UIndy's Potluck Podcast

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The University of Indianapolis' Potluck Podcast hosts conversations about the arts. Students and faculty talk with guests behind-the-scenes about their work. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast.

Etchings Press


    • Aug 5, 2024 LATEST EPISODE
    • every other week NEW EPISODES
    • 30m AVG DURATION
    • 37 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from UIndy's Potluck Podcast

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 6 – EPISODE 6 – José Olivarez

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 44:44


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Emma Knaack and Griffin Cloyer interview poet, José Olivarez, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. A big thank you to UIndy Music major Gabriel Bynoe for editing this episode. José Olivarez is the son of Mexican immigrants, the author of Citizen Illegal and Promises of Gold, the co-author of Home Court, co-editor of BreakBeat Poets 4: LatiNEXT, and the co-host of the poetry podcast The Poetry Gods. His work has been published in the BreakBeat Poets, the Adroit Journal, the Rumpus, and other places. He earned a BA from Harvard University. Named a Debut Poet of 2018 by Poets & Writers, he is the recipient of fellowships from CantoMundo, Poets House, the Bronx Council on the Arts, the Poetry Foundation, and the Conversation Literary Festival.  We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about the Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings [dot] uindy [dot] edu [forward slash] the [hyphen] potluck [hyphen] podcast. Thank you for your support. 

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 6 – EPISODE 5 – Maggie Graber

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 58:49


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Emma Bond and Ella Harner, with Prof. Barney Haney, interview poet, Maggie Graber, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. A big thank you to UIndy Music major Gabriel Bynoe for editing this episode. Maggie Graber is a queer millennial poet from the Great Lakes. She is a Luminarts Cultural Foundation Fellow, a graduate of the MFA in Creative Writing program at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, and a certified Wilderness First Responder. She currently serves as poetry editor for Yalobusha Review and lives and teaches in Oxford, Mississippi, where she earned her Ph.D. in English - Creative Writing at the University of Mississippi.  We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about the Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings [dot] uindy [dot] edu [forward slash] the [hyphen] potluck [hyphen] podcast. Thank you for your support. 

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 6 - EPISODE 4 – Rebecca McKanna

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2024 58:49


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Emma Bond, Piper Parks, and Emma Knaack interview fiction writer, Rebecca McKanna, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. A big thank you to UIndy Music major Gabriel Bynoe for editing this episode. Rebecca McKanna was born and raised in Iowa. She is an associate professor of English at the University of Indianapolis, and her debut novel, Don't Forget the Girl, was published in 2023. Her short stories have been published in Colorado Review, Michigan Quarterly Review, The Rumpus, and other publications, and recognized as distinguished in The Best American Short Stories 2019. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 6 - EPISODE 3 – Sarah Layden

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2024 47:27


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Emma Bond, Piper Parks, and Emma Knaack interview fiction writer, Sarah Layden, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. A big thank you to UIndy Music major Gabriel Bynoe for editing this episode. Sarah Layden is an Associate Professor of English at Indiana University-Purdue University in Indianapolis. She is the author of Imagine Your Life Like This, Trip Through Your Wires, and The Story I Tell Myself About Myself. Her recent nonfiction appears in The Washington Post, Poets & Writers, Salon, and The Millions. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 6 - EPISODE 2 – Brian Evenson

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 44:18


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Emma Bond, Piper Parks, and Emma Knaack interview fiction writer, Brian Evenson, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. A big thank you to UIndy Music major Sean Montgomery for editing this episode. Brian Evenson is an award-winning American academic and writer of both literary fiction and popular fiction. He's prolific, with many works of fiction, nonfiction, and translation, most recently Good Night, Sleep Tight: Stories, which was released in 2024. Since 2016, he has taught in the School of Critical Studies at the California Institute of the Arts. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 6 - EPISODE 1 - Elizabeth Kate Switaj

    Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2024 24:00


    This is UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts. Etchings Press, a student-run publisher at University of Indianapolis, awards The Whirling Prize to a book each year that demonstrates an excellent and compelling response to a theme selected by students. The 2023 theme was Mythology, and in this episode, the student judges in ENGL 479 (Abigail Bailey, Emma Bond, Olivia Cameron, Camille Dobbs, Sierra Durbin, Amber Phillips, and E. Alexander Phillips-Hedge) have a conversation with poet Elizabeth Kate Switaj, author of the winning collection, The Bringers of Fruit. A big thank you to UIndy Music major Nicholas Flowers for editing this episode. Elizabeth Kate Switaj has worked at the College of the Marshall Islands in the Central Pacific since 2013. She is the author of Supply Chain Problems and The Bringers of Fruit. Her third full-length poetry collection, At (Ghost) Depth, is forthcoming from Mouthfeel Press. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 5 - EPISODE 5- Erin Belieu

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 38:19


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Desteni Guidry, Aaliyah Hughes, and Ethan Thurston interview poet Erin Belieu, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. A big thank you to UIndy Music major Mikayla Crider for editing this podcast. Born in Nebraska, Erin Belieu earned an MA from Boston University and an MFA from The Ohio State University. Belieu's work focuses on gender, love, and history, filtering wide-ranging subject matter through a variety of theoretical frameworks. She often addresses feminist issues and uses poetic conventions and street talk. Belieu is the award-winning author of many books of poetry, including Come-Hither Honeycomb; Slant Six; Black Box; One Above, One Below; Belieu coedited, with Susan Aizenberg, the anthology The Extraordinary Tide: New Poetry by American Women. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 5 - EPISODE 4- Natasha Roe

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023 23:42


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Desteni Guidry, Sierra Durbin, and Sophia Atkinson interview poet, Natasha Rao, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. A big thank you to UIndy Music major Mikayla Crider for editing this podcast. Natasha Rao is a poet and educator from New Jersey. She holds a BA from Brown University and an MFA from NYU, where she was a Goldwater Fellow. She is the author of the collection, Latitude, and her work appears in Poetry Northwest, The American Poetry Review, Narrative, The Offing, and elsewhere, and she was a finalist in Narrative's 30 Below Contest. She is a managing editor of American Chordata and lives in Brooklyn. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 5 - EPISODE 3- Matt Bell

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2023 39:47


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Desteni Guidry, Emma Knaack, and Sophia Atkinson interview novelist Matt Bell, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Thanks to the Department of Music, Dr. Brett Leonard, and audio editing students Mikayla Crider and Jesse Wallace for editing this podcast. Matt Bell is the author of the New York Times Notable Book Appleseed and the craft book Refuse to Be Done, a guide to novel writing, rewriting, and revision. He is also the author of the novels Scrapper and In the House upon the Dirt Between the Lake and the Woods, as well as the short story collection A Tree or a Person or a Wall, a non-fiction book about the classic video game Baldur's Gate II. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, Esquire, Tin House, Fairy Tale Review, American Short Fiction, and many other publications. A native of Michigan, he teaches creative writing at Arizona State University. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 5 - EPISODE 2- Elissa Washuta

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 50:05


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGL 478 students Desteni Guidry, Emma Knaack, and Sophia Atkinson interview writer, Elissa Washuta, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to Music Technology majors Mikayla Crider and Jesse Wallace for editing this episode's audio. Elissa Washuta is a Native American author from the Cowlitz people of Washington State. She is the author of White Magic, My Body Is a Book of Rules, and Starvation Mode. With Theresa Warburton, she is co-editor of the anthology Shapes of Native Nonfiction: Collected Essays by Contemporary Writers. Washuta is an assistant professor of creative writing at the Ohio State University. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 5 - EPISODE 1- Donna Gordon

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 46:57


    In this episode of the UIndy Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGLISH 479 students Sophia Atkinson, Abby Bailey, Sierra Durbin, Desteni Guidry, Sam Jackson, Alex Philips-Hedge, Ethan Thurston, and Dylan Torres interview the 2022 Whirling Prize winner. Etchings Press, a student-run publisher at University of Indianapolis, awards The Whirling Prize in Prose to a book that demonstrate an excellent and compelling response to a theme selected by students. The 2022 theme was Young Adults Exploring the Mysterious, and in this podcast, the student judges have a conversation with novelist Donna Gordon, author of the winning book, What Ben Franklin Would Have Told Me. Special thanks to Music Technology majors Jesse Wallace and Mikayla Crider for editing this episode's audio. Donna Gordon is a fiction writer and visual artist from Cambridge, Massachusetts. In addition to her debut novel What Ben Franklin Would Have Told Me, her short stories have appeared in Tin House, Ploughshares, The Boston Globe Magazine, Story Quarterly, and other magazines. Her work with former political prisoners culminated in “Putting Faces on the Unimaginable: Portraits and Interviews with Former Prisoners of Conscience,” exhibited at Harvard's Fogg Museum. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 4 – EPISODE 6 – Curtis Crisler

