is an essay about the way technology can intrude and obscure what may be our most important human experiences
"In our latest chat, Patricia Leavy discusses the evolution of the self-coined social fiction genre and offers a sneak peek at her latest publication, Film Blue."
I worry about survival. Bluntly put, according to the Academy of Sciences almost every person on earth will be affected by climate change.
J. Sumerau·
All ContentAutoethnographic Flash NonfictionAutoethnographic Literary FictionVolume 3, Issue 4 (2023)
··19 min readThis short story about a night in a shed is an attempt to encourage any reader to think about the stories that circulate within communities.
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.
"The words we use and how we say them are much more than sounds, they tell a story that gives us away, revealing a history about and behind us, a place and a people that we have come from."
Within the context of this poem, I tried to explain what was happening to my body because of SLE and what I was thinking.
This lighthearted essay illustrates an experience I had in Singapore while doing research for a book I was writing about spirituality.
In the women’s history month, The AutoEthnographer supported "Her Story Leads: Amplifying Women’s voices through digital storytelling".
I explore the intersection of queer identity and popular culture through the lens of my adolescent crush on rock legend Tina Turner.
You will find ten poems by ten Albanian poets (mostly women poets) from Kosovo and Albania and our diaspora, translated into English by me.
Jesus and Fentanyl: A Mortician's Perspective is actually thoughts from a funeral director and also an ode to an overdose victim.