PennSound Podcasts

PennSound

PennSound Podcasts are hosted by PennSound's co-director, Al

  • 54 minutes 23 seconds
    Parts of parts: an interview with Larry Price
    In Episode 78 of PennSound podcasts, poet joins and for an interview in the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House to discuss his new book 1/0, as well as some of his earlier work. The three discuss various influences on Price's poetry, including his love of Shakespeare and his former work as a performance artist, which are both reflected in the theatrical, monologic quality of his work.
    5 February 2024, 2:00 pm
  • 54 minutes 40 seconds
    If we just had enough heart: an interview with Evie Shockley
    In Episode 77 of PennSound podcasts, poet sits down in the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House for an interview about her work with , , , and . In this wide-ranging conversation, Shockley, Filreis, Williams, Nielson, and Harris discuss the scope and trajectory of Shockley's poetry, from her 2011 book the new black, to her more recent books semiautomatic (2017) and suddenly we (2023). Shockley talks about the influences of various poets on her work, including , Gwendolyn Brooks, and , among others.
    24 January 2024, 2:00 pm
  • 44 minutes 59 seconds
    A placeholder for memory: an interview with Sally Van Doren
    In Episode 76 of PennSound podcasts, Sally Van Doren joins in the Wexler Studio at the Kelly Writers House for a discussion of her newest book, Sibilance (LSU Press, 2023). Van Doren reads aloud from her work, and the two discuss the practices of visual art and asemic writing that structure her life as an artist and inform her approach to poetry.
    12 December 2023, 2:00 pm
  • 1 hour 9 minutes
    Backwards and in circles: an interview with Willard Spiegelman
    In Episode 75 of PennSound podcasts, Willard Spiegelman sits down with at the Kelly Writers House's Wexler Studio for a discussion on the underappreciated 20th century poet Amy Clampitt. The duo embark on a long exploration of Spiegelman's biography on Clampitt, Nothing Stays Put: The Life and Poetry of Amy Clampitt (Knopf, 2023). Spieigelman reveals the challenges he faced connecting the dots on simple elements of Clampitt's biographical record, noting gaps in Clampitt's earlier life that she avoided discussing with even her close friends and family.
    31 July 2023, 2:00 pm
  • 1 hour 2 minutes
    Advance and retreat of energy: an interview with Gail Scott
    In Episode 74 of PennSound podcasts, Christy Davids talks with Montréal writer about her recent release Permanent Revolution (Book*hug Press, 2021), a compilation of new and revised essays, including work that originally appeared in Scott's foundational feminist text, Spaces Like Stairs (Women's Press, 1996). The revolutionary character of richly polysemous, multiply path-winding texts is a recurrent thread in this conversation. Davids and Scott also query the role of feminist theory, including that which it avows to do, as well as that which it actually does, and for whom.
    5 May 2022, 2:00 pm
  • 1 hour 18 minutes
    I will wear the mask: a conversation with Emily Abendroth and Jeff T. Johnson
    In Episode 73 of PennSound podcasts, Jeff T. Johnson and exchange perspectives on how modular, nonlinear writing can open into enactive relationships that press readers and listeners alike beyond individual experience toward "critical empathy" and its relational tactics and strategies for living in common amidst social struggles that require collective reflection and navigation. The conversation is structured around a set of readings and commentary on material drawn from Johnson's Trouble Songs: A Musicological Poetics (punctum books, 2018) and Abendroth's Sousveillance Pageant (Radiator Press, 2021), two texts that employ complementary approaches to working across genres, formal and gestural structures, and disjunctive expressive modes.
    4 May 2022, 2:00 pm
  • 44 minutes 37 seconds
    I am the city: a conversation with Jill Magi and Davy Knittle
    In Episode 72 of PennSound podcasts, and Jill Magi spoke over Zoom about Magi's book Speech (Nightboat Books, 2019). Their discussion moved through many aspects of the relationship between the city and the woven object, such as the intersection of textiles and architecture; how weaving, like walking, teaches us to live in communities; and walking, weaving, and poetry as fragmentary practices. They also discussed how language habits further spatial inequalities in cities, and poetry's capacity to introduce questions about the language of climate change, citizenship versus belonging, and our understanding of value.
    3 May 2022, 2:00 pm
  • 1 hour 4 minutes
    Empathy under late capitalism: an interview with Danielle LaFrance
    In Episode 71 of PennSound podcasts, Levi Bentley, Ted Rees, and Danielle LaFrance met in the Wexler Studio in November 2019 to discuss LaFrance's books Just Like I Like It and Friendly + Fire as a part of the Housework series. Their conversation touched on the gross and grotesque, "it" as ideology, abolishing the self and the "sovereign I," empathy in a late-capitalist world, and the discomfort of being both a participant in and host to parasitic social injustice.
    3 September 2020, 2:00 pm
  • 1 hour 14 minutes
    'Some quality of song': an interview with Al Young
    In Episode 70 of PennSound podcasts, , , and joined in the Wexler Studio to discuss Young and his work. The conversation covered the relationship between Young's poetry and the Black Arts Movement, the role of music and jazz in his writing, and other figures with whom he was acquainted, such as poets Ishmael Reed and . Young also gave readings of some of his poems: "A Dance for Militant Dilettantes," "Yes, the Secret Mind Whispers" (which was written in honor of Kaufman), and "January."
    12 May 2020, 2:00 pm
  • 38 minutes 2 seconds
    An openness to language: a conversation with Rodney Koeneke and Davy Knittle
    In Episode 69 of PennSound podcasts, hosted poet in the Wexler Studio to discuss his book, Body and Glass (Wave Books, 2018). Their conversation touches on Koeneke's writing process and use of pronouns as a "distancing technique," the role of poetry — particularly experimental forms — in America today, and how joy might emerge from work about loss. In the podcast, the two also examine the traditions that poetry assembles for itself, drawing comparisons between modernists like and contemporary poets.
    19 February 2020, 2:00 pm
  • 46 minutes 13 seconds
    Not-me-ness: a conversation with Eileen Myles and Davy Knittle
    In Episode 68 of PennSound podcasts, and had a conversation at Myles's home in the East Village in New York City in August, 2018, for this PennSound podcast. Their discussion began in the midst of an exchange about Myles's 1991 collection Not Me and changes in their neighborhood at the time. Conversation topics spanned "not-me-ness," gender, capitalism, sexuality, perception, and observation, among others.
    11 February 2020, 2:00 pm
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