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Kentucky Poetry Festival

Come celebrate National Poetry Month during first annual Kentucky Poetry Month, sponsored by the University of Kentucky's MFA in Creative Writing!

2015 Kentucky Poetry Festival Events

April 24 - May 01

 

  • Off the Ground Featuring Bianca Lynne Spriggs

    • Common Grounds on High Street

    • Friday April 24, 2015

    • 7:30pm

    • Affrilachian Poet and Cave Canem Fellow, Bianca Lynne Spriggs is a multidisciplinary artist who lives and works in Lexington, Kentucky. She is the author of Kaffir Lily (Wind Publications, 2010), How Swallowtails Become Dragons (Accents Publishing, 2011), and the forthcoming titles, Call Her By Her Name (Northwestern University Press, 2016), The Galaxy is a Dance Floor (Argos Books, 2016), and Circe's Lament: An Anthology of Wild Women (Accents Publishing, 2015). Her work may be found in numerous journals and anthologies. Open mic to follow!

       

  • KFP College Showcase

    • James F. Hardymon Theater, inside the Davis Marksbury Building on the UK's campus, 329 Rose Street

    • Saturday April 25, 2015

    • 2:00pm

    • Creative writing college students from around Kentucky will read their poetry.

  • A Reading by Louisvillian Poets, feat. Jeremy Clark, Adam Day, Lynnell Edwards, Michael Estes, and Martha Greenwald

    • James F. Hardymon Theater, inside the Davis Marksbury Building on the UK's campus, 329 Rose Street

    • Saturday April 25, 2015

    • 7:00pm

    • Louisville Poets will read their work.

  • Verse in Type

    • Clark Art & Antique, 801 Winchester Rd, Lexington, KY 40505

    • Sunday April 26th

    • 3:00pm

    • Broadside display from the King Library Press.

  • UK Libraries King Library Spring Seminar

    • Boone Center

    • Tuesday April 28th

    • 7:00pm

    • Dara Wier and Emily Pettit will lecture for the King Library as Keynote Speakers. King Library Press Broadside Contest Award winner will read.

       

  • Waxing Gastronomic: Food Poetry Open Mic

    • Donut Days on Southland

    • Wednesday April 29

    • 4:00pm

 

  • Dara Wier & Emily Pettit, Visiting Writers Series

    • UK Art Museum

    • Wednesday April 29th

    • 7:00pm

    • Dara Wier is the author of numerous collections of poetry, including You Good Thing (Wave Books, 2013); Selected Poems (2009); Remnants of Hannah (2006); Reverse Rapture (2005), and many others. She teaches workshops and form and theory seminars and directs the M.F.A. program for poets and writers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

    • Emily Pettit is the author of Goat in the Snow (Birds LLC), and two chapbooks How (Octopus Books) and What Happened to Limbo (Pilot Books). Her poems can be found in Skein, Thethe, Sixth Finch, Wolf in a Field, Le Petite Zine, Forklift Ohio, Glitterpony, Diagram, Octopus, H_ngM_n and elsewhere.  She has a MFA from the University of Iowa where she was a Maytag Fellow. She teaches writing and literature at Elms College, poetry workshops at Flying Object and is publisher and editor of jubilat (the literary magazine) and at factory hollow press.She is an editor for notnostrums (notnostrums.com) and Factory Hollow Press. More poems can be found online (Octopus, Sixth Finch, Strange Machine) and in print (Invisible Ear, and, soon, Skein and SUPERMACHINE.)

 

  • Holler, featuring Normandi Ellis, Roger Bonair-Agard, AlexanderSings

    • Al’s Bar

    • Wednesday April, 29, 2015

    • 8:00 PM

    • Open mic starts at 8:00pm

    • We celebrate national poetry month with the return of Normandi Ellis, author of Words on Water, and the debut of two-time National Poetry Slam Champion, Roger Bonair-Agard, his latest Bury My Clothes, a long list finalist for the National Book Award. Providing music is Louisville based old time/folk artist AlexanderSings! Alejandro Udisco Kentucki). As usual open mic opens and closes the show. Bring some extra bones for the Holler bucket. Support your local arts. See y'all there!

       

  • Write or Die Poetry Slam (Presented by Bianca Spriggs/Hosted by the Raven House)

    • Ravenhouse 3229 Raven Cir, Lexington, Kentucky

    • Thursday April 30, 2015

    • 8:30pm, doors open at 8:00pm

    • Eight poets from around the state and region will compete in a three-round elimination spoken word competition for a first prize of $500 (sponsored by The Morris Book Shop) and a second prize of $300 (Sponsored by UnderMain). The feature and celebrity judge for the night is award-winning poet, Roger Bonair-Agard. Opening musical performances by Designer Flow and J. Cannon. DJ Warren Peace will be on the one's and two's. And special bonus, Thomas Kirkland, veteran slam emcee, will be dusting off his mic for the occasion! There will be a full spread, BYOB. Admission is $20. Capacity is 80 attendees, so get there early for this fast-paced, one-of-a-kind event! You can purchase tix in advance here: http://theravenhouse.brownpapertickets.com. A portion of the proceeds will go towards each of the performers that night as well as the Carnegie Center for Literacy and Learning!

 

  • Roger Bonair-Agard Interview

    • William T. Young Auditorium

    • Thursday April 30th, 2015

    • 5:30pm

    • Poet and spoken-word artist Roger Bonair-Agard was born in Trinidad and Tobago and moved to the United States in 1987. His collections of poetry include Tarnish and Masquerade (2006); Gully (2010); and Bury My Clothes (2013), which was a long-list finalist for a National Book Award. A Cave Canem fellow, Bonair-Agard performs his work and leads workshops internationally. He is the cofounder and artistic director of the louderARTS Project and teaches poetry at the Cook County Temporary Juvenile Detention Facility in Chicago.

