Waves Breaking

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This is a podcast in which I, a lonesome transbaby, interview my contemporaries in trans and genderqueer poetry in order to better understand their literary contributions.

Avren Keating


    • Feb 4, 2023 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 44m AVG DURATION
    • 45 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Waves Breaking

    Interview with Kamden Ishmael Hilliard

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2023 47:27


    Finally, after a long break, Waves Breaking returns with this interview with Kamden Ishmael Hilliard. Kam generously shares their time with me to discuss their debut book of poems, MissSettl, out last year with Nightboat Books. We go in deep to discuss their thoughts around the sentence, modes of speech, writing poems within this current era of late-stage capitalism, and teaching students. Kamden Ishmael Hilliard was born in La Jolla, CA; their fam settled on O'ahu, Hawai'i. Kamden holds a BA in American Studies from the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa and an MFA in Poetry from the Iowa Writers' Workshop. Kamden, a nonbinary Black settler who goes by Kam, works on issues of surveillance, race, queerness, contemporary art and American politics. They're thankful for support from The National YoungArts Foundation, The Davidson Institute, Sarah Lawrence College, and The UCROSS Foundation. Kam's writing appears in West Branch, The Black Warrior Review, Tagvverk, Denver Quarterly, The Columbia Review, and other publications.   Formerly, they served as an AmeriCorps VISTA, held Maytag, Teaching-Writing, and Pfluflaught Fellowships at the University of Iowa, and were the 2020-2022 Anisfield-Wolf Fellow in Publishing and Writing at the Cleveland State University Poetry Center, a reader at Flypaper Lit, and a board member at VIDA: Women In Literary Arts. Kamden's website Kamden's Instagram Go buy MissSettl! Mentioned in the interview: Joyelle McSweeney Jayson P. Smith “Poem About My Rights” by June Jordan bell hooks Hoodie Allen (I'm sorry lol) Skee-Lo Punahou School Hawaii Iowa Writers Workshop and the Cold War James Baldwin Nene (bird) The nene population is on the rebound from its endangered status Beloved by Toni Morrison Huge plug for everyone to listen to the audiobook version of Beloved read by Toni Morrison herself. Find it on Libby! Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson Who Framed Roger Rabbit? (film) My poem with Judge Doom in it is “After Saturn Ate His Own Kid” at the bottom of this page. West Side Story (film) Goodbye, Vitamin by Rachel Khong Kam's Anti-recommendations: Apocalypse Now (film) The Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad The Sandman (TV series) This show's Editor and Social Media Manager is Mitchel Davidovitz.  The Sound of Waves Breaking is a clip of my cousin Ian and me (fake band name: Diminutive Denizens) doing a cover of “Dig My Grave” by They Might Be Giants. It's on this cover album of Apollo 18 if you want to listen to the whole thing. There are a bunch of other covers you can listen to there for free, including a very dumb skit my friend Greg and I did for one of the “Fingertips.” Greg's the host of the excellent podcast This Might Be a Podcast which I've also guested on many times. Check it out!

    Interview with Yanyi

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2022 52:16


    Photo of Yanyi, taken by him In this episode I spoke with Yanyi about his new book, Dream of the Divided Field, and his newsletter, The Reading. Yanyi is the author of Dream of the Divided Field (One World Random House, 1 March 2022) and The Year of Blue Water (Yale University Press 2019), winner of the 2018 Yale Series of Younger Poets Prize. His work has been featured in or at NPR's All Things Considered, New York Public Library, Granta, and New England Review, and he is the recipient of fellowships from Asian American Writers' Workshop and Poets House. He holds an MFA in Poetry from New York University and was most recently poetry editor at Foundry. Currently, he teaches creative writing at large and gives writing advice at The Reading. Yanyi's website You can purchase Dream of the Divided Field here Yanyi's Twitter Yanyi's Instagram Various books, movies, podcasts, etc. mentioned in this episode: Algorithm crowd sounds Surviving R. Kelly docuseries Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew AI generated imagery @images_ai WOMBO Dream DALL-E Virgina Woolf's audio BBC interview When We Were Young Festival and its much parodied poster Black Mountain Poets Olson's "Projective Verse" manifesto, some explicit field talk Lydia Davis's "Hand" story (this is the whole story lol): "Beyond the hand holding this book that I'm reading, I see another hand lying idle and slightly out of focus — my extra hand." (more stories here) "The Cows" chapbook Yanyi's newsletter Letter on why he left Substack Yanyi at the Poetry Project discussing de las Rivas's "Black Sun" and fascist dogwhistling in contemporary poetry Ghost, the platform Yanyi uses to now send his newsletters bell hooks's Teaching to Transgress full PDF Tell Them Anything You Want: A Portrait of Maurice Sendak documentary Laura Engels Wilder's Little House on the Prairie series FEELING ASIAN podcast episodes: An Evening With Two Asian Therapists (feat. Peter Adams, Ph.D and Melissa Yao, Ph.D) Asian Seeking Asian (therapists)   Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz Host and Producer: Avren Keating Sound of Waves Breaking: Sounds from this video of Merlin, my sweet 5-year-old Frenchie that died of a brain tumor in the time between recording and editing this episode. I love you, little bubs. 

    Interview with Sarah Nnenna Loveth Nwafor

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2022 35:17


    In this interview, I spoke with Sarah Nnenna Loveth Nwafor about their latest publication Already Knew You Were Coming. We discuss Igbo cosmology and time, vengeance poetry, their process in writing this chapbook, and more. Sarah Nnenna Loveth Nwafor (They/Them) is a queer Igbo-American Poet, Educator, and Facilitator who descends of a powerful ancestry. They believe that storytelling is magick, and they speak to practice traditions of Igbo orature. When they witness, their forebears are pleased. Sarah has been writing for a minute and is learning something new about their voice each year, but one thing they're proud to share is that they have a chapbook out with Game Over Books! When Sarah's not writing; they're probably sitting under a tree, reading about Love, dancing with friends or cooking a bomb-ass meal like the true Taurus they are. Go buy Already Knew You Were Coming Sarah's Instagram Sarah's website Books, artists, musicians, etc. mentioned in this episode: Mithsuca Berry Alexis Pauline Gumbs's Dub: Finding Ceremony Sister Love: The Letters of Audre Lorde and Pat Parker 1974-1989 I.S. Jones's Spells of My Name Nwaobiala Dena Igutsi's Cut Woman Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz Host and Producer: Avren Keating Sound of Waves Breaking: Melody Loop 95 BPM, DaveJf

    Interview with Cody-Rose Clevidence

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 17, 2021 37:21


    In this episode, I spoke with Cody-Rose Clevidence about their latest publication, Aux Arc / Trypt Ich, out with Nightboat Books. We dug into language, exploring motif, grief, love—all that good stuff.  Cody-Rose Clevidence is the author of BEAST FEAST (2014) and Flung/Throne (2018), both from Ahsahta Press, Listen My Friend This is the Dream I Dreamed Last Night from The Song Cave and Aux Arc / Trypt Ich as well as several handsome chapbooks (flowers and cream, NION, garden door press, Auric).  They live in the Arkansas Ozarks with their medium sized but lion-hearted dog, Birdie and an absolute lunatic cat.   Cody-Rose's Instagram Buy Aux Arc / Trypt Ich! Poets, books, etc. mentioned in this episode: Cody-Rose Clevidence's BEAST FEAST  Turquoise waters of the Ozarks "Apophatic" was the word I was trying to remember! I can't read this work because of the paywall, but it seems like it might be useful in exploring Manley Hopkins's contemplations of God.  H.D. Homer Algernon Charles Swinburne William Wordsworth English literature's Romanticism  Gerard Manley Hopkins Stephen Taylor's Building Thoreau's Cabin Jerome Rothenberg (editor), Technicians of the Sacred  Jerome Rothenberg (editor), Shaking the Pumpkin: Traditional Poetry of the Indian North Americas Guy Deutscher's The Unfolding of Language Guy Deutscher's Through the Language Glass: Why the World Looks Different in Other Languages George Lakoff and Mark Johnson's Metaphors We Live By   Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz Host and Producer: Avren Keating Sound of Waves Breaking: "Arkansas" by John Linnell. At last, one half of TMBG makes it onto the pod.

