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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20110122T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20110122T183000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204757Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180731T133442Z
UID:40810103654-1295721000-1295721000@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Music as a Weapon V Tour
DESCRIPTION:Korn and Disturbed\, two of rock’s biggest acts\, teamed up to co-headline this year’s “Monster Energy Music as a Weapon V Tour.” Special guests\, Sevendust and In This Moment started off what was an incredible high-energy rock experience. \nMusic as a Weapon V Tour \nDisturbed and Korn \nwith Special GuestsSevendust and In This Moment \nSaturday\, January 22\, 2011 \nProduced by AEG Live and Concerts East.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/music-as-a-weapon-v-tour/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20101130T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20101130T183000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204739Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190429T130559Z
UID:40810103576-1291141800-1291141800@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:HILLERBRAND & MAGSAMEN EXPERIMENTAL VIDEO/PERFORMANCE ARTISTS
DESCRIPTION:HILLERBRAND + MAGSAMEN EXPERIMENTAL VIDEO/PERFORMANCE ARTISTS \nScreening Artist talk \nTues. Nov. 30\, 2010 at The ShowRoom in Asbury Park\, 6:30 p.m. \nCo-sponsored by The ShowRoom \nDESCRIPTION OF WORK: Through the performative strategy of what they call formational interventions\, Hillerbrand+Magsamen’s work interstices between art and cultural geography by exploring perceptions of language\, identity\, media\, and family within a uniquely American subjectivities and created system. \nARTIST BIOS: The work of the collaborative artistic and curatorial team of Hillerbrand+Magsamen has been shown internationally in screenings and exhibitions including Ann Arbor Film Festival\, Boston Underground Film Festival\, LA Freewaves New Media Art Festival\, Stuttgarter Filmwinter\, the Aurora Picture Show\, Chicago Underground Film Festival and the Dallas Video Festival\, the Hudson River Museum\, Boston Center for the Arts Mills Gallery\, Light Factory Contemporary Museum of Photography and Film and the Dallas Contemporary. \nThey have been awarded the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Residency in New York City\, a residency at the Experimental Television Center and an Ohio Arts Council Individual Creativity Award. They have also received a Carol Crow Fellowship from the Houston Center for Photography and a Houston Arts Alliance Artist Grant. \nThey live and work in Houston TX where Mary Masgamen is the curator for the mirco-cinema The Aurora Picture Show and Stephan Hillerbrand teaches in the University of Houston Digital Media Program.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/hillerbrand-magsamen-experimental-video-performance-artists/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20101114T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20101114T200000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220509T191306Z
UID:40810103648-1289764800-1289764800@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Bob Dylan
DESCRIPTION:The Bob Dylan concert on November 14 was a huge success! Thanks to all who attended this sold-out concert. We encourage you to check back soon for more information on upcoming events. \nBob Dylan and His Band\nSold Out!\nSunday\, November 14\, 2010\, 8 p.m. \nProduced by AEG Live and Concerts East
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/bob-dylan/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20101020T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20101020T163000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204739Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180731T133435Z
UID:40810103573-1287592200-1287592200@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:PERFORMANCE ARTIST TERRY GALLOWAY PRESENTS: OUT ALL NIGHT AND LOST MY SHOES
DESCRIPTION:PERFORMANCE ARTIST TERRY GALLOWAY PRESENTS “OUT ALL NIGHT AND LOST MY SHOES” \ndirected by Donna M. Nudd\nWed. \nCO-SPONSORS OF EVENT: Disabilities Awareness Month Committee\, The\nDepartment of Communication\, CommWorks: Students Committed to\nPerformance\, Office of Student Activities \nDESCRIPTION OF SHOW: Not quite blind as a bat\, but definitely deaf as\n a doornail\, Terry Galloway is the modern medical accident who’s asking\ntough questions about disability\, queerness\, performance\, and more in\nOut All Night and Lost My Shoes\, one of the foundational texts in the\nhistory of disability performance. It’s one hour of pure\, energetic\ntheater that mixes poetry\, storytelling\, stand- up\, New Vaudeville and\nplain old corny vaudeville in a charged\, moving celebration of life –\nhers and that of all oddballs. \nArtist bios: \nTerry Galloway (writer/performer) is a little “d” deaf\, queer writer\nand performer. She gained a reputation for playing comic male roles on\nstage (and off) as a performer and Research Associate of the University\nof Texas’ alternative Shakespeare Festival\, Shakespeare at Winedale; and\n at Esther’s Follies\, the longest running musical comedy theater in the\nSouthwest\, of which