rile* books

rile*

Featuring new conversations with and readings by artists and poets, as well as recordings we've made over the past years of events at rile* books. rile* is a Brussels-based bookshop and project space for performance and publication, hosted by Sven Dehens and Chloe Chignell. More info at www.rile.space.

  1. 07/09/2025

    Liz Rosenfeld, Crossings: creative ecologies of cruising

    The recording of the launch of Crossings: creative ecologies of cruising, a collaborative work by queer scholar João Florêncio and artist Liz Rosenfeld from the 29th of June 2025. After a reading from the book, Liz Rosenfeld was joined in conversation with Chloe Chignell.Find the book here: https://rile.space/books/crossings-creative-ecologies-of-cruisingAbout the publicationCrossings is not your conventional book. It hovers in the charged space between academic inquiry and literary experimentation, between critical manifesto and queer sex memoir—Crossings is an erotic hybrid form that dares to think through desire, with desire. Throughout its chapters the book moves swiftly between  different streams of discourse from theoretical conversations to reflections on aesthetic and artistic practice  to sensuous descriptions of bodily encounters. The writing darts in and out of these thought spaces with such dynamic that it thoroughly, and pleasurably, disoriented me as a reader and had me pause to ask: what is sex? And what is theory?  In this work, an artist and an academic intertwine their voices in a dialogic exploration of cruising—not only as a sexual practice but as a method of knowing, remembering, and of constructing queer sociality. The book unfolds both the poetic and political forms that cruising enacts. Together Joao and Liz, take queer sex practices seriously as sites of knowledge production, opening up the possibility for other kinds of thinking that occur through the body and in public, in order to enact tenuous and vital spaces of queer community.About the authorsLiz Rosenfeld is a Berlin-based interdisciplinary artist and educator working across performance, moving image, experimental writing, and drawing. Their work explores questions of queer temporality, memory, and emotional and political ecologies, often through the lens of cruising and corporeal excess. Working with what they call "flesh as a non-binary collaborative material," Liz's practice, often auto-theoretical, questions how queer ontologies are grounded in variant and hypocritical desire(s.)Joao Florencio is a queer scholar currently work at the university of Linkskoping. His research draws from queer studies, media studies, visual culture and cultural studies to investigate the ways in which the queer body has been produced, policed, and contested as a political site of creative and affective sexual world-making in modern and contemporary sex cultures. Bareback Porn, Porous Masculinities, Queer Futures: The Ethics of Becoming-Pig published by Routledge, in 2020.CreditsIntroduction and interview by Chloe ChignellThis podcast was edited by Ros Del OlmoThe intro music was composed by Ive Vargas

    48 min
  2. 20/08/2025

    Rosie Stockton and Hannah Baer

    This episode brings you the recording of an evening of readings with authors Rosie Stockton and Hannah Baer. The event took place at our space in Brussels on the 7th of June 2025. Rosie and Hannah read from their recent work, followed by a conversation with Chloe Chignell.Find their books here:https://rile.space/authors/rosie-stocktonhttps://rile.space/authors/hannah-baerAbout the authorsBoth Rosie and Hannah are writers whose work engages rigorously with the poetics of desire, and with how language acts as a site that both makes and unmakes relations. In different ways, their writing troubles the idea of a coherent, stable, or “good” subject. They approach gender and identity as sites of negotiation, opacity, and play—doing so with a rare mix of clarity, humor, and formal experimentation.There’s something in both of their work that feels like it emerges from a deeply personal space that’s never fully private: a kind of intimacy that's always entangled with the social. Their writing makes room for contradiction, for not knowing and for desire as its own kind of thinking.Rosie Stockton is the author of two poetry books Permanent Volta and Fuel. Their poems are full of lyric loops, erotic tension, and deep attention to the structures—both poetic and social—that threaten to both hold and break us.Hannah Baer is the author of trans girl suicide museum. She writes across genre and form, weaving memoir, criticism, and theory into a writing that is as intellectually cutting as it is emotionally generous.CreditsIntroduction by Chloe Chignell This podcast was edited by Ros Del Olmo.The intro music was composed by Ive Vargas.

