Sinopsis
The Poetry Society was founded in 1909 to promote "a more general recognition and appreciation of poetry". Since then, it has grown into one of Britain's most dynamic arts organisations, representing British poetry both nationally and internationally. Today it has more than 4000 members worldwide and publishes the leading poetry magazine, The Poetry Review.With innovative education and commissioning programmes and a packed calendar of performances, readings and competitions, the Poetry Society champions poetry for all ages. "The Poetry Society is the heart and hands of poetry in the UK – a centre which pours out energy to all parts of the poetry-body, and a dexterous set of operations which arrange and organise poetry's various manifestations. It has a long distinguished history, and has never been so vital, or so vitalizing as it is now." Sir Andrew Motion
Episodios
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Lesley Sharpe reads 'Eyewitness' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 03minLesley Sharpe reads 'Eyewitness' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Chris Beckett reads 'The broom upside down' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 02minChris Beckett reads 'The broom upside down' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Lee Knapper reads 'Plums' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 02minLee Knapper reads 'Plums' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Andrew Dennison reads 'Courgettes' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 01minAndrew Dennison reads 'Courgettes' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Kit Buchan reads 'Hallowe'en Ghazal' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 01minKit Buchan reads 'Hallowe'en Ghazal' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Yong-Yu Huang reads 'Living as My Mother' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 01minYong-Yu Huang reads 'Living as My Mother' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Hannah Perrin King reads 'Inheritance' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 01minHannah Perrin King reads 'Inheritance' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Sorrel Briggs reads 'Heaven Down' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 01minSorrel Briggs reads 'Heaven Down' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Matt Barnard reads 'Two Boys at Midnight' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 54sMatt Barnard reads 'Two Boys at Midnight' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Fiona Larkin reads 'Absence has a grammar' | National Poetry Competition 2024
01/04/2025 Duración: 02minFiona Larkin reads 'Absence has a grammar' | National Poetry Competition 2024 by The Poetry Society
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Chen Chen Reads '2pm in provincetown—' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch
25/02/2025 Duración: 01minChen Chen Reads '2pm in provincetown—' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch by The Poetry Society
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(EXCERPT) Susannah Dickey Reads 'Sex Horse' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch
25/02/2025 Duración: 02min(EXCERPT) Susannah Dickey Reads 'Sex Horse' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch by The Poetry Society
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Crispin Best Reads 'In This Economy' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch
25/02/2025 Duración: 34sCrispin Best Reads 'In This Economy' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch by The Poetry Society
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Denise Saul Reads 'The White Room' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch
25/02/2025 Duración: 44sDenise Saul Reads 'The White Room' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch by The Poetry Society
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Jay Bernard Reads 'After Him' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch
25/02/2025 Duración: 02minJay Bernard Reads 'After Him' at The Poetry Review Winter 2024 Launch by The Poetry Society
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Young Critics review the T.S. Eliot Prize shortlist - part 2
10/01/2025 Duración: 27minListen to the final five of this year's Young Critics reviews in podcast form. You can watch all ten reviews on our YouTube channel: https://bit.ly/YoungCriticsReviews Tallulah Howarth pulls at the many threads of Rachel Mann’s ‘tapestry of alternative visions’, Eleanor Among the Saints, while Elliot Ruff uncovers the intertextual references of Gboyega Odubanjo’s Adam. Ahana Banerji discusses the skilful patterning and mirroring in Carl Phillips’s Scattered Snows to the North, Tusshara Nalakumar Srilatha finds an invitation to consider non-human perspectives in Katrina Porteous’s Rhizodont, and Priya Abularach elucidates the formal inventiveness in Karen McCarthy Woolf’s verse novel Top Doll. Since 2022, the T. S. Eliot Prize (the most valuable prize for new poetry collections in the UK and Ireland) and Young Poets Network, The Poetry Society’s leading platform for poets aged up to 25, have run an exciting new collaboration to support the next generation of poetry reviewers: the Young Critics Scheme. This
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Young Critics review the 2024 T.S. Eliot Prize shortlist - part 1
10/01/2025 Duración: 30minListen to the first five of this year's Young Critics reviews in podcast form. You can watch all ten reviews on our YouTube channel: https://bit.ly/YoungCriticsReviews Priyanka Moorjani reviews Signs, Music by Raymond Antrobus, guiding the viewer through the speaker’s ‘avalanche’ of emotions upon becoming a parent. Joe Wright considers the formal and poetic influences mapped throughout Hannah Copley’s Lapwing, while Sylvie Jane Lewis pays close attention to the epigraphs of Helen Farish’s The Penny Dropping and how they haunt the rest of the text. Eira Murphy situates Peter Gizzi’s Fierce Elegy within the poet’s wider corpus and influences, asking ‘in what ways might we come to a world increasingly pushed to the horizon of its own collapse?’, and Orla Davey interrogates Gustav Parker Hibbett’s use of mythology in High Jump as Icarus Story. Since 2022, the T. S. Eliot Prize (the most valuable prize for new poetry collections in the UK and Ireland) and Young Poets Network, The Poetry Society’s leading platfor
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'A Baby and A Tree' by Valerie Bloom - The Look North More Often Project
16/12/2024 Duración: 10minEach year, The Poetry Society commissions a new children’s poem celebrating the Christmas tree in Trafalgar Square, which is a gift from the city of Oslo to London, as a thank you for helping the King of Norway in World War 2. This year, Valerie Bloom wrote a magical new poem is called ‘A Baby and A Tree’, which is on display around the base of the tree in Trafalgar Square over the 2024 festive period. The poem was premiered at the lighting up ceremony of the tree in front of the mayors of Oslo, London and Westminster, plus thousands of spectators, by three children from a local primary school, St Vincent's RC Primary School. Their names are Aiden, Sebastian and Erietta and in this podcast, you’ll get to hear them read the poem, as well as talk about their experience discovering, writing and performing poetry. You can also find a plethora of free festive KS2 teaching resources and poems on The Poetry Society website at bit.ly/lnmo. Happy holidays from everyone at The Poetry Society!
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Foyle Young Poets of the Year Top 15 Winners 2023
16/07/2024 Duración: 24minThis is a podcast created by The Poetry Society. This podcast features the Top 15 winning poems read by the winners of the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award 2024. The top 15 winners represent some of the very best young poets in the world. This podcast includes strong language and themes including assault. For more information about the Foyle Young Poets of the Year Award please go to foyleyoungpoets.org.uk. Read the top 15 winning poems from 2023 at bit.ly/Foyle2023.
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Peter Gizzi & Richard Scott
30/01/2024 Duración: 34min‘We’ve always been here. As long as there has been soldiers, there have been poets. And it’s a long sad, venerable tradition.’ (Peter Gizzi) A Poetry Review podcast between Richard Scott and Peter Gizzi to accompany the Poetry Review Summer 2022 issue. Richard co-edited the issue with Andre Bagoo. You can read more about their issue here: poetrysociety.org.uk/publications/v…2-summer-2022/ You can buy the issue here: bit.ly/ThePoetryReview Richard Scott’s first book is Soho (2018), he guested edited The Poetry Review with Andre Bagoo in Summer 2022. Peter Gizzi’s recent books include, Now It’s Dark (Wesleyan, 2020), Sky Burial: New and Selected Poems (Carcanet, 2020), Archeophonics (Finalist for the National Book Award, Wesleyan, 2016) and In Defense of Nothing (Finalist for the LA Times Book Award, Wesleyan, 2014). His honours include fellowships from the Rex Foundation, the Howard Foundation, the Foundation for Contemporary Arts, and the Guggenheim Foundation. He has twice been the recipient of the