fled his war-torn homeland and is now struggling
to reconcile his past with his present life in California. He is advised
that in order to move forward he must "write everything." The result is
a great rattle bag of memories\, confessions\, and fictions: sweetly humo
rous recollections of Ismet's childhood in Tuzla appear alongside anguish
ed letters to his mother about the challenges of life in this new world.
And as Ismet's foothold in the present falls away\, his writings are furt
her complicated by stories from the point of view of another young man—
real or imagined—named Mustafa\, who joined a troop of elite soldiers a
nd stayed in Bosnia to fight. When Mustafa's story begins to overshadow I
smet's New World identity\, the reader is charged with piecing together t
he fragments of a life that has become eerily unrecognizable\, even to th
e one living it.
UID:20140214T030000Z-24346@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140130T112949Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/24346-a-fiction-reading-by-ism
et-prcic
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140130T204808Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/43569_shards.rev.1391111373.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:24346
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/43569_shards.rev.1391111373.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for a fiction read
ing by Ismet Prcic\, 2013 Oregon Book Award Winner for his novel\, Sh
ards.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|fiction|reading|send-to-undergr
aduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140225T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140225T130000
LOCATION:Albany Quadrangle\, Smith Hall
GEO:45.451415;-122.668211
SUMMARY:Poetry Readings by BBC Broadcasters Julian May and Katrina Porteous
DESCRIPTION:Julian May Julian May is a poet and producer working for the
BBC Radio Documentaries Unit. He grew up in Cornwall\, went to universit
y in Wales and has lived in China. He has travelled widely - from Greenla
nd to Cape Town\, California to Japan - to make programmes\, often poetry
features. \; He has worked with many of the major poets of our time
\, including Seamus Heaney\, Carol Ann Duffy\, Derek Walcott\, Les Murray
\, Jackie Kay and Dana Gioia\, and received several awards for his radio
work (and one\, an Eric Gregory Award\, for his poetry). His poetry has
been published in several magazines including Poetry Review\, Poetry Matt
ers\, The Spectator\, Resurgence\, PEN\, Outposts\, Acumen and Other Poet
ry\, and he published one volume\, The Earliest Memory (Peterloo Poets).
\;Katrina Porteous Katrina Porteous was born in Aberdeen\, Scotlan
d\, and grew up in County Durham. She graduated from Trinity Hall\, Cambr
idge\, with a double first in History in 1982\, studied at Berkeley and H
arvard Universities in the USA on a Harkness Fellowship\, and has lived i
n her grandparents' house on the Northumberland coast\, working as a free
lance writer\, since 1987. Her poetry has won many national awards\, inc
luding a Gregory Award (1989)\, an Arts Council Writer's Bursary (1993) a
nd an Arts Foundation Award (2003). As well as poetry in English\, she oc
casionally writes in Northumbrian dialect. In 1999 she accompanied two No
rthumbrian shepherd-poets to the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering (http:/
/www.cowboypoetry.com) in Nevada\, U.S.A. Katrina's first major collecti
on\, The Lost Music (Bloodaxe 1996)\, concentrated on the Northumbrian fi
shing community. She has also explored this subject in prose in Beadnell
- a History in Photographs (Northumberland County Library 1990)\, Beadnel
l Harbour 200th Anniversary (Harbour in Trouble 1998) and The Bonny Fishe
r Lad (People's History 2003). Katrina's other publications include a lon
g dialect poem\, The Wund an' the Wetter (with piper Chris Ormston\, Iron
Press 1999)\, Turning the Tide\, a collaboration with two artists on the
Durham coast (Easington 2001)\, Dunstanburgh (Smokestack 2004) and Longs
hore Drift (with artist James Dodds\, Jardine Press 2005). Katrina's poe
try is also included in many anthologies\, most recently Tweed Rivers\, n
ew writing and art inspired by the rivers of the Tweed catchment\, edited
by Ken Cockburn and James Carter (Luath Press and platform projects\, 20
05). Katrina's three-part poem about the River Tweed is accompanied by ph
otographs by Susheila Jamieson. Katrina Porteous is President of the Nor
thumbrian Language Society.www.northumbriana.org.uk/langsoc (http://www.n
orthumbriana.org.uk/langsoc) Katrina is also one of Britain's most excit
ing radio poets. Much of her innovative work has been produced by BBC doc
umentary-maker Julian May\, who describes her as 'extending the boundarie
s of the genre'. Her radio poems include: Beach Ride (Radio 4 2001)\, An
Ill Wind (Radio 3 2001)\, Longshore Drift (Radio 3 2003)\, Dunstanburgh (
Radio 4 2004)\, The Refuge Box (Radio 3 'Between the Ears' 2007) and Hors
e with Peter Zinovieff (2011). Katrina is President of the Northumbrian L
anguage Society and an Ambassador for New Networks for Nature.Two Countri
es\, a new collection of poems\, with a CD including recordings of some o
f her radio work\, will be published by Bloodaxe in 2014.'Katrina Porteou
s\, now being hailed as one of the most exciting talents of the North Eas
t: … a writer chronicling the life of the land through the stories of i
ts marginalised people.' (Alan Franks\, The Times).
