Call for Poets for the Mother Tongues Kavad: Seeking three first generation APIA poets to interview their mothers and to write poems from these interviews. $400 stipend. Deadline: April 18th, 2014

Mother Tongues


We never talked about it. Since she escaped the communist regime in Vietnam, my mother resolved to leave her past behind. Any question about the war, the refugee camp, or the Saigon gangster that had been my father met unshakable silence. Con oi, du roi. Me dien cai dau. All I knew of my family’s history came from library books, neighborhood gossip, or the long-distance calls my mother made across the Pacific while I pretended to sleep. Living without a history denied all possibilities for “existence.” And though she determined to protect me from what the telling revealed, I could not reconcile her trauma with the desire to understand where we came from, how we got here, or what unspeakable violence demanded we live in fear of that knowledge.  
-- Kundiman Fellow

 

We do not enter this life as tabulae rasae; we are born with the ability to recognize our mother's voice. In utero we begin to hear the sounds basic to language.  As we grow, we internalize the rules and structures that turn sound into meaning. Mothers give us our means of discerning language; language gives us our means of knowing our world. Past documents and images can salvage only so much of this past.  To capture our mothers' narratives we must incorporate the ephemerality of memory through speech.  We must begin with her own words.  

Mother Tongues recovers diasporic narratives by chronicling the lives and experiences of mothers across three Asian American generations. Interviews, poetry and performances will combine to form an archive that will document the triumphs and challenges of building lives in America.

 

Project Manager

Melissa Reburiano is a poet and a doctoral student in Applied Anthropology at Columbia University.  An Arthur Zankel Fellow, Ms. Reburiano's research examines race/ethnicity, gender, and social formation in emerging digital geographies. She has presented her research at conferences nationwide and has served as a teaching fellow at The Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity at Columbia University.  A longtime educator, Ms. Reburiano has devised and facilitated college-preparatory curriculum for The Harlem Children's Zone and has most recently worked with the Asian American Writers Workshop to offer the organization's first workshop using strategies of improvisational acting to teach elements of the creative process. 

 

Project Coordinator

Paul Tran is an Asian American activist, historian and spoken word poet from Providence, RI. He's won "Best Poet" and "Pushing the Art Forward" at the national college poetry slam and numerous fellowships from Kundiman, Coca Cola and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. His work combines oral history and performance the reimagine the violences inherited from the American war in Vietnam. Paul is the cofounder of the Gravediggers Poetry Collective, a workshop for emerging writers of color, and coaches the 2014 Providence youth slam team heading to Brave New Voices.

 

Call for Poets

We are looking for three first generation Asian American poets interested in the intersection between oral history and creative writing. These poets will interview their mothers, respond to these interviews through poetry and participate in the culminating reading at Fordham University. There will also be a round-table discussion with Asian American youth poets on June 1 from 12:00 - 1:00 pm. Honorarium is $400.

Access the Online Application
The application deadline is April 18.
Notification to applicants will go out by email on April 25.

 

Call for Youth Poets

Eligibility and Application

Asian American youth ages 13 - 18  
Access the Online Application
The application deadline is April 18th.
Notification to applicants will go out by email on April 25th.

Youth poets will attend an oral history/creative writing weekend intensive workshop and then will interview their mothers, respond to these interviews through poetry and participate in the culminating reading at Fordham University.

 

Youth Oral History/Creative Writing Weekend Intensive Workshop

Saturday, May 31 and Sunday, June 1
10:00 am - 1:00 pm 
Fordham University, Lincoln Center
Lunch will be provided.

 


Performance

Thursday, June 5, 7:00 pm
Fordham University, Lincoln Center
South Lounge

113 West 60th Street
Fordham University, Lincoln Center
Take A, B, C, D & 1 trains to Columbus Circle. 
Exit at 60th Street & Broadway.  Go west of Columbus Avenue.
Upon entering the glass doors inform the security desk that you are attending the English Department event. Take escalators up 1 floor to Plaza level.  Head to the back of the Student Cafeteria

Check out Fireside: A Poetry Blog during National Poetry Month

For more, visit: http://kundimanfireside.tumblr.com/

Poets Playing: Exquisite Corpse


From top to bottom the images/texts are by:

Rachelle Cruz lives in Southern Cali. Her text/image was completed with the help of her CRWT 150 students, Melanie and Jonathan.

