Release Party for Celebrating Voices Anthology

Arts, Books, Community, Hmong, Journals, Poetry, Spoken Word, Storytelling, Writing

Release Party for Celebrating Voices Anthology

No Comments 10 December 2011

St. Paul, Minn. — On Tuesday, December 13, 2011, Hnub Tshiab: Hmong Women Achieving Together and Writer/Performance Artist May Lee-Yang invite you to join in the release party for Hmong Women Write Now: An Anthology of Creative Writing and Artwork by Hmong Women and Girls.

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Barbara Jane Reyes

Arts, Books, Filipino, Journals, Poetry, Spoken Word, Writing

Barbara Jane Reyes

No Comments 26 September 2011

Barbara Jane Reyes is the author of Diwata (Photo by Oscar Bermeo).

By BRYAN THAO WORRA
AAP staff writer

Barbara Jane Reyes is the author of Diwata (BOA Editions, Ltd., 2010), recently noted as a finalist for the California Book Award. She was born in Manila, Philippines, raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, and is the author of two previous collections of poetry, Gravities of Center (Arkipelago Books, 2003) and Poeta en San Francisco (Tinfish Press, 2005), which received the James Laughlin Award of the Academy of American Poets.

She received her B.A. in Ethnic Studies at U.C. Berkeley and her M.F.A. at San Francisco State University. She has taught at Mills College, and at University of San Francisco’s Philippine Studies Program. She lives with her husband, poet Oscar Bermeo, in Oakland, where she is co-editor of Doveglion Press.

Her chapbooks include Easter Sunday (2008), Cherry (2008), and West Oakland Sutra for the AK-47 Shooter at 3:00 AM and other Oakland poems (2008).  Her poemsessays, and reviews have appeared or are forthcoming in Arroyo Literary Review, Asian Pacific American Journal, Chain, Filipinas Magazine, Hambone, Hyphen, Interlope, Kartika Review, Lantern Review, Latino Poetry Review, New American Writing, North American Review, Notre Dame Review, XCP: Cross Cultural Poetics, among others. Asian American Press had an opportunity to catch up with her recently.

Asian American Press: We often talk about how writers got started, but what keeps you going as an artist?

Barbara Jane Reyes: Deadlines, ambition.

Seriously, I wonder sometimes whether I’ve got another book in me. But as I gain more experience teaching poetry and literature, and mentoring emerging writers, I find that young folks’ wonder and enthusiasm for ideas and literature to which they’ve not previously been exposed can be contagious. A new set of eyes on ideas I thought I’ve exhausted can be so refreshing. So emerging writers keep me going.

My fellow artists also motivate me. It’s wonderful to be privy to their creative and intellectual processes, to see what informs and influences their work. It’s also inspiring to be a part of a prolific community of authors. My reading list has grown exponentially as a result of exposure to the poems, essays, and stories of their literary idols and forbears, as well as their newly published work.

AAP: Tell us a little about Diwata. What can we expect that’s different from your previous works? Where do you feel you are you really trying to push yourself?

BJR: Well, I think of Diwata as much more gentle than my previous book, Poeta en San Francisco, which I have been told is unflinchingly in your face. I’ve taken my poetic speakers into the realm of myth, mythic and historical time, which isn’t radically different from my previous work. There have always been glimmers of Philippine mythology in my poetry, and a sirena/mermaid persona who insists upon speaking. Diwata is where I expanded upon those mythical voices, and where there were gaps in my knowledge of my family’s and community’s narratives, I gave myself the permission to fabricate and speculate.

In Diwata, I’ve pushed myself into personae who speak in voices different enough than my own, inhabiting worlds unfamiliar to me. I’ve had to learn to be a better listener to others’ stories, folks from different generations and geographies, literally speaking different languages in which I am not fluent and barely proficient. So then, listening has become something other than spoken narrative.

I’ve also had to consider what I’ll call here a more indigenous world view which is truly not my own, and write from there while doing my best not to fetishize it.

From Diwata, I want to explore more deeply a world view and practice that is collective, in which that poetic “I,” is de-centered and really a poetic “we.” I’m challenged in figuring my way into this. While a fully collaborative and collective first person is appealing in the abstract, and as “tribe,” I’m also quite fearful of it because I really value my autonomy!

AAP: Do you have any big projects coming up?

BJR: None that I can talk about openly! Seriously, things are in the works.

What I can talk about is my ongoing work with the Philippine American Writers and Artists (PAWA), and the collaborative work we’re doing there with other local APIA arts orgs. In addition to continuing on with the reading series (which we have been running monthly since 2008), we will be offering more writing and publishing workshops.

As co-editor of Doveglion Press, I can also tell you about a collaboration with fellow APIA poet Lee Herrick’s In the Grove, dedicated to California writers. We are working on a special print issue of In the Grove, featuring Filipino American writers from California. While the issue is already quite comprehensive, it’s also still only a tiny snapshot of our community’s talent.

I am also creating a Pinay Literature curriculum for the Philippine Studies Program where I teach; I’m super excited to have an entire semester course solely dedicated to the writings of Filipinas, which to me is just phenomenal. The only time I have ever taken (much less heard of) a class like this was at University of the Philippines.

AAP: Has your artistic process changed over time, or do you feel you’ve found a specific approach that works for you now?

BJR: I would like to think my process is always growing or evolving. I used to keep Moleskines and rollerball pens with superfine points with me at all times, but that was when I was actually in public spaces for hours — parks, cafes, bars — people watching, eavesdropping on conversations, wandering slowly through art exhibits and gettin’ ekphrastic.

