Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Poets and Poems: Karla Van Vliet and Asemic Writing and Poetry




Artist, writer, and poet Karla Van Vliet published three works this year: Colors of the Grittiest God, a collaboration with Kristine Snodgrass in August; and two in September – Bone Scribed and Wildwood Devotions. I recently read the two from September, but before I started them, I had to look up a word. 

The word is asemic, as in asemic writing, which Van Vliet writes. 

 

Described as “the coolest writing you can’t read,” it has been defined as abstract text that conveys ideas as opposed to meaning. In fact, its literal definition is “having no specific semantic content” or “without the smallest unit of meaning.” It can be traced back to the ancient Chinese, but its more recent versions derive from abstract art (think Wassily Kandinsky and Cy Twombly) and the postmodern literary theories of Jacques Derrida (1930-2004) and Roland Barthes(1915-1980), credited with the concept of “deconstruction” and “”The Death of the Author.” “Asemic” was first applied to art in 1997 by two visual poets, Tim Gaze and Jim Leftwich.

 

Looking up “asemic” is like clicking on a hyperlink that takes you to the entire literary internet.


To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.


Some Tuesday Readings

 

The Hour of the Wolf – poem by Lynne Knight at 32 Poems.

 

Out of the ashes: how Notre Dame has been resurrected in a miraculously short period of time – dale Browning Sawa at The Art Newspaper.

 

Notre Dame is back – but not quite as you knew her – Joseph Ataman at CNN.

 

Casa Luna – poem by Tricia Gates Brown at Every Day Poems.

Monday, December 2, 2024

Some Monday Readings - Dec. 2, 2024


St. Hedwig’s: A Clean, Well-Lighted Place – Rod Dreher at The European Conservative. 

The John le Carre Advent Calendar – Tom Gauld at The Guardian.

 

An Education in Thanksgiving – Rachel Alexander Cambre at Law & Liberty on Wendell Berry’s Hannah Coulter

 

Advent Sunday: Christina Rossetti – Malcolm Guite.

 

Finding Order in the Pieces – John Wilson at First Things Magazine.

 

Britain Votes for Death – The Four Discoursemen. 

 

Crossing the Thames at Woolwich – A London Inheritance.

 

Connect Before You Ask – Terry Whalin at The Writing Life.

 

A Look Back at the Battle of Franklin – Emerging Civil War.

 

Plainsong – poem by Donald Platt at The New Criterion

 

Top illustration: Christina Rossetti.

Sunday, December 1, 2024

You still love him


(for Charles Godwin)
 

After I Peter 1:3-9

 

You haven’t seen him, yet

you love him.

You haven’t seen him, yet

you believe in him.

You haven’t seen him, yet

you rejoice in him.

You haven’t seen him, yet

you fill with glory.

And the result, the endpoint,

the outcome of all this,

the outcome of your faith,

the outcome is salvation.

Our faith is not 

our achievements;

our faith is the confidence

in God’s achievements.

 

Photograph by Jamie Street via Unsplash. Used with permission.

Saturday, November 30, 2024

Saturday Good Reads - Nov. 30, 2024


George Bothamley at Art Every Day did something interesting with two painters whom, at first glance, you might not immediately connect to each other. He looked at Edward Hopper & Johannes Vermeer,  and he found some striking similarities. 

I think, therefore Iamb. Andrew Benson Brown at the Society of Classical Poets has a video on “How to Write Iambic Pentameter in 13 Minutes." You, too, can write sonnets like Shakespeare!

 

When life is going well, it’s easy to give thanks. But what do you do when life isn’t going so well, when life is, well, like life. We all experience illness, grief, loss, hurt, and tragedy. Should you, can you, give thanks in those times as well? Aaron Armstrong has some suggestions for giving thanks in the worst of times.

 

More Good Reads

 

British Stuff

 

The Forgotten Corners of Old London and The Streets of Old London – Spitalfields Life.

 

Writing and Literature

 

The Beat Goes On: Michael Connelly on Words, Writers & ‘The Waiting’ – John Valeri at CrimeReads.

 

The Last of the Mohicans by James Fenimore Cooper – John Miller and Bradley Birzer at National Review (podcast). 

 

Poetry

 

A Review of Memory's Abacus by Anna Lewis – Zina Gomez-Liss at New Verse Review.