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Julian May
Julian May is a poet and producer wor
king for the BBC Radio Documentaries Unit. He grew up in Cornwall\, went
to university in Wales and has lived in China. He has travelled widely -
from Greenland to Cape Town\, California to Japan - to make programmes\,
often poetry features. \;
He has worked with many of the majo
r poets of our time\, including Seamus Heaney\, Carol Ann Duffy\, Derek W
alcott\, Les Murray\, Jackie Kay and Dana Gioia\, and received several aw
ards for his radio work (and one\, an Eric Gregory Award\, for his poetry
).
His poetry has been published in several magazines including <
em>Poetry Review
\, Poetry Matters\, The Spectator\
, Resurgence\, PEN\, Outposts\, Acumen and Other Poetry\, and he published one volume\, The Earli
est Memory (Peterloo Poets). \;
Katrina Porteous
Katrina
Porteous was born in Aberdeen\, Scotland\, and grew up in County Durham.
She graduated from Trinity Hall\, Cambridge\, with a double first in His
tory in 1982\, studied at Berkeley and Harvard Universities in the USA on
a Harkness Fellowship\, and has lived in her grandparents' house on the
Northumberland coast\, working as a freelance writer\, since 1987.
Her poetry has won many national awards\, including a Gregory Award (19
89)\, an Arts Council Writer's Bursary (1993) and an Arts Foundation Awar
d (2003). As well as poetry in English\, she occasionally writes in North
umbrian dialect. In 1999 she accompanied two Northumbrian shepherd-poets
to the National Cowboy Poetry Gathe
ring in Nevada\, U.S.A.
Katrina's first major collection\, The Lost Music
(Bloodaxe 1996)\, concentrated on the Northumbr
ian fishing community. She has also explored this subject in prose in Beadnell - a History in Photographs (Northumberland County Library
1990)\, Beadnell Harbour 200th Anniversary (Harbour in Trouble 1
998) and The Bonny Fisher Lad (People's History 2003). Katri
na's other publications include a long dialect poem\, The Wund an' the Wetter (with piper Chris Ormston\, I
ron Press 1999)\, Turning the Tide\, a collaboration with tw
o artists on the Durham coast (Easington 2001)\, Dunstanburgh (Smokestack 2004) and Longshore Drift (with artist James D
odds\, Jardine Press 2005). Katrina's poetry is also included in
many anthologies\, most recently Tweed Rivers\, new writing and art in
spired by the rivers of the Tweed catchment\, edited by Ken Cockburn and
James Carter (Luath Press and platform projects\, 2005). Katrina's three-
part poem about the River Tweed is accompanied by photographs by Susheila
Jamieson.
Katrina Porteous is President of the Northumbrian Lang
uage Society.
www.
northumbriana.org.uk/langsoc
Katrina is also one of Britain's
most exciting radio poets. Much of her innovative work has been produced
by BBC documentary-maker Julian May\, who describes her as 'extending th
e boundaries of the genre'. Her radio poems include: Beach Ride
(Radio 4 2001)\, An Ill Wind (Radio 3 2001)\, Longshore Drif
t (Radio 3 2003)\, Dunstanburgh (Radio 4 2004)\, The Re
fuge Box (Radio 3 'Between the Ears' 2007) and Horse with P
eter Zinovieff (2011). Katrina is President of the Northumbrian Language
Society and an Ambassador for New Networks for Nature.
Two Coun
tries\, a new collection of poems\, with a CD including recordings o
f some of her radio work\, will be published by Bloodaxe in 2014.
<
em>'Katrina Porteous\, now being hailed as one of the most exciting talen
ts of the North East: … a writer chronicling the life of the land throu
gh the stories of its marginalised people.' (Alan Franks\, The Times
).
UID:20140225T200000Z-24794@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140218T150408Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/24794-poetry-readings-by-bbc-b
roadcasters-julian-may-and
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140218T231557Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/0,10,358,368/43974_julian_may.rev.1392765279.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:24794
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,10\,358\,368/43974_julian_may.rev.1392765279
.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Julian May
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for poetry reading
s by BBC broadcasters Katrina Porteous and Julian May. \; Refreshment
s will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140303T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140303T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Molly Antopol
DESCRIPTION:A Fiction Reading by Molly Antopol \; A reading by Mol
ly Antopol\, Wallace Stegner Fellow and recipient of the National Book Fo
undation \;5 Under 35 \;award. \;Her debut story collection\,
\;The UnAmericans\, is forthcoming from W.W. Norton on February 3\,
2014\, and in six other countries. The book is a Barnes and Noble Discove
r Great New Writers selection\, and an Indies Introduce Debut Authors and
Indie Next pick. \;Antopol received her MFA from Columbia Univers
ity\, and her writing has appeared or is forthcoming on NPR's \;This
American Life\, \;online at \;The New Yorker\, \;and in \
;One Story\, \;Ecotone\, Glimmer Train\, The Oxford American\, Americ
an Short Fiction\, Mississippi Review Prize Stories\, Tablet\, The Wall S
treet Journal\, San Francisco Chronicle\, The Rumpus\, Southern Humanitie
s Review \;and elsewhere. She is also a writer-in-residence at the Su
mmer Literary Seminars in Lithuania. She lives in San Francisco\, and is
at work on a novel\, \;The After Party\, which will also be published
by Norton.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: A Fiction Reading by Molly Antopol
\;
A reading by Molly Antopol\, Wallace Stegner Fellow
and recipient of the National Book Foundation \;5 Under 35&
#160\;award. \;Her debut story collection\, \;The UnAmericans
\, is forthcoming from W.W. Norton on February 3\, 2014\, and in six
other countries. The book is a Barnes and Noble Discover Great New Write
rs selection\, and an Indies Introduce Debut Authors and Indie Next pick.