These days, I don’t have that kind of time, so I am now dong my best to multitask in efficient and concentrated bursts, starting with an idea, a line, a question. I am also writing less with pen and paper, so perhaps that’s why I’m nostalgic for those Moleskines and superfine point rollerball pens.

What’s been working best for me is to write within specific projects (and I know some poets hate it when you call your poetry a project). I am focused not so much on individual poems, but on bodies of poems which will one day become books of poems.

AAP: What do you deplore in poetry?

BJR: Inability and unwillingness to risk, to learn, and to grow. Unwillingness to read and write outside of one’s comfort zone. Lack of imagination, lack of curiosity / inquisitiveness. Selfishness.

Mostly, I deplore uncritical deployments of privileged narratives that portray women, women of color, people of color, and native people as objects, caricatures, backdrops, and foils/contrasts to reinforce their own dominant/centered whiteness and maleness.

AAP: How important is risk for Asian American artists?

BJR: Very. I think, if you don’t risk, then you are in danger of re-treading what you and others before you have already written.

AAP: What advice would you give to emerging writers?

BJR: Push your boundaries. Read everything! Write outside of your usual sets of aesthetics and politics. Let yourself be inspired by the diversity of literature, art, and cultural productions out there. Be open.

Be generous and supportive of your fellow writers. Share with others the opportunities that have presented themselves to you.

Be DIY and participate in the gift economy. It’s great practice to produce your own chapbooks, to swap work with others, to build a network of working artists this way. The kinship, camaraderie, and empathy you cultivate is necessary and irreplaceable.

Blog! It’s a wonderful public space in which to work out your ideas on process; to discuss who and what is informing your work, as well as why and how; to flesh out work in progress and receive feedback from others.

Ravi Shankar: Asian American Poet

Books, Journals, Poetry, Spoken Word

Ravi Shankar: Asian American Poet

No Comments 17 September 2011

Ravi Shankar is an Asian American poet.

By BRYAN THAO WORRA
AAP staff writer

Ravi Shankar is an Asian American poet. He was raised in Manassas, VA.

Shankar is the poet-in-residence at Central Connecticut State University and the founding editor of the online journal of the arts, Drunken Boat. His first book, Instrumentality, was published by Cherry Grove in May 2004, and was a finalist for the 2005 Connecticut Book Awards. He co-wrote Wanton Textiles (No Tell Books, 2006) with Reb Livingston. His chapbook Voluptuous Bristle, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2010.

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Asian American Studies, Books, Journals, Writing

Asian American Literary Review Special 9/11 Issue

No Comments 27 August 2011

A critical consideration of the moment and its aftermath — the political, legal, and civil rights repercussions for the communities most directly affected: South Asian, Arab, Middle Eastern, and Muslim American.

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Books, Events, Journals, Writing

The Loft Annual Gathering

No Comments 27 August 2011

Writers, readers and anyone with an interest in literature and the community are invited to “Write Here. Write Now,” The Loft Annual Gathering and Open House on Tues., Aug. 30, from 5 to 8 p.m. at the Loft Literary Center, 1011 Washington Avenue South, Minneapolis.

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Asian American Studies, Journals

Amerasia Journal on the study of APIA sexualities

No Comments 27 August 2011

LOS ANGELES — The UCLA Asian American Studies Center Press announces the release of the latest issue of Amerasia Journal, “Further Desire: Asian and Asian American Sexualities.”

Guest edited by Ramón A. Gutiérrez, this special topic issue is based on a conference on Asian American Sexualities held at the University of Chicago Center for the Study of Race, Politics and Culture, which is headed by Professor Gutiérrez. “Further Desire” builds on Amerasia’s commitment to the study of sexualities within Asian American Studies, which began with the groundbreaking 1994 volume, “Dimensions of Desire” (20:1).

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Journals

Celebrating Russell Leong

No Comments 05 August 2011

Russel Long

Los Angeles — The UCLA Asian American Studies Center Press announces the release of a special issue of Amerasia Journal marking the retirement of long-time Senior Editor Russell C. Leong.

Guest edited by James Kyung-Jin Lee (Asian American Studies, UC Irvine) and King-Kok Cheung (English and Asian American Studies, UCLA), “Word & Image:  Russell C. Leong” celebrates not only Leong’s immeasurable influence on the development of Asian American Studies during his thirty-three year tenure at the helm of Amerasia Journal, but also his distinguished career as an artist and writer.

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Asian American Studies, Education, Journals, National

AAPI Issues on Mental Health Practice

No Comments 22 April 2011

Los Angeles (April 20, 2011) – The UCLA Asian American Studies Center announces the publication of Asian American Pacific Islander Nexus Journal: Policy, Practice and Community Special Issue on Mental Health.

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An Interview with Hmong American Writer/Poet Burlee Vang

Arts, Books, Hmong, Journals, Storytelling, Writing

An Interview with Hmong American Writer/Poet Burlee Vang

1 Comment 04 February 2011

By BRYAN THAO WORRA
AAP staff writer

Hmong American author and poet Burlee Vang founded the Hmong American Writers’ Circle (HAWC) in 2004 to encourage creative writing in the Hmong community and to provide a space for emerging Central Valley writers to express themselves and network with other writers. Currently, he is co-editing an anthology, entitled: How Do I Begin?A Hmong American Literary Anthology, which will be available this summer from Heyday.

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Business, Government, International, Journals

APEC investment guide to promote transparency

No Comments 27 January 2011

Singapore, (January 25, 2011) – Asian Pacific Economic Cooperation has updated its investment guide for the Asia-Pacific region, which aims to improve transparency of investment policies and regulations and to enhance cross-border investment, fundamental to strong economic growth. Developed by the APEC Investment Experts’ Group, the “Guide to Investment Regimes of APEC Member Economies” is available for download at http://publications.apec.org.

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