The iFanboy.com Comic Book Podcast is a weekly talk show all about the best new current comic book releases. Lifelong friends, Conor Kilpatrick and Josh Flanagan talk about what they loved and (sometimes) hated in the current weekly books, from publishers like Marvel, DC, Image Comics, Dark Horse Comics, BOOM! Studios, IDW, Aftershock, Valiant, and more. The aim is to have a fun time, some laughs, but to also really understand what makes comic books work and what doesn’t, and trying to under ...
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University of Arizona Poetry Center에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 University of Arizona Poetry Center 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
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Poetry Centered
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Manage series 2809127
University of Arizona Poetry Center에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 University of Arizona Poetry Center 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
Poetry Centered features curated selections from Voca, the University of Arizona Poetry Center’s online audiovisual archive of more than 1,000 recordings of poets reading their work during visits to the Center between 1963 and today. In each episode, a guest poet introduces three poems from Voca, sharing their insights about the remarkable performances recorded in our archive. Each episode concludes with the guest poet reading a poem of their own.
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52 에피소드
모두 재생(하지 않음)으로 표시
Manage series 2809127
University of Arizona Poetry Center에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 University of Arizona Poetry Center 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
Poetry Centered features curated selections from Voca, the University of Arizona Poetry Center’s online audiovisual archive of more than 1,000 recordings of poets reading their work during visits to the Center between 1963 and today. In each episode, a guest poet introduces three poems from Voca, sharing their insights about the remarkable performances recorded in our archive. Each episode concludes with the guest poet reading a poem of their own.
…
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52 에피소드
모든 에피소드
×Kwame Dawes introduces poems that interrogate loss and violence, transforming them in the flame of irony, elegy, and empathy. He discusses Lucille Clifton distilling “pure moments of tremendous poetry” (“lu 1958”), Michael S. Harper offering a haunting conclusion that serves as both memorial and gift (“We Assume: On the Death of our Son, Reuben Masai Harper”), and Terrance Hayes treading the line where outrage meets compassion (“Carolina Lullaby,” “A Poem That Does Nothing,” “The Poet Ai as Dylann Roof”). Dawes closes with an unpublished poem, “The House of Two Women,” which engages with the turbulent present of American life. Find the full recordings of Clifton, Harper, and Hayes reading from the Poetry Center on Voca: Lucille Clifton (November 1, 2007) Michael S. Harper (April 4, 1973) Terrance Hayes (February 4, 2016) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Mackenzie Polonyi selects poems that engender bell hooks’ idea of love as a verb—a mycorrhizal, persistent, and complicated act linking us to past and present, near and far. She discusses Lucille Clifton on the boundlessness of light (“i was born with twelve fingers”), Fady Joudah’s adaptation of Hussein Barghouthi on the music of what it means to be human (“I Dreamed You”), and Victoria Chang on questions for the generations we cannot meet (“Once you had to stand behind...”). Polonyi closes with her own “Grand Daughter’s Grief Logic,” where grieving ruptures time. Find the full recordings of Clifton, Joudah, and Chang reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Lucille Clifton (October 12, 1983) Fady Joudah (February 19, 2015) Victoria Chang (October 6, 2022) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Abigail Chabitnoy curates poems that dwell in fields of searching, connecting, and being. She introduces Michael Wasson communing with those who are no longer breathing (“Aposiopesis [or, The Field between the Living & the Dead]”), Jean Valentine considering the moment and its boundaries (“To my soul”), and Saretta Morgan writing into love over many years (“Dearth-light”). To close, Chabitnoy reads her poem “Signs You Are Standing at the End,” which enters its own field of imagining across time. Find the full recordings of Wasson, Valentine, and Morgan reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Michael Wasson (April 27, 2023) Jean Valentine (September 25, 2008) Saretta Morgan (March 28, 2024) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Diego Báez introduces us to three Gabriels connected by themes of