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'Nerve Curriculum' Featured by The Latinx Project NYU: ‘La Treintena’ 2023

May 21, 2023
Nerve Curriculum
Futurepoem Authors In The News:


Manuel Paul Lopez's ‘Nerve Curriculum’ (Futurepoem 2023) was recently featured in The Latinx Project's “La Treintena 2023” — where Urayoán Noel highlights 30 (Something) Books of Latinx Poetry that have been making a splash this year:

This book begins with a burst of translingual noise (echoing PJ Harvey) and from there flows into a fragmentary écriture that has something of the rigor and clarity of the conceptual, not afraid of repetition or abstraction. Whereas some of Lopez’s other work has more transparently evoked the San Diego and Imperial Valley borderlands he is rooted in, here the memory of youth and the constitution of selfhood are fascinatingly worked through the speaker’s cousin/neighbor/alter ego, the “Chicano goth” Nestor. Along the way, the book pings with references to everyone from Kim Hyesoon and Don Mee Choi to John Yau, Kenneth Koch, José Olivarez, Jack Hirschman, and Zora Neale Hurston, and to the alternative curricula of Wikipedia and YouTube. Don’t miss the beautiful abjection of “Bird Brain,” the last couplet of which contains its own kind of wisdom: “Of all the rain falling on this planet I’ve somehow attracted / the neon spacey kind that governs like a syllabus of smoke."

Nerve Curriculum by Manuel Paul Lopez

January at Futurefeed : Kicking Off the New Year with Writer-in-Residence Anna Moschovakis 

January 24, 2023
 
Futurefeed rang in the new year with Anna Moschovakis as January's Blogger-in-Residence!
 
Here's a taste:
 
Ten Studio Resolutions
1. The studio is anywhere but it isn’t everywhere. Let yourself in when it opens its door.
2. The studio takes up space. Recognize this.
3. The studio has feelings. If you neglect it, it might neglect you back.
4. Some studios are cats and attach to place; some are dogs and attach to people; some are neither, both, or other. Know your studio and adjust your expectations accordingly.
5. Does the studio know of the existence of other studios? Unless the studio tells you, this is none of your business.
6. Be careful inviting others into the studio. It can be difficult—though it is possible—to kick them out.
7. And yet, the studio is a party. Tolerate, if you can’t celebrate, this contradiction.
8. The studio has at least four walls, a ceiling and a floor. Don’t forget to look around.
9. The air in the studio is always good. Breathe it.
10.  
 
Head over to futurefeed today to read the rest of her entries, draft resolve reviseat some point I became (a fiction), and fear of translation, or, confessions of a translator (a beginning).
 
Stay tuned for more from Futurefeed and our upcoming bloggers Anthony Hawley, Emily Luan, and more!