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Dionne Brand's Global Intimacies: Practising Affective Citizenship
Dionne Brand’s Global Intimacies: Practising Affective Citizenship Diana Brydon “I say this big world is the story, I don’t have any other” (Inventory 84) Rosi Braidotti suggests that “The human has been subsumed in global relations of intimacy, complicity and proximity with forces of the inhuman and post-human kind: scientific, industrial and military complexes, global communication networks, processes of commodification and exchange on a global scale” (264). She argues further that it is the task of critical theory to track the “fluctuations“ of this new disorder (264). In this paper I ask what tracking these fluctuations involves, for the poet Dionne Brand who sets herself this task in her long poem, Inventory, and for the critic who reads her work fully attentive to the historical legacies of humanism and their entanglements with the humanities and the humanitarian.1 The CFP for this special issue asks two related questions that I pursue here: “what good is the study of literature?” and “how does the turn to ethics position literary criticism in relation to politics?” It is not possible to answer these questions definitively. In this paper, I follow Brand’s lead into registering the visceral force of the kinds of global intimacies enumerated by Braidotti in order to ask what these practices imply for the political projects of citizenship and community in contemporary times. I argue that to fully grasp the implications of how Brand’s poetry engages and is engaged in these emerging global complicities, critics need to attend to the dynamics of the experiential dimensions of its affect as well as its explicit meaning.2 “On Poetry,” the last essay in Dionne Brand’s Bread Out of Stone, concludes: “Poetry is here, just here. -
THE C$80,000 GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE ANNOUNCES CANADIAN and INTERNATIONAL SHORTLIST for 2003 Robin Robertson David Young
THE GRIFFIN TRUST For Excellence In Poetry Trustees: Press Release Margaret Atwood Scott Griffin Robert Hass Michael Ondaatje THE C$80,000 GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE ANNOUNCES CANADIAN AND INTERNATIONAL SHORTLIST FOR 2003 Robin Robertson David Young TORONTO, March 27th — The Griffin Poetry Prize shortlist for 2003 was announced today by Scott Griffin, Chairman of The Griffin Trust. The C$80,000 Griffin Poetry Prize is the most generous international poetry prize for a single volume of poetry, and is awarded annually for the two best books of poetry published in English the previous year anywhere in the world. The seven shortlisted nominees are divided into three Canadian and four International. The Canadian Shortlist Concrete and Wild Carrot • Margaret Avison Brick Books thirsty • Dionne Brand McClelland & Stewart Ltd. Planet Earth: Poems Selected and New • P.K. Page The Porcupine’s Quill, Inc. The International Shortlist Mr. and Mrs. Scotland are Dead: Poems 1980-1994 • Kathleen Jamie Bloodaxe Books Moy sand and gravel • Paul Muldoon Farrar, Straus & Giroux American Sonnets: Poems • Gerald Stern W.W. Norton and Company Steal Away: Selected and New Poems • C.D. Wright Copper Canyon Press The shortlisted poets will be invited to give a reading in Toronto at a Harbourfront Reading Series Special event on June 11th and the two winners, who each receive C$40,000 will be announced at the third Griffin Poetry Prize awards on June 12th. THE GRIFFIN TRUST For Excellence In Poetry The judges for 2003 are the distinguished poets Michael Longley (Northern Ireland), Sharon Olds (U.S.) and Sharon Thesen (Canada). -
C24 New Long Poem Anthology.Pdf
T H E N E w L 0 N G P 0 E M ANTHOLOGY E D T E D B y SHARON THESEN T H E N E W LONG POEM :)LOGY ~ 111 ~111111 111111 11111111 1111 11111~ 1111111111 11111111 1111111 3 9345 00959985 7 CLC SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY LIBRARY SPECIAL COLLECTIONS PR 9058 N4785 1991 The New long poem anthology . T H E N E w LONG P 0 E M ANTHOLOGY E D T E D B Y SHARON TH ES EN COACH HOUSE PRESS · TORONTO For the selection and introduction, © Sharon Thesen, 1991 Published with the assistance of the Canada Council and the Ontario Arts Council. Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data Main entry under title: The New Long Poem Anthology 1. Canadian poetry (English) - 20th century.