    1h 12m
  3. 01/06/2025

    Mia You with Obe Alkema

    For this episode we are delighted to share with you an evening of readings by poets Mia You and Obe Alkema. They read from their latest poetry collections, respectively Festival and Bewogen selfies. The event took place at rile*books on February 14, 2025 in Brussels.Find their books here:https://rile.space/authors/obe-alkemahttps://rile.space/authors/mia-youAbout Festival (Belladonna* Collaborative, 2025)The festival is a space of communion and celebration, a romanticized collision of bodies, music and magic. The revolution will look like a festival, we’ve been told by philosophers, writers, artists, and marketers. But the festival is also, of course, the space of formalizing ideology, ritualizing the consumption and violence that propels existing structures of power.About Bewogen selfies (het balanseer, 2024)In Bewogen selfies, Obe Alkema investigates the relationship between landscape and memory. What does he find when returning to important places from his memory? What does he not remember, but Google does? Can a memoir be purveyed from his metadata?About Mia YouMia You is author of the poetry collections Festival (Belladonna* Collaborative, 2025) and I, Too, Dislike It (1913 Press, 2016), as well as the chapbooks Rouse the Ruse and the Rush (Nion Editions, 2023) and Objective Practice (Achiote Press, 2007). Her poems have appeared in Boston Review, Chicago Review, Cordite Poetry Review, the PEN Poetry Series, and Poetry. She currently teaches Anglophone literature at the Universiteit Utrecht and in the Critical Studies program at the Sandberg Institute.About Obe AlkemaObe Alkema is a poet based in The Netherlands. He debuted with Obelisque (2018), a poetry glossy in millennial pink, followed up by another Obelisque in 2022. His 2024 publication Bewogen Selfies is a collection of memoirs about New York, poet Kevin Killian and New Narrative, sex and sexuality, Italy, depression and therapy, and much more. He regularly reviews poetry collections for Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad and works for the municipality of Utrecht.CreditsMixing by Ros Del OlmoIntroduction by Chloe ChignellMusic by ive

    49 min
  4. 25/03/2025

    Nat Raha with Sulaiman Addonia

    We’re super excited to be able to share the recording of an evening of readings by poet and activist-scholar Nat Raha and novelist Sulaiman Addonia. It took place at our space in Brussels on 7th of December 2024.Nat raha read excerpts from her most recent book apparitions (nines) and Sulaiman Addonia invited simon asencio to read an excerpt from his novel The Seers. the evening concluded with a conversation between the authors.About apparitions (nines)Amidst the violence of capitalism and state and imperial power, there is Nat Raha’s apparitions (nines) in its “charred golden minidress,” ushering us into a space of grief and resistance, the embodiment and intimacy of queer, trans, and diasporic Black and brown people. Written as a series of  “niners,” a poetic form consisting of nine nine-syllable lines, apparitions (nines) is at once a brash and subversive rejoinder to the Anglophone sonnet, as well as an ode to beauty, collectivity, and tenderness which emerges from—and far surpasses—constraint.About Nat RahaDr Nat Raha is a poet and activist-scholar whose previous books of poetry include of sirens, body & faultlines (2018), countersonnets (2013), and Octet (2010). Her work has appeared in 100 Queer Poems (2022), We Want It All: An Anthology of Radical Trans Poetics (Nightboat, 2020), Liberating the Canon: An Anthology of Innovative Literature (2018), and TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly, amongst others. With Mijke Van der Drift, she co-edits the Radical Transfeminism zine and has co-authored articles for Social Text, The New Feminist Literary Studies, and the book Trans Femme Futures: Abolitionist Ethics for Transfeminist Worlds. Nat completed her PhD in queer Marxism at the University of Sussex, and is Lecturer in Fine Art Critical Studies at the Glasgow School of Art.About The SeersSuliaiman addonia’s The Seers follows the first weeks of a homeless Eritrean refugee in London. Set around a foster home in Kilburn and in the squares of Bloomsbury, where its protagonist Hannah sleeps, the novel grapples with how agency is given to the sexual lives of refugees, insisting that the erotic and intimate side of life is as much a part of someone’s story as ‘land and nations’ are.About Sulaiman AddoniaSulaiman Addonia is a British-Eritrean-Ethiopian author based in Belgium. His novels, The Consequences of Love (2008) and Silence is My Mother Tongue (2019), have been translated into more than twenty languages. Silence is My Mother Tongue was a finalist for the 2021 Lambda Literary Awards, the Firecracker (CLMP) Awards, and the African Literary Award from the Museum of the African Diaspora (MoAD) in San Francisco. He currently lives in Brussels, where he has launched a Creative Writing Academy for Refugees and Asylum Seekers, as well as the Asmara-Addis Literary Festival (In Exile). In 2021, he was awarded Belgium’s Golden Afro-Art Prize for Literature, and in 2022, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.Enjoy!

