Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Tina Darragh


Related Topics

In the News (Thu 31 Dec 09)

  
  Tina Darragh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tina Darragh (born 1950) is an American poet who was one of the original members of the Language group of poets.
Darragh was born in Pittsburgh and grew up in the south suburb of McDonald, Pennsylvania.
She began writing in 1968 and studied poetry in Washington, DC at Trinity University from 1970 to 1972.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Tina_Darragh   (218 words)

  
 Tina Darragh - InfoSearchPoint.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Tina Darragh (born 1950) is an American poet who was one of the original members of the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E group.
Darragh was born in Pittsburg and grew up in the nearby town of McDonald, PA.
Her books include Tina Darragh's books include on the corner to off the corner (1981), Striking Resemblance (1989), a(gain)2 st the odds (1989), and adv.
www.infosearchpoint.com /display/Tina_Darragh   (227 words)

  
 In-Conference: Mark Leahy
Darragh, in her work, uses those factors or categories of writing that organise the ‘other’ sort of anthology of women’s poetry, in particular genre, and the familiar.
Darragh’s engagement with the page of the dictionary does not suggest she readily accepts the historical model, the scientifically etymological narrative of the words on the page.
Darragh’s image in ‘Raymond Chandler’s Sentence’, of her mother chain reading mysteries on 1950s schoolday afternoons, is part of a chain of reading, of readings.
www.asu.edu /pipercwcenter/how2journal/archive/online_archive/v2_2_2004/current/in_conference/leahy.htm   (5017 words)

  
 tina majorino   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Tina Fey Elizabeth Tina Fey (born May 18, 1970) is an American comedian, actress, and writer from a predominantly Greek neighborhood in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia.
Tina Darragh Tina Darragh (born 1950) is an American poet who was one of the original members of the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E group.
Darragh was born in Pittsburg and grew up in the nearby town of McDonald, PA. She began writing in 1968 and studied poetry at Trinity College, DC from 1970 to
www.searchtermtrends.com /terms/tina+majorino.html   (867 words)

  
 Review of Etruscan Reader VIII by Tim Allen.
American L=anguage poet Tina Darragh’s ‘dream rim instructions’ (a handful of the fractals appeared in TW8) are conceptually a million miles from Douglas Oliver’s ‘Arrondissments’.
The ease of writing displayed by Darragh is matched by Douglas Oliver’s pieces loosely engendered by the districts (the Arrondissments) of Paris, his adopted city.
To follow Darragh and Oliver and to succeed, and to succeed with poems which, as he explains in the ‘Introduction to 25 Poems’, "are concerned with in formation and ideas...
www.wildhoneypress.com /Reviews/Etruscan8TA.html   (929 words)

  
 Tina Darragh: Striking Resemblance   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Four pieces which reflect Darragh's concern with the cross-fertilization of the formal and the personal.
They investigate, for instance, the relation of cliche and place, of writing and biographical notation, of definition and the desire to define.
Tina Darragh lives in Mt. Rainier, NM, where she works as a librarian for a computer system.
www.burningdeck.com /catalog/darragh.html   (188 words)

  
 8604 Review(s)
Darragh associates, chants, same vowel, projecting, her definitions are a meaning, an image, a reference and not; she will use an "L"-oh.
Tina Darragh: fun and poetry at home with a system and a dictionary.
Tina Darragh is fascinated with chants that depend on the "call words" at the top of dictionary pages.
www.timesnet.net /~anon/Review(s)-8604.html   (2905 words)

  
 Jacket 22 - Barbara Cole: Bruce Andrews's Venus: Paying Lip Service to Écriture Féminine
      Tina Darragh gestures towards this predicament in her mini-confessional anecdote about first hearing Andrews read in 1972 at her Catholic girls school (a scenario in itself that is rather fun to imagine).
Darragh relates that the other women ‘had a far different reaction to Andrews’ work,’ finding it autocratic whereas she found it freeing.
Nearing her conclusion, Darragh notes that ‘[i]t continues to bother me that I feel a kinship with work that my friends identified as oppressive’ (102) but rather than exploring the gender-inflected reasons for this dismissal, Darragh moves on.
jacketmagazine.com /22/and-cole.html   (3100 words)

