The Poetry Society
- Autor: Vários
- Narrador: Vários
- Editora: Podcast
- Duração: 41:59:21
- Mais informações
Informações:
Sinopse
The Poetry Society was founded in 1909 to promote "a more general recognition and appreciation of poetry". Since then, it has grown into one of Britain's most dynamic arts organisations, representing British poetry both nationally and internationally. Today it has more than 4000 members worldwide and publishes the leading poetry magazine, The Poetry Review.With innovative education and commissioning programmes and a packed calendar of performances, readings and competitions, the Poetry Society champions poetry for all ages. "The Poetry Society is the heart and hands of poetry in the UK – a centre which pours out energy to all parts of the poetry-body, and a dexterous set of operations which arrange and organise poetry's various manifestations. It has a long distinguished history, and has never been so vital, or so vitalizing as it is now." Sir Andrew Motion
Episódios
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Paul Nemser on the National Poetry Competition
04/09/2015 Duração: 19minUS poet Paul Nemser was delighted to have been commended in the The Poetry Society's National Poetry Competition – "an opportunity to have one's work looked at [anonymously] by very, very good poets". He spoke to Mike Sims about being taught by Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop and Stanley Kunitz, the benefits of translating poetry and why competitions matter.
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Zaffar Kunial talks to Maurice Riordan
13/08/2015 Duração: 15min"I'm struck by the meaninglessness of words, how slippery they are and yet I also want to believe in them. I'm left stuck between the two." Zaffar Kunial talks to Maurice Riordan about all his successes in 2014: winning the Geoffrey Dearmer Prize, his residency at the Wordsworth Trust (his first job as a 'poet') and publication in the Faber New Poets series. He also talks about writing for Hallmark Cards, bilingualism, identity and discovering his voice as a poet. He also reads his poem 'Fielder'.
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Atlantic Exchange: Don Share talks to Maurice Riordan
03/07/2015 Duração: 16minDon Share, editor of Poetry, talks to Maurice Riordan, editor of The Poetry Review, about their magazines' latest exchange of American and British poems, and how writers and readers on both sides of the Atlantic benefit from wider exposure to the two traditions. They also discuss 'Prufrock' – first published in Poetry 150 years ago – Young Turks, Old Possums, an editor's luck and typos.
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Kevin Patrick McCarthy - Enough Sky
12/06/2015 Duração: 01min'Enough Sky' was commended in The Poetry Society's 2014 National Poetry Competition. From the judges: 'From the start, 'Enough Sky' impresses with its tight lyricism and careful adjectives. It is delightfully elusive and warrants repeated reading. A poem which crept up on me and won me over with its spell and its surprising phrases - 'urging tangerine starward', 'seeking gauze to pull away''. This is a poem which feels longer than it is because it packs in a lot - lush and distilled.'' - Roddy Lumsden. Image: Moonrise over Ghost Ranch © Steve O'Bryan www.wildbasinphotography.com
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'May Books Be Your Courage' by Orla Owen, YPN Reading Agency mini writing comp winner
12/05/2015 Duração: 01minOrla was one of the winners of the Young Poets Network mini writing competition with the Reading Agency, to write a poem about reading. http://www.youngpoetsnetwork.org.uk/2015/03/17/writing-about-reading-the-latest-mini-competition/
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Kei Miller reads 'Place Name: Oracabessa'
17/04/2015 Duração: 03minWorking in collaboration with Royal Collection Trust, The Poetry Society commissioned Forward Prize winning poet Kei Miller to create a new poem. Place Name – Oracabessa, skilfully unites the themes of Gold and Journeys and follows the form of Miller's award winning collection 'The Cartographer tries to map his way to Zion'. The poem was premiered at an evening event in The Queen's Gallery on Thursday, 12 February 2015 to a full audience.
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Paul Muldoon talks to Maurice Riordan
05/02/2015 Duração: 22min"Many writers write not because they're fluent or because they have any kind of ability in a language but for the exact opposite reason." Paul Muldoon talks to Maurice Riordan, Editor of The Poetry Review, about Heaney, Beckett and Joyce, and reads 'A Dent' from his new collection, One Thousand Things Worth Knowing (Faber).