    Interview with féi hernandez

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2021 39:19


    In this episode, I spoke with féi hernandez about Hood Criatura, their poetry collection released in 2020. We also spoke about their incredible skills as an illustrator, and féi recommends some fantastic reads. féi hernandez (b.1993 Chihuahua, Mexico) is a trans, Inglewood- raised, formerly undocumented immigrant artist, writer, healer. They have been published in POETRY, Pank Magazine, Oxford Review of Books, Frontier Poetry, The Breakbeat Poets Vol. 4: LatiNext, amongst others. They are a Define American Fellow for 2021 and are currently the Board President of Gender Justice Los Angeles. féi is the author of the full-length poetry collection Hood Criatura (Sundress Publications 2020) which was on NPR's Best Books of 2020. féi collects Pokémon plushies. féi's website féi's instagram Purchase Hood Criatura Poets, books, etc. mentioned in this episode: Gloomy the Naughty Grizzly, anime series Sailor Moon, anime series Natalie Diaz's My Brother Was an Aztec Natalie Diaz's Postcolonial Love Poem Ambar Lucid and her song “Story to Tell” féi's illustrations Hood Criatura on Goodreads, Barnes and Noble, and Amazon. Go leave a review :) Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz The Sound of Waves Breaking is “Project - 3_30_21, 6.55 PM.wav” by bradygalp123

    Interview with Larkin Christie

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2021 30:54


    In this episode, I spoke with Larkin Christie about their book gather all your supple creatures.  Larkin Christie is a queer poet living on unceded Pocumtuc land in what is currently known as Western Massachusetts. Their second collection, gather all your supple creatures, is out now. Their creative work draws on experiences as an educator, organizer, and dancer.  Larkin's website Larkin's Instagram Go buy gather all your supple creatures!   Quotes, workshop, and media mentioned in this episode: In Surreal Life, workshop   Honeyfitz, band   From Larkin: "I just did some research and the quote is actually by Shelly Smith, published in June Jordan's Poetry for the People: A Revolutionary Blueprint. It is 'Deciding whom to publish, whose words are important or good or right, whose message is valuable, is about politics. Self-publishing is about power, about taking the responsibility to disseminate your words yourself.'   Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz   Sound of Waves Breaking: "Larks in Limburg, Netherlands.mp3" by @robkuster

    Interview with KB

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 33:01


    In this episode, I spoke with KB about their zine “A New Relationship to Pain,” their relationship to poetry, the pandemic, working as a poet and educator, and more. KB is from Stop Six, Fort Worth, Texas. They are a Black queer nonbinary poet, educator, student affairs professional, and lover of most plants/people. They want to be your friend as well as your reminder to think in abundance. They have words published in Cincinnati Review, Puerto Del Sol, Palette Poetry, and other equally pretty places. Their chapbook How To Identify Yourself with a Wound (Kallisto Gaia Press, 2022) won the 2020 Saguaro Poetry Prize and was written with support from workshops with Lambda Literary, In Surreal Life, The Watering Hole, The Hurston/Wright Foundation, The Speakeasy Project, and Winter Tangerine. They are currently a 2021 PEN America Emerging Writers fellow and an African American Leadership Institute - Austin fellow. When not on stage or in the page, they serve as Program Coordinator for the Gender and Sexuality Center at the University of Texas at Austin, Founding Executive Director of Interfaces, Co-Founder/President of Embrace Austin, and educator in various settings. Follow them on Twitter or Instagram at @earthtokb and access their exclusive teaching, writing, and other content at patreon.com/earthtokb. They live in Austin, TX where they’re writing books & trying their best. KB’s Zine “a new relationship to pain” KB’s Instagram KB’s Twitter Poets, books, etc. mentioned in this episode: Jericho Brown’s The Tradition Taylor Byas's poetry  George Abraham’s "ars poetica in which every pronoun is a Free Palestine” (second poem on this page) Justin Phillip Reed’s "Leaves of Grass" Claudia Delfina Cardona’s “What Remains" Khalypso’s “You Really Seem to Think I’ll Miss You” The Sound of Waves Breaking is “DesertTexasT01” by Riabad Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz

    Interview with Rainie Oet

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2021 45:01


    In this episode I spoke with Rainie Oet about their recent publication Glorious Veils of Diane. Content warning: We talk a lot about blood and some about self-harming Rainie Oet is a nonbinary writer and game designer, former Editor-in-Chief of Salt Hill Journal, and the author of Glorious Veils of Diane (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2021), as well as two other books: Porcupine in Freefall and Inside Ball Lightning. They have an MFA in Poetry from Syracuse University, where they were awarded the Shirley Jackson Prize in Fiction.  Rainie's website Rainie's Twitter Go buy Glorious Veils of Diane Rainie's Inside Ball Lightning Rainie's Porcupine in Freefall  Artists, books, films, games etc. mentioned in this episode: Diane Arbus Blood elemental in D&D Serena Perrone's "In Our Cinematic Lives"   Ladybird, film David Lynch movies Collected Poems by Zbigniew Herbert which includes the translated Hermes, Dog and Star. "The Little Box" by Vasko Popa Chase Berggrun's R E D My interview with Chase about R E D Dragula, TV Show 최호소 HOSO Terra Toma, drag performer  Yume Nikki, indie game Octavia Butler's Lilith's Brood series Merlin Sheldrake's Entangled Life: How Fungi Make Our Worlds, Change Our Minds, and Shape Our Futures The Sound of Waves Breaking: "Sanchon Drum - Seoul Korea" by RTB45   Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz

    Interview with Anaïs Duplan and imogen xtian smith

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2021 50:19


    In this episode, I dive deep into one poem with its authors, Anaïs Duplan and imogen xtian smith. Tune in for our conversation about of art, love, and utopias. Anaïs Duplan is a trans* poet, curator, and artist. He is the author of a book of essays, Blackspace: On the Poetics of an Afrofuture (Black Ocean, 2020), a full-length poetry collection, Take This Stallion (Brooklyn Arts Press, 2016), and a chapbook, Mount Carmel and the Blood of Parnassus (Monster House Press, 2017). He has taught poetry at the University of Iowa, Columbia University, Sarah Lawrence College, and St. Joseph’s College. His video works have been exhibited by Flux Factory, Daata Editions, the 13th Baltic Triennial in Lithuania, Mathew Gallery, NeueHouse, the Paseo Project, and will be exhibited at the Institute of Contemporary Art in L.A in 2021. As an independent curator, he has facilitated curatorial projects in Chicago, Boston, Santa Fe, and Reykjavík. He was a 2017-2019 joint Public Programs fellow at the Museum of Modern Art and the Studio Museum in Harlem. In 2016, he founded the Center for Afrofuturist Studies, an artist residency program for artists of color, based at Iowa City’s artist-run organization Public Space One. He works as Program Manager at Recess. An's website An's Twitter An's Instagram imogen xtian smith (fka xtian w) is a poet & performer. Recent work is featured or forthcoming in Peach Mag, Cosmonauts Ave, the Rumpus, & WE WANT IT ALL: An Anthology of Radical Trans Poetics. They live in Brooklyn. imogen's Twitter imogen's Instagram Places, people, art, books etc. mentioned in this episode: We Want It All: An Anthology of Radical Trans Poetics, ed. by Andrea Abi-Karam and Kay Gabriel An interview I did a while back with Kay Gabriel and the other editors of Vetch An interview I did with Andrea Abi-Karam Berl's Brooklyn Poetry Shop Take This Stallion An and imogen's Trans Oral History project Mohammed Zenia's Tel Aviv imogen's review for Tel Aviv for the Poetry Project Posthumous selected works of Wanda Coleman, Wicked Enchantments Bernadette Mayer's Midwinter Day Terrance Hayes Bahar Orang's Where Things Touch: A Meditation on Beauty Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz The Sound of Waves Breaking is "Gymnasium, Class Reunion in Distance" by ecfike. Meeting people in-person and hugging after a long period of time? I miss that and them.

