Christine Hamm Astoria, NY email: inktastesbitter@yahoo.com
C.V. Education
Fall 2006 PhD in English (in progress) Drew University 1993-1995 MSW in Social Work, NYU 1987-1989 MA in English with Certificate in Creative Writing, SUNY-Binghamton 1983-1987 BA in English, Reed College
Affiliations
2005 Second Vice President of Literature, Women's Studio Center 2004-Present Editorial Board, Vernacular 2002-Present Steering Committee of Literature, Women’s Studio Center 2002-Present Poetry Teacher, Women’s Studio Center, L. I. C., NY 2002 Literary Editor, Wide Angle Magazine, L. I. C., NY 2002 Member, Queens Council of the Arts 2001-Present Member, International Women’s Writing Guild 2001-Present Member, Women’s Studio Center, L. I. C., NY
Awards
2006 Full Scholarship for Graduate Studies towards a PhD in English, Drew University 2006 Nominated for Pushcart Prize by Mayapple Press 2004 Nominated for Pushcart Prize by VLQ 2003 Finalist in the Atlanta Review International Poetry Contest
Related Experience
2006-Present Rutgers University Adjunct Expository Writing: composition course focused on developing analytic thinking.
2005-2006 College of New Rochelle Adjunct Modes of Analysis: advanced course on reading and analyzing all genres of literature.
2005-2006 College of New Rochelle Adjunct Logic and Argumentation: advanced composition course.
2005 Women’s Studio Center Queens, NY Second Vice President of Writing Center Responsible for the following activiites: Designed outreach materials and implemented outreach on the web and in person, Started monthly women's reading series at Bowery Poetry Club, Ran monthly writers' forum for women, Started advertising campaign for writing center, Made decisions regarding curriculum for classes of writing center, researched local and nation wide grants for writing center, Designed and published print edition of Vernacular.
2005-present Women In Need New York, NY Poetry Teacher Designed poetry appreciation and writing course curriculum for women at drug rehab center. Compiled appropriate materials and writing exercises. Ran weekly class of 12 students.
2002-present Women’s Studio Center Queens, NY Poetry Teacher Designed poetry appreciation and writing course curriculum for adults Developed advertisements and ran outreach efforts for class on the web and in print Compiled appropriate materials and writing exercises Ran weekly 1 and ½ hour class on weekends
1995 Self-Help Community Center Bayside, NY Poetry Teacher Designed poetry appreciation and writing course curriculum for seniors at senior center Compiled appropriate materials and writing exercises Ran class of 30 students for one hour weekly
1988–1989 SUNY-Binghamton Binghamton, NY Teaching Assistant Designed course curriculum for writing class Ran 4 classes of 20 students weekly, focusing on exploring meaning in literature and improving writing and analysis skills
1987–1988 SUNY-Binghamton Binghamton, NY Teaching Assistant and Tutor Tutored 30 college students weekly on ESL and writing analysis issues Assisted in restructuring tutoring program
Editorial Experience
2005-Present Editorial Assistant Lungfull! Magazine (circ. 3,000) Assist editor in all aspects of production, but especially grant writing and development.
2004-Present Co-editor on editorial board of Vernacular, a new online journal of women's writing Read and review all poetry and fiction submissions. Meet with editorial board to discuss acceptances/rejections.
2004-Present Copy-editor Spire Magazine (circ. 1,000) Copy-edit accepted fiction submissions before publication.
2004 Editorial Assistant 12Gauge.com. Working with head of poetry department, read and approved or rejected all poetry submissions for previous 4 years.
2002 Literary Editor Wide Angle Magazine (circ. 5,000) Read and accepted or rejected all fiction and poetry submissions to a monthly Queens based magazine. Acted as liaison to all literary authors, and did outreach for submissions. Copy-edited submissions once accepted. Worked with the Editor and Publisher of magazine.