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 25:32


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, English majors, Sam Jackson, Brandon Hickey, and Olivia Cameron, interview poet Curtis Crisler, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to Music Technology major Jesse Wallace for editing this episode's audio. Curtis Crisler was born and raised in Gary, Indiana. He received an MFA from Southern Illinois University Carbondale. He currently teaches at Purdue University Fort Wayne. Crisler is a prolific, award-winning poet. Some of his collections that UIndy students engaged with are Tough Boy Sonatas, Black Achilles, Wonderkind, Soundtrack to Latchkey Boy, Don't Moan So Much (Stevie): A Poetry Musiquarium, "This" Ameri-can-ah, and most recently, Indiana Nocturnes, which he co-authored the collection with Kevin McKelvey. You can find his poems in many publications with a quick Internet search! Crisler has been nominated for the Eliot Rosewater Award and the Jessie Redmon Fauset Book Award, and has won the Library Scholars Grant Award, the Indiana Arts Commission Grants, Eric Hoffer Award, and the Sterling Plumpp First Voices Poetry Award. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 4 – EPISODE 5 – TAK Erzinger

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 24:21


    In this episode of the UIndy Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, English major Kim Owen and Etchings Press' advisor, Liz Whiteacre, interview the 2021 Whirling Prize poetry winner. Etchings Press, a student-run publisher at University of Indianapolis, awards Each fall, The Whirling Prize is awarded two books that demonstrate an excellent and compelling response to a theme selected by students. The 20201 theme was Nature, and in this podcast, the student judges have a conversation with poet TAK Erzinger, author of the winning collection, At the Foot of the Mountain. Special thanks to Music Technology major Jesse Wallace for editing this episode's audio. TAK Erzinger is an American/Swiss poet and artist with a Colombian background. She is also an alumna of Boston University and an English teacher. Erzinger is the author of the collections Found: Between the Trees and At the Foot of the Mountain. Her poetry has been featured in Bien Acompañada, The Muse, River and South Review, Welter, The Rational Creature, and more. Her audio drama Stella's Constellation was produced by Alt.Stories and Fake Realities Podcasts, out of the UK in 2021. Erzinger's illustrations/art have been featured in Latina Magazine, The American Visionary Art Museum, Ponder Savant, Pen to Print Magazine, Fishfood Magazine and more. She lives in a Swiss valley with her husband and cats. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 4 – EPISODE 4 - Daye

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 29:09


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, English majors Olivia Cameron, Brandon Hickey, and Sam Jackson, interview poet Tyree Daye, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to Music Technology major Jesse Wallace for editing this episode's audio. Tyree Daye is a poet from Youngsville, North Carolina, and a Teaching Assistant Professor at UNC-Chapel Hill. He is the author of two poetry collections River Hymns and Cardinal. Daye is a Cave Canem fellow and winner of the 2019 Palm Beach Poetry Festival Langston Hughes Fellowship, the 2019 Diana and Simon Raab Writer-In-Residence at UC Santa Barbara. Daye is a 2019 Kate Tufts Finalist, and most recently, he was awarded a 2019 Whiting Writers Award. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 4 – EPISODE 3 – Richard Louv

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 34:47


    In this episode of the UIndy Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGLISH 479 students Caroline Wood and Abby Bailey interview the 2021 Whirling Prize prose winner. Etchings Press, a student-run publisher at University of Indianapolis, awards The Whirling Prize each fall to two books that demonstrate an excellent and compelling response to a theme selected by students. The 2021 theme was Nature, and in this podcast, the student judges have a conversation with journalist Richard Louv, author of the winning book, Our Wild Calling. Special thanks to Music Technology majors Jesse Wallace and Abby Fain for editing this episode's audio. Richard Louv is a journalist and author of ten books, including Our Wild Calling: How Connecting With Animals Can Transform Our Lives - And Save Theirs and Last Child in the Woods. His books have been translated and published in 24 countries, and helped launch an international movement to connect children, families and communities to nature. He is co-founder and Chairman Emeritus of the Children & Nature Network, an organization helping build the movement. As a journalist and commentator, Louv has written for The New York Times, The Washington Post, the Times of London, Orion, Outside and other newspapers and magazines. Richard Louv speaks internationally on nature-deficit disorder, a concept he first introduced in Last Child in the Woods; on the importance of children's and adults' exposure to nature for their health, and on the need for environmental protection and preservation for greater access to nature and the health of the Earth. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 4 – EPISODE 2 – Lysley Tenorio