    Interview with noor ibn najam

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2021 44:09


    In this episode I spoke with noor ibn najam about her recent work and writing process. they also discussed showing work to friends and skill-sharing. Sorry that the intro and outro audio is a little wonky this time around, but my interview with noor is still good. noor is a poet who teases, challenges, breaks, and creates language. she's received fellowships from Callaloo and The Watering Hole and is a recent resident of the Vermont Studio Center. her poems have been published and anthologized with DIAGRAM, ANMLY, The Academy of American Poets, the Rumpus, Bettering American Poetry, and others. her chapbook, PRAISE TO LESSER GODS OF LOVE, was published by Glass Poetry Press in 2019. noor’s website purchase Praise to Lesser Gods of Love noor’s Patreon Writers, poems, books, events mentioned in this episode: The Arab Apocalypse, by Etel Adnan noor's poem "questions arabic asked in english (colonial fit)” an interview of Douglas Kearney where he discusses compositional hierarchy “I am an artist and I'm sensitive about my shit,” a lyric from Erykah Badu ‘s “Tyrone.” Zong! by M. NourbeSe Philip “The Secret Name,” by W.S. Graham وسوس Arabic for "whispers of the devil in your ear" khaleel, artist and noor’s partner Qil, Astro-Black Metalbender behind the jewlery line BLACKMARZIAN Keziah Harrell, painter Jamal Jones on Twitter kiki nicole here’s an interview kiki and I recorded last year noor’s Skill Swaps The Sound of Waves Breaking is “Walking on Snow,” recorded by rivernile7. Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz

    Interview with Aeon Ginsberg

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2020 47:51


    This month’s guest is Aeon Ginsberg. We dug into their recently published book Greyhound and also talked about PoBiz/Big Lit, death, and teeth poetry. Aeon Ginsberg (they/them) is an agender transfeminine writer and performer from Baltimore City, MD. They are the author of Greyhound, the 2019 winner of the Noemi Press Poetry Prize, and their work has been published in various magazines in print and online. Aeon is a Taurus, a bartending, and a bitch. Aeon’s website Aeon’s Twitter account Go get Greyhound! Writers, news, books, events mentioned in this episode: Aeon’s previous chapbooks: Until the Cows Come Home (Elation Press, 2016) Loathe/Love/Lathe (Nostrovia! Press, 2017) Yanyi has written an excellent article regarding PoMag’s “trans issue” and critiquing special issues in general: “Counting Tokens: Special Issues and the Theatre of Delay.” #BeyondSpecialIssue folio organized by jayy dodd Roy Guzman on what happened after their close reading of Toby Martinez de las Rivas’s published and fascist work "Titan / All Is Still" in PoMag’s Nov 2018 issue. PoFound statement about how they plan to reorient themselves and dismantle white supremacist practice in their organization. “Exclusive: The Paris Review, the Cold War and the CIA,” in Salon speCt! books open letter to PoFound at the wake of the COVID-19 crisis “MICA professor resigns after former student alleges misconduct, says she informed college two years ago,” in The Baltimore Sun. Isobel Bess (sorry for accidentally using her previous name!) Jamie Berrout Marxist Poetry Podcast Magpie Killjoy's I Pity The Immortal RBG's personal trainer doing push-ups in front of her casket Chen Chen Shazia Hafiz Ramji David Davis Kayleb Candrilli Chris, a Christine and the Queens album “Hello -- A Greeting From Nowhere” Anne Boyer's What Resembles A Grave Peach Mag Fargo Tbakhi's 12 World's Interrupted By The Drone Aeon made a Spotify playlist of songs that are in conversation with their book Anne Carson quote: "If prose is a house, poetry is a man on fire running quite fast through it." The Sound of Waves Breaking is this video Aeon sent me of Vin Diesel singing Rhianna. Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz If you want to get in contact with me, you can email me at wavesbreakingshow@gmail.com and/or message me @WavesBreakPod on Twitter.

    Interview with Kama La Mackerel

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 59:45


    This month I got to speak with Kama La Mackerel about their just-released book, ZOM-FAM, published by Metonymy Press. We go in-depth in discussion about their decolonial artistic practices and inspiration for the book. Kama La Mackerel is a Montreal-based Mauritian-Canadian multi-disciplinary artist, educator, writer, community-arts facilitator and literary translator who works within and across performance, photography, installations, textiles, digital art and literature. Kama’s work is grounded in the exploration of justice, love, healing, decoloniality, hybridity, cosmopolitanism and self- and collective-empowerment. They believe that aesthetic practices have the power to build resilience and act as resistance to the status quo, thereby enacting an anticolonial practice through cultural production. Kama has exhibited and performed their work internationally and their writing in English, French and Kreol has appeared in publications both online and in print. They have lived in far-flung places such as Pune, India and Peterborough, Ontario. ZOM-FAM, their debut poetry collection is published by Metonymy Press. GO BUY ZOM-FAM!  Kama's website   Media, artists, books, etc mentioned in this episode: Kama will get to perform ZOM-FAM in Montreal this October :) "The Self-Love Cabaret: L’Amour se conjugue à la première personne" "From Thick Skin to Femme Armour," performance Artists who made the ZOM-FAM cover: Kai Yun Ching and Aun Li Kalapani  "My Body is the Ocean" project and performance "Breaking the Promise of Tropical Emptiness: Trans Subjectivity in the Postcard" project Fierce Femmes and Notorious Liars: A Dangerous Trans Girl's Confabulous Memoir by Kai Cheng Thom Disclosure documentary Little Blue Encyclopedia (for Vivian), by Hazel Jane Plante My Art is Killing Me and Other Poems, by Amber Dawn "Explained: How Severe was the Mauritius Oil Spill," article in The Indian Express "Mauritius calls for urgent help to prevent oil spill disaster," article in The Guardian ** Fundraiser to help Mauritian oil spill clean-up ** "Before and after: Satellite images show how lightning complex fires scarred Bay Area landscape" article in The Mercury News "A California fire sparked by a gender reveal party has grown to more than 10,000 acres," an article for CNN. Because we definitely needed another reason to hate gender reveal parties, am I right? ** Donate to Latino Community Foundation's Northern California Wildfires Relief Fund ** The Sound of Waves Breaking: "Ay Ay Lolo" by Menwar Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz  

    Interview with kiki nicole

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 57:33


    In this episode, I spoke with poet kiki nicole about their manuscript, Autobiography of the boi Venus which not published (yet!), their embroidery work, film work, and current interests. kiki nicole is a Black, Queer, and Non-binary multimedia artist and poet based in Charlotte, North Carolina.. They’ve received invitations to fellowships such as Pink Door Writing Retreat, The Watering Hole, and Winter Tangerine. kiki nicole is currently a reader for Muzzle Magazine. They work to explore a Black, queer, femme & genderless universe that un/bodies, un/genders, & re/news, kiki hopes to lend a voice for the void in which Black femmes not only exist in plain view, but thrive. kiki’s site kiki’s instagram Donation link to support kiki Media, artists, books, etc mentioned in this episode: Winter Tangerine’s fellowship program jayy dodd venus selenite  Tyrell Blacquemoss (TBN), who runs Cause Reign Find examples of kiki’s textile and multimedia work here ariella tai ariella tai’s "she's not going to get more dead" the first + the last, a experimental film/video and new media arts project for Black femmes, women, and non-men that kiki and ariella co-curate Lil Uzi Vert Katherine McKittrick's Demonic Grounds: Black Women and the Cartographies of Struggle “Stitches in Time” quilt exhibition, was not at the museum  M. Norbese Philips's Zong! Yoruba deity Oshun Yoruba deity Yemaya Yoruba deity Shango Roman deity Venus Gríma Wormtongue from The Lord of the Rings Shakespeare’s Macbeth Toni Morrison’s Beloved Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower, Parable of the Talents, and Kindred Naked and Afraid reality series Xandria Phillips's HULL adrienne marie brown's Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good (Emergent Strategy) Big Thief’s "Not" Mitski noname’s “Song 33” Noname Book Club Oluwatoyin “Toyin” Salau kiki's syllabus “Into a New Year.” kiki notes “This is a syllabus of mine that I think ties a lot into what I was trying to convey near the end about preparing for a new world.” kiki’s pdf library “blk thots~” to decolonize your bookshelves! The sound of waves breaking is Sylvester's “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real).” This episode was edited and social media managed by Mitchel Davidovitz. Stay safe, everyone!!

    Interview with Như Xuân Nguyễn

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2020 41:38


    Như and I discussed her recent chapbook A System of Satellites and her writing practice, finding dignity as a trans poet, and writing past ingrained fear and doubt.   She also asked me questions. Hear me stumble trying to answer questions about my writing practice and how I approach writing with personal experiences. Như Xuân Nguyễn is a queer and trans Vietnamese American poet and writer. A Kundiman Fellow and a graduate of the MFA program in Creative Writing at Rutgers-Newark, she won the 2018 Poetry Society of America Chapbook Fellowship with her debut chapbook A System of Satellites. Her work has appeared in The Offing, DELUGE (Radioactive Moat), The Journal, The Shade Journal, and Juked. She is currently based in New York City, where she lives with her two cats, Arya and Azula.  Như's website Buy Như's chapbook   Note: I refer to a NOLA poetry fest panel that is no longer happening due to COVID-19. Wash your hands and stay at home, everyone.   People and Books Mentioned: Adrian Matejka Cathy Park Hong's Minor Feelings Tracy May Fuad  Emily Luan  Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz   The Sound of Waves Breaking: Lunar Wind, @Walter_Odington

