Category: Events

The Electrosense of Paddlefish

By , October 28, 2010 11:54 pm

The Electrosense of PaddlefishMonday Nov.1st, 8pm FREE!

THE ELECTROSENSE OF PADDLEFISH: a multimedia piece on Water in the American West
Charles Lindsay and David Rothenberg

Frederick Loewe Theater, 35 West 4th St. NY, NY
(between Washington Sq. Park E. and Greene Street.)

Why did Floyd Dominy draw the instructions for how to blow up the Glen Canyon Dam on a napkin? It was his greatest creation as director of the US Bureau of Land Management. What did he know about the evils of damming the West?

This is the premiere of a live multimedia performance interpreting the complex environmental, political and social issues involving water and the Western United States.  From the frontier days to 21st century silicon valley, water has been a lifeblood, transforming the western half of our nation from desert and wilderness into a booming region requiring vast quantities of this precious liquid resource — which westerners will stop at nothing to get.

Music:  Lindsay’s pristine and processed field recordings, live electric cello and Moog guitar. Rothenberg on clarinets and overtone flutes, live explorations of found sounds and words depicting the strange struggle of water to fight back against those who would try to control it.

Video: From May through August, 2010 Lindsay traveled the west capturing video of all things affected by water. Locations included Las Vegas, Fort Peck, Mono Lake, The Hoover Dam, Idaho’s ‘Craters of the Moon’ National Monument and Silver Creek Preserve. He shot Yellowstone Park’s geysers and forest fire remnants, Paddlefish snagging, The Mermaid Bar in Great Falls, the open pit copper mine in Butte, which is the United States largest Super Fund site. He shot Noah’s Ark at a Creationist Dinosaur Museum, industrial irrigation, an abandoned depression era farm, water coolers and truck stops and 75 million year old ocean beds.

The remixed video projection is structured in eight parts for a forty minute improvised performance. You might find out what happened to that napkin, as well as just how them leviathan paddlefish find those water fleas.

Charles Lindsay, video, moog guitar, electric cello, electronics
David Rothenberg, clarinets, electronics
Chen Serfaty + Liron Unreich, video editing and production

This is the closing event of Ear to the Earth, an annual festival of sound and music devoted to the environment, which is sponsored by the Electronic Music Foundation.

Maggie Payne and Andrea Polli are also appearing in this concert.

Further resources:

http://www.emfproductions.org/upcomingevents1011/nyu_pplr.html

http://www.eartotheearth.org
http://www.charleslindsay.com
http://www.davidrothenberg.net

Living Downstream

By , April 21, 2010 11:41 am

I’ve been a big fan of Sandra Steingraber ever since reading her book Having Faith: An Ecologist’s Journey to Motherhood, a beautiful, resonating, and timely book. I was doubly fortunate to have the opportunity to interview the biologist and poet for Terrain.org’s 20th issue [read interview]. And then I finally met Sandra, and her exuberant son, when I attended the Wildbranch Writing Workshop back in 2008.

She is as beautiful, passionate, and concerned in person as she is in her writing and interviews. That is, she is a real person working hard to raise a family while raising our consciousness about the dubious impacts of chemicals on the environment and our bodies.

In 1997, she published Living Downstream: An Ecologist’s Personal Investigation of Cancer and the Environment, in which she travels from hospital waiting rooms to hazardous waste sites and from farmhouse kitchens to incinerator hearings, bringing to life stories of communities in her hometown and around the country as they confront decades of industrial and agricultural recklessness — including her own cancer in her twenties. Now in its second edition, Living Downstream offers updated, meticulously researched science that strengthens the case for banning poisons so pervasive in our air, food, and bodies. Because synthetic chemicals linked to cancer come mostly from petroleum and coal, Sandra shows that investing in green energy also helps prevent cancer. Saving the planet becomes a matter of saving ourselves and an issue of human rights.

One of Sandra’s goals soon after publishing the book was bringing its lyrical and critical message to a wider audience through film. After a decade of work, the Living Downstream feature-length documentary, produced by The People’s Picture Company, is now available for film festival and theatrical screening. Learn more about the film here, and watch the trailer below:

Interested in learning more? Then advocate for a screening of the film near you.

And also tune into Sandra Steingraber’s Weekly Essays, published on the Living Downstream website and the Huffington Post. There you’ll find eloquent essays such as “Life After Cancer — The Identity That Has No Name” and “Earth Day — The View from the F Terminal.”