\;Antopol received her MFA from Columbia University\, and her wri
ting has appeared or is forthcoming on NPR's \;This American Life
\, \;online at \;The New Yorker\, \;and in 
\;One Story\, \;Ecotone\, Glimmer Train\, The Oxford Ame
rican\, American Short Fiction\, Mississippi Review Prize Stories\, Table
t\, The Wall Street Journal\, San Francisco Chronicle\, The Rumpus\, Sout
hern Humanities Review \;and elsewhere. She is also a writer-in-
residence at the Summer Literary Seminars in Lithuania. She lives in San
Francisco\, and is at work on a novel\, \;The After Party\,
which will also be published by Norton.
UID:20140304T030000Z-24347@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140130T113223Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/24347-a-fiction-reading-by-mol
ly-antopol
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140130T205317Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/43567_molly-new-stanford-photo.rev.1391111141.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:24347
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/43567_molly-new-stanford-photo.rev.1391111141.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Lewis &\; Clark College Department of English
invites you to a fiction reading by Molly Antopol\, Wallace Stegner Fello
w and recipient of the National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 award
.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|fiction|reading|send-to-undergr
aduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140304T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140304T190000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Marianne Boruch
DESCRIPTION:Marianne Boruch's eight poetry collections include Cadaver\,
Speak (2014)and The Book of Hours( 2011)\, a Kingsley-Tufts Poetry Award
winner\, both from Copper Canyon Press. She's also the author of two essa
y collections\, In the Blue Pharmacy (Trinity\, 2005) and Poetry's Old Ai
r (Michigan\, 1993)\, and a memoir\, The Glimpse Traveler (Indiana\, 2011
) about hitchhiking in 1971\, those days of yore. \;Her work has app
eared in The New Yorker\, Poetry\, London Review of Books\, American Poet
ry Review\, and elsewhere. She's been awarded fellowships from the NEA an
d the Guggenheim Foundation\, as well as artist residencies at the Rockef
eller Foundation's Bellagio Center and at Isle Royale\, our most isolated
national park. \;A Fulbright/ Visiting Professor in 2012 in Edinbur
gh\, Scotland\, she first taught at the University of Maine at Farmington
before founding in 1987–and still on faculty at–Purdue University's
MFA program. Since 1988\, she's also taught in the low residency Program
for Writers at Warren Wilson College.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Marianne Boruch's eight poetry collecti
ons include Cadaver\, Speak (2014)and The Book of Hours
( 2011)\, a Kingsley-Tufts Poetry Award winner\, both from Copper Canyon
Press. She's also the author of two essay collections\, In the Blue P
harmacy (Trinity\, 2005) and Poetry's Old Air (Michigan\, 1
993)\, and a memoir\, The Glimpse Traveler (Indiana\, 2011) abou
t hitchhiking in 1971\, those days of yore. \;Her work has appeared
in The New Yorker\, Poetry\, London Review of Books\, American Poetry
Review\, and elsewhere. She's been awarded fellowships from the NEA
and the Guggenheim Foundation\, as well as artist residencies at the Roc
kefeller Foundation's Bellagio Center and at Isle Royale\, our most isola
ted national park. \;A Fulbright/ Visiting Professor in 2012 in Edin
burgh\, Scotland\, she first taught at the University of Maine at Farming
ton before founding in 1987–and still on faculty at–Purdue University
's MFA program. Since 1988\, she's also taught in the low residency Progr
am for Writers at Warren Wilson College.
UID:20140305T020000Z-22882@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140106T113711Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/22882-a-poetry-reading-by-mari
anne-boruch
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140106T193743Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/43131_boruch.rev.1389037004.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:22882
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/43131_boruch.rev.1389037004.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English is delighted to welcome awa
rd-winning poet Marianne Boruch to campus.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:literary arts|open to the public|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140317T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140317T140000
LOCATION:Smith Hall
GEO:45.451415;-122.668211
SUMMARY:How to Get a Career in Public Relations and Media
DESCRIPTION:The English Department and Career Development Center are spon
soring a unique opportunity to meet with Lewis &\; Clark Public Affair
s and Communications staff members\, Lise Harwin and Shelley Meyer about
careers in public relations and media. \; Lise Harwin is our Director
of Public Relations and Shelley Meyer is the Senior Communications Offic
e and Editor of The Chronicle. \; Refreshments will be provided!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: The English Department and Career Devel
opment Center are sponsoring a unique opportunity to meet with Lewis &
\; Clark Public Affairs and Communications staff members\, Lise Harwin an
d Shelley Meyer about careers in public relations and media. \; Lise
Harwin is our Director of Public Relations and Shelley Meyer is the Senio
r Communications Office and Editor of The Chronicle. \; Refr
eshments will be provided!