she was a founding member. In New York she wrote and\n performed mixed drag cabarets and one woman shows for venues as diverse\n as American Place Theater to W.O.W. Cafe. Her plays and performance\npieces\, including Heart of a Dog\, Out All Night and Lost My Shoes\, Lardo\n Weeping and In the House of the Moles\, have since been produced around\nthe world in venues ranging from the Xteresa in Mexico City and the Zap\nClub in Brighton\, England. \nHer writing life has been as varied as her performing life and she has\npublished dozens of articles\, poems\, personal essays and monologues in\nmagazines\, books\, and journals including Texas Monthly\, the Austin\nChronicle\, The American Voice\, Cast Out: Queer Lives in Theater\,\nSleepaway: Writers on Summer Camp and With Wings\, an anthology of\nwriting by women with disabilities. Her memoir\, Mean Little Deaf Queer\,\nwas published by Beacon Press in 2009. \nDonna Marie Nudd (Director/Dramaturge) is a Professor in the\nDepartment of Communication at Florida State University. Her essays have\n appeared in numerous academic journals and books. She has served as\ndirector and dramaturge for Terry Galloway’s one-woman shows that were\nproduced in Edinburgh\, London\, New York\, Toronto\, Mexico City and\nnumerous alternative venues throughout the U.S. In 1987\, Donna Marie\nNudd also co-founded an alternative theatre/media company\, the Mickee\nFaust Club\, with Terry Galloway in Tallahassee\, Florida. The Club’s most\n recent work is a compilation of comic disability-themed video shorts\ncalled Mickee Faust’s Gimp Parade. In 2000\, Nudd and Galloway jointly\nreceived a lifetime achievement award\, the “Leslie Irene Coger Award”\nfrom the National Communication Association for their distinguished\nrecord of work in performance.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/performance-artist-terry-galloway-presents-out-all-night-and-lost-my-shoes/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20101014T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20101014T163000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204828Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180731T133453Z
UID:40810103741-1287073800-1287073800@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:David St. John
DESCRIPTION:David St. John has been honored\, over the course of his career\, with many of the most significant prizes for poets\, including fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation\, both the Rome Fellowship and an Award in Literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters\, the O. B. Hardison Prize (a career award for teaching and poetic achievement) from The Folger Shakespeare Library\, and a grant from the Ingram Merrill Foundation. His work has been published in countless literary magazines\, including The New Yorker\, The Paris Review\, Poetry\, American Poetry Review\, Harper’s\, Antaeus\, and The New Republic\, and has been widely anthologized. He has taught creative writing at Oberlin College and The Johns Hopkins University and currently teaches at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles\, where he served as Director of The Ph. D. Program in Literature and Creative Writing. David St. John is the author of nine collections of poetry (including Study for the World’s Body\, nominated for The National Book Award in Poetry)\, most recently The Face: A Novella in Verse\, as well as a volume of essays\, interviews and reviews entitled Where the Angels Come Toward Us. He is presently completing a new volume of poems entitled\, The Auroras. He is also the co-editor\, with Cole Swensen\, of American Hybrid: A Norton Anthology of New Poetry.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/david-st-john/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20100921T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20100921T163000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204834Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190102T160253Z
UID:40810103744-1285086600-1285086600@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Mihaela Mosculiuc
DESCRIPTION:Mihaela Mosculiuc \nPart of the South-Central-Eastern Europe: Legacies and Identities Project \nBorn and raised in Romania\, Mihaela Moscaliuc came to the United States in 1996 to complete graduate work in American literature. She received an M.A. from Salisbury University\, an M.F.A. in poetry from New England College\, and a Ph.D. in American Literature from the University of Maryland. Her poetry collection\, Father Dirt (winner of the Kinereth Gensler Award) appeared from Alice James Books in 2010\, and her co-translation of Carmelia Leonte’s Death Searches for You a Second Time was published by Red Dragonfly Press in 2003. She has lectured on Eastern European American immigration literature\, Roma/Gypsy culture\, and translation theory at universities in the US and in Europe. Her translations of Romanian poetry appear in Arts & Letters\, Mississippi Review\, Connecticut Review\, America\, Absinthe\,and Mid-American Review. She has published poems\, reviews\, and articles in The Georgia Review\, Prairie Schooner\, TriQuarterly\, New Letters\, Poetry International\,Pleiades\, Interculturality and Translation\, Soundings\, and Orient and Orientalisms in American Poetry and Poetics (Frankfurt: Lang\, 2009).