* I. Thesen, Sharon, 1946- PS8279.N4 1991 C8u'.5408 C91-093228-3 PR9195.7.N4 1991 Cover photograph: Thaddeus Holownia "Abandoned Boats," Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, March 1986 Courtesy: Jane Corkin Gallery, Toronto ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I'd like to thank Michael Ondaatje for having the foresighr to pur rogecher the first Long Poem Anthology in 1979· Thanks also to Robin Blaser, Phyllis Webb and George Bowering, for rhe conversations. - S. T. The following selecrions were originally publi hed by Coach House Press and are reprinred in rhis anrhology with rhe kind permi sion of the aurhors: Blaser, Robin, "The Moch Poem," from The Long Poem Anthology, © 1979 by Robin Blaser. Bowering, George, "Elegy ine" and "Elegy Ten," from Kerrisdale Elegies, © 1984 by George Bowering. Brand, Dionne," o Language I eurral," from No Language Is Neutral, © 1990 by Dionne Brand. -
Radical Utopian Politics in Dionne Brand's "No Language Is Neutral" and "Bread out of Stone"
University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository Graduate Studies Legacy Theses 2000 Voicing grace: Radical utopian politics in Dionne Brand's "No language is neutral" and "bread out of stone" Garrett, Brenda Garrett, B. (2000). Voicing grace: Radical utopian politics in Dionne Brand's "No language is neutral" and "bread out of stone" (Unpublished master's thesis). University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. doi:10.11575/PRISM/13957 http://hdl.handle.net/1880/40590 master thesis University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission. Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca THE UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY Voicing Grace: Radical Utopian Politics in Dionne Brand's No Laneuaee is Neutral and Bread out of Stone Brenda Garrett A THESIS SUBMInED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH CALGARY, ALBERTA AUGUST, 2000 O Brenda Garrett 2000 National Library Bibliotheque nati~nale of Canada du Canada Acquisitions and Acquisitions et Bibliographic Services services bibliographiques 395 Wellington Street 395, rue Wellington OttawaON K1AON4 Ottawa ON KIA ON4 Canada Canada Your lYe Vme referenm Our lVe Norre retersnu, The author has granted a non- L'auteur a accorde une licence non exclusive Licence allowing the exclusive permettant a la National Library of Canada to Bibliotheque nationale du Canada de reproduce, loan, distribute or sell reproduire, prgter, distribuer ou copies of ths thesis in microform, vendre des copies de cette these sous paper or electronic formats. -
In the Archive of Queer Politics: Adrienne Rich and Dionne Brand Listening for Something
In the archive of queer politics: Adrienne Rich and Dionne Brand Listening for Something Liana Borghi Università degli Studi di Firenze [email protected] Nel caso dei queer studies il punto fondamentale non è forse la resistenza critica alle categorie sessuali da cui si è costruiti? [The fundamental point of queer studies is it not the critical resistance to the sexual categories by which we are constructed?] (M. Pustianaz, 2009). Mother’s daughter who at ten years old knew she was queer (C. Moraga, 1983: ii). This paper endorses the suggestion that we push back the timeline of queer theory to the 1980s rooting it firmly in lesbian feminism despite the disclaimers and erasures of official queer theory. But rather than stating the obvious – i.e. that queer theory owes much to the lesbian movement – I would claim narrative space for a «reparative reading», and talk in terms of a «lesbian Queer». After the movement of radical lesbians in the 70s had settled down into visibility claims, identity politics and civil rights, it opened out into the fractals of the sex wars, butch and femme, S&M, and of lesbian AIDS projects alongside performance art and the bar scene – changing from a community, never singular but united by compact tales of coming out stories, to communities and diversities some of which eventually joined Queer Nation and Act Up alongside the GLT associations, as Arlene Stein has described in Sisters and Queers (1992). Looking back to those years, Adrienne Rich writes that «in the 1980s, AIDS catalyzed a new gay activism in outrage laced with mourning», and adds, quoting the poet and critic Essex Hemphill, that the epidemic pointed out that the «community» could no longer be surmised to be «one gender and one color» when the extreme cultural and economic differences produced such a higher death count among Black gay men (A. -