UID:20140317T200000Z-25497@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140312T145503Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/25497-how-to-get-a-career-in-p
ublic-relations-and-media
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140314T192754Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/44532_chronicle.rev.1394661471.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:25497
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/44532_chronicle.rev.1394661471.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:The Chronicle Magazine
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The English Department and Career Development Center
are sponsoring a unique opportunity to meet with Lewis &\; Clark Publi
c Affairs and Communications staff members\, Lise Harwin and Shelley Meye
r about careers in public relations and media. \; Lise Harwin is our
Director of Public Relations and Shelley Meyer is the Senior Communicatio
ns Office and Editor of The Chronicle. \; Refreshments will
be provided!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140331T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140331T133000
LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion
GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading and Q&A with Karla Kelsey
DESCRIPTION:Karla Kelsey is the author of three books of poetry: Knowledg
e\, Forms\, the Aviary and Iteration Nets\, both published by Ahsahta Pre
ss\, and A Conjoined Book forthcoming from Omnidawn Press. She edits and
contributes to Fence Books' Constant Critic poetry book review website an
d has had essays on poetics published in literary journals and anthologie
s. With Aaron McCollough she co-publishes SplitLevel Texts\, a small pres
s that publishes books of contemporary innovative poetry and prose.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Karla Kelsey is the author of three boo
ks of poetry: Knowledge\, Forms\, the Aviary and Iteration N
ets\, both published by Ahsahta Press\, and A Conjoined Book forthcoming from Omnidawn Press. She edits and contributes to Fence Boo
ks' Constant Critic poetry book review website and has had essay
s on poetics published in literary journals and anthologies. With Aaron M
cCollough she co-publishes SplitLevel Texts\, a small press that publishe
s books of contemporary innovative poetry and prose.
UID:20140331T193000Z-25508@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140313T111355Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/25508-a-poetry-reading-and-qam
pa-with-karla-kelsey
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140314T220809Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/44551_kelsey2.rev.1394734256.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:25508
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/44551_kelsey2.rev.1394734256.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Karla Kelse
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English department for a poetry readi
ng and Q&\;A session with publisher and author Karla Kelsey. \; Re
freshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140403T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140403T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by Emily Chenoweth
DESCRIPTION:A Fiction Reading by Emily Chenoweth \; A reading by E
mily Chenoweth of her novel \;Hello Goodbye. \;Emily Chenoweth is
a former fiction editor of Publishers Weekly. Her work has appeared in T
in House\, Bookforum\, and People\, among other publications. She lives i
n Portland\, Oregon. "Chenoweth's affectionate style works marvelously\,
capturing the decadence of youth." – The New York Times
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: A Fiction Reading by Emily Chenoweth
h3>
\;
A reading by Emily Chenoweth of her novel \;<
em>Hello Goodbye. \;Emily Chenoweth is a former fiction editor o
f Publishers Weekly. Her work has appeared in Tin House\, Bookforum\, and
People\, among other publications. She lives in Portland\, Oregon.
"Chenoweth's affectionate style works marvelously\, capturing the
decadence of youth." – The New York Times
UID:20140404T020000Z-24348@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140130T113642Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/24348-a-fiction-reading-by-emi
ly-chenoweth
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140130T205753Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/43570_74a_chenoweth.rev.1391111416.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:24348
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/43570_74a_chenoweth.rev.1391111416.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Lewis &\; Clark College Department of English
is delighted to welcome author Emily Chenoweth. \; Chenoweth will rea
d selections from her novel Hello Goodbye.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|fiction|reading|send-to-undergr
aduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140412T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140412T160000
LOCATION:Evans Hall
GEO:45.452273;-122.669241
SUMMARY:William Stafford Centennial Concert
DESCRIPTION:This brief musical tribute to William Stafford features setti
ngs of four of Stafford's poems composed by Lewis &\; Clark music facu
lty Michael Johanson and students David Salkowski and Alex Koehler in per
formances by LC music faculty members Katherine FitzGibbon\, Susan DeWitt
Smith\, and Carol Biel\; L&\;C alumnus Shohei Kobayashi\; L&\;C st
udent performers Adrian Au\, Lydia Simmons\, Spencer Mackey\, and Sage Co
y\; and Resonance Ensemble\, directed by Katherine FitzGibbon. \;
The concert features David Salkowski's "Our City is Guarded by Automatic
Rockets\," Alex Koehler's "The Well Rising\," and Michael Johanson's "Vit
a" and "Earth Dweller." \;Tim Barnes Poet and scholar Tim Barnes r
ecently retired from Portland Community College where he taught literatur
e\, composition\, and creative writing. He is the author of several books
of poetry\, most recently\, Definitions for a Lost Language and co-edito
r of Woodworks\, The Life and Writings of Charles Erskine Scott Wood. He
is on the board of the Friends of William Stafford and is the editor of F
riends of William Stafford: A Newsletter for Poets &\; Poetry. He is a
lso the creator and compiler of Everyone Out Here Knows: A Big Foot Tale\
, a picture book for children based on a William Stafford poem\, recently
published by Arnica Creative Services. The complete concert program is
below. \; Here is a link to the event: \;http://college.lclark.
edu/live/events/25692-a-musical-tribute-to-william-stafford (https://coll
ege.lclark.edu/live/events/25692-a-musical-tribute-to-william-stafford)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: This brief musical tribute to William S
tafford features settings of four of Stafford's poems composed by Lewis &
amp\; Clark music faculty Michael Johanson and students David Salkowski a
nd Alex Koehler in performances by LC music faculty members Katherine Fit
zGibbon\, Susan DeWitt Smith\, and Carol Biel\; L&\;C alumnus Shohei K
obayashi\; L&\;C student performers Adrian Au\, Lydia Simmons\, Spence
r Mackey\, and Sage Coy\; and Resonance Ensemble\, directed by Katherine
FitzGibbon.
