Welcome to Experiments In Text: Radical Poetry, Politics, & Pedagogy (Winter 2010)

Situationist ludic (derive & detournement) of Los Angeles, 2009

 

Dear All,

Welcome to our course.  Experiments in Text is a loose umbrella term I use for various and related, well, experiments in text, where each set of experiments has a particular focus—-these are the courses that cover avant-garde movements in text arts, cultural theory, and ideology.  These are, in a sense, shorter versions (in terms of focus) of the programs I often teach here, programs that are primarily creative writing and literary/cultural theory oriented, where “creative writing” is not taken as a given, a term defined ahead of time.  Though my courses and programs are, essentially, “graduate level,” in that the material we’ll cover and interact with will be quite contemporary, often difficult, I do not expect anyone to have a background in either text arts or in the philosophy of education.  We’ll take things in slowly, and we’ll work together to get through the material, and, most importantly, have productive fun.  In other words, don’t worry about how much background you have; especially in this course, Radical Poetry, Pedagogy, & Politics, we’ll be teaching each other.

In this course we’ll focus on the relationship between avant-garde poetry (and some prose) and recent experiments in radical education/learning.  What poetry and prose, you ask? And what experiments?  In future posts, and, of course, in and out of class, we’ll dig as deeply as we can in the time we have in order to allow these terms–”education” and “poetry” and “politics”–to translate in and through each other.  Of course, definitions are not what we’re after.  What we would like to do is apply a willing suspension of disbelief, and try to wipe clean what we take ourselves to know: try to reinvent these terms as completely as possible through discussion, collaboration, radical re-narration, but also through writing (is poetry, or creative writing a kind of thinking?), while acknowledging, but further, taking into deep consideration, that we are constrained by our contexts, most obviously, the institution that is The Evergreen State College.  For now, I want to welcome you, and to give you a sense of what the course will look like, especially the next couple of weeks.

Where/When: 

Except for one of the days you will be teaching one another, as well as 2 public readings by guests I’m bringing in (Weeks 4 & 9), we will always be meeting in Sem II Building, E3109.  Classes are on Wednesdays 6-8pm and Saturdays 4-6pm.  You will meet once per week outside those times when you begin teaching.  Details below, under Draft Schedule.

Readings for 1st Day of Class (Week 1, Wednesday)

There are three texts I would like you to have read for the first day of class.  We have little time to do some background readings, so we’re getting started right away. The readings are short but difficult.  They are:

1) Paulo Freire, Chapter 2 of Pedagogy of the Oppressed, here (http://www.marxists.org/subject/education/freire/pedagogy/ch02.htm)

2) Rodrigo Toscano, “Strikes & Orgies” and “Exchanges 2009″ here (http://www.wheelhouse.com/press/TOSCANO.pdf)

3) Amardo Rodriquez, “Searching for Paulo Freire,” critical look at race, Freire, & radical education here. http://radicalpedagogy.icaap.org/content/issue6_2/rodriguez.html

*Keep in mind that “CPT” means “Collapsible Poetics Theater” in the Toscano.  And both of the short Toscano pieces are one on top of the other–one pdf file.  So scroll down and read both short pieces.

*What do these readings have to do with each other?  For instance: replace “theater” with “course” or “class” and what happens here?  

*Take home work for after Weds, due the following Saturday: read again Toscano’s “Exchanges” and think about how you would perform this piece, especially in light of the lecture you will have just attended/participated in on Wednesday.

Readings, General

All readings will be available either online or via handout, or both.  All readings will be short, most, however, fairly difficult. All readings will be due by Wednesday, beginning of lecture. Make sure that you give yourself time to read and think through the work we’ll look at during that week’s lecture, and take notes.  That way we’ll be able to have a rich discussion every Wednesday.