The Griffin Poetry Prize Announces the 2011 International And
THE GRIFFIN TRUST For Excellence In Poetry Trustees: Margaret Atwood Press Release Carolyn Forché Scott Griffin Robert Hass THE GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE ANNOUNCES Michael Ondaatje THE 2011 INTERNATIONAL AND CANADIAN SHORTLIST Robin Robertson David Young TORONTO – April 5, 2011 – Scott Griffin, founder of The Griffin Trust For Excellence In Poetry and David Young, trustee, announced the International and Canadian shortlist for this year’s prize noting that judges Tim Lilburn (Canada), Colm Toíbín (Ireland) and Chase Twichell (USA) each read 450 books of poetry, including 20 translations, from poets in 37 countries around the globe. The seven finalists – three Canadian and four International – will be invited to read in Toronto at Koerner Hall at The Royal Conservatory in the TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning, 273 Bloor Street West, Toronto on Tuesday, May 31, 2011. The seven finalists will be awarded $10,000 for their participation in the shortlist readings. The winners, announced at the Griffin Poetry Prize Awards evening on Wednesday, June 1, 2011, will be awarded $65,000 each. International Shortlist Human Chain ● Seamus Heaney Farrar, Straus and Giroux Adonis: Selected Poems ● Khaled Mattawa, translated from the Arabic written by Adonis Yale University Press The Book of the Snow ● Philip Mosley, translated from the French written by François Jacqmin Arc Publications Heavenly Questions ● Gjertrud Schnackenberg Farrar, Straus and Giroux Canadian Shortlist Ossuaries ● Dionne Brand McClelland & Stewart The Irrationalist ● Suzanne Buffam House of Anansi Press Lookout ● John Steffler McClelland & Stewart 363 Parkridge Crescent, Oakville, Ontario L6M 1A8, Canada www.griffinpoetryprize.com Tel: 905 618 0420 Email: [email protected] THE GRIFFIN TRUST For Excellence In Poetry Each year, the Griffin Poetry Prize publishes an anthology, a selection of poems from the shortlisted books, published by House of Anansi Press. -
Kamau Brathwaite's Born to Slow Horses And
THE GRIFFIN TRUST For Excellence In Poetry Trustees: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Margaret Atwood KAMAU BRATHWAITE’S BORN TO SLOW HORSES Carolyn Forché AND Scott Griffin SYLVIA LEGRIS’ NERVE SQUALL Robert Hass WIN THE 2006 GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE Michael Ondaatje Robin Robertson Toronto, ON (June 1, 2006) – Kamau Brathwaite and Sylvia Legris are the International and Canadian winners of the 6th annual Griffin Poetry Prize. The C$100,000 Griffin Poetry David Young Prize, the richest prize in the world for a single volume of poetry, is divided between the two winners. The prize is for first edition books of poetry, including translations, published in English in 2005, and submitted from anywhere in the world. The awards event was hosted by Scott Griffin, founder of the prize. Simon Armitage, renowned poet, author and playwright assumed the role of Master of Ceremonies. Judges Lisa Robertson and Eliot Weinberger announced the International and Canadian winners for 2006. More than 400 guests celebrated the awards, including former Governor-General, the Right Honourable Adrienne Clarkson, acclaimed Canadian actors Albert Schultz and Sarah Polley, Senator Jerry Grafstein and his wife Carol, among others. In addition, poets, publishers and other literary luminaries attended the celebration. The evening’s theme was Shangri-La and featured a silk route marketplace replete with banners of fuschia, purple and gold. Hundreds of pigmy orchids and butterflies in a dizzying array of colours adorned the room. The event, which took place at The Stone Distillery in Toronto, offered up a menu of decidedly Asian fusion cuisine. Appetizers included mango and Thai basil sushi rolls, deep-fried plantain, sweet corn tamales, crab cakes on a bed of remoulade, and a sweet potato and jicama salad. -
The Griffin Poetry Prize Announces the 2008 Canadian And
