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	<title>Blanc Press</title>
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		<title>.UNFO (!x==[33]) Book 1 Volume 1</title>
		<link>http://www.blancpress.com/2011/11/09/unfo-x33-book1-volume1/</link>
		<comments>http://www.blancpress.com/2011/11/09/unfo-x33-book1-volume1/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Nov 2011 04:31:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>blancpress</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.blancpress.com/?p=411</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Los Angeles, 11.11.11—Blanc Press is pleased to announce the release of (!x==[33]) Book 1 Volume 1 by .UNFO the first volume of a projected multiple volume set. What if you had a very long book and made it longer? With (!x==[33]) .UNFO seeks to indexically lengthen the world&#8217;s most monumental texts through failed software operations. [...]]]></description>
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<a href="http://www.blancpress.com/x33/x33bookimage/" rel="attachment wp-att-374"><img src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/x33BookImage-502x670.jpg" alt="" title="(!x==[33])BookImage" width="502" height="670" class="alignnone size-large wp-image-374" /></a></p>
<p>Los Angeles, 11.11.11—Blanc Press is pleased to announce the release of <em>(!x==[33]) Book 1 Volume 1</em> by .UNFO the first volume of a projected multiple volume set. What if you had a very long book and made it longer?  With <em>(!x==[33])</em> .UNFO seeks to indexically lengthen the world&#8217;s most monumental texts through failed software operations. </p>
<p><em>(!x==[33])</em> is curated by UNFO (Unauthorized Narrative Freedom Organization), an unofficial and temporary coalition of coders and writers, including Dan Richert and Harold Abramowitz.</p>
<p>Purchase a copy of <em>(!x==[33]) Book 1 Volume 1</em> by .UNFO in hardbound <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=11191417">$50.00</a></p>
<p>To date, Blanc Press has published <em>CREDIT</em> by Mathew Timmons, and <em>Tragodía</em> by Vanessa Place, the three volume set comprised of <em>Statement of Facts</em>, <em>Statement of the Case</em> and <em>Argument</em>.</p>
<p>Blanc Press: It&#8217;s material!</p>
<p></br><br />
<a href="http://www.blancpress.com/x33/about-x33/x33cover-2/" rel="attachment wp-att-432"><img src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/x33Cover1-670x301.jpg" alt="" title="(!x==[33])Cover" width="670" height="301" class="alignnone size-large wp-image-432" /></a></p>
<p></br><br />
(!X==[33]) BOOK 1 VOLUME 1<br />
Hardcover with dustjacket 776 pages<br />
Blanc Press November 2011<br />
ISBN 13: 978-0-9814623-9-4<br />
Dimensions: 6.25 x 9.5 x 2 inches<br />
Purchase a copy of <em>(!x==[33]) Book 1 Volume 1</em> by .UNFO in hardbound <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=11191417">$50.00</a></p>
<h6><span style="color: #999999;">Contact the publisher at laliterature at gee mail dot com for classroom adoption discounts.</span></h6>
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		<title>Vanessa Place Argument</title>
		<link>http://www.blancpress.com/2011/09/05/vanessa-place-argument/</link>
		<comments>http://www.blancpress.com/2011/09/05/vanessa-place-argument/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 Sep 2011 11:40:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>blancpress</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.blancpress.com/?p=333</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Los Angeles, 09.15.11—Blanc Press is pleased to announce the release of Tragodía 3: Argument by Vanessa Place, the third volume of Place&#8217;s three-volume series, Tragodía. To celebrate, Blanc Press is offering a 10% discount on Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case, the second hardcover edition of the three-volume series. For further celebration, Blanc Press is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p id="top" /><a href="http://www.blancpress.com/?attachment_id=314"><img src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/ArgumentCover-670x316.jpg" alt="" title="ArgumentCover" width="670" height="316" class="alignnone size-large wp-image-314" /></a><br />
Los Angeles, 09.15.11—Blanc Press is pleased to announce the release of <em>Tragodía 3: Argument</em> by Vanessa Place, the third volume of Place&#8217;s three-volume series, <em>Tragodía</em>. To celebrate, Blanc Press is offering a 10% discount on <a href="http://www.blancpress.com/statement-of-the-case/about-sotc/"><em>Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case</em></a>, the second hardcover edition of the three-volume series. For further celebration, Blanc Press is thrilled to announce the release of <em>Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case</em> in paperback! So many things to be excited about. </p>
<p><em>Tragodía</em> is composed of the three parts of an appellate brief: Statement of Facts, which sets forth, in narrative form, the evidence of the crime as presented at trial; Statement of the Case, which sets forth the procedural history of the case; and Argument, which are the claims of error and (for the defense) the arguments for reversing the judgment. Place&#8217;s Statement of the Case project involves reproducing Statements of the Case from some of her appellate briefs and representing them as poetry.</p>