I will from time to time suggest supplementary (non-required) readings.  One such recommendation is to check in on my other blog, my “public” blog, which will serve as a supplement to this course.  Here it is. http://davidwolach.blogspot.com/

Draft Schedule

Roughly the first half of this course will be devoted to straightforward Wednesday lectures and Saturday seminars.  Seminars will often be workshops in which you will work in small groups on a) developing your group’s class, and b) developing your own creative-critical writing portfolio.  The second half (again, roughly) of this course will be devoted to your teaching.  That is, after having formed groups and worked on developing a pedagogical model / organizational politics for a “creative writing class,” you’ll spend 3 1/2 weeks taking each other’s courses–teaching one day, taking your peers’ course another.  We’ll discuss details of this schedule on Saturday, Week 1, including beginning the process of constructing your teaching schedules. Remember, as this course is 4 credits, work you’ll do during the quarter will be equivelant to 4 credits.  So, though there will not be many ground rules for how you construct your class, you will have to keep workloads and expectations to a 4 credit model.  Again, we’ll discuss this in more detail later, and a fleshed out schedule/syllabus will form here on the blog in the coming days and weeks.  

*In addition to attending your courses and/or meeting you in groups, I will meet with you once individually to discuss your writing–prose, poetry, essay, notes, whatnot.  

PRESS Events

As co-sponsor of the literary-politics-arts series, PRESS, Experiments in Text: Radical P’s will be bringing to campus four artists during the quarter, and helping organize other artist talks, performances, etc.  David Buuck was the first in the series, & hopefully you got a chance to attend his performance back in October. Here are the artists we are sponsoring this quarter, as part of the Evergreen-Slightly West-& affiliated programs PRESS Series: 

*Poet-activists Jules Boykoff & Kaia Sand will read and discuss guerilla poetry and public space during week 4.

*Philadelphia poet and activist CA Conrad will read and do a workshop with us during week 9.  

*Artist & active participant in Nonsite Collective, author of the forth. Armies of Compassion (Palm Press), Eleni Stecopolous (date TBA)

Other artists will be coming here as well, & though not sponsored by our course (thus not a required part of the course), please feel free (and excited!) to attend these events.  Lydia Davis will be here later in the spring, & Charles Bernstein will be here on Monday–info coming soon on that.

For more on these wonderful artists, google them!  Or visit my public blog!  Or, wait for info to be put up here on the course blog.  We’ll be discussing works by Conrad, Boykoff, and Sand, soon enough.

Covenant

As in all my courses and programs, but especially here, where we will be relying on one another so heavily, we must be respectful towards one another.  But more so, we should be interested in one another as persons, interested in what we don’t know or can’t understand.  And we need be empathic, work hard know one another intimately, to be cognizant at all times of each other’s otherness, to explore that otherness in ways that forefronts our humanity.  I don’t believe in covenants all that much.  For very large groups, I do.  As a union organizer years ago I worked with many, many people to put in place contracts that would guarantee rights on the job.  As a comparatively small group, I don’t expect that we’ll need a binding, written contract to keep us in check.  I believe we can treat each other as human beings without a covenant, reveling in each other’s differences as opposed to undermining each other via those differences, not tolerating difference, but coming to know what it consists of, and going beyond tolerance, towards the domain of empathy.   If all of you would like to draw up a covenant, you’re welcome to do so, and in that case, I’m happy to help. Otherwise, let this serve as our covenant, and let’s work together as a living, breathing, organism–an interdependent collective. 

Portfolios/Expectations

Your written evaluations will be based on 1) your attendance/immersion in lectures, discussions, guest readings, and seminars/workshops; 2) your participation in, construction of, and carrying out your teaching; 3) your participation in and work for your peers’ courses (your peers’ evaluation of your work); and 4) your creative-critical writing generated during the quarter.

I’m very much looking forward to working with you, and, of course, getting to know each of you.  See you Wednesday.

 

In Solidarity,

David

wolachd@evergreen.edu

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FINAL SAT BEFORE PERFORMATIVE EVENTS/PRESENTATION – BE THERE & ON TIME!

Dear All,

First, I wanted to thank you (as does Rob, who will email when he gets back to SF) for your really excellent work on Weds.  The workshop was rich, and so were your questions and thoughts during the reading.  Rob was quite blown away by all of you.  As am I, quite often.  For those of you who want to interact with or join NONSITE Collective, email me.  You can either join the collective or get onto the mailing list and be more peripherally involved.  Up to you.

Here, fyi, is the Mazen Kerbaj excerpt we listened to:

http://muniak.com/mazen_kerbaj-starry_night.mp3

There are only 4 more Disaster Suite books; if any of you are interested in buying via donation, let me know.  First come first serve of sliding scale $5-15.

Tomorrow (SAT): will be an intensive day of working in groups, working on performative events.  I’ll be meeting with groups during class time, as needed, starting with the first group, then the second, and so forth, until we get through all.

