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Poetry On The Move

  • Poetry that resists: Kei Miller and Jen Webb

    7 MAY 2020 · In this episode the first of a two-part podcast ‘Poetry that Resists’ recorded at the Poetry on the Move festival held in Canberra in 2019. During the socially traumatised times of history the ability of poetry to express human conscience has seen it embraced as a significant art form. In this panel, a discussion on poets […]
    28m 42s
  • POTM Episode 19 – Poet to Poet Keijiro Suga and Sholeh Wolpe

    7 OCT 2019 · Both Sholeh Wolpé and Keijiro Suga are noted translators of poetry. Suga is a scholar of poetic translation at Meiji University in Tokyo who regularly translates from French, English and Spanish into Japanese. Wolpé's translations from Farsi into English (including influential Iranian poet Forugh Farrokhzad, and the new translation of Attar's Persian classic The Conference of Birds) have opened the rich tradition of Persian poetry to readers in English. In this discussion, hosted by Australian poet Melinda Smith, we asked them to speak together about the "art" of translating poetry
    57m 1s
  • POTM Winter Readings 4: Bella Li

    19 JUL 2019 · Welcome to these special editions of Poetry on the Move, featuring poetry readings from 2018’s festival. Bella Li is the author of Argosy (Vagabond Press, 2017) which won the 2018 Victorian Premier's Literary Award for Poetry and the 2018 Kenneth Slessor Prize. Her work has been published in a range of journals and anthologies, including Best Australian Poems and The Kenyon Review, and displayed in the Triennial of the National Gallery of Victoria. Her latest book is Lost Lake (Vagabond Press, 2018).
    16m 3s
  • POTM Winter Reading 3: Oz Hardwick

    19 JUL 2019 · Welcome to these special editions of Poetry on the Move, featuring poetry readings from 2018's festival. Oz Hardwick is a writer, photographer,music journalist, and occasional musician, based in York (UK).. He has published six poetry collections, most recently TheHouse of Ghosts and Mirrors (Valley Press, 2017), and hasedited and co-edited several more, including (with Miles Salter) The Valley Press Anthology of Yorkshire Poetry, which was aNational Poetry Day recommendation in 2017.
    10m 36s
  • POTM Winter Readings 2: Jill Jones

    19 JUL 2019 · Welcome to these special editions of Poetry on the Move, featuring poetry readings from 2018's festival. Jill Jones has published 11 full-length books of poetry, including Viva the Real (UQP, 2018), Brink (Five Islands Press, 2017), and The Beautiful Anxiety (Puncher & Wattmann, 2014) which won the Victorian Premier’s Prize for Poetry in 2015. Her work is represented in a number of major anthologies. She is a member of the J.M. Coetzee Centre for Creative Practice, University of Adelaide.
    15m 32s
  • POTM Winter Readings 1 Christian Bök

    19 JUL 2019 · Welcome to these special editions of Poetry on the Move, featuring poetry readings from 2018's festival. Christian Bök is the author not only of Crystallography (1994), a pataphysical encyclopedia nominated for the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award, but also of Eunoia (2001), a bestselling work of experimental literature, which has gone on to win the Griffin Prize for Poetic Excellence. Bök teaches English at Charles Darwin University .
    17m 41s
  • POTM Episode 18 – Sholeh Wolpe

    10 JUL 2019 · Sholeh Wolpé is an Iranian-born poet, writer and translator whose latest books are Keeping time with Blue Hyacinths and her highly-regarded translation of Attar’s Conference of the Birds. Wolpé ’s literary work includes four collections of poetry, two plays, three books of translations, and three anthologies. Wolpé ’s writings have been translated into eleven languages and included in numerous American and international anthologies and journals of poetry and fiction. Her writings have been featured on programs such as Selected Shorts and PRI. She has lived in the UK and Trinidad, and is a Visiting Associate Professor at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). Sholeh Wolpe was an international poet in residence at 2018’s Poetry on the Move festival. Here she ‘takes us on a journey’ through her life and poetry and introduces many of us to the delights of Attar’s work.
    27m 41s
  • POTM Episode 17 – Keijiro Suga, Moira Egan, Eileen Chong

    20 MAR 2019 · In conjunction with the Poetry on the Move festival, selected guests are commissioned to produce a chapbook of work new to Australian audiences. The series is linked to a program of poets in residence at the University of Canberra. Keijiro Suga is a Tokyo based poet, translator and professor of critical theory at Meiji University. He is well known for his ten books of essays of which Transversal Journeys (2010) was awarded the Yomiuri Prize for Literature, one of the most prestigious literary awards in Japan. Moira Egan is an American poet/translator who lives in Rome. She has published eight volumes of poetry (five in the US, three in Italy); the most recent of these are Synæsthesium (The New Criterion Prize, 2017) and Olfactorium (Italic PeQuod, 2018). Her poems, essays, and translations have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies on four continents. Eileen Chong is a Sydney poet who was born in Singapore. Her books are Burning Rice (2012), Peony (2014), Painting Red Orchids (2016), and Rainforest (2018), all from Pitt Street Poetry, and The Uncommon Feast (2018) by Recent Work Press. Her work has shortlisted for numerous prizes, including the Anne Elder Award, the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award, and twice for the Prime Minister’s Literary Awards.
    31m 40s
  • POTM Episode 16 – Lines and Shapes

    19 MAR 2019 · In this panel, Lines and Shapes, taken from 2018’s Poetry on the Move festival, four poets discuss the importance of form in and for poetry. How does a consideration of form affect composition? Is form a conservative call to tradition, or a rediscovery that allows poets to explore new ways of working? We’ll hear this question addressed by in turn, Lisa Gorton, Owen Bullock, Lisa Brockwell and Cassandra Atherton. Before opening up to a group discussion moderated by the host of the panel, Paul Munden.
    45m 47s
  • POTM Episode 15 – Lionel Fogarty

    10 DEC 2018 · Lionel Fogarty is one of the best known contemporary Aboriginal Australian writers. A Yugambeh man, Fogarty was born on Wakka Wakka land in South Western Queensland near Murgon on a ‘punishment reserve’ outside Cherbourg. Throughout the 1970s he worked as an activist for Aboriginal Land Rights and protesting Aboriginal deaths in custody. He has published numerous collections of poetry in Australia.His most recent collections include Mogwie Idan: Stories of the land (Vagabond Press, 2012), Eelahroo (Long Ago) Nyah (Looking) Möbö-Möbö (Future) (Vagabond Press, 2014), and Selected Works 1980-2016 (re.press, 2017). Lionel’s is an uncompromising vision, tempered by years of activism and community engagement. Lionel was a guest of the Poetry on the Move festival where we were lucky enough to hear him reading a selection of work taken from across his career. Lionel was also interviewed by IPSI’s Jen Crawford and Paul Collis, where we catch him responding to a question on the potentials of Indigenous writing in Australia. This episode hosted by Shane Strange
    31m 22s
A podcast on contemporary poetry and poetics from IPSI, the International Poetry Studies Institute. It includes interviews and readings of contemporary poetry.
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Author Shane Strange
Categories Society & Culture
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