A conference at Durham University organised in association with the Durham Centre for Poetry and Poetics (including the Basil Bunting Poetry Centre).
With sleights learned from others and an ear open to melodic analogies I have set down words as a musician pricks his score, not to be read in silence, but to trace in the air a pattern of sound that may sometimes, I hope, be pleasing.
- Basil Bunting, preface to Collected Poems
Tuesday, 21 February 2012
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Tuesday, 14 February 2012
Bunting Conference 2012 Call for Papers
With
sleights learned from others: Basil Bunting and Friends
A conference at
Durham 4-5 July 2012
in association with the Durham Centre for Poetry and Poetics, incorporating the Basil Bunting Poetry Centre
in association with the Durham Centre for Poetry and Poetics, incorporating the Basil Bunting Poetry Centre
With sleights learned
from others and an ear open to melodic analogies I have set down words as a
musician pricks his score, not to be read in silence, but to trace in the air a
pattern of sound that may sometimes, I hope, be pleasing.
Basil Bunting, preface to Collected Poems
This conference aims
to emphasise the position of British modernist poet Basil Bunting in literary tradition,
reconnecting him with the work that shaped him and the work he shaped. We
invite papers that explore how movements in music, philosophy, religion,
science, visual art, nature, politics, and fiction, as well as poetry,
influenced Bunting, or were influenced by him in turn. We welcome proposals
that consider the writers and thinkers associated with Bunting, whether
directly or indirectly, as well as papers that focus on the poet himself. In
addition to academic panels, there will be two poetry readings, as well as an
optional third-day excursion to the nearby Brigflatts Quaker meeting house at
Sedbergh.
Bunting is often
viewed as a solitary poet, but even the phrase ‘struggler in the desert’ was
pinned on him by Pound and paired him with Zukofsky; there are also his later
associations with figures such as Jonathan Williams and Tom Pickard. Studying
these acquaintances and friendships casts light on Bunting’s poetry, as well as
the broader modernist tradition to which he belongs. The conference will
demonstrate the enduring importance of this intermittently neglected poet, by
examining his contacts, correspondents, influences and influence.
Please send
proposals of around 300 words for papers to Annabel Haynes (details below) by 19 March 2012. Papers should last 20 minutes.
Accommodation
can be provided by the university, and more details will be available upon
registration. We also welcome those who wish to attend without presenting. If
you would like to be added to the mailing list, or require any further information,
please contact the organisers.
‘Friends’ could include:
Dante Alighieri, W. H. Auden, J. S. Bach, Richard Caddel, Catullus, Kamo
no Chōmei, Bob Cobbing, Robert Creeley, Saint Cuthbert,
Peter Dale, Donald Davie, Karl Drerup, T. S. Eliot, Ferdowsi, Ford Madox Ford,
George Fox, Allen Ginsberg, Bill Griffiths, Hāfez, Ian Hamilton-Finlay, Horace,
Omar Khayyam, Tony Lopez, Mina Loy, Lucretius, Hugh MacDiarmid, Barry
MacSweeney, Manuchehri, Karl Marx, Thomas Meyer, Stuart Montgomery, William
Morris, Eric Mottram, Lorine Niedecker, Charles Olson, George Oppen, Tom
Pickard, Ezra Pound, Dorothy Pound, Rudaki, Saadi, Domenico Scarlatti, Colin
Simms, Joseph Skipsey, Gael Turnbull, Francois Villon, Walt Whitman, Jonathan
Williams, William Carlos Williams, Ludwig Wittgenstein, William Wordsworth,
Louis Zukofsky.
With kind
regards,
Annabel Haynes,
Jack Baker, John Clegg and Matthew Griffiths
Conference organisers
Contact Details:
Jack Baker jack.baker@durham.ac.uk
John Clegg j.r.clegg@durham.ac.uk
Matthew
Griffiths m.j.r.griffiths@durham.ac.uk
Annabel Haynes annabel.haynes@durham.ac.uk
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