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Dr. Hank Lazer
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| Dr. Jerome Rothenberg |
Tuscaloosa, Ala. – The University of Alabama’s New
College will host poets Dr. Hank Lazer and Dr. Jerome Rothenberg
for a reading from their latest work and a book signing at the
Gorgas Library at 4 p.m. on April 8 on campus.
This reading is the second in a series of three guest speaker
events presented by New College for the spring semester.
Lazer is a professor of English at UA where he has taught since
1977. He currently serves as assistant vice president for undergraduate
programs and services.
Lazer is a noted critic of modern and contemporary poetry and
is a founding member of The Alabama Poetry Ensemble. For the past
30 years, he has published poetry in many of America's leading
literary magazines and journals.
In 1992, he published “Doublespace: Poems 1971-1989,” a
192-page collection of poems written in several deliberately conflicting
styles. This book, which received considerable attention, is unique
in American poetry and enacts essential conflicts within current
American literary culture.
For the past several years, Lazer has also presented a variety
of performance pieces. He has participated in several collaborative
performances, including "Garden Works," a one-month installation
and performance with a group of seven artists in Birmingham, Alabama.
In 1996, along with dancer-choreographer Cornelius Carter, Lazer
co-choreographed "Cantus in Memory," a dance piece for
eight dancers. More recently, he participated in a one-hour cable
television reading/performance, and has performed poems from his “Days” series
with Alabama musician/poets Jake Berry and Wayne Sides.
Rothenberg, professor at the University of California at San Diego,
has been a poet for almost 50 years. He is the author of over 70
books of poetry including “Poems for the Game of Silence,” “Poland/1931,” “A
Seneca Journal,” “Vienna Blood,” “That
Dada Strain,” “New Selected Poems 1970-1985,” “Khurbn,” and
most recently, “A Paradise of Poets” and “A Book
of Witness.”
Describing his poetry career as "an ongoing attempt to reinterpret
the poetic past from the point of view of the present," he
has also edited seven major assemblages of traditional and contemporary
poetry. He has also been involved, since the late 1950s, with various
aspects of poetry performance, including two radio sound plays
written and performed for Westdeuttscher Rundfunk in Cologne, Germany.
His own selected poetry, “Poems for the Game of Silence,” has
appeared in French, Swedish and Flemish editions, and his work
has been translated extensively into 12 different languages.
He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1974, a National Endowment
for the Arts grant in 1976, and was a University of California
Regents Professor in 1971. As a visiting research professor with
the Center for Twentieth-Century Studies at the University of Wisconsin
at Milwaukee, he helped to organize the first international symposium
on “Ethnopoetics" in 1975.
New College was established at UA in 1970 to provide an opportunity
for highly motivated undergraduates to have greater flexibility
in forming a curriculum leading to a bachelor of science or bachelor
of arts degree. For more information on New College visit www.as.ua.edu/nc/ or
call 205/348-4600.
The College of Arts and Sciences is
the University’s largest division and the largest public
liberal arts college in the state with 6,600 students and 360 faculty.
Students from the college have won numerous national awards including
Rhodes Scholarships, Goldwater Scholarships, and memberships on
the “USA Today” Academic All American Team.
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