Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts
It will end on the day of thieves :: Submission deadline
It will end on the day of thieves, merchants and orators. A suitable sentiment for either end-time prophecies or submission deadlines. At Artichoke Haircut we do occasionally collude, conspire, share tea and fondle what some call fringe groups or crazies or cults, but we'll leave those discussions for another time. For now we'll just assume this sentiment means it's getting to be the "end-times" (wink) for submissions. It's the last week to submit in time for our Spring 2012 issue. The deadline is December 15th. This Thursday. Get 'em in.
Read guidelines here: Submit
Send things here: submit [at] artichokehaircut [dot] com
P.S. If you didn't click on the link above, please, do yourself a favor and click on this: William Tapley. This guy is so devastatingly, beautifully mad that he gives me a headache while simultaneously making parts tingle I'm ashamed to name or talk about on this public of a forum. (Hint: find "Denver Airport")
Labels:
A.H. Magazine,
Art,
Poetry,
Prose,
Submit
You're Allowed :: December 1st
Every month I run into the same problem: I try and think of a new thing or things to say about a reading that goes basically on the same trajectory from month to month. Maybe this month I'll try metaphors, some of which may or may not explain the general ambiance of that room on that day when we're all sitting in it:
-Dramamine is used to prevent nausea and when the ocean is far from our heads we feel sad.
-Fireflies in a field appear as strange landing pads for the kinds of birds that don't exist or won't land.
-The oranges are in a bowl. The bowl is on the table. We cannot eat them. If we do it will no longer be summer. They rot. It is still summer. It is about to snow.
-Alcohol has made us speak in a soft voice to our feet. The city is large. We may never hike again.
-When the dishes are used and piled in the sink I feel as if I have lots of friends.
-Buses have pretense of community. So do toes.
-Timmy Reed likes Wal-mart. There aren't that many ways to say hello. Only old or worried men say hello and feel it in their throat. Timmy Reed likes Wal-mart.
-Succulent plants look like they should taste like tequila but in a much different way than a pig + a cow should taste like a hot dog.
That ought to explain everything. Yes? Good. But if it doesn't, please send all questions to nobodyslistening@wedontcare.com.
Bios:
-Megan Boyle has jumped into a freezing cold bay though no one wanted her to. She came out smiling and smoked a cigarette. She has broken her ribs on a seesaw at 3am. She married Tao Lin in Vegas. The preacher was old and looked tired. The garishness of ceremony happened only virtually. She has peed in your sandbox. She has a new book out called "Selected Unpublished Blog Posts of a Mexican Panda Express Employee" (Muumuu House). She has been published by online places: here, here, here, here, etc. etc.
-Sarah Jane Miller hosts the Town Square Reading series at the marvelous Minás Gallery in Hampden, 3rd Sundays, and she wants to see you there. When not working as a saddle-shoed librarian, she can be found running, cooking curries, and watching old Bela Lugosi films.
-Little Lungs Little Hips is a band. They are girls. Grietje Smid may kick your ass and plays violin. Megan Lloyd plays guitar, sings and is Little Lungs Little Hips.
Labels:
Dionysus,
Poetry,
Prose,
Reading Series,
You're Allowed
You're Allowed :: November 3rd
It feels like forever since we've done one of these, these, reading-things. Though it's only been a little over a month. But no matter, we've missed the hell out of you, my darlings (note the hint of Royal Tenenbaums). So this month, in order to get back into the swing of things, we're coming back to Dionysus with a bang. We are proud to feature two great poets, Mike Young and Kendra Kopelke. And as always we'll cap the night off with an open mic.
See ya'll on the third floor.
-Mike Young is the author of Look! Look! Feathers (Word Riot Press 2010), a book of stories, and We Are All Good If They Try Hard Enough (Publishing Genius Press 2010), a book of poems. He co-edits NOÖ Journal and runs Magic Helicopter Press. He lives in Baltimore, MD.
You can read some of Mike's work here or here or here or here or here or here.
-Kendra Kopelke is a widely acclaimed poet and a fixture on the Baltimore literary scene. She directs the MFA in Creative Writing & Publishing Arts at the University of Baltimore. She has been nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize and was named “Best Poet” by Baltimore Magazine in 2001. Kopelke’s poetry collections include: Eager Street; Carpe Diem, Ants (the link has nothing to do with the book, it just reminded me of the title); Bladderville; and Hopper’s Women. She is also included in the anthology, When Divas Dance. She is founding editor of Passager, a national literary journal.
