march, 2020
Event Details
We are excited we can offer this event to the public in Port Townsend by making it available virtually: https://zoom.us/j/3900963638 Meeting ID: 390 096 3638 Or join via phone:
Event Details
We are excited we can offer this event to the public in Port Townsend by making it available virtually:
- https://zoom.us/j/3900963638
- Meeting ID: 390 096 3638
- Or join via phone:
- +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)
- +1 646 558 8656 US (New York)
- 877 853 5257 US Toll-free
- 855 880 1246 US Toll-free
- Find your local number: https://zoom.us/u/a9Io2sefE
Please join us for a reading with participatory elements: a somatic performance. “Gut Botany charts my body / language living on indigenous land as a white settler and traveler,” Petra Kuppers writes in the notes of her new poetry collection. Using a perfect cocktail of surrealist and situationist techniques, Kuppers submits to the work and to the land, moving through ancient fish, wounded bodies, and the space around her. The book invites the reader to navigate their own body through the peaks and pitfalls of pain, survival, sensual joy, and healing. Readers looking for experimental poetry that takes up space in their brains and bodies will dive deep and fast into this queer ecosomatic investigation.
Petra Kuppers is a disability culture activist and a community performance artist. She teaches on the MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts at Goddard College. She is author of the poetry collection PearlStitch, the queer/crip speculative story collection Ice Bar, and multiple academic books. She lives in Ypsilanti, Michigan, where she co-creates Turtle Disco, a community arts space.
Gut Botany (Wayne State University Press, 2020) Reviews:
Gut Botany weaves disability, ecological, somatic, and performance poetry. Throughout, diverse human and more-than-human bodies touch with tenderness, violence, joy, and pain. Kuppers tries to be open to ‘the all’ and how all her senses ‘layer and story’ so she can write––‘palm tingling’––toward healing, sanctuary, and love.
– Craig Santos Perez
In these poems Petra Kuppers slides words into unexpected spaces following rivers of conscious memories and neural networks of unconscious motions. Places become political and politics become visceral. She weaves a way of being in the world with the forces that oppose it and edges of reality and sensation that serve to feed it. Reading these poems we find light, breezes, and resilience.
– Margaret Noodin, author of Weweni (Wayne State University Press, 2015)
Gut Botany is a capacious assay of corporeal life-support systems. A lingual choreography of interrelation and interdependence forms a generative phenomenology where every point of contact matters. Gendered, sexual, ableist, ecological, and colonial-settler violence is met with fierce and tender resistance. By disarming all forms of tyranny and extractivism, sustainability is possible. This is a work of immense transformative capacity. I am moved by the sheer responsiveness and receptivity that is involved when blooming out of line as a gender non-conforming nebula. Find sustenance in this generous resource of movement and change.
– Brenda Iijima, author of Remembering Animals
Time
(Saturday) 6:15 pm - 7:15 pm
Location
Zoom