So, bring your necessary materials.  If it’s a nice day, we can spread out a bit and only do the individual meetings/check-ins/brainstorms inside, like last time.

THIS IS YOUR LAST FULL SATURDAY prior to performative event sharing.  Wednesday the first groups will go, and starting Wednesday, up till the following (eval week) Wednesday, in place of eval conferencing, we’ll try to make ourselves available for presentations.  But again, the NEXT TWO WEDNESDAYS DURING CLASS TIMES, will be our default presentation/reading/sharing days.  The first Weds will be in the classroom.  The second, I think, at my house for an end of quarter post-reading get together.

Please decide which day you’d like to present/read etc (keeping in mind the 2nd Weds is technically eval week), and one of you from each group email me that info.

Finally, Saturday is PRESS: PRODUCTION, the PRESS Literary week of performances, events, etc., culminating in mostly student and local work.  Please join us.  And if you have work you’d like to present, i.e., use this venue for your performative event, email me.  Here is the where/what/when:

http://www.facebook.com/inbox/?ref=mb#/event.php?eid=77229893773&ref=mf

Okay.  See you all tomorrow.

Solidarity,
David

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Class Today, Special Rob Halpern Seminar 6-730ish, Reading @ 8

Dear All,

Remember to please make it to class for Rob Halpern’s workshop.  Class begins at the regular time, 6pm.   It will end early.  We will then go to the reading below.  Please do not be late, as Rob has developed a workshop and discussion that demands the amount of time we will have.

Best,

David

An Evening of Reading & Urgent Discussion With
ROB HALPERN
Founder of Nonsite Collective

Dear Friends,
Please join students & faculty of Experiments in Text, Prolegomena to a Future Poetics, and Book Arts: The Organism that Literature Demands in welcoming poets Rob Halpern and Sarah Mangold. To kick off this year’s PRESS Literary Arts & Politics series, Halpern will read from his newly released Disaster Suites, and Mangold from her new work, Parlor. The reading and discussion will focus on crucial intersections between contemporary art and political action. The event is free and open to the public, but donations are welcome. All proceeds from book sales will go to the UFE Student Solidarity Fund, a fund set up by faculty to help defray student tuition costs.
WHEN? Wednesday, May 27 @ 8pm
WHERE? The Evergreen State College Library Underground (refreshments provided)
We’re very pleased that Rob Halpern has come to Evergreen from San Francisco – a kind of “coming back” as Halpern is an alumnus of Evergreen. And we’re happy to have Sarah return to Evergreen for a second reading. If you missed her during the first PRESS Literary conference, don’t miss her work this year!
In Solidarity
David Wolach & Elizabeth Williamson

——–
Poet Tyrone Williams writes of Rob Halpern’s recent book: “Snow Sensitive Skin is a remarkable collaboration between Taylor Brady and Rob Halpern. Beautifully designed by Michael Cross for Atticus Finch, this black-on-black chapbook, as dense intellectually, as culturally ‘thick’ as many, much longer, books of poetry, is really a collaboration between Brady, Halpern, Cross and the inspiration for this meditation on the 2006 Israeli bombing of Lebanon, the music of Lebanese musician and artist Mazen Kerbaj. Brady’s and Halpern’s alternately terse and lapidary lyrics acknowledge the distance between them and Kerbaj, their sense of culpability and impotence, even as it rages against these ‘individual’ reactions and conditions in order to situate the war within and as a function of global economies. And always, always, they return (as did the bombs, the commands, etc.) to the body .”
Rob Halpern is the author of several books of poetry, including Rumored Place (Krupskaya Books, 2004), Snow Sensitive Skin (a collaboration with Taylor Brady, Atticus/Finch Chapbooks, 2007), and most recently Disaster Suites (Palm Press, 2009). He’s currently co-editing the poems of the late Frances Jaffer together with Kathleen Fraser, and translating the early essays of Georges Perec, the first which, “For a Realist Literature,” appeared in Chicago Review. An active participant in the Nonsite Collective, he lives in San Francisco.
Elizabeth Williamson, Ph.D.
Member of the Faculty
Evergreen State College
Sem II E2112
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WEDS WEEK 7 STUFF

Dear All,

First, I decided that instead of sending you the short readings, since they are SO short, I will go over them with you as part of short lecture Weds.  Hence….

