Janice Lee's Blog, page 8
September 2, 2019
Ad Astra Reading Series @ Sunrise Project (Lawrence, KS) / September 15
Sunday, September 15, 2019
7 PM – 8:30 PM
Sunrise Project
1501 Learnard Ave. Ste. E,
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Crystal Boson writes short, dense poems that lay bare the complicated geographies of the United States and the lives of the Black, queer, and marginalized bodies that dwell within its boundaries. She currently writes about, and resides in the midwest. She is a Cave Canem and Callaloo fellow, and was awarded the Langston Hughes Creative Writing Award in 2014. She has work published in Blueshift Journal, Pank, Parcel, among other locations. Most recently her work: the bitter map was selected as the winner of the 2017 Honeysuckle Press Chapbook Contest by Saeed Jones.
Janice Lee is the author of 3 books of fiction: KEROTAKIS (Dog Horn Press, 2010), Daughter (Jaded Ibis, 2011), Damnation (Penny-Ante Editions, 2013), and 2 books of creative nonfiction: Reconsolidation (Penny-Ante Editions, 2015) and The Sky Isn’t Blue (Civil Coping Mechanisms, 2016). She writes about interspecies communication, plants & personhood, the filmic long take, slowness, the apocalypse, architectural spaces, inherited trauma, and the concept of han in Korean culture, and asks the question, how do we hold space open while maintaining intimacy? She is Founder & Executive Editor of Entropy, Co-Publisher at Civil Coping Mechanisms, Contributing Editor at Fanzine, and Co-Founder of The Accomplices LLC. She currently lives in Portland, OR where she is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Portland State University.
+ A community open mic featuring new writing from Janice’s generative workshop Co-Dependencies Writing Workshop w/ Janice Lee earlier in the day.
September 1, 2019
Co-Dependencies Writing Workshop @ Lawrence (Kansas) Public Library / September 15
Co-Dependencies: On Healing, Remembering, Breathing & Writing Trauma
Sunday, September 15, 2019
3:00PM – 4:30PM
Lawrence Public Library
Instructor: Janice Lee
“What really exists is not things made but things in the making.” – William James
How are the frames of reference and relationships between and of living beings activated? That is, how do different bodies and worlds articulate each other, or, how do we learn to be affected? How do we reconcile personal experience with historical fact? How do we reconcile history with memory? How do we reconcile truths with other truths? How does writing open up space while processing trauma or grief?
We will explore the articulation of personal experience, identity, and trauma (both lived & inherited) and look at the relationship of personal history & identity with aesthetics & narrative. We will explore how the presence of unresolved corporeal history and the impossibility of articulation or expression leads to new encounters in language and narrative via various aesthetic writing practices. We will also explore notions of personhood and interspecies communication through exercises in seeing, writing, breathing, and sensing.
There will be writing prompts, guided meditations, intuition exercises, shamanic practices, divination, mapping, unbinding wounds & trauma, and communing with plant & animal beings.
Free and open to the public.
Location: Meeting Room B
Bring a notebook/paper, something to write with, and a rock or stone of your choosing.
More info at Lawrence Public Library
August 1, 2019
Hugo House Workshop: Inherited Trauma & the Failure of Language / August 17

More Details at Hugo House Website
Term: Summer 2019
Start Date: 08/17/2019
Days of the Week: Saturday
Time: 10:00 am – 1:00 pm
General Price: $90.00
May 2, 2019
Memory’s Possibilities: Chelsea Biondolillo and Janice Lee @ Hugo House / August 15
Thurs Aug 15, 7 pm
Free
Hugo House
1634 11th Ave, Seattle
WA 98122
“Join us for a reading and conversation on place, memory, and possibility with lyric essayists Chelsea Biondolillo and Janice Lee. Chelsea Biondolillo is the author of two prose chapbooks, Ologies and #Lovesong, both from Etchings Press, UIndy. Her first full-length essay collection, The Skinned Bird, is forthcoming from Kernpunkt Press in June 2019. Janice Lee is a writer, editor, publisher, and professor interested in interspecies communication, the apocalypse, the Korean concept of han, inherited trauma, and personhood. She is the author of The Sky Isn’t Blue (Civil Coping Mechanisms, 2016) and cofounder of The Accomplices. “
April 25, 2019
Brandon Shimoda, in conversation with Janice Lee / July 29
Mon July 29, 7:30 pm
Powell’s City of Books
1005 W Burnside, Portland, OR 97205
Award-winning poet Brandon Shimoda reads from The Grave on the Wall, a lyrical portrait and tribute to his paternal grandfather, Midori Shimoda. Shimoda will be joined in conversation by Janice Lee, author of The Sky Isn’t Blue.