<p>Purchase a copy of <em>Tragodía 3: Argument</em> by Vanessa Place<br />
in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=11084842">hardbound</a> $40.00 (now discounted 15%)<br />
in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=12167474">paperback</a> $23.00</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>(hardbound cover image above and paperback cover image below)</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.blancpress.com/argument/argpb/" rel="attachment wp-att-457"><img src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/ARGPB-670x479.jpg" alt="" title="ARGPB" width="670" height="479" class="alignnone size-large wp-image-457" /></a></p>
<p>Drafting a virtuous brief is not simply a matter of avoiding grammatical mistakes and typographical errors. Rather, a virtuous brief should demonstrate to the court the correctness of the advocate’s position by showing that the writer has diligently and carefully researched the legal issues and is thoroughly acquainted with the record in the case. The writer should also consider the court’s heavy workload and craft a brief to assist the court to review the merits of the case and the legal issues presented. A virtuous brief is clear, concise, and persuasive. It should be free from muddy arguments and dense prose. A brief should help the court resolve the legal dispute before it. First, present a straight-forward argument designed to convince the court that the result you advocate is fair, legally correct, and factually supported. Start out by honestly explaining the applicable state of the law. Discuss precedent from other circuits when there is a circuit split. Second, provide a thorough analysis. Explain all the steps in the analytical process. The brief should explain how the facts fit with the law in easy-to-follow steps that support the conclusion being advocated. The brief ought to anticipate and resolve questions that are likely to arise in the reader’s mind to minimize any doubts as to the brief’s accuracy or veracity. Third, write for clarity. Clear writing is essential to making a brief easy to read. Avoid cluttering the brief with unnecessary words. Finally, be concise. The argument should be short, uncomplicated, logical, and written in clear language that is easy to read.</p>
<blockquote><p>Praise  for <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em>:<br />
&#8220;Vanessa Place n’est pas une femme banale. Avocate à Los Angeles, critique d’art, écrivain…les photographies la montrent les bras tatoués, toute de noir vêtue comme une rockeuse. Son premier opus traduit en français (et son sixième ouvrage) : &#8220;Exposé des faits&#8221; ressemble à son auteur : il est étrange et fort. Parfois la littérature expérimentale est purifiante.&#8221;—Stephanie Hochet</p>
<p>&#8220;No poetry book this year will be more disturbing – upsetting, unsettling – to read than <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em>, by Vanessa Place.&#8221;—Steven Fama, <em>the glade of theoric ornithic hermetica</em></p>
<p>&#8220;&#8230; extremely disturbing on multiple levels &#8230;&#8221;—Sina Queyras, <em>Lemon Hound</em></p>
<p>&#8220;Vanessa Place, herself an appellate criminal defense attorney who specializes in sex offenders and sexually violent predators, has assembled a remarkable sequence of narratives, taken almost verbatim from court testimonies she herself reviewed: her cases are entirely “real.” But what is the “real” anyway? What is the difference between fact and the interpretation of fact? Between fact and truth? And what do these “true” stories tell us about the society we live in, and the way we apportion innocence and guilt? Telling it straight turns out to be the most mysterious—and poetic—way of telling it there is. No novelist could invent horror stories as compelling—and puzzling—as these actual case studies.  <em>Statement of Facts</em> is a superb piece of conceptual writing.&#8221;—Marjorie Perloff</p>
<p>&#8220;Just the facts, Ma’am. The only way to be more clever than Kathy Acker, it turns out, is to be less clever. Charles Reznikoff sampled the National Reporter System of appellate decisions for his verse in <em>Testimony</em>; Acker incorporated legal documents from <em>In re van Geldern</em> as part of her modified plagiarism; but Place recognizes that such documents are far more powerful left unedited. And they read, frequently, like the reticent syllogistic prose of Hemingway short stories. Reframed from the public record as literature, the results are emotionally unbearable.&#8221;—Craig Dworkin</p>
