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    canlit

    Explore " canlit" with insightful episodes like "Questions with Brad Dunne, author of The Merchant's Mansion | The Write Project", "🔒 6 Authors Reveal: How long they were part time before they hit it big! | The Write Project", "P042 Elizabeth Cunningham - Marty's Place", "Interview with Trudy Morgan-Cole, author of The Cupids Trilogy! | The Write Project" and "'Land of Many Shores' authors reveal their favorite comic book characters! | The Write Project" from podcasts like ""The Write Project", "The Write Project", "Writers Radio", "The Write Project" and "The Write Project"" and more!

    Episodes (83)

    Questions with Brad Dunne, author of The Merchant's Mansion | The Write Project

    Questions with Brad Dunne, author of The Merchant's Mansion | The Write Project

    Brad Dunne is a freelance writer and editor from St. John’s, Newfoundland. He began his writing career as an intern at The Walrus magazine and has published journalism and essays in publications such as Maisonneuve, The Canadian Encyclopedia, and Herizons. His short fiction has been featured in In/Words, Acta Victoriana, The From the Rock Series, Terror Nova, and, The Cuffer Anthology. In October 2018 he released his first novel, After Dark Vapours. It was followed in September 2020 by The Gut. The Merchant’s Mansion is his third novel.

    Pick up The Merchant's Mansion using this link to help the channel: https://amzn.to/3ZQxT8T

    Originally broadcast on October 17, 2022 on CHMR 93.5 FM in St. John's, and on other great stations across the country. 

    Check out As Loved Our Fathers, the latest book from Write Project host Matthew LeDrew: https://amzn.to/3HB7BAB

    It's a hunt for the Holy Grail taken on by an American Anthropologist and a Newfoundland History professor that unveils hidden secrets within Newfoundland history!

    Support the show

    Listen on CHMR online at http://www.chmr.ca/​

    This program, and others like it, are helped by support from viewers and fans on Patreon. Consider helping support Engen Books on Patreon for as little as $1.00 a month for excellent rewards, including books! https://www.patreon.com/engenbooks​

    Checkout Engen titles at http://www.engenbooks.com/​

    The Write Project signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8W9OT
    Engen Horror Society Signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8Yemr
    Fantasy Files signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8X4zL
    Engen's Science-Fiction Newsletter for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/ir5Jmg

    This recording copyright © 2023 Matthew LeDrew

    🔒 6 Authors Reveal: How long they were part time before they hit it big! | The Write Project

    🔒 6 Authors Reveal: How long they were part time before they hit it big! | The Write Project

    Subscriber-only episode

    Writing is hard, and very few people get to do it as their sole source of income. We sit down with six popular writers and ask how long they were doing that grind before they went full time... if they have at all!

    Featuring:
    From Breakwater Books Ltd.:
    Kevin Major, author of Three for Trinity
    Daze Jefferies - Land of Many Shores'Acceptance' with Quadrangle NL
    Kerri Cull, author of Rock Paper Sex

    From Marvel Comics:
    Jed Mackay, author of Moon Knight and Black Cat

    Also featuring:
    JRH Lawless, author of Always Greener
    and: Sal, from ComicPop!

    Originally broadcast on September 13, 2022 on CHMR 93.5 FM in St. John's, and on other great stations across the country. 

    Listen on CHMR online at http://www.chmr.ca/​

    This program, and others like it, are helped by support from viewers and fans on Patreon. Consider helping support Engen Books on Patreon for as little as $1.00 a month for excellent rewards, including books! https://www.patreon.com/engenbooks​

    Checkout Engen titles at http://www.engenbooks.com/​

    The Write Project signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8W9OT
    Engen Horror Society Signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8Yemr
    Fantasy Files signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8X4zL
    Engen's Science-Fiction Newsletter for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/ir5Jmg

    This recording copyright © 2023 Matthew LeDrew

    P042 Elizabeth Cunningham - Marty's Place

    P042 Elizabeth Cunningham - Marty's Place

    In the spirit of HARVEST, this autumn’s programs will recall people and events, underscoring their importance which reverberates in today’s world when we remember.

    Elizabeth Cunningham of Nelson, British Columbia is a writer, teacher and visual artist who loves collaborating with others. Both her life and her work demonstrate a wide range of interest and commitment, which seem to flow through time and experience.

    In this episode we spotlight her 2021 poetry release, Watching the Light Below the Storm. Then Elizabeth and I discuss her creative non-fiction memoir, Marty's Place and her next poetry offering, Airborne which are works in progress, with readings from both.


    Marty's Place fits our autumn theme of harvest very well. 

    Marty's Place was The Village Bookstore owned by Marty Ahvenus. It opened in 1961 in the Gerrard Street Village in Toronto; a creative hub of the 60's and 70's which eventually gave way to the inevitable high-rises of urban renewal. Marty Ahvenus was an early supporter of emerging Canadian authors Margaret Atwood, bpNichol and many others.

    Elizabeth worked for Marty in her late teens, and at Coach House Press, working on her own projects among others. Her memoir of these times recalls the early flowering of CanLit which is evident in the blooming garden of Canadian books today.

    Two poems from Airborne complete the program, accompanied by Doug Jamieson's original music by the same title.

    Watching the Light Below the Storm and Elizabeth's earlier poetry book,  A Fragile Grace are available through bookstores or direct from the publisher, Ekstasis Editions.

    Go to WritersRadio.ca and listen to the current episode.

    Writers Radio is a free 24/7 non-commercial internet radio station that presents new and recognized writers reading their own work.

    Interview with Trudy Morgan-Cole, author of The Cupids Trilogy! | The Write Project

    Interview with Trudy Morgan-Cole, author of The Cupids Trilogy! | The Write Project

    Interview with Trudy Morgan-Cole, author of The Cupids Trilogy from Breakwater Books Ltd., as well as Most Anything You Please, By the Rivers of Brooklyn, and That Forgetful Shore!

    Originally broadcast on July 25, 2022 on CHMR 93.5 FM in St. John's, and on other great stations across the country.

