jaywest / collective / tags / poetry

Tagged with “poetry” (10) activity chart

  1. Sci-Fi Meets Love In Carruth’s ‘Upstream Color’

    Film writer, director, producer, actor Shane Carruth burst on the independent film scene in 2004, grabbing the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance with his mind-bending sci-fi drama “Primer,” beating out hot titles like “Napoleon Dynamite” and “Garden State.”

    Carruth is almost one-of-a-kind these days. A film poet. A cinema shaman.

    In his new film he puts, as one headline has it, “the trance in Transcendentalist.” Thoreau’s “Walden,” strange orchids, mind-control larva, and love — all in one entrancing movie.

    —Huffduffed by adactio one month ago

  2. Interview: Kevin Young, Editor Of ‘The Hungry Ear’ | Readable Feast: Poems To Feed ‘The Hungry Ear’ : The Salt : NPR

    According to poet Kevin Young, the best poems are like the best meals — they’re made from scratch. Young has edited a new collection of poems that celebrate the pleasures of food, from "butter disappearing into whipped sweet potatoes" to oysters that taste like "starlight."

    http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2012/11/22/165489750/a-readable-feast-poems-to-feed-the-hungry-ear

    —Huffduffed by adactio 4 months ago

  3. Brian Eno Interviewed on KPFA’s Ode to Gravity, 1980, Reel 1 (54:30)

    Charles Amirkhanian and Brian Eno discuss Phonetic Poetry, how Brian writes his lyrics, and the spirit of inquisitiveness at KPFA Radio on Saturday February 2, 1980. Listen to some of Brian Enos pieces; After the Heat, Everything Merges With the Night, Another Green World, Spirits Drifting and sections of other pieces. Brian Eno also discusses the artist Peter Schmidt and their work on the Oblique Strategies Cards, being a producer, Process vs Product and looping. Reel I ends with some thoughts on Steve Reich and his music.

    http://ubu.com/sound/eno.html

    —Huffduffed by adactio 8 months ago

  4. Babbage and Tennyson

    Today, Charles Babbage writes a letter to Alfred Lord Tennyson. The University of Houston’s College of Engineering presents this series about the machines that make our civilization run, and the people whose ingenuity created them.

    http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi879.htm

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago

  5. Science Diction: The Origin Of The Word ‘Atom’ : NPR

    The British poet and alchemist Thomas Norton used the word "attoms" in his 1477 poem, The Ordinal of Alchemy. Historian Howard Markel explains how Norton came to use the word, and points out earlier philosophers who raised the concept of indivisible units of matter.

    http://www.npr.org/2010/11/19/131447080/science-diction-the-origin-of-the-word-atom?ft=1&f=1007

    —Huffduffed by adactio 2 years ago

  6. Forum — A World of Ideas: Stereotypes and habits of mind.

    Provost of Columbia University Claude Steele reveals how our brains can be hindered by the power of stereotype threats and shows us what we can do to avoid them. Linguist Guy Deutscher explores how different quirks of our mother tongues, such as irregular genders, can create unique habits of mind. Hungarian writer Agnes Lehoczky uses poetry to create new geographies in our minds and suggests that it’s time to rehabilitate the notion of eavesdropping.

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/series/forum/

    —Huffduffed by adactio 2 years ago

  7. Live From The NYPL: Oliver Sacks — Hallucinations

    The Robert B. Silvers Lecture. Neurologist and author Oliver Sacks examines how the normal brain, if deprived of perceptual input, may generate illusory sensations—as with the visual hallucinations of the blind, or the musical hallucinations of the deaf.

    http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/pep/pepdesc.cfm?id=5843

    —Huffduffed by adactio 3 years ago

  8. Overlay

    A poem created from CSS.

    "Technic poetry is a kind of found poetry, based on actual production code, reworked to produce a new level of sound and meaning. Any software engineer with a good ear and poetic sensibility can write it; we certainly have plenty of raw material for creating this art. I would be curious to hear verses from the most elegant parts of the Linux kernel."

    From http://jonaquino.blogspot.com/2009/07/poetic-for-software-engineers.html

    —Huffduffed by adactio 3 years ago

  9. Jennifer Michael Hecht: Doubt

    November 28, 2008 - Jennifer Michael Hecht is the author of award-winning books of philosophy, history, and poetry, including The End of the Soul: Scientific Modernity, Atheism and Anthropology; Doubt: A History; The Happiness Myth, and her book of poetry, Funny, which Publisher’s Weekly called one of the most original and entertaining books of the year.

    This is one of my favorite guests on POI. I particularly enjoyed her views on art and poetry.

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 4 years ago

  10. Ron Slate: The Incentive of the Maggot

    Ron Slate reads from and discusses his debut collection, The Incentive of the Maggot. Ron Slate is the winner of the 2004 Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference’s prestigious Bakeless Prize, selected by former U.S. poet laureate Robert Pinsky. As Pinsky writes in his foreword to the collection, Slate "brings together the personal and the global in a way that is distinctive, subtle, defying expectations about what is political and what is personal."

    —Huffduffed by Indyplanets 4 years ago