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Reading: Mary Jo Bang
In this recording from Wednesday, March 20th, 2013, during the 44th Annual UND Writers Conference, “A Portrait of an Artist,” Mary Jo Bang reads poetry from The Bride of E and a canto from her translation of Dante\u27s Inferno. Before reading Dante\u27s Inferno, she discusses the process of writing it. She reads her more recent poetry and discusses “erasure” as a method of writing and reads from Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf. She answers questions from the audience. Topics for questions include: writing inspirations, over-arching arguments in collections of poetry, and metaphysical and physical spaces for writing.
Introduced by Laurel Perez
The Philosophy of Poetry
Almost seven hundred years ago Dante Alieghieri took us on a terrifying and mesmerizing journey through the nine circles of hell. He could never have predicted that today, in that same poem, the sin of gluttony would be represented by the South Park Character Eric Cartman. This isn’t a joke, but a way of modernizing Dante’s epic, and of showing that it still speaks to us as a serious work of art. On this episode of WHY?, we’re going to take our own journey, not through hell, but through the nature and limits of poetry, of what it means, and how it speaks to us
Mary Jo Bang is a poet, translator, and professor of English at Washington University in Saint Louis. She is the author of six books of poems and a a new translation of Dante’s Inferno.
This episode was recorded at the University of 2013 University of North Dakota Writers Conference. WHY? thanks the Conference, its organizers, and donors for allowing us to interview one of their invitees.https://commons.und.edu/why-radio-archive/1083/thumbnail.jp