April 22, 2019
2019 ASLE Conference @ UC Davis / June 26-30
2019 ASLE Conference / Paradise on Fire
June 26-30, 2019 / University of California, Davis
ASLE 2019 Conference Details & Program
Plant Poetics: Healing Modalities
Stream: Plant and Food Studies
Chair: Megan Kaminski, University of Kansas
● Numberless Collective Bodies / Amanda Ackerman, Independent
● Vegetal Poetics: Proliferating from Loss / Megan Kaminski, University of Kansas
● Phytoconscious Love / Sonnet L’Abbé, Vancouver Island University
● Co-Dependencies & Becoming: The Languages of Personhood / Janice Lee, Portland State University
● All Plants Are Medicinal Plants: Learning through Looking / James Thomas Stevens, Institute of American Indian Arts
This Will Destroy You – Pedram Navab & Janice Lee @ Mother Foucault’s / May 31
7PM-9PM Friday, May 31, 2019
Mother Foucault’s Bookshop
523 SE Morrison St
Portland, Oregon 97214
Come to the shop on Friday, May 31 at 7 pm to celebrate the launch of This Will Destroy You, a new novel by Pedram Navab. With special guest Janice Lee.
Pedram Navab is a neurologist and a Fellow of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine who currently resides in Los Angeles. Educated at Brown and Stanford, he holds both a graduate degree in English/Modern Culture and Media and a JD. His debut novel, Without Anesthesia, was published in 2015 (Jaded Ibis). In his spare time, he acts and makes short films.
Janice Lee is the author of KEROTAKIS (Dog Horn Press, 2010), Daughter (Jaded Ibis, 2011), Damnation (Penny-Ante Editions, 2013), Reconsolidation (Penny-Ante Editions, 2015), and The Sky Isn’t Blue (Civil Coping Mechanisms, 2016). She writes about the filmic long take, slowness, interspecies communication, the apocalypse, and asks the question, how do we hold space open while maintaining intimacy? She is Founder & Executive Editor of Entropy, Co-Publisher at Civil Coping Mechanisms, Contributing Editor at Fanzine, and Co-Founder of The Accomplices LLC. She is an Assistant Professor of Fiction at Portland State University and can be found online at: http://janicel.com
Early Praise for This Will Destroy You:
”A riveting story that is at once shattering and wildly engaging.” — Lisa Lutz, New York Times Bestselling author of The Passenger
”This Will Destroy You is as delicate and sharp as a surgeon’s scalpel, precisely opening up visceral layers of a haunting psychoanalytic fable.” — Rosalind Galt, author of Queer Cinema in the World
”This Will Destroy You is both nightmare and ‘daymare’ — a glinting hypodermic shot into the reader’s heart and mind.” — Debra Di Blasi, author ofToday Is The Day That Will Matter
”No other contemporary novel has made the object of desire this accessible, this reflective.” — Jorge Armnenteros, author of The Roar of the River
“This Will Destroy You is an immense and devastating work.” — Janice Lee, author of The Sky Isn’t Blue
“A gripping book that satisfies the cravings of the mind and the soul.” — Nicole Rizzuto, author of Insurgent Testimonies
AN ARMFUL OF WORDS @ H-Mart / May 24
AN ARMFUL OF WORDS A POETIC CELEBRATION OF THE BELMONT H MART
Write to Publish 2019 @ PSU / April 27
A one-day conference connecting writers to the publishing industry
Saturday, April 27th, 2019, 9 am – 6 pm
Smith Memorial Student Union
1825 SW Broadway
Portland, OR 97201
Panel 6 – Be Aware of Your Surroundings: Conscious Editing and Writing
Description: Sometimes our words have meanings that we never intend for them. Being a conscious writer or editor can help you be more mindful of the way your words may be perceived by readers. This panel will outline the importance of being aware of your writing when developing potentially difficult scenes or characters and how to use language effectively. It’s a great practice in empathizing with the reader—a skill all writers should have in their toolkit.
Speakers: Jessie Carver, Freelance Editor & Writer; Sarah Heilman, Editor at Ex Libris Editing; Jessica Mehta, owner of MehtaFor and Poetry Editor at Bending Genres Literary Review, Exclamat!on, and Airlie Presst; Janice Lee, Writer, Editor, & Publisher
Location: SMSU 238
April 18, 2019
.:LOOP:. Reading and Performance by Corporeal Writing Mammals / April 20
5PM-8PM Saturday, April 20
Corporeal Writing
510 SW 3rd Ave.
Portland, Oregon 97204
Please come witness Corporeal Writing participants read along with me and Lidia Yuknavitch at Corporeal Center on Sat, 4/20 from 5-8pm. You can find us at 510 SW 3rd Ave Suite 101, in the old Postal building just across the Morison bridge and in the same bldg as Killler Burger. We don’t call our comrades students because that top down jam just isn’t how we roll.
Just so you know, no one will be turned away for inability to pay at the door, but we are asking you to consider
$5 or so, so we can keep offering a space for anyone to write for free on Tues-Fri, 12-6pm.
Love .:LOOP:.
Domi
Our phenomenal readers/performers are:
Dot Hearn
Pamela K. Santos
Annie Gudger
Jewels
Bethann Cartino
Janice Lee
Katie Guinn
Kelsey Taylor
Zaji Cox
Lidia Yuknavitch