Labels:
A.H. Magazine,
Dionysus,
Poetry,
Prose,
Reading Series,
You're Allowed
An Early October Cold :: from American Life in Poetry
Here we repost the weekly poetry column brought to you, free of charge, by American Life in Poetry – an organization supported by The Poetry Foundation, the Library of Congress, and the U.S. Poet Laureate from 2004-2006, Ted Koosner. This week is presented a windy-cold and haunting poem by Don Thompson:
OctoberI used to think the landhad something to say to us,back when wildflowerswould come right up to your handas if they were tame.Sooner or later, I thought,the wind would begin to make senseif I listened hardand took notes religiously.That was spring.Now I’m not so sure:the cloudless sky has a flat affectand the fields plowed down after harvestseem so expressionless,keeping their own counsel.This afternoon, nut tree leavesblow across themas if autumn had written us a long letter,changed its mind,and tore it into little scraps.
Labels:
Editors' Picks,
Poetry
Words & Whisky :: You're Allowed
So what’s with the horse head? A couple of you may have noticed pictures of an editor dressed in a centaur-esque getup… No, it might be more accurate to say he’s the opposite of a centaur, with the head of a horse and the body of a man… Hold on, is that the opposite?… Wouldn’t the opposite of a centaur have the body of an animal opposite a horse, like a mermaid? No, that doesn’t make sense either. How can anything be opposite a horse?
Anyway, he kind of looks like Bottom from A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and his image has been floating around Facebook and here on the blog. You may have even seen him sitting at one of our readings. Well, for the last three or four months we’ve been working on a short film which will premier at our next reading with Marion Winik, Dave K. (bio below) and a very secret and special guest* on September 1st. I’d post something of a summary of the film here but I’m not exactly sure how. It’s just absurd, and that’s how we like it. You’ll just have to come to the reading and see for yourself.
You know the drill, third floor of Dionysus, 8:30ish, and as always, fun and drinks abound.
Oh yeah, and coming soon, Halloween...
Bio:
Dave K. is a writer, graphic designer, and theater tech who lives in Baltimore. He is a regular contributor to Adfreak, TSB Mag, and the Gettysburg Times, and his creative writing has been published in The Bullet, Ghoti Hook, Battered Suitcase, the Nautilus Engine, ULA Redux, The Light Ekphrastic, and Welter, among others. Dave K. is also a small, dense star composed mostly of electron-degenerate matter.
*The guest has been revealed... Shucker (onemanawsomeband).
Labels:
Dionysus,
Film,
Poetry,
Prose,
You're Allowed
It Has to Live in The Air :: A Conversation with Baltimore’s Own Chris Toll
“The more trash, the better,” he said.
I agreed.
We both had some vague notion of a Baltimorean aesthetic in mind. We both lacked any aptitude for digital photography. We had come there, though,—to the littered Station North alleyway—to communicate as best we could.
It was, admittedly, a rocky start. Our photographer had dropped out last-minute, leaving my jittery, untrained eye to capture the essence of Chris Toll, a man who I quite honestly had no idea how to talk to. It was quickly becoming clear that the Chris Toll with whom I had become acquainted through my week-long intake of The Disinformation Phase, that strong-voiced, verbally decisive work of certain apocalypse, was locked away deep inside the man who now stood arms-folded in front of me, unapologetically tangible and soft-spoken. A “recovering catholic,” as he would later put it. I was utterly unprepared.
This is not to say that I hadn’t spent the previous week versing myself on all things Chris Toll; I, along with my friend and fellow editor Justin Sanders, had systematically devoured the Baltimore-native’s poetry in that stereotypical post-graduate manner. We showed up to the interview complete with thematic insights, biographical inquiries, and possible inconsistencies in the work, all of which were intended to give the poet enough room to embellish, as one might expect a poet to do. The problem: Chris Toll is more than “a poet.” He is a vessel of the “higher self.”
I’d heard this sort of philosophy before, and I admittedly reacted to it with a hefty dose of reactionary skepticism. Personally, I don’t buy into any divine (or external for that matter) intervention when it comes to a poet and his work—we are the only ones who get in our way. So, I jumped right into the accusations.
