Southern Maryland News

Fall Literary Series hosts nationally recognized poets

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The College of Southern Maryland will continue its tradition of bringing engaging writers to its campuses this fall with the annual Connection­s Literary Series, according to a release. The series will showcase two nationally recognized poets. Evie Shockley, a Holmes National Poetry Prize winner, will visit the Prince Frederick Campus on Sept. 30, and Rick Benjamin, former state poet of Rhode Island, will be at the Leonardtow­n Campus on Nov. 4.

Neal Dwyer, coordinato­r of the Connection­s program and a professor in CSM’s Languages and Literature Division, believes Shockley and Benjamin will be a good fit for the series.

“I was struck by their commitment to using poetry as a way to build bridges and break down barriers,” he said.

Shockley will read from her collection titled “the new black” beginning at 7:30 p.m., Sept. 30 in Building A, Room 119 on the Prince Frederick Campus, 115 J.W. Williams Road.

Born and raised in Nashville, Tenn., Shockley earned a bachelor’s degree at Northweste­rn University, a juris doctor degree at the University of Michigan, and a doctorate in English literature at Duke University. She is currently an English professor at Rutgers University.

The author of several collection­s of poetry, including “a half-red sea” (2006) and “the new black” (2011), Shockley is also the author of the critical volume “Renegade Poetics: Black Aesthetics and Formal Innovation in African American Poetry” (2011). Her poetry and essays have been featured in several anthologie­s, including “Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry” (2009), “Poets on Teaching: A Sourcebook” (2010), “A Broken Thing: Contempora­ry Poets on the Line” (2011) and “Contempora­ry African American Literature: The Living Canon” (2013).

Dwyer hopes Shockley’s presentati­on will serve as an opportunit­y for the larger Southern Maryland community to join in the conversati­on, not only about racism, identity and society, but about the role poetr y and storytelli­ng can play in transformi­ng conflict.

Benjamin will read from his work at 7:30 p.m., Nov. 4 at the Leonardtow­n Campus, Building A, Auditorium, 22950 Hollywood Road, Leonardtow­n.

He has taught at Brown University, the Rhode Island School of Design, the MFA Program in Interdisci­plinary Arts at Goddard College, in many schools and in community and assisted living centers — where, he said, “I have passed good time in the company of people who range in age from 6 to 96.”

Benjamin also served as a Fellow at New Urban Arts, an afterschoo­l arts mentoring program for Providence area high school students. His poems and essays have appeared in “PRØOF,” “Watershed,” The Providence Journal, “Tongue,” 350. org, “The Writer’s Circle,” “American Poets in the 21st Century: The New Poetics” (Wesleyan University Press), “Urthona: An Internatio­nal Buddhist Journal of the Arts, Poem, Home: An Anthology of Ars Poetica” (Paper Kite Press) and “La Petite Zine.”

Benjamin believes that poetry can play a primary role in creating vibrant and connected communitie­s. Dwyer said that is what drew him to Benjamin’s work.

“Rick is about building community and using poetry as a way to bring people together. That could be the theme for this season of Connection­s: Poetry’s role in bringing people together,” Dwyer said.

Benjamin’s poetry classes at Brown and the Rhode Island School of Design always included a community component so that his students could more fully experience what it means to circulate in communitie­s outside of higher education, and his own creative practice includes work in many schools, community and senior centers.

“We can try it in many ways but, unfortunat­ely for us in this culture, poetry has such a reputation,” Dwyer said. “Most people would not think of it as a way to deal with a concern like racism, as Evie does, or in Rick’s case bringing communitie­s together.”

The work these poets are doing is important and relevant, Dwyer said. He has seen the extent to which a poem can actually be “a direct connection to the lives that my students are living. These poets can inspire an audience to believe that there are other ways of dealing with conflict, trauma and division – at very least, their works can serve to begin the conversati­on.”

“As an educationa­l institutio­n, that’s a big part of our job,” he said, “… to begin the conversati­on, to bring people together over issues that matter, to share stories, to employ words, poetry to engage the larger CSM community … in terms of how we give back to the region, that’s what we’ve been doing through the Connection­s series and the literary magazine for years.”

In addition to the Connection­s readings by Shockley and Benjamin, the Connection­s Magazine is soliciting submission­s. The magazine is a regional literary journal published twice a year that features poems, stories, artwork and photograph­y of Southern Maryland residents. A reading by contributo­rs to the magazine will take place at 7:30 p.m., Dec. 2 on the La Plata Campus Center for Business and Industry (BI) Building, Rooms 103/104 at 8730 Mitchell Road, La Plata. Another reading will be held in May. To be considered for fall 2016’s issue, the deadline for submission­s is Oct. 31.

Since 1990, the Connection­s program has featured writers such as National Book Award winners Tim O’Brien and Robert Stone, Pulitzer Prize winning poets Yusef Komunyakaa and Henry Taylor, and Maryland Poet Laureates Lucille Clifton and Michael Glaser. Connection­s readings offer the Southern Maryland community a chance to hear from and meet establishe­d and emerging writers up close and personal.

Shockley’s reading is sponsored in part by a grant from the Arts Council of Calvert County and the Maryland State Arts Council. Benjamin’s reading is sponsored in part by a grant from the St. Mary’s County Arts Council and the Maryland State Arts Council.

Tickets for the Shockley and Benjamin readings are $3 in advance at the CSM box office, $5 at the door and $3 with a CSM Student ID. For tickets, contact bxoffc@csmd.edu or 301934-7828.

For informatio­n on Connection­s, study guides and author links, visit www. csmd.edu/connection­s. Featured books are available at any CSM College Store or online at www. csmd.edu/CollegeSto­re.

 ??  ?? Rick Benjamin, former state poet of Rhode Island, will read from his works as part of the fall Connection­s Literary Series at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 4 on the College of Southern Maryland’s Leonardtow­n Campus.
Rick Benjamin, former state poet of Rhode Island, will read from his works as part of the fall Connection­s Literary Series at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 4 on the College of Southern Maryland’s Leonardtow­n Campus.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTOS ?? Poet Evie Shockley will visit the College of Southern Maryland’s Prince Frederick Campus at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 30 as part of the fall Connection Literary Series.
SUBMITTED PHOTOS Poet Evie Shockley will visit the College of Southern Maryland’s Prince Frederick Campus at 7:30 p.m. Sept. 30 as part of the fall Connection Literary Series.

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