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By Charla Cultural
4.8
66 ratings
The podcast currently has 18 episodes available.
We’re moving clouds with Ingrid Rojas Contreras.
Ingrid Rojas Contreras is an award-winning author who was born and raised in Bogotá, Colombia. Her essays and short stories have appeared in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Electric Literature, Guernica, and Huffington Post, among others. She is the book columnist for KQED, the Bay Area's NPR affiliate.
We’ll start with a clip of from Rojas Contreras’ performance at City of Asylum in July 2019, then we’ll transition to an interview we just did with Ingrid, some conversation, and finally we’ll get to what we’re reading and some thoughts for the road. We'll be talking spiritualism, writing and identity, as well as that time I tried to buy some contraband and ended up with Something Special.
We’re LOOKING BACK at Jazz Poetry.
Jazz Poetry has celebrated the fusion of music and language for over 18 years. Musicians and poets are brought together by City of Asylum to experiment, collaborate, connect and to express themselves freely, yielding performances greater than their parts . Over the years, Jazz Poetry has featured hundreds of artists from hundreds of countries.
This episode is really special, an opportunity to dig through performances from the City of Asylum archive 2011-2019. Unless you were sitting in the audience at the COA tent, or Alphabet City, at any of these performances, you’ve never heard these before. We’re really excited to share.
We’ll Open with a performance by Sonia Sanchez from 2011. Then we’ll follow up with the incredible medley featuring Justin Philip Reed, Ilya Kaminsky, Jenny Johnson, and Yusef Komunyakaa. All the music, the amazing jazz, is brought to you by Jazz Poetry musical director Oliver Lake and various musicians he’s recruited to join him across the years.
We’re eating fire with Jose Hernandez Diaz
Jose Hernandez Diaz is a 2017 NEA Poetry Fellow. He holds degrees from the University of California, Berkeley, and Antioch University Los Angeles. His work appears in The Best American Nonrequired Reading, Green Mountains Review, Huizache, New Orleans Review, North American Review, The Progressive, Witness, among others. He has served as an editor for Floricanto Press and Lunch Ticket. His manuscript was a finalist for the 2018 Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize.
We'll be talking astrology, Frida Kahlo, and the different definitions of "pocho."
We're turning tables with Patrick Rosal.
Patrick Rosal is the award winning author of four books of poetry: Boneshepherds, My American Kundiman, Uprock Headspin Scramble and Dive, and Brooklyn Antediluvian. He is a Guggenheim fellow and lives in New Jersey.
We’re peeling oranges with Ada Limón.
Ada Limón is the award-winning author of the poetry collections The Carrying, Bright Dead Things, and several other books, poems, and essays.
We'll be talking about voice, faith, and answering the most impossible question of all: what is poetry? We'll also be talking about comics and revenge monsters.
BRIAN BROOME’s debut memoir, Punch Me Up to the Gods, is New York Times Editor’s Pick and the winner of the 2021 Kirkus Prize for Nonfiction. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, Poets and Writers, Medium, and more.
We're talking structure, fires, and what to tell your mother when you write about how much you hate her.
We’ll start with a clip of Brian answering a question during his performance at City of Asylum back in August of 2021 and then Karla and I will chat a little bit about family and writing. After that, we’ll listen to Brian Broome’s full reading from that same performance. We’ll transition to an interview I just did with Brian, some conversation from us, and finally we’ll get to we’re reading and some thoughts for the road.
It's the SEASON TWO premier and we're naming ghosts with Chiwan Choi.
Chiwan Choi is a poet and the author of The Flood, Abductions, and The Yellow House. Choi is currently working on a fourth book titled my name is wolf.
Choi is also the host of the new paranormal/literary podcast, Are You There, Ghost? It's Me, Chiwan.
We’ll start with the trailer for Are You There Ghost? It’s Me, Chiwan and then we will chat a little bit about the relationship between ghosts and writing. After that, we’ll listen to Chiwan Choi’s full performance at City of Asylum back from August 6, 2019. We’ll transition to an interview we just did with Chiwan, some conversation, and finally we’ll get to we’re reading and some thoughts for the road.
For our season finale, we’re celebrating more Cave Canem poets to honor their 25th anniversary!! With performances by the poets Lyrae Van Clief-Stefan, Evie Shockley, Kevin Young, and Dawn Lundy Martin.
Founded by Toi Derricotte and Cornelius Eady in 1996 to remedy the under-representation and isolation of African American poets in the literary landscape, Cave Canem Foundation is a home for the many voices of African American poetry and is committed to cultivating the artistic and professional growth of African American poets.
Cave Canem has grown from a gathering of 26 poets to become an influential movement with a renowned faculty, high-achieving national fellowship of over 400 and a workshop community of 900. Cave Canem enjoys over 20 local, regional and national cultural partnerships, among them City of Asylum.
We’ll also get into prose poetry, heists involving money, what we’re reading, and some thoughts on The African Queen for the road!
We're breaking It Down with S. Brook Corfman. S. Brook Corfman is the author of My Daily Actions, or The Meteorites, one of The New York Times’ Best Poetry Books of 2020, a finalist for the Publishing Triangle’s Trans & Gender-Variant Lit Award, and the winner of the Fordham University Press POL poetry prize judged by Cathy Park Hong. They are also the author of the collection Luxury, Blue Lace, chosen by Richard Siken for the 2018 Autumn House Rising Writer Prize, and the chapbooks Frames, Meteorites, and The Anima: Four Closet Dramas. Born and raised in Chicago, they now live in a turret in Pittsburgh.
We'll be talking memory, absence, climate change, and the body as well as what we're reading and some thoughts for the road.
(GUEST HOSTED BY MARISSA JOHNSON-VALENZUELA with Adriana)
The podcast currently has 18 episodes available.