\;
The concert features David Salkowski'
s "Our City is Guarded by Automatic Rockets\," Alex Koehler's "The Well R
ising\," and Michael Johanson's "Vita" and "Earth Dweller."
 
\;
Tim Barnes
Poet and scholar Tim Ba
rnes recently retired from Portland Community College where he taught lit
erature\, composition\, and creative writing. He is the author of several
books of poetry\, most recently\, Definitions for a Lost Language and co
-editor of Woodworks\, The Life and Writings of Charles Erskine Scott Woo
d. He is on the board of the Friends of William Stafford and is the edito
r of Friends of William Stafford: A Newsletter for Poets &\; Poetry. H
e is also the creator and compiler of Everyone Out Here Knows: A Big Foot
Tale\, a picture book for children based on a William Stafford poem\, re
cently published by Arnica Creative Services.
The complete
concert program is below. \; Here is a link to the event:

60\;
http://college.lclark.edu/
live/events/25692-a-musical-tribute-to-william-stafford
UID:20140412T220000Z-26138@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140408T114025Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/26138-william-stafford-centenn
ial-concert
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140408T184049Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/53,0,292,240/45163_williamstafford.rev.1396982401.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:26138
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/53\,0\,292\,240/45163_williamstafford.rev.13969
82401.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n This brief musical tribute to William Stafford
features settings of four of Stafford's poems composed by Lewis &\; C
lark music faculty Michael Johanson and students David Salkowski and Alex
Koehler in performances by LC music faculty members Katherine FitzGibbon
\, Susan DeWitt Smith\, and Carol Biel\; L&\;C alumnus Shohei Kobayash
i\; L&\;C student performers Adrian Au\, Lydia Simmons\, Spencer Macke
y\, and Sage Coy\; and Resonance Ensemble\, directed by Katherine FitzGib
bon.\n
\n\n \;\n
\n\n The concert features David Salko
wski's "Our City is Guarded by Automatic Rockets\," Alex Koehler's "The W
ell Rising\," and Michael Johanson's "Vita" and "Earth Dweller."\n
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140414T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140414T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Poetry Readings by Samiya Bashir & Joy Katz
DESCRIPTION:Joy Katz Joy Katz is the author of \;All You Do is Per
ceive (http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-1-935536-35-2)\, a National Po
etry Series finalist and a Stalecher Series Selection at Four Way Books (
http://fourwaybooks.com/site/all-you-do-is-perceive/) (forthcoming in Nov
ember 2013). Her other two poetry collections are \;The Garden Room (
Tupelo\, 2006: winner of the Snowbound Series prize) and \;Fabulae (S
outhern Illinois University press\, 2002: winner of the Crab Orchard Awar
d). She also is co-editor of the acclaimed anthology Dark Horses: Poets o
n Overlooked Poems (University of Illinois\, 2007). She was educated
at Ohio State\, Washington University in St. Louis\, and Stanford. Train
ed in industrial design\, she worked as a graphic designer before startin
g to write poems. Honors for her writing include a 2013 Pittsburgh F
oundation grant\, an NEA fellowship (http://www.nea.gov/features/writers/
writersCMS/writer.php?id=11_41)\, a Pushcart prize\, a Stegner fellowship
\, and the Nadya Aisenberg fellowship at the MacDowell Colony. Her poems
are anthologized in three volumes of \;The Best American Poetry\, amo
ng other places\, and appear in such journals as American Poetry Review\,
Gulf Coast\, \;Notre Dame Review\, Ploughshares\, Cincinnati Review\
, and elsewhere. Her prose has appeared in The New York Times Book Review
and The Village Voice. She was recently the visiting writer at the
University of Pittsburgh and has taught literature and poetry at The New
School and NYU. Currently she teaches in the graduate writing program at
Chatham University and in Carlow University's Madwomen in the Attic works
hops. She is an editor-at-large for Pleiades. She lives in Pittsburg
h with her husband and young son. \; Samiya Bashir
Samiya Bashir is the author of Gospel\, finalist for the Hurston/Wright L
egacy Award and the 2009 Lambda Literary Award\, and Where the Apple Fall
s\, a Poetry Foundation bestseller and finalist for the 2005 Lambda Liter
ary Award. Bashir is editor of Black Women's Erotica 2 and co-editor\, wi
th Tony Medina and Quraysh Ali Lansana\, of Role Call: A Generational Ant
hology of Social &\; Political Black Literature &\; Art. B
ashir's poetry\, stories\, articles and editorial work have been featured
in numerous publications \;including\, most recently and forthcoming
