This autoethnographic account explores the complex relationship between language and identity.
In this 2nd of my Processing Parental Grief series, Calliandra receives a letter from her mother weeks after her death.
In the women’s history month, The AutoEthnographer supported "Her Story Leads: Amplifying Women’s voices through digital storytelling".
"From dancing at New York’s Metropolitan Opera to the Cow Palace in San Francisco, every venue taught me valuable lessons."
The Ultimate Wave: Prose Poetry of the Pandemic and Parents Author’s Memo “The Wave” examines the problem of pleasure and...
I offer the following five poems to you. I hope that when you read/hear them you see a way into your own stories and ideas of poetic voice.
There are multiple approaches to find one's poetic voice depending on the lens one chooses as a part of the author’s creative process.
This particular piece, "What is Human, Remains" looks back at my first year as a teacher, and the unexpected activism in my students.
Through all of the things that separate us, there is one universal experience that transcends all barriers: love.
Zona. I have always thought that names of diseases sound so beautiful. This is the story of a disease that lives with me.
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