  
 Bard College Press Releases - Full Story
Darragh's books include on the corner to off the cover; Striking Resemblance; a(gain)2st the odds; and adv.
Darragh is a reference librarian at the National Reference Center for Bioethics Literature at Georgetown University.
Inman and Darragh live in Greenbelt, Maryland, with their son, Jack.
inside.bard.edu /tools/pr/fstory.php?id=557   (886 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
For a brief biography of Tina Darragh, see the bottom of this page or click here.
Among Bernstein's selections was Tina Darragh's "ludicrous stick," which appeared in the pages of Paris Review as follows:
Tina Darragh's books include on the corner to off the
www.writing.upenn.edu /~afilreis/88v/darragh.html   (218 words)

  
 In-Conference: Hilda Bronstein   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Perelman was keen that the fortnightly meetings held in London should continue after his departure and, accordingly, a second series ran from February to July 1999, and a third between January and May 2001, both curated by Professor Robert Hampson of Royal Holloway College London and Frances Presley.
For Mark Leahy, the elusive quality of ‘the talk' and the possibilities of the talk as genre is central to his piece on the work of radical US poet Tina Darragh, and to his exploration of tensions in her writing between the procedural and the personal.
Nicky Marsh's writing on the self-publishing culture of the ‘zine' and ways in which women were able to operate within it is provocative in its account of women's contemporary engagements with public/private media.
www.scc.rutgers.edu /however/v2_2_2004/current/in_conference/intro.shtm   (815 words)

  
 Eleana Kim on Language Poetry 5   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
At the same time, however, in order to check an otherwise whole-hearted endorsement of these new writers’ projects, she retains a measure of critical distance by calling into question that aspect most anathema to the dominant poetical conventions rooted in New Criticism — the political/Marxist claims of some of the poets under review.
Using a rhetoric which would both empathize with the befuddled reader confronted with this inaccessible poetry, as well as posit herself as the master scholar, Perloff’s mock-Socratic method belies her own selective and limited understanding of the work in question.
Tracking Tina Darragh’s "‘oilfish’ to ‘old chap for ‘C’" in all its riddled etymological nuance, she comes up with the first proposition of Language writing: word play.
home.jps.net /~nada/language5.htm   (2271 words)

  
 looktouchblog: Index of this weekend's events in DC/Balt.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
tina darragh/ca conrad/frank sherlock after going to a performance/art event the night before, I expected to be bored by this reading, and I was.
There were extricable moments of happiness, mostly during conrad's portion of the show.
tina read material she'd read recently at bridge street books, and was not as energized as she had been then.
looktouch.blogspot.com /2005/12/index-of-this-weekends-events-in.html   (844 words)

  
 [Lucipo] Fw: Retallack / Darragh at Washington Printmakers April 9   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Retallack is in the early > stages of a year-long poetic project called "The Reinvention of Truth." > She is John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Professor of Humanities at Bard > College where she teaches poetics and interdisciplinary arts.
> > > In response to the right-to-life movement's recent "embrace" of animal > rights issues, Tina Darragh is furiously revising part of her "opposable > dumbs: a project", an investigation of racism and sexism in the animal > rights movement.
This fervor is tempered by cross referencing entries > from Raymond Williams' Keywords with Evelyn Fox Keller and Elisabeth > Lloyd's Keywords in Evolutionary Biology for a set of exercises > tentatively dubbed "(unstuckeys".
lists.ibiblio.org /pipermail/lucipo/2005-April/001981.html   (488 words)