THE GRIFFIN TRUST For Excellence In Poetry Trustees : Press Release Margaret Atwood Carolyn Forché THE GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE ANNOUNCES THE 2008 Scott Griffin CANADIAN AND INTERNATIONAL SHORTLIST Robert Hass Michael Ondaatje An Unprecedented 509 Eligible Books Submitted Robin Robertson David Young TORONTO – April 8, 2008 – Scott Griffin, founder of The Griffin Trust for Excellence in Poetry and David Young, trustee, today announced the Canadian and International shortlist for this year’s prize. The C$100,000 Griffin Poetry Prize is one of the most lucrative poetry prizes in the world, exemplifying the international spirit of the form. The prize is awarded annually for the two best books of poetry, including translations, published in English in the previous year. Judges George Bowering, James Lasdun and Pura López Colomé read 509 books of poetry, including 19 translations, received from 31 countries around the globe. The seven finalists – three Canadian and four International – will be invited to read in Toronto at the MacMillan Theatre on Tuesday, June 3, 2008. The winners, who each receive C$50,000, will be announced on Wednesday, June 4, 2008 at the eighth annual Griffin Poetry Prize Awards Evening . Canadian Shortlist The Holy Forest: Collected Poems of Robin Blaser ● Robin Blaser University of California Press Notebook of Roses and Civilization ● Robert Majzels and Erín Moure, translated from the French, written by Nicole Brossard Coach House Books Why Are You So Sad? Selected Poems of David W. McFadden ● David McFadden Insomniac Press/4 -
Margaret Avison's Concrete and Wild Carrot and Paul Muldoon's Moy
THE GRIFFIN TRUST For Excellence In Poetry Trustees: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Margaret Atwood Scott Griffin Robert Hass Michael Ondaatje MARGARET AVISON’S CONCRETE AND WILD CARROT AND PAUL MULDOON’S MOY SAND AND GRAVEL Robin Robertson WIN THE 2003 GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE David Young TORONTO, June 12, 2003 – The Canadian and International winners of the 2003 Griffin Poetry Prize are Margaret Avison’s, Concrete and Wild Carrot and Paul Muldoon’s, Moy sand and gravel, it was announced tonight at the third annual awards event. The C$80,000 Griffin Poetry Prize, the richest poetry prize in the world for a single volume of poetry, is divided between the two winners. The prize is for first edition books of poetry published in 2002. The awards event was hosted by Scott Griffin; founder of the prize, Heather McHugh (International winner 2001) was the Emcee, with judges Sharon Olds and Sharon Thesen announcing the Canadian and International winners for 2003. Among the more than 300 guests celebrating the awards were the Guests of Honour, Her Excellency the Right Honourable Adrienne Clarkson, Governor General of Canada and His Excellency John Ralston Saul. In addition, poets, publishers and other literary luminaries attended the celebration which took place in The Stone Distillery (formerly a whiskey distillery), Toronto’s newly renovated centre for the arts, designated a historic site. The two winners will be invited to read at this year’s Edinburgh International Book Festival on August 17th, the second year that the Griffin Poetry Prize winners have been showcased at the Edinburgh Festival. Preceding the awards event, the seven short listed poets (three Canadian and four international) read excerpts from their books at a sold-out Special Harbourfront Reading Series Event on June 11th, attended by more than 500 devotees. -
John Ashbery's Notes from The
THE GRIFFIN TRUST For Excellence In Poetry Trustees : FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Margaret Atwood Carolyn Forché JOHN ASHBERY’S NOTES FROM THE AIR: SELECTED LATER POEMS Scott Griffin Robert Hass AND Michael Ondaatje Robin Robertson ROBIN BLASER’S THE HOLY FOREST: COLLECTED POEMS OF ROBIN BLASER David Young WIN THE 2008 GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE TORONTO, June 4, 2008 – John Ashbery’s Notes from the Air: Selected Later Poems and Robin Blaser’s The Holy Forest: Collected Poems of Robin Blaser are the International and Canadian winners of the eighth annual Griffin Poetry Prize. The C$100,000 Griffin Poetry Prize, the richest poetry prize in the world for a single volume of poetry, is divided between the two winners. The prize is for first edition books of poetry, including translations, published in English in 2007, and submitted from anywhere in the world. The awards ceremony was held in The Fermenting Cellar of The Stone Distillery and hosted by Scott