Below is a slightly tweaked list of the groups, tweaked based on connections formed by you last Saturday.  Though it was really good that particular students could form connections and thus build something together, it occurred because too many of you were absent.  Saturday class is not an option.  I love all of you and want to see your faces and hear your thoughts – but in the end, your absence doesn’t effect me all that much.  It DOES effect your student collaborators.  From here on, it’ll be very little of me blabbing, the majority of the time spent working on performative events.  So, please be responsible to your peers and be in class.

Okay, I think you get the point, indeed got the point before I began writing this.  SO, onto what is below – first, the new group list (only a small change), and second, the schedule and due dates (or benchmarks) for certain things.  The first major bench mark is described in detail below–that of the project proposal, due by Saturday at the end of class.  See below.

I will be sending all of you a second email with the short readings for tomorrow.  Really just a couple pieces that are citations of collaborative work, plus links to helpful websites on collaborative writing and constraints, procedures, etc.  So, more in a bit.

For now, do look!

Best,
David

1)    Rachel
Wendy
Andrea
Jacob
Hayes

2)     Gabe
Rick
Claire
Diann

3)    Anna
Shannon
Zachary
Heather

4)     Whitney
Elan
Gianna
Cody

5)    Amanda
Jane
Adam
Cara

6)
Hayes
Croft
Nigel

SCHEDULE:

NOW: be in email contact with one another, circulating your notes from last Saturday

By SAT, WEEK 7: have figured out a time to meet outside of class for 1 or more hours each week from now till the end of the quarter.  Meetings, though ideally in person, can be phone or email check ins as well, work and other program schedule dictating how and when meetings will take place.

By SAT, WEEK 7: PROJECT PROPOSALS DUE.  (See below for details)

WEEK 9: Rob Halpern, NONSITE COLLECTIVE, and Sarah Mangold, BIRD DOG PRESS will be working with us, along with a Weds evening reading and q&a.

WEEK 10 & 11 (I will talk more about this in class): SHARING/EXHIBITING/READING OF PERFORMATIVE EVENTS as well as end of year party.  Default days for sharing will be both Wednesdays during class time.  However, some groups may require that we try to attend work “performed” during other days of those weeks, in spaces other than the classroom or a house.  NOTE: there usually is no week 11, but scheduling conflicts, plus Saturday class factor, are such that we will probably want to do performative events both Wednesdays, with some groups (who can stick around for eval week), sharing second.  Again, we’ll discuss this and come to some consensus tomorrow.

PROJECT PROPOSALS:

By methods determined in group (consensus model, one person writing on behalf of, dictatorial, tyrannical, etc), email me the following (again, by this upcoming Saturday, Week 7):

1) What, in 1-2 paragraphs, your performative event is, and importantly, in what sense it is answering the central question of the course – absent normative definitions of “poetry,” “creative writing,” “performance,” etc (or absent at least one of these), what can “performing the text” come to mean?  In this 1-2 paragraph description, be as clear and precise as possible about what it is you will be doing.

2) In a following few lines, describe how you will accomplish (1), what your basic schedule is, your basic working model, and, if discussed, your organizational politics.

3) Describe what materials you will be using, and how you will be procuring them if you don’t already have them.

4) Make mention of any assistance – technical, material, or otherwise -  you think you may need.

5) What sort of “public” will this work demand?  How do you envision this work being “performed,” “read,” “displayed,” “wrestled with,” etc?

THE PROJECT PROPOSAL ITSELF SHOULD BE NO MORE THAN 1-2 PAGES. MAKE SURE TO INCLUDE INFORMATION NECESSARY.  THE PROPOSAL SHOULD SERVE NOT ONLY AS INFORMATION FOR ME (SO THAT I CAN UNDERSTAND AND CRITIQUE AND SUPPORT YOUR WORK), BUT IT SHOULD SERVE AS A WORKING MODEL AND OUTLINE FOR YOUR GROUP.
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Groups: Decided Not to Post Personal Emails Online – Only Over Email

1)    Rachel
Wendy
Andrea
Jacob
Hayes

2)     Gabe
Rick
Claire
Diann

3)    Anna
Shannon
Zachary
Heather

4)     Whitney
Elan
Gianna
Cody

5)    Amanda
Jane
Adam
Nigel

6)    Cara
Hayes
Croft

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