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Atlantic City (from ‘Blast’ 2):
by Helen Saunders
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Spring 2015, Web Issue 17
Spring 2015, Web Issue 17
Spring 2014, Web Issue 16
Spring 2013, Web Issue 15
Spring 2012, Web Issue 14
Spring 2010, Web Issue 13
Summer 2009, Web Issue 12
Winter 2008, Extra Issue 11
Spring 2008, Web Issue 10
Spring 2007, Web Issue 9
Spring 2006, Web Issue 8
Summer 2004, Web Issue 7
Winter 2004, Web Issue 6
Summer 2003, EXTRA #2
Spring 2002, Web Issue 5
Winter 2001, Web Issue 4
Summer 2000, EXTRA #1
Summer 1999, Web Issue 3
Spring 1998, Web Issue 2
Spring 1997, Web Issue 1
A multidisciplinary journal in the arts and politics
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FLASHLINKS!

Galerie

Paintings & Prints
Poetry & Prose
Virtual Facsimiles
Founding Editors: Joe Brennan Carlo Parcelli
Contributing Editors: Bradford Haas Rosalie Gancie Cathy Muse Mark Scroggins Jim Angelo
Web Editors: JR Foley Rosalie Gancie Nicole Foley
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from: Paul Celan & the
Meaning of Language
An Interview with Pierre Joris
by Doug Valentine
In that sense Hölderlin’s ideas on translation became important in that I felt that to carry Celan over into English I often had to do violence to English i.e. to write German in English, just as Hölderlin had written “Greek in German.”
This is one of the most important aspects of translation: it has to expand, to widen the possibilities of the target language; it is not meant to simply squeeze what is squeezable from the original language into the canonical forms of that language. I hate nothing more than that supposedly laudatory phrase you usually see in a New York Times type book review, usually dismissing translation with the to me lethal compliment according to which “this book reads as if it had been written in English”.
– Pierre Joris
All essays, poetry, fiction, and artwork are copyrighted in the names of the authors and artists, to whom all rights revert.
Issue Index

