The Poetry Center; SF State; Dr. Tonya M. Foster; Poetry SF State; San Francisco Poetry Reading; SFSU Events https://greenhouse.sfsu.edu/ en The Poetry Center Presents, Other Influences: An Untold History of Feminist Avant-Garde Poetry https://greenhouse.sfsu.edu/event/poetry-center-presents-other-influences-untold-history-feminist-avant-garde-poetry <div class="row bs-2col-stacked node node--type-event node--view-mode-rss"> <div class="pl-component col-sm-12 bs-region bs-region--top"> <div class="field field--name-field-sub-component field--type-entity-reference-revisions field--label-hidden field--item"> <div class="paragraph paragraph--type-compound-event-info-card paragraph--view-mode-default pl-component pl-component--card event-card"> <div class="event-info-overview"> <div class="event-image col-sm-8 col-sm-push-5"> <div class="field field--name-field-p-image field--type-entity-reference field--label-hidden field--item"> <img loading="lazy" src="/sites/default/files/styles/sf_state_576x320/public/images/Poetic-correspondence-influence-and-Lineage.jpg?h=b2982222&amp;itok=D7FKRkY6" width="576" height="320" alt="Poetic Correspondence: Influence and Lineage" class="img-responsive" /> </div> </div> <div class="event-info col-sm-5 col-sm-pull-7"> <h1></h1> <div class="event-date"> Thursday, October 16, 2025 </div> <div><span class="fa fa-clock-o"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Event Time</span> 04:00 p.m. - 05:30 p.m. PT</div> <div><span class="fa fa-usd"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Cost</span> Free </div> <div><span class="fa fa-map-marker"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Location</span> The Poetry Center, HUM 512 </div> <div><span class="fa fa-envelope-o"></span><span class="sr-only sr-only-focusable">Contact Email</span> cwriting@sfsu.edu </div> <div> <div class="btn"> <div class="pl-component pl-component--button"> <a class="btn btn-call-to-action" href="https://otherinfluences.rsvpify.com">RSVP HERE</a> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div class="col-sm-push-2 col-sm-7 bs-region bs-region--right"> <h2 class="field-label-above">Overview</h2> <div class="pl-component pl-component--content-medium sfstate-medium" > <div class="field field--name-field-p-formatted-content field--type-text-long field--label-hidden field--item"><p>On Thursday, October 16 from 4pm to 5:30pm, please join us in the SFSU Poetry Center — HUM 512 — for readings and conversations with Jennifer Firestone, Brenda Hillman, Cynthia Parker-Ohene, and Tonya M. Foster. Picking up on <em>Other Influences: An Untold History of Feminist Avant-Garde Poetry</em>, these writers will discuss literary influence, poetry, and the now.<br /> </p> </div> </div> <div class="pl-component pl-component--content-basic" > <div class="field field--name-field-p-formatted-content field--type-text-long field--label-hidden field--item"><h2>The Writers</h2> <h3>Brenda Hillman</h3> <p>Brenda Hillman is the author of eleven books of poetry from Wesleyan University Press, the most recent of which is <em>In a Few Minutes Before Later </em>(2022). Her first collection of prose, <em>Three Talks</em>, was published in 2023 by the University of Virginia Press. Hillman has co-edited and co-translated over a dozen books, including <em>At Your Feet</em> by Brazilian poet Ana Cristina Cesar, co-translated with her mother Helen Hillman. A former Chancellor at the Academy of American Poets, Hillman’s recent awards include the Morton Dauwen Zabel Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters for innovation in literature as well as a Lifetime Achievement Award from Pen (Oakland) in 2025.  Hillman is Professor Emerita at Saint Mary’s College of California and currently directs the Poetry Program at Community of Writers; she lives in the Bay Area with her husband Robert Hass.</p> <h4><em>Near Jenner</em></h4> <p>I asked the mind for a shape and shape meant nothing;<br />I asked the soul for help, and some help came:</p> <p>some wedding-band gold<br />came around the edges of a sunset,<br />and I knew that my bride could see forward, behind it; </p> <p>and all the women I had known<br />came back from their positions<br />where they had been hanging the sil<br />laundry of heaven<br />upside down by the elastic;</p> <p>They'd help me find her</p> <p>though they looked slightly faded from being dead,<br />as the first wildflowers here—<br />radish, and the ones they call 'milkmaids'—<br />look faded when they appear<br />on the shoulders of the Pacific—</p> <p> </p> <h3>Cynthia Parker-Ohene</h3> <p>Cynthia Parker-Ohene is a poet, therapist, and educator whose work braids together memory, history, and Black ecological thought. She earned her MFA in Creative Writing from Saint Mary’s College of California, where she was a Chester Aaron Scholar. Her debut collection, <em>Daughters of Harriet</em> (The Center for Literary Publishing, 2022), was a Finalist for the 2023 <em>Los Angeles Times</em> Book Prize in Poetry, 2022 Best American Poeety, and has been recognized for its unflinching attention to lineage, resilience, and survival.