  
 [Lucipo] "Outsider" Poets for the Carrboro Poetry Festival   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
TOC of long-winded suggestions below: -- Lauren Gudath -- Mary Burger -- Beth Murray -- David Larsen -- Tina Darragh -- Buck Downs -- Heather Fuller I also think that my SF Bay-area pals Lauren Gudath and Mary Burger would be great readers.
---follow this Shampoo link to some of Beth's work: http://www.shampoopoetry.com/ShampooReading/beth.html ---click here for a page-by-page tour through a Larsen book: http://www.fauxpress.com/e/larsen/p1.htm Also consider Tina Darragh, Buck Downs, and Heather Fuller from the DC area.
Tina has recently written an opera (part of which I saw performed a coupel months ago---excellent and hilarious); Heather is one of the best readers I've ever seen (and an NC native); and Buck is an accomplished book artist, printer, and ephemerist.
lists.ibiblio.org /pipermail/lucipo/2004-November/001064.html   (401 words)

  
 {lime tree}: Ten Essential Single-Author Works of Language Poetry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Tina Darragh, Pi in the Skye (Privately Published, 1980)
But you're right that the book is generally known: that's why I didn't make it #1 on my list...
Having slept on the list, I'd change one title: I'd replace Tina Darragh's Pi in the Skye--my favorite processual text of all time and incontrovertible proof that Allen Fisher is a necessary antecedent for Langpo--with Darragh's more recent Dream Rim Instructions (Drogue Press, 1999).
limetree.ksilem.com /archives/000032.html   (855 words)

  
 Small Press Traffic > Tina Darragh and P. Inman   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Tina Darragh's books include on the corner to off the corner(Sun and Moon, 1981), Striking
Selections from her current project, the dream rim instructions,have been published in Chainand Primary Writing,and featured in
Darragh is employed as a reference librarian at the National Reference Center for Bioethics Literature at Georgetown University.
www.sptraffic.org /html/authors/darragh_inman.html   (188 words)

  
 PhillySound: new poetry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Reading with Frank Sherlock and Tina Darragh was a pretty fantastic good time!
SOUNDS, wow, you have to hear her to believe her(!), with a mix of the sound of Olson's skull THUMP THUMP THUMPING in that footage of Olson hitting his head, getting his point across (in his kitchen) EXCLAIMING about the feds coming down on Timothy Leary.
In response to the return of Yoko-bashing that has resurfaced during the anniversary of John lennon's murder, the Yoko Defense League (YDL) was founded in Baltimore by Frank Sherlock, CAConrad & Tina Darragh.
phillysound.blogspot.com /2005_12_01_phillysound_archive.html   (1789 words)

  
 ULA -- "Underground Literary Alliance"   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
This announcement must be a hoax, I thought--a satire of Sun & Moon's parochial literacy and, by extension, its embarrassingly narrow view of the literary world.
The pseudo-ad also mocks the judges announced under each America Award--in one case, Will Alexander, David Bromidge, and Raymond Federman; in the other case, Lydia Davis, Jackson Mac Low, and Rosmarie Waldrop; in Palmer's case, Clark Coolidge, Tina Darragh, and Leslie Scalapino--implying that none of these nine is reknowned for nonpartisan, disinterested taste.
That probably accounts for why their names, rather than others, were chosen for mockery, the satire implicitly suggesting that sponsors of self-respecting literary contests should think twice before selecting any of these nine to be judges (again?).
timeliketoons.tripod.com /ULA/monday/monday.5.3.04.rk.htm   (735 words)

  
 Darragh/Oliver/Harwood; Author: Darragh, Tina; Author: Oliver, Douglas; Author: Harwood, Lee; Paperback   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Darragh/Oliver/Harwood; Author: Darragh, Tina; Author: Oliver, Douglas; Author: Harwood, Lee; Paperback
Author: Darragh, Tina; Author: Oliver, Douglas; Author: Harwood, Lee
Prices subject to change to be advised on confirmation of order.
www.netstoreusa.com /lxbooks/190/1901538095.shtml   (139 words)

  
 Ought: July 2004   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Read Tina Darragh's Dream Rim Instructions last night.
I really liked the dream poems themselves very much.
Interesting though less successful were the figure-cutout images, which are reminiscent of Darragh's older experiments (like the skewed-proportion-room viewing hole figures) but not quite as revelatory or insightful.
people2.clarityconnect.com /webpages6/ronhenry/2004_07_01_oughtold.htm   (1118 words)

