Opening the Doorways of Recognition for Native People: A Conversation with Joy Harjo, by Crystal AC Salas

Interviews Photo © Matika Wilbur For the 44th Annual Writers Week, the University of California, Riverside Department of Creative Writing, in partnership with the LA Review of Books, honored three US Poets Laureate with Lifetime Achievement Awards: Rita Dove (1993–95), Juan Felipe Herrera (2015–16), and Joy Harjo (2019–present). As part of honoring these poetry luminaries—three visionaries representing barrier breakage in their page, stage, and community work—Crystal AC Salas, third-year MFA student at UCR, interviewed each laureate over phone and Zoom in commemoration of the occasion. To celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of National Poetry Month, in this last of the series of conversations with three US Poets Laureate, Joy Harjo discusses her digital map project, how Native people have been disappeared, and answers the question, What can poetry do? Crystal AC Salas: Who would you say are your ancestors in your legacy of poet as ambassador, community organizer, and activist? How are these ancestors present in your work with the public? Joy Harjo: June Jordan is a poet whose scope and presence encompasses all those terms. She’s not quite an ancestor, but she is almost a generation ahead of me. I met her first through her book of poetry Things That I Do in the Dark. Her activism was always the bedrock of any utterance from her, whether it was poetry or personal essay—her essays are wonderful. I remember when she... Continue reading at 'World Literature Today'

[ World Literature Today | 2021-04-21 15:11:24 UTC ]

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Those Who Create Desire an Audience: A Conversation with Darlington Chibueze Anuonye, by Anthony Chibueze Ukwuoma

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Book Review: ‘Critical Hits,’ edited by J. Robert Lennon and Carmen Maria Machado

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On Literary Empathy and the Performative Reading of Palestinian Authors

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Marjane Satrapi Centers a New Graphic Anthology on the Women of Iran

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Ananda Devi Wins the 2024 Neustadt Prize

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Read the last words of writer Heba Abu Nada, who was killed last week by an Israeli airstrike.

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How a Collective of Incarcerated Writers Published an Anthology From Prison

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Revisiting The Brownies’ Book, a Magazine for Black Children Published by W.E.B. Du Bois

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October is for Horror Fans! Here are 8 Scarily Good New Releases

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Peace Is What Our Hearts Seek: Kalpna Singh-Chitnis’s Love Letters to Ukraine, by Candice Louisa Daquin

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In Memoriam Andrew Singer, by Clayton McKee

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US Poet Laureate Ada Limon is publishing a new anthology of 50 poems by 50 poets.

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Lit Hub Daily: August 23, 2023

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