\, in POETRY\, \;Poet Lore\, \;Michigan Quarterly Review\, \;
Crab Orchard Review\, Cura\, The Rumpus\, Hubbub\, Callaloo\, \;and&#
160\;Encyclopedia Vol. 2 F-K. She is the recipient of two Hopwood Aw
ards from the University of Michigan\, as well as awards\, grants\, fello
wships\, and residencies from the Virginia Center for Creative Arts\, whe
re she was a recent NEA writer-in-residence\, the University of Californi
a\, where she served as Poet Laureate\, the Astraea Foundation\, the Nati
onal Association of Pen Women\, Community of Writers at Squaw Valley\, So
ul Mountain Writers Colony\, The Austin Project\, Alma de Mujer\, the Jam
es Dick Foundation for the Performing Arts\, and Cave Canem\, among other
s. Her long poem\, "Coronagraphy\," was nominated for a 2013 Pushcart Pri
ze. A long-time communications professional focused on editorial
\, arts\, and social justice movement building\, Bashir is a founding org
anizer of Fire &\; Ink\, an advocacy organization and writer's festiva
l for LGBT writers of African descent and a recipient of the 2011 Aquariu
s Press Legacy Award\, given annually in recognition of women writers of
color who actively provide creative opportunities for other writers. She
currently lives in Portland\, Oregon\, where she teaches creative writing
at Reed College.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Joy Katz
Joy Katz is the author of \;All You Do is Perceive\, a National Poetr
y Series finalist and a Stalecher Series Selection at Four Way Books (forthcomi
ng in November 2013). Her other two poetry collections are \;The Garden Room (T
upelo\, 2006: winner of the Snowbound Series prize) and \;Fabulae (Southern Ill
inois University press\, 2002: winner of the Crab Orchard Award). She als
o is co-editor of the acclaimed anthology Dark Horses: Poets on Overlooked Poems (U
niversity of Illinois\, 2007).
She was educated at Ohio State
\, Washington University in St. Louis\, and Stanford. Trained in industri
al design\, she worked as a graphic designer before starting to write poe
ms.
Honors for her writing include a 2013 Pittsburgh Foundati
on grant\, an NEA fellowship\, a Pushcart prize\,
a Stegner fellowship\, and the Nadya Aisenberg fellowship at the MacDowe
ll Colony. Her poems are anthologized in three volumes of \;The B
est American Poetry\, among other places\, and appear in such journa
ls as American Poetry Review\, Gulf Coast\, \;N
otre Dame Review\, Ploughshares\, Cincinnati Review\, and elsewhere. Her prose has appeared in The New York Times Book
Review and The Village Voice.
She was recently
the visiting writer at the University of Pittsburgh and has taught litera
ture and poetry at The New School and NYU. Currently she teaches in the g
raduate writing program at Chatham University and in Carlow University's
Madwomen in the Attic workshops. She is an editor-at-large for Pleiad
es.
She lives in Pittsburgh with her husband and young s
on.
\;
Samiya Bashir
Samiya Bashir is the author of Gospel\, finalist for
the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award and the 2009 Lambda Literary Award\, and
Where the Apple Falls\, a Poetry Foundation bestseller and final
ist for the 2005 Lambda Literary Award. Bashir is editor of Black Wom
en's Erotica 2 and co-editor\, with Tony Medina and Quraysh Ali Lans
ana\, of Role Call: A Generational Anthology of Social &\; Politic
al Black Literature &\; Art.
Bashir's poetry\, st
ories\, articles and editorial work have been featured in numerous public
ations \;including\, most recently and forthcoming\, in POETRY\,<
/em> \;Poet Lore\, \;Michigan Quarterly Review\, \;Crab Orchard Review\, Cura\, The Rumpus\, Hubbub\, Callaloo\,
\;and \;Encyclopedia Vol. 2 F-K.
She i
s the recipient of two Hopwood Awards from the University of Michigan\, a
s well as awards\, grants\, fellowships\, and residencies from the Virgin
ia Center for Creative Arts\, where she was a recent NEA writer-in-reside
nce\, the University of California\, where she served as Poet Laureate\,
the Astraea Foundation\, the National Association of Pen Women\, Communit
y of Writers at Squaw Valley\, Soul Mountain Writers Colony\, The Austin
Project\, Alma de Mujer\, the James Dick Foundation for the Performing Ar
ts\, and Cave Canem\, among others. Her long poem\, "Coronagraphy\," was
nominated for a 2013 Pushcart Prize.
A long-time communic
ations professional focused on editorial\, arts\, and social justice move
ment building\, Bashir is a founding organizer of Fire &\; Ink\, an ad
vocacy organization and writer's festival for LGBT writers of African des
cent and a recipient of the 2011 Aquarius Press Legacy Award\, given annu
ally in recognition of women writers of color who actively provide creati
ve opportunities for other writers. She currently lives in Portland\, Ore
gon\, where she teaches creative writing at Reed College.