  
 Darragh Books - Signed, used, new, out-of-print
by Torlief E. Ericson, Vernon W. Hughes, Darragh E. Nagle
When Christians Gather: Issues in the Celebration of the Eucharist
Drawing on his experience as a priest in New Zealand, Darragh examines how cultures and communities shape the celebrations of Eucharist and pays particular attention to the concrete symbolism of these celebrations.
www.alibris.com /search/books/author/Darragh   (396 words)

  
 flim: Two pieces from Hommage a Darragh   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
That, part of the bow of a ship.
Striking Resemblance: Strikingly marvellous poems by Tina Darragh.
Go, read it, before you are a corpse and spend eternity in torment.
www.flim.com /flim/article.html?a=032   (94 words)

  
 How2 Postcards: Correspondence
Below is an excerpt from a message I received from Tina Darragh when she read the text of the talk I gave in the TALKS series curated by Robert Hampson in London.
She is happy for it to go on the postcards section of How2 if you think it of interest to others.
And I'm so glad that you bring in the part about identifying narrative as embarrassing, and that is about preset boundaries - I hadn't thought of it in that way before.
www.asu.edu /pipercwcenter/how2journal/archive/online_archive/v2_2_2004/postcard.htm   (7738 words)

  
 Slought Foundation: "PhillyTalks #4" with Darragh, Osman, et al.
Slought Foundation: "PhillyTalks #4" with Darragh, Osman, et al.
Media files on the Slought.org website are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 License.
Matter in Motion, The Cinema Image, Feminism and Architecture
www.slought.org /content/11070   (175 words)

  
 All Events - California College of the Arts   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Jules Boykoff joins us in honor of his first collection, Once Upon a Neoliberal Rocket Badge (Edge Books).
Tina Darragh says of reading it, "I want to echo Tom Hayden's comment on the 1999 Seattle anti-WTO demonstrations: 'I am glad to have lived long enough to see a new generation of rebels accomplish something bigger.'"
Judith Goldman joins us in honor of her new book, Death Star Rico-chet (O Books).
www.cca.edu /calendar/all/1167   (130 words)

  
 :::::::::::::::::::Mark Leahy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
PhD on contemporary American poetry at the School of English, University of Leeds; (completed December 1999)
MA by Research in Anglo-Irish Literature and Drama at Department of English, University College Dublin; (first class honours, 1994)
Sett Piece; text for an exhibition by Tina O'Connell
www.inplaceofthepage.co.uk /leahy.htm   (512 words)

  
 Reed - English Department Courses
We will read the work of artists who engage poetry as a wild space that is intelligent, dynamic, resistant, baffling, and sometimes threatening; a poetry in which the process of creation includes the author but remains open to other or wild compositional voices.
Authors will include Lorine Niedecker, H.D., Gary Snyder, Robert Grenier, Mei-mei Berssenbrugge, Robert Duncan, Susan Howe, Nathaniel Mackey, Rodrigo Toscano, and Tina Darragh.
Prerequisite: two English courses at the 200 level or above, preferably including English 211, or consent of the instructor.
academic.reed.edu /english/courses.html   (7426 words)

  
 Eleana Kim on Language Poetry 1
The different terminologies for this writing reveal the difficulties encountered by both the writers and their commentators in naming this tendency.
Jackson MacLow, Hannah Weiner, Susan Howe, Clark Coolidge, Lyn Hejinian, Ted Greenwald, Peter Seaton, Michael Palmer, Ray DiPalma, James Sherry, Rae Armantrout, P. Inman, Bob Perelman, Bruce Andrews, Barrett Watten, Charles Bernstein, Tina Darragh, Alan Davies, Carla Harryman, and Diane Ward.
It is also the name of a poetry series, airing on KPFA-FM, San Francisco, beginning in 1978, and which often featured poets from this milieu.
home.jps.net /~nada/language1.htm   (2806 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.