Allegience by Gurney Norman Book Release
Fall Break
Feminist Designs: From Mina Loy to Modernist Digital Humanities
SUZANNE W. CHURCHILL is Professor of English at Davidson College. She is the author of The Little Magazine Others & the Renovation of Modern American Poetry (Ashgate 2006); co-editor, with Adam McKible, of Little Magazines & Modernism: new approaches (Ashgate 2007); and author and illustrator of Dinosaurs Drive Firetrucks (Britt Stadig Studio 2018). She has published on modernism and the Harlem Renaissance, and on periodicals, poetry, and pedagogy in various journals and collections. Founder and editor of the website, Index of Modernist Magazines (modernistmagazines.org), she is currently working on a collaborative scholarly website, Mina Loy: Navigating the Avant-Garde (mina-loy.com), which won a 2017 NEH Digital Humanities Advancement Grant.
The Gaines Center & Visiting Writers Series - Shayla Lawson & Keith Wilson
The Gaines Center & Visiting Writers Series Featuring SHAYLA LAWSON & KEITH WILSON
Thursday February 6th, 2020
7:00 pm
WTY Auditorium
Shayla Lawson is the author of three books of poetry—A Speed Education in Human Being, the chapbook PANTONE and I Think I’m Ready to see Frank Ocean—and the forthcoming essay collection THIS IS MAJOR (Harper Perennial, 2020). Her work has appeared in print & online at Tin House, GRAMMA, ESPN, Salon, The Offing, Guernica, Colorado Review, Barrelhouse, and MiPOesias. She curates The Tenderness Project with Ross Gay and writes poems with Chet’la Sebree (pronounced Shayla, no relation). A MacDowell and Yaddo Artist Colony Fellow, Shayla currently serves as Writer-in-Residence and Chair of Creative Writing at Amherst College. She is also supported by the Cini Foundation of Venice, Italy, the Allen Fellowship at the New York Public Library and her Havanese, Sammy Davis Jr. Jr. She is a member of The Affrilachian Poets.
Keith S. Wilson is an Affrilachian Poet and Cave Canem fellow. He is a recipient of an NEA fellowship as well as fellowships/grants from Bread Loaf, Kenyon College, Tin House, MacDowell, Vermont Studio Center, UCross, and Millay Colony, among others. Keith serves as Assistant Poetry Editor at Four Way Review and Digital Media Editor at Obsidian Journal. His first book, Fieldnotes on Ordinary Love, was published by Copper Canyon. His work in game design includes “Once Upon a Tale,” a storytelling card game designed for Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago in collaboration with The Field Museum of Chicago, and alternate reality games (ARGs) for the University of Chicago. He has worked with or taught new media with Kenyon College, the Field Museum, the Adler Planetarium, and the University of Chicago.
Visiting Writers Series - Marcelo Hernandez Castillo
Marcelo Hernandez Castillo is a poet, essayist, translator, and immigration advocate. He is the author of Cenzontle, winner of the A. Poulin, Jr. Prize, the Great Lakes Colleges Association New Writer Award, and the Golden Poppy Award from the Northern California Independent Booksellers Association. Cenzontle was listed among one of NPR’s and the New York Public Library’s top picks of 2018. His memoir, Children of the Land, is forthcoming from Harper Collins in 2020.
Marcelo was born in Zacatecas, Mexico, and was the first undocumented student to graduate from the Helen Zell Writers Program at the University of Michigan. He is a founding member of the Undocupoets campaign, which successfully eliminated citizenship requirements from all major US first poetry book prizes and was recognized with the Barnes & Noble Writers for Writers award. Through a literary partnership with Amazon Publishing, he helped to establish The Undocupoet Fellowship, which provides funding to help curb the cost of submissions to journals and contests for undocumented writers. His work has appeared or been featured in The New York Times, The Paris Review, The Academy of American Poets, PBS Newshour, Fusion TV, Buzzfeed, Gulf Coast, New England Review, People Magazine, and Indiana Review, among others. He teaches at the Ashland Low-Residency M.F.A. Program and teaches poetry workshops for incarcerated youth in Northern California. He lives in Marysville, California, with his wife and son.