Why This Now? Introduction by Debra Di Blasi
What do we talk about when we talk about conceptual writing?
Wait.
Do we talk about conceptual writing?
And who's we?
This website is dedicated to writing that's not easily categorized. Writing that's too infrequently published. Writing that's concerned with the concept behind the "product" — whether fiction, poetry, nonfiction or a multitude of cross-dressing genres. Writing that explores the how it's done and the why it's done, not just the It's done!
Conceptual writing discloses the way we live now, our precarious existence illuminated in conscious choices made by writers hoping to push the act of writing beyond preconceived boundaries.
Who built those stone walls, anyway, and why don't we shiver in their moldering shadows?
A sense of risk-taking and fearless exploration exists in the visual arts that is sadly lacking in literature today. American fiction, for example, is still closely allied with 19th Century naturalism and far less interested in the possibilities of form than are the visual arts. Readers claim to crave "reality" but what they really want is some perverted notion of the real: tidy, facile and wholly comfortable.
It’s increasingly difficult to get published if a writer's literary investigations occur far from the mainstream center, which has as much to do with the politics of our times as with America's craving for passive entertainment. Well, they're entwined, aren't they? Apathy and politics: Intoxicated lovers who think it's grass they're strolling upon, not corpses.
Conceptual writing is necessary if we are to keep from drowning in our own excreta. As Goethe said: "The decline of literature indicates the decline of a nation."
Read the Review feature of conceptual writers' art, interviews and dialogs now. (Download times will vary. Requires Acrobat Reader)
If Fiction Isn't Real: cover art by Jirí Cêch
Download review_cover.pdf
The Label-less-ists by Debra Di Blasi
Download labellessists_final.pdf
Ink by Maria and Steve Tomasula
Download tomasulas_final.pdf
Literarchiture by Scott Helmes
Download scott_helmes.pdf
There Are No Rules: An Interview with
Eduardo Kac
Download kac_page.pdf
She Taking Her Space by Alexandra Grant & Michael Joyce
Download joyce_and_grant.pdf
Simple Math by Kass Fleisher and Joe Amato
Download amatofleisher_simplemath.pdf
We Have Nothing to Fear But August Highland
Himself ...um...Herself?
Download highland_page.pdf
Ainsworth by Jen Maxted
Download maxted2005.pdf
Water by Lidia Yuknavitch
Download water.pdf
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Grateful acknowledgement goes to Review and its publisher and editor, Mike Miller, and managing editor, Marcus Cain, for allowing me to guest edit a special feature on conceptual writing for the March 2005 issue. The task connected me with great writers and their great writing. And to them, too, I'm indebted, for having taken increasingly valuable time to create and discuss conceptual writing for Review and at the concurrent exhibition at Van Ackeren Gallery at Rockhurst University. Of course, I'm thankful to Steve Tomasula at Notre Dame University who organized the first &NOW Festival of Writing as a Conceptual Art that introduced me to some of these writers and provided a physical space and real time to share ideas regarding the art form. Long live the idea! Long live the idea of the idea!
Jirí Cêch interviews Debra Di Blasi About Conceptual Writing
Download DebraInterviewweb.mov
Surgery #151 from The Collector, a multimedia novel
Download Surgery151web.mov
Click here for more audio, video, and visual art.
about Debra Di Blasi
Debra Di Blasi won the 2003 James C. McCormick Fellowship in Fiction from the Christopher Isherwood Foundation, and her short story Sparrows was nominated for a 2004 Pushcart Prize. Books include the novellas Drought & Say What You Like (New Directions), winner of the 1998 Thorpe Menn Book Award, and a short story collection Prayers of an Accidental Nature (Coffee House Press) that The New York Times Book Review praised for its "clear, resonant prose, laced with bittersweet humor." Her short stories, essays, art reviews and articles have appeared in a variety of national and regional publications, including The Iowa Review, Notre Dame Review, Poetry Midwest, First Intensity, Chelsea, New Art Examiner, SOMA, New Letters, and Pitch where she served as art critic. Her fiction has been anthologized and adapted to film, radio, theatre, and audio CD in the U.S. and abroad. Collaborations with visual and audio artists have been featured museum installations, and her drawings, digital art and videos exhibited in prominent galleries. Screenwriting credits include The Walking Wounded, finalist in the 1996 Austin Screenwriters Competition, and Drought, for which she won the 1999 Cinovation Screenwriting Award. The short film Drought, directed by Lisa Moncure, went on to win a host of national and international awards, and was only one of six films selected for the Universe Elle section at 2000 Cannes International Film Festival. Debra is president of Jaded Ibis Productions, Inc., a transmedia corporation™ producing a mélange of audio interviews and music, videos, print and web fiction and visual art.