“Right,” I said, “but there’s a lot of you in The Disinformation Phase,” citing the speaker’s repetitive use of the possessive. There are two examples in the first poem alone: “My cathedral/ blows its brains out…My slaughterhouse/ mixes a martini for the moon.”
He paused before delineating his approach: “The ‘I’ is invisible. You can read this whole book and learn nothing about me. The ‘I’ is you.” His response, it seemed, was a convoluted poem in itself.
Feeling as though we’d reached some sort of dead end, I shifted the focus to a more concrete discussion of the poetic devices at play in the collection. Less controversial. Safer, I thought.
“Do you pay attention to form,” I asked him. This, I hoped, would elicit a more involved response. Aside from writing poetry, Toll also works within the bodily—as he describes it—arena of collage art (see the cover of The Disinformation Phase for an example).
“I do a lot of fourteen-line poems,” he replied. “I have this thing about numbered lines. I like even-numbered lines. It’s a good answer to nothing.”
Okay. So he was interested in answers.
“Do all of your poems ask questions,” I asked.
He thought about that for a minute, stared down at his beer. “I always want my poems to be a voyage of discovery,” he explained. “I get one line and then I just see what comes in. I use wordplay as a way to go from one spot to another, but they almost always end in questions. There is no answer; the question is everything.”
At this point, we couldn’t have agreed more. I was confused; all of my carefully accumulated knowledge about Toll’s poetry had just been dismantled. What I had painstakingly dissected and identified as a definitive stance on the impending collapse of a post-cultural America (albeit through the eyes of an ambivalent speaker), was turning out to be a random heap of questions that could care less about being answered.
I wanted an answer: “The Disinformation Phase feels as if it’s searching for a connection between a reckless past and an indifferent future. The present just seems to teeter …Do you have faith in the present?”
Again, he took a minute to stare down at his beer. “This is the 21st century,” he said. “There is hope for salvation. There’s a lot of confusion, too. I welcome confusion. Confusion is good.”
I was a dumbstruck attorney in what had been a strange trial of my own self-absorbed search for objective meaning in the poetry of a stranger. I wasn’t sure who had really been on the stand, or what conclusions—if any—could be drawn from the evidence presented, but I knew I had to rest my case. We had reached the point of “no further questions.”
Our pen and paper put away, the recording devices powered down, Justin and I made small talk with Chris while we finished our drinks. We mostly compared notes on the pleasures and frustrations of running a reading series (he co-curates the traveling Benevolent Armchair series, which—currently in its third season—migrates between Baltimore and York, PA).
Eventually, I ran out of conversational steam. My mind was elsewhere, trying to figure out how the hell I was going to piece this interview into something definitive and relevant. I thought it a good time to head out.
As I gathered up the empty glasses, Chris was wrapping up a final thought. “You know, to me a poem isn’t finished until it’s spoken aloud in front of a stranger.” He pulled me from clearing the table, with a certain urgency.
“Write this down,” he said. “Poems live in the air. It doesn’t necessarily have to be a stranger…and I’m not a spoken word poet…but poems live in the air.”
Looking back, I like to think that he was throwing me a bone.
-By Jon Gavazzi
For more info, and to get a copy of Chris Toll's new book click here or here.
Another Installment of "You're Allowed"
This month we present two of our favorite writers, Stephen Matanle and Lily Herman. Plus we will be premiering our very strange trailer for the reading series and the magazine. This is a must see reading. Or maybe not, this damn thing is out of our control. Who knows what is going to happen.
And as always, the open mic will have 10 available slots that are first come first serve. If you would like to read come early, they always fill up.
See you on the third floor.
Labels:
Dionysus,
Poetry,
Prose,
Reading Series,
You're Allowed
Preview of Artichoke Haircut Vol. Two
Here is a quick preview of some of the work you'll find in our newest issue. If you like it you can buy a copy at our online store to your right. Enjoy.
Labels:
A.H. Magazine,
Art,
Poetry,
Prose
Artichoke Haircut Volume Two is now available!
