For the criminal photojournalist Weegee (the so-called “Official Photographer for Murder, Inc”) creating sublime visual art and taking a useable journalistic photograph blended seamlessly. Why is he so much less appreciated today than his peers? https://t.co/6Im9Cz24nb
“When you change your body in any way, I think it often becomes more you.”
A conversation between @AllisonWyss and @crowserowser from the new issue: https://t.co/OuEm1RdS94
Joseph Conrad, usually a rather sombre figure, indulges in drunken juvenile japery with the Glaswegian author Neil Munro—a popular writer then, little-read today, but due for a reconsideration—and the experience rescued Conrad's career: https://t.co/oU5Wwz5I0w
Here's the edited discussion between Xu Xi (Monkey in Residence and me ( Selfie: Poetry, Social Change & Ecological Communication), two different ways of writing in discussion and reconciliation.
https://t.co/NtL3PZwo6c
@CriticalFlame - John Wieners, Allen Ginsberg and William Blake, Allen Ginsberg and psychiatry - Friday's Weekly Round-up on the Allen Ginsberg Project -https://t.co/jqygzSoA7N
"Poets reframing, repurposing, revising, and revisioning fairy tales and tropes from folk traditions are producing some of the most inventive and dynamic work in English-language poetry today." https://t.co/7FVRvNoWp6
#Writers! We are in need of review and literary essays for the upcoming issue. Submissions are open and free. Send us your work! https://t.co/M0Lr2Zce9o
Insightful by Daniel Rabuzzi @TheChoirBoats in @CriticalFlame 'History is at the heart of the endeavor. Poets dissecting fairy tales aim to rewrite how we tell the story, specifically to surface and celebrate the history of the oppressed and marginalized'
https://t.co/bij8EPRv4U
@nadmussen "Six Proposals for the Reform of Fiction in the Age of Climate Change" @nadmussen in @CriticalFlame https://t.co/8TU3AZkXDw
"the English language is choked by metaphors of possession and exchange, and sorely lacks metaphors of membership and interrelation."