div>
UID:20140415T003000Z-21866@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20131104T110436Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/21866-poetry-readings-by-samiy
a-bashir-joy-katz
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20131106T181747Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/42173_samiya_bashir.rev.1383673387.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:21866
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/42173_samiya_bashir.rev.1383673387.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Samiya Bashir
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Lewis &\; Clark English department and Watzek
Library are delighted to welcome the community to a co-reading by poets S
amiya Bashir and Joy Katz. \; Refreshments will be provided.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|reading|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140415T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140415T183000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:A Poetry Reading by Michael McGriff
DESCRIPTION:Michael McGriff was born and raised in Coos Bay\, Oregon. His
books include Dismantling the Hills\; To Build My Shadow a Fire: The Poe
try and Translations of David Wevill\; and a co-translation of Tomas Tran
strömer's The Sorrow Gondola. His poetry\, translations\, and essays hav
e appeared in numerous publications\, including American Poetry Review\,
Bookforum\, Slate\, Narrative\, The Believer\, and The Wall Street Journa
l. He has received a Lannan Literary Fellowship\, a Stegner Fellowship\,
and a National Endowment for the Arts Literary Fellowship. He is the foun
ding editor of Tavern Books\, a publishing house devoted to poetry in tra
nslation and the reviving of out-of-print books. \; He currently teac
hes at Lewis &\; Clark College.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Michael McGriff was born and raised in
Coos Bay\, Oregon. His books include Dismantling the Hills\; To Build My
Shadow a Fire: The Poetry and Translations of David Wevill\; and a co-tra
nslation of Tomas Tranströmer's The Sorrow Gondola. His poetry\, transla
tions\, and essays have appeared in numerous publications\, including Ame
rican Poetry Review\, Bookforum\, Slate\, Narrative\, The Believer\, and
The Wall Street Journal. He has received a Lannan Literary Fellowship\, a
Stegner Fellowship\, and a National Endowment for the Arts Literary Fell
owship. He is the founding editor of Tavern Books\, a publishing house de
voted to poetry in translation and the reviving of out-of-print books.
60\; He currently teaches at Lewis &\; Clark College.
UID:20140416T003000Z-26199@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140409T142015Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/26199-a-poetry-reading-by-mich
ael-mcgriff
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140409T212015Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/45186_mike_mcgriff.rev.1397077997.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:26199
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/45186_mike_mcgriff.rev.1397077997.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the English Department for a poetry readi
ng by Stegner Fellow\, founding editor of Tavern Books\, and visiting pro
fessor at Lewis &\; Clark\, Michael MGriff. \; Professor McGriff h
as published several books and his poems have appeared in such places as
Slate\,
The Believer\,
American Poetry Review\
, and
Bookforum.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140422T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140422T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
SUMMARY:Senior Fiction Readings
DESCRIPTION:The Department of English department cordially invites you to
one of our most anticipated annual events. \; Please join us for rea
dings of original works of fiction by senior students from Pauls Toutongh
i's Advanced Fiction Writing course. \; Refreshments will be provided
. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
The Department of English department co
rdially invites you to one of our most anticipated annual events. \;
Please join us for readings of original works of fiction by senior studen
ts from Pauls Toutonghi's Advanced Fiction Writing course. \; Refresh
ments will be provided. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
UID:20140423T020000Z-21869@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20131104T110808Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/21869-senior-fiction-readings
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20140130T200420Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:21869
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of English department cordially invite
s you to one of our most anticipated annual events. \; Please join us
for readings of original works of fiction by senior students from Pauls
Toutonghi's Advanced Fiction Writing course. \; Refreshments will be
provided. \; We look forward to seeing you there!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Creative Writing|English|fiction|open to the public|read
ing|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140424T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140424T200000
LOCATION:Frank Manor House
GEO:45.450219;-122.670175
SUMMARY:Literary Review Release Party
DESCRIPTION:The Literary Review\, Lewis &\; Clark's student-run litera
ry magazine will be celebrating the release of this year's edition with f
ood and good company. \; The magazine features poetry\, fiction\, and
creative non-fiction written by students from various majors. Please joi
n us! \; Literary Review Published annually\, and run entirely by
Lewis and Clark students\, The Literary Review \;provides creative w
riters with a hands-on process — in generating submissions\, in working
on an editorial board\, and in laying out a magazine.The Literary Review
\;publishes poetry\, fiction\, and creative non-fiction. The next vo
lume will be available in the spring of 2014. Please email the editor (m
ailto:lcreview@lclark.edu) \;with any submissions or questions. Subm
ission Deadline: February 2014 Current Editors: Will Aime (waime@lclark.
edu)\, Sara Balsom (sbalsom@lclark.edu)\, and Ailee Feber (afeber@lclark.
edu). \; Who's Who From the Literary Review Jessie Moon Longhurst
\, Elizabeth Miller\, Tana Wojczuk\, Cayley Bell\, Chris Bailey\, Julia R
enfro\, Kiki Johnson. They all got their start here\, in these pages. Th
e Lewis and Clark Literary Review: The writers of tomorrow\, today. Past
co-editor Lauren Furnish helped organize the 2009 issue from her study-a
broad program in the mountains of Chile. "The Lit Review has been one of
the most valuable experiences of my time at LC\," Lauren says. "I will ne
ver forget it."
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
The Literary Review\, Lewis &\; Clar
k's student-run literary magazine will be celebrating the release of this
year's edition with food and good company. \; The magazine features
poetry\, fiction\, and creative non-fiction written by students from vari
ous majors. Please join us!
\;
Literary Review
Published annually\, and run entirely by Lewis and Clark students\,
The Literary Review \;provides creative writers with a hands
-on process — in generating submissions\, in working on an editorial bo
ard\, and in laying out a magazine.
The Literary Review
60\;publishes poetry\, fiction\, and creative non-fiction. The next volum
e will be available in the spring of 2014.