    Pick up A Roll of the Bones using this link to help the channel: https://amzn.to/3Zzbfls

    Trudy J. Morgan-Cole is a writer and teacher who lives in St. John’s. Her previous books include By the Rivers of Brooklyn (2009), That Forgetful Shore (2011), and A Sudden Sun (2014), all of which were shortlisted for the Best Atlantic Published Book Award.

    Check out As Loved Our Fathers, the latest book from Write Project host Matthew LeDrew: https://amzn.to/3HB7BAB

    It's a hunt for the Holy Grail taken on by an American Anthropologist and a Newfoundland History professor that unveils hidden secrets within Newfoundland history!

    Support the show

    Listen on CHMR online at http://www.chmr.ca/​

    This program, and others like it, are helped by support from viewers and fans on Patreon. Consider helping support Engen Books on Patreon for as little as $1.00 a month for excellent rewards, including books! https://www.patreon.com/engenbooks​

    Checkout Engen titles at http://www.engenbooks.com/​

    The Write Project signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8W9OT
    Engen Horror Society Signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8Yemr
    Fantasy Files signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8X4zL
    Engen's Science-Fiction Newsletter for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/ir5Jmg

    This recording copyright © 2023 Matthew LeDrew

    'Land of Many Shores' authors reveal their favorite comic book characters! | The Write Project

    'Land of Many Shores' authors reveal their favorite comic book characters! | The Write Project

    On this episode of Write Project, we sit down with the authors of the most serious literary book of 2022 and ask them the silliest, most childish questions possible... sounds like fun! Featuring Gemma Hickey, Ainsley Hawthorn, Daze Jefferies, and Paul David Power, the authors of Land of Many Shores from Breakwater Books Ltd.!

    Pick up Land of Many Shores using this link to help the channel: https://amzn.to/3F8HQ9E

    Originally broadcast on July 4, 2022 on CHMR 93.5 FM in St. John's, and on other great stations across the country. 

    Check out As Loved Our Fathers, the latest book from Write Project host Matthew LeDrew: https://amzn.to/3HB7BAB

    It's a hunt for the Holy Grail taken on by an American Anthropologist and a Newfoundland History professor that unveils hidden secrets within Newfoundland history!

    Support the show

    Listen on CHMR online at http://www.chmr.ca/​

    This program, and others like it, are helped by support from viewers and fans on Patreon. Consider helping support Engen Books on Patreon for as little as $1.00 a month for excellent rewards, including books! https://www.patreon.com/engenbooks​

    Checkout Engen titles at http://www.engenbooks.com/​

    The Write Project signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8W9OT
    Engen Horror Society Signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8Yemr
    Fantasy Files signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8X4zL
    Engen's Science-Fiction Newsletter for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/ir5Jmg

    This recording copyright © 2023 Matthew LeDrew

    Moving, Still

    Moving, Still

    SUMMARY

    In this episode, ShortCuts returns to a recording of Phyllis Webb in order to re-listen through this season’s question of how the archive remembers. What is held in the ‘room’ of the recording, and how does that differ from the room where reading took place? Or from the room of personal memory? What exceeds those rooms? And what does it feel like to hear their contours? Join producer Katherine McLeod as she reflects upon these questions while listening to a 1966 recording of Phyllis Webb reading from Naked Poems.

    EPISODE NOTES

    A fresh take on sounds from the past, ShortCuts is a monthly feature on The SpokenWeb Podcast feed and an extension of the ShortCuts blog posts on SPOKENWEBLOG. Stay tuned for monthly episodes of ShortCuts on alternate fortnights (that’s every second week) following the monthly SpokenWeb podcast episode.

    Series Producer: Katherine McLeod

    Host: Hannah McGregor

    Supervising Producers: Judith Burr and Kate Moffatt

    ARCHIVAL AUDIO

    Phyllis Webb reading (with Gwendolyn MacEwen) in Montreal on November 18, 1966, https://montreal.spokenweb.ca/sgw-poetry-readings/phyllis-webb-at-sgwu-1966-roy-kiyooka.

    ShortCuts 2.7: Moving, 19 April 2021, https://spokenweb.ca/podcast/episodes/moving.

    RESOURCES

    Collis, Stephen. Almost Islands: Phyllis Webb and the Pursuit of the Unwritten. Talonbooks, 2018.

    McLeod, Katherine. “Listening to the Archives of Phyllis Webb.” In Moving Archives. Ed. Linda Morra. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2020. 113-131.

    Webb, Phyllis. Naked Poems. Periwinkle Press, 1965.

    Webb, Phyllis. Peacock Blue: The Collected Poems. Ed. John Hulcoop. Talonbooks, 2014.

    'The archive is messy and so are we': Decoding the Women and Words Collection

    'The archive is messy and so are we': Decoding the Women and Words Collection

    Simon Fraser University's Special Collections and Rare Books holds the rich Women and Words Collection, which contains more than one hundred recordings from the Women and Words Conference in 1983, a decade of WestWord writing retreats and workshops, and a number of other readings, meetings, workshops, and events. Although the audio in this collection has a significant paper archive to accompany it, the absence of pre-existing metadata made it difficult to identify the recordings. This episode is framed by how two research assistants, Kandice Sharren and Kate Moffatt, encountered the collection—one physically, in the archive, and the other solely with digitized audio recordings and scanned print materials—and takes us behind the scenes of their work to make sense of both its depths and the Women and Words Society’s history.

    Special thanks to Tony Power, librarian and curator of the Contemporary Literature Collection at Simon Fraser University, and to SFU's Special Collections and Rare Books.  

    SpokenWeb is a monthly podcast produced by the SpokenWeb team as part of distributing the audio collected from (and created using) Canadian Literary archival recordings found at universities across Canada. To find out more about Spokenweb visit: spokenweb.ca . If you love us, let us know! Rate us and leave a comment on Apple Podcasts or say hi on our social media @SpokenWebCanada.

     

    Episode Producers:

    Kate Moffatt is an incoming PhD student in English at Simon Fraser University. Her research interests lie primarily with women's book history and women's writing of the Romantic period. She brings a keen interest in the digital humanities, book and literary history, and archives and archival practices to her work as a Research Assistant for SpokenWeb.

