Category Archives: Palmerston North

The Kete Series – Manawatu Poetry Book Launch

 

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Two of our senior tutors are having a book launch tomorrow. Tim Upperton and Joy Green are being celebrated for their collections of poetry entitled ‘The Kete Series – Manawatu Poetry’ tomorrow night (Friday) at the City Library, Palmerston North at 5.30.

Poetry, publishing and a ‘back-to-basics’ approach to doing business come together this Friday night when three Manawatū poets (and their books) shake off their dust-jackets to reveal the colour and creativity that ‘thinking local’ can bring to our community.

Award-winning weavers-of-words Tim Upperton, Joy Green and Leonel Alvarado along with HauNui Press, Swampthing Magazine and the Palmerston North City Library present an evening of poetry readings, music and mild mayhem – all in the name of National Poetry Day. Starting at 5.30pm, this launch of the new Kete Series home-grown poetry books is just one of the more than 60 events being held around the country to celebrate National Poetry Day. Reading poems from their books, Tim, Joy and Leonel, will in turn recite, excite and reunite audiences on the night with all that poetry can offer.

For the poetry lover, the three books will be available in a limited edition ‘basket set’. Cradled in a kete crafted by local Manawatū weavers, according to publishers HauNui Press “it’s the ultimate traditional tote packed full of juicy poetry goodness!”. In a press release David Lupton, event organiser of Palmerston North-based boutique publisher HauNui Press, noted that ‘We’ve come to think of our approach to book-making as ‘slow publishing’! Along the lines of the ‘slow food’ movement, slow publishing looks to support our local economy by using suppliers in our backyard and respecting the relationship side of transactions, kind of like the way local markets support gate-to-plate dealings between home cooks and growers. For us, it’s the ink-slinger to book-lover connections that are key.’ The books retail for $20 a copy and $80 for a limited edition ‘Kete Set’, which bundles the three titles together inside a traditional tote. The publishers spurned traditional boxed book sets in favour of beautiful flax kete woven specially for the project by another talented local group, Raranga Manawatū, based out of the Highbury Weaver’s Centre.  Books and Kete Sets will be available at the launch or from all good booksellers nationwide (or online at www.haunuipress.co.nz) after 22 August.

  • What: Book launch
  • Where: the Palmerston North City Library
  • When: 5.30pm on Friday 22nd August – National Poetry Day. 

For more information read this article in this weeks Tribune http://thetribune.realviewdigital.com/?IID=99786&STARTPAGE=PAGE0000001&ArticleTitle=294068#folio=1 

Or, visit the event page for the launch on Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/events/508914752585277/

The Naturalist Book Launch

Friday 15th August saw the launch of a Massey University creative writing senior lecturer Thom Conroy’s novel the Naturalist at Palmerston North City Library, with over 150 people in attendance. The book launch featured a reading from Dr Conroy, and introductions from the Head of the School of English and Media Studies Joe Grixti and well known poet Helen Lehndorf. The book is currently at number two on the New Zealand fiction bestseller list.

The Naturalist tells the tale of Dr Ernst Dieffenbach – a liberal-minded, free-spirited 19th century German physican, geologist and naturalist who studied New Zealand’s wildlife, plants and people, was fluent in Māori and considered all races to be equal – was a man ahead of his time.

His views seem more in line with contemporary thinking on issues such as race relations and democracy, which is partly what fascinated Dr Thom Conroy. The result is his first, just-published novel The Naturalist (Penguin Random House Books).

Dr Conroy says he was struck by what he read about Dieffenbach while researching natural history for another project. He felt the German deserved more attention in light of his colourful personality and experiences at the onset of New Zealand’s colonisation.

Expelled from Germany for supporting a subversive pro-democracy revolutionary student movement and for duelling, Dieffenbach wound up in London and was appointed as naturalist aboard the controversial 1839 expedition of the Tory.

His ship mates included Colonel William and his nephew Jerningham Wakefield of the New Zealand Company, who were off to buy land from Māori for British settlers without the consent of the Crown. Charles Heaphy, artist and draughstman for the New Zealand Company, was aboard too.

Dieffenbach had strong views on colonisation, which clashed with orthodox views at the time and made for heated debate during the gruelling three-month voyage. Also on board was Nahiti, a young Māori returning home from London having left New Zealand on a whaling ship. His friendship with the German naturalist confirmed Dieffenbach’s conviction that humans were equal, whatever their skin colour.

While he may be known to a few historians through his two volume narrative Travels in New Zealand, Dr Conroy says Dieffenbach has been overlooked. “The more I read about him, the more I felt he needed to be rescued from the margins of history.”

He includes a striking quote at the opening of the book from the second volume of Dieffenbach’s Travels in New Zealand: “I am of the opinion that man, in his desires, passions, and intellectual faculties, is the same, whatever be the colour of his skin; that mankind forms a great whole, in which the different races are the radii from a common centre; and that the differences which we observe are due to particular circumstances which have developed certain qualities of body and mind.”

