double change et
l’atelier Michael Woolworthvous invitent
à une lecture
de
Marie-louise Chapelle et
Lyn Hejinianle jeudi 13 février à 19h
Atelier Michael Woolworth2 rue de la Roquette, cour Février
75011 Paris
>
comment s’y rendreentrée libre
http://www.michaelwoolworth.com/www.doublechange.orgBIOSMarie-Louise ChapelleNée en 1974 à Nevers.
Bibliographie:
mettre (Théâtre Typographique, 2006),
à la corde (contrat maint, 2010),
Prononcé second (Flammarion, 2010) et
Tu (maniériste) (Éric Pesty Éditeur, 2017). A établi avec Claude Royet-Journoud le texte de
La Mezzanine, le dernier récit de Catarina Quia d’Anne-Marie Albiach (Seuil 2019)
Lyn Hejinian teaches at the University of California, Berkeley, where her academic work is addressed principally to modernist, postmodern, and contemporary poetry and poetics, with a particular interest in avant-garde movements and the social practices they entail. She is the author of over twenty-five volumes of poetry and critical prose, the most recent of which are
Positions of the Sun, which was published in January, 2019 by the Brooklyn-based independent feminist literary collective and small press Belladonna, and
Tribunal, published by Omnidawn books in the spring of 2019. Translations of her work have been published in Denmark, France, Spain, Japan, Italy, Russia, Sweden, China, Serbia, and Finland. She is the co-director (with Travis Ortiz) of
Atelos, a literary project commissioning and publishing cross-genre work by poets, and co-editor (with Jane Gregory and Claire Marie Stancek) of Nion Editions. Other collaborative projects include a composition titled
Qúê Trân with music by John Zorn and text by Hejinian; two mixed media books (
The Traveler and the Hill and the Hill and The Lake) created with the painter Emilie Clark; the award-winning experimental documentary film
Letters Not About Love, directed by Jacki Ochs; the multi-authored 10-volume work
The Grand Piano: An Experiment in Collective Autobiography (co-authored with Rae Armantrout, Steve Benson, Carla Harryman, Tom Mandel, Ted Pearson, Bob Perelman, Kit Robinson, Ron Silliman, and Barrett Watten [Detroit: Mode A, 2006-10])