Club utilise des cookies et des technologies similaires pour faire fonctionner correctement le site web et vous fournir une meilleure expérience de navigation.
Ci-dessous vous pouvez choisir quels cookies vous souhaitez modifier :
Club utilise des cookies et des technologies similaires pour faire fonctionner correctement le site web et vous fournir une meilleure expérience de navigation.
Nous utilisons des cookies dans le but suivant :
Assurer le bon fonctionnement du site web, améliorer la sécurité et prévenir la fraude
Avoir un aperçu de l'utilisation du site web, afin d'améliorer son contenu et ses fonctionnalités
Pouvoir vous montrer les publicités les plus pertinentes sur des plateformes externes
Club utilise des cookies et des technologies similaires pour faire fonctionner correctement le site web et vous fournir une meilleure expérience de navigation.
Ci-dessous vous pouvez choisir quels cookies vous souhaitez modifier :
Cookies techniques et fonctionnels
Ces cookies sont indispensables au bon fonctionnement du site internet et vous permettent par exemple de vous connecter. Vous ne pouvez pas désactiver ces cookies.
Cookies analytiques
Ces cookies collectent des informations anonymes sur l'utilisation de notre site web. De cette façon, nous pouvons mieux adapter le site web aux besoins des utilisateurs.
Cookies marketing
Ces cookies partagent votre comportement sur notre site web avec des parties externes, afin que vous puissiez voir des publicités plus pertinentes de Club sur des plateformes externes.
Une erreur est survenue, veuillez réessayer plus tard.
Il y a trop d’articles dans votre panier
Vous pouvez encoder maximum 250 articles dans votre panier en une fois. Supprimez certains articles de votre panier ou divisez votre commande en plusieurs commandes.
I was washing an eggplant at the end of the world on February 4 2020 when I heard from Vincent. It was Mozart's 39;s birthday, a momentous event that the melophiliac Vincent Katz would never have let pass without a celebratory panegyric. There it was in the email, beginning Its Mozart's39th birthday. He's only 264.years old; Mozart died young but kept on living. Vincent and I were older already than Mozart was when he died, but if we had any chance at living as long as he did we had better get to work. We are poets but our immortality is far from ensured. Our contributions to the archive of the aptly named School for Disembodied Poetics at Naropa University in Boulder Colorado are so our only bid for a mozartian afterlife. Not enough. Beginning with Mozart we began our search for the aqua vita of the long poem that would be sung by the melomanes of the future. CoVid was our last chance to make embodied poetry that would keep living in the future, as long as we washed our vegetables, masked our faces, disinfected the doorknobs, stayed six feet away from all human beings -- and wrote to each other via the as-yet uncontaminated internet. And if we kept celebrating our immortal predecessors while noting the daily routines to preserve our bodies, we might make it into that future via our (regularly disinfected) keyboards. Our common bonds at that curious time of the planet- engulfing Plague were various: we were friends, we were poets, we took poetry seriously enough to believe in its superpowers, but above all, we both had mothers who at ages past Ninety needed the care and attention that we two could provide them. Our exchanges quickly became an ongoing epic of care. It became also a store of reminiscences, activities and ideas that paid homage to the women we cared for, communiques and confessions that we would have liked them to appreciate. Happily, at least for me, my mother was past appreciating our fabulous antics though she smiled, sometimes appropriately, when I hit Send. She passed away on September 20, 2022, and is now in my room, listening without recourse. Happily, Vincent's mother is, as of this date, still listening in her body to this epic of care. Andrei Codrescu