Please email the editor \;with any submissions or
questions.
Submission Deadline: February 2014
Current Edi
tors: Will Aime (waime@lclark.edu)\, Sara Balsom (sbalsom@lclark.edu)\, a
nd Ailee Feber (afeber@lclark.edu).
\;
Who's Who Fr
om the Literary Review
Jessie Moon Longhurst\, Elizabeth Miller\
, Tana Wojczuk\, Cayley Bell\, Chris Bailey\, Julia Renfro\, Kiki Johnson
. They all got their start here\, in these pages.
The Lewis a
nd Clark Literary Review: The writers of tomorrow\, today.
P
ast co-editor Lauren Furnish helped organize the 2009 issue from her stud
y-abroad program in the mountains of Chile. "The Lit Review has been one
of the most valuable experiences of my time at LC\," Lauren says. "I will
never forget it."
UID:20140425T020000Z-21871@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20131104T111256Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/21871-literary-review-release-
party
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20131105T191305Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:21871
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Literary Review\, Lewis &\; Clark's student-ru
n literary magazine will be celebrating the release of this year's editio
n with food and good company. \; The magazine features poetry\, ficti
on\, and creative non-fiction written by students from various majors. Pl
ease join us!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|open to the public|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140501T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140501T193000
LOCATION:Miller Hall
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:History and English Office Crawl
DESCRIPTION:Join the English &\; History Departments in a collaborativ
e Fourth Floor Office Crawl in Miller on Thursday\, May 1 starting around
6:30 pm! \; Talk to professors\, eat delicious themed foods\, and en
joy the company of fellow majors\, and non-majors. The Office Crawl\, fi
rst started by the history department two years ago\, emphasizes a strong
community within the humanities at Lewis &\; Clark\, both in and outs
ide of the classroom setting. \; The idea is to communicate with Engl
ish &\; History majors\, as well as non-majors\, professors\, and facu
lty in an informal\, non-academic context. \; The Office Crawl will g
ive you the opportunity to talk to professors about their fields of study
\, their research\, their interests\, and really anything else that you m
ight want to know about them. \;It is also an opportunity to talk t
o other students who have a passion for English and/or History. Each pro
fessor will start out in his/her office with foods and/or beverages withi
n the theme of their studies and research\, so the diversity will be plen
tiful! So come join us after the History Thesis poster session in the li
brary for an evening of fun! If you have any questions or would like to
get involved with the crawl (posters\, advertising\, etc.) then feel free
to contact Nina Manno (senior history major) at nmanno@lclark.edu. All
help/interest is encouraged\, don't be shy!
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Join the English &\; History Departm
ents in a collaborative Fourth Floor Office Crawl in Miller on Thursday\,
May 1 starting around 6:30 pm! \; Talk to professors\, eat delicious
themed foods\, and enjoy the company of fellow majors\, and non-majors.<
/p>
The Office Crawl\, first started by the history department two ye
ars ago\, emphasizes a strong community within the humanities at Lewis &a
mp\; Clark\, both in and outside of the classroom setting. \; The ide
a is to communicate with English &\; History majors\, as well as non-m
ajors\, professors\, and faculty in an informal\, non-academic context.&#
160\; The Office Crawl will give you the opportunity to talk to professor
s about their fields of study\, their research\, their interests\, and re
ally anything else that you might want to know about them.
\;
It is also an opportunity to talk to other students who have a passion fo
r English and/or History.
Each professor will start out in his/he
r office with foods and/or beverages within the theme of their studies an
d research\, so the diversity will be plentiful!
So come join us
after the History Thesis poster session in the library for an evening of
fun!
If you have any questions or would like to get involved with
the crawl (posters\, advertising\, etc.) then feel free to contact Nina
Manno (senior history major) at nmanno@lclark.edu.
All help/inter
est is encouraged\, don't be shy!
UID:20140502T013000Z-26140@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140408T121330Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/26140-history-and-english-offi
ce-crawl
LAST-MODIFIED:20140409T200222Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/src_region/237,0,776,539/45183_miller.rev.1397071610.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:26140
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/src_region/237\,0\,776\,539/45183_miller.rev.1397071610.jp
g
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the English &\; History Departments in a coll
aborative Fourth Floor Office Crawl in Miller!
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:English|history|open to the public|send-to-undergraduate
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140510T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140510T130000
LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, 4th floor lobby
GEO:45.450858;-122.668265
SUMMARY:English Department Senior Reception
DESCRIPTION:English graduates and their guests are cordially invited to a
reception to celebrate students graduating with a major or a minor in th
e department. \; Please RSVP to drichman@lclark.edu.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
English graduates and their guests are
cordially invited to a reception to celebrate students graduating with a
major or a minor in the department. \; Please RSVP to drichman@lclark
.edu.
UID:20140510T180000Z-26598@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20140428T143357Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/26598-english-department-senio
r-reception
LAST-MODIFIED:20140428T213357Z
ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro
p/1/45935_english_reception_image.rev.1398720721.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:26598
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he
ight/80/crop/1/45935_english_reception_image.rev.1398720721.jpg
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:English graduates and their guests are cordially invi
ted to a reception to celebrate students graduating with a major or a min
or in the department. \; Please RSVP to drichman@lclark.edu.
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:commencement|English
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR