My weird depression showed up this summer like “hey sis!” And I was like “fuck my life”! I wasn’t ready. This time, it caught me off guard.
It grew out of my personal experience researching Black history museums; but in reality, it began a lot earlier, maybe before I was born.
"Barriers melt like grilled cheese at the table when you're dancing for your supper like the old vaudevillians."
In a single paragraph that represents one long thought, “I’d say I was a runner” explores the act of running as a form of self-therapy.
"This is an autoethnographic narrative where I use my own marriage to tell a story about love, bodily autonomy, acceptance and illness."
"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."
This work shows that the benefits of reading multiple texts, each from a different perspective provides opportunities for students.
“Answering the Call of Conscience in the Call Out Culture” continues my accounting of, and critical reflection on, the ethical and political dimensions of having been falsely accused of sexual assault online.
Emerging Immigrant’s Accents is about how language impacts our self image as we come to understand ourselves and our cultural beings.
My essay tells my life story in relation to a specific moment in the history of American women’s access to abortion and reproductive justice.
What this essay tries to capture is both the wonder and the inherent horror in potty training.
This lighthearted essay illustrates an experience I had in Singapore while doing research for a book I was writing about spirituality.