Spelling suggestions: "subject:"criting"" "subject:"awriting""
431 |
Kidron Road and Other StoriesMolohon, Jason 01 January 2016 (has links)
Kidron Road and Other Stories is a collection of fiction that ranges from the soberly tragic to the magically real. The characters in each selection are molded by their choices, the choices of others, and the cruel whims of fate. I am fascinated by the way fatalism and free will intersect in the human experience. Therefore, my work often explores the paradoxical way lives are molded by past decisions while, at the same time, those decisions seem determined by outside forces.
|
432 |
TetheredBarnes, Audi 01 January 2020 (has links)
Tethered is a cross-genre poetry and essay collection whose speaker explores topics of identity, racial injustice, mental health, and emotional abuse, while also tackling the speaker's chronic physical illness. The collection seeks to discuss discomfort in all its form with increasingly intimate and personal detail. Structured by theme, it ventures first into race, before delving into greater identity issues that intersect with sexism and the speaker's sexual identity, finally alighting on the speaker's health as it intersects with her upbringing. In poems like "On God," and essays including "Naming Conventions of the Mid Life Jamaican," the speaker considers how her familial relationships have informed her identity, driven her self-destructive behavior, and ultimately armed her to content with bigoted practices in her personal and professional life outside of the home. With poems like "My Best Friend's White Guilt," "imma be real," and "I Said What I Said," the speaker interrogates her own Blackness and her alternating complicity in, complacency with, and pushback against bigoted systems that seek to exclude and suppress minority voices. With a greater focus on non-white identities coming forth in the media, these pieces seek to emphasize the flawed complexity of the individual Black woman, for her own sake—not just for her entertainment value. Poems like "immolate," "A Fine Merlot," and "Elegy for St. Gertrude" illustrate feminine vulnerability as created by patriarchal hierarchy, and rail against this phenomenon with incisive language that seeks to weaponize the female body as that which consumes rather than is consumed, and by validating the emotional vulnerability commonly associated with the feminine.
|
433 |
Episodes of Bar EugeniaGagnon, Lauren 01 January 2020 (has links)
This linked short story collection follows the evolution of Bar Eugenia—a legacy restaurant once a staple in New York City's Southside—from the early 1920's to the present day. Each story explores the intersection of NYC's working-class roots and increasingly prevalent showbiz culture, presenting a cast of characters who find themselves out of place, with a better life visible just beyond reach. In the premier story, "Bar Eugenia," a man with a dream of entertaining entertainers receives the Bar Eugenia in a back-alley deal with the mysterious mobster Mr. C but soon finds himself caught in a feud between the Mafioso and silent-film star Buster Keaton. In "A Demon in the Dark," a desperate detective searches for a Southside serial killer among the cast of Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. In "Lights, Camera, Action," an old war hero with a secret finds himself competing, appropriately, on a military-themed episode of the game show I've Got a Secret. Throughout each of the stories in the collection, characters are asked to reevaluate where they are, where they want to go, and how far they'll travel to get there.
|
434 |
Charcoal Boys and Dreams of IgnitingKelly, Malcolm 01 January 2020 (has links)
In Charcoal Boys & Dreams of Igniting, themes of race, queerness, isolation, othering, fetishization, love and relationships are all explored. They are paired up against one another and questioned through the lens of creative writing. Experimental and traditional poetry, prose poetry and memoir are all incorporated to make this possible. Examining how pain can lead to beauty and working to strike up a discourse on societal preconceptions. This work is an attempt to jut open the silent discourse and provoke discussion of these subjects, to make the reader uncomfortable. For it is in our discomfort that we learn the most about ourselves.
|
435 |
Be Your Own Charlatan!Farmer, Melanie 01 January 2020 (has links)
Be Your Own Charlatan! is a collection of personal essays about the nature of violence, the intricacy of aspiration, and the labels we use to distinguish our identities and accomplishments. The essays explore how such labels can be limiting and frustrating while simultaneously useful for navigating what is expected of us. Essays such as "Hip Throw," "Fighting," and "Rolling: A Ladies' Guide to Brazilian Jiu Jitsu" use the lens of martial arts to examine femininity, the difference between perceived and actual violence, and the line between violence and sport. "White Homework" and "Couch Sitter" reflect upon ways of navigating the expectations of other people as well as self-invented parameters and limitations. "The Teacher Doesn't Jump in Front of the Bullet" and "Teacher Eavesdrops Thursday At the Diner" dissect the myth that teachers are selfless and patient nurturers. "I'm Not an Actor, But I Play One in This Essay," "Colorblind Casting," and "Anything and Everything" reflect upon life as a student, and how the enthusiasm expressed by various teachers can reshape long-held expectations and ideas about identity. Be Your Own Charlatan! tackles these ideas through humor that leads to introspection and introspection that unlocks the absurdity of the expectations we place on ourselves, those we meet, and the world around us.