    Kandice Sharren is a postdoctoral research fellow at the National University of Ireland, Galway. Her research focuses on print culture of the Romantic period, and she brings her experience with digital humanities, archival research, and book history to the SpokenWeb project.

     

    Citations:

    Beverly, Andrea. “Traces of a Feminist Literary Event.” CanLit Across Media, MQUP, 2019, p. 221, https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvscxtkg.15.

    "Castor Wheel Pivot." Blue Dot Sessions. Accessed 2 April 2022. https://app.sessions.blue/browse/track/100713

    "Dust Digger." Blue Dot Sessions. Accessed 27 March 2022. https://app.sessions.blue/browse/track/99584.

    "Flipping through a book." Free Sound. Accessed 2 April 2022. https://freesound.org/people/Zeinel/sounds/483364/

    Heavenly choir singing sound, "Ahhh." Free Sound. Accessed 2 April 2022. https://freesound.org/people/random_intruder/sounds/392172/  

    "Palms Down." Blue Dot Sessions. Accessed 15 March 2022. https://app.sessions.blue/browse/track/96905

    "Record Scratch." Free Sound. Accessed 2 April 2022.  https://freesound.org/people/simkiott/sounds/43404/ 

    Rooney, Frances. "activist; Gloria Greenfield." Section15, 22 May 1998. Accessed 31 March 2022. http://section15.ca/features/people/1998/05/22/gloria_greenfield/.

    Listening Communities: The Introductions of Douglas Barbour

    Listening Communities: The Introductions of Douglas Barbour

    Our guest-producer this month, Michael O’Driscoll, invites us to listen to the introductions of the late Douglas Barbour (March 21, 1940 - Sept 25, 2021) from readings held at the University of Alberta. What are we listening to when we hear introductory remarks from past readings spliced together? By asking us to listen to remember, this episode remembers Barbour in his element —in sonic performance — and what we hear in the selected recordings is a combination both of poetic sound and sounds of deep care as he welcomes each writer to the microphone. 

    EPISODE NOTES

    A fresh take on sounds from the past, ShortCuts is a monthly feature on The SpokenWeb Podcast feed and an extension of the ShortCuts blog posts on SPOKENWEBLOG. Stay tuned for monthly episodes of ShortCuts on alternate fortnights (that’s every second week) following the monthly SpokenWeb podcast episode.

    Guest Producer: Michael O'Driscoll

    Series Producer: Katherine McLeod

    Host: Hannah McGregor

    Supervising Producer: Judith Burr

    GUEST PRODUCER

    Michael O’Driscoll is a Professor in the Department of English and Film Studies in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Alberta. He teaches and publishes in the fields of critical and cultural theories with a particular emphasis on deconstruction and psychoanalysis, and his expertise in Twentieth-Century American Literature focuses on poetry and poetics as a form of material culture studies. His interests in material culture range from sound studies, archive theory, radical poetics, and technologies of writing to the energy humanities and intermedia studies. He is a Governing Board Member and a member of the U of Alberta research team for the SpokenWeb SSHRC Partnership Grant.

    AUDIO

    Audio played in this ShortCuts is excerpted from the SpokenWeb’s audio collections held by the University of Alberta. The audio is currently being catalogued by SpokenWeb researchers. 

    Audio of Douglas Barbour reading “The Gone Tune” is from the cassette tape recording of The Bards of March (15 March 1986). 

    Audio of Douglas Barbour’s introductions are selected from readings recorded in 1977-1981. The poets introduced are, in order of audio appearance: Tom Wayman, Phyllis Webb, Fred Wah, Maxine Gadd, George Bowering, Roy Kiyooka, Penn Kemp, Leona Gom, John Newlove, Sheila Watson, Robert Kroetsch, and bpNichol. 

    RESOURCES

    NeWest Press: IN MEMORIAM: DOUGLAS BARBOUR (1940-2021), https://newestpress.com/news/in-memoriam-douglas-barbour-1940-2021

     Douglas Barbour (March 21, 1940 - September 25, 2021), https://robmclennan.blogspot.com/2021/09/douglas-barbour-march-21-1940-september.html

    Sounds of Trance Formation: An Interview with Penn Kemp.” Produced by Nick Beauchesne & Penn Kemp forThe SpokenWeb Podcast and starts with a clip from the Trance Form reading hosted by Douglas Barbour at the University of Alberta (1977).

    The Voice That Is The Poem, ft. Kaie Kellough

    The Voice That Is The Poem, ft. Kaie Kellough

    On ShortCuts this month, producer Katherine McLeod talks with poet, novelist, and sound performer Kaie Kellough about a memorable recording from The Words & Music Show.  

    What are we listening to? Kellough upacks what we are listening to — which turns out to be a highly technical, performative, and polyphonic sonic object, along with it being an early version of a passage from his Griffin Prize-winning book of poetry, Magnetic Equator

    Listen to this ShortCuts for the story behind one archival recording, and what this story reveals about how we remember the feelings infused within live performance. 

     

    EPISODE NOTES

    A fresh take on sounds from the past, ShortCuts is a monthly feature on The SpokenWeb Podcast feed and an extension of the ShortCuts blog posts on SPOKENWEBLOG. Stay tuned for monthly episodes of ShortCuts on alternate fortnights (that’s every second week) following the monthly SpokenWeb podcast episode.

    Producer: Katherine McLeod

    Host: Hannah McGregor

    Supervising Producer: Judith Burr

     

    ARCHIVAL AUDIO

    Archival audio in this episode is excerpted from a recording of The Words and Music Show on November 20, 2016 (Casa del Popolo, Montreal). 

    The performers that night were Eve Nixen, Kaie Kellough, Tawhida Tanya Evanson’s Zenship [Tawhaida Tanya Evanson (voice); Mark Haynes (bass); Ziya Tabassian (percussion); Caulder Nash (keyboards), with guest performance by Nina Segalowitz (Inuit throat singing)], Paul Dutton* and pianist Stefan Christoff.

     

    SHOW NOTES

    Kellough, Kaie. Magnetic Equator. McClelland and Stewart, 2020. 

