Serenade on PW
Serenade gets reviewed by Publisher’s Weekly here.
“My thing is that I’m like unreasonable,” announces Ellsworth in a crafty, cagey debut collection that manifests as a “darkening house of low-tide astonishment.”
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Keni
Misplaced Lens Cap

tannertan36
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
NASA
Stranger Things
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titsay
todays bird
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
YOU ARE THE REASON
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d e v o n
Not today Justin

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will byers stan first human second
dirt enthusiast
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
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@brookeellsworth
Serenade on PW
Serenade gets reviewed by Publisher’s Weekly here.
“My thing is that I’m like unreasonable,” announces Ellsworth in a crafty, cagey debut collection that manifests as a “darkening house of low-tide astonishment.”
12 or 20 (second series) questions with Brooke Ellsworth
I answer some questions for rob mclennan in this interview.
“Most of Serenade was written in a frenzy during the late summer of 2014. In many ways, it was more of me working out the tangles from my first two chapbooks,Thrown and Mud. I press upon a lot of history of feminine brutality and eco-disaster, do a lot of urgent lineation around flood zones. Serenade became some metacognition of me listening to water, while realizing this was a self-eroding reflection. Serenade changed everything, because I let the editing process chip away at the poems’ temporality. I was doing a lot of hiking around the tidal estuary surrounding Indian Point Energy Center.”
November 1st, Octopus Books
I’ll be reading at this AWP offsite reading at Foundry Gallery alongside such inimitable authors: Sawako Nakayasu, Rae Armantrout, Christine Shan Shan Hou, Simone I. John, and others.
An impossibility??????????????
We are everyone's dogs.
We are everyone's dogs. 🇺🇸
Auroras Larger Than Earth Spotted Over Jupiter
And these hyper auroras never stop:
“Jupiter is able to generate its own lights,“ says Gladstone. The process begins with Jupiter’s spin: The giant planet turns on it axis once every 10 hours and drags its planetary magnetic field around with it. As any science hobbyist knows, spinning a magnet is a great way to generate a few volts—it’s the basic principle of DC motors. Jupiter’s spin produces 10 million volts around its poles."Jupiter’s polar regions are crackling with electricity,” says Gladstone, “and this sets the stage for non-stop auroras."The polar electric fields grab any charged particles they can find and slam them into the atmosphere. Particles for slamming can come from the sun, but Jupiter has another, more abundant source nearby: the volcanic moon Io, which spews oxygen and sulfur ions (O+ and S+) into Jupiter’s spinning magnetic field. “ (source: NASA)
Dark Matter: The interrelation between climate change and colonialism
Written (and posted on Facebook) by Dark Matter Poets December 24, 2015
People have asked us about the connections between #climatechange and colonialism. Many activists and scholars have been making these connections for a very long time--a simple search will yield a lot of results. But, perhaps as a starter for people who aren't familiar with these connections (and as an invitation to learn more!), here are a few thoughts on how climate change is linked to the historical and contemporary reality of colonialism(s). In the aftermath of #COP21 in Paris, as many peoples demand more urgent action and reparations from global powers for the impacts of climate change, hopefully this might help some understand why every dollar/pound/euro and policy that is being demanded is not only deserved but incredibly, urgently necessary.
1. "Global warming" is a misleading term, both scientifically and politically. The earth is not all warming at once, and not at all uniformly. Misunderstanding of this fact is why you can have Republican Senator Jim Inhofe bring a snowball to the Senate floor and claim that climate change is a hoax. Climate change is *not* a globally uniform phenomenon, at all. Its impacts are incredibly regionally contingent, and often the higher level of uncertainty and flux (in temperature, storm events, and rainfall) brought on by climate change is a greater immediate threat than overall warming. What does this have to do with colonialism? Well, the communities that are most immediately impacted by climate change include small farmers, fisherfolk, and others who economies rely more directly on environmental "predictability”. For a simple example: South Asian wheat farmers are expected to lose *at least* 1/3 of their crop yield by 2050, but it’s highly highly unlikely the guys on Wall Street or real estate investors are going to see drops that rapidly. (Can you imagine if Wall Street was crashing that bad across the board? They would jump into action asap!) Essentially, climate change is hitting a lot of peoples' economies NOW. And those peoples tend to be formerly or presently colonized communities.