|
436 |
Skin BabyMacalintal, Erica 01 January 2020 (has links)
Skin Baby is about the inevitability of decline and decay—what happens when we turn away from it, and what happens when we're forced to confront it head on. The essays in this collection focus on navigating a parent's devastating diagnosis of Parkinson's disease and the struggle to control its accompanying chaos. The collection interrogates identity, addiction, generational mental illness, and parent-child relationships. In "Home for the Holidays," illness is an invisible foe that shatters expectations. "Prologue to Revelations" and "This Too Shall Pass" consider rampant escapism and anesthetization. "The Druggist's Daughter" explores preconceived notions of family dynamic. Other essays focus on discoveries about inherited traits both physical and mental ("Things Unattended"), desperation for metaphysical and spiritual understanding ("Bruja," "Peripheries") and accepting the inescapable ("Skin Baby," "What is Owed," "Next Year in Jerusalem"). Parkinson's disease slowly robs people of their faculties as it progresses. Death ultimately occurs, but not before a long period of watching and waiting. Skin Baby explores what that watching and waiting looks like for one family.
|
437 |
This Might Get HeavyMayer, Tara 01 January 2020 (has links)
This Might Get Heavy is a collection of essays which explores intersecting themes of body image, mental illness, and sexual identity. Through these personal essays, Mayer explores and interrogates the societal norms and tendencies that have formed the shape into which she has forced herself both mentally and physically. In essays such as "The Point System" and "Refraction," Mayer uses memoir to depict the origins of her struggles with body image and disordered eating. "Tara's Body Quiz and Answer Guide" and "How to Determine Your Sexuality: A Guide to Finding Your Letter in the Acronym" inhabit "hermit crab" forms to break through emotional barriers and question the need for conformity. Other essays, like "Green Tea and Giant Donuts" and "(Potentially Unwanted) Letters from Your Former Self," act as thematic bridges that explore the ways body image and sexuality can influence one another, ultimately helping Mayer to unearth previously undiscovered pieces of her identity. This Might Get Heavy uses several voices and forms to address and break away from the perceived expectations that have ruled the narrator's life. It is both a reflection on the ways in which a body is built and a rebellion against the binding that holds these parts together.
|
438 |
Boitawl: Soil, Lost and LeftChowdhuri, Bishnupriya 01 January 2018 (has links)
Boitawl ("Boi"- lack, devoid of, "Tawl"- bottom/ ground/ foundation), the word in one of the Bengali dialects refers to one without a ground beneath her feet. The thesis, a hybrid collection of prose and verse including narratives and graphic vignettes, flash, fabulist and short stories, prose poems and free verse imagines the inside worlds of such un-settled existences. In the process, the pieces connect migration, memory, childhood and lost towns with fractured humans caught in between - to reveal what lies under pillars of desires, the shapes of unsaid longings and recurrent images in their dreams.
|
439 |
Counter Clockwise Culture ShockMercer, Matthew 01 January 2018 (has links)
Counter Clockwise Culture Shock is a memoir focused the narrator's return to his hometown, a place he barely escaped: drug addiction, incarceration, bad relationships, alienation, an Oedipal mother, and suicidal threats. It is reflection on both culture and self, after I gained an outside perspective from Japan. The narrator is forced to relive nihilism and monotony, and face the troubles of his younger years. It describes the difficult journey of today's youth, in an evermore technologically dynamic world - with few role models able to plot a course through. This is a meditation on past actions that ended in survival. Unlike most books dealing with cultural alienation, it focuses on a reinterpretation of my own culture. The main theme of the memoir is identity. The remnants of adventure, ingrained in the narrator's mind, contrast with a return to the deja vu of a distorted hometown. Many of the stories cut across time and space to mimic the disorientation of the narrator. The clarity of these cultural distortions emerges when viewed through an outside lens. Not only does Counter Clockwise Culture Shock distill these distortions, it uses an Eastern perspective - and language - to better understand the flaws and strengths of indoctrinated cultures. An outside perspective of a different culture expands the narrator's former view of the world. Suicide and depression are destroying Western society, and this is an attempt to catalog stresses of Western culture and help people in similar circumstances.
|
440 |
Assisted Living: StoriesSwift, Donovan 01 January 2019 (has links)
Assisted Living is a collection of stories that explores themes of parenthood, brotherhood, old and new love, adultery, financial strife, and the many faces of loss. The collection offers different points of view, which allow the reader to experience these themes within varying lives and situations. For example, the eponymous "Assisted Living" is from the perspective of a pet-sitter at the brink of losing both her job and husband, while "Holy Mother" explores the point of view of a wife coming to terms with her affair and the physical injury that has changed her husband. "The World of Reptiles" follows a father walking his son through a zoo before they receive his son's cancer test results, while "Host" follows two sons who discover their recently deceased mother believed in reincarnation before she died. Other stories explore characters stuck in relationships - both familial and romantic - that started bright, but curled toward the dark, leaving the characters feeling trapped by the ones they love. The collection as a whole seeks to explore people stuck between selves, people striving to be new and better, while failing and succeeding in ways big and small.
|
Page generated in 0.0629 seconds