Transnational Poetics, Reading and Conversation

THE GUILD PRESENTS A CONVERSATION ON TRANSNATIONAL POETICS
 
Sunday November 5th 2017, 6:00 PM- 7:30 PM
Chopin Theatre, 1543 W Division St, Chicago, IL 60642
 
STUART COOKE | NATANIA ROSENFELD | TONI NEALIE
Please join the Guild LIterary Complex in a conversation with authors and poets Stuart Cooke, Natania Rosenfeld, and Toni Nealie as we journey into conversation about transnational poetics. Readings and a larger conversation about poetry and writing across the cultural miles of distant seas will set the tone for the night’s conversations.  Books will be on sale that night, so come with cash to get your copies signed by these three tremendous writers.
 
STUART COOKE is an Australian poet, critic and translator, with his books ranging from the poetry collections Opera (2016) and Edge Music (2011), to a critical work, Speaking the Earth’s Languages: a theory for Australian-Chilean postcolonial poetics (2013), and a translation of an Aboriginal (Nyigina) song cycle, George Dyuŋgayan’s Bulu Line (2014). He has also published translations of many Latin American poets, and his translation of Gianni Siccardi’s The Blackbird is forthcoming. Stuart’s awards include the 2016 Gwen Harwood Poetry Prize and the 2012 Dorothy Porter Poetry Prize. He lives on the Gold Coast, Australia, where he lectures in creative writing and literary studies at Griffith University.
 
TONI NEALIE is the author of The Miles Between Me, an essay collection about homeland, dispersal, heritage and family, published by Curbside Splendor. Recent essays have appeared in Guernica, The Prague Review, The Offing and The Rumpus. Her essay “The Displeasure of the Table” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Originally from New Zealand, she holds an MFA from Columbia College Chicago. She teaches and writes in Chicago, where she is Literary Editor of Newcity. In her debut essay collection, The Miles Between Me, New Zealand native Toni Nealie examines journeys, homelands, family, and motherhood. She details humiliating confrontations with airport security, muses on the color brown, and intimately investigates her grandfather’s complicated and criminal past, all while hearkening home—wherever and whatever that is.
 
ATANIA ROSENFELD grew up in Oberlin, Ohio and spent periods of time in Germany and Israel.  Her poems, essays, and fiction have appeared in many journals including The American Poetry Review, Raritan,Southwest Review and The Fairy Tale Review.  She is the author of Outsiders Together: Virginia and Leonard Woolf (Princeton University Press, 2000), and lives in Chicago and Galesburg, Illinois where she is a Professor of English at Knox College.