Friday, November 7, 2008

Submission Reminder!


The official press release is out regarding Plains Song Review's call for submissions, so now's as good a time as any to remind all of you to get busy and submit! We take poetry, short stories, photography, and essays--there's a little somethin' for everybody! The submission deadline is January 20th, so while you're recovering from your various holiday food comas it would be a great time to spend writing!

Please visit the official submission page for submission guidelines!

Nothing makes me happier than seeing a big stack of envelopes in my mailbox, and you all want me to be happy, right? Right?!



cover photo © Joel Sartore

Thursday, October 30, 2008

David Blackbourn: "Landscape and Identity in Modern Germany"





What: David Blackbourn, Professor of History at Harvard University: "Landscape and Identity in Modern Germany"
When: Wednesday, November 5th 3:30 p.m.
Where: Regency A, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Union (2nd floor auditorium)

Professor Blackbourn is one of the most prominent German and European historians in the United States. He is the author of The Conquest of Nature, Water, Landscape, and the Making of Modern Germany (Norton, 2006). This lecture will be of interest to anyone interested in regional history, environmental history, comparative history, 19th century studies, European studies, or anyone who wishes to explore issues involving a sense of place, space, landscape, region, and identity.


The lecture is sponsored by the Plains Humanities Alliance and the Center for Great Plains Studies. Copies of The Conquest of Nature will be available for purchase, and this event is free and open to to the public.







Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Reading by Tayari Jones

When: Thursday, October 23rd at 7:30 p.m.
Where: Great Plains Art Museum, Hewit Place (12th and Q)

Award-winning African American novelist and author of Leaving Atlanta and The Untelling, will be reading from her work in the Great Plains Art Museum on October 23rd at 7:30 p.m. Her books will be available for purchase at the event, and a booksigning will follow the reading. This event is sponsored by the UNL department of English-Creative Writing and Ethnic Studies.

Jones's novel Leaving Atlanta received the Hurston/Wright Award for Debut Fiction, was named "Novel of the Year" by Atlanta Magazine, "Best Southern Novel of the Year" by Creative Loafing Atlanta. Her second novel, The Untelling, was awarded the Lillian C. Smith Award for New Voices by The Southern Regional Council and the University of Georgia Libraries. She has been awarded a slew of fellowships from organizations across the country.

This event is free and open to the public!


Information gathered from UNL Press Release and www.TayariJones.com.
Photo copyright Richard Powers, from www.TayariJones.com.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Featured Poet: Red Shuttleworth


For your reading pleasure once again, a poem (by a dear friend of Plains Song Review), Red Shuttleworth.

____

The Holy Grail

Decades after his widow caught a ride
to a rest home, the village photographer's
negatives were found...so there is something
to be said for the patience of the unjust.

Fire on snow.
Cattle on corn stubble.
The turbulent eyes of a farm boy
in a mud-splattered Sunday suit.
A mother cradling her dead child's shoes.
A trio of old men, bald domes,
shrunken faces, in Rough Rider uniforms,
precarious on saddled plow horses.

Someone phones someone at Minot State.
A scholar comes a week later, on the dot,
carries the widow's stuff,
except for the negatives,
from her 30 x 20 paint-blistered house,
and leaves green plastic garbage sacks
beside the gravel road.

It thunders and hails that night...
and mice scratch horribly
inside the woman's house...
shake a wedding portrait
off a tattered floral-papered wall.

____

Red Shuttleworth and his wife and children lived in Fairbury and Winside in the eighties. Red’s Western Settings received the first Spur Award for Poetry in 2001 from Western Writers of America. He was named “Best Living Western Poet” in 2007 by True West magazine. Red will shortly be seen in Minnetonka Review and has poems set to appear in RATTLE's special Western/Cowboy poetry issue and Weber: The Contemporary West. Red currently lives in Moses Lake, Washington.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Plain Speaking & Straight Shooting: Documentary Art in Flyover Country

The second in the Paul Olson Seminar series for fall 2008 is Michael Farrell, Photographer and TV Production Manager for NET, and Adjunct Faculty member at the College of Journalism and Mass Communication at UNL.