Desiree Bailey lives in Providence, RI and is an MFA Fiction candidate at Brown University. She has received fellowships from Princeton in Africa, The Norman Mailer Center and the Callaloo Creative Writing Workshop. She is the current Fiction editor for Kin Folks.

Eduardo Corral first book Slow Lightning was published by Yale University Press in 2012 as the winner of the Yale Younger Series Poets Prize. Corral was born in Casa Grande, Arizona to Higinio and Socorro Corral. He currently lives in Rego Park, Queens, New York. 

Lisa Lee is a writer living in Los Angeles.

Rona Luo is a writer and healer living in Oakland, California.

Rajiv Mohabir studies writing in Honolulu and loves poems by Kundies, Kabir, and humpback whales. Check out some of his work here: http://rajivmohabir.wordpress.com/writing/

Rachel Ronquillo Gray was born and raised in Nevada; she now lives in the Midwest and is trying to live without mountains. 

Poet and visual artist Maya Pindyck is the author of the collection Friend Among Stones (New Rivers Press) and the chapbook Locket, Master (Poetry Society of America).

Matthew Olzmann is the author of Mezzanines (Alice James Books), selected for the 2011 Kundiman Prize. His poems have appeared in New England ReviewKenyon ReviewGulf Coast,The Southern Review and elsewhere. He’s received fellowships and scholarships from the Kresge Arts FoundationThe Kenyon Review Writers Workshop, and the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. Currently, he teaches at Warren Wilson College and is the poetry editor of The Collagist.

March 29: Cathy Linh Che, Paul Tran, and Ocean Vuong present New Vietnamese Poetry at Split This Rock

March 29 New Vietnamese Poetry: A Group Reading & Discussion
Cathy Linh Che, Paul Tran, Ocean Vuong 

Beacon Hotel, Beacon Room [Map]

 

Saturday, March 29, 2014
11:30am – 1:00pm

The Vietnam War continues to inform public discourse, scholarship, and national policies on race, empire, and the struggle for human rights. This layered roundtable and reading will excavate voices from the diaspora’s exiled. Three Vietnamese American poets will share their work and lead a discussion on the Vietnam War and its legacies in new Vietnamese poetry, exploring death, ghosts, belonging, displacement, memory, debt, intergenerational trauma, and sexual assault. It will examine how poetry and spoken word recover the history of marginalized peoples and the war’s connection to US colonialism throughout the world. Sponsored by Kundiman, an organization dedicated to the creation and cultivation of Asian American poetry.
 

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Cathy Linh Che is the author of Split (Alice James, 2014), winner of the 2012 Kundiman Poetry Prize

A Vietnamese American poet from Los Angeles and Long Beach, CA, she received her BA from Reed College and her MFA from New York University. She has been awarded fellowships and residencies from Poets & Writers, The Fine Arts Work Center at Provincetown, KundimanHedgebrookPoets House, The Asian American Literary Review, The Center for Book Arts, and The Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Workspace Residency.

A founding editor of the online journal Paperbag, she is currently Program Associate for Readings & Workshops (East) at Poets & Writers and Manager of Kundiman.

She currently lives in Brooklyn, NY.
 

Paul Tran grew up in San Diego, CA. His mother escaped from Vietnam in 1989 and raised him as a single-parent in the United States. Being the first in his family to graduate high school and attend college, Paul is fascinated by the promise and transformative power of education.

Since 2005, Paul has facilitated workshops and trainings for youth organizers throughout the United States. He designs curriculum around race, power, and the potential of arts activism. As an organizer and mentor, Paul has earned awards from the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. (2006), Prudential Spirit of Community (2007), Gloria Barron Prize for Young Heroes (2008), California Museum & Office of the Governor and First Lady Maria Shriver (2009), Parents, Families & Friends of Lesbians & Gays (2010), and funding from Qualcomm, Fish & Richardson, United Way San Diego, and the University of California, San Diego.
 

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 2013 Pushcart Prize, he has received fellowships from Kundiman, Poets House, The Elizabeth George Foundation, 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 Poetry, The Nation, American Poetry Review, Quarterly West, Guernica, The Normal School, Beloit Poetry Journal, and Denver Quarterly, amongst others. Work has also been translated into Hindi, Korean, Vietnamese, and Russian.

