#africandiaspora https://poetry.sfsu.edu/ en Tripwire Cross-Cultural Poetics Series: Momtaza Mehri and Zoé Samudzi, reading and in conversation https://poetry.sfsu.edu/event/tripwire-cross-cultural-poetics-series-momtaza-mehri-and-zoe-samudzi-reading-and-conversation <div class="row bs-2col-stacked node node--type-event node--view-mode-rss"> <div class="pl-component col-sm-12 bs-region bs-region--top"> <div class="field field--name-field-sub-component field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field--item"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type-compound-event-info-card paragraph--view-mode-default pl-component pl-component--card event-card"> <div class="event-info-overview"> <div class="event-image col-sm-8 col-sm-push-5"> <div class="field field--name-field-p-image field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden field--item"> <img loading="lazy" src="/sites/default/files/styles/sf_state_576x320/public/images/Momtaza_Zoe_750x425.jpg?h=cfd975a4&amp;itok=N_87Hxw6" width="576" height="320" alt="Momtaza and Zoe" class="img-responsive" /> </div> </div> <div class="event-info col-sm-5 col-sm-pull-7"> <h1></h1> <div class="event-date"> Saturday, March 13, 2021 </div> <div><span class="fa fa-clock-o"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Event Time</span> 12:00 p.m. - 01:00 p.m. PT</div> <div><span class="fa fa-usd"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Cost</span> Free and open to the public </div> <div><span class="fa fa-map-marker"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Location</span> Remote access event </div> <div><span class="fa fa-envelope-o"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Contact Email</span> poetry@sfsu.edu </div> <div></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-sm-push-2 col-sm-7 bs-region bs-region--right"> <h2 class="field-label-above">Overview</h2> <div class="pl-component pl-component--content-basic" > <div class="field field--name-field-p-formatted-content field--type-text-long field--label-hidden field--item"><p><a href="https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL61PYyhbqyuZjEh3734HkobEEvzYJ2u15">Watch the unedited video at YouTube</a> before the finished program gets posted at <a href="https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/poetrycenter">Poetry Center Digital Archive</a></p> <p>With emcee, <strong>alex cruse</strong></p> <p>This remote-access event starts promptly at 12:00 pm Pacific Time, and is free and open to the public. Real-Time Captioning link will be provided at the event. Media Captioning provided after the event, at our <a href="https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL61PYyhbqyuZjEh3734HkobEEvzYJ2u15">YouTube channel</a> and at <a href="https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/poetrycenter">Poetry Center Digital Archive</a>. For other reasonable accommodations please contact <a>poetry@sfsu.edu</a></p> <p>Please note early start-time, to accommodate our guest and audience in the UK, and elsewhere.</p> <p>For our third program in the <a href="https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/poetrycenter/12637"><strong>Tripwire Cross-Cultural Poetics Series</strong></a>, we are delighted to welcome two of the more outstanding young Black writers and intellectuals at work in the US and UK. <strong>Momtaza Mehri</strong>, in London, and <strong>Zoé Samudzi</strong>, here in the Bay Area, will each read from their work, engage in conversation with one another and with emcee <strong>alex cruse</strong>, and respond to questions from the audience. We welcome this rare opportunity to bring these two Afro-diasporan writers and thinkers together across continents.</p> <ul> <li>“...A poet is drenched in a singularity, sodden with its viscous specificity. A poem speaks for itself exactly when it declares it speaks for others. The Black poet is an isotope of both hope &amp; despair. The Black poet is both a reluctant &amp; enthusiastic interlocutor of what is known as the Black condition, which conditions &amp; structures the World that invented it. The Black poem asks you where it hurts &amp; demands no particular answer. The Black poet knows this is a question one can spend a life trying to answer....”