    —“Rough Craft: Notes on the creation of the audio / visual / textual work Small Stones.” SPOKENWEBLOG, 22 May, 2021, https://spokenweb.ca/rough-craft-notes-on-the-creation-of-the-audio-visual-textual-work-small-stones/.

    “The Show Goes On.” Producer Jason Camlot. The SpokenWeb Podcast, 7 Feb 2022. https://spokenweb.ca/podcast/episodes/the-show-goes-on-words-and-music-in-a-pandemic/.

    The Show Goes On: Words and Music in a Pandemic

    The Show Goes On: Words and Music in a Pandemic

    How has the reading series been transformed by the Covid pandemic and its accompanying technologies of virtual gatherings? In this episode, Jason Camlot - SpokenWeb Director and Professor of English at Concordia University - takes us on a reflective listening tour through recordings of the Words and Music Show as it has evolved through the pandemic since early 2020. The Words and Music Show has been organized by Ian Ferrier for two decades to bring performances of literature, art, and music to live audiences at the Casa del Popolo in Montreal. Jason assisted Ian with organizing after Covid sent the series online, and this episode takes us into the in-person and virtual sounds of the Show. In this episode, we listen to the journey of one reading series and its co-curator over the past two years. Join us in reflecting on how the pandemic has changed the ways we share and connect to each other through literature, art, and performance.

    SpokenWeb is a monthly podcast produced by the SpokenWeb team as part of distributing the audio collected from (and created using) Canadian Literary archival recordings found at universities across Canada. To find out more about Spokenweb visit: spokenweb.ca . If you love us, let us know! Rate us and leave a comment on Apple Podcasts or say hi on our social media @SpokenWebCanada.

     

    Episode Producer:

    Jason Camlot is the principal investigator and director of The SpokenWeb, a SSHRC-funded partnership that focuses on the history of literary sound recordings and the digital preservation and presentation of collections of literary audio. His recent critical works include Phonopoetics: The Making of Early Literary Recordings (Stanford 2019), and the co-edited collections Unpacking the Personal Library: The Public and Private Life of Books (with Jeffrey Weingarten | Wilfrid Laurier, 2022), and CanLit Across Media: Unarchiving the Literary Event (with Katherine McLeod | McGill Queen’s, 2019).  He is also the author of five collections of poetry, most recently, Vlarf (McGill Queen’s, 2021).  Jason is Professor of English and Tier I Concordia University Research Chair in Literature and Sound Studies at Concordia University in Montreal.

     

    Words and Music Shows of the Pandemic Period:

    This episode contains sounds from most of the Words and Music Shows held between 29 March 2020, when it was forced to move online, through to the return to a “live” in person show at Café Resonance held on 24 October 2021. 

    We are grateful to everyone whose words, music, movement, art, ideas, and voices contributed to this episode. This episode features the voices of many wonderful performers who have performed in pandemic period online Words and Music Shows, including Alexei Perry Cox, Ali Barillaro, Angela Szczepaniak, Cole Mash, Fabrice Koffy, Faith Paré, Ian Ferrier, Jason Selman, Jay Alexander Brown, John Sweet, Judee Burr, Katherine McLeod, Kenny Smilovich, Klara Du Plessis, Mike O’Driscoll, Nicholas Beauchesne, Nisha Coleman, Rachel McCrum, Roen Higgins, and Tawhida Tanya Evanson. Many other voices and sounds from the online shows are integrated into short audio-collage portraits of the events that can be heard in the episode.

     

     A full list of the shows and performers that inspired the episode is as follows:

    22 March 2020, Ian Ferrier posted this announcement about the upcoming Words and Music Show:

    Tonight's show is not canceled, only postponed. We are collecting tracks from all the performers who were scheduled to present, and preparing the way to present them live in this group sometime this upcoming week

    Stay tuned and stay safe!

    Ian Ferrier

    29 March 2020

    Brian Bartlett, Lune très belle (Frédérique Roy. Eugénie Jobin), Alexei Perry-Cox. Nisha Coleman, Sava (Dina Cindrić, Sarah Albu, Antonia Branković, Sara Rousseau).

    19 April 2020

    Liz Howard, Liana Cusmano, Ian Ferrier, Lauren DeRoller, Mary St-Amand Williamson.

    17 May 2020

    Maureen Hynes, Cassidy McFadzean, John Arthur Sweet
, Eryn Dace Trudell, Louise Campbell.

    21 June 2020

    Moe Clark, Taqralik Partridge, Cara Lessard Cole, David Bateman, Jay Alexander Brown, Angela Hibbs.

    23 August 2020

    Silvervest, Faith Paré, Cole Mash, Ali Barillaro, S.B. Goncarova.

    20 September 2020

    Rachel McCrum and Jonathan Lamy, Robin Durnford, Greg Santos, PC Vandall.

    18 October 2020

    John Arthur Sweet, Carolyn Marie Souaid, Erin Scott, Fortner Anderson and the Growler Chorus, and the winners of the Lawnchair Soirée videopoem contest.

    15 November 2020 (“Live” from Sala Rossa)

    Fabrice Koffy, Faith Paré, Jason (Blackbird) Selman.

    13 December 2020

    Roen Higgins, Naomi Steinberg, Klara du Plessis, Angela Szczepaniak,Tatiana Koroleva.

    21 February 2021

    Roen Higgins, Fabrice Koffy, Faith Paré, Jason Selman.

    21 March 2021

    Tawhida Tanya Evanson, Emilie Zoey Baker, Raymond Jackson, Marie-France Jacques, Francis Caprani, Kelsey Nichole Brooks, Ramela Arax Koumrouya

    18 April 2021

    Sarah Wolfson, Geronimo Inutiq, Louise Belcourt, David Bateman, Marie-Josée Tremblay, Ian Ferrier.

    23 May 2021 (The SpokenWeb Show)

    Oana Avasilichioaei, Klara du Plessis, Ian Ferrier, Shannon Maguire, Cole Mash, Jason Camlot, Kenny Smilovitch, Kevin McNeilly, Erin Scott, Katherine McLeod, Michael O’Driscoll, Ali Barillaro, and other special guests.

    1 August 2021

    RC Weslowski, April Ford, Natasha Perry-Fagant, Poet Riley Palanca, Nathanael Larochette (of Musk Ox).