    Interview with sung yim

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2020 62:13


    This episode, I got to talk with sung! sung is a writer and interdisciplinary artist from Korea. They are the author of What About the Rest of Your Life (Perfect Day Publishing) and Flowers Are for Pussies (Ghost City Press). Their work has appeared in Nat. Brut, Kweli Journal, Contrary, The James Franco Review, The Wanderer, and Crab Fat Magazine.   Media, artists, books, etc mentioned in this episode: sung's website sung's Twitter Kaveh Akbar bag of dirt tweet  Jamie Berrout's essays against publishing Interview with Kaveh Akbar where he discusses "Poems are rarely on the side of power." Not mentioned in the episode, but looks interesting to read (and it's free online!) on the subject of trauma and how our culture makes it a commodity: Decolonizing Trauma Studies: Trauma and Postcolonialism Paintbucket  "To eat the fruit climb the tree" poem Black Orpheus soundtrack Dreaming of Ramadi in Detroit by Aisha Sabatini Sloan "On Basquiat, the Black Body, and a Strange Sensation in My Neck" by Aisha Sabatini Sloan Kendra Allen's When You Learn the Alphabet The sound of waves breaking is "Wynd" by weerm This episode's editor and social media manager is Mitchel Davidovitz

    Interview with Zefyr Lisowski

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2019 50:03


    In this episode, I had the opportunity to talk with Zefyr Lisowski about her book Blood Box. Zefyr Lisowski is a trans and queer writer, artist, and North Carolinian currently living in NYC. She's a Poetry Co-editor for Apogee Journal and the author of Blood Box, winner of the Black River Editor's Choice Award from Black Lawrence Press and forthcoming fall 2019; she's also the author of the microchap Wolf Inventory (Ghost City Press, 2018) and is a 2019 Tin House Summer Workshop Fellow. Zefyr's work has appeared or is forthcoming in Lit Hub, Nat. Brut., Muzzle Magazine, and DIAGRAM, among many other places; she's also received support from Sundress Academy for the Arts, McGill University, the New York Live Ideas Fest, and the 2019 CUNY Graduate Center Adjunct Incubator Grant for the arts. A 2018 nominee for the Pushcart Prize, she also goes by Zef. Zefyr Lisowski's website Go buy Blood Box!  Media, artists, books, etc mentioned in this episode: Sharon Pollock's play Blood Relations Angela Davis's short story "The Fall River Axe Murders" Angela Davis's Bloody Chamber Lizzie Borden's film Born in Flames Lizzie (2018 film) Muriel Leung  Joey De Jesus  Jessie Rice Evans  Cyree Jarelle Johnson's SLINGSHOT  (and here's my interview with Cyree) Diana Khoi Nguyen's Ghost Of  Johanna Hedva's "Sick Woman Theory"  @Mx_ctrl is my Instagram handle, and...I definitely failed Inktober  Samuel Ace/ Linda Smukler's Meet Me There: Normal Sex & Home in three days. Don't wash.  Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz Sound of Waves Breaking is "Cicada Single" by Jedo.

    Interview with Cyrée Jarelle Johnson

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2019 41:37


    This episode, I had the chance to speak with Cyrée Jarelle Johnson about their book, SLINGSHOT. Cyrée Jarelle Johnson (He/They) is a poet and writer from Piscataway, NJ. His work has appeared in The New York Times, Boston Review, Wussy, The Wanderer, Vice, Rewire News, The Root, and Nat. Brut among other publications. They earned an MFA in Creative Writing from Columbia University with support from Davis Putter Scholarship Fund. SLINGSHOT, his first collection of poetry, is available now from Nightboat Books. Development of the work was supported by Astraea Foundations' Global Arts Fund, Culture/Strike Climate Change and Environmental Justice Fellowship, and Rewire News Disabled Writers Fellowship. They tweet with significant queer millenial ennui at @CyreeJarelle  Cyrée's website  Cyrée's TED Talk "What is Autism Neutrality?"  Authors and books mentioned in the episode: Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha's Tonguebreaker and Care Work  Kay Undlay Barrett's When the Chant Comes Britteney Black Rose Kapri's Black Queer Hoe Yanyi's Year of Blue Water  The Sound of Waves Breaking was "Natural Disaster" by @davidthomascairns  Editor, Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz Host, Producer: Avren Keating

    Interview with Samuel Ace

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2019 69:22


    It's been a minute! Thanks for your patience as I've slogged through life. In this episode I spoke with Samuel Ace about his book Our Weather Our Sea. Samuel Ace is a trans/genderqueer poet and sound artist. He is the author of several books, most recently Our Weather Our Sea (Black Radish 2019), the newly re-issued Meet Me There: Normal Sex and Home in three days. Don’t wash., (Belladonna* Germinal Texts 2019), and Stealth with poet Maureen Seaton. He is the recipient of the Astraea Lesbian Writer Award and the Firecracker Alternative Book Award in Poetry, as well as a two-time finalist for both the Lambda Literary Award and the National Poetry Series. Recent work can be found in Poetry, PEN America, Best American Experimental Poetry, Vinyl, and many other journals and anthologies. He currently teaches poetry and creative writing at Mount Holyoke College in western Massachusetts. Sam's website Buy Our Weather Our Sea Also buy Meet Me There: Normal Sex & Home in three days. Don’t wash. Books, poets, artists, etc mentioned in this episode: Ari Banias  Oliver Baez Bendorf  TC Tolbert's "Dear Melissa"  j/j hastain Julie Carr's Real Life: An Installation Ronaldo Wilson's Lucy 72 Douglas Kearney's Mess and Mess and  M. NourbeSe Philip's ZONG!  Ching-In Chen's recombinant  Sawako Nakayasu's Mouth Eats Color  Harmony Holiday a reading from 2015  LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs's Twerk Caroline Bergvall's sound installations  Cecilia Vicuña's New and Selected Poems Saborami (Chainlinks) Tracie Morris two poems Andrea Abi-Karam's EXTRATRANSMISSION  Orlando White LETTERRS  Maureen Seaton  Rickey Laurentiis  Philip B. Williams  Ocean Vuong  Farid Matuk  Kaveh Akbar  Angel Dominguez's D E S G R A C I A D O  Ariana Reines's A Sand Book  Trace Peterson's Since I Moved In  Go listen to my interview with Roy over at the Marxist Poetry Podcast The Sound of Waves Breaking: Samuel Ace's "These Nights"  Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz

    Interview with S. Brook Corfman

    Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2019 38:06


    I had the opportunity to talk with S. Brook Corfman at AWP this year! S. Brook Corfman is the author of Luxury, Blue Lace, chosen by Richard Siken for the Autumn House Rising Writer Prize, and two chapbooks: the letterpress Meteorites from DoubleCross Press and the digital collection of performance pieces The Anima from GaussPDF. The recipient of grants and fellowships from Lambda Literary, the Vermont Studio Center, and the Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council, recent work has appeared in DIAGRAM, Indiana Review, Muzzle, The Offing, Territory, and Quarterly West (Best of the Net Nomination), among other places. Born and raised in Chicago, Sam now lives in a turret in Pittsburgh. S's website Luxury, Blue Lace Meteorites (chapbook) Writers, topics, etc, mentioned in the show: Collection of essays on Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria (ROGD) and why it's bad science I should not be surprised someone wrote a thinkpiece on The Little Mermaid as transgender figure Sarah Ruhl’s Eurydice A review of the version S. saw in Chicago Dawn Lundy Martin S recommends Discipline Mei Mei Berssenbrugge This episode's Editor and Social Media Manager is Mitchel Davidovitz The Sound of Waves Breaking is a field recording of kids playing at a park during the day by JohnnyBeCrafty

    Interview with B'ellana Johannx

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2019 54:55


    Hello, hello! Happy Spring! I'm here with another interview for you fine people. I had the opportunity to interview B'ellana Johannx aka Chloe Rose about their two upcoming chapbooks!  B'ellana Johannx's gender is Rilke’s dark god: a webbed scrim made of a thousand roots drinking in silence. Also known as Chloe Rose, she/they are a fat, queer, femme, non-binary womxn-of-color living with disabilities and their cats Franz and Pepper in Tacoma, WA. Rose/Johannx has been published in The Wanderer, Dream Pop, and Aspasiology, with Pushcart and Bettering American Poetry nominations henny, so watch out! Tweet them about conlangs, antifa, witchcraft, and drag names @llanaandsuchas. If you are a faggot, you are her/their kin and they love you. May the peace of the Goddess and God be upon you. #SMIB B'ellana's website B'ellana's Twitter  Writers, books, ideas, musicians mentioned: BBC News reporting on Fatbergs Cruising Utopia and Disidentifications by José Esteban Muñoz Raquel Salas Rivera  Kolby Harvey In a Queer Time and Place by Jack Halberstam  blackbox of butterfly goo   Never Angeline Nørth, aka , aka Møss Høpe Ångel, fka Moss Angel the Undying, fka Moss Angel Witchmonstr, fka Sara June Woods, fka Sara Woods  Infancy Gospel of Thomas Epimemetics / cultural mimetics: This Wired article from the 90s and also the more contemporary: Thomas Hobson and Kaajal Modi, “Communist Imaginaries and Queer Futures: Memes as Sites of Collective Imagination” coming soon as part of this anthology  Beast Meridian while they sleep (under the bed another country) by Raquel Salas Rivera Cruel Fiction by Wendy Trevino Big Lucks Dream Pop Femmescapes zine The Faggots and their Friends between Revolutions by Larry Mitchell  Sea-Witch by Never Angeline North Lizzo  listicle about BLACKPINK "The Sound of Waves Breaking" is titled "Ghost Merkel Beat" by stanrams and made me laugh my ass off. This episode was edited and media managed by Mitchel Davidovitz