1989-1990 Editorial Assistant Putnam Publishing Worked with editors of trade paperback and hardcover fiction. Wrote advertising copy for catalogue and book covers. Read slush pile. Liaison with other publishing houses and agents. Copy-edited manuscripts and copy. Christine E. Hamm, Poet Professor Painter 11:23 PM
Publication History
Book: The Transparent Dinner, Fall 2006, Mayapple Press. Chapbooks: The Salt Daughter, Winter, 2005, Little Poem Press. The Animal Husband, Spring 2006, Dancing Girl Press.
poetry
2007
Simple Machines, What Happens When Things Burn by Listenlight The Holy Birds of Astoria, A Few Important Films by Blue Fith Review Millions of These Particles by Ballard Street Poetry The Architect of Appetite, Gretel Dreams by Madhatter's Review
2006
Popular Baby Names by Horseless Review Begin at the Mouth, Miscarriage Song by MiPoesias March 25, 1911, The 7th Year by Blue Fifth Review Definition of a Tree by Identity Theory The Call by Listenlight The Weight of the World by Melancholia's Tremulous Dreadlocks Untitled Visual Poems by The Younger Poets Anthology, 2008 The Underneath by RALPH --- The Review of the Arts, Literature, Philosophy, and the Humanities The 7th Year, Memoir of an Unrepentant Thief by The Goodnight Show (podcast) The Transparent Dinner (poem) by Progress Chrome Looting by Washing the Color of Water Golden
2005
Love Hurts by Rattle Notes for the Modern Woman by Snowmonkey The Mule Deer by Rhapsodia Door by Slab My Mother's Basement by Pebble Lake Review, A Daughter's Love Song by Vernacular Understanding Girls and Sentences by The Misfit Library Toilets I Have Known by The Moonwort Review Slut, Discount Heaven and Affection Control by Lodestar Quarterly Stable by Spire Magazine Animal Husbandry in The Homewrecker Anthology (SoftSkull) Qualities of Sugar by Block Magazine Megan by Andromeda In-flight
2004
Diary of a Thief by VLQ Her Shoes by Loop Self-Portrait as a House by Quiet Feather Who has not wished her husband into a cat? by Exquisite Corpse Who has not wished her husband into a cat? by Monday Night Lit Raised by Wolves by Pulplit In the Park of Lost Ideas and For Andrew, After College by Plum Ruby Review June's Lament by Ululation Modern Maid by Poetry Super Highway Joy School by Adirondack Review Sylvia: a Eulogy by Tertulia Magazine Modern Maid by Nth Position Resting State by Flashquake American Dream by Watchword Press
2003
Kiss or Kill by the Arbutus Review Joy School by The Absinthe Literary Review The Underneath by Coelacanth Magazine Modern Maid by Starving Arts To Be a Blonde by Foliate Oak Online The Dressmaker’s Daughter by Alsop’s Review Octavo (This poem was also shortlisted for the Alsop’s Review Poetry Prize.)
2002
Empty Bed by Taint Magazine Empty Bed by Whalelane Magic Trick, The Cul de sac Angel, and Cat Eating Pizza by Digitalhammer.com The Jon Poem, Doll Descending a Staircase by Beekiller Empty Bed, To Greenpoint, Hysterical Blindness and The Anatomy of Distance by Burning Word Spring and Amorous Morsels by C/Oasis My Father Entering Me by Word Salad The Addict Renames the Days by Shampoo Poetry Thirteen Ways of Killing a Kitten by Improvijazzation Nation Science Gone Mad by Wicked Alice Sex in Middle America by Riverbabble The Bad Secretary by Small Spiral Notebook Dream Cats by Poetry Midwest Getting Over by Ecletica What it Means to be White and A Promise by canwehaveourballback.com What Remains at K-Mart, According to my Dream on Wednesday by Stirring Magazine American Dream and Sex Ed by Sniffy Journal Bite Me, Ugly and In the elevator by 3AM Magazine One Night Standing by Soapboxgirls Mad Play Summer by the Toys in Babeland Salon The Dressmaker's Dummy by the Morpo Review
2001
1,000 Words for Snow by Vert! 1,000 Words for Snow by Diagram Mad Play Summer by Cleansheets One Night Standing and 1,000 Words for Snow by Bluffmag
fiction
2002
Born to be Wild by Sex and Guts Magazine The Curse, Woman in Search of Herself by Woodenfish The Curse, Woman in Search of Herself by Slow Trains Christine E. Hamm, Poet Professor Painter 11:26 AM
critical writing
Poetry Project Newsletter Book Review of Pieces of Air in the Epic, by Brenda Hillman
Altar Magazine Book Reviews for Violet: A Murder,The End of Art, Fierce Attachments, Raising the Queen of Heaven, The End of Art, If She Were a Woman, American Sci-Fi TV, Cloudlife, Because Why, Surfing Armageddon, Seeing The Unspeakable and others. (Reviews not available online)