Plain Speaking & Straight Shooting: Documentary Art in Flyover Country
Speaker: Michael Farrell
Where: Great Plains Art Gallery, Hewit Center (12th and Q, Lincoln)
When: October 15, 3:30 p.m.

This event is free and open to the public! If you can't make it to the seminar, Michael Farrell's photography exhibit Hinterlands NE WY CO will be on display at the Great Plains Art Gallery until October 31--stop in and check out his photography!

Friday, September 26, 2008

Barnes & Noble Bookfair Benefiting Sheldon Museum of Art

If any of you are looking for an excuse to buy some books (come on, who really needs an excuse?) pay Barnes & Noble at SouthPointe Mall a visit this Saturday the 27th from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. Just mention the Sheldon and a portion of your purchase will go to the Sheldon Museum of Art!

More art related events will take place at Barnes & Noble starting at 11 a.m. including art trivia, face painting (for the kids or young at heart) and prizes!

Additionally, by no coincidence whatsoever, SouthPointe is also hosting the Lincoln Arts Festival on the 27th and 28th (10-6 Saturday, 10-5 Sunday) which always proves to be a fantastic experience, whether you're looking to buy or just looking to look!

For more info on the Sheldon Museum of Art Bookfair at Barnes & Noble, check out the website.
For more info on the Lincoln Arts Festival, check out the website.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

September is National Recovery Month

September is National Recovery Month, and in honor of all the hard work and dedication of those recovering from drug and alcohol addiction (and the friends and family members who are by their side), Plains Song Review Online is proud to feature a poem by Kelly Madigan Erlandson.



Rarely Have We Seen a Person Fail



I have not come to sobriety without reason.
The rim of the glass itself insisted. I was collared by bottles
let loose from their cardboard cells, who brandished photographs
of my unborn children. The clerk, crushing a cigarette
behind the liquor store counter, clucked his tongue
at my purchases. How could I continue, when the cubed ice
hurled curses from the cradle of my palm?

I have not come to sobriety
of my own accord, and no one does. The alchemy failed.
Weary of medicating the problem
with larger and larger doses of the problem, even I
could see the futility. I tried to persist,
learned to vomit in order to make more room
in my stomach, to prime before events,
to hold one hand with the other, to interlock
day and night. But longing has distended
itself beyond my reach. My organs have drafted
armies and built fences at their borders, a yellow dog
has rubbed against my skin.

I have not come to sobriety without quarrel. Tarot
cards foretold a better outcome. I knew the mixers
were the culprit. Stringing Jacob's Ladder
full of promises hasn't quelled the gag reflex, and now
my hands are tied. Otherwise I'd raise them
over my head, otherwise I would have already surrendered.

(Poem previously appeared in 32 Poems, Volume 5, Issue 1, 2007.)


Kelly Madigan Erlandson is the author of Getting Sober: A Practical Guide to Making it Through the First 30 Days (McGraw-Hill). Visit her web site at http://www.kellymadiganerlandson.com/

For more information about National Recovery Month, please visit the Recovery Month Website.

For local information and assistance visit the Bryan LGH substance abuse treatment center website.

For some informational recovery podcasts, check out http://www.aajustfortoday.org/.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Omaha Lit Fest 2008


Various locations around Omaha, Nebraska will be hosting the 2008 Omaha Lit Fest from September 19-20th. This year's theme is Plagiarism, Fraud, & Other Literary Inspiration.

From the Lit Fest Website:

Sunday, September 14th 1:30-4:00 pm (Satellite event)
Cash-for-your-words Teen Poetry Bash & Poetry Writing Contest
Omaha Public Library, W. Dale Clark (215 S. 15th St.)
omahapubliclibrary.org

Friday, September 19th, 7-10 pm
Opening night party, art exhibit, and book-banning, with food and wine.
(A suggested donation supports the Omaha Lit Fest and the Omaha Public Library)
TXT:ART; a one-night-only exhibit of visual art incorporating text; painting, prints, video installation, sculpture.
The opening night party will also be celebrating the 70th anniversary of the banning of the book Slogum House by Mari Sandoz. Slogum House was banned from Omaha Public Libraries by Mayor Dan B. Butler because it was "rotten and filthy" which I think we all know means "a fantastic read" in non-crazy speak.