<p>&#8220;Vanessa Place is a lawyer and, like Bartelby, much of her work involves scribing appellate briefs, that task of copying and editing, rendering complex lives and dirty deeds into “neutral” language to be presented before a court. That is her day job. Her poetry is an appropriation of the documents she writes during her day job, flipping her briefs after hours into literature. And like most literature, they’re chock full of high drama, pathos, horror and humanity. But unlike most literature, she hasn’t written a word of it. Or has she? Here’s where it gets interesting. She both has written them and, at the same time, she’s wholly appropriated them—rescuing them from the dreary world of court filings and bureaucracy—and, by mere reframing, turns them into what is arguably the most challenging, complex and controversial literature being written today.&#8221;—Kenneth Goldsmith</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Statement of Facts</em> is a powerful poem which forces us to question our own response to &#8216;documentary&#8217; material and the nature and reliability of evidence. There&#8217;s also for me the way that language functions (and often lies) in response to our attempts to make sense of things and I&#8217;m grateful to Place for bringing this to my attention.&#8221;—John Armstrong, <em>Arduity</em></p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Statement of Facts</em> is a book about limits and boundaries: physical, psychological, legal, literary, and conceptual. It is about speech and its transcription, and the strange distortions of language that have evolved to serve the legal system. It is about actions that leave a mark on the body and the soul.&#8221;—Ken Gonzales-Day</p>
<p>&#8220;You might have supposed that the hallowed technique of cultural appropriation had exhausted itself in the wake of the Duchampian ready-made, the spend-thrift citations of Pop, Burrough’s lapidary cut-ups, or the critical twist given to all this by New York postmodernism in the 80s. But by re-presenting appellate briefs of sexual offense cases, attorney-cum-wordsmith, Vanessa Place has come up with another take on taking. Here the uncanny juggernaut of the Law collides with the excruciating strengths and fragilities of victims, voice is overwritten by context, and morality by salient indignation. In other circumstances we would take our hats off, but given her profession, she deserves a citation.&#8221;—John Welchman</p>
<p>&#8220;By repurposing legal prosecution and defense documents of violent sexual crimes verbatim, <em>Statement of Facts</em> takes on issues too messy to benefit from further elucidation which only grow more disturbing presented in their purest case material form. For some, what <em>Statement of Facts</em> brings into the public square is salacious, but Place is in effect saying: ‘I move the ball out of this arena and take it into this arena’ in order to pump up the socio political volume on this legal/moral battlefield. Her definition of injustice is sweeping. <em>Statement of Facts</em> does not care what the reader thinks about content and in essence, Place’s relationship to content is like Oprah Winfrey’s to money. It is straightforward, and you are free to project onto it whatever you need to. However you respond to this fierce book, it is indisputable that <em>Statement of Facts</em> has carved out a place for itself as a touchstone of poetic push back. As Pasadena Superior Court Judge Gilbert Alston famously quipped in his dismissal of a 1986 rape case because the victim was a prostitute: ‘A whore is a whore is a whore’—<em>Statement of Facts</em> counters by unflinchingly reminding us ‘a rape is a rape is a rape.’&#8221;—Kim Rosenfield</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Statement of Facts</em> is poet/lawyer Vanessa Place’s masterful demonstration of day-for-night writing. Alternately nauseating, cold, gripping, philosophical, and relentless, this volume is an analytical portrait of a writer writing in double-time, simultaneously producing legal language caught in the trap of trying (and failing) to secure the self-evident meanings of the factual; and poetic language procedurally measuring the way facts are fundamentally also instruments of violence, building toward the legitimation of a legal edifice from which no one can escape. These descriptions of heinous sex crimes, detached from their original function as depositions, are a treatise on contingency; a discourse on the moral lenses of narrative; and an institutional critique of the aesthetics and ethics of juridical administration.&#8221;—Simon Leung</p></blockquote>
<p>Vanessa Place is a writer, a criminal appellate defense attorney, and co-director of Les Figues Press. <a href="http://www.blancpress.com/statement-of-the-case/vplacelace/" rel="attachment wp-att-237"><img src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/VPlaceLACE-300x225.jpg" alt="" title="VPlaceLACE" width="300" height="225" class="alignright size-medium wp-image-237" /></a>Of Vanessa Place and Robert Fitterman’s <em>Notes on Conceptualisms</em>, Mary Kelly said, “I learned more about the impact of conceptualism on artists and writers than I had from reading so-called canonical works on the subject.” Place is author of<em> Dies: A Sentence, La Medusa, Notes on Conceptualisms</em> (co-authored with Robert Fitterman), <em>Exposé des Faits</em>, and <em>The Guilt Project: Rape, Morality and Law</em>. Other work includes the Factory Series of chapbooks and a sound collaboration with Stephanie Taylor, <em>Murder Square Dance on the Spiral Jetty </em>(both with oodpress).</p>
<p>TRAGODÍA 3: ARGUMENT<br />
