Oct. 5 Kundiman Poetry Booth with Hossannah Asuncion, Cathy Linh Che, Evan Chen, Cynthia Arrieu-King, and Sally Wen Mao

KUNDIMAN POETRY BOOTH

Hossannah Asuncion, Evan Chen, Cynthia Arrieu-King, Sally Wen Mao, and Cathy Linh Che

1PM - 2PM | YWCA Ground Floor Meeting Room
30 3rd Ave
Brooklyn, NY 11217 ‎

Want a poem written for you? We’re taking requests. Meet some hot emerging poets and give them a prompt. They’ll write a poem for you on the spot. Featuring Hossannah Asuncion (Fragments of Loss), Evan ChenCynthia Arrieu-King (Manifest), Sally Wen Mao (Mad Honey Symposium), and Cathy Linh Che, the winner of the 2012 Kundiman Poetry Prize.

Hossannah Asuncion grew up near the 710 freeway in Los Angeles and currently lives near an A/C stop in Brooklyn. Her work has been published by The Poetry Society of America,Tuesday; An Art ProjectThe CollagistAnti- and other fine places.  

Evan Robert Chen is a doctoral student in creative writing at SUNY Albany, where he has taught courses in poetry and film. You can listen to his poems and drones at marrymepoems.tumblr.com.

Cynthia Arrieu-King works as an associate professor of creative writing at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey. She is the author of two collections of poetry, People are Tiny in Paintings of China (Octopus Books, 2010) and Manifest (Switchback Books, 2013).  

Sally Wen Mao is the author of a forthcoming book of poems, Mad Honey Symposium (Alice James Books, 2014), the winner of the 2012 Kinereth Gensler Award. Her work has been anthologized in The Best American Poetry 2013 and is published or forthcoming in GuernicaGulf Coast, and Indiana Review. 

Cathy Linh Che is the author of Split (Alice James, 2014), the winner of the 2012 Kundiman Poetry Prize. She has also received fellowships from Poets & Writers, Poets House, and LMCC's Workspace Residency. 

For more information, visit http://pageturnerfest.org/ 

 

Oct. 5 Cynthia Arrieu-King, Michelle Chan Brown, Cathy Linh Che, Evan Chen, Vanessa Huang, Jee Leong Koh, Sally Wen Mao, Alison Roh Park, Purvi Shah, R.A. Villanueva read at AAWW's Page Turner

October 5

Kundiman Marathon Poetry Reading at AAWW's PageTurnerFest

11 am - 12 pm

Roulette Ballroom
509 Atlantic Ave
Brooklyn, NY 11217

This special marathon reading presents some of the best emerging Asian American poets.

Featuring Michelle Chan Brown (Double Agent), Cathy Linh Che (Split ), Evan Chen, Vanessa Huang, Cynthia Arrieu-King (Manifest), Jee Leong Koh (Seven Studies for a Self Portrait), Sally Wen Mao (Mad Honey Symposium), Alison Roh Park (What We Push Against), Purvi Shah (Terrain Tracks), and R.A. Villanueva (Reliquaria)

For more information, visit http://pageturnerfest.org/ 

Cynthia Arrieu-King works as an associate professor of creative writing at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey. She is the author of two collections of poetry, People are Tiny in Paintings of China (Octopus Books, 2010) and Manifest (Switchback Books, 2013).  

Michelle Chan Brown
’s Double Agent was the winner of the 2012 Kore First Book Award, judged by Bhanu Kapil. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in BlackbirdThe Missouri Review, and Witness. She lives with DC, where she teaches, writes, and edits Drunken Boat.

Cathy Linh Che
 is the author of Split (Alice James Books, 2014), the winner of the 2012 Kundiman Poetry Prize. She has also received fellowships from Poets & Writers, Poets House, and LMCC's Workspace Residency.

 Evan Robert Chen is a doctoral student in creative writing at SUNY Albany, where he has taught courses in poetry and film. You can listen to his poems and drones at marrymepoems.tumblr.com.