    22 Aug 2021

    Jerome Ramcharitar, Marc-Alexandre Chan, Samara Garfinkle, Shawn Thicke, Tracy Yeung, Hosted by Guest Curator Avleen K Mokha, with backup from Ian Ferrier and Jason Camlot.

    19 September 2021

    Rachel McCrum, Jay Alexander Brown, John "Triangles" Stuart, John Arthur Sweet, For Body and Light.

    24 October 2021 (Back in Person at Resonance Café)

    Silvervest (Nicolas Caloia, Kim Zombik), Jason Camlot, Dark Sky Preserve (Ian Ferrier and Louise Campbell), John Stuart.

    Sonic Passages

    Sonic Passages

    This ShortCuts episode responds to poet Daphne Marlatt’s conversation with Karis Shearer and Megan Butchart in the recent SpokenWeb Podcast episode “SoundBox Signals presents Performing the Archive.” By listening to audio from Marlatt’s previous archival performances, ShortCuts producer Katherine McLeod considers how we remember feelings attached to reading a poem out loud. What does it feel like to hear a recording of your own voice? Are you reminded of how you were feeling while speaking, and can the archive ever hold the memory of those feelings?

    *

    “Sometimes, unknowingly, one writes a few lines that continue to reverberate as some kind of pointer for future years of writing.” 
    — Daphne Marlatt, “Afterword: Immediacies of Writing” (Rivering)

     

    EPISODE NOTES

    A fresh take on sounds from the past, ShortCuts is a monthly feature on The SpokenWeb Podcast feed and an extension of the ShortCuts blog posts on SPOKENWEBLOG. Stay tuned for monthly episodes of ShortCuts on alternate fortnights (that’s every second week) following the monthly SpokenWeb podcast episode.

    Producer: Katherine McLeod

    Host: Hannah McGregor

    Supervising Producer: Judith Burr

     

    AUDIO

    Audio in this episode is from a 1970 recording of Daphne Marlatt reading in Montreal at the Sir George Williams Poetry Series, and from a 2019 interview with Marlatt conducted by Karis Shearer and Megan Butchart and that aired on The SpokenWeb Podcast’s sister podcast, Soundbox Signals, and re-aired on The SpokenWeb Podcast. 

    Listen to the full recording of Daphne Marlatt reading in Montreal (1970): https://montreal.spokenweb.ca/sgw-poetry-readings/daphne-marlatt-at-sgwu-1970/.

    Listen to the previous episode of The SpokenWeb Podcast, “SoundBox Signals presents Performing the Archive”: https://spokenweb.ca/podcast/episodes/soundbox-signals-presents-performing-the-archive/.

    Listen to the previous ShortCuts on Marlatt, “Then and Now” mentioned in this episode: https://spokenweb.ca/podcast/episodes/audio-of-the-month-then-and-now/.

     

    RESOURCES

    “Daphne Marlatt & Diane Wakoski: Performing the SpokenWeb Archive.” SpokenWeb. Concordia University, 21 November 2014,  https://montreal.spokenweb.ca/oral-literary-history/daphne-marlatt-diane-wakoski-performing-the-spokenweb-archive/.

    Marlatt, Daphne. “Afterword: Immediacies of Writing.” Rivering: The Poetry of Daphne Marlatt. Ed. Susan Knutson. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2014. 

    — “Bird of Passage.” Origin, vol. 3, no. 16, Cid Corman, Jan. 1970, pp. 1–68, https://jstor.org/stable/community.28042112.

    McLeod, Katherine. “Daphne Marlatt reading ‘Lagoon’.” SPOKENWEBLOG, 28 November, 2019, https://spokenweb.ca/daphne-marlatt-reading-lagoon/.

    Shearer, Karis. “Performing the Archive: Daphne Marlatt, leaf leaf/s, then and now.” The AMP Lab. UBC-Okanagan, 17 November 2019, https://amplab.ok.ubc.ca/index.php/2019/11/17/performing-the-archive-daphne-marlatt-leaf-leaf-s-then-and-now/.

    SoundBox Signals Presents “Performing the Archive”

    SoundBox Signals Presents “Performing the Archive”

    This month on the SpokenWeb Podcast, we are excited to share with you a special episode from our sister podcast Soundbox Signals. Host Karis Shearer, guest curator Megan Butchart, and poet Daphne Marlatt have a conversation about Daphne Marlatt's 1969 archival recording of leaf leaf/s and her experience of performing poetry with the archive in 2019. This episode was co-produced by Karis Shearer and Nour Sallam.

    Produced by the SpokenWeb team at UBC Okanagan’s AMP Lab, SoundBox Signals brings literary archival recordings to life through a combination of ‘curated close listening’ and conversation. Hosted and co-produced by Karis Shearer, each episode is a conversation featuring a curator and special guests. Together they listen, talk, and consider how a selected recording signifies in the contemporary moment and ask what listening allows us to know about cultural history. https://soundbox.ok.ubc.ca/

    SpokenWeb is a monthly podcast produced by the SpokenWeb team as part of distributing the audio collected from (and created using) Canadian Literary archival recordings found at universities across Canada. To find out more about SpokenWeb visit: spokenweb.ca . If you love us, let us know! Rate us and leave a comment on Apple Podcasts or say hi on our social media @SpokenWebCanada.

     

    Episode Producers:

    Karis Shearer is an Associate Professor in English & Cultural Studies at UBCO where her research and teaching focus on literary audio, the literary event, the digital archive, book history, and women’s labour within poetry communities. She is the editor of All These Roads: The Poetry of Louis Dudek (WLUP 2008), and has published essays on Sina Queyras’s feminist blog Lemonhound, George Bowering’s little magazine Imago, and Michael Ondaatje’s The Long Poem Anthology. She is the author of a chapter on gendered labour and the Vancouver Poetry Conference in the book Canlit Across Media: Unarchiving the Literary Event (McGill-Queens UP, 2020) and is co-editor with Deanna Fong of Wanting Everything: The Collected Works of Gladys Hindmarch (Talonbooks, 2020). She also directs the AMP Lab, is a Governing Board member and lead UBCO Researcher for the SpokenWeb SSHRC Partnership Grant. She held the 2010-11 Canada-U.S. Fulbright Visiting Research Chair at Vanderbilt University.