    Interview with Andrea Abi-Karam

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2019 34:23


    I'm back! Hello! I got to talk with Andrea Abi-Karam this time, and I had a blast catching up with them about their latest book "EXTRATRANSMISSION." Andrea Abi-Karam is an arab-american genderqueer punk poet-performer cyborg, writing on the art of killing bros, the intricacies of cyborg bodies, trauma & delayed healing. Their chapbook, THE AFTERMATH (Commune Editions, 2016), attempts to queer Fanon’s vision of how poetry fails to inspire revolution. Simone White selected their second assemblage, Villainy for forthcoming publication with Les Figues. They toured with Sister Spit March 2018 & are hype to live in New York. EXTRATRANSMISSION [Kelsey Street Press, 2019] is their first book. Andrea's Website Andrea's Twitter Spray Tan's bandcamp Rob Halpern's Music for Porn Jennifer Terry's "Significant Injury:War, Medicine, and Empire in Claudia's Case" (Andrea didn't specifically name this paper, but I felt it was relevant).  Jasbir Puar's Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer Times Sister Spit Tour 2018 Equine Therapy for Military Veterans  Nightboat Books  Jasmin Gibson Don't Let Them See Me Like This Wendy Travino's Cruel Fiction Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore's Sketchtasy  This episode's editor and social media manager was Mitchel Davidovitz. The "Sound of Waves Breaking" was Spray Tan's "SOLOSLUT."

    Interview with June Gehringer

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2018 34:02


    This month I got to talk to June Gehringer about her latest book. June Gehringer is the author of "I Love You It Looks Like Rain" (Be About It 2017), and "I Don't Write About Race" (Civil Coping Mechanisms 2018), the latter of which was the winner of Civil Coping Mechanisms's 2017 Mainline contest. She lives in Philadelphia and has more crushes than she can count. She tweets about it @june_gehringer, and if you're a press interested in her next book you can reach her at gehringercat@gmail.com . She's also an editor over at tenderness lit.  I Don't Write About Race can be purchased here.    Writers, presses, musicians mentioned in the show: Peyton Burgess Danez Smith Prairie M. Faul Sung Yim Naadeyah Haseeb glo worm press EVIL MTN jayy dodd p.e. garcia Alexandra Naughton Mitski Kristin Chang Hanif Abburraqib The Wanderer Zack Blackwood Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz The Sound of Waves Breaking

    Interview with Chase Berggrun

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2018 41:21


    In this episode I got to speak to Chase Berggrun about their new book R E D (Birds, LLC, 2018). Their work has appeared or is forthcoming in POETRY, Pinwheel, PEN Poetry Series, Sixth Finch, Diagram, The Offing, Prelude, Beloit Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. They received their MFA from New York University. They are Poetry Editor at Big Lucks. Chase's website Chase's Twitter Go Buy R E D List of things and people mentioned in this episode: Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula Dodie Bellamy’s The Letters of Mina Harker Cathy Park Hong essay: “Delusion of Whiteness in the Avant-Garde” Joey De Jesus essay: “Goldsmith, Conceptualism & the Half-baked Rationalization of White Idiocy” Solamz Sharif essay “The Near Transitive Properties of the Political and Poetical: Erasure” Solmaz Sharif’s LOOK Matt Rasmussen’s Black Aperture Jos Charles’ feeld George Abraham: al youm: for yesterday & her inherited traumas Gala Mukomolova’s One Above, One Below: Positions and Lamentations Leslie Jameson’s The Recovering: Intoxication and Its Aftermath Tommy Pico’s podcasts Food 4 Thot and Junk The Parent Trap starring Lindsay Lohan and Lindsay Lohan Spongebob asexually reproducing   Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz Sound of Waves Breaking

    Interview with Luis Lopez-Maldonado

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2018 34:48


    This month I got to talk with Luis Lopez-Maldonado. Prepare yourself, this episode gets a little more sexy than usual. Luis is a Xicanx poeta, playwright, dancer, choreographer, and educator. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of California Riverside in Creative Writing and Dance. His poetry has been seen in The American Poetry Review, Foglifter, The Packinghouse Review, Public Pool, and Spillway, among many others. He also earned a Master of Arts degree in Dance from Florida State University, and a Master of Fine Arts degree in Creative Writing from the University of Notre Dame. He is currently a co-founder and editor at The Brillantina Project.  Luis' website Luis' Twitter Luis is on Instagram @luis.lopezmaldonado The Artist is Present Wicked Follow Waves Breaking on Twitter at @WavesBreakPod, or email at wavesbreakingshow@gmail.com Editor and Social Media Manager: Mitchel Davidovitz The Sound of Waves Breaking: LA/Orange County Metro

    Interview with Kayleb Rae Candrilli

    Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2018 35:32


    This month I got to chat with Kayleb Rae Candrilli. Kayleb is author of "What Runs Over," winner of the 2016 Pamet River Prize, with YesYes Books. "What Runs Over" is a 2017 Lambda Literary finalist for Transgender Poetry. Candrilli is published or forthcoming in Puerto del Sol, Booth, RHINO, Cream City Review, Hayden's Ferry Review, Adroit, Bettering American Poetry, Boaat Press, Vinyl, CutBank, Muzzle, New Orleans Review, and many others. ​ They have served as the nonfiction editor of the Black Warrior Review and as a feature editor for NANO Fiction. They are now an Assistant Poetry Editor for Boaat Press. In 2015, Candrilli was a Lambda Literary Emerging Fellow in Nonfiction, and again in 2017 as a fellow in poetry. Kayleb is a Best of the Net winner and has been nominated for Pushcart Prizes (in prose and poetry) and for Best New Poets. They were also a 2017 recipient of a Leeway Art and Change Grant. Authors and music mentioned in this episode: Kayleb's website: https://www.krcandrilli.com Purchase "What Runs Over" here: https://www.yesyesbooks.com/product-page/what-runs-over-by-kayleb-rae-candrilli Nabila Lovelace "Sons of Achilles" https://www.yesyesbooks.com/product-page/sons-of-achilles-by-nabila-lovelace Shaelyn Smith "The Leftovers" http://www.csupoetrycenter.com/books/the-leftovers Jamie Mortara "GOOD MORNING AMERICA I'M HUNGRY AND ON FIRE" https://www.yesyesbooks.com/product-page/good-morning-america-i-am-hungry-and-on-fire-by-jamie-mortara Chase Berggrun "R E D" http://www.birdsllc.com/catalog/red Lynette Reeman: https://www.linettereeman.net Post-ironic bummer pop band Coping Skills: https://copingskills.bandcamp.com/album/worst-new-music Swedish EDM Kasbo: https://www.edmsauce.com/tag/kasbo/ The Sound of Waves Breaking is here: https://freesound.org/people/kickhat/sounds/328969/ This episode is edited by Mitchel Davidovitz. Mitchel Davidovitz is also the Social Media Manager. You can contact Avren on twitter @WavesBreakPod, and on Facebook at "Waves Breaking Podcast," and through email wavesbreakingshow@gmail.com.