Hardcover, with dustjacket, 298 pages<br />
Blanc Press, September 2011<br />
ISBN-13: 978-1-934254-19-6<br />
Dimensions: 6.25 x 9.5 x 1 inches<br />
Purchase a copy of <em>Tragodía 3: Argument</em> by Vanessa Place<br />
in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=11084842">hardbound</a> $40.00 (now discounted 15%)<br />
in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=12167474">paperback</a> $23.00</p>
<h6><span style="color: #999999;">Contact the publisher at laliterature at gee mail dot com for classroom adoption discounts.</span></h6>
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		<title>Vanessa Place Statement of the Case</title>
		<link>http://www.blancpress.com/2011/06/11/vanessa-place-statement-of-the-case/</link>
		<comments>http://www.blancpress.com/2011/06/11/vanessa-place-statement-of-the-case/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 11 Jun 2011 00:12:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>blancpress</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.blancpress.com/?p=255</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Los Angeles, 06.15.11—Blanc Press is pleased to announce the release of Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case by Vanessa Place, the second volume of Place&#8217;s three-volume series, Tragodía. To celebrate, Blanc Press is offering a 15% discount on Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts, the first hardcover edition of the three-volume series. For further celebration, Blanc [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p id="top" /><a rel="attachment wp-att-236" href="http://www.blancpress.com/statement-of-the-case/soccoverfinal/"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-236" title="SOCCoverFINAL" src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/SOCCoverFINAL-670x326.jpg" alt="" width="670" height="326" /></a><br />
Los Angeles, 06.15.11—Blanc Press is pleased to announce the release of <em>Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case</em> by Vanessa Place, the second volume of Place&#8217;s three-volume series, <em>Tragodía</em>. To celebrate, Blanc Press is offering a 15% discount on <a href="http://www.blancpress.com/statement-of-facts/buy-sof/"><em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em></a>, the first hardcover edition of the three-volume series. For further celebration, Blanc Press is thrilled to announce the release of <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em> in paperback! So many things to be excited about.</p>
<p>Purchase a copy of <em>Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case</em> by Vanessa Place<br />
in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=10680118">hardbound</a> $35.00 (now discounted 15%)<br />
in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=11088571">paperback</a> $20.00 (now discounted 15%)</p>
<p><em>Tragodía</em> is composed of the three parts of an appellate brief: Statement of Facts, which sets forth, in narrative form, the evidence of the crime as presented at trial; Statement of the Case, which sets forth the procedural history of the case; and Argument, which are the claims of error and (for the defense) the arguments for reversing the judgment. Place&#8217;s Statement of the Case project involves reproducing Statements of the Case from some of her appellate briefs and representing them as poetry.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><em>(hardbound cover image above and paperback cover image below)</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.blancpress.com/?attachment_id=319"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-319" title="SOCPBCOV" src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/SOCPBCOV-670x498.jpg" alt="" width="670" height="498" /></a></p>
<p>Rule 8.204(a )(2)(A) of the California Rules of Court requires the appellate brief to “state the nature of the action, relief sought in the trial court, and the judgment or order appealed from.” The purpose of this rule is to give the Court of Appeal a concise overview of the relevant trial court proceedings. Usually this would include, in chronological order: the charges, relevant motions and rulings, the type of proceeding, the verdict or other result, the judgment and sentence, and the date the notice of appeal was filed. The statement should include only information relevant to the issues or necessary to give the appeal an intelligible setting. It should not quote or paraphrase pleadings or other documents extensively or offer excessive detail about dates and procedures not material to the issues. One page or less often suffices. The key is to offer the court procedural context and focus.</p>
<blockquote><p>Praise  for <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em>:<br />
&#8220;No poetry book this year will be more disturbing – upsetting, unsettling – to read than <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em>, by Vanessa Place.&#8221;—Steven Fama, <em>the glade of theoric ornithic hermetica</em></p>
<p>&#8220;&#8230; extremely disturbing on multiple levels &#8230;&#8221;—Sina Queyras, <em>Lemon Hound</em></p>
