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BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260207
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615902482
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260208
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615903507
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260209
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615904532
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260210
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615905557
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260211
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615906582
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260212
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615907607
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260213
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615908632
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260214
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615909657
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260215
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615910682
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260216
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615911707
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260217
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615912732
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260218
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615913757
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260219
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615914782
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260220
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615915807
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260221
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615916832
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260222
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615917857
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260223
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615918882
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260224
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615919907
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260225
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615920932
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260226
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615922981
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260227
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615924006
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260228
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615925031
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260301
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615926056
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260302
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615927081
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260303
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615928106
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260304
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615929131
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260305
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615930156
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260306
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615931181
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260307
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615933230
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260308
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615934255
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260309
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615934256
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260310
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615935281
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260311
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615936306
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260312
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615937331
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260313
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615938356
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260314
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615939381
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260315
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615940406
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260316
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615941431
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260317
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615942456
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260318
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615943481
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260319
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615944506
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260320
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615945531
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260321
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615946556
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260322
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615947581
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260323
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615948606
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260324
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615949631
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260325
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615949632
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260326
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615950657
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260327
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615952706
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260328
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615953731
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260329
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615954756
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260330
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615955781
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260331
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615956806
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260401
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615957831
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260402
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615958856
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260403
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615958857
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260404
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615959882
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260405
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615960907
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260406
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615961932
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260407
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615962957
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260408
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615963982
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260409
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615965007
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260410
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615966032
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260411
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615967057
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibits
DESCRIPTION:The exhibition\, Some days\, everything is a machine\, traces t
 he shifting\, innovative\, and increasingly hybrid creative practices of po
 et and translator Mary Jo Bang across analog and digital formats.\n\nMateri
 als include photographs\, drafts of poetry manuscripts\, annotated proof co
 pies\, correspondence\, translation work\, and published texts. The exhibit
 ion highlights Bang’s creative and collaborative processes as a poet and tr
 anslator and includes photographs from her work as a visual artist. This ex
 hibition not only maps a creative process as it existed in the past\, but a
 lso how it is now and what it might become. \n\nBang’s multifaceted archive
 \, created over decades of rapidly evolving technological change\, illustra
 tes the need to strategically address the evolving nature of the poet’s cre
 ative practice in order to sustain it for future generations.\n\nThis exhib
 ition is part of the Mellon-funded Born-Digital Poetry: Planning for the Fu
 ture of Literary Archives project. Curated by Born-Digital Poetry fellow an
 d PhD candidate in Comparative Literature\, International Writers track\, S
 arah María Medina\, with special thanks to Born-Digital Poetry Fellow and P
 roject Archivist Christa Kileff and Modern Literature Collection Curator Jo
 el Minor.
DTSTAMP:20260414T053603Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20260412
GEO:38.648457;90.307739
LOCATION:Olin Library\, Ginkgo Reading Room
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Some Days\, Everything is a Machine: The Poetic Practices of Mary J
 o Bang
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_51348615968082
URL:https://happenings.washu.edu/event/some-days-everything-is-a-machine-th
 e-poetic-practices-of-mary-jo-bang
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