    Interview with Nat Raha

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2018 48:35


    This month(ish) I got to interview Nat Raha! Nat Raha is a poet and trans / queer activist, living in Edinburgh, Scotland. Her poetry includes two collections countersonnets (Contraband Books, 2013) and Octet (Veer Books, 2010); and numerous pamphlets including ‘de/compositions’ (Enjoy Your Homes Press, 2017), '£/€xtinctions' (sociopathetic distro, 2017), '[of sirens / body & faultlines]' (Veer Books, 2015), 'radio / threat' (sociopathetic distro, 2014) and 'mute exterior intimate' (Oystercatcher Press, 2013). She's performed and published her work internationally. Nat co-edited the Radical Transfeminism zine, and is currently finishing PhD in on queer Marxism and contemporary poetry at the University of Sussex. http://sociodistro.tumblr.com (if you go here, there's pdfs of £/€xtinctions, the first edition '[of sirens...], and 'radio/threat') http://sociopatheticsemaphores.blogspot.com Ideas and writers discussed in this episode: Psychogeography Situationism Guy Debord Ivan Chtcheglov Sonic Youth My Bloody Valentine early Austerity 2011 England: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_government_austerity_programme The New York School Sean Bonney "The Commons" Nat Raha's essay "Transfeminine Brokenness, Radical Transfeminism" https://read.dukeupress.edu/south-atlantic-quarterly/article/116/3/632/129746/Transfeminine-Brokenness-Radical-Transfeminism  Lauren Berlant's idea of "slow death" found in her book "Cruel Optimism" Verity Spott, "Click Away Close Door Say" http://www.contrabandbooks.co.uk/verity-spott/ Linus Slug, Mendoza, Tommy Peeps, Insect Librarian: ninerrors http://ninerrors.blogspot.com Jay Bernard: http://www.poetryinternationalweb.net/pi/site/poet/item/19397/29/Jay-Bernard Nisha Ramayya Frances Kruk Vahni Capildeo, Measures of Expatriation This episode was edited and social media managed by Mitchel Davidovitz The Sound of Waves Breaking is from CadereSounds, freesound.org

    Interview with Chely Lima

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2018 38:18


    This month I got to speak with Chely Lima and Margaret Randall, the translator for his new collection of poetry What the Werewolf Told Them/ Le que los dijo el licantropo. Chely Lima is a queer Cuban-American writer who has published numerous books (poetry, novel, short story, theater, literature for children) in his country of origin, and also in Spain, United States, Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela and Ecuador. Some of these books are the novels Lucrecia quiere decir perfidia (2015), Triángulos mágicos (2014) and Confesiones nocturnas (1994), as well as the poetry books Zona de silencio (2004), Discurso de la amante (2013), and Lo que les dijo el licántropo / What the Werewolf told them (2017). His texts have been translated into English, French, Portuguese, German, Italian, Russian, Czech and Esperanto, and numerous selections and anthologies of literature from various parts of the world collect samples of his work.  ** Listeners can use the code WAVES for a 20% on ANY *OS* book directly through our online store, here: https://squareup.com/store/the-operating-system/ **  Books, authors, and ideas mentioned in this episode: Chely Lima's blog What the Werewolf Told Them/ Lo que los dijo el licantropo Margaret Randall's website The Operating System Jungian concept of the shadow   An article about androgyny and shamanism, though I would exercise caution around its terminology, which might be harmful for non-binary POC folks in its use of the term "third gender"   Viracocha and Dionysus   Alberto Serret   Editing and Social Media Management mangaed by none other than Mitchel Davidovitz   Sound of Waves Breaking: Wolves in Finland

    Interview with H. Melt

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2017 41:35


    This month I had the opportunity to interview H. Melt about the anthology they've just edited: Subject to Change: Trans Poetry & Conversation.    H. Melt is a poet, activist, and educator whose work proudly celebrates Chicago’s queer and trans communities. Their writing has appeared many places including In These Times, The Offing, and Them, the first trans literary journal in the United States. They are the author of The Plural, The Blurring and editor of Subject to Change: Trans Poetry & Conversation. Lambda Literary awarded them the Judith A. Markowitz Award for Emerging LGBTQ Writers and they've been named to Newcity's Lit 50 list, as well as Windy City Times' 30 under 30. H. Melt co-leads Queeriosity at Young Chicago Authors and works at Women & Children First, Chicago’s feminist bookstore.   Writers, books and artists mentioned in this episode:   Subject to Change anthology Joshua Jennifer Espinoza  Christopher Soto AKA Loma Beyza Ozer  Cameron Awkward-Rich Kay Ulanday Barrett  Jay Besemer KOKUMO Troubling the Line anthology H. Melt's book The Plural, The Blurring H. Melt's website Women and Children First Bookstore Jesse Jacobs' work Crawl Space   Sound of Waves Breaking: butter melting in a pan   Editing and Marketing by: Mitchel Davidovitz   WE HAVE SOCIAL MEDIA: check out our new facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/WavesBreakPod/ and our new Twitter account at @WavesBreakPod   You can, of course, always reach me at wavesbreakingshow@gmail.com 

    Interview with Venus Selenite

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2017 48:20


    This month, I had the pleasure of meeting Venus Selenite in person while she started her first leg of her #RehabYearTour. Venus is a Bettering American Poetry 2016 nominee, a 2017 Pink Door Fellow, and one of the most notable trans women of color interdisciplinary artists in the United States. She is the author of two books: trigger and the fire been here. She lives in Washington, D.C. and the internet. Venus's website Venus's Patreon trigger The Fire Been Here James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time Nameless Woman anthology Goddess X KOKUMỌ J Mase III Jamie Berrout Lady Dane Figueroa Edidi  Her new book: For Black Trans Girls Who Gotta Cuss a Motherfucker Out When Snatching an Edge Ain't Enough Jayy Dodd  Their new book Mannish Tongues Also, shameless plug for my interview with them back on Episode 10 What you can do to support trans artists of color (thread) The Sound of Waves Breaking is by Chris Lynn, a recording of voices in Washington, D.C. near the Jefferson Memorial.   The editor is Mitchel Davidovitz, and the show is produced by me. 

    Interview with Raquel Salas Rivera

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2017 58:45


    This month I speak with Raquel Salas Rivera from their residence in Puerto Rico. Raquel Salas Rivera es una poeta, traductora, ensayista y educadora puertorriqueña que vive y trabaja en Filadelfia. Ha publicado poemas, traducciones y ensayos en numerosas revistas y antologías; también ha publicado cuatro libros de poesía: Caneca de anhelos turbios (2011), oropel/tinsel (2016), huequitos/holies (2016) y tierra intermitente (2017). En el 2018, publicará el libro lo terciario/the tertiary con Timeless, Infinite Light. Actualmente, es editora contribuyente y traductora para The Wanderer. Si para Roque Dalton no existe revolución sin poesía, para Raquel no existe poesía sin Puerto Rico. Puedes aprender más sobre su trabajo si visitas raquelsalasrivera.com. Raquel Salas Rivera is a Puerto Rican poet, translator, essayist, and educator living and working in Philadelphia. They have published poetry, translations, and essays in numerous anthologies and journals, and as well as four poetry books: Caneca de anhelos turbios (2011), oropel/tinsel (2016), huequitos/holies (2016), and tierra intermitente (2017). In 2018, Timeless, Infinite Light will publish their fifth book, lo terciario/the tertiary. Currently, they are a Contributing Editor at The Wanderer. If for Roque Dalton there is no revolution without poetry, for Raquel there is no poetry without Puerto Rico. You can find out more about their work at raquelsalasrivera.com. Artists and other things mentioned in this month's episode The Wanderer César Vallejo Ángelamaría Dávila Nestor Perlongher Lezama Lima Severo Sarduy Julia de Burgos Manuel Ramos Otero Los nadaístas  Quitapon beer Pedro Scaron’s El Capital PROMESA Colette Arrand Chloe Rose jayy dodd RE Katz Gaddiel Francisco Ruiz Rivera Caleb David Acevedo John Paul Kirkland Gegman Lee Mara Pastor Vara Liceaga Raquel Albarrán Xaviar Valcarcel Abdiel Echevarría Yolanda Arroyo Nicole Delgado Charles Theonia Jasmine Gibson Marc Anthony Richardson (Raquel notes that Year of the Rat was great) Angel Dominguez Moss Angel Witchmonstr Ginger Ko Tatiana Luboviski-Acosta Gabriel Ojeda Sague Kirwyn Sutherland CA Conrad Sophie Robinson José Raúl González (Gallego) This episode was edited by Mitchel Davidovitz and produced by me. The Sound of Waves Breaking is of the coquí hanging out at night, found on freesound.org

    Interview with Kenyatta JP Garcia

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2017 46:31


    I got to talk on the phone with poet Kenyatta JP Garcia and their most recent collection Slow Living.  Kenyatta JP Garcia is the author of They Say, Slow Living and ROBOT. JP was raised in Brooklyn but currently resides in Albany, N.Y. where they received degrees in English and linguistics. They are an editor at both Rigorous and Five 2 One Literary Magazine. In a past life, they were a cook for about a dozen years. In this modern incarnation, they get paid to put boxes on shelves by night and by day they read comics, pine, worry, and attempt to craft something worth reading.    JP's Website Slow Living ROBOT: The Waste Land Reimagined Yawning on the Sands Frank O'Hara Oscar Wilde Jean Genet Alice Notley an article about queer death in the media, not the article JP mentioned, but hopefully helps some Michael Sikkemma Danielle Pafunda Mark Lamoureux H.D.'s Helen in Egypt Moss Angel Witchmonstr Jean Toomer's Cane Here by Richard McGuire (not Bill Kartalopoulos like I said in the episode!!) Hank Williams Sr. Joy Division Brooklyn Radio's History of Hip-hop Johnny Cash & Family "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" Claes Oldenburg Andy Warhol If you can, check out Dr. Schoerke's essay, "The Divided Heart," specifically examines the sentimentality-vs-modernism forced schism more clearly than how I articulated it