Get Underground Neckface for President A review of the artist Neckface and the hype surrounding him http://getunderground.com/underground/features/article.cfm?Article_ID=1681
11211 Magazine LASE-Menance 2 Society A discussion of the graffitti artist, NYC-LASE, and his venture into gallery space http://www.11211magazine.com/editor/issue15/artart15a.htm
NYMetropolis An Iris Is an Iris A Review of William Kentridge’s show at the New Museum. www.nymetropolis.com/html/vol1no5_AnIrisI.htm
She-Zine The Ghost (Dream) in the Machine: Christine Hamm on what your internet experience really means. www.she-net.com/she-zine/
Pemmican Reviews Review of Chapbook; Dictation. www.pemmicanpress.com/Pemreviews.html
Monthly column about contemporary art published at Suite101.com from 2000-2001 Christine E. Hamm, Poet Professor Painter 11:29 PM
Performance History (all in NYC)
Speakeasy: 9/01, Thesauraushead:10/01, Women's Studio Center:12/01, Women's Studio Center: 1/02, Teachers and Writers : 4/02, Thesauraushead: 4/02, The Charleston: 5/02, 6/02, The Read Cafe: 7/02, Women's Studio Center: 9/02, 10/02, East Side Oral: 3/04, Halcyon: 11/04, Women's Studio Center: 1/05, Galapagos: 5/05, the Bowery Poetry Club: 6/05, Poetry vs Comedy: 8/05, Atomic Cafe: 9/05, Bowery Poetry Club: 10/05, St. Mark's Poetry Project: 2/06, Happy Ending: 2/06, Bar 13: 3/06, Galapagos: 8/06, Ear Inn: 11/06, Drew University: 11/06, Women's Studio Center: 11/06.
Reviews of My Work
"Emily Dickinson exhorted poets to "Tell all the Truth but tell it slant--" and in The Transparent Dinner, Christine Hamm deftly achieves this goal. Throughout this book she exposes familial dysfunction, marital complexity, and the confusion of traveling into the larger world, all with imagery that falls deliciously askew. These poems are full of animals both dangerous and domestic, of sex both dangerous and domestic, of flames that wound and cauterize. I was turning thirteen the way milk turns, becomes thicker, more complicated, fragrant. As in those lines (from "The Family Practice"), there is both stench and beauty here, both grim reportage and fractured fairy tale. The strength of this book is in its relentless refusal to distinguish between the two, exposing the place where horror and magic commingle to create something deeper than a simple truth. These poems tell secrets -- dirty ones, delicious ones, ones you know you could be punished for hearing. Hamm is a thief and a trespasser, and her readers are the richer for it."
---Anne Haines, Five Women Poets, honorable mention, Thomas Merton Foundation's 2006 "Poetry of the Sacred" contest.
"If you’re looking for a quaint book of rhyming verse, The Transparent Dinner is not the collection for you. Christine Hamm’s poetry is a whirling carnival of family dysfunction, talking animals and deathbed confessions. These poems are discarded doll’s heads littering a dried-out field. They give you the feeling you’ve just walked into a situation you weren’t supposed to witness but can’t stop watching. They suck you in, spin you around and leave you breathless. Reading Hamm’s poetry is like watching a feminist version of The Shining except even more jarring and wickedly funny."
-- Cheryl Burke, writer and producer of PVC: The Poetry vs. Comedy Variety Show
"Christine Hamm's The Salt Daughter takes us on a journey through the secret kitchen of an American family. This daughter is no shrinking violet. Like Alice in the well, she swims through spoilt milk, soup, wine, rotten eggs and ice cream. She is the dark bud on a head of cabbage, the burnt patch in the pot of soup, the cotton candy under the nails of a fighter. In turning back to see mother, father and siblings, The Salt Daughter is sea water and chloride, cathartic and acid. Hamm's brilliant collection resounds with the force of a fairy tale. The Salt Daughter looks back, but she never flinches."
----Rebecca Loudon, author of Tarantella
"The poems in The Salt Daughter evoke a fairy tale world that is anything but. In this startlingcollection, children break off bits of their mother and are left with throats drawn in thirst. The mother is made of twigs, lives under the bed like a nightmare, sings inside their bodies. She’s so small I can fit my tongue all the way around her neck. Hamm’s familial explorations are daring, often tragic, and the poems are the “dark star” we willingly sail towards."
-- Amanda Auchter, author of Light Under Skin and editor of Pebble Lake Review Christine E. Hamm, Poet Professor Painter 11:31 PM
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