The response we have gotten for our latest issue of Artichoke Haircut has been incredible. Our magazine release party last night at Dionysus could not have been more of a success. Harwood could not have sounded better. The submissions we included in this issue could not have been more enlightening, more funny, more moving, more well written, etc., etc. And, I guess it goes without saying, our egos are now swelling.
In all seriousness, we really are humbled by the response. We could not have asked for a better group of writers and readers who constantly surprise us with the quality of their work, and with their support. Keep sending in your work, and keep coming to our readings, and we'll keep trying to put out the best magazine we know how to.
You can get the latest copy of the magazine at our online store to the right of this post. Also we will be stocking area independent bookstores in the coming weeks.
For pictures of Artichoke Haircut Vol. Two release party click here.
Labels:
A.H. Magazine,
Poetry,
Prose,
Reading Series,
You're Allowed
Words & Whisky :: You're Allowed
For the second installment of our monthly reading series we have quite a treat for you. Artichoke Haircut is releasing the second volume of their odd little magazine, and to celebrate there will be drinking, readings from the contributors, an open mic (as always), and a live set from Harwood. The magazine is fresh off the press and we're excited to open the box to the world. Though saying it like that reminds me of Pandora's box––maybe I should delete that last sentence. Nah. We promise, there are no plagues or diseases in this box, just a bunch of shiny, happy books.
Same time and place as always (see the flyer for details). Come on down.
Labels:
A.H. Magazine,
Dionysus,
Poetry,
Prose,
Reading Series,
You're Allowed
Editors' Shorts :: Vol. 1.5
So we received about 230 submissions (over 500 individual pieces) for issue number two. We’re happy to have had the chance to read/discuss/analyze the hell out of some great pieces. We’re even happier to be getting some new blood into this issue. We will be publishing writers from faraway places. We will be publishing photography. Most importantly, though, we won’t be publishing ourselves. It’s great to finally have so much to work with.
We are, however, still arrogant and self-centered, so we the editors compiled some of our recent work in an online issue, which we hope you will download. It’s free, and we put a lot of work into it.
For anyone still wondering what our magazine is all about, take a look. Maybe you can derive some sense of what our criteria might be. If you figure it out, maybe you could give us a heads up.
Thanks for reading, and keep watching for new stuff.
(To download click here and go to the far right box with the down arrow, otherwise you can just read it online.)
Labels:
A.H. Magazine,
Art,
Editors' Shorts,
Poetry,
Prose
You're Allowed :: Words & Whisky
It is now official, Artichoke Haircut will hold a monthly reading on the first Thursday of every month on the third floor of Dionysus Lounge. So if you're going to take advice from me – and I'm not 100% sure why you would – you might as well just go ahead and take that following Friday off work from here on out. Because both you and I know you're not going to be able to handle the morning after.
And to start off our monthly reading series we have two very talented and very odd writers (seriously, they are the oddest people we know, but we mean that in the best possible way). We are thrilled to be featuring the prose styling of a young Baltimore icon, Timmy Reed, and the quirky/crazy poetry of an up and coming Baltimore icon, Erik Pecukonis. I really can't imagine why you'd want to miss either one of these talented writers.
We'll see you there.
Bios:
Timmy Reed is an endangered, sub-intelligent hominid from North Baltimore. He writes stuff in hieroglyphics and has it translated by slaves. Follow his micro-awesome-short-rad-flash-supercool fiction on Twitter at @BMORETIMMYREED. Also, check out the Bicycle Review on June 15th for a short story about neighborhood associations. Buy him a drink sometime maybe. Don't sleep.
Erik Pecukonis is, well... come to the reading and you'll see.
Labels:
Dionysus,
Poetry,
Prose,
Reading Series,
You're Allowed
Percy Bysshe Shelley :: Editors' Picks
![]() |
Bill Henson Untitled # 20, 2000-3 |
To the Moon
By Percy Bysshe Shelley
Art thou pale for weariness?
Of climbing heaven and gazing on the earth,
Wandering companionless
Among the stars that have a different birth, --
And ever changing, like a joyless eye
That finds no object worth its constancy?
I’m not exactly sure what it says about man, that he is always looking for something beyond himself, something greater than his surroundings? It could be that this question springs from, as La Rochefoucauld said, the fact that we can neither look the sun nor death directly in the face?