Such views were unusually enlightened for his time, and in contrast to those of the theory of evolution founder Charles Darwin, who makes a cameo appearance in the novel. He believed Māori were of a “lower order”.

The novel focuses on Dieffenbach’s 18-month stay in New Zealand, weaving a compelling narrative around his discoveries, explorations – he was the first European to ascend Mt Taranaki – and encounters with land, nature and people. The story vividly evokes the extraodinary pioneering sea voyage into unknown territory, and spans the Northern and Southern hemispheres to encompass his personal life and love interests in Germany, London and New Zealand.

American-born Pennsylvanian Dr Conroy, who has lived in New Zealand for nine years, drew on extensive historical records and research for the book, inventing scenes and additional minor characters to bring the German’s remarkable personality and story to life.

He hopes his fictional rendition of Dieffenbach’s story will have wide appeal – especially to those intrigued by influential yet marginalised historical figures who provide fresh clues to the tangents and nuances of New Zealand’s colonial history.

Balancing the tension between fact and fiction to produce a compelling and authentic story was one of the main creative challenges of the book, which he completed after more than 30 drafts, he says.

But such literary challenges have a positive spin-off. Discussing them enlivens his creative writing classes and supervision of Master of Creative Writing students. “When I’m sitting in a class or workshop discussing work with students, we’re there as people, as writers. We understand what we each are going through and can learn from each other.”

Dr Conroy’s short fiction has appeared in various journals in the US and New Zealand, including Landfall, Sport, New England Review, Alaska Quarterly Review, and Kenyon Review. He has won the Katherine Anne Porter Prize in Fiction and his writing has been recognised by Best American Short Stories 2012 as well as the Sunday Star-Times Short Fiction Competition.

He and his School of English and Media Studies colleague Dr Tina Dahlberg, who publishes under the name of Tina Makereti and also teaches creative writing papers at Massey’s Manawatū campus, are two of only only three new literary fiction writers in New Zealand to be published by Penguin Random House Books this year. Dr Dahlberg’s novel Where the Rekohu Bone Sings, was published in March. </P.

Naomi Richards accepted for PhD in Creative Writing, Lancaster University

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Naomi Richards, former creative writing student at Massey, has been accepted for her PhD in Creative Writing at Lancaster University.  “I really enjoyed studying  creative writing at Massey University. Now I’m very excited about starting a PhD in Creative Writing at Lancaster University, in England in October 2014.”

 

Award-winning poet at Writers Read

Alice MillerAlice Miller, Massey University 2014 Writer in Residence features in two upcoming public events this month in the Manawatu.

On Friday June 13, join Alice for a Writers Read panel reading and discussion with Tim Corballis and Ashleigh Young at the Palmerston North Central Library. Refreshments from 6.30pm, reading 7pm. Ground floor, Palmerston North Central Library (George Street entrance).

Later this month, Alice will give a community poetry workshop at Square Edge, Thursday 26 June, 12:30-2:30pm. Spaces are limited. Register with Sue at Square Edge: sue@ca.org.nz

Alice Miller is the author of The Limits, published simultaneously by Shearsman and Auckland University Press. She has an MA from the International Institute of Modern Letters and an MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Alice writes in a variety of forms, and her writing has appeared in Boston Review, Narrative Magazine, Oxford Poetry, Mslexia, Landfall, the New Zealand Listener, The Iowa Review, and The American Scholar. She has received the BNZ Katherine Mansfield Premier Award, the Royal Society of New Zealand Manhire Prize, a Glenn Schaeffer Fellowship at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and a trip to Antarctica courtesy of Antarctica New Zealand.

See more info on the Writers Read event in the event-finder listing at http://www.eventfinder.co.nz/2014/writers-read-series-2014-alice-miller/palmerston-north

Daughters of Heaven: Drama in Performance 139.104

Based on the notorious 1954 Parker-Hulme murder, Michelanne Forster’s Daughters of Heaven tells the tale of two teenage girls who conspire to murder one of their own mothers. The play explores the breakdown of one moral universe and its replacement with another that is potent, powerful and, ultimately, tragic. Directed by Rachel Lenart, students of 139.104 Drama in Performance performed adaptation of Daughters of Heaven which featured techniques associated with the German playwright and theorist Bertold Brecht at the Black Sheep Theatre on Massey’s Palmerston North Campus on the 28th and 29th of May 2014.

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May 28th, Arts on Wednesday, Manawatu Campus

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Based on the notorious 1954 Parker-Hulme murder, two teenage girls conspire to murder the mother of one of them. This script explores the breakdown of one moral universe and its replacement with another that is potent, powerful and, ultimately, tragic. Students of 139.104 Drama in Performance present a brechtian theatre adaptation of the drama Daughters of Heaven by Michelanne Forster.