Griffin, founder of the prize. Poet Paul Farley, shortlisted for the 2007 Griffin Poetry Prize, was the featured speaker. Judges George Bowering and James Lasdun announced the International and Canadian winners of the 2008 Griffin Poetry Prize. More than 400 guests celebrated the awards, among them, poets, publishers, and many literary and cultural luminaries, including Canada’s former Governor General, the Right Honourable Adrienne Clarkson, authors Michael Ondaatje and Anne Michaels, and international poets Carolyn Forché, Robert Hass and Robin Robertson. The Fermenting Cellar was transformed into a tropical paradise for the evening, with the bright colours and sounds of the Caribbean islands permeating the historic site. -
Overview of Marxism, Black Liberation, and Black Working-Class Organic Intellectuals
THE DEVELOPMENT OF WORKING-CLASS ORGANIC INTELLECTUALS IN THE CANADIAN BLACK LEFT TRADITION: HISTORICAL ROOTS AND CONTEMPORARY EXPRESSIONS, FUTURE DIRECTIONS by Christopher Harris A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of Sociology and Equity Studies in Education Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto © Copyright by Chris Harris 2011 THE DEVELOPMENT OF WORKING-CLASS ORGANIC INTELLECTUALS IN THE CANADIAN BLACK LEFT TRADITION: HISTORICAL ROOTS AND CONTEMPORARY EXPRESSIONS, FUTURE DIRECTIONS “Doctor” of Education (2011) Christopher Harris Department of Sociology and Equity Studies in Education University of Toronto Abstract This thesis explores the revolutionary adult education learning dimensions in a Canadian Black anti-racist organization, which continues to be under-represented in the Canadian Adult Education literature on social movement learning. This case study draws on detailed reflection based on my own personal experience as a leader and member of the Black Action Defense Committee (BADC). The analysis demonstrates the limitations to the application of the Gramscian approach to radical adult education in the non-profit sector, I will refer to as the Non-Profit Industrial Complex (NPIC) drawing on recent research by INCITE Women of Colour! (2007). This study fills important gaps in the new fields of studies on the NPIC and its role in the cooptation of dissent, by offering the first Canadian study of a radical Black anti-racist organization currently experiencing this. This study fills an important gap in the social movement and adult education literature related to the legacy of Canadian Black Communism specifically on the Canadian left. -
Poetry and the Canadian Public Sphere: the Public
POETRY AND THE CANADIAN PUBLIC SPHERE: THE PUBLIC INTELLECTUAL ENGAGEMENT OF PAULINE JOHNSON, DOROTHY LIVESAY, AND DIONNE BRAND SHAUNA LANCIT A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY GRADUATE PROGRAM IN ENGLISH YORK UNIVERSITY, TORONTO, ONTARIO MARCH 2017 ©Shauna Lancit, 2017 ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the roles of Pauline Johnson, Dorothy Livesay, and Dionne Brand in the evolution of the public sphere in Canada, arguing that each of these writers has functioned as what we now call a “public intellectual.” Taking their careers as exemplary, I show that the Canadian context has been particularly conducive to the ability of women poets to fulfill this social function. In attending closely to the role of the public sphere in their poetry I offer a new lens through which to understand some of their significant poems. In situating these poets in their material and historical contexts I also offer an explanation of why Canadian women writers, and poets in particular, have been unexpectedly well situated to appear as public intellectuals. Beginning with a genealogy of the public intellectual, I show the significance of this figure in the Canadian context. I demonstrate that institutional responses to Canada’s unique challenges in establishing and sustaining a public sphere have had wide-ranging effects on opportunities for artists and intellectuals to shape that sphere. These include the amplification of the voices of women poets relative to a purely market-based public sphere. I situate Johnson, Livesay, and Brand in their material and discursive contexts in order to make sense of the ways in which they figure the public sphere in their poetry, and the ways in which they use both their poetry and other forms of cultural production to encourage political and cultural change.