Odesa addresses the traumas of struggling immigrants, who face rejection and shunning rather than acceptance and understanding.
This sestina poem reflects and validates my own personal experience as a 14-year-old who was dealing with something I couldn’t initially even name; anxiety.
On Emerging Liberated of the Glass Box Author’s Memo Like many others in the American South, I began my teens...
In this essay, the current reality of queerness is juxtaposed against milestones in my own life as a queer man in America.
One Man’s Perspective on Grieving and Death is a narrative representation of death as a universal humanistic theme.
Humor acts as a defense mechanism, a pressure release valve, a teaching tool. As a heart surgeon, I have used laughter for all these reasons.
"I see myself as someone whose organic inquiry and teaching are shaped by radical love, and I am willing to let myself be changed by my students."
"This is an autoethnographic narrative where I use my own marriage to tell a story about love, bodily autonomy, acceptance and illness."
Just like Puerto Rican immigrants, animals might land in a complex political landscape where some might welcome them, but some might not.
This writing is based on storytelling, common in Mexican culture.
Patricia Leavy is a genuine trailblazer, the real deal, an inspiration.
Today we're talking with the award-winning author, researcher, and performer, Shanita Mitchell about performance and autoethnography.