<br /> —Momtaza Mehri, <em>"</em><a href="https://bombmagazine.org/articles/harlem-is-hijaz-is-havana-is-hararorthe-whole-point-of-the-black-arts-movement-is-that-they-were-moving/">Harlem Is Hijaz Is Havana Is Harar, Or: The Whole Point of the Black Arts Movement Is That They Were Moving"</a></li> <li>“We [Afro-]diasporans joke often about the genre of poetry and prose born out of a longing for a motherland animated only by hungry verses. There’s a cowardice to this: nostalgic memory, a narrativized nostalgia for memories and experiences and beauty that never belonged to you, is easy. But situating oneself in the wake and afterlife of those traumas and beautiful/beautified struggles is far harder still.”<br /> —Zoé Samudzi on Momtaza Mehri, <a href="https://www.poetryproject.org/publications/newsletter/261/doing-the-most-with-the-least-by-momtaza-mehri-goldsmith-university-press-2019"><em>The Poetry Project Newsletter</em>, Summer 2020</a></li> </ul> <p><strong>Momtaza Mehri</strong> is a poet and independent researcher. Her work has been widely anthologised and has appeared in <em>Granta, Artforum, The Guardian, BOMB</em>, and <em>Real Life Mag</em>. She is the former Young People’s Laureate for London. Her latest pamphlet, <em>Doing the Most with the Least</em>, was published in 2019 by Goldsmiths Press. Her s<em>ugah. lump. prayer </em>was included in the chapbook box set <em>New-Generation African Poets</em>, edited by Kwame Dawes and Chris Abani (African Poetry Book Fund/Akashic Books, 2017). <a href="https://momtazamehri.contently.com/">More here.</a></p> <ul> <li>“<em>As Black as Resistance</em> [by Zoé Samudzi and William C. Anderson] is an urgently needed book…a call to action through an embrace of the anarchy of blackness as a recognition and a refusal of the deathly logics of liberalism and consumption. In the face of the ever expanding carceral state, levels of inequality, environmental degradation, and resurgent fascism, this book offers a map to imagining the liberated futures that we can and mus and do make.”<br /> —Christina Sharpe, author of <em>In the Wake: On Blackness and Being</em></li> </ul> <p><strong>Zoé Samudzi</strong> is a writer, photographer, and a doctoral candidate in Medical Sociology at the University of California, San Francisco. Her writing has appeared in <em>The New Inquiry</em>, <em>Warscapes</em>, <em>Truthout</em>, <em>ROAR Magazine</em>, <em>Teen Vogue</em>, <em>BGD</em>, <em>Bitch Media</em>, <em>Open Space,</em> and <em>Verso</em>, among others. With William C. Anderson, Samudzi is coauthor of <a href="https://www.akpress.org/as-black-as-resistance.html"><em>As Black as Resistance: Finding the Conditions for Liberation</em></a> (foreword by Mariame Kaba, AK Press, 2018). <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zo%C3%A9_Samudzi">More here.</a></p> <p> </p> <p>Featured:</p> <p><em><a href="https://tripwirejournal.com/">Tripwire: a journal of poetics</a></em></p> <p><a href="https://tripwirejournal.com/tripwire-pamphlet-series/">Tripwire Pamphlet Series</a></p> <p><a href="https://granta.com/podcast-momtaza-mehri/">Momtaza Mehri, <em>Granta</em> Podcast, Ep. 94, October 7, 2020</a></p> <p><a href="https://www.versobooks.com/blogs/4903-poets-should-ride-the-bus-on-diane-di-prima-1934-2020">Momtaza Mehri, "Poets Should Ride the Bus: On Diane di Prima (1934–2020)," at Verso Books, November 3, 2020</a></p> <p><a href="https://openspace.sfmoma.org/author/momtazamehri/">Momtaza Mehri at <em>Open Space</em>, 2018</a></p> <p><a href="https://contemporaryand.com/magazines/cs-top-articles-of-2019/">"Blackness As a State of Matter: A Conversation with Zoé Samudzi," by Will Furtado, at <em>Contemporary And</em>, C&amp;'s Top Articles of 2019</a></p> <p><a href="https://openspace.sfmoma.org/author/zoesamudzi/">Zoé Samudzi at <em>Open Space</em>, 2018–2019</a></p> <p>Video:</p> <p><a href="https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/poetrycenter/12637">View earlier events in the Tripwire Cross-Cultural Poetics Series</a></p> </div> </div> <p>Tags</p> <div class="tags-item"> <ul class="list-inline"> <li > <a href="/index.php/tags/tags/blackwomenwriters" hreflang="en">#blackwomenwriters</a></li> <li > <a href="/index.php/tags/tags/africandiaspora" hreflang="en">#africandiaspora</a></li> <li > <a href="/index.php/tags/tags/tripwirecrossculturalpoeticsseries" hreflang="en">#tripwirecrossculturalpoeticsseries</a></li> </ul> </div> </div> </div> Thu, 25 Feb 2021 20:05:44 +0000 Jimena Villasenor-Martinez 7 at https://poetry.sfsu.edu