And what does it say about the human race that we must mythologize these forces, and every force, for that matter, we do not understand. What manic insecurity we must have that we find it necessary to make up fantastical stories in order to escape from the thoughts born of those treacherously quiet moments, those moments that otherwise would be filled with thoughts of the smallness we feel pushing us into the ground, only to be mocked by the stars and the growing night?
I must confess, I find it too horrible to consider the stars, or even a tree or a rock completely on their own – they laugh and destroy everything I believe makes me a conscious man. So they too must have stories forced upon them. They must be told their reason for being, a story that does not include them watching us, watching me. But, as all stories do, these stories will eventually no longer satisfy our longing for answers, our longing for understandable forces, so we then tell stories of supermen living amongst the stars, playing conductor to the music of the spheres. But, today, these stories too have lost their truths. So much so that we have made up stories of men to replace them. Men who were like us and like the stars – Abraham, David, Moses, Solomon, Jesus, Mohammed. Men who are their own myths, and who can bring the sky, brightly, to the earth.
Even these stories now are suspect, maybe because our skies are so dark. A black sky with, as far as the eye can see, only stars in the form of Justin Bieber, Charlie Sheen and Glen Beck. Now don’t get me wrong, I am endlessly fascinated with these guys. I, like everyone else, gaze at them as if gazing into the absence we hope is in heaven, the spotless mind on the other side of the Lethe. Nonetheless, I have to answer yes to Shelly’s question. I am weary of climbing to black heaven. So weary that I have turned back many times to the comfort of Geico ads (the Achilles’ heel of my aversion to consumer culture). The stories I know no longer chart a reliable path to the moon; they could be anywhere, go anywhere and seem absurd even to exist, if in fact they still do.
So I guess this brings me my last question: What does it say about man that he must, despite his weariness, continue to search the path that brings him further from his home in an effort to find himself? I don’t know. But I keep going down that same path hoping to find the answer to that question.
-Adam Shutz
Labels:
Editors' Picks,
Poetry
Editors' Shorts :: #2
![]() |
Laura Letinsky, "Untitled #85" |
Sunday
Sunday is my day to pretend I am not
animal I clean my clothes and wash
the pots that have pondered
for a week and grow
not in size that would be preposterous
but in life egregious
they mimic the rest of the world
or at least the part that runs
behind your back whenever you turn.
I’m sad to think that everything
in the world has already been touched
or nearly like a rock I found sitting in a gutter
by a flamingo feather I picked up
the rock and not the feather because though
they both sat perfectly next to one another sharing
color and a yearning for the market or a sleek city
condo the feather must have been retched
so I picked up the rock and not the feather
put the rock in my pocket smooth from some other
long place and time
and watched the feather lend the gutter pink
starving itself with generosity and ecstasy
while a trickle from someone washing their car
slid it closer and closer to the drain.
– Adam Shutz
Labels:
Editors' Shorts,
Poetry
Editors' Shorts :: #1
Narrative Flow
The thought was in the head; the head
was somewhat
connected to the neck; the neck
was frail and wanted badly to snap, but
could not.
It was
begrudgingly
interested in the head.
It
wished secretly
to be pulled into the skull’s frivolous breezing
like a string,
to
fray.
Labels:
Editors' Shorts,
Poetry
Juxtaposition :: Editors' Picks
![]() |
Cy Twombly: Apollo and the Artist 1975 |
It is impossible that one with even a tangential interest in modern culture has not suffered through a conversation on the power of language, a topic discussed ad nauseam in political discourse, academia, literary circles, theology, blah blah blah. Yet what is little discussed outside the arts (and esoteric, modern philosophy -- hi, Derrida), is what the desire to speak says about the human condition. We find it necessary to cognitively coral things within our experience, yet beyond another's, so that through speech they may indeed experience it. The human animal finds its own reality so endlessly fascinating, or unbearably terrifying, that it is impossible not to blather on about it, no matter who is or is not listening. What else explains the constant speaking into the void that is Twitter?
The three writers below speak to the absurdity that we need to speak, by speaking, which is of course an absurdity of its own. The first poem has trickled down through the centuries from the far-away-lands of India, by the pen of the mystic poet Kabir. The subsequent pieces are modern interpretations on a similar theme: the use of language saying, and saying away ourselves.
Except That It Robs You of Who You Are
Except that it robs you of who you are,
What can you say about speech?