Saturday, September 20th
9:30 am- 10:50 am
@ Aromas Coffee House, 1033 Jones St.
Meet the authors, fuel up on joe, and browse the authors' books, courtesy of a book table provided by the Bookworm. Book table also open throughout the day.

11 am-5 pm
Panel discussions every hour @ Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, 12th and Leavenworth. Panel details below *.

5 pm-5:30 pm
@ Aromas Coffee House, 1033 Jones St.
Last-chance book signing, meet the authors.

5:30-7 pm
The featherproof books & MAKE magazine Slowdown Happy Hour, featuring readings by Zach Plague, Jonathan Messinger, Starlee Kine & Amy Guth. @ the Slowdown, 729 N. 14th St.

__________

There are also a plethora of panel discussions taking place on Saturday the 20th, which means you should all stay plenty busy if you attend the Lit Fest--which you should!

Photo courtesy Omaha Lit Fest Website.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

Nebraska History Professor to Speak at Chadron State College

Dr. Rolland Dewing, professor emeritus of history at Chadron State College, will speak on the CSC campus on Wednesday, September 17 at 7 p.m. in the Chicoine Atrium of the Mari Sandoz High Plains Heritage Center. The presentation is open to the public and free of charge.

Dewing's presentation is entitled, "The Northern Great Plains: The Other Dust Bowl" and will discuss the impact of drought in the Northern Great Plains in the 1930's, with particular emphasis on its effects on Western Nebraska.

Much of the material Dewing will cover in his discussion originates in his book Regions in Transition: the Northern Great Plains and the Pacific Northwest in the Great Depression, published by University Press of America in 2006.

For more information on the event, visit the KCSR AM 610 news release.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Great Plains Distinguished Book Prize Lecture


The Center for Great Plains Studies at UNL will be hosting a lecture by Akim D. Reinhardt, entitled "American Colony: Pine Ridge Reservation in the 20th Century."


Reinhardt's book Ruling Pine Ridge: Ogalala Lakota Politics from the Ira to Wounded Knee was the recipient of the 3rd annual Great Plains Distinguished Book Prize.


From the Center for Great Plains Studies website:

"England and other European nations used colonialism to establish their presence and exert influence in America. By establishing colonies, they gained control over an expanding region, at the expense of Indigenous nations. When 13 of those English colonies broke away and formed their own nation, they continued the process of colonial expansion, again seizing land, resources, and political power from Indigenous peoples. While that process has changed many times and in many ways over the last 500 years, it nevertheless remains in motion, even to this very day. Akim Reinhardt will examine the role colonialism played for Indian nations during the 20th century. In particular, he will discuss the political situation on Pine Ridge Reservation, home to the Oglala Lakota (Sioux) people."


The lecture will be the first in the 2008-2009 Paul A. Olson Seminars in Great Plains Studies.


When: Wednesday, September 17 at 3:30 p.m.

Where: Great Plains Art Museum, 1155 Q Street in Lincoln

A reception will follow the talk.


For further information, please visit the Center for Great Plains Studies website.

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

"Origins of Western Plains Cultures" Program at Neihardt State Historic Site

The John G. Neihardt Foundation's Sunday Afternoon at the Museum will be presenting "Origins of Western Plains Cultures" by Jim Horn on September 14, 2008 at 2:00 p.m.

Jim Horn is a member of the Osage Nation, a Historical re-enactor, and former National Parks Service Artist in Residence. The program is free and open to the public and will take place at the Neihardt State Historic Site at 306 W. Elm Street in Bancroft, Nebraska.

For more information feel free to call 1-888-777-4667 or 402-648-3388 for those who take a liking to local numbers.

The flier from which I took all this information has some pretty awesome sketches on it, which can only mean that this presentation will be equally as awesome. Check it out!

Monday, September 1, 2008

Center at Emporia State University Receives Grant


The Center for Great Plains Studies on the Emporia State University campus has received a $25,000 grant from the Kansas Humanities Council. The grant is to study F.M. Steele, a pioneer Kansas photographer.

From The Emporia Gazette:
"In 1890 at age 24 Steele arrived in Dodge City, where he outfitted a buggy with a portable darkroom and ventured out onto the open range to photograph cowboys at work. Over the next four and a half decades Steele documented all aspects of life in the southwestern plains: farming, railroad construction, irrigation projects, sugar production, small town life, rural scenes, and people."