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 33:34


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, Barney Haney, assistant professor of English, interviews novelist Lysley Tenorio, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to Music Technology majors Sean Montgomery and Jackson Smith for editing this episode's audio. Lysley Tenorio is the author of the novel The Son of Good Fortune and the story collection Monstress, which was named a book of the year by the San Francisco Chronicle. He is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, a Whiting Award, a Stegner fellowship, the Edmund White Award, and the Rome Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. His stories have appeared in The Atlantic, Zoetrope: All-Story, and Ploughshares, and have been adapted for the stage by The American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco and the Ma-(Yee)Yi Theater in New York City. Born in the Philippines, he lives in San Francisco, and is a professor at Saint Mary's College of California. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 4 – EPISODE 1 – Margaret Kimball

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2022 35:13


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, Barney Haney, assistant professor of English, interviews illustrator and writer, Margaret Kimball, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to Music Technology professor Dr Brett Leonard for editing this episode's audio. Margaret Kimball is an award-winning illustrator and the author of And Now I Spill the Family Secrets, a graphic memoir about mental illness and family dysfunction. Her writing has appeared in The Believer, LitHub, Ecotone, Black Warrior Review and elsewhere. Her hand lettering and illustrations have been published around the world, and she's worked with clients like Smithsonian Magazine, Macy's, Marks & Spencer, Boston Globe, Little, Brown, Simon & Schuster and many others. Her work has been listed as notable in Best American Comics. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 3 – EPISODE 5 – Alison C Rollins

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 23:21


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGLISH 478 students Olivia Williams, Maiya Johnson, Chelsea Keen, and McKenna Tetrick interview poet Alison C Rollins, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. Alison C. Rollins currently works as the Lead Teaching and Learning Librarian for Colorado College. She also serves as faculty for Pacific Northwest College of Art's Low-Residency MFA program. She is a 2019 National Endowment for the Arts Literature fellow, as well as a Cave Canem and Callaloo fellow. Alison C. Rollins' debut poetry collection is Library of Small Catastrophes, and her poems have appeared in American Poetry Review, Black Warrior Review, Crazyhorse, and elsewhere. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 3 – EPISODE 4 – Victoria Chang

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 25:34


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts ENGLISH 478 students McKenna Tetrick, Olivia Williams, and Chelsea Keen interview poet Victoria Chang, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. Victoria Chang's collections of poetry include Circle, winner of the Crab Orchard Review Award Series in Poetry; Salvinia Molesta; The Boss; Barbie Chang; and Obit. Her poems have been published in the Kenyon Review, Poetry, the Threepenny Review, and elsewhere. Chang is the editor of the anthology Asian American Poetry: The Next Generation. In addition to editing, Victoria Chang writes children's books and teaches in Antioch University's MFA program. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 3 – EPISODE 3 – Emily Skaja

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 19:56


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGLISH 478 students Chelsea Keen, Savannah Harris, McKenna Tetrick, and Olivia Williams interview poet Emily Skaja, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. Emily Skaja's first book, Brute, won the 2019 Walt Whitman Award from the Academy of American Poets. She is the Poetry Co-Editor of Southern Indiana Review. Her poems have been published in Best New Poets, Blackbird, Crazyhorse, and others. She is the winner of the Gulf Coast Poetry Prize, an Academy of American Poets College Prize, and a 2019-2020 Literature Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Emily Skaja is an Assistant Professor in the MFA program at the University of Memphis. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 3 – EPISODE 2 – Joe Laycock