2. Climate change is intimately linked to fossil fuel consumption and overuse. The process is something like this: fossil fuels are burned, CO2 and other carbon compounds are released into the air, they create a “greenhouse gas effect” that traps heat in the atmosphere, and the various compounded and complex effects of climate change result from there. The hyper-demand for fossil fuel use is hugely linked to the history of colonialism. The rapid project of settlement and expansion in the colonial United States (e.g. the building of the Transcontinental Railroad), for example, required a very concentrated and “easy” energy source, along with cheap labor. The Industrial Revolution, and the increased accumulation of wealth and power in the West that accompanied it, was extremely dependent on fossil fuel use. Fossil fuels also rank high among resources that have been colonially pilfered from land and water across the world to make that wealth accumulation possible. For example: look up the history of British Petroleum’s linkages to the colonization of Nigeria and present-day political repression Azerbaijan.
3. War is a staple of how colonial maintenance of control (over land, people, sovereignty, and resources) is executed. It also happens to be a huge fore of climate change. For example: the United States Department of Defense, on its own, is the world’s 34th largest emitter. Ideologically, this is consistent. The logic of war is consistent with the driving logic of Western power’s inaction on climate change: that the land, water, and air are somehow “theirs” though accountability and stewardship for the same is not.
4. Much of colonialism is/was actually carried out not only by governments but by corporations that had heavy links (i.e. revolving doors) to and monopolies granted by those governments. Think “Dutch East India Company”. Similarly, climate change is not some accident caused by individual consumers across the world. The thinking that both climate change and other colonial processes are highly dispersed phenomena makes it harder to target the institutions carrying out the majority of the violences (states & corporations). 2/3 of all carbon emissions are actually caused by just 90 multinational corporations, including several government-run enterprises like enterprises like Saudi Aramco and Norway’s Statoil. Fossil fuel lobbies are huge and corrupt—and they have no interest in genuinely shutting down this machine.
5. At the moment, climate change is already creating large-scale displacement, especially for island nations like Kiribati, Tuvalu, and the Marshall Islands. The UN estimates that about 200 million people will be displaced by climate-related phenomena by 2050. Why are you not hearing about this? Corporate media doesn’t care. Essentially, climate change is one mechanism by which, without even sending in a traditional ‘army;, governments and corporations are able to destroy economies, lands, and community sovereignty. They weaponize the earth instead. And powerful nations are already failing to claim responsibility. For example: look up the case of Ioane Teitiota, a climate refugee from Kiribati, whose claim was refused by New Zealand courts.
6. Many of the regional/local impacts of climate change—especially disastrous phenomena like forest fires, large-scale agricultural yield loss, and coastal storm events—are exacerbated specifically by shifts towards colonial/corporate land, water, and air practices. Such practices include bans on seed-saving, privileging of water-intensive crops, hyper-deforestation, overfishing, and coastal overdevelopment. The regions and peoples facing the worst impacts from these phenomena also tend to be those with less infrastructure to provide rapid relief. Storms and floods account for about 70% of climate disaster-related deaths in poorer nations. In this context, money that global powers & multinational corporations contribute to climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts should be framed as “debt” or “reparations”, not as “aid”—since their wealth was in part built on climate injustice in the first place.
Near Fantasy
,An Optimism
I will never forget the time when I was young on arbor day and we were being told about the hypothetical melting of the glaciers as a direct result of industrialization and i broke down, faced with the terrifying chaos of that possibility (how could I be alive and this be true, irreconcilable to my baby brain) and i was reassured that this was far into the future, never a possibility in my lifetime, this was a thought experiment to get u to recycle, a dystopia to live in relation against, but these reassurances are incredibly damaging and incredibly politicized, there are those who gain from our feelings of helplessness as new shipping routes are mapped thru the polar regions and shell sets up shop in the arctic, as migrants try to cross the Mediterranean by the thousands, and i vowed long ago to never proliferate those feelings of helplessness and to never outsource the agency of baby brains, to never disregard at the agency of the anthropocenic environment > realities that are "chillingly obvious" (evolutionary biologist Jared Diamond), to resist these enclosures and knock down the ones that are in the process of being built, we are responsible for each other and we are responsible to dismantle the declarative rhetoric of eternity, afterlife, purity (the divestment of the earth, white divestment) and to engage in a inquiry rhetoric of fermentation (rot, accretion, fallibility, paradox), nothing ever goes away, June 23, 2015
Strawberry moon
Yesterday, I was fortunate enough to read alongside Roberto Montes, EC Belli, & K Lorraine Graham, for the In Your Ear reading series in Washington DC, housed in the DC Arts Center. Here I am, matching the glitchy painting behind me.
“Identity” by X-Ray Spex
This past spring, Coldfront included my thoughts on X-Ray Spex’s song, “Identity” for their Song of the Week column (the No, Dear residency).
“Poly Styrene, the angel-brain of X-Ray Spex, had visions of pink lights.“