126 episodes

Intimate and compelling interviews by Rachel Zucker with poets and other artists. Become a Patron & support our growing podcast! www.patreon.com/commonplacepodcast

Commonplace Podcast Rachel Zucker

    • Arts
    • 4.8 • 209 Ratings

Intimate and compelling interviews by Rachel Zucker with poets and other artists. Become a Patron & support our growing podcast! www.patreon.com/commonplacepodcast

    Episode 126: D. A. Powell

    Episode 126: D. A. Powell

    While on a trip to San Francisco, Rachel checks in with her longtime friend, poet D. A. Powell. The two discuss what D. A. is working on and what has changed for him since the two recorded episode 13 of Commonplace back in 2016. This episode contains excerpts from a listening party that Rachel and Doug attended the night before curated by Gabrielle Civil and featuring a recording of poets Judy Grahn and Pat Parker. Doug and Rachel talk about their friendship, optimism and hopelessness, how poetry is a transfer of energy, and prioritizing the writing of individual poems over the making of a book. Doug reminds Rachel to give herself a vacation from words and talks about the pleasures of making art that he gives away.

    • 1 hr 45 min
    Episode 125: The Poetics of Motherhood

    Episode 125: The Poetics of Motherhood

    The third of five episodes featuring the lectures that became Rachel Zucker’s newest book, The Poetics of Wrongness. After an introduction from Rachel this episode contains archival audio of “Why She Could Not Write A Lecture on the Poetics of Motherhood” presented at the UC Berkeley English Department on November 15, 2016 and the introduction to the event given by poet Robert Hass.

    In this lecture, Rachel Zucker—while teaching and mothering and preparing to record a conversation with poet mother Alicia Ostriker in the months leading up to and in the days following the 2016 presidential election—discusses the difficulty of writing a lecture on the work of poet mothers Alice Notley, Bernadette Mayer, Toi Derricotte and others, and what might or might not constitute a poetics of motherhood.

    • 1 hr 11 min
    Episode 124: Reading Hafizah Augustus Geter's The Black Period

    Episode 124: Reading Hafizah Augustus Geter's The Black Period

    Rachel speaks with poet, memoirist and literary agent Hafizah Geter about her recently published memoir The Black Period: On Personhood, Race and Origin. They speak one-on-one over zoom and then, a few weeks later, at the live-virtual Reading with Rachel salon. They speak about being poets writing prose, about writing to think and talking to think, MFA programs, writing classes, beauty, erasure, revision, being a craft junkie, TV, resisting “the privilege to obscure,” finding the question your book is trying to answer, writing yourself out of the shame you were given, rethinking reading and writing as solitary experiences, getting over the embarrassment of not knowing, and writing all over the walls.

    • 1 hr 45 min
    Episode 123: Mary Ruefle

    Episode 123: Mary Ruefle

    Rachel speaks with poet and erasure artist Mary Ruefle about menopause, thresholds, death, reading, museums, schools, podcasting, trees, wind, created violence, real violence, haiku, love, the erotics of reading, Yom Kippur, erasure, how to walk around the world two babysteps at a time, and more.

    • 2 hr 9 min
    Episode 122: Reading Nicole Sealey's The Ferguson Report: an erasure

    Episode 122: Reading Nicole Sealey's The Ferguson Report: an erasure

    Rachel speaks with poet and Commonplace producer Christine Larusso and then, a few weeks later, with Nicole Sealey at the live-virtual “Reading with Rachel” salon about Sealey’s recently published book-length erasure, The Ferguson Report: poems. Sealey describes why, how and when she erased this document and how the erasure and lifted poems became a book.

    • 1 hr 41 min
    Episode 121: Fred Moten and Ronaldo Wilson - Part 2

    Episode 121: Fred Moten and Ronaldo Wilson - Part 2

    In this two-part episode, Rachel Zucker speaks with Ronaldo V. Wilson and Fred Moten about poetry as performance, influences and teachers, open field poetics, finding space for listeners and audience to feel welcome, how to define the limits—or lack thereof— of a book and, specifically, the performance they gave the night before at the Poetry Project at St Mark’s Church on May 24, 2023. Part one (ep 120) is a conversation about the performance. Part two (ep 121) is a recording of that performance.

    • 1 hr 32 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
209 Ratings

209 Ratings

JBermanos ,

New

Don’t know how I got here but was refreshing to hear poems.

thisaintit1 ,

Hafizah geter ep

Unsubscribing after that. What a shallow and pompous person; I understand that she is a poet but to pretend at telling history, indigenous or otherwise, with such tenuous and self-regarding grasp is gross and weird.

flowerlover33 ,

Love

Just listened to ep 76 and it was so lovely and much needed!

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