In addition to a number of meetings to be held at the Kansas History Center in Topeka, the Center will mount a traveling exhibit of Steele's photographs.

Read the full story from The Emporia Gazette here.

Visit Emporia University's Center for Great Plains Studies here.

Photo taken by F.M. Steele (Library of Congress [USZ62-55220])

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Busy, busy, busy!

Hello, blog friends!

You might have noticed a conspicuous lull in the blogging as of late. Now that myself and my editorial board have started school, other far more fun things have begun to fall by the wayside. But never you fear, faithful readers! We're still here and we'll still keep you up-to-date on all the interesting goings-on in the Great Plains. In the meantime, there are a few dates you should keep in your calendars--exciting things are afoot!

September 17, 3:30 p.m. Great Plains Art Gallery
Great Plains Distinguished Book Prize Lecture
American Colony: Pine Ridge Reservation in the 20th Century
Speaker: Akim Reinhardt, Associate Professor of History, Towson University, Towson, Maryland

September 25, 2008, 7:30 p.m. Nebraska Union, UNL Campus
A Research and Region Lecture
"Toxic Civics for the Twenty-First Century"
Speaker: Thomas Frank (author of What's the Matter with Kansas? and The Wrecking Crew)

Nothing like a good lecture to keep the brain juices flowing! Fall is a busy time for events and lectures; keep an eye on the blog for updates!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Prairie Schooner, Nebraska Press Announce Awards

Earlier this month, the Prairie Schooner announced the winners of its annual short fiction and poetry book awards.

On the short fiction side, Anne Finger received first prize for her manuscript "Call Me Ahab." She receives a $3,000 prize. You can read more about Anne here.

The runner-up was Michael Kardos for his manuscript, "One Last Good Time." Read about Kardos at this site, which also includes an example of his work.

On the poetry side, Kara Candito won with her manuscript, "Taste of Cherry." She aslo receives $3,000. Kara is a Ph.D. candidate in English at Florida State University, where she specializes in poetry and literary theory.

The runner-up for poetry was Adrian Matejka, with "Mixology." Check out some of his work here.

Congrats to all the winners, and if you'd like info on how to get involved with the Prairie Schooner and submit work for contest consideration, more details are available on its Web site.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

The (Insert Title) Slam at Jones Coffee

Do you love poetry? Do you thirst for the thrill of competition? Do you enjoy tasty caffeinated beverages? If you answered yes to any of these questions, poetry slams are for you!

On Thursday August 21st at 7:00 PM, the Nebraska Writers Collective is hosting the (Insert Title) Poetry Slam at Jones Coffee on 11th and H Street. You can compete, or watch local talent duke it out onstage with their best poems. The 2008 Lincoln Slam Team won 12th place in the National Poetry Slam out of 76 teams, so bet on seeing a lot of good poetry!

If you can't make it this time, the (Insert Title) Slam goes down every third Thursday of the month at Jones Coffee. The Nebraska Writers Collective also holds a poetry slam every second Thursday of the month at Meadlowlark Coffee on South Street in Lincoln.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Featured Poet: Red Shuttleworth


We have an extra special treat for today's blog: a poem by friend of Plains Song Review, Red Shuttleworth.

_______________

Infernal Fantast

It's a whiskey-stammer evening
northeast of Norfork,
west of Winside:
a blood-mucus horizon sun.
Hot wind stirs dry grass.
Barn rats screech,
scurry for poison
in trampled-hay corners.
So this is the dance
at trail's end...
steers sold for whiskey,
counterfeit frontier maps,
Virginia tobacco
to lodge between gum and lip.
You're in my arms, sugar,
with our kids bedded down.
Innocence and lust,
we whirl in sultry circles.
So this is the onward
stumble at full vision.
Before we sleep,
I pray to be
a silver-blue sunrise horse
at gallop against
a barb wire fence line.

_______________

Red Shuttleworth
and his wife and children lived in Fairbury and Winside in the eighties. Red’s Western Settings received the first Spur Award for Poetry in 2001 from Western Writers of America. He was named “Best Living Western Poet” in 2007 by True West magazine. Red will shortly be seen in Minnetonka Review and has poems set to appear in RATTLE's special Western/Cowboy poetry issue and Weber: The Contemporary West. Red currently lives in Moses Lake, Washington.