reclamation and new beginnings. He shares Gabriel Dozal approaching the US-Mexico border with humor (“You Look at Crossers, You Look Just Like Them”), Gabriel Palacios unpacking narratives of inheritance and race (“The Friar’s Daughter’s Mother”), and Jimmy Santiago Baca experiencing the birth of his son, Gabriel (“Child of the Sun—Gabriel’s Birth (Sun Prayer)”). Báez closes by reading “Neuropathy with Lamb,” which reflects on his role as a caregiver for his mother. Find the full recordings of Dozal, Palacios, and Baca reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Gabriel Dozal (May 2, 2024) Gabriel Palacios (May 2, 2024) Jimmy Santiago Baca (September 14, 1988) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Valerie Hsiung selects poems that disorient as they open us to the vital, visceral present. She introduces Roberto Tejada and the poem as a breaking fever (“Kill Time Objective”), Jennifer Elise Foerster as a channel for a multiplicity of lost voices (“Hokkolen: I become the canyon, its dreaming eye”), and Mei-mei Berssenbrugge narrowing the senses to expand what remains (“Slow Down Now”). To close, Hsiung reads from her sequence “a-begging,” her voice responding to the room where she’s recording. Watch the full recordings of Tejada, Foerster, and Berssenbrugge reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Roberto Tejada (January 12, 2023) Jennifer Elise Foerster (April 27, 2023) Mei-mei Berssenbrugge (March 13, 2010) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Geffrey Davis selects recordings that reveal the bold, risky, and relentless work of attention and connection that poetry undertakes. He shares Lisel Mueller pushing against the limits of human understanding (“What the Dog Perhaps Hears”), Carl Phillips exploring change as more than calamity (“Continuous Until We Stop”), and Ross Gay asserting that pain and grief live alongside gratitude (“Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude”). Davis closes by reading his poem “Inside the Charged Dark,” paying tribute to his mother as the model of inquiry in his life. Find the full recordings of Mueller, Phillips, and Gay reading from the Poetry Center on Voca: Lisel Mueller (October 28, 1981) Carl Phillips (November 1, 2012) Ross Gay (January 19, 2017) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Vickie Vértiz curates poems that chart a path to a collective future where we can survive crises, connect with others, and see life’s beauty. She introduces Khadijah Queen looking to words as weapons amidst grief (“bloodroot,” “Dear fear…”), Lehua M. Taitano moving through the luminous ocean of time (“Queer Check-Ins”), and Angel Dominguez breaking through the world’s isolation (“What Does the Future Sing to You in Dreams”). Vértiz closes with her poem “Disco,” a celebration of discovery and delight. Watch Suheir Hammad’s “Gaza Suite” from the 2009 Palestine Festival of Literature. Watch the full recordings of Queen, Taitano, and Dominguez reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Khadijah Queen (February 18, 2016) Lehua M. Taitano (July 25, 2019) Angel Dominguez (August 3, 2023) You can also enjoy a recording of Vickie Vértiz reading for the Poetry Center in 2016 . Read about the Voca captioning project here . Every recording on Voca now has transcripts and captions—dive in and enjoy! Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Eugenia Leigh introduces poems that speak from a particular moment into our own time, offering possibility amidst struggle. She shares John Murillo’s engagement with resistance and reality (“Enter the Dragon”), Monica Sok’s truth-telling about genocide (“Tuol Sleng”), and Angel Dominguez’s joyful protest against capitalism. Leigh closes with her poem “This City,” which ends with renewal. Watch the full recordings of Murillo, Sok, and Dominguez reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: John Murillo (April 22, 2021) Monica Sok (February 13, 2020) Angel Dominguez (August 3, 2023) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Mary Jo Bang brings together poems united by astonishment at the continuation of a world that seems utterly self-destructive. She shares Claudia Rankine on the illusions of American optimism (“Don’t Let Me Be Lonely”), Srikanth Reddy on mortality and teaching literature (“Underworld Lit”), and Timothy Donnelly on the human experience of a polluted world (“In My Life”). She closes with her own “Cosmic Madonna,” an ekphrastic poem inspired by Salvador Dali. Watch the full recordings of Rankine, Reddy, and Donnelly reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Claudia Rankine (October 19, 2005) Srikanth Reddy (November 12, 2015) Timothy Donnelly (October 19, 2023) You can also enjoy a recording of Mary Jo Bang reading for the Poetry Center in 2011 . Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