Poet, Artist, and Cultural Organizer Vanessa Huang weaves poemsongs with moments of creative aliveness and transformative encounter, color, and texture in call and response with kindred spirits who dream and make worlds where each and all of us are free. She was a finalist for Poets & Writers’ 2010 California Writers Exchange Award.

Jee Leong Koh is the author of four books of poems, including Seven Studies for a Self Portrait (Bench Press). His most recent collection, The Pillow Book, will be translated into Japanese and published by Awai Books in 2014. Born in Singapore, he now lives in New York, and blogs at Song of a Reformed Headhunter.

 Sally Wen Mao is the author of a forthcoming book of poems, Mad Honey Symposium (Alice James Books, 2014), the winner of the 2012 Kinereth Gensler Award. Her work has been anthologized in The Best American Poetry 2013 and is published or forthcoming in GuernicaGulf Coast, and Indiana Review. 

Alison Roh Park is a Kundiman fellow, Pushcart nominated poet, and winner of the 2011 Poetry Society of America New York Chapbook Fellowship, 2012 Poets and Writers Magazine Amy Award and 2010 Jerome Foundation Travel and Study Grant. She currently teaches Asian American Studies at Hunter College and writes for www.racefiles.com.

Purvi Shah won the inaugural SONY South Asian Excellence Award for Social Service for her work fighting violence against women. Her debut book,Terrain Tracks, garnered the Many Voices Project prize and was nominated for the Asian American Writers’ Workshop Members’ Choice Award. You can find more of her work at http://purvipoets.nethttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/purvi-shah/, or @PurviPoets.

R.A. Villanueva is the author of Reliquaria, winner of the 2013 Prairie Schooner Book Prize. He is also the winner of the 2013 Ninth Letter Literary Award for poetry. A founding editor of Tongue: A Journal of Writing & Art, he lives in Brooklyn.

Sept. 28 Tamiko Beyer, Margaret Rhee, Truong Tran, Ocean Vuong, & Debbie Yee at Eastwind Books

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Kundiman Poetry reading in the Bay to celebrate NYC poets Ocean and Tamiko and their publications! with Debbie, Margaret, and Truong!!

Facebook event here: https://www.facebook.com/events/219838354842419/ 

Hosted by the Handsomest: Dan Lau

Come celebrate with us the new publications of
Tamiko's WE COME ELEMENTAL
(ALICE JAMES BOOKS, 2013)
& Ocean's NO (YES YES BOOKS, 2013)

at EASTWIND BOOKS of BERKELEY
2066 University Ave
Berkeley, CA 94704


Saturday, September 28 at 4:30pm

REMEMBER: KUNDIMAN IS LOVE.

Bios Below

OCEAN VUONG!

Born in Saigon, Vietnam, Ocean Vuong is the author of two chapbooks: NO (YesYes Books, 2013) and BURNINGS (Sibling Rivalry Press, 2010), which was an American Library Association's Over The Rainbow selection. A recipient of a 2014 Pushcart Prize, other honors include fellowships from Kundiman, Poets House, and the Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts, as well as the 2012 Stanley Kunitz Prize for Younger Poets and an Academy of American Poets Prize. Poems appear in American Poetry Review, Crab Orchard Review, Quarterly West, Denver Quarterly, Guernica, Poetry Northwest, and The Normal School, amongst others. He lives in Queens, NY. (www.oceanvuong.tumblr.com)

DEBBIE YEE!

Debbie Yee's poems have appeared variously, including The Best American Poetry 2009, Bateau and Fence. A Kundiman fellow and San Francisco Arts Commission grant recipient in literary arts, Debbie lives in San Francisco where she is in-house counsel for a national bank and periodically teaches writing and Gocco printmaking. She has lately returned to blogging about crafts, cooking, motherhood, and sometimes poetry at linocat.com.

MARGARET RHEE!