Born in Saigon, Vietnam, he currently resides in New York City where he reads chapbook submissions as the managing editor of Thrush Press. He thinks you’re perfect.

March 19: AALR Local/Express Brooklyn Book Release with Cathy Linh Che, April Naoko Heck, Eugenia Leigh, R.A. Villanueva, and more!

Wednesday, March 19th, 2014, 7pm

Dumbo Sky
10 Jay Street #903
Brooklyn, New York

STORYTELLING/OPEN MIC FEATURING (in formation):
Jaishri Abichandani
Tina Chang
Cathy Linh Che (AALR A Lettre Fellow)
Curtis Chin
April Naoko Heck
Eugenia Leigh (AALR A Lettre Fellow)
Ed Lin
Swati Marquez
Peter Ong
Zohra Saed
RA Villanueva (AALR A Lettre Fellow)
YaliniDream

& Nancy Bulalacao, hosting the mic

"They were out there all around us: a startling array of offbeat, outspoken, and idealistic Asian American artists, activists, entrepreneurs, and organizers who converged [in] New York City in the '90s—most of them, like us, a double "second generation," the children of immigrants and students of the first wave of Asian American Studies.... This collection is a relief map of unexplored history. But it is also a first draft of the future." - Jeff Yang from foreword of Local/Express: Asian American Arts and Culture 90s NYC.

Come celebrate the release of a new anthology by The Asian American Literary Review that captures some of the voices, reflections, and energy of Asian American NYC in the 90s with artists active then and now!

The Facebook event is here: https://www.facebook.com/events/214988622034254/

March 23 Kundiman & Verlaine Reading with J. Mae Barizo, Tina Chang, & Emily Yoon

Kundiman & Verlaine Reading with J. Mae Barizo, Tina Chang, & Emily Yoon

Sunday, March 23rd, 2013, 4pm


Happy spring, everyone! Join us for an evening of poetry & libation at the Lower East Side's Verlaine. Come early for open bar! Stay after for Verlaine's delicious happy hour specials. 

Open bar 4pm-5pm
Open mic 4:30-5pm
Feature reading begins 5pm

$5 suggested donation


Facebook event page: https://www.facebook.com/events/469897616471950/

J. Mae Barizo, poet and cultural critic, was a Kundiman Prize and Kinereth Gensler award finalist for Alice James Books. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Los Angeles Review of BooksBoston ReviewHyperallergicParis Review OnlineNylon MagazineDenver Quarterly and many more. She attended Bennington College, where she was awarded the Jane Kenyon Award for poetry. She is a 2014 Poet's House fellow, and her first book, The Cumulus Effect will be published by Four Way Books. A champion of cross-genre works and performatic poetics, J. Mae has collaborated with musicians from the The National, Bon Iver, and the American String Quartet. She lives in New York City.

Emily Yoon is a first-year MFA in Poetry student at New York University. She admires the subtlety in expression and unique intimacy with nature in traditional Korean poetry, and aims to capture such qualities in her own work. Previous honors she has received for poetry include International Merit Award from the Atlanta Review, Poem of Distinction in the Writecorner Press Poetry Awards, 1st Place in the Iris N. Spencer Poetry Contest, and publication on the APIARY magazine online.

Tina Chang is the Poet Laureate of Brooklyn. She is the author of the poetry collections Half-Lit Houses and Of Gods & Strangers (Four Way Books) and co-editor of the anthology Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from the Middle East, Asia and Beyond (W.W. Norton, 2008) along with Nathalie Handal and Ravi Shankar. Her poems have appeared in American PoetMcSweeney’sPloughsharesThe New York Times among others. She currently teaches poetry at Sarah Lawrence College and is an international faculty member at the City University at Hong Kong.

 


Verlaine

110 Rivington St.
(Ludlow & Essex Sts.)
New York, NY 10012

212-614-2494 
F train to Delancey


This event was funded in part by Poets & Writers, Inc. with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature. 


Tamiko Beyer and Busha Rehman are Lambda Literary Award Finalists

Major congrats, dear Tamiko and dear Bushra!

