Poets Corner Reading Series

EVENTS

UPCOMING READINGS, FEATURED POETS, and THEMED READINGS.

Poets Corner bids farewell to 2021 at our December Reading

Posted on behalf of Evelyn Schofield

On December 15 a goodly number of us gathered again to enjoy an evening of fine poetry together. We started off with some readings from near and far at our open mic, welcoming regular contributors Herb Bryce, Nefertiti Morrison, and Peter Marcus, as well Josephine LoRe, Erin Brown-John, and Catherine Chen.

Our first featured poet was Wendy Donawa, who joined us from Victoria to read selections from her latest book Our Bodies’ Unanswered Questions. During the Q&A session she commented that poetry often starts with everyday experiences and explores beyond them to place them in a broader context. She compared this to her work as a museum curator, where she needed to consider the stories behind the different objects on display. This approach was evident in poems such as the pantoum Stroke of Genius, which speaks of the devastating effects of a stroke, and Vespers for a Tent City, in which she commented on how fitting it was that the tent city that sprang up in Victoria during the pandemic should be situated in a “sodden field sandwiched between cathedral and courthouse”. She finished her reading on a lighter note with On Considering My Demise after reading ‘Lincoln in the Bardo’, a semi-humorous look at mortality as she imagines watching others callously dispose of her possessions after her death.

Our second featured poet, Chantal Gibson, began by commenting on the recent passing of the Black feminist author bell hooks, whose writing had a profound influence on her own work. She read poems from her recent book with/holding and other works. In poems like Terms and Conditions and Fair Use, she focuses on the commodification of Black images and uses her command of the language of digital technology to challenge us to confront our unconscious, ingrained biases and break free from the “grinning tyranny of cut and paste”. Her use of dates in poems like Revisionist History and State-sanctioned Violence points to a growing impatience that time moves on but nothing much changes for Black women, who remain “phantom[s] of the racist imagination”. During the Q&A session she commented that “we are not separate from history, we are in it”. Or, as she writes in her poem Anchors, “now the news is always breaking”.

These two fine poets certainly ended our year of poetry readings on a high note and that may be our last online reading for some time. We do hope to be coming to you live from Fairleigh Dickinson University on January 19, when we will feature Ellie Sawatzky and Shauna Paull. We know that some of you won’t be able to attend in person, but we plan to get our readings livestreamed as soon as we can manage that technical feat. Happy holidays – we’ll see you on the other side!

 

December’s Virtual Poetry Reading at Poets Corner!!

Please join us this Wednesday 15th December for what we think will be our last VIRTUAL reading at Poets Corner, featuring:

Wendy Donawa spent 36 years in Barbados as student, college instructor and museum curator. She has returned to her salty West Coast birthplace on the unceded lands of the Esquimalt and Songhees people, whom she acknowledges with respect and gratitude. From her writing desk, she can see sunset on the Salish Sea and Sooke Hills.

Her poems appear in Canadian anthologies, magazines, and solo chapbooks. Her début poetry collection, Thin Air of the Knowable (Brick Books, 2017) was a finalist for the Gerald Lampert award.  Our Bodies’ Unanswered Questions (Fontenac House, 2021) is her second book.

 

Chantal Gibson (chantalgibson.com) is an award-winning writer-artist-educator living on the ancestral lands of the Coast Salish Peoples. Working in the overlap between literary and visual art, her work confronts colonialism head on, imagining the BIPOC voices silenced in the spaces and omissions left by cultural and institutional erasure. Her visual art has been exhibited in galleries and museums across Canada and the US.

Her debut book of poetry, How She Read (Caitlin Press, 2019) explores the representation of Black women in Canadian history, art, literature. It won the 2020 Pat Lowther Memorial Award and the 2020 Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize and was shortlisted for the 2020 Griffin Poetry Prize. Her follow-up collection, with/holding (Caitlin Press, 2021) brings a critical lens to the representation and reproduction of Blackness across digital media.

Recipient of the 2021 3M National Teaching Fellowship award, she teaches writing and design communication in the School of Interactive Arts & Technology at Simon Fraser University.

Poets Corner’s December 2021 virtual reading will be Wednesday, 15th December, 2021, at 730pm. REGISTER NOW!!

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMvc–hrjssE9yU70DVGqJCTE9Lx6U-Rk0m

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