Loves green tea ice cream, vegan foods, thinking about activism, dreams, and new media. Recent poems published and forthcoming at Berkeley Poetry Review, Hyphen Magazine, and Comma, Poetry. Her chapbook Yellow was published in 2011 by Tinfish Press. She is a Kundiman Fellow.

TRUONG TRAN!

Truong Tran is a Vietnamese-American poet, visual artist, and teacher. His collection dust and consciousness (2002) won the San Francisco Poetry
Center Book Prize is the author of several collections of poetry. In 2003, he served as  Writer in Residence for Intersection for the Arts. Tran currently lives in San Francisco,where he teaches creative writing at San Francisco State University, and is Writer in Residence at theSan Francisco School of the Arts.

DAN LAU!

Dan Lau is a recipient of a Kundiman Fellowship, a William Dickey Fellowship, an Archie D. and Bertha Walker Scholarship from the FAWC in Provincetown,and an Individual Arts Commission grant from the San Francisco Arts Commission. His poem have appeared in Generations, Cape Cod Review, CRATE, Gesture, RHINO, The Collagist.

TAMIKO BEYER!

Tamiko Beyer is the author of We Come Elemental (Alice James Books), winner of the 2011 Kinereth Gensler Award, and bough breaks  (Meritage Press). Her poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming in The Volta, Octopus, Quarterly West, and elsewhere.  She has received grants and fellowships from Kundiman, Astraea Lesbian Writers Fund, Hedgebrook, and Washington University in St. Louis where received her M.F.A..  Currently, she is the Senior Writer at Corporate Accountability International and lives in Cambridge, MA. Find her online at tamikobeyer.com.

 

Michelle Chan Brown, April Naoko Heck, Mia Ayumi Malhotra, Chris Santiago, & R.A. Villanueva published in Kartika Review

Congrats, dear fellows and alums!

We’re excited to announce the release of our latest publication, Issue 16, Fall 2013.

In This Issue: Michelle Chan Brown, Kali Fajardo-Anstine, April Naoko Heck, Susan Ito, Mia Ayumi Malhotra, Minh Pham, Danny Robles, Chris Santiago, R. A. Santos, Shubha Venugopal, R.A. Villanueva, Frances Kai-Hwa Wang.

Interviews with Li-Young Lee, acclaimed poet and author of four books of poetry and a memoir, including Behind My Eyes (W.W. Norton, 2008) and Shin Yu Pai, author of eight books of poetry, including Aux Arcs (La Alameda Press, 2013).

APIA Commentary by David Mura: The Student of Color in the Typical MFA Program.

 

Go here to check out their work! http://kartikareview.com/?p=558

Sept. 27 Kazim Ali, April Naoko Heck, & Srikanth Reddy at NYU

Kundiman Reading at NYU

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September 27, 2013 5:00 p.m

Facebook event here:

https://www.facebook.com/events/366737396790683/

 

 

Congrats to Roberto Ascalon, winner of the 2013 Rattle Poetry Prize!

Congrats, dear Roberto! 

Check out the announcement here: 
http://www.rattle.com/poetry/2013/09/2013-rattle-poetry-prize-winners/

“The Fire This Time”
by
Roberto Ascalon
Seattle, WA

__________

Finalists:

“A Poem for Women Who Don’t Want Children”
Chanel Brenner
Santa Monica, CA

“My Mother Told Us Not to Have Children”
Rebecca Gayle Howell
Lubbock, TX

“Baby Love”
Courtney Kampa
New York, NY

“What He Must Have Seen”
Stephen Kampa
Daytona Beach, FL

“Man on Mad Anthony”
Bea Opengart
Cincinatti, OH

“Laundry List”
Michelle Ornat
Elma, NY

“Man on the Floor”
Jack Powers
Fairfield, CT

“Basic Standards Test”
Danez Smith
St. Paul, MN

“Who Breathed in Binders”
Patricia Smith
Howell, NJ

“Of You”
Wendy Videlock
Grand Junction, CO

These eleven poems will be published in the Winter issue of Rattle this December. Each of the Finalists are also eligible for the $1,000 Readers’ Choice Award, to be selected by entrant and subscriber vote (the voting period is December 1, 2013 – February 15, 2014).