<p>&#8220;Vanessa Place, herself an appellate criminal defense attorney who specializes in sex offenders and sexually violent predators, has assembled a remarkable sequence of narratives, taken almost verbatim from court testimonies she herself reviewed: her cases are entirely “real.” But what is the “real” anyway? What is the difference between fact and the interpretation of fact? Between fact and truth? And what do these “true” stories tell us about the society we live in, and the way we apportion innocence and guilt? Telling it straight turns out to be the most mysterious—and poetic—way of telling it there is. No novelist could invent horror stories as compelling—and puzzling—as these actual case studies.  <em>Statement of Facts</em> is a superb piece of conceptual writing.&#8221;—Marjorie Perloff</p>
<p>&#8220;Just the facts, Ma’am. The only way to be more clever than Kathy Acker, it turns out, is to be less clever. Charles Reznikoff sampled the National Reporter System of appellate decisions for his verse in <em>Testimony</em>; Acker incorporated legal documents from <em>In re van Geldern</em> as part of her modified plagiarism; but Place recognizes that such documents are far more powerful left unedited. And they read, frequently, like the reticent syllogistic prose of Hemingway short stories. Reframed from the public record as literature, the results are emotionally unbearable.&#8221;—Craig Dworkin</p>
<p>&#8220;Vanessa Place is a lawyer and, like Bartelby, much of her work involves scribing appellate briefs, that task of copying and editing, rendering complex lives and dirty deeds into “neutral” language to be presented before a court. That is her day job. Her poetry is an appropriation of the documents she writes during her day job, flipping her briefs after hours into literature. And like most literature, they’re chock full of high drama, pathos, horror and humanity. But unlike most literature, she hasn’t written a word of it. Or has she? Here’s where it gets interesting. She both has written them and, at the same time, she’s wholly appropriated them—rescuing them from the dreary world of court filings and bureaucracy—and, by mere reframing, turns them into what is arguably the most challenging, complex and controversial literature being written today.&#8221;—Kenneth Goldsmith</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Statement of Facts</em> is a powerful poem which forces us to question our own response to &#8216;documentary&#8217; material and the nature and reliability of evidence. There&#8217;s also for me the way that language functions (and often lies) in response to our attempts to make sense of things and I&#8217;m grateful to Place for bringing this to my attention.&#8221;—John Armstrong, <em>Arduity</em></p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Statement of Facts</em> is a book about limits and boundaries: physical, psychological, legal, literary, and conceptual. It is about speech and its transcription, and the strange distortions of language that have evolved to serve the legal system. It is about actions that leave a mark on the body and the soul.&#8221;—Ken Gonzales-Day</p>
<p>&#8220;You might have supposed that the hallowed technique of cultural appropriation had exhausted itself in the wake of the Duchampian ready-made, the spend-thrift citations of Pop, Burrough’s lapidary cut-ups, or the critical twist given to all this by New York postmodernism in the 80s. But by re-presenting appellate briefs of sexual offense cases, attorney-cum-wordsmith, Vanessa Place has come up with another take on taking. Here the uncanny juggernaut of the Law collides with the excruciating strengths and fragilities of victims, voice is overwritten by context, and morality by salient indignation. In other circumstances we would take our hats off, but given her profession, she deserves a citation.&#8221;—John Welchman</p>
<p>&#8220;By repurposing legal prosecution and defense documents of violent sexual crimes verbatim, <em>Statement of Facts</em> takes on issues too messy to benefit from further elucidation which only grow more disturbing presented in their purest case material form. For some, what <em>Statement of Facts</em> brings into the public square is salacious, but Place is in effect saying: ‘I move the ball out of this arena and take it into this arena’ in order to pump up the socio political volume on this legal/moral battlefield. Her definition of injustice is sweeping. <em>Statement of Facts</em> does not care what the reader thinks about content and in essence, Place’s relationship to content is like Oprah Winfrey’s to money. It is straightforward, and you are free to project onto it whatever you need to. However you respond to this fierce book, it is indisputable that <em>Statement of Facts</em> has carved out a place for itself as a touchstone of poetic push back. As Pasadena Superior Court Judge Gilbert Alston famously quipped in his dismissal of a 1986 rape case because the victim was a prostitute: ‘A whore is a whore is a whore’—<em>Statement of Facts</em> counters by unflinchingly reminding us ‘a rape is a rape is a rape.’&#8221;—Kim Rosenfield</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>Statement of Facts</em> is poet/lawyer Vanessa Place’s masterful demonstration of day-for-night writing. Alternately nauseating, cold, gripping, philosophical, and relentless, this volume is an analytical portrait of a writer writing in double-time, simultaneously producing legal language caught in the trap of trying (and failing) to secure the self-evident meanings of the factual; and poetic language procedurally measuring the way facts are fundamentally also instruments of violence, building toward the legitimation of a legal edifice from which no one can escape. These descriptions of heinous sex crimes, detached from their original function as depositions, are a treatise on contingency; a discourse on the moral lenses of narrative; and an institutional critique of the aesthetics and ethics of juridical administration.&#8221;—Simon Leung</p></blockquote>