</p> <p>Her honors include the San Francisco Foundation/Nomadic Press Poetry Prize, as well as awards and fellowships supporting her ongoing literary and community work. She has been supported by the Virginia Center for the Arts, Juniper, Tin House, and Callaloo, among others. Parker-Ohene’s writing has appeared in leading journals and anthologies, and she continues to explore the intersections of oral history, land memory, and collective healing through poetry and interdisciplinary practice.</p> <p>She is committed to building spaces of mutual generosity and transformation, where language serves as a site of resistance and reparations.</p> <h4>In Virginia  </h4> <p>In Virginia’s room </p> <p>Her own<br />Peruvian lilies light her desk </p> <p>With carefully placed pens</p> <p>Bought with her own words<br />The groovings in the desk waxed by<br />Pearline who at noon serves Earl Grey<br />In a pink apron carrying pink teacups<br />Laced with lemon on its pungent lip <br />Delicate woman-sized treats for swooning<br />Pearline moves to the door to bring in the Silk Road porcelain tub </p> <p>Camphor, salts, and tints-of-violet to balm Virginia’s tuckered feet unbend </p> <p>the curvature of Virginia’s back the enamored covetous prose in Virginia’s own</p> <p><em>Pearlie</em> she calls <em>bring my notebooks and more tea</em><br />Pearline walks hard into the kitchen to draw the fires prepare domesticity<br />For the writer who needs a room of her own to subordinate her muse<br />Her maid who labors for Miss Virginia’s ownness, her roominess<br />Virginia says the room frees her from the tyranny of man  <br />Her men, planters and industrialists<br />Pearline is asked to stay late to prepare refreshments for her writer friends To collect <br />their wet coats dry them by the hearth and pleasantly waitress their personalities  <br />Pearline agreeable prepares the table embosses it with fairies and musing mermaids tapered flickering</p> <p>Nights when Pearline walks to her bus stop fresh from clanking silver goblets of drink <br />She has never tasted goes to the butcher for the leftover shanks of meat closest to <br />The guts of its porcine body for her own family’s stewed victuals  <br />At home she draws the fire for her children’s nightly bath <br />Washes clothes for school on the morrow, braids their hair  <br />After all and sundry has been cared for she walks to the pallet she shares<br /> And thinks of Virginia’s ownness the ownness that she  <br />Pearline keeps pristine from the tyranny of mistress Virginia’s men</p> <p> </p> <h3>Jennifer Firestone </h3> <p>Jennifer Firestone is the author of five books of poetry including her most recent collection <em>Story</em> by Ugly Duckling Presse.  Firestone is the co-editor of two anthologies, the recently published MIT collection <em>Other Influences: An Untold History of Feminist Avant-garde Poetry</em> (co-edited with Marcella Durand) and <em>Letters To Poets: Conversations about Poetics, Politics and Community</em> (co-edited with Dana Teen Lomax). Firestone co-authored the collection <em>LITtle by LITtle</em> with photographer and urban geographer, Laura Y. Liu. She is an Associate Professor of Literary Studies and Chair of Writing at the New School’s Eugene Lang College.</p> <p> </p> <p><em>Light the first light of evening, as in a room       In which we rest and, for small reason, think The world imagined is the ultimate good</em></p> <p> </p> <p>The candle</p> <p>blown                    Merciless wind</p> <p>              trying                    before snuffed Black crepe</p> <p>                      Your father a postman,</p> <p> </p> <p><em>Light the first              </em>Follow an intuitive thread Swallow nascent spark    Decipher               what is droll</p> <p>Release golden wheat                                                 Swing in sun             Or— Many a Yankee in </p> <p>town                    Many of     glee          Fried</p> <p>             oysters &amp; clams          Soft          serve</p> <p>               Cesar salads                             I hear                   sounds</p> <p>You hear them too               Winds shake Trumpet tree                       Hear me </p> <p>            talking to myself                  Hear me</p> <p><em>The world imagined is the ultimate good          </em>What flocks                   fire</p> <p> </p> <p>Too old                          for                        indecision</p> <p>You ask                too much                       Listen</p> <p> </p> <h3>Tonya M. Foster</h3> <p>Emeryville resident Tonya M. Foster is a poet and essayist. She is the eldest of four daughters born, and was raised in N’Awlins. Foster is a co-editor of <em>Third Mind: Teaching Creative Writing through Visual Art, </em>and the author of <em>A Swarm of Bees in High Court, </em>the bilingual chapbook <em>La Grammaire des Os</em>, and the forthcoming <em>Thingifications : : Mathematics of Chaos. </em>A recipient of grants from several foundations and granting organization, she is an Associate Professor at SFSU, and holds George and Judy Marcus Endowed Chair in Poetry in the Creative Writing Department. She’s dancing despite what is.