#queerpoets https://poetry.sfsu.edu/ en An Evening of Nice: On David Melnick, with Benjamin Friedlander, J. Gordon Faylor, Jo Aurelio Giardini https://poetry.sfsu.edu/event/evening-nice-david-melnick-benjamin-friedlander-j-gordon-faylor-jo-aurelio-giardini <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/Jo-Gordon-Ben%20banner.jpg?h=abc34b67&amp;itok=6bzOx7Qn" width="576" height="320" alt="three poets: one with curly brown hair and flower over their ear; one gazing intensely directly ahead; one holding a cat under their arm" class="img-responsive" /> </div> </div> <div class="event-info col-sm-5 col-sm-pull-7"> <h1></h1> <div class="event-date"> Thursday, February 15, 2024 </div> <div><span class="fa fa-clock-o"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Event Time</span> 07:00 p.m. - 09:00 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> Et al. etc., 2831a Mission Street, San Francisco </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><strong>The Poetry Center</strong> co-presents with our friends at Small Press Traffic (celebrating their <a href="https://www.smallpresstraffic.org/">50th anniversary</a>) an evening in celebration of late San Francisco poet <strong>David Melnick</strong> (1938–2022), marking the publication of <em>Nice: Collected Poems</em> (Nightboat Books). We welcome to San Francisco <strong>Benjamin Friedlander</strong>, one of the book's editors, together with <strong>J. Gordon Faylor</strong> and <strong>Jo Aurelio Giardini</strong>, to speak to the work and life of David Melnick, with <strong>Noah Ross</strong> of SPT as emcee.</p> <p><a href="https://etaletc.com/infoa">Et al. etc.</a> bookstore and gallery is located at street level on Mission Street near 24th Street BART.</p> <p>VIDEO for this program will be posted after editing at <a href="https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/poetrycenter">Poetry Center Digital Archive</a>.</p> <p>Historic video newly posted: <a href="https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/poetrycenter/bundles/239641">David Melnick reading <em>Men in Aïda</em>, from Book II: April 23, 1984</a>.</p> <p>‍<em><a href="https://nightboat.org/book/nice/">Nice</a> </em>spans twenty crucial years of gay life and experimentation with poetic form, bringing together four masterworks of American literature: <em>Eclogs</em> (1967–70), ten episodes in the urban afterlife of the pastoral; <em>PCOET</em> (1972), written in an unknown tongue, verse for a world that’s yet to be; <em>Men in Aïda</em> (1983–85), Melnick’s masterpiece, a giddy epic of queer community; and <em>A Pin’s Fee</em> (1988), a backward glance and elegy, a cry of pain, a howl of anger.</p> <p><strong>David Melnick</strong> was born in Illinois in 1938 and raised in Los Angeles, educated at the University of Chicago (where he studied with Hannah Arendt) and the University of California at Berkeley. Although he spent time in France, Greece, and Spain (whence his mother’s ancestors emigrated in 1492), most of his adult life was centered in San Francisco. For an author’s note he once wrote, “This poet’s politics are left, his sexual orientation gay, his family Jewish. . . . He is short, fat, and resembles Modeste Moussorgsky in face and Gertrude Stein in body type and posture.” A participant in the Free Speech movement, Melnick was a key member of G.A.W.K. (Gay Artists and Writers Kollective) and an early inspiration to the Language Poets. His masterpiece, <em>Men in Aida</em>, began in a reading group organized by Robert Duncan. Melnick passed away in 2022, a day before his 84th birthday.</p> <p><strong>Benjamin Friedlander</strong> is a poet, scholar, and editor. His poetry collections include <em>The Missing Occasion of Saying Yes</em> (Subpress, 2007), <em>One Hundred Etudes</em> (Edge, 2012), and <em>Some Cares</em> (Spuyten Duyvil, 2024). With Alison Fraser, Jeffrey Jullich, and Ron Silliman he edited <em>Nice: The Collected Poems of David Melnick</em> (Nightboat, 2024). He has also edited the writings of Larry Eigner, Charles Olson, and Robert Creeley. Since 1999 Friedlander has taught American literature and poetics at the University of Maine, where he edits the scholarly journal <a href="http://www.paideuma.com/index.html"><em>Paideuma</em></a>.