<p>Vanessa Place is a writer, a criminal appellate defense attorney, and co-director of Les Figues Press. <a rel="attachment wp-att-237" href="http://www.blancpress.com/statement-of-the-case/vplacelace/"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-237" title="VPlaceLACE" src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/VPlaceLACE-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" /></a>Of Vanessa Place and Robert Fitterman’s <em>Notes on Conceptualisms</em>, Mary Kelly said, “I learned more about the impact of conceptualism on artists and writers than I had from reading so-called canonical works on the subject.” Place is author of<em> Dies: A Sentence, La Medusa, Notes on Conceptualisms</em> (co-authored with Robert Fitterman), <em>Exposé des Faits</em>, and <em>The Guilt Project: Rape, Morality and Law</em>. Other work includes the Factory Series of chapbooks and a sound collaboration with Stephanie Taylor, <em>Murder Square Dance on the Spiral Jetty </em>(both with oodpress).</p>
<p>TRAGODÍA 2: STATEMENT OF THE CASE<br />
Hardcover, with dustjacket, 80 pages<br />
Blanc Press, June 2011<br />
ISBN-13: 978-1-934254-20-2<br />
Dimensions: 6.25 x 9.5 x 0.5 inches<br />
Purchase a copy of <em>Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case</em> by Vanessa Place<br />
in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=10680118">hardbound</a> $35.00 (now discounted 15%)<br />
in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=11088571">paperback</a> $20.00 (now discounted 15%)</p>
<h6><span style="color: #999999;">Contact the publisher at laliterature at gee mail dot com for classroom adoption discounts.</span></h6>
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		<title>Vanessa Place Statement of Facts</title>
		<link>http://www.blancpress.com/2010/07/04/vanessa-place-statement-of-facts/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Jul 2010 12:07:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>blancpress</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Los Angeles, 07.15.10—Blanc Press is pleased to announce the release of Vanessa Place&#8217;s Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts, the first of the three-volume series, Tragodía. Forthcoming from Blanc Press this fall are Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case, and Tragodía 3: Argument. Purchase a copy of Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts by Vanessa Place in [...]]]></description>
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<h6><a rel="attachment wp-att-119" href="http://www.blancpress.com/statement-of-facts/sofcover-2/"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-119" title="SOFCover" src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/SOFCover1-670x311.jpg" alt="" width="670" height="311" /></a></h6>
<p>Los Angeles, 07.15.10—Blanc Press is pleased to announce the release of Vanessa Place&#8217;s <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em>, the first of the three-volume series, <em>Tragodía</em>. Forthcoming from Blanc Press this fall are <em>Tragodía 2: Statement of the Case</em>, and <em>Tragodía 3: Argument</em>.</p>
<p>Purchase a copy of <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em> by Vanessa Place<br />
in <a href="https://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=8814951">hardbound</a> $45.00 (now discounted 15%).<br />
or in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=10783527">paperback</a> $25.00 (now discounted 15%).</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;"><em>(hardbound cover image above and paperback cover image below)</em></p>
<p><a rel="attachment wp-att-280" href="http://www.blancpress.com/statement-of-facts/sofpbcov/"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-280" title="SOFPBCOV" src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/SOFPBCOV-670x469.jpg" alt="" width="670" height="469" /></a></p>
<p>A statement of facts is a legal document which sets forward factual information without argument. These documents are used in a variety of legal settings, ranging from appeals to filing vehicle registration paperwork. The goal of a statement of facts is not to put forward an argument, but rather to present factual information in a clear, easy to understand way. That said, many lawyers may make implicit arguments in a statement of facts, using a variety of tricks to sway the reader to one point of view or another. Typically these arguments are designed to paint someone in a favorable light, or to dismiss the reliability of someone else.</p>