As advocates for environmental and cultural consciousness and equity, we have a lot vying for our attention. If you’re keeping a list, put Sandra Steingraber on top — your attention will be well-placed and well-rewarded.

Terrain.org at AWP Denver 2010

By , April 17, 2010 11:06 pm
The Tivoli

The Tivoli at Auraria Campus, site of the Terrain.org / Hawk & Handsaw reading. Photo by Lisa O'Neil.

The Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP) annual conference in Denver April 7-10 was, as expected, fantastic. Not only did the majority of Terrain.org’s editors get together (a rarity given their geographic ranges), but we also met many contributors (and hopefully future contributors) at the Terrain.org table at the AWP bookfair, and got to rub elbows with the good folks at Hawk & Handsaw: The Journal of Creative Sustainability and The LBJ: Avian Life, Literary Arts.

The highlight for us was the Terrain.org / Hawk & Handsaw “Wild Lives / Raucous Pens” reading at the Tivoli, a historic brewery near downtown. Many thanks to Jake Adam York, University of Colorado – Denver, and Copper Nickel for helping us with the space, which was a beautiful room with a wrought-iron balcony, exposed brick walls, large copper vats in the back, and a bank of windows overlooking downtown behind the readers.

We’ve posted a slideshow of 27 photos recapping our visit to Denver. Check it out at:

http://www.terrain.org/img/2010/awp/

And don’t forget about our inaugural contests in fiction, nonfiction, and poetry with an August 1 deadline!

See You in Denver!

By , April 5, 2010 11:55 am

Join Terrain.org at the nation’s largest literature conference: the Association of Writers and Writing Programs’ annual conference and bookfair this week, April 8-10. AWP 2010 will be held in Denver, at the Colorado Convention Center, and you’ll be able to find us there, as well.

Here’s what’s going on for Terrain.org:

Table at Bookfair

Join us at Exhibit Hall A, H9 from Thursday through Saturday. We’ll be right next to the table for Hawk & Handsaw: The Journal of Creative Sustainability, and we’re also dedicating a corner of the Terrain.org table to The LBJ: Avian Life, Literary Arts.

Wild Lives / Raucous Pens: Readings from Terrain.org and Hawk & Handsaw

Join us Thursday evening, April 8, from 8 to 9:30 p.m. (reception with free beer/wine begins at 7:30 p.m.) for a joint reading held at the Tivoli at Auraria Campus (Adirondacks Room).  Facilitated by Hawk & Handsaw editor Kathryn Miles and Terrain.org editor Simmons Buntin, the reading features Patrick Burns, Alison Hawthorne Deming, Scott Elliott, James Engelhardt, Suzanne Frischkorn, Andrew Gottlieb, Luisa Igloria, John T. Price, Ben Quick, Suzanne Roberts, Jeffrey Thomson, and Arianne Zwartjes. View flyer, with walking directions.

We hope to see you in Denver!

Terrain.org at AWP

By , February 28, 2010 12:44 pm

We’re just over a month away from the nation’s largest literature conference: the Association of Writers and Writing Programs’ annual conference and bookfair, April 8-10. AWP 2010 will be held this year in Denver, at the Colorado Convention Center, and you’ll be able to find Terrain.org: A Journal of the Built & Natural Environments there, as well.

Here’s what’s going on for us:

Table at Bookfair

Join us at Exhibit Hall A, H9 from Thursday through Saturday. We’ll be right next to the table for Hawk & Handsaw: The Journal of Creative Sustainability, and we’re also dedicating a corner of the Terrain.org table to The LBJ: Avian Life, Literary Arts, a great little literary bird journal that wasn’t able to get a table of its own.

Wild Lives / Raucous Pens: Readings from Terrain.org and Hawk & Handsaw

Join us Thursday evening, April 8, from 8 to 9:30 p.m. for a joint reading held at the Tivoli at Auraria Campus (Adirondacks Room).  Facilitated by Hawk & Handsaw editor Kathryn Miles and Terrain.org editor Simmons Buntin, the reading features Patrick Burns, Alison Hawthorne Deming, Scott Elliott, James Engelhardt, Suzanne Frischkorn, Andrew Gottlieb, Luisa Igloria, John T. Price, Ben Quick, Suzanne Roberts, Jeffrey Thomson, and Arianne Zwartjes.