LESBIAN POETRY

  • A Wild Surmise: New & Selected Poems & Recordings, Eloise Klein Healy, Red Hen Press
  • Chopper! Chopper! Poetry From Bordered Lives, Veronica Reyes, Red Hen Press/Arktoi Books
  • Chord Box, Elizabeth Lindsey Rogers, The University of Arkansas Press
  • The Collected Poems of Ai, Ai, W.W. Norton & Company
  • The Exchange, Sophie Cabot Black, Graywolf Press
  • Proxy, R. Erica Doyle, Belladonna Collaborative
  • Rise in the Fall, Ana Bozicevic, Birds, LLC
  • She Has a Name, Kamilah Aisha Moon, Four Way Books
  • Viral, Suzanne Parker, Alice James Books
  • We Come Elemental, Tamiko Beyer, Alice James Books

BISEXUAL FICTION

  • Corona, Bushra Rehman, Sibling Rivalry Press
  • Hild: A Novel, Nicola Griffith, Farrar, Straus and Giroux
  • In His Secret Life, Mel Bossa, Bold Strokes Books
  • My Education, Susan Choi, Penguin Group/Viking
  • The Two Hotel Francforts: A Novel, David Leavitt, Bloomsbury

For more information, please click here: http://www.lambdaliterary.org/features/news/03/06/26th-annual-lambda-literary-award-finalists-announced/

Feb 23. Kundiman Reading in DC with Michelle Chan Brown, Tung-Hui Hu, and Subhashini Kaligotla

February 23, 2014
5:30pm-7:30pm
Bloombars
3222 11th St NW 
Washington, DC, 20010

$10 donation 

Three Kundiman poets (fellows and former faculty) -- Tung-Hui Hu, Michelle Chan Brown, and Subhashini Kaligotla -- come together for a night of poetry, sharing new work. Kundiman is an Asian American poetry organization that cultivates and promotes new generations of Asian American poets. This is Kundiman’s first reading in DC.

Facebook event page here: https://www.facebook.com/events/132722683565152/

About the Poets: 

MICHELLE CHAN BROWN's Double Agent received the 2012 Kore Press First Book Award. A chapbook,The Clever Decoys, is available from LATR editions. Poems and reviews have appeared in Blackbird, Cimarron Review, The Journal, Linebreak, Missouri Review, Quarterly West, Sycamore Review, Witness and others, as well as forthcoming anthologies; two poems have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. She has received scholarships from the Vermont Studio Center, the Sewanee Writers’ Conference, and the Wesleyan Writers’ Conference. A Kundiman fellow, Michelle lives in DC, where she teaches, writes and edits Drunken Boat.

SUBHASHINI KALIGOTLA's poems have appeared in such journals as Boxcar Poetry Review, Drunken Boat, LUMINA, New England Review, and The Literary Review, and in anthologies published in India, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Her writing has benefited from the support of Hedgebrook, Sanskriti Kendra (New Delhi), the Fulbright Program, and Columbia University. Subhashini is currently a fellow at the National Gallery of Art, where she is writing her doctoral dissertation on Indian temple architecture.

TUNG-HUI HU is the author of three collections of poetry, The Book of Motion (Georgia, 2003), Mine (Ausable/Copper Canyon, 2007), and Greenhouses, Lighthouses (Copper Canyon, 2013). His poems have appeared in places such as Boston Review, The New Republic, Ploughshares, Gastronomica, and, most recently, the SoundWalk festival of sound art in Long Beach, CA. Hu teaches at the University of Michigan, where Hu teaches at the University of Michigan, where he is an assistant professor of English.

For more Kundiman events, please visit our events page at www.kundiman.org/events

Feb. 18 NYC Word for Word Poetry Reading with April Naoko Heck, Purvi Shah, and Ocean Vuong

Word for Word Reading Series at Bryant Park

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Join Word for Word Poetry in partnership with Kundiman for a reading by April Naoko Heck, Purvi Shah & Ocean Vuong. 

Tuesday, February 18, 2014, 6pm
Kinokuniya Bookstore
1073 Avenue of the Americas
(Between 40th & 41st St)
New York, NY 10018

Facebook event page here: https://www.facebook.com/events/1458238237721872/

The 2014 Kundiman Poetry Prize: Last Call for Submissions! Deadline 3/15

The Kundiman Poetry Prize

Published by Alice James Books 
an affiliate of The University of Maine at Farmington

kundimanprize.jpg

Deadline for submission:
March 15, 2014

The Kundiman Poetry Prize is dedicated to publishing exceptional work by Asian American poets. Winner receives $1,000 and book publication with Alice James Books.