       

  • Ekphrastic Poetry Prize DEADLINE

  • The Art Museum at the University of Kentucky and the University of Kentucky MFA Program in Creative Writing present The Kentucky Poetry Festival’s Ekphrastic Poetry Prize. First prize: $100. Deadline: May 01st. Entries must pertain to the permanent collection, or a current or past exhibit at The Art Museum at the University of Kentucky. Please indicate the name of the work and the artist’s name with entry. Contest is open to all poets, excluding current MFA poetry students at the University of Kentucky. Entrants may submit up to 3 poems as a single attached file with the format firstname_lastname2015 to: kpfpoetrycontest@gmail.com. For inquiries contact us at kpfpoetrycontest@gmail.com

  • Poetry in the Greenhouses

    • Michler's Florist, Greenhouses & Garden Design, 417 E Maxwell St, Lexington, KY 40508

    • Friday, May 01

    • 5:30pm

    • Readings by Steven Alvarez, Dan Howell, Leatha Kendrick, George Ella Lyon, Maurice Manning, Christopher McCurry, Kimberly Miller, Gurney Norman, Katerina Stoykova-Klemer, Richard Taylor, and Jeff Worley
    • Open mic to follow.

Date:
-
Location:
Lexington and UK's campus
Tags/Keywords:

"A Hylomorphic Analysis of Concrete Particular Objects"

Kathrin Koslicki, Professor of Philosophy and Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Epistemology and Metaphysics at the University of Alberta, will be giving a talk Friday April 17 at 4pm in SC 228.

https://www.ualberta.ca/~koslicki/

 

Date:
-
Location:
Student Center 228
Tags/Keywords:

Dissertation Defense-Nicholas Armenoff

Title:  Free Resolutions Associated to Representable Matroids

 

Abstract:  As a matroid is naturally a simplicial complex, one can study its combinatorial properties via the associated Stanley-Reisner ideal and its corresponding free resolution.  Using results by Johnsen and Verdure, we prove that a matroid is the dual to a perfect matroid design if and only if its corresponding Stanley-Reisner ideal has a pure free resolution, and, motivated by applications to their generalized Hamming weights, characterize free resolutions corresponding to the vector matroids of the parity check matrices of Reed-Solomon codes and certain BCH codes.  Furthermore, using an inductive mapping cone argument, we construct a cellular resolution for the matroid duals to finite projective geometries and discuss consequences for finite affine geometries.  Finally, we provide algorithms for computing such cellular resolutions explicitly.

Date:
-
Location:
745 Patterson Office Tower

Dissertation Defense--Bill Robinson

Title: Dissertation Defense

Abstract: We study a class of determinantal ideals called skew tableau ideals, which are generated by (t x t) minors in a subset of a symmetric matrix of indeterminates.  The initial ideals have been studied in the (2 x 2) case by Corso, Nagel, Petrovic and Yuen.  Using liaison techniques, we have extended their results to include the original determinantal ideals in the (2 x 2) case, and obtained some partial results in the (t x t) case.  A critical tool we use is an elementary biliaison, and producing these requires some technical determinantal calculations.  We have uncovered in error a previous determinantal lemma that was applied in several papers, and have used the straightening law for minors of a matrix to establish a new determinantal relation.  This new tool is quite versatile; it fixes the gaps in the previous papers and provides the main computational power in several of our own arguments.  This is joint work with Uwe Nagel.

Date:
-
Location:
341 White Hall Classroom Building
Event Series:

Geography & The Priority of Injustice

 

Justice has been a reference point for radical and critical geographers for more than 40 years. Geographers’ engagements with issues of justice, however, have always been defined by wariness toward political philosophies of justice. These are variously considered too liberal, too distributive in their orientation, or too universalizing. The wariness, in short, indicates the parameters that define the prevalent spatial imaginary of radical and critical human geography: self-consciously oppositional, concerned with the production of structural relations, sensitive to context and difference. Barnett explore two overlapping strands of contemporary political philosophy and political theory that have recently developed arguments for ‘the priority of injustice’ in the elaboration of democratic theory.

Date:
Location:
Whitehall Classroom Bldg. - Room 214
Tags/Keywords:

Ping Pong Ball Drop

http://www.uksab.org/event/ping-pong-ball-drop/

Be on the lookout for 1,000 ping pong balls to drop from the top of Patterson Office Tower at 11:55 a.m. on April 22. The event is part of a longstanding UK tradition hosted by SAB’s Traditions Committee known as the Ping Pong Ball Drop. Students that locate ping pong balls with colors on them and take them to the SAB Office in the Student Center Room 204 will receive a prize, small or large.

Date:
-
Location:
Patterson Office Tower Plaza

Spring Carnival - FREE

http://www.uksab.org/event/carnival/

Spring Carnival 2015 | April 18

 

Celebrate the end of a great semester on April 18 at 12 p.m. at the Spring Carnival sponsored by SAB’s Traditions and Campus Life Committees! There will be carnival rides, carnival games, awesome prizes, food trucks, food booths, and more! Upon arrival, each student will receive a free ticket that allows them a single “meal special” from the food truck of their choice. Come experience one of the largest and most exciting events SAB has to offer before the stress of finals begins!

The Carnival will take place at Good Barn Field, across from Commonwealth Stadium near Nicholasville Road. There will be shuttles available to and from campus for student use. Stops include: the Student Center Bus Stop across from Roselle Hall on Avenue of Champions and William T. Young Library at Hilltop Avenue.

Any questions should be directed to Zoe Pittman, Director of Traditions, and Abbey Tillman, Director of Campus Life. For all press inquiries, please contact Olivia Senter, Director of Public Relations.

Date:
-
Location:
Goodbarn Field
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