<p><em>Tragodía</em> is composed of the three parts of an appellate brief: <em>Statement of Facts</em>, which sets forth, in narrative form, the evidence of the crime as presented at trial; <em>Statement of the Case</em>, which sets forth the procedural history of the case; and <em>Argument</em>, which are the claims of error and (for the defense) the arguments for reversing the judgment. Place&#8217;s <em>Statement of Facts</em> project involves reproducing Statements of Facts from some of her appellate briefs and representing them as poetry.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;What is a fact? “On February 28, 2005, seventeen-year-old Amanda was living with her mother and her twelve-year-old sister in Lennox.” Yes, that seems like a perfectly neutral factual statement made by Amanda in her police testimony.</p>
<p>But next we read, “When Amanda came home about 8:00 p.m., the lights were off and the doors were unlocked.” Are these facts? Not necessarily: Amanda might be inventing the scenario, although these facts can be checked against the testimony of her mother Sandy, who was out at the laundromat when the incident occurred. But by the time we get to “Once inside, Amanda made something to eat, then went to the bedroom, and laid on her mother’s bed to watch a movie,” we’re in the realm of interpretation so that the surreal account of the sexual assault scene that follows is less than factual.</p>
<p>Vanessa Place, herself an appellate criminal defense attorney who specializes in sex offenders and sexually violent predators, has assembled a remarkable sequence of narratives, taken almost verbatim from court testimonies she herself reviewed: her cases are entirely “real.” But what is the “real” anyway? What is the difference between fact and the interpretation of fact? Between fact and truth? And what do these “true” stories tell us about the society we live in, and the way we apportion innocence and guilt? Telling it straight turns out to be the most mysterious—and poetic—way of telling it there is. No novelist could invent horror stories as compelling—and puzzling—as these actual case studies.  Statement of Facts is a superb piece of conceptual writing.&#8221;<br />
—Marjorie Perloff</p>
<p>You might have supposed that the hallowed technique of cultural appropriation had exhausted itself in the wake of the Duchampian ready-made, the spend-thrift citations of Pop, Burrough&#8217;s lapidary cut-ups, or the critical twist given to all this by New York postmodernism in the 80s. But by re-presenting appellate briefs of sexual offense cases, attorney-cum-wordsmith, Vanessa Place has come up with another take on taking. Here the uncanny juggernaut of the Law collides with the excruciating strengths and fragilities of victims, voice is overwritten by context, and morality by salient indignation. In other circumstances we would take our hats off, but given her profession, she deserves a citation.<br />
—John Welchman</p>
<p>By repurposing legal prosecution and defense documents of violent sexual crimes verbatim, <em>Statement of Facts</em> takes on issues too messy to benefit from further elucidation which only grow more disturbing presented in their purest case material form. For some, what <em>Statement of Facts</em> brings into the public square is salacious, but Place is in effect saying: ‘I move the ball out of this arena and take it into this arena’ in order to pump up the socio political volume on this legal/moral battlefield. Her definition of injustice is sweeping. <em>Statement of Facts</em> does not care what the reader thinks about content and in essence, Place’s relationship to content is like Oprah Winfrey’s to money. It is straightforward, and you are free to project onto it whatever you need to. However you respond to this fierce book, it is indisputable that <em>Statement of Facts</em> has carved out a place for itself as a touchstone of poetic push back. As Pasadena Superior Court Judge Gilbert Alston famously quipped in his dismissal of a 1986 rape case because the victim was a prostitute:  ‘A whore is a whore is a whore’—<em>Statement of Facts</em> counters by unflinchingly reminding us ‘a rape is a rape is a rape.’<br />
—Kim Rosenfield</p></blockquote>
<p><a href="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/WitnessSm.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-6" title="WitnessSm" src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/WitnessSm-300x199.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="199" /></a>Of Vanessa Place and Robert Fitterman’s <em>Notes on Conceptualisms</em>, Mary Kelly said, “I learned more about the impact of conceptualism on artists and writers than I had from reading so-called canonical works on the subject.” Place is also author of <em>Dies: A Sentence, La Medusa</em>, and <em>The Guilt Project: Rape, Morality and Law</em>. Place is co-director of Les Figues Press, and a regular contributor to X-TRA Contemporary Art Quarterly. Her most recent work is available in French by éditions è®e, as <em>Exposé des Faits</em>, and by Blanc Press, as the forthcoming English trilogy, <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts, 2: Statement of the Case</em>, and <em>3: Argument</em>.</p>