Look forward to seeing more from Red in the future!

Monday, August 18, 2008

Great Plains Cycling: Heatstroke 100

Tired of the typical workout: stationary scenery and treadmill terrain? The Great Plains Bicycling Club is offering an alternative--a scenic ride for cyclists known as the Heatstroke 100--on Sunday, August 24th. The 100 mile route, which begins at 7:30 a.m. at the SAC Air Museum in Ashland, consists of three loops through rolling hills and scenic vistas in the Platte River Valley and surrounding area. Cyclists can also opt for a shorter ride: 25, 36, 42, or 67 miles. All routes cost $25 for adult individuals (age 18+) and $50 for families. Registrations are welcome at 7 a.m. the day of the ride. For more information, visit the Great Plains Bicycling Club website at greatplainsbikeclub.org.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Sheldon Museum of Art seeks docents


If you are not quite sure what a docent is - don't feel bad. A docent is a volunteer who helps guide people through out the museum and shares information about art. At the Sheldon Museum of Art in Lincoln, Nebraska the focus of the art is on American artists and art work.

This month is the beginning of the 45th year with the Sheldon Docent Program, a program that assists the volunteers with the information they need to be great tour guides and art informed volunteers. Anyone who wishes to apply should be encouraged to do so, it does not require any specific credentials or special background. This does, however, require that you do have some time to spare once a week during the morning.

For more information about how to apply follow this link.
Photo by Richard Wright.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Great Plains in Politics

It's a bright and cool Tuesday morning after a heavy nighttime rainfall here in Lincoln. I'm at work doing my usual morning work routine (which, incidentally, doesn't actually involve any work). I'm perusing my favorite news websites with Google Reader, which keeps track of updates from all of my most visited sites.

In terms of the Great Plains, the overarching theme I see permeating the news is energy, energy, energy.

It's a different world out there: it wasn't until relatively recently that the world began sitting up and taking notice of the energy crisis it faces, both in terms of human and environmental impact. At the forefront of the issue is the Great Plains, an area that has a lot to offer the world in terms of energy production--ethanol being the most obvious, though certainly not the only one.

Of course, this means that the Great Plains states will also be playing a pivotal role in this year's Presidential election. For the first time since Bobby Kennedy's race for the White House, Nebraska might be a state to fight for. I have it on good authority that we'll be seeing more of Senators Obama and McCain in the coming months.

Hopefully this post will be a good talking point for you all--how do you feel about our role in the current energy crisis? Do you look forward to a more important role in the Presidential race, or do you even think we'll have one? Ready...discuss!

Friday, August 8, 2008

"Art of the Plains" at Crazy Horse Memorial


Hello all,

It's about time someone else besides Katie should contribute to the Plains Song Review blog, so I wanted to let everyone know about an event happening this month in South Dakota.

Arthur Amiotte, an Ogalala Lakota artist and professor, will present a program called "Art of the Plains" on Aug. 14 at the Crazy Horse Memorial at 6 p.m. Another interesting tidbit - Amiotte is a descendant of Standing Bear, who fought in the Battle of Little Big Horn and illustrated John Neihardt's book Black Elk Speaks.

It sounds like the program will focus on the advantages of mastering multiple media and education about American Indian art forms.

From the Black Hills News Bureau website:

After experimenting with a range of painting styles as well as working in fiber, hide and beads, he took off in a new direction. In 1988, he started a collage series, a genre in which he explores autobiographical issues, as well as larger themes in Lakota history and art history. “I purposefully decided to treat Sioux life from the periods of approximately 1880 to 1930, a period when culture change and adaptation were drastically taking place in the areas of technology; printed media and language; fashion; social and sacred traditions; education; and for Sioux people, an entirely different world view,” stated Amiotte in 2001.

Another program on Aug. 21 features Urla Marcus' program "Past & Present Educational Views from a Northern Cheyenne Perspective."

Plus, those who go to either program get free admission to the memorial - sounds like a deal to me.

Photo courtesy South Dakota Department of Tourism. Copyright Crazy Horse Mem. Fnd.. via Black Hills News Bureau.