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 24:08


    In this episode of the UIndy Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGLISH 479 students Savannah Harris and Hope Coleman interview the 2020 Whirling Prize winner in prose. Etchings Press, a student-run publisher at University of Indianapolis, awards The Whirling Prize each fall to two books that demonstrate an excellent and compelling response to a theme selected by students. The 2020 theme was the genre of Horror, and the student judges talk with Joe Laycock who edited the winning anthology, The Penguin Book of Exorcisms. Special thanks to Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. Joseph P Laycock is an assistant professor of religious studies at Texas State University and a co-editor of the journal Nova Religio. He is the author or editor of several books about religion, including Speak of the Devil, Spirit Possession Around the World, and The Seer of Bayside, and has written for Quartz and The New Republic. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast - SEASON 3 – EPISODE 1 - Laurel Radzieski

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2022 19:03


    In this episode of the UIndy Potluck Podcast, where we host conversations about the arts, ENGLISH 479 students Hope Coleman, Cassi Dillon, and Imani Gilbert interview the 2020 Whirling Prize poetry winner. Etchings Press, a student-run publisher at University of Indianapolis, awards The Whirling Prize each fall to two books that demonstrate an excellent and compelling response to a theme selected by students. The 2020 theme was the genre of Horror, and the student judges talk with poet Laurel Radzieski, author of the winning collection, Red Mother. Special thanks to Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. Laurel Radzieski is the Grant Writer for Lackawanna College and a Teaching Artist for the Arts in Education in Northeastern Pennsylvania. She is the author of Red Mother, and her poems have appeared in Rust + Moth, Atlas and Alice, SPLASH!,and other journals. In addition, her poems have been featured on roadsides and a street sign in Wisconsin. Laurel Radzieski has presented on-the-spot poetry installations in Chicago, IL; Scranton, PA; Reedsburg, WI; and elsewhere. You can check out her 2020 TEDxScranton talk “Writing Poems for Strangers” online. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode09_Paige Lewis

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 29:44


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, English majors and minors Jessica Marvel, Bre Nunn, and Moira Himes interview poet Paige Lewis, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. Paige Lewis is the author of Space Struck and multiple other titles. Their poems have appeared in Poetry, American Poetry Review, Ploughshares, Best New Poets 2017, Gulf Coast, The Massachusetts Review, The Georgia Review, The Iowa Review, Poetry Northwest, Ninth Letter, and elsewhere. Paige currently lives and teaches in Indiana. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode08_Leah Milne_Rick Marshall

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 25:25


    In this episode of the Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, Lauren Wilkinson, an English Literature and Secondary Education major, talks with guests of Communiversity, UIndy English professors Leah Milne and Rick Marshall. They discuss Ivanhoe and Milne and Marshall's lecture “Chivalry and Romance.” Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. 2019 marked the 200th anniversary of Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe, a book Mark Twain blamed for starting the American Civil War! To celebrate this milestone, UINDY hosted Communiversity, a free, online class. Students, faculty, staff, alumni and the broader community were invited to explore this classic detective novel. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode07_Jonathan Evans

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 17:38


    In this episode of the Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, Lauren Wilkinson, an English Literature and Secondary Education major with a minor in History, talks with guest of Communiversity, Jonathan Evans, a professor of Philosophy at UIndy. They discuss Ivanhoe and Evan's lecture “Ivanhoe and Integrity.” Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. 2019 marked the 200th anniversary of Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe, a book Mark Twain blamed for starting the American Civil War! To celebrate this milestone, UINDY hosted Communiversity, a free, online class. Students, faculty, staff, alumni and the broader community were invited to explore this classic detective novel. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode06_Samuel Baker

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 21:42


    In this episode of the Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, Lauren Wilkinson, an English Literature and Secondary Education major with a minor in History, talks with guest of Communiversity, Samuel Baker, an associate professor of English at the University of Texas--Austin. They discuss Ivanhoe and Baker's lecture “Ivanhoe, Scotland, and Brittan.” Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. 2019 marked the 200th anniversary of Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe, a book Mark Twain blamed for starting the American Civil War! To celebrate this milestone, UINDY hosted Communiversity, a free, online class. Students, faculty, staff, alumni and the broader community were invited to explore this classic detective novel. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode05_Jim Williams_Molly Martin_Chard Martin

