Posts Tagged: Diaspora

Terror Is a Faggot with Halal Sausages Strapped to His Chest

By

Dishonesty became a form of protection.

...more

Finding the World Within

By

Secrets are expectations passed down over silent years.

...more

On the Futility of Defying Extinction

By

Always, when my father spoke to me in words I could not understand, my guilt spoke back.

...more

Which Flame Is Mine?: A Conversation with Rajiv Mohabir

By

Rajiv Mohabir discusses his second collection, The Cowherd’s Son, his work as a translator, and resisting erasure in a racist America.

...more

The Ability to Pass Becomes Her Cage: Talking with SJ Sindu

By

SJ Sindu discusses her new novel, Marriage of a Thousand Lies, queer readings of Hindu scriptures, and issues of privilege and power.

...more

VISIBLE: Women Writers of Color: Lisa Factora-Borchers

By

Lisa Factora-Borchers talks about being a Catholic feminist, writing across genres, and pushing back against a singular narrative about New York.

...more

Mothers of My Diaspora

By

It paralyzes me to think about the sacrifices my family made before I was in my mother’s womb. When they came here they knew they would lose a part of their language, their memories, their sanctity of self.

...more

The Saturday Rumpus Essay: No Wound

By

Maybe I can touch it and show it to you. If I convince you, we can call it real. And then perhaps it will be.

...more

The Rumpus Interview with Vanessa Hua

By

Vanessa Hua discusses her debut collection, Deceit and Other Possibilities, writing fiction in order to understand life as an American-born child of immigrants, and the importance of literary community.

...more

The Rumpus Interview with Meline Toumani

By

Meline Toumani discusses her debut, There Was and There Was Not, the rewards and risks of writing a political memoir, and what it means to approach a divided past and future.

...more

“Black to the Future”

By

Black to the future was/is a radical, dangerous, and daring dream—an impossibility. Science fiction and fantasy (sf&f) is a rehearsal of the impossible, an ideal realm for redefinition and reinvention. For Africans and their descendants in the diaspora, decolonizing our mind/body/spirits was/is an on-going sf&f project. In a stellar essay for the LA Review of Books, […]

...more

Black Quotations from Marion Berry to Natasha Trethewey

By

For Guernica, Lauren K. Alleyne interviews Retha Powers, editor of the new Bartlett’s Familiar Black Quotations, which collects quotes by a rainbow of black sources, from Zora Neale Hurston to NWA to ancient Egypt. It’s a really interesting glimpse at the necessity and difficulty of distilling the essence of “the black experience” from all the different black […]

...more

Abandoning the Mothership

By

We’ve all heard the stories about people getting fired from jobs because of overly revealing Facebook photos, or of couples breaking up by changing their Facebook “relationship status” before even talking to one another. Though Facebook is meant to exist in virtual reality, we have given it the power to seep into and intermingle with […]

...more

The Rumpus in your inbox!

* indicates required