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the colon: its role in recent literary history

No, it's not a post about literary excretions (oh, wait -- perhaps it is). Your Monkey Called has a nice post that highlights, among other things, ubiquity of subtitles in contemporary non-fiction. Say, for instance, you wrote a book on killing -- well, the actual title is gonna be something like Killing: Misadventures in Violence. Here, then, are 'Book titles if they were written today'.

Then: The Wealth of Nations
Now:  Invisible Hands: The Mysterious Market Forces That Control Our Lives and How to Profit from Them

Then: Walden
Now:  Camping with Myself: Two Years in American Tuscany ... read more

Written by Jeff Sparrow on 16-09-2009, 1 user comment

and normal service is returned

As Maxine says, the Overload/Overland blog project has now come to an end. Thanks again to everyone involved. Special thanks to Maxine herself, for agitating to make it happen, for serving as a one-woman content provider, and for establishing a new visual and poetic aesthetic for the OL website. I've been thinking a lot about poets and poetry recently and, if life ever calms down a bit, we'll explore possibilities for ongoing collaborations along the lines we've just seen. So stay tuned for more.

In the interim, we've now put almost all of the content from OL 196 -- including the poetry -- online. You can access it here. Enjoy.

Written by Jeff Sparrow on 16-09-2009, 5 user comments

poets holiday

7Here it is: the last post of our Overland Overloaded coverage. Tomorrow, the Overland blog will be back as it was...or maybe it never will be. Thankyou to Overland and Overload for your faith in the concept. May the relationship grow. Us Overloaders have loved it, and we hope to be back again next year. Thankyou also to the many people who’ve been interviewed, who have visited, commented and reviewed. You are too large an army to name. To finish, Poets Holiday, a poem by Sandon Macleod which I heard read by Melbourne poet, and founder of Overload Steve Smart at the Spinning Room some months back. I was struck, at the time, not only by the poem but by Smart’s heartfelt delivery of it: the weight behind every word. Steve writes:
  ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 15-09-2009, 5 user comments

going out swinging

untitled31Going Down Swinging has been out and about recording during the 2009 Overload Poetry Festival. At the end of it all, they're left with hours and hours of audio, which will be culled down to twelve or so tracks to be released later in the year as part of a new Overload/Going Down Swinging highlights disc. In the early hours of the morning after the last event of Overload 2009 had finished

Written by Overland Overloaded on 15-09-2009, 4 user comments

haiku chain

untitled161At the beginning of Overland Overloaded, we sent out a call for haiku written about Melbourne poets. 2007 Australian National Poetry Slam winner Marc Testart responded with gusto. Here are his efforts, accompanied by the photographs from the  wonderful Michael Reynolds, who went home on Sunday night cradling an Overload award for his utterly outstanding contribution to Melbourne poetry. Please add to the comments section your own haiku about an Overload poet. ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 15-09-2009, 5 user comments

look at what poetry does with us

10The Overland Overloaded team will be handing the Overland blog back to Overland at the end of today. Today we'll be uploading our last few posts. We'll let you sit in on our musings with the exhausted but triumphant Lisa Greenaway from Going Down Swinging, and taking one last look at the people and poetry that made the Overload Festival 2009.  For the moment though, Alec Patric's getting sentimental about his time reviewing the festival. Almost makes  all us Overloaders teary...well, if we weren't half dead with exhaustion. Alec writes: ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 15-09-2009, 1 user comment

the word on poetry blogging

91When I first started posting poetry on the Overland site, I was visited by Gingatao. And visited. And visited and visited and visited. I sent an email to Jeff: who IS this guy? But on further investigation Gingatao, aka Brisbane blogger-poet Paul Squires, is everywhere online that there is poetry, and poetry is everywhere on line he is, creating mayhem across cyber-space. If you are an Australian poet who blogs, you have most likely come across him. Poet-bloggers hate him. Poet-bloggers love him. They hate to love him and they love to hate him. Given the combination of poetry and blogging that's been the last two weeks of the Overland blog, I thought I'd vox-pop the man and reveal some of the mystery behind the poet not short on confidence or comments: ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 15-09-2009, 25 user comments

nobody comments when it’s love love love

13Overland Overloaded's Alec Patric has instructed me to refrain from certain prefaces to this review of the final event of Overload, the Surprise Showcase. 'Just pretend worker bee Maxine doesn't know slam Maxine', he urged. So here the review is. No comment.

Glowing reviews aren’t my strong suit. It’s really difficult to find anything to write about the Show Case that doesn’t sound saccharine and sentimental. ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 15-09-2009, 12 user comments

haiku rooku

untitled31Haiku are deluding. There’s always this sense that anybody could write them: grab a crumpled napkin, a spare three minutes and a pen and you have something you can call a poem: the right number of syllables staring back at you in all their self-contained smugness. 
 