    Megan Butchart is currently an MA student in English and Film Studies at the University of Alberta. She received her Bachelor of Arts at UBCO in 2020, majoring in English and History. She is interested in Archival Studies and is passionate about the preservation and conservation of artifacts, and the making available of such resources for public research and study. She is pleased to participate in The SoundBox Project, which merges literary, historical, and archival elements.

    Nour Sallam co-produced the original episode for SoundBox Signals. She is a former UBC-Okanagan undergraduate student, who graduated  with Honours in English and Political Science.

    Featured Guest:

    Daphne Marlatt (1942-) grew up in Penang, Malaysia before immigrating to Canada in the 1950s. While studying at UBC in the 1960s, Marlatt was one of the editors during the second-phase of TISH. Marlatt has written over twenty collections of poetry and prose including Steveston (1974), The Given (2008), and Reading Sveva (2016). In 2006 she received the Order of Canada. Marlatt lives in Vancouver.

     

    For the shout-outs mentioned in this episode, please visit the links below:

    John Lent's “A Matins Flywheel”: https://thistledownpress.com/product/a-matins-flywheel/

    David R. Loy's “Nonduality in Buddhism and Beyond”: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Nonduality/David-R-Loy/9781614295242

    Daphne Marlatt's Ana Historic: https://houseofanansi.com/products/ana-historic

    Inspired Word Cafe: http://www.inspiredwordcafe.com/

    Read more about the AMP Lab’s events with Daphne Marlatt:

    Shearer, Karis. “Performing the Archive: Daphne Marlatt, leaf leaf/s, then and now.” The AMP Lab Blog. 17 November 2019. http://amplab.ok.ubc.ca/index.php/2019/11/17/performing-the-archive-daphne-marlatt-leaf-leaf-s-then-and-now/

    Buchart, Megan. "Poetry, Campus, Community: Tuum Est.” The AMP Lab Blog. 18 November 2019. http://amplab.ok.ubc.ca/index.php/2019/11/18/poetry-campus-community-tuum-est/

    Oddleifson, Shauna. “Performing the Archive: Daphne Marlatt.” In Featured Stories and Our Students, UBCO Faculty of Critical and Creative Studies. 11 September 2019. https://fccs.ok.ubc.ca/2019/09/11/performing-the-archive-daphne-marlatt/ 

    Communal Listening [ShortCuts]

    Communal Listening [ShortCuts]

    As part two of ShortCuts 2.9 Situating Sound—and as one of the many remembrances of Stó:lō writer and activist Lee Maracle—this ShortCuts explores how the archive remembers and who these memories serve. The audio recording for this episode is a 1988 recording of Lee Maracle and Dionne Brand, recorded for broadcast on Gerry Gilbert’s radio program “radiofreerainforest” (Vancouver Coop Radio; SFU Digitized Collections). Building towards Maracle’s reading of the poem “Perseverance,” producer Katherine McLeod selects audio clips from this recording in which we can hear feminist placemaking in action. 

     

    EPISODE NOTES

    A fresh take on sounds from the past, ShortCuts is a monthly feature on The SpokenWeb Podcast feed and an extension of the ShortCuts blog posts on SPOKENWEBLOG. Stay tuned for monthly episodes of ShortCuts on alternate fortnights (that’s every second week) following the monthly SpokenWeb podcast episode.

    Producer: Katherine McLeod

    Host: Hannah McGregor

    Supervising Producer: Judith Burr

     

    AUDIO CLIPS

    All audio in this episode is from the Gerry Gilbert radiofreerainforest Collection, held at Simon Fraser University and part of SFU’s Digitized Collections.

     

    RESOURCES

    Maracle, Lee. I Am Woman: A Native Perspective on Sociology and Feminism. Vancouver: Press Gang, 1996.

     

    Maracle, Lee. Memory Serves: Oratories. Ed. Smaro Kamboureli. NeWest Press, 2015.

     

    “radiofreerainforest 3 & 28 July and 7 August, 1988.” Gerry Gilbert radiofreerainforest Collection. SFU Digitized Collections. https://digital.lib.sfu.ca/radiofreerainforest-357/radiofreerainforest-3-28-july-and-7-august-1988

     

    “ShortCuts 2.9: Situating Sound.” The SpokenWeb Podcast, 21 June 2020. https://spokenweb.ca/podcast/episodes/situating-sound/

     

    Taylor, Diana. The Archive and the Repertoire: Performing Cultural Memory in the Americas. Durham, N.C: Duke UP, 2003.

     

    Wilson, Michelle. “Forced Migration.” The SpokenWeb Podcast, 6 December 2021. https://spokenweb.ca/podcast/episodes/forced-migration/

    Sounds [ShortCuts]

    Sounds [ShortCuts]

    ShortCuts is back! Season Three of ShortCuts begins with a listening exercise. We attune our ears to what it sounds like and feels like to hear archival clips ‘cut’ out of context. Join ShortCuts producer Katherine McLeod in this exploration of the sonic and affective place-making of ShortCuts as podcast. What kind of creative and critical work can these archival sounds do? On their own, or together as an archival remix? 

    A fresh take on sounds from the past, ShortCuts is a monthly feature on The SpokenWeb Podcast feed and an extension of the ShortCuts blog posts on SPOKENWEBLOG. Stay tuned for monthly episodes of ShortCuts on alternate fortnights (that’s every second week) following the monthly SpokenWeb podcast episode.

    Producer: Katherine McLeod

    Host: Hannah McGregor

    Supervising Producer: Judith Burr

    Audio Excerpted

    Voices heard in this episode: Katherine McLeod, Tanya Davis, Ali Barillaro, Muriel Rukeyser, Margaret Avison, Stephanie Bolster, Barbara Nickel, Mathieu Aubin, Dionne Brand, Alexei Perry Cox and Isla, and Phyllis Webb.  

    All audio has been played on previous ShortCuts on The SpokenWeb Podcast. 

