Montreal Zen Poetry Festival - March 10-13, 2011
The Montreal Zen Poetry Festival 2011 Edition is coming up and looks to be quite an event. A blend of Zen Buddhism and words with both contemporary and traditional poets, linguists, artists and musicians all offering up the best in “beyond words” and “spoken silence”.
The theme of the third edition of the Montreal Zen Poetry festival is “silence always speaks”. Based on the lineup present on the festival’s website, it looks to be a delightful mix of events to cover a wide variety of interests.
Award-winning poet Jane Hirshfield (After; Given Sugar Given Salt) writes from the depths of her formal Zen practice. She will lead a one-day poetry workshop and will headline Saturday night’s reading event, alongside acclaimed poet, translator, typographer, Robert Bringhurst (past nominee for the Governor General’s Award and Griffin Poetry Prize). Bringhurst’s language is imbued with moments of stillness, and delves into the thoughts and images of Zen masters and East Asian poets. Christopher Patton, Zen practitioner and poet (Ox), will join us from Salt Spring Island, BC to read from his latest work.
Kazuaki Tanahashi, translator of Zen Master Dōgen, master calligrapher, and Zen teacher, will present a calligraphy demonstration and three-day workshop, highlighting the play between word and image so essential to Chinese and Japanese culture.
Zen poet Steve Sanfield (USA’s first Storyteller-in-Residence) will be harmonizing his verse with the concerto of Paul Humphreys (composer, Zen practitioner) at Friday night’s event. Sanfield will also employ his captivating storytelling skills to speak of the poetry of 103-year-old Zen Master Kyozan Joshu, his teacher of fifty years.
Bringhurst will join Victor Sōgen Hori (McGill) and Steven Heine (Florida International University) to discuss the nature of poetic language within their respective domains. After receiving his doctorate in Western philosophy, Hori trained for thirteen years as a Zen monk in Japan. He is an authority on formal poetic practice within Zen kōan training, as exemplified in his book Zen Sand, a major translation project of verses studied by Zen monks.
Prof. Steven Heine has authored or edited twenty books on themes of Zen and language, including translations of poems by the influential Dōgen. Heine will be presenting the Hsiang Lecture on Chinese Poetry at McGill University in collaboration with the Centre for East Asian Research.
Finally, we will feature readings by francophone Quebec poets, including Janick Belleau and Micheline Beaudry, who write within the Japanese poetic form tanka, bringing the traditional Buddhist themes of impermanence and interdependence into contemporary poetic practice.
For more information, visit
www.montrealzenpoetryfestival.ca
Facebook: Montreal Zen Poetry Festival
Twitter: MtlZENpoetry