    1h 38m
  5. 19/01/2025

    Asiya Wadud, Mandible Wishbone Solvent

    For this episode we’re delighted to share with you a recording of Asiya Wadud reading from her latest collection of poetry, Mandible Wishbone Solvent alongside a manuscript-in-progress, titled: Any Want Rings The Circle.The reading took place at rile*books on the 12 of October 2024.Mandible Wishbone solvent was published by the university of Chicago press earlier this year. The poems and prose in the collection engage with migration, climate change, race, sexuality, and art— though not necessarily in tha t order. Punctuated by images of Asiya’s own original art, offers an indirect meditation on the concepts of the drift and the isthmus ("An isthmus— passageway, a threshold, a deliverance.About Asiya WadudAsiya Wadud is a poet based in brooklyn and the author of 5 collections of poetry: Mandible Wishbone Solvent from this year, No Knowledge Is Complete Until It Passes Through My Body 2021, A filament in gold leaf and Syncope both from 2019 and Crosslight for a young bird from 2018. She has also been published Interlude Docs, POETRY, e-flux journal, BOMB Magazine and elsewhere. She teaches poetry at Saint Ann’s School in Brooklyn, New York and Pacific Northwest College of Art.After the reading we opened the floor to questions from the audience. For technical reasons the audio quality of the questions is not ideal but we wanted to anyway include the conversation in the podcast so we hope you can excuse the slight glichtes in the audio towards the end.We hope you enjoy listening!

    48 min
  6. 24/11/2024

    Bitterness and Wit, Eugene Yiu Nam Cheung

    Today we have the pleasure of sharing the recording of a reading by Eugene Yiu Nam Cheung that took place on September 28th of this year. Eugene reads from his most recent publication Bitterness and Wit, published by the Asymmetry Art Foundation, London, within the framework of Eugene Yiu Nam Cheung's curatorial fellowship at Whitechapel Gallery in 2023. The reading is followed by a conversation with Chloe Chignell.The titiular story in the collection, Bitnerness an Wit follows a museum worker who feels a profound sense of suffering as he vulgarises language to write jargon-filled wall texts for a contemporary art institution he finds deeply unserious and unrigorous. Amongst other things, he questions the emancipatory valence given to language in certain schools of psychoanalysis, and poses questions to do with whether giving language and form to a series of symptoms can alleviate an experience of suffering tied to something so material, and inescapable, like the wage. The reading is followed by a conversation I had with Eugene in which we discuss his approach to writing fiction and art critisim and his thinking on practices of institutional critique.About Eugene Yiu Nam CheungEugene Yiu Nam Cheung is a writer, cultural worker, and founding editor of Decolonial Hacker. He is particularly interested in anarchist and dissident publication practices, utopian thresholds in language, and literary expressions of the revolutionary consciousness. In 2023, Eugene was the Asymmetry Curatorial Fellow at Whitechapel Gallery, London, where he curated the exhibition Anna Mendelssohn: Speak, Poetess.Eugene has been a curator-in-residence at Delfina Foundation, and was previously part of the curatorial and public program teams at the Julia Stoschek Foundation and documenta fifteen, respectively. His writing has appeared in places such as e-flux Criticism, Third Text, ArtReview, Griffith Review, Art+Australia, and more. In 2021, he won the International Award for Art Criticism (IAAC).Eugene currently teaches critical theory and curatorial practice at Design Academy Eindhoven. Previously, he has given lectures at RMIT’s School of Architecture and Urban Design, Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane, UCL Slade School of Fine Art, and Fudan University. Eugene holds degrees in art history, gender studies, and law from the University of Sydney.CreditsThis episode was recorded and edited by Ros Del Olmo. You can check out past and upcoming events via the website rile.space.

    58 min

About

Featuring new conversations with and readings by artists and poets, as well as recordings we've made over the past years of events at rile* books. rile* is a Brussels-based bookshop and project space for performance and publication, hosted by Sven Dehens and Chloe Chignell. More info at www.rile.space.