    Interview with Julian Shendelman

    Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2017 73:37


    In this interview, I get to talk IN-PERSON with Julian Shendelman about his new chapbook, Dead Dad Club (Nomadic Press, 2017).  Julian Shendelman has a weird looking dog (part fawn, part fruit bat) and a nice Jewish boyfriend. After 10 years of living in Oakland, where he was an organizer for the Bay Area Trans Writers Workshop, Julian is relocating to Philadelphia with hopes of having more time to write. He was a 2016 Pushcart nominated poet for his piece in Bat City Review, and won a Literary Death Match with a true story about queer punk cannibalism. His first published chapbook, “Dead Dad Club,” was released by Nomadic Press in March of this year.   Poets and groups mentioned in this episode: Cam Awkward-Rich (check out the interview I did with Cam here) Zach Ozma Thel Seraphim Bay Area Trans Writers Workshop (if you're in the area, not-cisgender and not a jerk, please come!) "Welcome to the Dead Dads Club" scene in Gray's Anatomy Seahorse by Natasha Dennerstein Quiéreme by Juliana Delgado Lopera  Timeless Infinite Light (sign up for a subscription!)

    Interview with Ching-In Chen

    Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2017 53:21


    This month I had the pleasure of interviewing Ching-In about their recent publication, recombinant. We got to talk about archive, language, history, and gender.  Ching-In Chen is the author of The Heart's Traffic (Arktoi Books) and recombinant (Kelsey Street Press) and co-editor of The Revolution Starts at Home: Confronting Intimate Violence Within Activist Communities (South End Press; AK Press) and Here is a Pen: an Anthology of West Coast Kundiman Poets (Achiote Press). A Kundiman, Lambda, Watering Hole and Callaloo Fellow, they are part of the Macondo and Voices of Our Nations Arts Foundation writing communities. Their work has appeared in The Best American Experimental Writing, The &NOW Awards 3: The Best Innovative Writing, and Troubling the Line: Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and Poetics. They are a senior editor of The Conversant and poetry editor of the Texas Review. They serve on the Executive Board of Thinking Its Presence: Race, Advocacy, Solidarity in the Arts as the Director of Membership and Social Media. www.chinginchen.com Have a listen, spread the word! Artists and works mentioned in this episode: Ching-In's book recombinant Ching-In's book The Heart's Traffic The Peabody Essex Museum's collected artifacts of the basket and fan Milwaukee lynch mob information Cheng Chui Ping aka "Sister Ping"  Golden Venture Disaster Michael Lin's artwork at Peabody Essex Museum I Was Born with Two Tongues Tyehimba Jess's Olio  Syncopated Sonnets Kunidman Cathy Linh Che Wo Chan Jai Arun Ravine Trish Salah conference: Thinking as Presence, creative writing, race and the arts. CFS!   The Sound of Waves Breaking this week is from Jon Jang and the Pan-Asian Arkestra's "Night in Tunisia," just in case you're curious.    This episode was edited by Mitchel Davidovitz, whose sound project you can find here on bandcamp    

    Interview with Tyler Vile

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2017 50:06


    While I was on the East Coast to attend/table AWP, Tyler Vile and I got the chance to meet up with each other in D.C.'s Green Lantern bar to talk poetry and punk. The photo for this month's episode was taken just after our interview.   Tyler Vile is a writer, performer, and activist from Baltimore, MD whose novel-in-verse, Never Coming Home, is available on Topside Press. She is a member of the Baltimore Transgender Alliance leadership team and the vocalist in a punk band called Anti-Androgen. Her interactive poetry zine, Hassidic Witch Murderer is available on her website. She aspires to one day become the world’s greatest transsexual yenta. Artists/Bands Mentioned in the show: Tyler's Wesbite Never Coming Home Hassidic Witch Murderer Anti-Androgen's bandcamp Cat Fitzpatrick Punk Globe Cpunk or CripplePunk movement the Sidebar  Media Pigs  the Germs  Jayne County  Ginger Coyote  Operation Ivy  The Fags  Raped (UK band)  Minor Threat Black Flag  Marginal Man Government Issue   John Stabb John Berry  The Slickee Boys  Iron Cross the Twats  Mischief Brew  Bad Brains  G.L.O.S.S. Venus Selenite Lady Dane Figueroa Edidi The Baltimore Transgender Alliance  KOKUMỌ Kay Ulanday Barrett The Sound of Waves Breaking this week was a demo version of "FUCK THE WOLVES" by Anti-Androgen. 

    Interview with Aristilde Kirby

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2017 66:39


    It was such a gift to speak with emerging-talent Aristilde Kirby for this month's episode! Aristilde Kirby is a twenty-five year old lesbian trans-woman poet and songsmith originally from Bronx, NY, but now resides from Carrollton, GA. She is a UGA Master Gardener. She is working on a chapbook entitled [bitácora total bust] and an EP entitled [LA POESÍA DEL CANTE JONDO], which will be out sometime in future recent history, hopefully.  Authors, artists, and books mentioned in this episode: Aris's twitter account Mei-Mei Berssenbrugge Jamie Berrout's translation of Esdras Parra's Este suelo secreto/ To Be Human Once More Frederico Garcia Lorca's Poema del cante jondo Trans Women Writer's Collective website Kay Gabriel's "Untranslating Gender in Trish Salah's Lyric Sexology Vol. 1" The name of the woman whose name escaped Aris's mind was we were talking about Aris's recent publication was Ralayzia Taylor. You can donate to her YouCaring for her to help cover medical expenses, food, and secure housing. Vetch Journal Nina Chaubal has been released! You can still help her cover lawyer fees! Peachy Parade /  ピーチー・パレード Allen Thomas Void Scrolls I Frida Palacios No Name's Telefone Mitski's Puberty 2   The Sound of Waves Breaking is Aris's poetic soundscape "Opaline Y Hyalite" which you can find here at her bandcamp.    Editing was done by Mitchel Davidovitz. 

    Interview with Jayy Dodd

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2016 47:27


    This month’s interview is with none other than Jayy Dodd! In this episode we talk about their work in other genres of art and critique, compensation for labor, and their newest chapbook, [sugar in the tank].   [sugar in the tank] can be found here Jayy Dodd’s website “All my exes look like mass murderers” Jayy as an editor Jayy as a graphic designer Jayy as Social Media manager Donate to Jayy for their work here and here Georgina Arroyo’s website The Shade Journal, issue 1 Langston Hughes’ “I, Too” “Hyel’s Zumbi” Tafisha A. Edwards Morgan Parker Danez Smith Joshua Jennifer Espinoza Luther Hughes The Sound of Waves Breaking is Lucille Clifton reading her work “blessing the boats,” a poem I return to often in this post-election climate.

    Interview with Vita E. Cleveland

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2016 54:06


    I am so honored to get to speak with Vita E. Cleveland about her recent chapbook Dedications. The conversation, of course, wanders toward her percussion expertise, musings on art's intersection with activism, slut shaming in activist circles, and more.  Notes of Poets Mentioned in this episode:   Vita E's tumblr Vita E's youtube Vita's new ebook, Dedications Saul WilliamsJ Mase III Regie Cabico  Kavindu Ade awQward Talent Agency TaneshaNicole Tyler's performance at TED Talk Timothy DuWhite CeCe McDonald giving a talk at the Humanist Hall Dane Figueroa Edidi Ashleigh Shackelford Capturing Fire 2016 Kay Barrett Kit Yan Venus Selenite Linette Reeman Nik Moreno   Edited by: Mitchel Davidovitz, whose experimental audio work you can check out at his bandcamp.    "The Sounds of Waves Breaking" was Vita E's drum solo "Clave." You can listen to the entirety of "Clave" at her SoundCloud page.    Transcripts forthcoming.