 

“Rice Pudding,” poem by A.A. Milne and “The Chimney Sweeper,” poem by William Blake – Sally Thomas at Poems Ancient and Modern.

 

A Poet’s Thanks – L.L. Barkat at Every Day Poems.

 

Art

 

Snug as a bug: conservation work reveals beetle in Gauguin cat painting – Martin Bailey at The Art Newspaper.

 

Life and Culture

 

Do-able Simplicities: On Letter Writing and Fountain Pens – Art Kusserow at Front Porch Republic.

 

Nonprofit nabobery: On the Ford Foundation’s philanthropy – The New Criterion.

 

Faith

 

The (Unimpressive) Ambassadors of Heaven – Seth Lewis

 

Low-Tide Evangelism – Glen Scrivener at The Gospel Coalition. 

 

Calling All Christians: The Everyday Mission of God – Seth Porch at Desiring God.

 

The Battle and the Blessing – City Alight



 
Painting: Girl Reading, oil on canvas (1883) by Otto Scholderer (1834-1902)

Friday, November 29, 2024

Only for a time


After I Peter 1:3-9
 

It is only for a time,

only for a little while,

that we are grieved,

afflicted, and beset

by various trials, tests,

for a purpose: to show

our faith is genuine,

tested and refined

by trial, refined

to a purity finer

than pure gold, 

for a purpose: 

our faith results in praise,

our faith results in glory,

our faith results in honor,

at the precisely right time

of the revelation.

 

Photograph by Elyas Pasban via Unsplash. Used with permission.


Some Friday Readings

 

A Pastoral Prayer – Tim Challies.

 

The Desire – poem by Hester Pulter at Kingdom Poets (D.S. Martin).

 

2024: Ten Reasons I'm Thankful This Thanksgiving Day – Brian Miller at Notes from an East Tennessee Farmer.

Thursday, November 28, 2024

Two Thanksgiving Day Proclamations


Three United States presidents have issued Thanksgiving Day proclamations. George Washington issued the first proclamation, as the new Republic was getting started in 1798. James Madison issued one in 1815. Abraham Lincoln issued two, one in 1862 and one in 1863. But it wasn't until the 1863 proclamation that Thanksgiving became an annual observance. 

The first proclamation by Washington and the second by Lincoln are posted at Dancing Priest today

Top photograph by Virginia Simionato via Unsplash. Used with permission.


Some Thursday Readings

 

Thankfulness is a Year-long Habit – Terry Whalin at The Writing Life.

 

The New-England Boy’s Song about Thanksgiving Day ,” poem by Lydia Maria Child – Joseph Bottum at Poems Ancient and Modern.

 

Thanksgiving Sonnet – Kelly Belmonte at Kelly’s Scribbles.

 

A Nation’s Gratitude: The First Presidential Thanksgiving – Jason Clark at This is the Day.

 

Thanksgiving: A Sonnet – Malcolm Guite.

 

The Year Washington (Almost) Canceled Thanksgiving – Michael Connolly at The Imaginative Conservative.

 

Wednesday, November 27, 2024

"The Last Days of the War" by Dr. Henry T. Bahnson


The half-century after the end of the Civil War saw an outpouring of memoirs by veterans on both sides. Some were written by war heroes, like Ulysses S. Grant and William Tecumseh Sherman (and were bestsellers as well). For time, it must have seemed like every general and officer in the war was writing an account. A joke made the rounds that so many people had witnessed Robert E. Lee’s signing of the surrender to Grant at Appomattox that both armies had crowded into the room. 

For a time, those who had been privates – enlisted and drafted – penned their remembrances as well. These accounts, and I’ve read a considerable number number for my soon-to-be-published historical novel Brookhaven, are not so much concerned with strategy and battle outcomes as they are with day-to-day survival, getting enough food, mud (lots of mud, especially when you have to walk through it), in short, what everyman experienced. 

To continue reading, please see my post today at Dancing Priest.

Some Wednesday Readings

 

King Arthur left an ancient trail across Britain. Experts say it offers clues about the truth behind the myth – Julia Buckley at CNN.

 

King Arthur: A Legacy of Chivalry – George Grant at Florilegium. 

 

O Pioneers! – Joseph Pearce at The Imaginative Conservative.

 

Digging Deep, Staying with It: James Sallis on Writing, Reality, and the Danger of Creative Work – Nick Kolakowski at CrimeReads.