Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Bollywood Actress: Shilpa Shetty

Shilpa ShettyShilpa Shetty

Thanks for support, for more detail and photos about Shilpa Shetty. Please visit our new website. Please click here: http://asianhotbeauty.com

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Japan Idol: Aya Ueto

Aya UetoAya Ueto

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Monday, April 20, 2009

Japan Actress: Yukie Nakama

Yukie NakamaYukie Nakama

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Sunday, April 19, 2009

Indonesia Actress: Dhini Aminarti

Dhini AminartiDhini Aminarti

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Saturday, April 18, 2009

Baby Number 4 On the Way!!

Congratulations to Heidi and Seal. The cute Tinseltown twosome is expecting baby number four. Seal confirmed the pregnancy at a recent concert. We're so happy for this perfect pair!

Amy's First "Big Splurge"

"It depends. I think your perspective of a large pay-check changes over time. So the first time I got what I thought was a large pay-cheque, I got a set of matching towels. I was like, ‘I can now get towels from Bed, Bath & Beyond’, because I’d taken hand-me-down towels from friends and family for so long. So that was a big pay-check for me at the time. Now I get them from Target. They’re the best towels in the whole world. They are! Thomas O’Brien towels! - Amy Adams reveals her first 'big splurge.'"

*Getty

Ashton Beats CNN

"In some ways this is kind of a commentary on the state of media. I believe we are at a place now with social media where one person's voice can be as powerful as a news network - an entire media network. That is the power of social Web ... an uprising of the Internet. Through your own stream [you] can have a voice that's as loud as a media network." - Ashton Kutcher brags about his Twitter triumph over CNN. The actor challenged the media company to a Twitter-off to see who could reach 1 million followers first.

*Getty Images

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Philippines Actress: Ehra Madrigal

Ehra MadrigalEhra Madrigal

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Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Japan Idol: Leah Dizon

http://files.myopera.com/Trangfirstlove/albums/629911/Leah%20Dizon.jpghttp://files.myopera.com/Trangfirstlove/albums/629911/Leah%20Dizon.jpg

Thanks for support, for more detail and photos about Leah Dizon. Please visit our new website. Please click here: http://asianhotbeauty.com

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Bollywood Actress: Freida Pinto

Freida PintoFreida Pinto

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Saturday, April 11, 2009

Japan Actress: Aya Hirayama

Aya HirayamaAya Hirayama

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Tuesday, April 7, 2009

China Actress: Vicki Zhao Wei 赵薇

Vicki Zhao Wei 赵薇Vicki Zhao Wei 赵薇

Thanks for support, for more detail and photos about Aishwarya Rai. Please visit our new website. Please click here: http://asianhotbeauty.com

Monday, April 6, 2009

Proud Mama

Nicole Kidman shows off pics of daughter Sunday Rose at the Academy of Country Music Awards afterparty at the MGM Grand Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas.

*Getty Images

Friday, April 3, 2009

China Famous Actress: Xu Jinglei

Xu Jinglei 徐静蕾Xu Jinglei 徐静蕾

Thanks for support, for more detail and photos about Xu Jinglei 徐静蕾. Please visit our new website. Please click here: http://asianhotbeauty.com

Thursday, April 2, 2009

The Unending Medieval and the Edges of Poetry: Reading William Carlos Williams adjacent the Exeter Anthology


Image from The Exeter DVD Ed. Bernard Muir, Software Nicholas Kennedy, which all good libraries should own.

Tomorrow, I travel to D.C. at the kind invitation of George Washington University's Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute (thanks for the invite, JJC!) to give a talk about reading Anglo-Saxon poetry adjacent to 20th and 21st century poetry. My talk builds from recent investigations into the way 20th century poets adapted Anglo-Saxon poetry, and argues for adjacent readings of poetry from the two periods; I explore the importance of what is "contemporary to the acting-on-you of the poem," to use a phrase from Charles Olson I thought I'd post a couple of fragments from the talk below, slightly adapted for this blog.

I'll also be reading poems from my debut collection of poems, The All-Purpose Magical Tent, out now from Nightboat Books.

An open, adaptive tendency towards Old English is evident in British poet Geoffrey Hill’s contemporary-Anglo-Saxon poems, especially his 1971 book Mercian Hymns. Here, he turns to Anglo-Saxon poetics—the way poetry is formed—as well as to Anglo-Saxon content. Nicholas Howe has elegantly noted, in a 1998 essay titled “Praise and Lament: The Afterlife of Old English Poetry in Auden, Hill, and Gunn” that Hill’s Mercian Hymns look and feel like prose poems, that hybrid genre often described as Baudelaire’s invention, until one reads them as an Anglo-Saxonist, as works written from left margin to right margin but with a lineation “fixed by internal metrical features rather than by layout on a page” (303). To do so reveals “lines” divided into two halves, with three beats to each half. Hill is not trying to do exactly what the Anglo-Saxon scops did, and carry the typical four beat alliterative poetic line over from the 9th century. Instead, he is drawing on the heft and heave of the Anglo-Saxon poetry, its singular sonics. By doing so, Hill teaches us something both about his own project and about the Anglo-Saxon “Mercian Hymns” he read in Sweet’s Anglo-Saxon Reader: he makes flexible the template by which we approach and sometimes mistake Anglo-Saxon prosody and poetics. The 20th century is just as able and liable to inform the Anglo-Saxon as the other way round, a process succinctly described by Nicholas Howe, with a nod to poet Thomas Gunn, as the way 20th century poets “loosened and revised Old English poetics” (305). These poets’ forays into Anglo-Saxon were not thievish mining expeditions to extract raw materials for re-use in the 20th and 21st century. Instead, they can usefully discover Anglo-Saxon poetics for us, the current readers of a still-present poetry.

***

The multi-directionality of Spring and All might strike readers of 20th century poetry as disruptive, but it is familiar to Anglo-Saxonists. Beowulf is a poem all about re-telling stories and looking back to past events; its structure is, as Michael Lapidge has argued, retroactive, leading readers to move backwards as well as forwards as we assemble meaning. The famous opening phrase of “The Wanderer,” Oft him anhaga “often the solitary one,” is echoed folios later in the Exeter Anthology by the first phrase of Riddle 5, Ic eom anhaga, “I am solitary.” Where “The Wanderer” advises its audience to seek frofre to fæder on heofonum, “consolation with the father in heaven,” the speaker of Riddle 5 frofre ne wene, “does not expect consolation.” The poems are not companion pieces, nor do they explicate one another, but they self-consciously suggest the possibility of reading across the Exeter Anthology, yet one more way of seeing it, as Muir does, as a carefully organized book, one that comments on its own textual practices. The last phrase of "Wulf and Eadwacer," the poem preceding Riddle 1 in the Anthology contains the word giedd, song or riddle, situating riddlic practice outside of the riddle section, and questioning what it means to call a text a riddle. Spring and All, with its interruption of normative, unidirectional reading practices, offers us a way to think flexibly about the recursions and echoes we encounter within the Exeter Anthology.