Another nine poems were selected for standard publication, and offered a space in the open section of a future issue. These poets will be notified individually about details, but they are: Jacqueline Berger, Daniel Bohnhorst, Jackleen Holton, Sharon Kessler-Farchi, Michael Meyerhofer, Kathleen Nolan, Charlotte Pence, Sam Sax, and Timothy Schirmer.

Thank you to everyone who participated in the competition, which would not have been a success without your diverse and inspiring poems. We received a record 2,105 entries and well over 8,000 poems, and it was an honor to read each of them.

 

September 8: Kundiman & Verlaine Reading featuring Nina Sharma, Sho Sugita & Jenny Xie

September 8

Kundiman & Verlaine Reading

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Open Bar from 4-5 pm
Open Mic from 4:30-5pm
Featured reading begins at 5 pm
$5 donation

Verlaine
110 Rivington St.
(Ludlow & Essex Sts.)
212-614-2494
F train to Delancey

Nina Sharma, Sho Sugita, & Jenny Xie read. 

Facebook event page here: https://www.facebook.com/events/1409893549226010/ 

Nina Sharma is a writer from Edison, New Jersey. Her work has been featured in Certain Circuits Magazine, The Feminist Wire, Reverie: Midwest African American Literature, and Ginosko Literary Journal. She recently was awarded a fellowship from the Vermont Studio Center and nominated for a Pushcart Prize for her nonfiction. With Quincy Scott Jones, she co-created the Noreaster Exchange: a multicultural, multi-city reading series. She is currently attending Columbia University's MFA in writing program and working on her first book. 

Sho Sugita lives in Brooklyn, NY. He works as a medical manuscript translator and studies poetry at Brooklyn College. He was an invited musician/reader in 2012 for Les Souffleurs de Vers: deuxième edition in Grenoble, France to raise funds for the 3-11 Tohoku disaster. His creative work can be found in Washington Square and Endless
Possibilities
(Classical and New Music on WRSU). He is currently working on a translation manuscript of Hirato Renkichi and Kanbara Tai, two poets active during the Japanese Futurist Movement of the early 1920s.

Jenny Xie received her MFA from NYU, and her work has appeared or is forthcoming in the LA Review of Books, Narrative, Gulf Coast, Indiana Review, and elsewhere. She's currently a lecturer in the expository writing program at NYU.

 

This event was funded in part by Poets & Writers, Inc. through public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council. 

 

 
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Hannah Sanghee Park wins Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship

Congrats, dear Hannah! 

Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowships

The Poetry Foundation and Poetry magazine are pleased to announce the five recipients of 2013 Ruth Lilly Fellowships: Harmony Holiday, Matthew Nienow, Hannah Sanghee Park, Natalie Shapero and Phillip B. Williams. Among the largest awards offered to aspiring poets in the United States, the $15,000 scholarship prize is intended to encourage the further study and writing of poetry and is open to all U.S. poets between 21 and 31 years of age.

“Since Harriet Monroe's founding of Poetry in 1912, to Ruth Lilly's endowment of these fellowships in 1989, to our constant search for fresh new voices today, Poetry has always sought work that enlivens our sense of what poetry is worth and what it can do,” said Don Share, editor of Poetry magazine, in announcing the 2013 winners. “This year's group of fellows—which includes poets whose passions range from community service to woodworking to scholarship—is especially inspiring because their extraordinary talents are so deeply informed by the way in which they have composed their lives.”

Harmony Holiday was born in Waterloo, Iowa and educated at the University of California at Berkeley and Columbia University. Her debut collection of poems, Negro League Baseball (Fence, 2011), won the Fence Books Motherwell Prize. Go Find your Father/A Famous Blues, a “dos-a-dos” book featuring poetry, letters and essays, is due out from Ricochet Editions in fall 2013. Holiday lives in New York City.

