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Posts by tag

Women Writers of Color

27 posts
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  • Rumpus Original

VISIBLE: Women Writers of Color: Samantha Irby

  • Deesha Philyaw
  • July 19, 2017
Samantha Irby discusses her new collection, We Are Never Meeting in Real Life, her reluctance to call herself a writer, and writing for the “cream jeans” crowd.
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Politics
  • Rumpus Original

A Specific Kind of Loneliness: In Conversation with Geeta Kothari

  • Parul Kapur Hinzen
  • July 7, 2017
Geeta Kothari discusses her debut collection, American xenophobia, and the immigrant narrative.
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  • Deesha Philyaw
  • Features & Reviews
  • Rumpus Original

VISIBLE: Women Writers of Color: Lisa Factora-Borchers

  • Deesha Philyaw
  • June 21, 2017
Lisa Factora-Borchers talks about being a Catholic feminist, writing across genres, and pushing back against a singular narrative about New York.
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
  • Rumpus Original

On Grief and Inheritance: A Conversation with Brionne Janae

  • Olivia Kate Cerrone
  • May 26, 2017
The poet Brionne Janae discusses her debut poetry collection After Jubilee, intergenerational trauma, and writing her way into historical personae.
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  • Deesha Philyaw
  • Features & Reviews
  • Rumpus Original

VISIBLE: Women Writers of Color: Tamiko Nimura

  • Deesha Philyaw
  • May 24, 2017
Tamiko Nimura talks about the influence of history, memory, and silence on her work; creating a private MFA for herself; and writing a generational memoir.
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Mini-Interviews

The Rumpus Mini-Interview Project #81: Chanelle Benz

  • Mickie Meinhardt
  • April 27, 2017
Chanelle Benz’s debut collection, The Man Who Shot Out My Eye Is Dead, is filled with characters often facing a moral crossroads. The stories contain the unexpected, like a classic Western…
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  • Deesha Philyaw
  • Features & Reviews
  • Rumpus Original

VISIBLE: Women Writers of Color: Angie Thomas

  • Deesha Philyaw
  • April 19, 2017
Angie Thomas discusses her debut novel, The Hate U Give, landing an agent on Twitter, and why she trusts teenagers more than the publishing industry.
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  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
  • Rumpus Original

Interrogating the English Language with Safiya Sinclair

  • Laura Creste
  • March 27, 2017
To be forced to speak in the language of the colonist, the language of the oppressor, while also carrying within us the storm of Jamaican patois, we live under a constant hurricane of our doubleness.
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  • Deesha Philyaw
  • Features & Reviews
  • Poetry
  • Rumpus Original

VISIBLE: Women Writers of Color: Yona Harvey

  • Deesha Philyaw
  • March 22, 2017
Yona Harvey talks about her path to becoming a poet, Winnie Mandela as an artistic inspiration, and what it means to write more publicly.
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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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  • Features & Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Rumpus Original

The Rumpus Interview with Roxane Gay

  • Abigail Bereola
  • January 4, 2017
Roxane Gay discusses her new collection, Difficult Women, the problem with whiteness as the default and the need for diverse representation, and life as a workaholic.
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