May 28th DRAMA Daughters of Heaven by Michelanne Forster presented by  Students of Drama in Performance 139.104

Free admission: May 28th 12.30pm

Location: Black Sheep Theatre, Room 2, Wool Building, University Avenue, Massey University, Manawatu Campus

All My Sons: Drama In Performance 139.104

The 30th April and 1st may saw Massey Expressive Arts and English students in Palmerston North perform a version of Arthur Miller’s play All My Sons in the Black Sheep Theatre on Massey’s Turitea campus. The performances were directed by paper coordinator and Massey senior tutor Rachel Lenart.

Written in 1947, All My Sons is based upon a true story, which Arthur Miller’s then mother-in-law pointed out in an Ohio newspaper. The news story described how in 1941-43 the Wright Aeronautical Corporation based in Ohio had conspired with army inspection officers to approve defective aircraft engines destined for military use. The story of defective engines had reached investigators working for Sen. Harry Truman’s congressional investigative board after several Wright aircraft assembly workers informed on the company; they would later testify under oath before Congress.

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Drama In Performance - All My Sons

Drama In Performance - All My Sons

Drama In Performance - All My Sons

Drama In Performance - All My Sons

Drama In Performance - All My Sons

Drama In Performance - All My Sons

Drama In Performance - All My Sons

The Bookbinder by Trick of the Light Theatre, Arts on Wednesday, School of English and Media Studies, Manawatu Campus

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School of English and Media Studies presents Arts on Wednesday for Semester One, Part Two, 2014.  12.30 1.30pm, Free Admission

 

April 30th DRAMA The Bookbinder

From award winning Trick of the Light Theatre (The Road That Wasn’t There) comes a story of mystery, magic & mayhem.

Inspired by the haunting works of Chris Van Allsburg & Joy Cowley, The Bookbinder weaves shadow play, paper art, puppetry & music into an inventive performance for curious children and adventurous adults.

Wellington Fringe Winner Best Theatre 2014, Melbourne Fringe Winner Tiki Tour Award 2014. Written and performed by Ralph McCubbin Howell Directed by Hannah Smith with music by Tane Upjohn Beatson.

 

Socrates Now

Arts on Wednesday on Wednesday 9th April at Massey’s Palmerston North campus saw an inspired performance of Socrates Now by Yannis Simonides. The show marked the the final leg of a 300 date world tour which took place across 15 countries.

The internationally acclaimed one-man show, presented by New York-based Emmy Award winner, Yannis Simonides, puts the audience in a ringside seat at the trial of Socrates in 399BC, at which Socrates, the Greek founder of Western philosophy – dubbed the “bad ass of Athens” – was sentenced to death because his insightful questioning embarrassed influential Athenians and was claimed to corrupt youth.

Socrates Now

Socrates Now

Socrates Now

Socrates Now

Socrates Now

Socrates Now

Socrates Now

Socrates Now

Arts on Wednesday, Manawatu host “Socrates Now” by Yannis Simonides

New Zealand audiences will get a rare chance to see the internationally acclaimed theatrical production, Socrates Now, as it concludes its world tour here in April.
This 80-minute, one-man show, presented by Emmy Award winner, Yannis Simonides, puts the audience in a ringside seat at the trial of Socrates in 399BC.
Socrates, the Greek founder of Western Philosophy and so-called “bad ass of Athens”, was sentenced to death because his insightful questioning embarrassed influential Athenians and was claimed to corrupt youth. Hailed by the European Parliament, and the Universities of Harvard, Cornell and Columbia, critics have described the production as “riveting, superhuman, humorous, brilliant and fascinating.”

Following this free performance for Arts on Wednesday, hosted by the School of English and Media Studies, Massey University, the audience will get a unique opportunity to engage with Simonides in a Q&A session – discussing issues like virtue, justice, politics, civic duty, life and death.

New Zealand producer, Vicky Yiannoutsos, says the story is as relevant to New Zealand today as it was to Greek society thousands of years ago. “This show has an almost magical ability to make us question life, love, death, all the issues that make us the people we are. Afterwards, you find yourself asking: `What would Socrates say?’ It is truly transformational. ” Principle sponsor, Network Communication Managing Director, Antonios Papaspiropoulos, says the play throws a much needed spotlight on the issues we face every day. “The curveballs of life, be they social, economic, environmental or cultural, can only be bettered through effective communication. This play showcases how we can all make positive change through constructive dialogue and powerful thought.”

This is the final stop in a show that has toured 15 countries with a staggering 300 performances. Simonides has served as Professor of New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts Drama Department and is founder of the Greek Theatre in New York and the innovative performing arts lab, Mythic Media. He is a recipient of the United States National Endowment for the Arts, and the New York State Council of Arts.

9th April, 12.30pm Black Sheep Theatre, University Ave, Massey University, Manawatu campus.

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