Matthew Nienow was born in Los Angeles in 1983 and spent most of his youth in Seattle. He holds an MFA from the University of Washington and a degree in Traditional Small Craft from the Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding. His work has appeared in Beloit Poetry JournalNew England Review, Poetry and two editions of the Best New Poets anthology (2007 and 2012). He has received awards and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Elizabeth George Foundation and Artist Trust, among others. He lives with his wife and two sons in Port Townsend, Washington where he builds boats and custom wooden paddle boards.

Hannah Sanghee Park was born in Tacoma, Washington in 1986. She earned a BA from the University of Washington and an MFA from the Iowa Writers' Workshop. Her chapbook, Ode Days Ode, was published by the Catenary Press in 2011. She is the recipient of fellowships and awards from the Fulbright Program, 4Culture, the Iowa Arts Council/National Endowment for the Arts and the MacDowell Colony. Her work is forthcoming in Best New Poets 2013 and Poetry Northwest. Park lives in Los Angeles and is currently studying at the USC School of Cinematic Arts.

Natalie Shapero was born in Chester, Pennsylvania in 1982. She received a BA from the Johns Hopkins University, an MFA from the Ohio State University and a JD from the University of Chicago Law School. She is the author of the poetry collection No Object (Saturnalia, 2013) and her writing has appeared in The Believer, The New Republic, Poetry, The Progressive and elsewhere. Shapero is a 2012-2014 Kenyon Review fellow at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio.

Phillip B. Williams was born 1986 in Chicago. He is the author of the chapbooks Bruised Gospels (Arts in Bloom Inc., 2011) and Burn (YesYes Books, 2013). Williams is a Cave Canem graduate and the poetry editor of the online journal Vinyl Poetry. His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Blackbird, Callaloo, Kenyon Review Online, Painted Bride Quarterly, The Southern Review, West Branch and others. Williams is currently a Chancellor’s Graduate fellow at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri and is working on his MFA in creative writing.

These five emerging voices will be featured in Poetry magazine’s November issue and on poetryfoundation.org.

The Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship program is organized and administered by the Poetry Foundation in Chicago, publisher of Poetry magazine.

Note: In 2014, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowships will become the Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Fellowships and the current $15,000 Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship prize amount will nearly double. This increase is the result of a generous gift from the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Memorial Fund.

* * *

About the Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship Program
Established in 1989 by Ruth Lilly to encourage the further writing and study of poetry, the Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship program has dramatically expanded since its inception. Until 1995, university writing programs nationwide each nominated one student poet for a single fellowship; from 1996 until 2007, two fellowships were awarded. In 2008 the competition was opened to all U.S. poets between 21 and 31 years of age, and the number of fellowships increased to five, totaling $75,000.

 

Interview with Nina Sharma

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Nina Sharma is a writer from Edison, New Jersey. Her work has been featured in Certain Circuits Magazine, The Feminist Wire, Reverie: Midwest African American Literature, and Ginosko Literary Journal. She recently was awarded a fellowship from the Vermont Studio Center and nominated for a Pushcart Prize for her nonfiction. With Quincy Scott Jones, she co-created the Noreaster Exchange: a multicultural, multi-city reading series. She is currently attending Columbia University's MFA in writing program and working on her first book. 

Cathy Linh Che: I know that you are now attending Columbia for your MFA program. How has your work changed during the course of the MFA? How has it remained the same?

Nina Sharma: I’m actually starting next week!  This world isn’t entirely new to me though.  I have a master’s in American Studies.  I think I began to find my footing as a writer during the course of that program.  It was a little bit of a discovery period for me—honing in on the issues and themes I care most about and how I’d like to attend to them.  I took chances.  I slipped in creative writing when I could, brought pop culture into conversations otherwise reserved for canonical works, and vice versa.  I felt a newfound charge in my writing as I did.  While I was working along these lines prior to my program, shifting into that new space, with a new audience, made me realize that the best writing comes out of a sense of risk.  I kind of take that with me whether I am working in a program or outside of it. 