Inconceivable to live without
And impossible to live with,
Speech diminishes you.
Speak with a wise man, there’ll be
Much to learn; speak with a fool,
All you get is prattle.
Strike a half-empty pot, and it’ll make
A loud sound; strike one that is full,
Says Kabir, and hear the silence.
(translated from the Hindi by Arvind Krishna Mehrotra)
Taken from New York Review of Books
Flame, Speech
By Octavio Paz
I read in a poem:
to talk is divine.
But the gods don't speak:
they make and unmake worlds
while men do the talking.
They play frightening games
without words.
The spirit descends,
loosening tongues,
but doesn't speak words:
it speaks fire.
Lit by a god,
language becomes
a prophecy
of flames and a tower
of smoke and collapse
of syllables burned:
ash without meaning.
The word of man
is the daughter of death.
We talk because we are mortal:
words are not signs, they are years.
Saying what they say,
the words we are saying
say time: they name us.
We are time's names.
The dead are mute
but they also say
what we are saying.
Language is the house
of all, hanging over the abyss.
To talk is human.
(translated from Spanish by Mark Strand)
Taken from The Ecco Anthology of International Poetry
Excerpt from the play, The Maids
by Jean Genet
Solange: She would like to smile but she is dead…. She enters her apartment – but, Madame is dead. Her two maids are alive: they’ve just risen up free, from Madame’s icy form. All the maids were present at her side – not themselves but rather the hellish agony of their names.
(translated from the French by Bernard Frenchtman)
-By Adam Shutz
Labels:
Drama,
Editors' Picks,
Poetry
Vasko Popa :: Editors' Pick
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Ancient rock painting at Horseshoe Canyon, Utah |
I could ramble on and on about Popa's use of myth, folklore, surrealism, etc. I could talk about the humor and sly intelligence which springs out of his deceivingly simple poems. I could talk about his use of repetition and cliché . But these labels and explanations would do little but distract attention from the man's voice. Instead I'll just let the 'lame wolf' poet from Serbia say it, and hopefully you will see it for yourselves:
Echo Turned to StoneOnce upon a time there were so many echoesThey were slaves of one voiceBuilt him archesThe arches tumbled downThey’d built them crookedThe dust buried themThey gave up the dangerous laborTurned to stone from hungerTurned to stone they flewTo find to rip to bits the lipsFrom which the voice cameThey flew no one knows how longBlind fools, didn’t they seeThat they flew along the edge of the lipsThey were seeking
Translated by Charles Simic.
For more on Vasko Popa go to www.oberlin.edu/ocpress/Books/Popa.htm
-By Adam Shutz
Labels:
Editors' Picks,
Poetry
Feature :: Eat On This
One of our lovely editors here at Artichoke Haircut has a poem up on the web, published by Eat On This. Click the link to read "Stray Cat," by Adam Shutz:
Labels:
Eat On This,
Feature,
Poetry
Gerard Manley Hopkins :: Editors' Picks
It isn't that I dislike religious imagery in poetry, it's just that a part of my brain rebels and fights and screams whenever I hear it. It takes a bit of work and an excellent poet to crack through that prejudice and make me listen. Hopkins does, and his poem "God's Grandeur" shows the reader the wonder this planet can instill if carefully observed. He pulls you from ephemeral beauty into the blear of humanities' devastation of their environment. Yet there is no "the end is nigh" in this poem. With a touch of grace he pulls you out of the mortal tragedy in time to show you it's eminent rejuvenation. Such is the hope of religion I guess. Lets hope he's right:
God's Grandeur
The world is charged with the grandeur of God.
It will flame out, like shining from shook foil;
It gathers to a greatness, like the ooze of oil
Crushed. Why do men then now not reck his rod?
Generations have trod, have trod, have trod;
And all is seared with trade; bleared, smeared with toil;
And wears man's smudge and shares man's smell: the soil
Is bare now, nor can foot feel, being shod.
And for all this, nature is never spent;
There lives the dearest freshness deep down things;
And though the last lights off the black West went
Oh, morning, at the brown brink eastward, springs —
Because the Holy Ghost over the bent
World broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings.
-Posted by Adam Shutz
-Posted by Adam Shutz
Labels:
Editors' Picks,
Poetry
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