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Booking information

Duration: 8 weeks
Type: Interactive Online Course
Level: Open to all
Location: Poetry School Online

Details

Start date: Wednesday 10th Oct 2012
Session times: Wednesdays, fortnightly, 7pm (UK Time)
Cost:
Full cost:£61.00
60+:£54.00
Concs:£48.00

 

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Excavations

What artefacts or personal traits would we leave behind if we died tomorrow? What landscapes have shaped us? What communities and civilisations do we belong to (bikers, feminists, parents)? What do we think of our own material culture - the objects and buildings around us? This course concentrates on the personal archaeologies that dictate and shape our lives, and allows us to focus on how we can write them.

Tutor:

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Jo Bell

For many years an archaeologist, Jo Bell became a ‘poetry professional’ some years ago.  She also works freelance.  From 2013 Jo Bell will be running a small poetry press with Martin Malone.

She writes poems, including commissions and residencies.  She performs her work, often making stage pieces with other writers like Riverlands, with Jo Blake Cave – or Fourpenny Circus which was nominated for a Ted Hughes Award. Jo Bell also manages projects, the largest of which is National Poetry Day. She programs festivals and events, including the Ledbury Poetry Festival 2011 with Jonathan Davidson.  She edits books, journals and e-zines including Word Gumbo, where she is poetry editor.  She runs workshops and residential breaks for writers across the UK and in France. She writes articles for publications including Magma and non-poetry titles like Country Walking and Heritage magazines.

 

Creative collaborations include work on the Companion Stones project, filmpoems with Alastair Cook, live poetry shows, and a new book-length sequence with Martin Malone. She is a former Cheshire Poet Laureate and my play First Person was performed at the Chester Literature Festival.

 

http://belljarblog.wordpress.com/

Jo Bell writes, performs, project-manages and generally works in poetry across the UK. It’s a ridiculous way to make a living, but then so was professional archaeology which is what she did for 18 years beforehand.

She writes ...

“I’m the director of National Poetry Day in the UK; a project manager, producer and promoter; and in 2011 programmed Ledbury Poetry Festival, the UK’s largest, with Jonathan Davidson.

“I’ve been poet in residence for Glastonbury Festival and the Royal Derby Hospital. Collaborations include work on the brilliant Companion Stones project, filmpoems with Alastair Cook, live poetry shows, an atmospheric spoken word show called Riverlands with Jo Blake Cave and engrossing new work with poet Martin Malone. I write poetry shows like Fourpenny Circus, nominated for the Ted Hughes Award in 2010. I am a former Cheshire Poet Laureate and my short, bad play First Person was performed at Chester Literature Festival. With David Calcutt I invented the successful eavesdropping/ writing project Bugged – the sequel is coming up in 2012 – and I am poetry editor at online journal Word Gumbo.

“I work the spoken word circuit across the UK and abroad including perfomances at Glastonbury, Hay Festival, headline slots at Bang Said the Gun and Rrrants, Stromstad’s Winter Words festival and Paris’ Shakespeare & Co. I have been broadcast on Radio 4. On the page, recent good fortune includes a double commendation in the Wigtown Poetry Competition, shortlisting in the Strokestown International Poetry Competition, a double commendation in the Hippocrates International Prize for Poetry and Medicine, and inclusion in the Templar anthology Bliss, the Red Squirrel anthology Split Screen and forthcoming Bird Book 2 (Fuselit/ Sidekick).

“I grew up around Sheffield and went to school in a mining town. For many years I was a professional archaeologist specialising in industrial archaeology: I still love to work with historic landscapes and documents. I live on a narrowboat (no, it is not cold in the winter) and my first book Navigation drew on that life, as well as on my archaeology work. I lead workshops and online courses, and present poetry evenings themed around gardens, historic events, boats or food.