CLC: Could you tell me a little about your life pre-MFA? What made you decide to apply and attend one?

NS: For the most part, up until like a year or so ago actually, I was more of what I call a secret writer.  I always wanted a professional writing life but I wasn’t sure it would happen.  Most of my family members are in healthcare in some way.  Only three out of the fourteen of us cousins pursued something else.  Even though I didn’t take a science track and wrote throughout my life, I always struggled to see this as something very real and possible. I owe a huge debt to Asian American Writers’ Workshop, where I worked for a few years.  Meeting other writers of similar backgrounds and who engaged with similar themes, who pushed their work across bounds I could not even fathom yet, connecting with like-minded organizations such as Cave Canem and Kundiman along the way, I felt excited and hopeful in a way I hadn’t before.  Being part of a writing community full time for two years is a real gift, to not have to fight for that time or qualify it in any way.

CLC: Kundiman has an ongoing Kavad project this year called Writing Race and Belonging: Would you mind spending some time discussing your relationship to writing, race, and belonging? Broad topic, I know, but we're interested in any gut reactions, memories, thoughts, or impressions you have when you think about those three ideas.

NS: At the risk of sounding Mad Libby, I would say that writing, in particular reflecting on race and identity, gives me a sense of belonging more than anything else.  I am a shy person and I think I have written my way out of the silences in my life.  I am thinking of the times when my loved ones do not consider the traumas they have suffered to be worth acknowledging and also times when I fail to acknowledge my own.  I am, like many first generation South Asian Americans, an inheritor of silences, we absorb them and later, learn to read between them, just as we learn to negotiate the two worlds we exist in— the world of our home and family and the one outside of it, in which the former is often rendered invisible.  It is that threshold between the two worlds that is most like home to me, the closest I’ve felt to belonging.  That is where I write from.

CLC: What are you currently working on?

NS: I am working on a series of essays reflecting on my relationship with my husband, Quincy Scott Jones, meditating on our experiences as an interracial couple— he being African American and I, South Asian.  I reflect upon moments in our life and also engage with broader histories that speak our experiences; in particular surprising, idiosyncratic connections I found as I looked into things further.  It’s been exciting, discovering so much even as I write our own story.

CLC: Do you have any poetry (or art or music) recommendations?

NS: The writings of Theresa Hak Kyung Cha, Maxine Hong Kingston, and James Baldwin are particularly inspiring to me. They are and always will be, to take a line from Kingston's Woman Warrior, my swordsmen and swordswomen. Speaking more contemporarily, the work of Minter Krotzer, Kamilah Aisha Moon, Bushra Rehman, whose wonderful debut novel Corona came out earlier this year, Thaddeus Rutkowski, Hal Sirowitz, and Mecca Jamilah Sullivan are always close by me and Quincy’s The T-Bone Series is right at the heart.

 

Nina will be reading at Kundiman & Verlaine this Sunday, September 8th with Jenny Xie and Sho Sugita. Facebook event here and more event info here.

 

Interview with Sho Sugita

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Sho  Sugita lives in Brooklyn, NY. He works as a medical manuscript translator and studies poetry at Brooklyn College. He was an invited musician/reader in 2012 for Les Souffleurs de Vers: deuxième edition in Grenoble, France to raise funds for the 3-11 Tohoku disaster. His creative work can be found in Washington Square and Endless Possibilities (Classical and New Music on WRSU). He is currently working on a translation manuscript of Hirato Renkichi and Kanbara Tai, two poets active during the Japanese Futurist Movement of the early 1920s.

 

Cathy Linh Che: I've heard that you are now attending Brooklyn College for your MFA program. How has your work changed during the course of the MFA? How has it remained the same?

