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Posts by tag

Mental Health

121 posts
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Mini-Interviews
  • Poetry

The Rumpus Mini-Interview Project #87: Kai Cheng Thom

  • Thora Siemsen
  • June 8, 2017
Rarely is birth silent for anyone involved. Silence, instead, is a learned phenomena. Unlearning silence can become its own birth, as it seems in Kai Cheng Thom’s debut poetry collection…
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Politics
  • Rumpus Original

Where You Put It on the Line: A Conversation with Mychal Denzel Smith

  • Abigail Bereola
  • May 10, 2017
Mychal Denzel Smith discusses his debut nonfiction book Invisible Man, Got the Whole World Watching, how the activist space has changed in recent years, and who he is writing for.
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  • Rumpus Original

The Day the FBI Tapped Our Phones

  • Kaylie Jones
  • April 19, 2017
I held an image in my mind of my daughter and me in a small rowboat and I’m rowing, rowing, rowing as hard as I can, away from this sinking ship.
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  • Rumpus Original

Written in Chalk: What It Means to Be Crazy

  • Jenessa Abrams
  • April 17, 2017
As truth becomes more elusive, as fact blends with fiction, we ought to take notice of how we categorize people, as categorization seems to be married to suppression, to disenfranchisement.
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  • Rumpus Original

Mixed Feelings: The Emotional Labor of Listening to Men Complain

  • Mandy Len Catron
  • March 28, 2017
In the first installment of "Mixed Feelings," a science-based advice column, Mandy Catron offers counsel on handling a partner's obsession with their ex.
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Mini-Interviews

The Rumpus Mini-Interview Project #76: Chris Tusa

  • Steven Petite
  • March 23, 2017
Set in post-Katrina New Orleans, Chris Tusa’s second novel, In the City of Falling Stars (Livingston Press, September 2016), tells a tale of paranoia and intrigue. Maurice Delahoussaye witnesses dead birds…
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Annie Lennox - Nostalgia | Rumpus Music
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  • Music
  • Rumpus Original

My Life with Annie Lennox: Nostalgia

  • Abby Higgs
  • March 23, 2017
I don’t use the term “lifelong hero” frivolously. There are a lot of people I respect and wish to emulate; Annie Lennox, however, is the only “lifelong hero” I’ll ever have. I need her.
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  • Deesha Philyaw
  • Features & Reviews
  • Rumpus Original

VISIBLE: Women Writers of Color: Abeer Hoque

  • Deesha Philyaw
  • February 22, 2017
Abeer Hoque talks about coming of age in the predominantly white suburbs of Pittsburgh, rewriting her memoir manuscript ten times, and looking for poetry in prose.
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  • Deesha Philyaw
  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
  • Rumpus Original

VISIBLE: Women Writers of Color: Tara Betts

  • Deesha Philyaw
  • January 18, 2017
Tara Betts discusses her newest collection, Break the Habit, the burden placed on black women artists to be both artist and activist, and why writing is rooted in identity.
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  • Other

Weekly Geekery

  • Julia Ostmann
  • November 29, 2016
Don’t dis slang—it’s older than you are. Regarding the pain of fish (and humanities-loving robots). Fake scientists are real. Sexism messes up men’s mental health, too. Aimee Bender and the Ladies…
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  • Features & Reviews
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  • Rumpus Original

The Rumpus Interview with Esmé Weijun Wang

  • Hannah Baxter
  • November 4, 2016
Esmé Weijun Wang discusses her first novel, The Border of Paradise, about a multi-generational new American family, creative expression through writing and photography, and interracial relationships.
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Rumpus Original

The Rumpus Interview with Brit Bennett

  • Abigail Bereola
  • October 17, 2016
Brit Bennett discusses her debut novel The Mothers, investigating “what-if” moments, and navigating racism in white spaces.
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