Category Archives: About

What Is Tendencies: Poetics & Practice?

Tendencies is a series of talks by contemporary poets, writers and makers of art.

Tendencies is inspired by Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s book of the same name, and curated by Tim Peterson (Trace).

Tendencies is energetic, awkward, torqued, gangly, lively, exhilarating. You will hear conversations here that happen nowhere else.

Tendencies is inspired by queer issues and queer writers.

Tendencies is an answer to the question “what next” for poetics and for writing today.

Tendencies talks are about WRITING PROCESS.

Tendencies talks are MANIFESTOS that invent new terms.

Tendencies talks address what individual writers actually do when they write that we don’t know about yet, what we actually do when we write that they don’t know about yet, and what I actually do when I write that you don’t know about yet.

Tendencies events put writers into conversation with each other about writing process and reading and pedagogy.

Tendencies gathers new manifestos by major queer writers (and writers concerned with queer issues), with a view toward collecting these in a book project.

Tendencies wants you to join our dialogue, participate, ask questions, give us a rhetorical hard time, give us some linguistic love.

Tendencies is building alternate kinds of kinship in language and discussion.

Tendencies is happening every month at CUNY Graduate Center and is cosponsored by the Center for the Humanities, the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies, the CUNY Graduate Center Ph. D. Program in English, and the GC Poetics Group.

Tendencies is fierce.

Tendencies is glorious.

Tagged ,

A Brief Note About the Series

This new talks series on queer poetics is poised, like Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick’s work itself, to potentially suspend various foreclosures of meaning that usually happen when we talk about contemporary poetics. Just a few of these obstacles include reification of concepts already prevalent in today’s MFA programs, predictable uses of the hermeneutics of suspicion, and a lingering blockage around the form of the poetics manifesto. With Frank O’Hara’s “Personism” held prominently in mind as a more generative example, I want to try and create a space in which what Sedgwick called the reparative impulse can be just as important as these other types of reasoning, a space in which we can pause to attend to the idiosyncrasies and capaciousness of the individual writer, in this case the individual queer writer, and who knows what larger implications will occur as a result. In the Introduction to her book Tendencies (from Duke University Press), Sedgwick writes “I know Tendencies sounds like a title for Walter Benjamin essays—really it’s channeled from Dame Edna Everage.” And so it might be with this series, inspired by Eve who was a great friend to and fan of poets, and a poet herself.

But really, queer poetics will be any damn thing it wants to be; violet speech cannot be legislated. In her book Manifesto: A Century of Isms, Mary Ann Caws smartly and critically defines the medium of the manifesto, the usual means by which poetics is transmitted, with a certain amount of appreciative ambivalence: “It can start out as a credo, but then it wants to make a persuasive move from the ‘I believe’ of the speaker toward the ‘you’ of the listener or reader, who should be sufficiently convinced to join in.” I imagine the ground for TENDENCIES: Poetics & Practice stretched between that description and Sedgwick’s own comment that “’I’ is a heuristic; maybe a powerful one.” In the capacious spirit of Eve, I want to hear names for things we almost know but don’t have language to describe yet, the way a sentence in Proust unfolds, nudges, hints, and predicts. As curator, I want to learn from this series something about poetry and poetics that I don’t know yet.

Tagged , , , ,

Announcing TENDENCIES: Poetics & Practice

This new series of talks by major poets, titled in honor of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, will explore the intersection of contemporary poetic manifesto, practice, queer theory and pedagogy. Too often today, statements on poetics and their manifesto-like style have been moralistic or prescriptive discourses. By contrast, this series will attempt a Kinsey-like survey of actual poetic practice–what writers actually do, in the writers’ own words–in the process queering the manifesto, inventing new terms for poetics discourse, and emphasizing queer writing and poetics.

* * *

TENDENCIES: Poetics & Practice is curated by Tim Peterson (Trace).

All events are co-sponsored by the Center for the Humanities, CLAGS (the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies), the Graduate Center PhD Program in English and the GC Poetics Group.

Tagged ,
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.