Submit now! 

For more information, visit our prize page here: www.kundiman.org/prize

And to submit electronically, click here: https://kundiman.submittable.com/submit/26452

Alice James Books

Alice James Books is a cooperative poetry press with a mission is to seek out and publish the best contemporary poetry by both established and beginning poets, with particular emphasis on involving poets in the publishing process.

Eligibility

Asian American writers living in the United States.

General Guidelines

  • Reading period begins January 15.
  • Manuscripts must be typed, paginated, and 50 – 70 pages in length (single spaced).
  • Individual poems from the manuscript may have been previously published in magazines, anthologies, or chapbooks of less than 25 pages, but the collection as a whole must be unpublished. Translations and self-published books are not eligible. No multi-authored collections, please.
  • Manuscripts must have a table of contents and include a list of acknowledgments for poems previously published. The inclusion of a biographical note is optional. Your name, mailing address, email address and phone number should appear on the title page of your manuscript. 
  • No illustrations, photographs or images should be included.
  • The Kundiman Poetry Prize is judged by consensus of the members of Kundiman's Artistic Staff and the Alice James Books Editorial Board. Manuscripts are not read anonymously. Learn more about our judging process.
  • Winners will be announced in June.

Guidelines for Electronic Manuscript Submission

Click here to access the Electronic Submission Application between January 15 and March 15.

Guidelines for Print
Manuscript Submission

Should you wish to submit your manuscript via postal mail, mail your entry to:

Kundiman
P.O. Box 4248
Sunnyside, NY 11104

Send one copy of your manuscript submission with two copies of the title page. Use only binder clips. No staples, folders, or printer-bound copies.

MANUSCRIPTS CANNOT BE RETURNED. Please do not send us your only copy.

Entry fee is $28.  Checks or money orders should be made out to Alice James Books. On the memo line of your check, writeThe Kundiman Poetry Prize.

Checklist for print manuscript entry:

  • One (1) copy of manuscript enclosed, with acknowledgements and two (2) copies of title page
  • $28 entry fee
  • Business sized SASE
  • Stamped addressed postcard
  • Postmarked between January 15
    and March 15

Lantern Review previews 2014 books by Cathy Linh Che, Oliver de la Paz, Tarfia Faizullah, Sally Wen Mao, Eugenia Leigh, W. Todd Kaneko, and R.A. Villanueva.

Congrats, dear fellows!

From Lantern Review editor Iris A. Law: 

"Today, just in time for the start of the year of the lunar new year, we’re finishing off our two-part roundup of books that we’re looking forward to in 2014.  Last week’s post (part 1) focused on recently published titles, while today’s (part 2) focuses on forthcoming books that are due out later this year.

Note: the books discussed below are divided by category according to whether they are currently available for pre-order, or whether specific details of their release have, as of this posting, yet to be announced. For each category, books are listed alphabetically by author."

Available for Pre-order

Split by Cathy Linh Che (forthcoming from Alice James Books in April 2014)

Turn by Wendy Chin-Tanner (forthcoming from Sibling Rivalry Press in March 2014)

Post Subject by Oliver de la Paz (forthcoming from U of Akron Press in August 2014)

Seam by Tarfia Faizullah (forthcoming from SIU Press in March 2014)

Mad Honey Symposium by Sally Wen Mao (forthcoming from Alice James Books in May 2014)

Forthcoming (Specific Details to Come)

Picture Dictionary by Kristen Eliason (forthcoming from Flaming Giblet in 2014)

Blood, Sparrows and Sparrows by Eugenia Leigh (forthcoming from Four Way Books in fall 2014)

The Dead Wrestler Elegies by W. Todd Kaneko (forthcoming from Curbside Splendor in 2014)

Reliquaria by R. A. Villanueva (forthcoming from U of Nebraska Press in fall 2014)

For the full post, click on the link below:

http://www.lanternreview.com/blog/2014/01/31/editors-corner-books-were-looking-forward-to-in-2014-part-2/