P
Poetry Centered

Olatunde Osinaike curates poems that meld comedy, cultural scrutiny, and self-imagination. He introduces Patricia Spears Jones clearing a path for desire (“Self-Portrait as Midnight Storm”), Morgan Parker pursuing feeling through description (“Magical Negro #217: Diana Ross Finishing a Rib in Alabama, 1990s”), and Ishmael Reed satirizing wealth and importance (“Sixth Street Corporate War”). Olatunde closes with his own self-identification, “Self-Portrait in Lieu of My EP.” Find the full recordings of Spears Jones, Parker, and Reed reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Patricia Spears Jones (October 21, 2017) Morgan Parker (September 6, 2018) Ishmael Reed (March 29, 1989) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Sawako Nakayasu selects poems that confront griefs personal and national, told directly and obliquely. She introduces Timothy Liu documenting the atrocities of Japanese imperialism (“A Requiem for the Homeless Spirits”), Daniel Borzutzky’s translation of Raul Zurita witnessing to the brutal crimes of the Chilean dictatorship (“Song for His Disappeared Love”), and Keith Waldrop conjuring a grief-riddled dream landscape (“An Apparatus”). Nakayasu closes with her own “Ant in a silvery tide,” a poem linked to a time of personal grief. Find the full recordings of Liu, Borzutzky, and Waldrop reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Timothy Liu (February 20, 2014) Daniel Borzutzky (January 10, 2019) Keith Waldrop (with Rosmarie Waldrop, March 5, 2011) You can also enjoy three recordings of Nakayasu reading for the Poetry Center in 2007 , 2018 , and 2023 . Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Jake Skeets curates poems by Diné poets centering on translation and the way that the Diné language orients its speakers to the world, which exists before them. He shares Rex Lee Jim’s invocation of voice as what brings life (“Language”), Laura Tohe’s embodiment of meaning in rhythm and sound (“Niltsá Bi'áád, Female Rain” and “Niltsá Bika', Male Rain”), and Luci Tapahonso’s blending of Diné syntax with English (“Hills Brothers Coffee”). Skeets closes with his poem “Emerging,” which traces the act of translation between English and Diné. Watch the full recordings of Jim, Tohe, and Tapahonso readings for the Poetry Center on Voca: Rex Lee Jim (2001) Laura Tohe (2011) Luci Tapahonso (2011) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Sally Wen Mao shares poems that trace her awakening as a poet, invoking teachers both in person and on the page. She introduces Claribel Alegría on how to express the unknowable and untraceable (“Savoir Faire”), Terrance Hayes on transformation as the role of poetry in the world (“The Deer”), and Bhanu Kapil on poetic language as a means of collapsing borders (“Humanimal”). Mao concludes with her poem “a dream or a fox,” written after Lucille Clifton’s “A Dream of Foxes.” Find the full recordings of Alegría, Hayes, and Kapil reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Claribel Alegría (1997) Terrance Hayes (2016) Bhanu Kapil (2008) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Lauren Camp selects poems that each inhabit a place, a music, another person—shaping a cosmos large or small in language. She introduces Beckian Fritz Goldberg synchronizing past and present (“Black Fish Blues”), Olga Broumas moving through shadows toward individual lives (“The Moon of Mind Against the Wooden Louver”), and Lisel Mueller cherishing names as a beginning (“Naming the Animals”). Camp closes with her poem “Ode to Two,” where land, house, and lovers are celebrated by light. Listen to the full recordings of Goldberg, Broumas, and Mueller reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Beckian Fritz Goldberg (1994) Olga Broumas (1988) Lisel Mueller (1981) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
Sophia Terazawa introduces poems that lead us to encounter both the beloved and the enemy, seeing them blurred and intertwined—seeing them as human. She shares Joy Harjo’s prayer of courage for the heart (“This Morning I Pray for My Enemies”), Khaled Mattawa’s recognition of the faceless dead (“Face: To the One Million Plus”), and Carolyn Forché’s liturgy for the last hour (“Prayer”). To close, Terazawa reads her poem “Gibbons Howling,” a prayer spoken from dreams into dust. Watch the full recordings of Harjo, Mattawa, and Forché reading for the Poetry Center on Voca: Joy Harjo (2017) Khaled Mattawa (2018) Carolyn Forché (2007) Full transcripts of every episode are available on Buzzsprout . Look for the transcript tab under each episode. Voca is now fully captioned, with interactive transcripts and captions available for all readings! Read more about the project here , or try out this new feature by visiting Voca .…
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