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Posts Tagged ‘nationalpoetrymonth’

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“HOMOCONSONANTISM

Choose a sentence or short passage from your newspaper to complete a homoconsonantism. In this form, the sequence of consonants in a source text is kept, while all its vowels are replaced. For example:

ORIGINAL: To be or not to be: that is the question.
CONSONANTS ONLY: T b r n t t b t t s t h q s t n
FINAL PRODUCT: As burnt tibia: it heats the aqueous tone. ” -from The OULIPOST Handbook

 

sourced from:
Snc xplrr Trs Sl Trn
By DV TZKFF

Dmn lbrn, wh sng n th bnds Blr nd Grllz nd mmrsd hmslf n frcn msc nd Chns pr, wll rls hs frst sl lbm.

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OULIPOST#2: Lipogram (Newspaper Titles)

“A lipogram is a text that excludes one or more letters of the alphabet. The ingenuity demanded by the restriction varies in proportion to the frequency of the letter or letters excluded. For this initial exercise . . . compose a poem using only words that can be formed from letters that are NOT found in the title of your newspaper.” –from The OULIPOST Playbook

My text is sourced from THE NEW YORK TIMES;
therefore, I was prohibited from using the letters: T, H, E, N, W, Y, O, R, K, I, M, or S.

The result is a poem that asks you to listen, as well as to examine it on the page.

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Thanks to my pal, Jen Michalski, for helping me spread the word about OULIPOST!

JMWW

carla Congrats to Baltimore resident CarlaJean Valluzzi , who is one of 78 poets from seven countries selected to participate in the OULIPOST project this April. Coordinated by the Found Poetry Review , the initiative unites authors in applying the constrained writing techniques of the Oulipo group to text found in local newspapers. Valluzzi will be using The New York Times and others as her source text for the month.

OULIPOST is inspired by the experimental writing practices of Oulipo (Ouvroir de littérature potentielle — or “workshop of potential literature”) writers. Founded in 1960 by Raymond Queneau and François Le Lionnais, the group encourages the application of writing constraints to generate new structures and patterns.

“Oulipo constraints provide poets a chance to break free from the restrictions and challenges they face in their everyday writing practices,” noted Found Poetry Review Editor-in-Chief Jenni B. Baker. “We’re encouraging writers to be bold, take…

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Ouliposter-Badge-Black-300x300

Hello Friends~

I am so pleased to announce my being chosen to participate in the Found Poetry Review’s OULIPOST challenge for National Poetry Month, 2o14!  As such, I will be writing a new poem each day, in the tradition of Oulipo and sourced from the day’s news–as reported in the New York Times and the Baltimore Sun–and posting them here on the blog.

Each of the 82 poets involved were asked to answer a few questions, as a means of introducing OULIPOST and those of us engaged in it.  My answers follow below.

I hope you will enjoy checking in each day and following my completely non-linear “progress”.  Feel free to leave me feedback!

Cheers,
CarlaJean

 

1.  WHAT EXCITES YOU ABOUT OULIPOST?

I am excited to have to step outside of my traditional (more formal; worked, then reworked and then worked again) methods of production.  I am also excited for what this will yield in terms of the end results.

I’m also excited by the group dynamic inherent in the project, to be inspired by the work of the other OULIPOSTers and how they generate it. 

Finally, I’m also excited about being asked to find my inspiration in alternative spaces, mainly in what’s happening in the world around me in terms of current affairs, as well as what the mainstream media is choosing to call our attention to.

 

2.  WHAT, IF ANYTHING, SCARES YOU ABOUT OULIPOST?

I’m afraid I won’t be able to keep up.
I’m also afraid of getting in to trouble at work for just wanting to work on the poems throughout the day!

 

3.  HAVE YOU WRITTEN EXPERIMENTAL OR FOUND POETRY BEFORE? IF SO, TELL US ABOUT IT.

I was introduced to experimental writing in graduate school, the likes of Ben Lerner, Ingeborg Bachmann and Christian Bök; I was dubious at first, but it didn’t take long for me to come around.

I am also obsessed with writing poems based on the scraps sent in to FOUND magazine!

My first “experimental” poem seemed to open many doors for me around Baltimore, once I had the courage to share it with others.

 

4.  WHAT NEWSPAPER WILL SERVE AS YOUR SOURCE TEXT?

I’ll be using the New York Times, with a little help—if necessary—from the Baltimore Sun.

 

5.  WHO’S YOUR SPIRIT OULIPIAN?
[Some people have spirit animals. We have spirit Oulipians. Do a little Internet research on the members (past or present) of the Oulipo group and choose one to be your spirit guide throughout National Poetry Month. In addition to naming your spirit Oulipian, tell us a little bit about why you picked him or her.]

My spirit Oulipian is Jacques Jouet.  He, like me, works in several forms and media, including collage.  He is also responsible for “Poèmes de métro”, of which I am severely fond!
Also, he is the only “J”!

 

 

 

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