</p> <p><strong>J. Gordon Faylor</strong> is the author of <em>Fort Discloses Guests If You Wait Enough</em> (Smiling Mind Documents) and <em>Sun Shelter Gray</em> (Zahir Editions), among other works. He is the former editor of Gauss PDF, and the former managing editor of SFMOMA's <a href="https://openspace.sfmoma.org/author/gordon/">Open Space</a>. He currently lives in Queens, NY.</p> <p><strong>Jo Giardini</strong> lives in Baltimore, by way of Vancouver, and is a Post-Doctoral Fellow in Gender Studies at Johns Hopkins. They are writing on the politics of communalism and separatism in the 1970s, and working on a critical history of the Johns Hopkins Gender Identity Clinic, its relationship to trans communities in Baltimore, and its often noxious effects on access to trans care and affirmation.</p> </div> </div> <p>Tags</p> <div class="tags-item"> <ul class="list-inline"> <li > <a href="/tags/tags/queerpoets" hreflang="en">#queerpoets</a></li> </ul> </div> </div> </div> Thu, 25 Jan 2024 08:33:11 +0000 Steve Dickison 89 at https://poetry.sfsu.edu Eric Sneathen, Noah Ross, Violet Spurlock, reading and book party https://poetry.sfsu.edu/event/eric-sneathen-noah-ross-violet-spurlock-reading-and-book-party <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/Violet-Noah-Eric%20banner%20copy.jpg?h=abc34b67&amp;itok=SnHvCAFE" width="576" height="320" alt="3 poets, side by side, gardens behind first and third, blue-grey sky behind the second, with the third poet holding a peach" class="img-responsive" /> </div> </div> <div class="event-info col-sm-5 col-sm-pull-7"> <h1></h1> <div class="event-date"> Saturday, September 30, 2023 </div> <div><span class="fa fa-clock-o"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Event Time</span> 02:00 p.m. - 03:30 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> ATA (Artists Television Access), 992 Valencia Street, San Francisco </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>The Poetry Center presents a reading and book party featuring new work by three Bay Area poets and poetry organizers, generative presences on the local scene and beyond. We are pleased, together with our friends at <a href="https://www.atasite.org/">ATA</a> (Artists' Television Access) on Valencia Street in San Francisco Mission District, to host the dream lineup of <strong>Eric Sneathen</strong>, <strong>Noah Ross</strong>, and <strong>Violet Spurlock.</strong> This event marks the first public readings from anticipated new books by Sneathen (<a href="https://nightboat.org/book/dont-leave-me-this-way/"><em>Don't Leave Me This Way</em></a>, Nightboat Books) and Spurlock (<em>In Lieu of Solutions</em>, Futurepoem).</p> <p>This event is free and open to the public.</p> <p>VIDEO for this program will be posted after editing at <a href="https://diva.sfsu.edu/collections/poetrycenter">Poetry Center Digital Archive</a>.</p> <p><strong>Eric Sneathen</strong> is a poet and queer literary historian living in Oakland. He is the author of <em>Snail Poems</em> (2016) and <em>Don’t Leave Me This Way</em> (2023). With Lauren Levin, he edited <em>Honey Mine</em> (2021), the selected fictions of Camille Roy.</p> <p><strong>Noah Ross</strong> is a poet in the East Bay, the author of <em>The Dogs </em>(Krupskaya, 2024), <em>Active Reception </em>(Nightboat Books, 2021), and <em>Types </em>(Nion Editions, 2021). Noah edits <a href="https://www.baestjournal.com/">Baest</a>: a journal of queer forms &amp; affects.</p> <p><strong>Violet Spurlock</strong> is a writer living in the Bay Area. Her first full-length collection, <em>In Lieu of Solutions</em>, received the Other Futures Award and is forthcoming from Futurepoem. She is also the author of <em>Alloyed Bliss</em> (Eyelet, 2021) and <em>VS VS VS </em>(GaussPDF, 2021). </p> </div> </div> <p>Tags</p> <div class="tags-item"> <ul class="list-inline"> <li > <a href="/tags/tags/queerpoets" hreflang="en">#queerpoets</a></li> </ul> </div> </div> </div> Wed, 02 Aug 2023 02:52:20 +0000 Steve Dickison 77 at https://poetry.sfsu.edu