    Interview with Jay Besemer

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2016 53:27


    In this month's episode, Jay Besemer and I talk about his recent book, Chelate, along with other topics, including: living with chronic illness, our relationship with nature, sci-fi, poetry comics, and time.   Books and things mentioned in this episode: Jay's Tumblr Samuel Delany's Babel-17 Petra Kuppers' essay in Transgender Studies Quarterly Oliver Baez Bendorf's poetry comics Clover manga Bianca Stone's poetry comics Warren Craghead III's poetry comics Theme Music is by Bahati Kiro Music throughout is by Chris Zorn Transcripts forthcoming from Amir Rabiyah The Sound of Waves Breaking is the ambient noise of Terok Nor from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

    Interview with Cameron Awkward-Rich

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2016 27:56


    In this episode I talk with Cameron Awkward-Rich about his approaches to poetry and theory, and the poetry in his new book Sympathetic Little Monster. Cameron has published poems in The Journal, cream city review, Muzzle Magazine, Hobart, The Seattle Review, The Offing and elsewhere. He is a Cave Canem Fellow, a poetry editor at Muzzle Magazine, and currently a doctoral candidate in Modern Thought & Literature at Stanford University. Cam is the author of the chapbook Transit (Button Poetry, 2015) and his debut collection, Sympathetic Little Monster, was published by Ricochet Editions in 2016. Go check out Sympathetic Little Monster, its a wonderful collection.    Writers who were mentioned in the shout outs:  James Baldwin's essay "Here Be Monsters" Aracelis Girmay Ari Banias Danez Smith Franny Choi Sam Sax Justin Phillip Reed Fatimah Asghar Aziza Barnes Hanif Willis-Abdurraqib   The Sound of Waves Breaking this week is the sound of opening an attic, as found on freesound.org

    Interview with Jai Arun Ravine

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2016 34:05


    Jai Arun Ravine talks to me about their newest book, The Romance of Siam, just released from Timeless, Infinite Light. We talk about their use of humor in critiquing orientalism, the tourist industry in Thailand, and their process as an interdisciplinary artist.  The sound of waves breaking is "Once in a Lifetime," the theme song for Thailand's tourism campaign.  Jai’s website: http://jaiarunravine.com/ The Romance of Siam: http://timelessinfinitelight.com/collections/frontpage/products/romance-of-siam Jai’s performance piece from 2010, “TOMBOIGATOEYMANGO”: https://vimeo.com/15429089 Once in a Lifetime Commercial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5_zFBH4wqU Ambient Asian Space: noodlecroons.tumblr.com Jo Ann Wasserman’s book of sestinas, “The Escape”: http://www.futurepoem.com/books/the-escape Gabriel Ojeda-Sague & Jai Arun Ravine in conversation about adjacency: https://medium.com/drunken-boat/a-conversation-between-gabriel-ojeda-sague-and-jai-arun-ravine-fea4b9c44842#.cgsw305tg Gabriel’s book: http://timelessinfinitelight.com/products/oil-and-candle Jim Thompson, the Unsolved Mystery: https://www.amazon.com/Jim-Thompson-Unsolved-William-Warren/dp/9813018828 Information about W. Somerset Maugham in Thailand: http://padraigrooney.com/journalism/a_literary_journey_through_thailand.html  

    Interview with Zoe Tuck

    Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2016 33:00


    In this episode I get to talk to Zoe Tuck in a coffee shop in Oakland. We discuss speculative fiction, the second wave feminism she navigated during her coming of age years, spirituality, trans identities and collective memory, and more.  Zoe's website is here: zoetuck.com and you can order Terror Matrix from TIL here: http://timelessinfinitelight.com/products/zoe-tuck-br-terror-matrix  Other writers and thinkers brought up in this show:    David Antin: http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-arts-and-culture/books/188685/talmudic-improv-david-antin Interview that Tom Leger was part that I referenced: http://www.lambdaliterary.org/interviews/09/17/three-umpires-walk-into-a-bar-transgender-authors-and-editors-on-transgender-literature/ "What is Bay Area Poetry" Podcast: https://soundcloud.com/heonversant Zoe’s review of Archipelago: http://www.spdbooks.org/pages/staff-picks/default.aspx Connie Willis: http://www.tor.com/2015/06/24/where-to-start-with-the-works-of-connie-willis/ Ursula K. Le Guinn: http://www.ursulakleguin.com/ Laura Moriarty: http://www.spdbooks.org/Producte/1891190245/ultravioleta.aspx Alice Notley: http://www.amazon.com/Descent-Alette-Penguin-Poets/dp/0140587640 Zach Ozma: http://cargocollective.com/zachozma bell hooks on arts education and visual politics: http://www.amazon.com/Art-My-Mind-Visual-Politics/dp/1565842634

    Interview with the Editors of "Vetch"

    Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2016 29:38


    In this episode I have the pleasure of interviewing the current editors of Vetch: A Magazine of Trans Poetry and Poetics: Kay Gabriel, Stephen Ira, Liam O'Brien and Rylee Lyman. We talk about their approaches to putting the journal together, their insights into transgender poetics, and touch on the archival of transgender/gender-variant art.  There's a huge reading/viewing list for this episode. Explore all the trans art! Vetch (obviously!) http://vetchpoetry.co.vu/ Lilith Latini http://topsidepress.com/author/lilith-latini/ Merrit K’s podcast http://woodlandsecrets.co/ and DBZ fanzine Badman: http://pinebark.tumblr.com/post/131704442142/badman-a-dragon-ball-zine and INTERNET MURDER REVENGE FANTASY https://a-dire-fawn.itch.io/imrf Trace Peterson http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poets/detail/trace-peterson succubus in my pocket can be purchased here: http://eoagh.com/?p=2486 Cat Fitzpatrick http://topsidepress.com/author/cat-fitzpatrick/ Kay Gabriel’s essay on Trish Salah’s Lyric Sexology Vol. 1 https://www.academia.edu/22511089/Untranslating_Gender_in_Trish_Salahs_Lyric_Sexology_Vol._1  which will soon be released in TSQ*: https://www.dukeupress.edu/TSQ-Transgender-Studies-Quarterly Aristilde Kirby https://twitter.com/motjustine Maxe Crandall https://maxecrandall.com/ Trish Salah http://www.thefeministwire.com/2013/12/3-poems-by-trish-salah/ Aiyanna Maracle (who just recently passed away): http://indianacts.gruntarchives.org/video-day-1-keynote-panel-1.html http://nomorepotlucks.org/site/death-in-the-shadow-of-the-umbrella-aiyyana-maracle/ Donate to help archive Aiyyana’s work here: https://www.gofundme.com/2bwu25ks Mirha-Soleil Ross http://zagria.blogspot.com/2014/09/mirha-soleil-ross-1969-sex-worker.html#.Vy0US_krI2w Xanthra Phillipa MacKay http://www.citr.ca/2015/11/20/from-the-citr-archives-17-64288/ Manuel Arturo Abreu’s essay Transtrender: A Meditation on Gender as a Racial Construct http://blog.newhive.com/transtrender-a-meditation-on-gender-as-a-racial-construct/ Hal Schrieve https://twitter.com/hal_schrieve The Sound of Waves Breaking for this episode is a clip from Season 4 of DBZ "Goku's Special Technique."

    Interview with Joy Ladin

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2016 52:01


    In this interview I get a chance to talk with Joy Ladin. We talk about her latest book Impersonation, how her relationship to poetic language changed as she transitioned, the use of persona in poetry, the early Modernists, and trends in trans & gender-variant poetry. Joy's website is: joyladin.com. GO BUY IMPERSONATION IT'S GREAT. Email me at: wavesbreakingshow@gmail.com Theme music by Bahati Kiro, transition music by Chris Zorn. The Sound of Waves Breaking is from the Nasa's new collection of space sounds up on Soundcloud. It's Chorus Radio waves from within Earth's atmosphere.

    Interview with Loma

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2016 24:10


    Today's show features a conversation between Loma and me about the government influence on poetry, the boundaries of a poem between other objects and being, poetry & activism, struggling with how to write poetry about domestic abuse, fearlessness, and more. Poets & essays mentioned in this episode: Juliana Spahr and her influential essay on Contemporary Poetry and Its Nationalisms: ( http://www.academia.edu/9079433/Contemporary_US_Poetry_and_Its_Nationalisms ) Loma's website ( christophersoto-poet.com ) Dark Matter: ( http://www.darkmatterpoetry.com/ ) Joshua Jennifer Espinoza: ( http://joshuajenniferespinoza.com/ ) Stephanie Burt ( http://www.closecallswithnonsense.com/category/stephanie/ ) TC Tolbert ( http://www.tctolbert.com/ ) Julian T. Brolaski ( http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/julian-brolaski )

    Interview with Amir Rabiyah

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2016 23:06


    In this interview I am in conversation with poet and activist Amir Rabiyah. This is the first episode of "Waves Breaing," a podcast in which I, a lonesome transbaby, interview my contemporaries in trans and genderqueer poetry.    Help out Aurora Levins Morales at http://www.littlevehicleforchange.org/ and Amir Rabiyah's Hambidge Residency at https://www.gofundme.com/amirgoestohambidge

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