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Straight Up | Jan Herman

Arts, Media & Culture News with 'tude

Fluxus Poetry: ‘Rail Track,’ Artistbook by Litsa Spathi

May 4, 2015 by Jan Herman

Cover of 'Rail Track,' An Artistbook by Litsa Spathi

i think of it like this: the fact of the artbook = the artifact of the book = the bookart of the fact = the art of the bookfact EmailFacebookTwitterReddit

Burroughs Makes Inroads, But What About Algren?

April 28, 2015 by Jan Herman

Burroughs wearing his fedora. [Photo: Harriet Crowder]

The British have always shown a serious interest in William Burroughs, evidenced by the fact that the most authoritative Burroughs scholars are or have been Brits such as Eric Mottram, Oliver Harris, and Ian MacFayden, for three examples, and that the most authoritative Burroughs biography, Call Me Burroughs, was written by another Brit, Barry Miles. […]

Poem for the Cleaning Women: ‘We Are All Holy’

April 25, 2015 by Jan Herman

Judith Malina 'We Are All Holy' [Sloow Tapes, 2015]

Courtesy of Bart de Paepe’s Sloow Tapes This is a historical recording by Judith Malina, who died two weeks ago. I’ve transcribed the text the way it struck my ear, but its true power can’t be fully appreciated until you’ve heard her read the poem for yourself. — JH every one of the cleaning women […]

The Extinction Lesson of a Comical, Salutary Creature

April 25, 2015 by Jan Herman

Illustration © by Elena Caldera

But the bird was fearless and easily lured aboard By an offer of unlimited ship’s biscuits. By a miracle the bird survived the crew’s curiosity And their wondering if it tasted delicious. After it had lived out its life in England A taxidermist was called when it died. He stuffed it and, to retain its […]

Algren to Get the Literary Biography He Deserves

April 22, 2015 by Jan Herman

Colin Asher [Photo: Andrew A. Nelles]

The Leon Levy Center for Biography has awarded fellowships worth $60,000 each to four writers who are currently working on new biographies. One of them is Colin Asher, whose tentatively titled biography of Nelson Algren, But Never a Lovely So Real, is under contract to W. W. Norton & Company. The other recipients are Blake […]

Algren for Real: ‘The End Is Nothing. The Road Is All’

April 19, 2015 by Jan Herman

NELSON ALGREN [foto: Steve Deutch]

Here he is on the big screen at last, an hour and a half of who Nelson Algren was and what he meant. It’s a documentary with the sources — authoritative sources (Kurt Vonnegut and Studs Terkel, for example, who give their personal impressions of the man). Radical sources, too (Paul Buhle for one, who […]

Easter Poetry + Hadron Collider = ‘Son of God Particle’

April 16, 2015 by Jan Herman

Poem by Heathcote Williams. Narration and montage by Alan Cox. Art by Elena Caldera and other artists. Some words from the poem: Imagine Christ particles let loose on the one percent, Erasing their fortunes at a key stroke. Imagine airborne Christ particles attacking Wall Street, Penetrating algorhythms in its mainframe computers, Moving columns of figures […]

realitystudio.org Launches Jed Birmingham’s Podcast

April 13, 2015 by Jan Herman

I am STAGGERED! Of course I would be, for obvious reasons. Did I say I want this embedded in my headstone? Click to listen. It is utterly, inescapably humbling. The really wonderful thing about JB’s devotion to books as artifacts is the way he appreciates them as mysteries and teases out their hidden meanings. This […]

Sinclair Beiles: Poet of Many Parts and Places

April 6, 2015 by Jan Herman

Sinclair Beiles in 1969 [from 'Bone Hebrew,' Cold Turkey Press]

Dyehard Press has re-issued Who Was Sinclair Beiles? in a revised and expanded edition. I posted an item about the first edition when it was published five years ago. It’s hard to believe so much time has passed. As I wrote then, Beiles was best known for his association with the Beats. He collaborated on […]

