I have been reading Joanne Kyger again...

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[this is good]
You can read more about Joanne Kyger here.
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In her essay "Joanne Kyger's Poetry" in Coming After: Essays on Poetry, Alice Notley states:

Kyger's influence on my own practice--and on many other women's--has been considerable; she's one of the women who's shown me how to speak as myself, to be intelligent in the way I wish and am, rather than suiting the requirements of established intellectuality. Universities are frightfully conservative because they love their traditions and especially their language; idiomatic truth can't get born there, or anything that has to be new, not just wants to be.

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Joanne repeated Spicer’s notion that poetry is a form of magic, most potent when spoken aloud.

I'm certain I mentioned to you that I read The Birthday Sonnets aloud. That's how I always read poetry. If I remember correctly, I think you objected to some of your poems being read that way.

[this is good]
Thank you for sharing these wonderful poems. Her photograph reminds me of a New York Times story from Sunday, about the discovery and online posting of the earliest known recording of "Howl" by Allen Ginsburg.
http://web.reed.edu/news_center/multimedia/index.html

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Renee

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Renee
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It's so clear that you have to cherish everyone. Every soul is to be cherished, every flower is to bloom.--Alice Walker
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