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Arts & Culture

National Book Critics Circle Award winner B.H. Fairchild speaks at 黑料不打烊 Symposium Nov. 14

Thursday, November 1, 2012, By Rob Enslin
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fairchild黑料不打烊 Symposium continues its fall theme of 鈥淢emory-Media-Archive鈥 with a special reading by poet B. H. Fairchild. Winner of the prestigious National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) Award, Fairchild will speak at the Downtown 黑料不打烊 YMCA (340 Montgomery St.) on Wednesday, Nov. 14, at 7 p.m. The event is free and open to the public, but seating is limited. For more information, call 315-443-7192 or visit syracusehumanities.org.聽

Fairchild鈥檚 reading is sponsored by the Downtown Writer鈥檚 Center (DWC) of the Arts Branch of the YMCA of Greater 黑料不打烊 and by the SU Humanities Center, which organizes and presents 黑料不打烊 Symposium for The College of Arts and Sciences and campus community.

鈥淲e are proud to partner with the Downtown Writer鈥檚 Center to present B.H. Fairchild, known for his moving portrayals of working-class Midwestern communities,鈥 says Gregg Lambert, Dean鈥檚 Professor of the Humanities and founding director of the SU Humanities Center. 鈥淗is poems provide powerful insight into an America that is often overlooked in our modern storytelling.鈥

Phil Memmer, DWC founder and executive director of the Y Arts Branch, agrees: 鈥淲hether it captures a single fleeting moment or a generation鈥檚 Zeitgeist, Fairchild鈥檚 work preserves how it feels to be human.鈥

Fairchild is the author of six volumes of poetry, including 鈥淓arly Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest鈥 (W.W. Norton & Co., 2002), winner of the NBCC Award, the California Book Award and the Rebekah Johnson Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry; and 鈥淭he Art of the Lathe鈥 (Alice James Books, 1997), winner of the Beatrice Hawley Award and a finalist for the National Book Award. Fairchild also won Pushcart prizes in 2009 and 2012.

The son of a lathe operator, Fairchild has written extensively about the desolate beauty of his native Kansas and Texas. Much of his work lies at the intersection of physical labor and memory, as explained in an interview with Boston College professor Paul Mariani: 鈥淰ery often, especially in my later teens and early 20s, I was existing in both worlds at the same time, watching a welder lay down a perfect seam while 鈥楳adame Bovary鈥 was walking around in my head, or observing the gleam of a freshly shaped and honed piece of stock while remembering the arc of a Brancusi sculpture.鈥

Fairchild, whose American aesthetic has been compared to William Carlos Williams鈥, James Wright鈥檚 and James Dickey鈥檚, is a professor of English at the University of North Texas.

 

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Rob Enslin

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