A lifelong pursuit

Rare are the people who start honing their career at only five years old, but this was the case for 糖心vlog视频 alumnus Brent Cox. From the time he could hold a pencil, he has been writing poems.

鈥淎 lot of these narrative poems emerged from long hours playing in the bathtub with action figures until the water cooled, where I would still remain, shivering 鈥 nonetheless intent on bringing objects to life with language.鈥

He developed his skillset further in middle school when he started creating videos to complement his poems. 鈥淚 experimented with all kinds of mediums,鈥 Cox recalled, 鈥渂ut I most vividly remember the films I made with animated figurines and clay animation, also known as claymation.鈥

Some decades later, Cox is now defending his doctoral dissertation that mirrors the very thing he was doing all those years ago but on a much larger, more sophisticated scale by creating video-animated readings of poems and art. 鈥淧eople often have a very difficult time with poetry, and what attracted me to the medium of video is its ability to help make it less intimidating, while still preserving its mystery.鈥

When a poem is just words on a paper, it鈥檚 easy to get lost. 鈥淗earing it read aloud gives people a roadmap to follow,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey can better identify where sound patterns are occurring and, based on the inflection of the readers voice, can determine how words signify.鈥

More than a degree

It was Cox鈥檚 lifelong interest in exploring multimedia poetry that led him to enroll in UW Bothell鈥檚 Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing & Poetics program in 2015. In contrast to many other MFA programs, the writers in this School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences鈥 program enjoy the freedom to experiment across genres and media as it suits their creative purposes.

鈥淚 made a very intentional choice to go to UW Bothell because I greatly admired the work of the faculty and poets there,鈥 Cox said. 鈥淭hey were incredible role models and teachers 鈥 always encouraging me to experiment with multimedia, publish my work and network with others in the field.鈥

As evidenced by Dr. Amaranth Borsuk, associate professor and the MFA鈥檚 associate director, that encouragement extended far beyond the program鈥檚 duration. 鈥淥ne of the things I really appreciate and admire about Brent is his collaborative鈥痵pirit and intellectual generosity,鈥 Borsuk said. 鈥淚 have continued to follow Brent鈥檚 work, and I love that I still learn from and am energized by his many creations.鈥

That same long-lasting support exists within Cox鈥檚 cohort of fellow students, too. Six years after graduating from the University in 2017, Cox is publishing two UW Bothell alumni in The Topological Poetics Research Institute, the autonomous research collective he founded.

A place for poets

The collective, which launched in 2018, is a manifestation of Cox鈥檚 desire to create an institute for poetics that is entirely autonomous and focused specifically on researching poetry and poetics. It encompasses the work of individuals from dozens of different cities, states and even countries. In fact, the TPRI鈥檚 first print journal features writers from Ukraine, Russia, Australia, Poland and the United States.

Along with the authors, the collective also houses a diverse set of opportunities, including an annual Ecopoetry Workshop that takes place at llaria Mazzoleni鈥檚 Nature, Art, Habitat Residency in Taleggio Valley, Italy. Organized by Cox and collaborators Brooke Bastie, Courtlin Byrd and Simon Eales, this two-week residency explores collaborative, critical and creative connections between poetics and contemporary environmental issues.

Photo from Ecopoetics Workshop in Italy courtesy of Brent Cox

鈥淩ather than only providing time to write nature poetry,鈥 Cox said, 鈥淓copoetics Workshop is intent on gathering poets, multimedia and movement artists, theorists, philosophers, and researchers who are committed to advancing the way humans both understand and interact with nature.鈥

This year, in partnership with NAHR, the workshop will concentrate on the theme of air.

Airing out ideas

鈥淧articipants will be encouraged to explore the function, mechanism, importance and state of air from a wide range of perspectives,鈥 Cox said, 鈥渁nd to reflect on the impacts of air pollution and air quality degradation as it relates to climate change, atmospheric toxins and environmental racism.鈥

The workshop schedule involves alternating days of structured and open time. On structured days, the group meets in the morning to discuss the day鈥檚 theme, and in the afternoon they embark on a creative exercise.

Halfway through, a 鈥榳ork-in-progress鈥 event is held to give participants an opportunity for feedback as, at the end of the workshop, they will be presenting their final projects.

These projects have historically led to esteemed publications and conference presentations 鈥 including one at UW Bothell鈥檚 &NOW Conference in 2019. There, the TPRI organized two panels: One on the affordances of video for poetry was titled, 鈥淎sk Not What Video Can Do For Poetry But What Poetry Can Do For Video鈥 and another on materialist poetics was titled, 鈥淭oward Topological Poetics: Media, Materiality and the Impossibility of a Desaturated Media Environment.鈥

What鈥檚 more, the Ecopoetics Workshop has inspired a course by attendee Joanna Doxey at Colorado State University as well as a number of courses at the University of Buffalo that are taught by event founders Cox and Eales.

Caffeinated creatives

The TPRI runs a podcast, too, called 鈥淏uried Text,鈥 with core members Zack Brown, Byrd and Eales. 鈥淏uried Text is a good example of TPRI鈥檚 objective of doing fundamental poetics research that insists on expanding poetry beyond the page while building a community committed to unfolding the event of poetry,鈥 Cox explained. The podcast, which has featured a number of esteemed guests, has published more than a dozen episodes.

Expanding the poetics community even further, Cox runs a coffee blog and Instagram account鈥痗alled Pure Happiness Coffee. He describes it as 鈥渁 multimedia, poem and artwork project that includes writing, video, print zines, a computer game and more.鈥

Like with the TPRI, his intention is to build community and facilitate philosophical and aesthetic reflection 鈥 but in this case specifically surrounding the infrastructure of specialty coffee.

He does all of this while simultaneously teaching courses in the Environmental Humanities at the University of Buffalo, where he is currently defending his doctoral thesis. His dissertation, 鈥淚nfrastructuralist Writing,鈥 presents poems by Louis Zukofsky, Kamau Brathwaite, Asiya Wadud, Jose-Luis Moctezuma, Holly Melgard, Craig Dworkin 鈥 and more 鈥 as 鈥渕etamorphic entities that swallow criticism into their identity, freeing us from the illusory mandate of critical distance.鈥

In other words, Cox said, 鈥渕y dissertation argues that we read poems just as much as they read us, and in the process, the poem, and the reader, change.鈥

A passion, purpose and pursuit

In the past year, Cox has presented work related to his dissertation at the University of Cambridge 2022 Graduate Conference 鈥淲hat Does the Poem Think?鈥 as well as in Lake Como, Italy, at the Electronic Literature Organization鈥檚 2022鈥疌onference Exhibition of digital works.

Additionally, he received a race and technology grant to study at University of Colorado Boulder鈥檚 Media Archaeology Lab and has work recently published or forthcoming at &&& (Triple Ampersand) and in OEI, a poetics journal out of Stockholm, in an issue on Aural Poetics edited by Michael Nardone of the Center for Expanded Poetics at Concordia University in Montreal.

鈥淔or me, poetry is a lifelong pursuit,鈥 Cox said. 鈥淚t has been my passion for as long as I can remember. For those reading this who are committed to getting an MFA and interested in poetry and poetics 鈥 I cannot recommend UW Bothell enough.

鈥淚 moved from California to attend this University and explore new ideas and test the bounds of what is possible in poetry,鈥 he said. 鈥淧ushing those boundaries is what shaped me into the poet I am today.鈥

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