</p> <h4>Hood Hauntings:         (A Poem in Progress)</h4> <p>(<a href="https://nam10.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgeohack.toolforge.org%2Fgeohack.php%3Fpagename%3DMarcus_Garvey_Park%26params%3D40.804487_N_73.943696_W_region%3AUS_type%3Alandmark&amp;data=05%7C02%7Ckkwid%40sfsu.edu%7Ccddaa867d44d4f8ea0e808de06bc5bb3%7Cd8fbe335822c41a987747f16709aac9f%7C0%7C0%7C638955604264674208%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&amp;sdata=DqkL4Xcwg3gxEAJhHVMrWgCePU7bluJBSAZ0RWD48Hw%3D&amp;reserved=0">40°48′16″N 73°56′37″W</a>)</p> <p>(for Walter Hood in Oakland)</p> <p> </p> <p>At this hour, standing t/here, among you, </p> <p>on this bit of earth that is our momentary lot </p> <p> </p> <p>I want to say that the self </p> <p>is not to a single body bound</p> <p>Earth is, after all, a planetary</p> <p>constellation pressing past our </p> <p>              cautiously corralling calculations. </p> <p> </p> <p>I want to say that the self</p> <p>is not to a single body bound</p> <p>               The tender ways she holds her lover’s scarf tells</p> <p>               us everything she won’t say </p> <p>               about his touch, about her quiet wanting</p> <p> </p> <p>I want to say that the self</p> <p>is not to a single body bound</p> <p> </p> <p>                And the gentle way the bearded addict folds </p> <p>                his lanky arms across his torso, ashen, is a semaphore</p> <p>                for what we cannot hold</p> <p> </p> <p>I want to say that the self</p> <p>is not to a single body bound</p> <p> </p> <p>               The doubter, situated as s/he is </p> <p>               at road-forks and rivers, dreams in circuits </p> <p>               of certainty, that can only short-circuit one such as s/he.</p> <p> </p> <p>I want to say that the self</p> <p>is not to a single body bound</p> <p> </p> <p>               And the optimist has never seen</p> <p>               the schist for the moss. And the pessimist</p> <p>               refuses to see the sky beyond the mine,</p> <p>                             and refuses to see that was is not always,</p> <p>                             and that is is not will be.</p> <p> </p> <p>I want to say that the self</p> <p>is not to a single body bound</p> <p>                And the loner, who knows this, cries</p> <p>               To her self wrought of words and worries.</p> <p>               She hunkers down with her arms full of absences</p> <p>                            more bearable than the gregariousness of neighbors</p> <p>                            What is an “I” without you or them?</p> <p> </p> <p>Say <em>I</em> want, therefore</p> <p> </p> <p>To say that the self</p> <p>is not to a singular body bound</p> <p> </p> <p>               is to dream in real time, time, time, tock</p> <p>               is a cosmic conjuring of past </p> <p>                            the metal fences, past </p> <p>                            the clipped and cultivated lawns, past</p> <p>                            today’s neighborhood congregants, past</p> <p>                            the omni-present past there’s no way of filtering out</p> <p> </p> <p>To say that the self</p> <p>is not to a singular body bound</p> <p> </p> <p>               is to make space for the girl become lover become mother </p> <p>               who breathes, for a time, for another, </p> <p>               is to embrace that each <em>I </em>is </p> <p>               only in the company of <em>We,</em></p> <p>               even if only an idea of we</p> <p> </p> <p>And myself?</p> <p> </p> <p>My self is not a single body, is not a body singularly situated</p> <p>               among the stars, among things, among thoughts, among words, </p> <p>               among syllables, among shopping carts, among breaths and boxes</p> <p> </p> <p>My self is not by my body’s boundaries bound</p> <p>In the thicket, we are</p> <p> </p> <p><em>I</em> <em>am</em> because <em>we are</em></p> <p>and We            we are mostly spirit—salve and machete </p> <p> </p> <p> </p> </div> </div> <p>Tags</p> <div class="tags-item"> <ul class="list-inline"> <li > <a href="/tags/tags/poetry-center-sf-state-dr-tonya-m-foster-poetry-sf-state-san-francisco-poetry-reading" hreflang="en">The Poetry Center; SF State; Dr. Tonya M. Foster; Poetry SF State; San Francisco Poetry Reading; SFSU Events</a></li> </ul> </div> </div> </div> Thu, 09 Oct 2025 17:01:41 +0000 Katherine Kwid 295 at https://greenhouse.sfsu.edu