Warren Tallman's English 358 Lecture at SFU on July 15, 1981 Part 1 COPY 1

CLASSIFICATION

Swallow ID:
8647
Partner Institution:
Simon Fraser University
Source Collection Label:
Roy Miki Fonds
Sub Series:
Roy Miki Fonds

ITEM DESCRIPTION

Title:
Warren Tallman's English 358 Lecture at SFU on July 15, 1981 Part 1 COPY 1
Title Source:
Cassette and J-card
Language:
English
Production Context:
Classroom recording
Identifiers:
[]

Rights

Rights:
Copyright Not Evaluated (CNE)

CREATORS

Name:
Tallman, Warren
Dates:
1921-1994

Name:
Miki, Roy
Dates:
1942-
Notes:
Roy Miki is heard in the beginning of side one

Name:
Bissett, Bill
Dates:
1939-
Notes:
Warren Tallman introduces Bill Bissett in the beginning of side one

Name:
Mandel, Eli
Dates:
1922-1992
Notes:
Eli Mandel is also present in the lecture since Warren Tallman calls him

CONTRIBUTORS

MATERIAL DESCRIPTION

Image:
Image
Recording Type:
Analogue
AV Type:
Audio
Material Designation:
Cassette
Physical Composition:
Magnetic Tape
Extent:
1/8 inch
Sound Quality:
Good
Physical Condition:
Good
Other Physical Description:
Black and white clear jewel case with J-card

DIGITAL FILE DESCRIPTION

Channel Field:
Stereo
Sample Rate:
44.1 kHz
Duration:
T00:31:54
Size:
41.1 MB
Bitrate:
32 bit
Encoding:
WAV for master files and .MP3 for online files

Channel Field:
Stereo
Sample Rate:
44.1 kHz
Duration:
T00:31:47
Size:
41 MB
Bitrate:
32 bit
Encoding:
WAV for master files and .MP3 for online files

Dates

Date:
1981-07-15
Type:
Production Date
Source:
J-card

LOCATION

Address:
8888 University Dr, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6
Venue:
Simon Fraser University
Latitude:
49.2770
Longitude:
-122.9178

CONTENT


NOTES

Type:
General
Note:
Warren Tallman discusses W.H. (William Herbert) New, the Canadian poet and literary critic. He also references ideas from Eli Mandel, drawing on points raised during Mandel's lecture the previous day. Later in the lecture, Tallman shifts his focus to Bill Bissett and bpNichol, exploring what sets them apart from other poets and highlighting their unique contributions to Canadian poetry.

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