stutter

Stutter: Jordan Scott and the Element Choir in Toronto

May 21

On Thursday, May 21, Vancouver performance poet Jordan Scott (Blert) and Toronto's improvisational Element Choir collaborate to produce original compositions. Stutter takes place at The Music Gallery (197 John Street); doors open at 7 p.m.

Stutter
Featuring Jordan Scott and the Element Choir
Thursday, May 21, 2009
The Music Gallery, 197 John Street
8 p.m. (doors at 7 p.m.)
$10 regular, $5 for Music Gallery Members
http://www.musicgallery.org/

Location: 
The Music Gallery
197 John Street
Toronto, ON
Canada
See map: Google Maps
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Jordan Scott reads in Richmond, BC

Mar 23

Jordan Scott (Blert) reads at Kwantlen Polytechnic University on Monday, March 23, at 12:00 p.m. in 1420 Boardroom.

Jordan Scott reads in Richmond
Monday, March 23, 2009
Kwantlen Polytechnic University, 8771 Lansdowne Rd
1420 Boardroom
Richmond, BC
Free

Location: 
Kwantlen Polytechnic University
8771 Lansdowne Road 1420 Boardroom
Richmond, BC
Canada
See map: Google Maps
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Bookninja posts audio interview with Jordan Scott

Bookninja.com features an audio interview with / reading by Jordan Scott, author of blert, a volume of poetry that explores the stutter.

Listen to it at http://www.bookninja.com/?page_id=4938. And while you're at it, why not download an excerpt from the book?

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Broken Pencil on Jordan Scott's art of stuttering

From Broken Pencil, Issue 41. By Erin Kobayashi.

If Jordan Scott's stutter magically disappeared and he continued to play soccer and rugby, his life could be very different right now. Fortunately, Scott's stutter stuck around. And as luck would have it, he broke his kneecap at 19 and was forced to stay inside for the summer. It was during that recovery period when Scott began to take his first serious stabs at poetry.

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Believing in Blert

By Stephen Burt
The Believer
January 1 2009

Language means things, but no language is only its meanings: any word, said aloud, has a sound, and every phrase is also, in physicists' terms, a set of waves moving through air, produced by tongue, pharynx, larynx, lungs, etc., as they act on the mix of gases we inhale or exhale. Since (at least) the heyday of Gertrude Stein, some poets have tried to focus on speech as physical event, on how brains make tongues create not meanings but sounds. These poets do not just complicate, but nearly sever, links between sound ('t' + 'r' + 'ee') and meaning (what happens when you think of a tree).

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Alberta Views finds blert a 'fascinating linguistic foray'

blert by Jordan Scott
By Jay Smith
Alberta Views
February 9 2012

Try saying this 'lip off' three times fast: 'fresh nugs / mouse milking / NASCAR // wrist flex / snorkel mosh / dental furrow / ease Pantene.' These are lines taken from blert, Jordan Scott's first book of poetry. Scott, a Calgarian and lifelong stutterer, wrote the book as a 'spelunk into the mouth of a stutterer.' It is a text designed to be a stutterer's nightmare verse.

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