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SEPTEMBER 22, 2002 Brian Glaser spent his childhood in Detroit. He teaches in the English Department at Berkeley. He is completing a book about the significance of Hegel for understanding generational ruptures in American poetry. His poems appear in quarterlies, most recently North American Review. Benjamin Hollander was born in Israel and emigrated to New York City in 1958, at the age of six. He has lived in San Francisco since 1978. His books include Rituals of Truce and the Other Israeli (Parrhesia Press, forthcoming), Levinas and the Police (Chax Press, 2001), The Book Of Who Are Was (Sun & Moon, 1997), How to Read, too (Leech Books, 1992), and Translating Tradition: Paul Celan in France (editor, ACTS, 1988). Hollander's poetry and prose have appeared in a variety of journals, including Sulfur, Sagetrieb, Hambone, Five Fingers Review, Boxkite, and Raddle Moon. He currently teaches critical thinking, writing, and poetry at Chabot College in Hayward, California. |
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SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 * 7:30 p.m. 125 Clayton Street #6 (at Hayes) San Francisco |
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