We hope to see you in Denver!

Patagonia Writers’ Round-up 2010

By , February 1, 2010 8:43 pm

2010 Writers' Round-up in Patagonia, ArizonaJoin Terrain.org editorial board member Alison Hawthorne Deming and other authors at the Friends of the Patagonia Library Writers’ Round-up 2010: Saturday, February 13, 2010 from 10.00 a.m. – 3.30 p.m. at Cady Hall in Patagonia, Arizona.

Scheduled writers include Mark Bahti, Betty Barr, Byrd Baylor, Elizabeth Bernays, Joel Bernstein, J.P.S. Brown, Stephen Cox, Philip Caputo, Alison Hawthorne Deming, Elizabeth Gunn, Lynn Hassler, Juanita Havill, Mike Hayes, Fenton Johnson, Ken Lamberton, Susan Lowell, Gregory McNamee, Tom Miller, Gary Paul Nabhan, Margaret Regan, Richard Shelton, Stephen Strom, and Janet Winans.

For more information, visit http://www.patagoniapubliclibrary.org/?p=874.

Terrain.org Editorial Board Member Erik Hoffner’s Solo Exhibit at the Vermont Center for Photography

By , January 27, 2010 5:10 am

Final Week of Solo Exhibit: Heritage Homecoming, by Erik Hoffner
Vermont Center for Photography, January 8-31, 2010
49 Flat Street, Brattleboro, VT
www.vcphoto.org

Terrain.org editorial board member Erik Hoffner will exhibit images from a 2008 photo assignment in Poland for Heifer Project International’s magazine World Ark. This solo show features dozens of gorgeous enlargements captured with black & white film and also some color digital images. See the online gallery for a sampling.

Mrs. Green’s Top Ten Easy Tips for Consumers

By , December 3, 2009 7:36 pm

Last night Gina Murphy-Darling, a.k.a. Mrs. Green of Tucson radio fame, presented at the Civano Neighbors neighborhood association annual meeting. (It just so happens that in addition to editing Terrain.org, I head up our new urbanist community’s neighborhood association, for better or worse….)

Here are her Top Ten Green Tips:

  1. Oh the places you go… take reusable bags.
  2. You can lead a horse to water… but make sure you have a reusable water bottlw with you.
  3. Save on your energy bill… unplug cell phone chargers and other appliances when not in use.
  4. Always shut your computer down… save energy, not to mention your workplace will be about 5 degrees cooler.
  5. Green birthday fun… make a meal for a friend or loved one instead of buying things that come in packaging.
  6. If you are going to shop organic… buy organic milk, fruits, vegetables, and meat.
  7. Remove ALL antibaaterial soap from your home… the plain old stuff works great.
  8. Stop junk mail and save trees… www.41pounds.org.
  9. Buy organic wine… and really make green living fun!
  10. Use hydrogen peroxide… for mouthwash, germ removal of toothbrushes, cleaning countertops and table tops, cleaning cutting boards, healing cuts, and much more.

Learn more about Mrs. Green at her website: http://www.mrsgreengoesmainstream.com.

Writer’s Conferences v. Writing Workshops: Considerations, Values

By , November 21, 2009 4:49 am

I was asked recently to put together a brief comparison of sorts of writer’s conferences versus writing workshops around the idea of exposure to editors and publishers.  This is what I came up with:

The view from the Wildbranch Writing Workshop: Craftsbury Common.

The view from the Wildbranch Writing Workshop: Craftsbury Common.

It seems to me that there are really two types of writer’s events — writing workshops and conferences about writing, the latter usually including a bookfair, publishers’ exhibits, or the like.

The biggest and perhaps best known example of the conference about writing is the Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP) annual conference and bookfair, which usually draws at least 5,000 people.  The panels cover a very wide range of writing topics.  For example, I chaired a panel at the NYC AWP conference in early 2008 on “the future of environmental essay.”  Large conferences such as these are excellent venues for attending panels of very well-known writers and visiting (and being overwhelmed by) publishers’ booths.  I can’t recall the number of exhibitors at the bookfair, but it must be well over 400, I bet.  In New York in 2008 and Denver in 2010, the journal I edit — Terrain.org: A Journal of the Built & Natural Environments — did/will have a table.  Visiting tables/booths and talking with editorial staff (and sometimes contributors) is the best way to learn about the publication short of actually purchasing it (or, in our case, visiting it online).  Like smaller writer’s conferences, it’s not a venue for submitting work, but rather for identifying publications you’re interested in submitting your work to (whether individual literary journals or book publishers), talking with the editors to get a sense of what they’re interested in for upcoming issues, and rubbing elbows with other inquring writers.