Sho Sugita: I used to attempt at verse. I now think about how to rupture them.

CLC: Could you tell me a little about your life pre-MFA? What made you decide to apply and attend one?

SS: I graduated from the University of Chicago in 2008, which was obviously a bad time for finding jobs. This was especially true for the Midwest. I had an offer to pursue an MFA in music at Mills, but it didn’t make too much sense to go into debt at the time. I moved to Japan due to the dire prospects for seeking employment in the US and ended up becoming an orthopedic sales representative. I decided that I wanted to reapply for school when I entered my late-20s. There was a lot of downtime with the nature of my work, so I was writing a lot during my waiting hours at outpatient lounges. The pursuit of writing made more sense than music with my work-related constraints in Japan.

CLC: Kundiman has an ongoing Kavad project this year called Writing Race and Belonging: Would you mind spending some time discussing your relationship to writing, race, and belonging? Broad topic, I know, but we're interested in any gut reactions, memories, thoughts, or impressions you have when you think about those three ideas.

SS: To answer your question directly, I have a tendency to question the authority of how we canonize literature—especially in regards to race and belonging—that probably stems out of my interest in Frank Chin’s “Come All Ye Asian American Writers of the Real and the Fake” as a teenager. I never liked the term “Classics” in literature and its implications of the Western cannon, but I’ve learned over the years that there is just as much to talk about “what we don’t talk about.” 

I’m currently interested in the study of Modernism. With that said, the term scholars tend to use a lot in the field is “transatlantic” to describe the transmission of fin de siècle as a spirit of the time. I want to provide examples that “transcontinental” might be a more accurate modifier to describe the era. Fortunately, the academic climate is moving in a similar direction. For example, I think this year’s interest around Chicago Review’s criticism of The Princeton Encyclopedia of Poetry and Poetics by Kent Johnson is a necessary discussion to have—that inclusion has improved over the years, but to question if it is enough.

The same could be said about attitudes in poetry circles and small presses. When I was an undergraduate, I remember Ed Roberson was kindly suggesting to me that I should try to find Asian-American writing communities, but little was visible to me back in 2007. Kundiman’s programming is a testament to the changes I’m seeing.

CLC: What are you currently working on?

I recently finished a translation manuscript of Hirato Renkichi Shishū, a posthumous selection of poems by a Japanese Futurist poet. I spent some time over the summer in Tokyo at the Museum of Modern Literature, and I realized that I could collect Modernist and Proletariat coterie journals from the 1910s-1920s to compile a “Collected Works of Hirato Renkichi.” I should be finished with that project in a month or so. Hopefully, some of the poems will be available for readers in the near future. One can find an excellent translation of Hirato Renkichi’s Manifesto of the Japanese Futurist Movement by Miryam Sas in Cabinet Magazine (Issue 13).

SS: Do you have any poetry (or art or music) recommendations?

Poetry: O-Bon by Brandon Shimoda, Facts for Visitors by Srikanth Reddy, the recent Northwestern World Classics edition of Mayakovsky’s Selected Poems. I would also recommend John Solt’s translations of Kitasono Katue in Oceans Beyond Monotonous Space. I’ve read that there’s going to be a translation of Gozo Yoshimasu by Sayuri Okamoto with creative interventions by Forrest Gander, which is exciting to hear. Here’s an amazing reading of Yoshimasu’s “Ancient Observatory” from 1985: http://vimeo.com/31991414

Art: Tokyo 1955-1970: A New Avant-Garde, Requiem for the Sun: The Art of Mono-ha, and Modernism in the Russian Far East and Japan 1918-1928

Music: Odori by radicalfashion (Hirohito Ihara), Perfect Lives by Robert Ashley, Obscure Tape Music of Japan 1: Aoi no Ue by Joji Yuasa, Tomomi Adachi’s sound poetry performances on PennSound. I’ve also heard from a professor in the MFA program that Jay-Z is great.