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Kim Addonizio talks to Maurice Riordan
02/12/2014 Duração: 20minUS poet Kim Addonizio talks to Maurice Riordan, Editor of The Poetry Review, about riffing on the canon and traditional forms, her view that "emotional experience is the essence of any art" and how "the best humour is also dark and traffics with something else" – how she uses poetry as a process of discovery. She also reads her new poem 'White Flower, Red Flower'.
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'Dissolving into Crazy' by Rose Swainston, YPN Edith Sitwell challenge winner
11/07/2014 Duração: 04minRose was one of the winners of the Young Poets Network Edith Sitwell challenge. http://www.youngpoetsnetwork.org.uk/2014/03/24/edith-sitwell-eccentricity-and-sounds-new-writing-challenge/
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Linda France, National Poetry Competition 2013 winner, on prize-winning poems
01/07/2014 Duração: 17minLinda France, winner of the National Poetry Competition 2013, presented by the Poetry Society, talks about her why entering competitions is so worthwhile, which poems she enters and why, how the competition connects the world of poetry and why anonymity matters.
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Simon Armitage talks to Maurice Riordan
30/06/2014 Duração: 21minSimon Armitage talks about his writing home – his teenager's bedroom in Marsden, West Yorkshire, of taking poetry out into the world on long walks, on the radio and in the theatre – the "go anywhere artform" in Les Murray's phrase. He also talks about compiling his new Selected and reads his new poems 'Camera Obscura' and 'Paper Aeroplane'.
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Michael Hofmann reads 'Baselitz and his Generation'
24/06/2014 Duração: 03minThis poem was specially commissioned by the British Museum, London, in partnership with the Poetry Society. It was inspired by the exhibition, 'Germany Divided: Baselitz & his generation', at the British Museum, London, 2014. http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/exhibitions/germany_divided.aspx
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Sam Riviere reads his poem, 'untitled'
24/06/2014 Duração: 03minThis poem was specially commissioned by the British Museum, London, in partnership with the Poetry Society. It was inspired by the exhibition, 'Germany Divided: Baselitz & his generation', at the British Museum, London, 2014. http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/exhibitions/germany_divided.aspx
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Kathryn Maris reads 'The House with Only an Attic and a Basement'
24/06/2014 Duração: 02minThis poem was specially commissioned by the British Museum, London, in partnership with the Poetry Society. It was inspired by the exhibition, 'Germany Divided: Baselitz & his generation', at the British Museum, London, 2014. http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/exhibitions/germany_divided.aspx
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Adlestrop - read by Lance Pierson
20/06/2014 Duração: 01minAdlestrop - read by Lance Pierson by The Poetry Society
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The Blackbirds Come by Kim Rooney
17/06/2014 Duração: 29sThe Blackbirds Come by Kim Rooney by The Poetry Society
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Adlestrop, read by Katrina Naomi
17/06/2014 Duração: 01minAdlestrop, read by Katrina Naomi by The Poetry Society
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Steve Ely talks to Maurice Riordan
16/04/2014 Duração: 18minJoin poets Steve Ely and Maurice Riordan in a sparkling discussion about Ely's current and forthcoming collections, his guiding spirits Hughes, Hill and Heaney, his "alternative England" and fighting 500-year-old battles in history, politics and religion, and his interest in bloodsports as a metaphor for rebellion.
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Jack Underwood talks to Maurice Riordan
12/02/2014 Duração: 23minJack Underwood talks to Maurice Riordan about the development of his work and the transition from pamphlet to a full collection, how there are just ten "really good" poems, Simon Armitage, Elizabeth Bishop, Frank O'Hara and Charles Simic, the latest generation of young poets, teaching and the inspiration of TV. He also reads his terrific poem, ‘Spring’.
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Adam Bridgland on his show 'Fables'
16/01/2014 Duração: 13minArtist Adam Bridgland talks to Mike Sims about his Poetry Café exhibition,'Fables', the inspiration of song lyrics, caravans, picnics, printmaking and Pop Art.