<p>TRAGODÍA 1: STATEMENT OF FACTS<br />
Hardcover, with dustjacket, 430 pages<br />
Blanc Press, June 2010<br />
ISBN-13: 978-1-934254-18-9<br />
Dimensions: 6.25 x 9.5 x 1.25 inches<br />
Purchase a copy of <em>Tragodía 1: Statement of Facts</em> by Vanessa Place<br />
in <a href="https://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=8814951">hardbound</a> $45.00 (now discounted 15%).<br />
or in <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=10783527">paperback</a> $25.00 (now discounted 15%).</p>
<h6><span style="color: #999999;">Contact the publisher at laliterature at gee mail dot com for classroom adoption discounts.</span></h6>
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		<title>Mathew Timmons CREDIT</title>
		<link>http://www.blancpress.com/2010/07/01/mathew-timmons-credit/</link>
		<comments>http://www.blancpress.com/2010/07/01/mathew-timmons-credit/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Jul 2010 22:53:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>blancpress</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[CREDIT by Mathew Timmons Hardcover, 800 pages, full color Blanc Press, September 2009 ISBN-13: 978-0-9814623-4-9 Dimensions: 11 x 8.5 x 1.75 inches Price (w/o shipping): $199.99 (now discounted 5%) download price: $299.99 &#8220;Almost all of America&#8217;s wealthiest citizens are poorer this year.&#8221; BUY CREDIT! CREDIT is an 800 page, large format, full color, hardbound book, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p id="top" /><a href="http://www.blancpress.com/credit/credcov/" rel="attachment wp-att-50"><img src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/CredCov.jpg" alt="" title="CredCov" width="690" height="518" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-50" /></a></p>
<p><em>CREDIT</em> by Mathew Timmons<br />
Hardcover, 800 pages, full color<br />
Blanc Press, September 2009<br />
ISBN-13: 978-0-9814623-4-9<br />
Dimensions: 11 x 8.5 x 1.75 inches<br />
Price (w/o shipping): $199.99 (now discounted 5%)<br />
download price: $299.99</p>
<p>&#8220;<a href="http://finance.yahoo.com/career-work/article/107844/the-forbes-400.html?mod=career-leadership">Almost all of America&#8217;s wealthiest citizens are poorer this year.</a>&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=5658152">BUY CREDIT!</a></p>
<p><em>CREDIT</em> is an 800 page, large format, full color, hardbound book, released by Blanc Press in Los Angeles&#8211;the longest, most expensive book publishable through the online service, lulu.com. Divided into two sections, Part A: Credit&#8211;26 parts (a-z) and Part 2: Debit&#8211;10 parts (1-10), <em>CREDIT</em> is a highly revealing and emotional work chronicling a personal tale of credit. </p>
<p>Now Announcing a shortened, condensed, more affordable version of <em>CREDIT</em>!<br />
BUY <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=11170634">THE A, D, O&#8217;S &#038; 1, 6, 10&#8242;S OF CREDIT</a> NOW!</p>
<p><em>The a, d, o&#8217;s &#038; 1, 6, 10&#8242;s of CREDIT</em><br />
Hardcover, 140 pages, full color<br />
Blanc Press, December 2011<br />
Dimensions: 11 x 8.5 x 0.5 inches<br />
Price (w/o shipping): <a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=11170634">$65.00</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.blancpress.com/credit/adocreditcov/" rel="attachment wp-att-475"><img src="http://www.blancpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/ADOCreditCov-670x446.jpg" alt="" title="ADOCreditCov" width="670" height="446" class="alignnone size-large wp-image-475" /></a></p>
<p>In late spring 2007 as an irrational exuberance and promise of financial fortune hung in the air, mailboxes were filled with generous and gracefully worded offers of credit. Just over two years later, in midsummer 2009, the shape of the financial environment changed radically and mailboxes still filled up with statements of credit. Something had to change, offer turned to obligation. </p>
<p>Retailing for $199.99, <em>CREDIT</em> is a book the author himself lacks the cash or credit to buy.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=5658152">BUY CREDIT!</a></p>
<p>Mathew Timmons&#8217; <em>CREDIT</em> has been roundly endorsed by a number of artists, writers, editors and critics, including: Harold Abramowitz, Stan Apps, Marcus Civin, Brian Joseph Davis, Ryan Daley, Craig Dworkin, Brad Fliss, Lawrence Giffin, James Hoff, Maximus Kim, Matthew Klane, Janne Larsen, Matthias Merkel Hess, William Moor, Joseph Mosconi, Holly Myers, Sawako Nakayasu, Sianne Ngai, Ariel Pink, Vanessa Place, Dan Richert, Ronald Quinn Rudlong Jr., Ara Shirinyan, Danny Snelson, Erika Staiti, Brian Kim Stefans, Robert Summers, Rodrigo Toscano, Matias Viegener and Steven Zultanski.</p>
<p>Read Advance <a href="http://www.blancpress.com/credit/praise/">Praise</a> for Mathew Timmons&#8217; <em>CREDIT&#8230;</em> &#8220;<a href="http://www.blancpress.com/credit/praise/">here</a>.&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.lulu.com/commerce/index.php?fBuyContent=5658152">BUY CREDIT!</a></p>
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