‘Fugitive Literature’: Granary Books Has Done the Deed

March 23, 2015 by Jan Herman

'My Adventures in Fugitive Literature' by Jan Herman [Granary Books, 2015]

Here’s what happened: I was invited to speak about “little magazines and William S. Burroughs” on a panel with Jed Birmingham and Charles Plymell at the 2014 Burroughs Centennial Conference hosted in New York City by the Center for the Humanities. After my talk, Steve Clay came up to me and asked to publish what […]

Quantum Theory, Soul Removal, and Atheists

March 21, 2015 by Jan Herman

“You’ll hope there’ll be someone to hear you laugh.” — Heathcote Williams EmailFacebookTwitterReddit

I Remember Oriana Fallaci . . .

March 18, 2015 by Jan Herman

Oriana Fallaci

You hear a lot about Michel Houellebecq these days. You don’t hear much about Oriana Fallaci. She once was more controversial than Houellebecq for her blistering scorn of Islam and Muslims. Mark Lilla has a big piece, Slouching Toward Mecca, in the current New York Review of Books about Houellebecq’s latest novel, Soumission, which as […]

A Savoyard’s First Brush With Censorship

March 4, 2015 by Jan Herman

A feature-length experimental documentary, exploring the history of alternative publishing in Manchester, UK.

Have a look at this Kickstarter campaign: Savoy Books is an independent publishing house based above a locksmith shop in the South Manchester district of Didsbury, founded and run by Michael Butterworth and David Britton. In 1989 they published Lord Horror, the last book to be banned in the UK under the 1959 Obscene Publications […]

Because She Can . . . Therefore She Is

February 20, 2015 by Jan Herman

'Moonrise on Mars . . . Sunday at Noon' [Hanne Lippard, 2015]

Hanne Lippard’s ‘Orbit’ was first posted here last year. I was reminded of it yesterday when she performed the piece at the Kunsthalle Vien as part of an exhibition, “The Future of Memory.” EmailFacebookTwitterReddit

A Poet With a Dark Vision and a Tuned-Up Voice

February 15, 2015 by Jan Herman

Philip Levine [from WGBH series Poetry Breaks, created by Leita Luchetti]. Click for video.

The poet Philip Levine has died. Here’s an appreciation, written years ago at the Los Angeles Times, which began like this: Philip Levine, no prodigy, wrote poetry for seven years before his first poem was published in his mid-20s. It took another nine before his first slim volume, On the Edge, appeared in 1963. But […]

Some Got Plenty and Some Got Plenty O’ Nuttin’

February 9, 2015 by Jan Herman

Illustration: Elena Caldera

Five years after the Wall Street crash of 1929, George Gershwin wrote what he called a “banjo song” for “Porgy and Bess.” It turned into “I Got Plenty O’ Nuttin’” with lyrics by Edwin DuBose Heyward and Ira Gershwin. The second verse goes like this: De folks wid plenty o’ plenty Got a lock on […]

Burroughs Central This Is Not

February 4, 2015 by Jan Herman

My Adventures in Fugitive Literature [Granary Book, 2015] front cover

Anyone who thinks this blog is Burroughs Central has no idea. The fact is, I’m just skimming. The real Burroughs Central is RealityStudio, where the true aficionados congregate for deep postings by Jed Birmingham’s Reports from the Bibliographic Bunker. For example, he recently made the case that le maître’s cut-ups in the mimeo mags of […]

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Jan Herman

When not listening to Bach or Cuban jazz pianist Chucho Valdes, or dancing to salsa, I like to play jazz piano -- but only in the privacy of my own mind.
Another strange fact... Read More…

About

My Books

Several books of poems have been published in recent years by Moloko Print, Statdlichter Presse, Phantom Outlaw Editions, and Cold Turkey … [Read More...]

Straight Up

The agenda is just what it says: news of arts, media & culture delivered with attitude. Or as Rock Hudson once said in a movie: "Man is the only … [Read More...]

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