medicine

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Description (in English)

You Say Time is a River is a locative, digital poetry collection, created and currated by Maria Barnas for the AMC Kunststichting (Academic Medical Center Art Foundation).

Anyone who is in a waiting room, lives in her own special time zone. For some, time goes by slowly, for others, time pulsate like a stroboscope. Maria Barnas created poems for the Emergency Room of the AMC Hospital that open up a spaces where the different timelines of the visitors are made accessible.

Description (in original language)

You Say Time is a River is een ruimtelijke, digitale poëzie bundel, ontwikkeld en samengesteld door Maria Barnas in opdracht van de AMC Kunststichting.

Iedereen in een wachtkamer leeft in een eigen tijd. Voor sommigen verstrijkt de tijd als stroop, voor anderen pulseert de tijd als een stroboscoop. Maria Barnas maakte voor de afdeling Spoedeisende hulp van het AMC met poëzie een ruimte waarin ze de uiteenlopende tijdslijnen van de bezoeker betreedbaar maakt.

Maria Barnas nodigt u uit om een gedicht van maximaal drie regels aan te leveren waarin u uw eigen tijdsbeleving vanuit de wachtruimte beschrijft. Zij maakt een keuze uit de ingezonden gedichten en laat deze vertalen. De gedichten zijn na te lezen in de digitale dichtbundel die Barnas voor het AMC samenstelt, op deze website.

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"Voyeur with Dog" was the first of many slideshow fiction works created by Richard Holeton. The text tells the story of a lonely middle-aged man, coming to terms with the potential loss of his aging, canine companion. The slides describe the behavior of the main character (simply called "The Man") after his divorce, his relationship with his dog and his struggle to connect with others. He has few relationships and spends his time dwelling on memories of his ex-wife and musing about the lives of his (female) neighbors, like the "Girl Next Door" and "Woman at the Sink." Though the Man describes his own appearance and demenour as off-putting, he notices that people, especially women, are drawn to his "beautiful" dog. In contrast to the Man, "the Dog" attracts and delights everyone without effort. Walking the Dog becomes a reprieve from solitude and a source of comfort. However, as the Dog ages and acquires health problems, the Man realizes that he will not always be able to rely on his pet for support. 

Holeton continued to experiment with the slideshow format in the works: "Custom Orthotics Changed My Life" (2010), "Do You Have Balls?" (2011) and "Postmodern: An Anagrammatic Slideshow Fiction" (2017). As with his other slideshow fiction creations, "Voyeur with Dog" incorporate elements like: bullet points, large, easy-to-read text, still images, graphs and tables, a summary of key points, and even a closing Thank You slide.

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"Do You Have Balls?" is a slideshow prose-poem by Richard Holeton that explores issues of masculinity and the body. The presenter muses about how the presence or absence of testes affects his feelings of self-worth and way of relating to others. Each of the section headings is an iteration of the Seussian mantra: "Yes, I have ___ ball(s), and you have ___" Holeton previously experimented with the slideshow format in his works: "Voyeur With Dog" (2009) and "Custom Orthotics Changed My Life" (2010). As with these other slideshow fiction pieces, "Do You Have Balls?" incorporates elements like: bullet points, large, easy-to-read text, still images, graphs and tables, a summary of key points, and even a closing Thank You slide.

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By Glenn Solvang, 9 November, 2017
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Abstract (in English)

Elizabeth Wall Hinds reviews Andrew Miller’s first novel, Ingenious Pain, winner of the James Black Memorial Fiction Prize and the 1999 International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.