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Fall 2011

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POET JAMES MEETZE

Thursday SEPTEMBER 15

7:00 p.m., Hyde Art Gallery (Building 25)

Poet and songwriter James Meetze received the Poet Laureate Award from the University of

California in 2001.  Meetze's chapbooks--Serenades (Cy Press 2003), Instrument (Sea Lamb

Press 2004), and It's Overhead (Fashionably Pressed 2007)--paved the way for the release of

his first poetry collection, I Have Designed This For You (Editions Assemblage) in 2007, and in

2010 his second collection, Dayglo (Ahsahta Press), was bestowed the prestigious 2010

Sawtooth Poetry Prize.  Meetze, who is currently a Lecturer in the Creative Writing Program at

California State University, San Marcos, co-founded the now defunct poetry movement, New

Brutalism, and helped to launch Tougher Disguises in 2002, a small press whose roster of

experimental poets includes Peter Gizzi and Clark Coolidge, among others.  James Meetze is

also front-man for the alternative rock band, Dreamtiger, which released its EP, Glisten, in 2008.

Visit James Meetze's on Facebook: www.facebook.com/james.meetze

Follow Dreamtiger on Twitter: twitter.com/dreamtiger

Other Links and Resources:

Extend Bio: Ashata Press

excerpt from "Condominium" [poetry]

audio samples from Dreamtiger

CELEBRATION OF BANNED BOOKS READING

Thursday SEPTEMBER 29

7:00 p.m., Room 150 (Bldg. 34)

Join Joe Medina of the Grossmont College English Department for an evening of school and

scandal with a CELEBRATION OF BANNED BOOKS, in honor of National Banned Books Week.

Topics change annually in this thought-provoking and sometimes audacious event.  Topics from

past years have included Sandra Cisneros, Susan Patron, Langston Hughes, James Joyce,

Sherman Alexie, Erica Jong, J.K. Rowling, Lenny Bruce, Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, Dorothy

Allison, banned children's literature, controversial fan fiction and slash, censored anime and

manga, and many others.  The 2011 reading will include students, community members and

faculty.

This activity fulfills requirements for Professional Flex hours.  For further information, contact Joe

Medina at 619-644-7507, or e-mail him at joe.medina@gcccd.edu, or visit his Banned Books page

on-line:  www.grossmont.edu/joemedina/banned_books.asp

FICTION WRITER CRIS MAZZA

Wednesday OCTOBER 12

12:30 p.m., Room 220 (Building 26)

Widely anthologized Southern California native Cris Mazza has published nine novels, a collection

of essays, and four collections of short fiction.  Her writing is heralded as an example of post-

feminist, formalist or contemporary experimental fiction.  She is responsible, along with Jeffrey

DeShell, for coining the now commonly used term, "chick lit."

Mazza won the PEN / Nelson Algren Award for her novel How to Leave a Country. In addition,

she was recipient to an &NOW Award in 2009 for her story “Trickle-Down Timeline” (published in

The &NOW Awards: The Best Innovative Writing in 2009) and has participated in the biennial

&NOW Festival. Currently, she directs the Program for Writers at the University of Illinois,

Chicago.

Visit Cris Mazza's official website: www.cris-mazza.com.

Cris Mazza on Wikipedia

An Interview With Cris Mazz (Chiasmus Press)

"I Write As a Charlatan" (Madhatter's Review)

3rd Annual

LESTER BANGS MEMORIAL READING

Featuring JUSTIN HUDNALL

Wednesday OCTOBER 19

7:00 p.m., , Room 220 (Building 26)

Faculty, alumni writers, and guests read their original works of poetry, fiction and creative

nonfiction, while paying tribute to Grossmont College alumnus Lester A. Bangs, who has come

into recognition as “America’s Greatest Rock Critic.”  Considered one of the most influential

voices in rock criticism, music critic Bangs is credited for coining the term "punk," and his

subversive spirit and creativity continue to influence generations of writers.

Visit The Grossmont College Lester Bangs Archive.

Justin Hudnall, So Say We All website

Justin Hudnall, Huffington Post

CELEBRATION OF THE IMMORTAL LIFE OF HENRIETTA LACKS

Monday OCTOBER 24 through Wednesday NOVEMBER 2

Information about events, times and venues, available on the

GC Henrietta Lacks Resource Center.

AUTHOR LIDIA YUKNAVITCH

Monday NOVEMBER 14

7:00 p.m., Room 220 (Building 26)

In addition to her book of criticism, Allegories of Violence (Routledge 2000), Lidia Yuknavitch has

authored three collections of short fiction: Reel to Reel (FC2 2002), Liberty's Excess (FC2 2000),

and Her Other Mouths (House of Bones Press 1997).  Her writing has appeared in a variety of

literary journals, including Postmodern Culture, Fiction International, Another Chicago Magazine,

Zyzzyva, Critical Matrix, Other Voices, and has been anthologized in RePresenting Bisexualities

(NYU Press 1996) and Third Wave Agenda (University of Minnesota Press 1997).

Having served as co-editor of Northwest Edge: Deviant Fictions and as editor of Two Girls'

Review, Yuknavitch now teaches fiction writing and literature in Oregon.

Visit Lidia Yuknavitch's official website

Lidia Yuknavitch's Weblog

Yuknavitch on YouTube

NEW VOICES: A STUDENT READING

Tuesday DECEMBER 06

7:00 p.m., Room 220 (Building 26)

New Voices: A Student Reading, features standout students from the Grossmont College

Creative Writing Program's current semester of courses, reading their original short fiction,

poetry, creative nonfiction, novel excerpts, drama, and mixed media literary works. Refreshments

and desserts, made possible by a generous grant from WACC (World Arts and Cultures

Committee).

 

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