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2021 22:24


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, Professor Jen Camden talks with Dr. Jim Williams, Dr. Molly Martin, and Dr. Chad Martin about their lecture “Jews, Templars, and Saxons: Ivanhoe's Imaginary Past.” This interdisciplinary panel of experts, guests Communiversity, a free, online class, reflect on Ivanhoe, which students, faculty, staff, alumni and the broader community were invited to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Sir Walter Scott's romance together. Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. Jen Camden is the Beverley J Pitts Distinguished Professor of the Ron and Laura Strain Honors College and Professor and Associate Chair of English. She coordinates the Communiversity course and the lecture and performance series that accompanies the course. Jim Williams is the Executive Director of the Strain Honors College and Associate Professor of History, specializing in medieval history. Molly Martin is Professor and Chair of English, specializing in Medieval Literature and Culture Chad Martin is Associate Professor of History, specializing in modern Britain. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode04_Maurice Broaddus

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2021 19:19


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, English majors Savannah Harris and Dakota Kennebrew interview fiction writer Maurice Broaddus, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. Maurice Broaddus' work has appeared in Lightspeed Magazine, Cemetery Dance, Uncanny Magazine, and Beneath Ceaseless Skies, with some of his stories having been collected in The Voices of Martyrs. His books include Buffalo Soldier, Pimp My Airship, and The Usual Suspects. Learn more at MauriceBroaddus.com. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode03_Mira T Lee

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2021 23:07


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, creative writing majors Bre Nunn and Tayah Eakle interview novelist Mira T. Lee, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major Landen Howell for editing this episode's audio. Mira T. Lee's debut novel, Everything Here is Beautiful, was selected as a Top 10 Debut by the American Booksellers Association, and named a Best Fiction title of 2018 by Amazon, O Magazine, Real Simple, and the Goodreads Readers Choice Awards. It is also the 2018 UIndy Whirling Prize winner. Lee's stories and essays have appeared in publications such as the New York Times, Tin House, Real Simple, the Southern Review, Missouri Review, and Harvard Review. Lee works as a graphic designer, and in her previous lives, has also been known as a pop-country drummer, a salsa dancing fanatic, and a biology graduate student. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode02_Jessica Rae Bergamino

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2021 15:45


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, English major Lindsey Henderson interviews poet Jessica Rae Bergamino, winner of the 2019 Whirling Prize in Poetry, which is an annual international literary prize that recognizes books of distinction in response to a theme selected by students. The 2019 theme was Space. Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major John Miley for editing this episode's audio. Jessica Rae Bergamino is the author of Unmanned, winner of Noemi Press' 2017 Poetry Prize, as well as the chapbooks The Desiring Object or Voyager Two Explains to the Gathering of the Stars How She Came to Glow Among Them (Sundress Publications), The Mermaid, Singing (dancing girl press), and Blue in All Things: a Ghost Story (dancing girl publications). Individual poems have appeared in publications such as Third Coast, Black Warrior Review, The Journal, and Gulf Coast. She is a doctoral candidate in Literature and Creative Writing at the University of Utah, and lives in Seattle, WA. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast2_Episode01_Ella Frances Sanders

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2021 17:18


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, English major Tayah Johnson and Social Work major Tylyn Johnson interview essayist Ella Frances Saunders, winner of the 2019 Whirling Prize in Prose, which is an annual international literary prize that recognizes books of distinction in response to a theme selected by students. The 2019 theme was Space. Special thanks to English major Hope Coleman for voicing our podcast's Intro and Outro, and Music Technology major Oliver Valle for editing this episode's audio. New York Times bestselling author Ella Frances Sanders is the writer and illustrator of two previous books, Lost in Translation: An Illustrated Compendium of Untranslatable Words from Around the World and The Illustrated Book of Sayings: Curious Expressions from Around the World, which have both been translated into eight languages. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast_Episode06_Randell Horton

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2019 36:11


    In this episode of UIndy’s Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, English major Bre Nunn and Electronic Media Communications major Taylor Woods interview poet and memoirist Randall Horton, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Randall Horton is the author of the poetry collections Pitch Dark Anarchy, The Definition of Place, and The Lingua France of Ninth Street, and author of the memoir, Hook. Horton is an associate professor of English at the University of New Haven. He is a member of the experimental performance group Heroes Are Gang Leaders which recently received the 2018 American Book Award in Oral Literature. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndyPotluckPodcast_Episode05_AmySekhar