    Try listening to this episode first without knowing whose voices you are hearing. Afterwards, explore the audio that caught your attention. Use the transcript to find the ShortCuts episode that the audio is clipped from, and there you will find the original audio sources listed in the show notes. For a full transcript of this episode, check out the link above.

    Welcome to Season 3! Our Trailer.

    Welcome to Season 3! Our Trailer.

    We would love to hear your reactions and ideas to our stories. If you appreciate the podcast, leave us a rating and a comment on Apple Podcasts or say hi on our social media @SpokenWebCanada.

    Trailer Producers:

    Judith Burr & Hannah McGregor

    Clips Featured:

    KPFA recording of Robert Hogg reading at Berkeley Poetry Conference, 1965, from S2E10 “Robert Hogg and the Widening Circle of Return”

    Mavis Gallant, SFU, 1984, from S2E9 “Mavis Gallant Part 2: The Paratexts of ‘Grippes and Poche’ at SFU”

    Mathieu Aubin, in S2E2 “Lesbian Liberation Across Media: A Sonic Screening”

    “Listen to Black Womxn”, by jamilah malika, and Katherine McLeod in S2E8 “Talking about Talking”

    Penn Kemp, from S2E3 “Sounds of Trance Formation: An Interview with Penn Kemp”

    Wisdom Agorde, from S2E4 “Drum Codes Pt 1: The Language of Talking Drums”

    Klara du Plessis, from S2E1 “Deep Curation: Experimenting with the Poetry Reading as Practice”

    Stacey Copeland, from S2E5 “Cylinder Talks - Pedagogy in Literary Sound Studies”

    Treena Chambers, from S2E7 “Listening Ethically to the SpokenWeb”

    Music: 

    “Slapstick” by Moon Juice from Blue Dot Sessions

    16 Questions with the writers and editor of Us, Now from Breakwater Books | The Write Project

    16 Questions with the writers and editor of Us, Now from Breakwater Books | The Write Project

    Us, Now is a collection of stories connecting Newfoundland and Labrador to the world via racialized Newfoundlanders. These are stories that fit George Elliot Clarke's thinking on what a truly Canadian national tale might be: local, yet connected, broadly and diversely. But what do their authors and editor think? What are their favorite comic book characters? Their favorite children's books? Their favorite books from childhood? Get the answers, here!

    Pick up Us, Now using the following link to help the channel: https://amzn.to/3kWTopL

    Originally broadcast on August 16, 2021 on CHMR 93.5 FM in St. John's, and on other great stations across the country. 

    Check out As Loved Our Fathers, the latest book from Write Project host Matthew LeDrew: https://amzn.to/3HB7BAB

    It's a hunt for the Holy Grail taken on by an American Anthropologist and a Newfoundland History professor that unveils hidden secrets within Newfoundland history!

    Support the show

    Listen on CHMR online at http://www.chmr.ca/​

    This program, and others like it, are helped by support from viewers and fans on Patreon. Consider helping support Engen Books on Patreon for as little as $1.00 a month for excellent rewards, including books! https://www.patreon.com/engenbooks​

    Checkout Engen titles at http://www.engenbooks.com/​

    The Write Project signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8W9OT
    Engen Horror Society Signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8Yemr
    Fantasy Files signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8X4zL
    Engen's Science-Fiction Newsletter for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/ir5Jmg

    This recording copyright © 2023 Matthew LeDrew

    Interview with Dr. Richard Elcock, Us Now | The Write Project

    Interview with  Dr. Richard Elcock, Us Now | The Write Project

    Interview with  Dr. Richard Elcock, Us Now (2021, Breakwater Books).

    Dr. Richard Elcock is a GTA native, born in Toronto, ON and raised in Mississauga, ON. He is a first generation Canadian of Afro-Barbadian and Afro-Jamaican descent. He holds dual certification from the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in both General Psychiatry as well as Child & Adolescent Psychiatry.

    Pick up Us, Now using the following link to help the channel: https://amzn.to/3kWTopL

    Originally broadcast on July 26 2021 on CHMR 93.5 FM in St. John's, and on other great stations across the country. 

    Check out As Loved Our Fathers, the latest book from Write Project host Matthew LeDrew: https://amzn.to/3HB7BAB

    It's a hunt for the Holy Grail taken on by an American Anthropologist and a Newfoundland History professor that unveils hidden secrets within Newfoundland history!

    Support the show

    Listen on CHMR online at http://www.chmr.ca/​

    This program, and others like it, are helped by support from viewers and fans on Patreon. Consider helping support Engen Books on Patreon for as little as $1.00 a month for excellent rewards, including books! https://www.patreon.com/engenbooks​

    Checkout Engen titles at http://www.engenbooks.com/​

    The Write Project signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8W9OT
    Engen Horror Society Signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8Yemr
    Fantasy Files signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8X4zL
    Engen's Science-Fiction Newsletter for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/ir5Jmg

    This recording copyright © 2023 Matthew LeDrew

    Robert Hogg & The Widening Circle of Return

    Robert Hogg & The Widening Circle of Return

    In the late 1950s and early 1960s, a group of poets at UBC Vancouver began a little magazine: the TISH poetry newsletter. The TISH poets would later be called one of the most cohesive writing movements in Canadian literary history. In the summer of 2019, Craig Carpenter visited one of the former editors of TISH magazine —who is also his former professor of modern Canadian poetry. Based on interviews conducted during this visit and a subsequent visit in the winter of 2019, Craig has created an episode that explores his evolving relationship with his former professor and scenes from more than 50 years of literary history. Craig takes us through the relationships and the stories that formed a part of the TISH movement and the poet that Robert Hogg has become.Craig gives a heartfelt thank you to all those who took the time to offer feedback on early script drafts: Deanna Fong, Judith Burr, Mathieu Aubin, Marjorie Mitchell. Special thanks to Dr. Karis Shearer, all of his  colleagues at the UBC Okanagan AMP Lab, and, of course, to Robert Hogg.

    SpokenWeb is a monthly podcast produced by the SpokenWeb team as part of distributing the audio collected from (and created using) Canadian Literary archival recordings found at universities across Canada. To find out more about SpokenWeb visit: spokenweb.ca. If you love us, let us know! Rate us and leave a comment on Apple Podcasts or say hi on our social media @SpokenWebCanada.