Overload’s Rooku of Haiku on Saturday evening ripped apart the image I had of these tiny poetic morsels as the buttered cinema-popcorn of the poetry pantry: crunchable quickly without a second thought, gulped down with some soft drink or other. ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 15-09-2009, 3 user comments

Nil By Mouth

13An aggressive life-sized badger (the mascot of the Bristol Poetry Festival Slam), and a pixie-sized deranged masked ninja (mascot of the Overload Poetry Festival Slam), the impromptu staccato sound-poetry caused by technical glitches and web-cammed rooms of mad, excitable poets evidently weren't bizarre enough for Overland Overloaded's Simonne Michelle-Wells. Embracing the true chaos of Slam, Simonne emerged from the Overload-Bristol Skype Slam on Saturday evening seriously lamenting the lack of commitment to mayhem and disorder: ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 14-09-2009, 24 user comments

eddy burger and ‘THAT’ voiceprints review

111Being coordinator of the Overland Overloaded blog has been an interesting experience for me. In asking people to review events at Overload, I gathered together six very dedicated people: three poets and three 'non-poets',  or at least, people who were not members of the Melbourne Spoken Word scene (all of them, I believe, have written poetry) in the hope that a broad range of opinions would prevail. This has certainly been the case. Writers who have never seen a poetry slam before have reviewed poetry slams, writers who have never been to a spoken word event have reviewed showcases of the best spoken wordsters in Melbourne. Poets have reviewed themselves, their performances and their peers. Overland Overloaded blogger Alec Patric's post, regarding the Voiceprints #1 event was one of the most debated reviews of the Overland Overloaded Project. Part of Patric's review read: ... read more

Written by Maxine Clarke on 14-09-2009, 8 user comments

subliminal poegramming

untitled121...white feathers suffocating...
...my heart is a breath only...

Throughout the 2009 Overload Poetry Festival, poems have been broadcast at Federation Square as scrolling text. The ticker wall on the corner of Flinders and Swanston Streets became a giant poetry board with a selection of poetry edited by Matt Hetherington and Luis Gonzalez Serrano. The big screens in the main square and atrium also displayed a selection of concrete/

Written by Overland Overloaded on 14-09-2009, 3 user comments

it ain’t over till the last poet slams

untitled31The 2009 Overload Poetry Festival might be officially over tonight, but Overland has agreed for the Overland Overloaded team to have the blog until Tuesday, and we intend to hold on to it for dear life. That is, until those pesky non-fiction and prose writers over there come knocking at the door with baseball bats. Over the next few days, we will be talking with poet Eddy Burger, hearing haiku from poet Marc Testart (2007 National slam champion), and posting reviews from Westwords, The Whisperers (at NGV), the Rooku of Haiku, the Overload vs Bristol Poetry Skype Slam and the Overload Surprise Showcase. Ladies and gentlemen, it ain't over till the last poet slams. ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 13-09-2009, 2 user comments

an angst disposal unit

91Over the last few weeks, Melbourne's poet soulster Sean M Whelan has been so crazily busy working the stages with his new poetry-music collaboration, Sean M Whelan and the Interim Lovers, that he's barely had time to breathe, let alone ease out a pen and paper and scribble a little poetry. Whelan performed for the first time with the Interim Lovers during Overload 2009, and the response was overwhelmingly positive. The Overland Overloaded team finally backed Whelan into a corner and forced him to answer some questions. ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 13-09-2009, 2 user comments

what poetry looks like in cyberspace

91Coverage of Overload wouldn't be complete without a word from Melbourne poet Komninos Zervos. Komninos was one of the poets who was locked in the poetry workshop during Overload, while the rest of us were out sestina-ing the streets. The Overland Overloaded team caught up with Komninos:

Komninos Zervos...Sorry, that was self indulgent, I love saying your name. It's poetry in itself - Komninos Konstantinos Zervos. So ummm....let's start again for the sake of professionalism. How have you survived so long on the Melbourne poetry scene, when we hear tell it's just wild out there?
Well, I haven't. I left Melbourne in 1989 and moved north to Sydney, then further north in 1995 to Queensland. I decided to go back to study and got myself a Master of Arts in Creative Writing from UQ and started working with computers, trying to imagine what poetry looks like in cyberspace. So from about 1995 to 2007 I have been working mainly on the web creating animated text multimedia poetry, (I call it cyberpoetry) sometimes interactive, and didn't really write performance poetry for page and stage until I returned to melbourne in 2008 to resume my role as a performance poet. And you are right it is wild out there. there are so many great performance poets, yourself included, it is very competitive for audience and money. When I started off in 1985 I was one of few poets that had ... read more

Written by Overland Overloaded on 12-09-2009, 1 user comment