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Vang, Mai Der. Yellow Rain. Minneapolis: Graywolf Press, 2021, p. 179.
Vicuña, Cecilia. New and Selected Poems of Cecilia Vicuña. Edited and translated by Rosa Alcalá. Kelsey Street Press, 2018.
Wasson, Michael. Swallowed Light. Port Townsend: Copper Canyon Press, 2022.
Wasson, Michael. Swallowed Light. Port Townsend: Copper Canyon Press, 2022.
Wasson, Michael. Swallowed Light. Port Townsend: Copper Canyon Press, 2022.
Foerster, Jennifer Elise. The Maybe-Bird. Brooklyn: The Song Cave, 2022, pp. 9, 12-13, 18.
Johnson, Julie Swarstad. Pennsylvania Furnace. Greensboro: Unicorn Press, 2019.
Morgan, Saretta. Alt-Nature. Minneapolis: Coffee House Press, 2024.
Roberta J. Hill opens with two poems from her first collection, Star Quilt (1984), before reading more recent work that would later be collected in Philadelphia Flowers (1996). Both collections were published under the name Roberta Hill Whiteman.
Judith Barrington reads from History and Geography (1989) along with poems that would go on to be collected in Horses and the Human Soul (2004) and several that remain uncollected. The poems she selects for this reading center on place, landscape, memory, and Lesbian identity; horses recur throughout.
LeAnne Howe, Jennifer Elise Foerster, and Joy Harjo discuss and read poetry from the anthology When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through: A Norton Anthology of Native Nations Poetry (2020). Diana Marie Delgado leads a conversation to conclude the event. This reading was given online as the first event from the Institute for Inquiry and Poetics, a thought center founded at the University of Arizona Poetry Center and designed to create space and time for poets to respond to pressing questions that reside at the intersection of social concern and poetry.
Michael Wasson reads poems primarily from his first full-length collection, Swallowed Light (2022), which inhabits both the fragmented self and the tensions of language and history experienced by Wasson's Nimíipuu community. Part of the Distinguished Visitors in Creative Writing Series, this reading was originally given with Jennifer Elise Foerster.
Jennifer Elise Foerster reads from The Maybe-Bird (2022), her third book of poetry. Her poems and commentary center on themes of poetry as deep listening, layered voices, and created forms that expand and circle back on themselves. Foerster closes with two short poems in Mvskoke. Part of the Distinguished Visitors in Creative Writing Series, this reading was originally given with Michael Wasson.