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/mihaela-mosculiuc/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100613
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100614
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204755Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190102T163300Z
UID:40810103645-1276387200-1276473599@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Backstreet Boys
DESCRIPTION:THE BACKSTREET BOYS \nSunday\, June 13\, 2010 \nMINDLESS BEHAVIOR opens the show \nProduced by AEG Live and Concerts East
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/backstreet-boys/
LOCATION:MAC At Monmouth
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100520
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100521
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204754Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180725T204754Z
UID:40810103642-1274313600-1274399999@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Alice in Chains
DESCRIPTION:95.9 WRAT presents \n \nThursday\, May 20 \nTHE PARLOR MOB opens the show \nAll Ages to Enter\, 21 to Drink with Proper I.D. \nProduced by AEG Live and Concerts East Incorporated. \nA metal band with an alternative-rock edge\, Alice in Chains was among the biggest to emerge from the grunge scene that spawned Nirvana\, Pearl Jam\, and Soundgarden. The group’s dark\, bitter songs occupy a musical landscape somewhere between Metallica’s dense head bangers and Pearl Jam’s grinding anthems. \nAfter a string of shows in New York that sold out in minutes earlier this year\, Alice In Chains has announced a May 20 show at the new MAC at Monmouth University.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/alice-in-chains/
LOCATION:MAC At Monmouth
CATEGORIES:Music + Theatre Arts
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20100427T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20100427T163000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180731T133454Z
UID:40810103747-1272385800-1272385800@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Nicole Cooley
DESCRIPTION:Nicole Cooley grew up in New Orleans\, Louisiana. Her new book of poems\, Breach\, about Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath\, will be published by Louisiana State University Press in March 2010. Her first book of poetry\, Resurrection\, won the 1995 Walt Whitman Award and was published by LSU Press in 1996. Her second book of poetry\, The Afflicted Girls\, about the Salem witch trials of 1692\, came out with LSU Press in April 2004 and was chosen as one of the best poetry books of the year by Library Journal. She also published a novel Judy Garland\, Ginger Love\, with Regan Books/Harper Collins (1998). She has received a Discovery/The Nation Award\, a National Endowment for the Arts Grant and the Emily Dickinson Award from the Poetry Society of America.  \nHer poems have appeared in The Nation\, Poetry\, Missouri Review\, Pleaides\, and Mississippi Review\, among other magazines. She is an associate professor of English and Creative Writing at Queens College—City University of New York where she directs the new MFA program in creative writing and literary translation.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/nicole-cooley/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20100325T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20100325T163000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204839Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190301T185144Z
UID:40810103750-1269534600-1269534600@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Colm Tóibín
DESCRIPTION:Tóibín was born in Ireland in 1955. He is the author of six novels including The Blackwater Lightship and The Master\, both shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize\, and the winner of a Los Angeles Times Book Prize. His nonfiction includes The Sign of the Cross and Love in a Dark Time. He writes frequently for such publications as the London Review of Books and the New York Review of Books. He was a fellow at the Center for Scholars and Writers at New York Public Library\, and has taught at Stanford\, Princeton\, and American universities\, as well as the New School\, in the United States. His books have been translated into eighteen languages.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/colm-toibin/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20091209T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20091209T163000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204840Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20181221T155137Z
UID:40810103753-1260376200-1260376200@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Matthew and Michael Dickman
DESCRIPTION:Matthew Dickman \nA remarkable young writer\, Matthew Dickman won the APR/Honnickman First Book Prize for All-American Poem (2008)\, chosen by Tony Hoagland and published by Copper Canyon Press. A book of great hopefulness\, gratitude\, and praise\, it plumbs the ecstatic nature of daily life\, where pop culture and sacred longing go hand in hand. The work is expansive and intimate\, rushing forth like a river\, with a fluid unstoppable energy. Matthew Lippman praises it thus: “The language is a music\, and one has to understand that when you jump into the poems they will take you places you could have never imagined.” Dorianne Laux says his poems are “Ravenous for life\, for love\, for forgiveness.” His poems have appeared in a wide range of publications\, including The New Yorker and Tin House. He has received fellowships for his work from the Michener Center for Writers\, the Vermont Studio Centers\, and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown. Matthew has been profiled in Poets & Writers and The New Yorker; with his twin brother\, poet Michael Dickman. He lives in Portland\, Oregon. \nMichael Dickman \nMichael Dickman began writing poems “after accidentally reading a Neruda ode.” His first collection is The End of the West (2009) from Copper Canyon Press. A brilliant debut\, his poetry breathes in the entire world\, it’s delights\, cruelty\, boredom\, and griefs\, and breathes out a prayer\, one that holds both grace and suffering\, equally\, lightly. “There is only this world and this world // What a relief / created // over and over.” Franz Wright calls him a young poetic genius with a “style like no one else’s” and elucidates\, “With the utmost gravity as well as a kind of cosmic wit\, Michael Dickman’s poems give a voice to the real life sorrows\, horrors\, and indomitable joys which bind together the vast human family.”
