Home Morningside Events - Morningside Area Alliance Lectures Sickle of Syntax & Hammer of Tautology
2024 10 28 Sezgin Boynik1

Date

Oct 28 2024
Expired!

Time

6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Formats (virtual, in person, hybrid)

In-Person

Sickle of Syntax & Hammer of Tautology

You must register by 5pm on October 25, 2024 to attend this event.

Please join the Njegoš Endowment for Serbian Language and Culture and the Harriman Institute for a lecture by Sezgin Boynik. Moderated by Aleksandar Bošković.

In his lecture, Sezgin Boynik will introduce the publication Sickle of Syntax & Hammer of Tautology: Concrete and Visual Poetry in Yugoslavia, 1968–1983, which he edited as a special number (# 90–91) of OEI in 2021. Boynik will discuss example Yugoslav experimental poetry through specific historical and political context of socialist Yugoslavia.

Sickle of Syntax & Hammer of Tautology offers the first English-language overview of the history of the production of concrete and visual poetry in socialist Yugoslavia between 1968 and 1983. By focusing on mass-produced examples of concrete poetry, the publication presents these poetic experiments as organically linked to social movements, critical theories, and youth cultural revolutions. In his presentation, Boynik, will discuss the concrete and visual poetry in socialist Yugoslavia as an uneven and combined development, and emphasize its confrontational and organizational aspects.

Among others the publication includes accounts on the early years of OHO formation and its complex theories of words and things; an interview with Rastko Močnik on programmed art and political formalism; militant polemics of Goran Babić; Signalist contradictions; subjective structural devices of Judita Šalgo; zaum experiments of Vojislav Despotov; detective meta-texts of Slavoj Žižek; poetic self-management studies of Vujica Rešin Tucić; a feminist historicization of Ažin school for experimental poetry; democratization of visual poetry by Westeast; selections from special issues of the journals Pitanja, Problemi, Ulaznica, Dometi, Delo, Koraci, Vidik, Pegaz, and many other materials translated into English for the first time and presented in one publication.

Event Contact Information:
Eileen Huhn
(212) 854-6217
eph2125@columbia.edu