    Episode Producer:

    Craig Carpenter is an MA student in the IGS Digital Arts & Humanities theme at the University of British Columbia (Okanagan). A poet, journalist, sound designer, and former literary editor, Craig brings a diverse set of skills to the SpokenWeb project. His thesis will explore the podcast as public scholarship and engages archival recordings of second wave TISHITES Daphne Marlatt and Robert Hogg. With particular attention to Charles Olson’s 1950 essay PROJECTIVE VERSE, he is investigating the intersection of proprioceptive poetics, the embodiment of voice in performance and sound studies. 

    Musical score by Chelsea Edwardson: Chelsea Edwardson uses music as a tool to transform stories and concepts into the sonic realm, creating experiences through sound that heal and inspire. Her background in ethnomusicology brings the depth of tone and expression that transcends culture, taking the listener to worlds beyond a physical place and into a landscape of feelings. To learn more, visit https://www.chelseaedwardson.com.

    Featured Guest:

    Robert Hogg was born in Edmonton, AB, and grew up in Cariboo and Fraser Valley, BC. Hogg graduated from UBC with a BA in English and Creative Writing. During his time at UBC, Hogg became affiliated as a poet and co-editor a part of TISH. In 1964, Hogg hitchhiked to Toronto and visited Buffalo NY, where Charles Olson had been teaching at the time. At SUNY at Buffalo, he completed a Ph.D. on the works of Charles Olson. Shortly after, Hogg taught American and Canadian poetry at Carleton University for the following thirty-eight years. Hogg currently lives at his farm located in Ottawa.

    Sound Recordings Featured:

    Archival Audio from PennSound.com

    Short intro clips of: Warren Tallman, Fred Wah, Daphne Marlatt, George Bowering: all from PennSound digital archives.

    Recording of “The Red Wheelbarrow” by William Carlos Williams: http://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Williams-WC/the_red_wheelbarrow_multiple.php

    Recording of “Often I am Permitted to Return to a Meadow” by Robert Duncan: https://media.sas.upenn.edu/pennsound/authors/Duncan/Berk-Conf-1965/Duncan-Robert_01_Often-I-am-Permitted_Berkeley-CA_1965.mp3

    Recording of “I Know a Man” by Robert Creely: http://www.writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Creeley/i_know_a_man.php

    Recording of “Maximus From Dogtown I” by Charles Olson: https://media.sas.upenn.edu/pennsound/authors/Olson/Boston-62/Olson-Charles_14_Maximus-Dogtown-2_Boston_06-62.mp3

    Archival Audio from AMP Lab’s Soundbox Collection

    Robert Hogg reads at Black Sheep Books, Vancouver, 1995: https://soundbox.ok.ubc.ca/

    Archival Audio from KPFA

    Robert Hogg reads at Berkeley Poetry Conference, 1965: http://www.kpfahistory.info/bpc/readings/Young%20poets.mp3

    Contrapuntal Poetics [ShortCuts]

    Contrapuntal Poetics [ShortCuts]

    A fresh take on sounds from the past, ShortCuts is a monthly feature on The SpokenWeb Podcast feed and an extension of the ShortCuts blog posts on SPOKENWEBLOG. Stay tuned for monthly episodes of ShortCuts on alternate fortnights (that’s every second week) following the monthly SpokenWeb podcast episode.

    Producer: Katherine McLeod

    Host: Hannah McGregor

    Supervising Producer: Judith Burr

    AUDIO SOURCES

    Audio clipped from “The Words and Music Show” (29 March 2020), https://www.facebook.com/1541307492796466/videos/891396077972589.

    Audio clipped from “ShortCuts 1.3 Where does the reading begin?” (Kaie Kellough reading at “The Words and Music Show,” 16 Nov 2016),  https://spokenweb.ca/podcast/episodes/audio-of-the-month-where-does-the-reading-begin/.

    RESOURCES

    Gibson, Kenneth. “Jessica Moss ponders the mysteries of the universe.” The Concordian. 22 January 2019,  http://theconcordian.com/2019/01/jessica-moss-ponders-the-mysteries-of-the-universe/.

    Moss, Jessica. Entanglement. https://jessicamoss.bandcamp.com/album/entanglement.

    Perry Cox, Alexei. Finding Places to Make Places. Vallum, 2019. 

    ----- Revolution / Re: Evolution. Gap Riot, 2021.

    Poet Yasmine Dalloul, contributor to Mythology from the Rock | The Write Project

    Poet Yasmine Dalloul, contributor to Mythology from the Rock | The Write Project

    Interview with Yasmine Dalloul, whose poetry is featured in Mythology from the Rock!

    Yasmine Dalloul is an astonishing fresh talent from Kuwait City, and currently residing in Montreal. Her previous work includes articles such as “Za’atar Grows in Palestine” in A Matter of Taste. Mythology from the Rock will be her first fiction credit, with her poem ‘Old Wives.’

    Pick up Mythology from the Rock using this link to help the channel: https://amzn.to/3L5CLTv

    Originally broadcast on April 19, 2021 on CHMR 93.5 FM in St. John's, and on other great stations across the country. 

    Check out As Loved Our Fathers, the latest book from Write Project host Matthew LeDrew: https://amzn.to/3HB7BAB

    It's a hunt for the Holy Grail taken on by an American Anthropologist and a Newfoundland History professor that unveils hidden secrets within Newfoundland history!

    Support the show

    Listen on CHMR online at http://www.chmr.ca/​

    This program, and others like it, are helped by support from viewers and fans on Patreon. Consider helping support Engen Books on Patreon for as little as $1.00 a month for excellent rewards, including books! https://www.patreon.com/engenbooks​

    Checkout Engen titles at http://www.engenbooks.com/​

    The Write Project signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8W9OT
    Engen Horror Society Signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8Yemr
    Fantasy Files signup for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/c8X4zL
    Engen's Science-Fiction Newsletter for FREE book: http://eepurl.com/ir5Jmg

    This recording copyright © 2023 Matthew LeDrew

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