Saturday, January 8, 2011
Professor Jenny Boully Nominated for Essay Prize!
Columbia's own Jenny Boully has been nominated for the Essay Prize, an award "given each year to the work that best exemplifies the art of essaying—inquiry, experimentation, discovery, and change—the Essay Prize emphasizes the activity of a text, rather than its status as a dispensary of information."
Boully's nominated work, entitled A Short Essay on Being, stands against the work of other nominees including once-Columbia guest David Shields, Jonathan Safran Foer, and Rebecca Solnit.
Click here to view the rest of this year's nominees for the prize, and here to read Jenny's original published essay.
Monday, December 27, 2010
Ryan Spooner Publishes in New Wave Vomit

MFA Candidate Ryan Spooner has not one, but three poems appearing in the most recent issue of New Wave Vomit: "Zoo Poem," "An Objection to Night Swimming / Southern Coast / United States / America / July," and "Five Paragraph Essay by John D'Agata." The poems can be enjoyed here.
New Wave Vomit is an electronic journal of wit and lyricism. Submissions are encouraged, bulimia is not.
Winter Break Reading List
The Complete Essays of Montaigne: by Michel de Montaigne
Reality Hunger: A Manifesto: David Shields
The Gastronomical Me: M.F.K. Fisher
Gravity and Grace: Simone Weil
The Pleasure of the Text: Roland Barthes
A Room of One's Own: Virginia Woolf
Reflections: Walter Benjamin
Nox: Anne Carson
Bluets: Maggie Nelson
A Lover's Discourse: Roland Barthes
Ava: Carol Maso
The Book of Disquiet: Fernando Pessoa
The Book of Disquiet: Fernando Pessoa
Speak, Memory: Vladimir Nabokov
Autobiography of Red: Anne Carson
+ selections of Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, Eula Biss, John D'Agata, Ander Monsen and others.
Monday, December 6, 2010
An Interview with Maggie Nelson
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Maggie Nelson visits with MFA candidate Ryan Spooner |
It’s difficult to come up with a biography or introduction to Maggie Nelson that surpasses Jenny Boully’s. In fact, we won’t even try. Instead we’ll say we’re graciously honored to have Maggie visit us recently, and even more appreciative of the time she took to meet and greet with students who’ve had all types of questions.
Maggie Nelson is the author of multiple collections of poetry and nonfiction, most recently Bluets (Wave Books, 2009), Something Right, Then Holes (Soft Skull Press, 2007), Women, the New York School, and Other True Abstractions (University of Iowa Press, 2007) and The Red Parts: A Memoir (Free Press, 2007), which chronicles the reopening of a murder case in which Nelson’s aunt, Jane Mixer, was the victim.
We are humbled to have had Nelson visit Columbia. The following interview is only the tip of the brilliant, sincere, and welcoming presence that is Maggie Nelson:
How long did it take you to collect your "Bluets"?
I collected them my whole life—the blue anecdotes or memories or factoids in the book come from my childhood, from my teenage years, and from my early adulthood. But it was between 2003 and 2006 that I collected, and then wrote, most fiercely.
What was the process of assembling each of your threads throughout the book? For instance, did you collect tangible items, or bits and pieces of text? As essayists we’re all very interested in process, as it seems that different layers and stories throughout the text are seamlessly interwoven.
The process was something like building a blue bower. I collected all my pieces—some in the form of objects; some in the form of ideas; some in the form of mental images; some in the form of sentences or phrases—and literally surrounded my work space with them. I had a blue altar by my side, with all my blue objects laid out, and I made a kind of wallpaper out of index cards, each of which had a quote, image, or locution of potential use, and I hung it around my desk. The writing was basically a process of translating these objects, thoughts, facts, and memories into a web made of words.
Has there been any notable response or feedback to the moments in the book in which you describe sex? These moments are adroitly interwoven, and it'd be interesting to know how you knew when to implement them.
The book doesn’t actually describe sex in the way that, say, Catherine Millet describes it in her wonderful The Sexual Life of Catherine M., or Eileen Myles does in her brilliant Inferno. Instead, Bluets makes use of certain placeholder words (like “fucking”) that recur, sparking the text at certain moments and intervals. Sometimes the words feel empty, sometimes full. Mostly I wanted to dramatize the conjoined rhythms of thought, language, and body. You know, you’re trying to think something out very assiduously, like what the word “pharmakon” might mean, what the nature of divine darkness might be, and suddenly your body is sparked by a certain twinge, drive, memory, or flood. The writing body is many things. It isn’t that the body interferes with or interrupts the mind—not at all. I’m actually more interested in the reverse: how thought itself is a physical sensation, how ideas are felt “on the pulses,” as Keats had it.