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2019 27:41


    In this episode of the Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, UIndy Finance and Professional Writing major Kara Wagoner interviews independent scholar and disability rights activist Amy Sekhar, a guest of Communiversity. They talk about The Moonstone from the perspective of disability literature. 2018 marked the 150th anniversary of The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, a book T.S. Eliot described as “the first, the longest, and the best of modern English detective novels, in a genre invented by Collins and not by Poe.” To celebrate this milestone, UINDY hosted Communiversity, a free, online class. Students, faculty, staff, alumni and the broader community were invited to explore this classic detective novel. In this episode, We thank you for listening to the UIndy Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about the Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy Potluck Podcast_Episode 04_John Jodzio

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2019 18:54


    In this episode of UIndy's Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, Creative Writing and Professional Writing major Shauna Sartoris interviews fiction writer John Jodzio, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. John Jodzio's work has been featured in a variety of places including This American Life, McSweeney's, and One Story. He's the author of the short story collections, Knockout, Get In If You Want To Live and If You Lived Here You’d Already Be Home. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast_Episode 03_Christine Stewart-Nuñez

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2019 29:03


    In this episode of the Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, UIndy students Creative Writing Major Tayah Eakle, Finance and Professional Writing Major Kara Wagoner, and Professional Writing Major Sara Perkins interview the 2018 Whirling Prize winning poet. Etchings Press, a student-run publisher at University of Indianapolis, awards The Whirling Prize each fall to two books that demonstrate an excellent and compelling response to a theme selected by students. The 2018 theme was disability, and the student judges talk with Christine Stewart-Nuñez about her winning collection, Bluewords Greening. Christine Stewart-Nuñez, a Professor of English at South Dakota State University, writes at the intersection of experience and research. She’s the author of four poetry books: Untrussed (University of New Mexico Press 2016), Bluewords Greening (Terrapin Books 2016), Keeping Them Alive (WordTech 2010), and Postcard on Parchment (ABZ Press 2008). Her work has appeared in Arts & Letters, North American Review, Prairie Schooner and Shenandoah and her essay “An Archeology of Secrets” was a Notable Essay in Best American Essays 2012. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast_Episode 2_Mira T Lee

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2019 25:13


    In this episode of the Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, UIndy students Creative Writing Major Jessica Marvel and Nursing Major Erin Pool interview the 2018 Whirling Prize winning novelist. Etchings Press, a student-run publisher at the University of Indianapolis, awards The Whirling Prize each fall to two books that demonstrate an excellent and compelling response to a theme selected by students. The 2018 theme was disability, and the student judges talk with Mira T. Lee about her winning novel, Everything Here Is Beautiful. Mira T. Lee's work has been published in numerous quarterlies and reviews, including The Missouri Review, The Southern Review, Harvard Review and Triquarterly. She was awarded an Artist's Fellowship by the Massachusetts Cultural Council in 2012, and has twice received special mention for the Pushcart Prize. She is a graduate of Stanford University, and currently lives with her husband and two young sons in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Everything Here Is Beautiful is her debut novel. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

    UIndy's Potluck Podcast_Episode 01_Angela Palm

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2019 28:54


    In this episode of the Potluck Podcast, where UIndy hosts conversations about the arts, UIndy English professor Barney Haney interviews creative nonfiction writer Angela Palm, a guest of the Kellogg Writers Series, which is a series that brings writers of distinction to the University of Indianapolis campus for classroom discussions and free public readings. Angela Palm is the author of Riverine: A Memoir from Anywhere but Here, which won the 2014 Graywolf Press Nonfiction Prize. Short-listed for the Vermont Book Award and the Indiana Author Award/Emerging Author Award, Riverine was also noted for being an Indie Next selection, a Kirkus Best Book of 2016, and a Powerful Memoir by Powerful Women selected by Oprah. She was part of the 2018 Kellogg Writers Series’ Indiana Writers Spotlight. We thank you for listening to UIndy's Potluck Podcast, which is hosted by students and faculty of the University of Indianapolis. We would like to thank our guests and the Shaheen College of Arts and Sciences. To learn more about UIndy's Potluck Podcast and hear other episodes, please visit etchings.uindy.edu/the-potluck-podcast. Thank you for your support.

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