David Jones Conference
March 29 & 30, 2012

J.R. Foley

Country Valley Press

Carlo Parcelli:
Book
/
Author page

Wayne Pounds
Book / Author page

Eric Rosenbloom
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The Vorticists at the Restaurant de la Tour Eiffel: Spring, 1915
William Roberts, 1961–2
intro
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a digital facsimile of
Welborn Victor Jenkins
The “Incident” at Monroe
A Requiem for the Victims
of July 25th, 1946
(Written at the Scene of the Tragedy)
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Dorothy
Shakespear Pound
Artist
plus
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Dorothy Shakespear Pound
Selections from
Etruscan Gate
(journal entries 1909-1911 and watercolours)
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A Few Reference Pages For Vorticism:
Kate Lechmere
“Wyndham Lewis from 1912”
Lawrence Atkinson
http://www.flashpointmag.com/Lawrence_Atkinson.htm
Jacob Epstein
http://www.flashpointmag.com/Jacob_Epstein.htm
Jessica Dismorr
…Writings
http://www.flashpointmag.com/Jessica_Dismorr_writings.htm
…Paintings
http://www.flashpointmag.com/Jessica_Dismorr_paintings.htm
Gaudier Brzeska
http://www.flashpointmag.com/Gaudier_Brzeska.htm
Alvin Langdon Coburn
http://www.flashpointmag.com/Alvin_Langdon_Coburn.htm
Helen Saunders
http://www.flashpointmag.com/Helen_Saunders.htm
Edward Wadsworth and Dazzleships
http://www.flashpointmag.com/blast_dazzleships_wadsworth.htm
The Female Vorticists – Reference Links
http://www.flashpointmag.com/women_vorticists.htm
In this issue…
We open this issue of FlashPøint …
with historian and poet
Doug Valentine’s in-depth interview with Pierre Joris concerning the difficulties and rewards of translating Paul Celan, one of the great poets of the twentieth century. This interview is in conjunction with the release of the second book of translations by Joris of Celan’s work, Breathturn into Timestead:
The Collected Later Poetry of Paul Celan.
We then move on to John Armstrong’s determined defence and advocacy of
Charles Reznikoff’s Documentary Poetic Form.
With the essay
Anti-Lynching Poems in the 1930s, Jon Woodson probes the phenomena that provoked and created these poems as they articulated a self-formation of African-American identity. A striking example of such poetry, as it persisted beyond World War II, is Welborn Victor Jenkins’s “The ‘Incident’ at Monroe: A Requiem for the Victims of July 25th, 1946, Written at the Scene of the Tragedy”.
Editor JR Foley continues our FlashPøint #15 tribute to Robert Coover with “7-7-[70]: ARMAGEDDON in a very small space”, reviewing The Brunist Day of Wrath to accompany our excerpt from near the beginning of the novel. “Apocalypse,” which is ecclesiastical Greek for “revelation,” is over-used, much abused, and trivialized, as though the word means “end-of-the-world, etc.” (think “Snow-Apocalypse”!). But the incredibly sustained climax of this sequel after nearly 50 years to Coover’s prize-winning first novel, The Origin of the Brunists, is apocalyptic in every way you can imagine.
Filmmaker and poet Dennis Leroy Kangalee gives us five dynamic offerings in his unique, authentic voice with Fragments, Vol 1.
In
Jessie Dismorr: Walking and Rewriting London, Francesca Brooks explores the particular significance of Dismorr’s prose writings in Blast and their relation to the feminist and metropolitan cultures of her day.
Magus Magnus offers us a rich, philosophical meditation on the ouroboros in
Topology of Books Unread, Thoughts Revisited.
Nina Fleck shares a photographic documentation of her responses to the world around her, in much the same way as Jessica Dismorr did with her writings about London and artwork for BLAST with
Nina Fleck Photographs: ‘Street Hauntings’.
The various events marking Blast’s 100th anniversary brought renewed attention to
Dorothy Shakespear Pound as a contributing Vorticist artist. In this issue we post an online digital facsimile of the 1923 work by B.C. Windeler called Elimus: A Story With Twelve Designs by D. Shakespear. Elimus includes 12 vorticist inspired works by Shakespear.
On a separate page we include selections from Shakespear’s
Etruscan Gate (1972) which incudes fragments of her diaries from 1910-11 along with additional artworks and watercolours.
We also republish Rod Rosenquist’s reconsideration of one of the first High Modernists, Wyndham Lewis in Rosenquist’s essay from FlashPøint 6, London, Literature, and BLAST: The Vorticist as Crowd Master. Rosenquist also covers Lewis’s Vorticist colleague Jessica Dismorr.
Next we have two hyper-kinetic offerings from Stephen Gatling
Everything at Once; A Hyperkinetic Ode to Pantheism, Chapter One and An Irishman’s Indignation.
With “The Green Gloves” Joan McCracken adds an early passage to her tale of Miriam, excerpted in several issues of FlashPøint.
Frank Gatling gives us three excerpts from his longer work Vague Terrain.
Next we reprise a 2008 article on the state of US politics and culture by Norman Ball
ENRAPTUREMENT: The Guiltiest Pleasure.
Moving along we have Carlo Parcelli’s review of Doug Valentine’s grim anthology of witness poetry, With Our Eyes Wide Open:Poems of the New American Century.
Next, the exiled Roman cynic Philosopher Canus Ictus is brought to life by Carlo Parcelli in this first installment of Canus Ictus in Exilium, [Dog Bite in Exile].
And finally we have the fourth installment of Mr. Parcelli’s book length philosophical work Syllogism / Super-Quantophrenia IV.
‘Garbage in. Garbage out.’
We are eager to hear from you, especially about this issue, so please tell us what you think: [email protected]!
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