Would this book have been any different, or the same, if you had chosen another color? Colors have their cultural and psychological associations, so do you think that this project would have been any more poignant had it been about, say, red or yellow or green?
I suppose someone else could have written a poignant book about any of those colors—think of Anne Carson’s Autobigraphy of Red, for instance—but I couldn’t have. I mean, brilliant and moving books can be written about anything under the sun. But a writer can’t feign the drive, interest, or passion required to power a whole book, and I would have been faking it had I tried to write about a color other than blue. You’ve got to go where it’s hot, I think, or at least I do. Otherwise I’m lost.
In an interview with About-Creativity.com, you mention "shifting genres" as a way to keep a freshness to your work. It seems you have an openness regarding form, but at the same time work best when given a set of constraints—for instance, you call Bluets a series of "Wittgensteinian propositions." Can you talk a bit about the ability of formal constraints to spur creativity? Which comes first: form or topic?
I don’t think it matters which comes first. Sometimes you have the subject, which aches to find a form; sometimes you have a compelling formal idea which propels you forward. I’ve worked both ways, though more often I’ve started with content. “Form is never more than an extension of content,” as Robert Creeley always used to say. I never used to understand what he was getting at, but I think now I do.
I am exceedingly interested in form, but I have to admit that the word itself kind of annoys me. Often I prefer the word “shape,” as it makes me imagine a book as a wild and wily animal rather than as a kind of static sculpture. I first got onto the “shape” idea back in college, when I read this Archie Ammons poem, the one that goes: “I look for . . . the shape/things will take to come forth in.” Later in the poem he says he’s actually “not so much looking for the shape/as being available/to any shape that may be.” This seems about right to me.
How might you respond to Bluets being called "melancholic" or "depressive?" Is this accurate? Is it even a negative criticism?
Those are wonderful words, not a criticism at all! If that were true, it would join a worthy pantheon of melancholic or depressive literature. Bluets actually talks a bit about self-help books for depression, which is a subtle hint that the book is my kind of self-help—my loose imitation of, or homage to, the kinds of books—literary and otherwise—that have helped me when I have been truly low. However, if one were to be more clinically accurate, it’s probably more of a hypomanic book—that is, evidencing a kind of “bipolar lite,” in which there are euphoric, productive highs and terrifying, sorrowful lows, but—by the grace of God—no real psychosis.
(Note: a PDF of this interview is also available here).
(Note: a PDF of this interview is also available here).
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Announcing a Columbia College Chicago End-Of-Semester Reading
Friends of the Columbia College MFA Programs: in celebrating the hard work done by graduate Nonfiction and Poetry students at Columbia College Chicago, The Book Cellar (4736 N. Lincoln Ave.) shows its support by hosting an end of semester reading for poets and essayists looking to showcase their work.
Are you a poet who’s interested in meeting a few Nonfiction students? An essayist looking to mingle with some poets? Here’s your chance. Join us at The Book Cellar in Lincoln Square on Saturday, December 11 from 7 to 9 p.m. for good food, great drinks and a wonderful reading by Columbia’s MFA students. Time slots will be limited to nine minutes per reader.
The Book Cellar is located at 4736-38 N. Lincoln Ave. in Lincoln Square
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Nonfiction Students Visit Iowa Conference
Last week a few lucky MFA students visited the University of Iowa, where famed writers from all over gathered for the university’s somewhat-annual NonfictioNow Conference. The conference, similar to AWP’s annual conference, featured panelists and guest readers from Alison Bechdel to David Shields to Rebecca Solnit to Columbia’s very own David Lazar. The students confessed that, whether sitting in on a riveting panel or meeting with a guest speaker, their time in Iowa was well-spent.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Micah McCrary Publishes New Review in Bookslut
MFA Candidate Micah McCrary has published a new review of Joyce Carol Oates' In Rough Country: Essays and Reviews in this month's issue of Bookslut. Feel free to give it a read here and, of course, check out Oates' new book!
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