"I danced each morning with Pina Bausch. I became her pupil lifting my leg up in the air like a flamingo except feeling more awake than I’ve ever been."
Poet Anne McCrary Sullivan discusses her latest book Learning Calabar, Notes from a Poet’s Year in Nigeria with editor Michelle Reale.
Jill Boyles·
All ContentAutoethnographic Art & MultimediaAutoethnographic Literary NonfictionVolume 4, Issue 2 (2024)
··4 min readA Private Life in Rural Idaho Challenges Living in Rural Areas Living a private life can be enticing. One way...
This artwork is based on a startling and memorable encounter at the local vet while attempting to get Anaïs spayed.
A Startling Note: "Looking for Gay Friends" in the Triangle Place narrates a gay man’s experience of sexual awakening on a university campus.
I worry about survival. Bluntly put, according to the Academy of Sciences almost every person on earth will be affected by climate change.
From all there is something to be learned, as the river itself has been victimized, has not escaped its own environmental terrorism.
This piece recounts a trip I took to the Czech Republic and it is proof that language barriers similarly embolden people to speak cruelly.
This work, a narrative and poetic account of a school shooting, provides an experiential entry into the experience from the point of view of a faculty member.
This is a song for the Passover prophet as a critique on his inability during the Covid-19 pandemic to appear and provide solace and safety.
This work addresses the issue of young women being underserved as health care patients, specifically through the lens of medical gaslighting.
The poem driving this experimental film about television considers the insomniacs who wake at the same time each night in rhythm.