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/matthew-and-michael-dickman/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20091015T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20091015T163000
DTSTAMP:20260408T033636
CREATED:20180725T204841Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180731T133455Z
UID:40810103756-1255624200-1255624200@www.monmouth.edu
SUMMARY:Willis\, Aliki and Tony Barnstone
DESCRIPTION:Location: Wilson Auditorium \nWillis Barnstone was born in Lewiston\, Maine\, and educated at Bowdoin\, Columbia\, and Yale. He taught in Greece at the end of the civil war (1949-51)\, in Buenos Aires during the Dirty War\, and during the Cultural Revolution went to China\, where he was later a Fulbright Professor of American Literature at Beijing Foreign Studies University (1984-1985). His publications include Modern European Poetry (Bantam\, 1967)\, The Other Bible (HarperCollins\, 1984) The Secret Reader: 501 Sonnets (New England\, 1996)\, a memoir biography With Borges on an Ordinary Evening in Buenos Aires (Illinois\, 1993)\, and To Touch the Sky (New Directions\, 1999). His literary translation of the New Testament The New Covenant: The Four Gospels and Apocalypse was published by Riverhead Books in 2002. Most recently\, he has published two more collections of translations: The Complete Poems of Sappho and The Restored New Testament: A New Translation with Commentary\, Including the Gnostic Gospels Thomas\, Mary\, and Judas. A Guggenheim Fellow and Pulitzer Prize finalist in poetry\, Barnstone is Distinguished Professor at Indiana University.  \nAliki Barnstone is a poet\, translator\, critic\, and editor. Her books of poems are Blue Earth (Iris\, 2004)\, Wild With It (Sheep Meadow\, 2002)\, a National Books Critics Circle Notable Book\, Madly in Love (Carnegie-Mellon\, 1997)\, Windows in Providence (Curbstone\, 1981)\, and The Real Tin Flower (which was introduced by Anne Sexton and was published by Macmillan in 1968\, when she was twelve years old). Her translation\, The Collected Poems of C.P. Cavafy came out with W.W. Norton in 2006. In 2007\, Changing Rapture: Emily Dickinson’s Poetic Development appeared with University Press of New England. She has two books of poems forthcoming: Dr. God\, Dear Dr. Heartbreak: New and Selected Poems (the Sheep Meadow Press) and Bright Body (White Pine Press). Barnstone spent the fall of 2006 in Greece as a Senior Fulbright Scholar. Her project was to write a sequence of poems in the voice of an imaginary poet\, Eva Victoria Perera\, a Sephardic Jew from Thessaloniki\, who survives the Holocaust. She is Professor of English in the Creative Writing Program at the University of Missouri\, Columbia.  \nTony Barnstone is The Albert Upton Professor of English Language and Literature at Whittier College and holds a Masters in English and Creative Writing and Ph.D. in English Literature from U.C. Berkeley. He has won fellowships and poetry awards from the National Endowment for the Arts\, the California Arts Council\, the Pushcart Prize\, the Paumanok Poetry Award\, the Randall Jarrell Poetry Prize\, The Sow’s Ear Poetry Contest\, the Milton Dorfman Poetry Prize\, the National Poetry Competition (Chester H. Jones Foundation)\, the Pablo Neruda Prize in Poetry\, the Cecil Hemley Award\, and the Poetry Society of America. In 2006 he won the Benjamin Saltman Award in Poetry for his manuscript The Golem of Los Angeles\, which was published by Red Hen Press in 2007. He won the John Ciardi Prize in Poetry in 2008 for Tongue of War and won the grand prize in the Strokestown International Poetry Festival\, in Strokestown\, Ireland\, in 2008.  \nHis first book of poetry\, Impure\, a finalist for the Walt Whitman Prize of the Academy of American Poets\, the National Poetry Series Prize\, and other national literary competitions\, appeared with the University Press of Florida in June of 1999. He is also the author of a chapbook of poems\, Naked Magic. His second book of poems\, Sad Jazz: Sonnets  appeared in 2005 with Sheep Meadow Press. His most recent book of poems\, The Golem of Los Angeles\, won the Benjamin Saltman Award in Poetry and was published in late 2007 by Red Hen Press. His new project is Pulp Sonnets\, a collection of poems based upon classic pulp fiction\, comic books\, and horror\, film noir and sci-fi movies.
URL:https://www.monmouth.edu/events/event/willis-aliki-and-tony-barnstone/
CATEGORIES:Arts at Monmouth
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