Smaller conferences are not so overwhelming, and often provide a more intimate experience and opportunity for connecting even further with an editor.  I think of this summer’s Association for the Study of Literature and Environment (ASLE) biennial conference in Victoria, BC.  With perhaps 400 attendees, the panels are smaller and last longer, the panels and events are tailored in this case to a specific set of literature — environmental literature and literary ecocriticism — and there are more opportunities for networking, especially with editors and contributors.  The exhibitor can be much smaller; there were perhaps ten or twelve exhibitors at ASLE, Terrain.org among them.

At both settings, readings are offered.  In the case of AWP, they’re offered both as part of the program and outside of the official event — dozens of them nightly, it seems.  For example, in Denver in April 2010, Terrain.org is teaming up with Hawk & Handsaw: The Journal of Creative Sustainability and Isotope: A Journal of Literary Nature and Science Writing to host a reading not affiliated with AWP but which, we hope, will draw fans of those publications and people interested in place-based literature — even as it will conflict with one of AWP’s big poetry readings.  At ASLE, on the other hand, it seemed appropriate not to schedule an off-site reading but rather to attend the two or three scheduled evening readings.

At the other end of the spectrum, though still related of course, are writing workshops.  Staying in the environmental literature genre, I think here of the Wildbranch Writing Workshop held over a week each summer in northern Vermont.  While one or two journals may be represented — Orion magazine (the Orion Society) is the primary sponsor, so always participates, and sometimes editors of other journals attend either as speakers or students (that was my experience in the summer of 2007) — there is little opportunity for editorial interaction unless it’s part of the workshop.  At Wildbranch, however, that opportunity is a distinct and important part of the overall workshop experience: the year I attended, Orion’s editor-in-chief Chip Blake agreed to read every participant’s submission and provide individual feedback.  That’s not common, I think, but is certainly valuable.  What also isn’t common except at workshops like Wildbranch is the ability for students to meet with and really hang out with the instructors.  I had the good fortune of spending time with Scott Russell Sanders and Sandra Steingraber, two writers/activists whose work I much admire.  I’ve kept in touch with both of them.  It’s true that as an editor myself I may have more opportunity to maintain our contact, but that the opportunity is there in the first place is pretty special.  I doubt you dine at every meal with your instructor and other participants, including sponsoring magazine editors, at most workshops.  But every writing workshop has some unique opportunity, I’d wager, and I suspect all of them develop a sense of community among the students that may continue well after the workshop.

So is there value in either or both of these approaches — the writer’s conference versus the writing workshop?  Definitely.  At the conference, the writer receives broad exposure to publications and access to an array of panels across genres but doesn’t receive instruction.  The opportunities to meet publishers at booths/tables are many.  At the workshop, the writer receives individual (small group, really) instruction and usually may sit on a few panels offered when the instructor-led workshops are not in session.  Exposure to publishers and editors is limited, though.  It’s really a question of what the writer is after.  For me personally, they all offer benefits, but I can only go to so many larger writer’s conferences like AWP, especially if I’m not one of the presenters.  And I could only attend a writing workshop (mainly due to cost and, at a full week often, time off) every now and then.  But Wildbranch for me was incredibly beneficial and affirming.  And the ASLE conference, held every other year, is an event I plan not to miss if I can help it.  I don’t feel much community at AWP because of its vast size, but I definitely do at ASLE and Wildbranch.

Issue No. 24 Launch and Reading Redux

By , October 5, 2009 4:59 am

David RothenbergOn Thursday, September 24th, Terrain.org held its first-ever public issue launch and reading, celebrating Issue No. 24, “Borders and Bridges” with readings by David Rothenberg, Pamela Uschuk, Christopher Cokinos, and Deborah Fries at the University of Arizona Poetry Center.

We’ve just added an image gallery and mp3 of the full reading at the new Terrain.org Events section of the website.

We had a great turnout, and thank the Poetry Center and Center for Biological Diversity for sponsoring the event, the readers for such wonderful performances, and the audience. View the image gallery and listen to the full performance now.

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