BlasiosVictory

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Sunday, 30 June 2013

SCOTUS: The Good, the Bad & the Horrendous

Posted on 15:35 by Unknown
In Soho
Pride Flag, Soho
With most of its majority rulings over the last few years, the conservative/libertarian-leaning US Supreme Court has regularly managed to outrage liberals and progressives, and cheer business and rightist interests, but it also occasionally raises eyebrows on all sides with a surprise decision or two that at least on the surface appear reasonable. So it was, in the latter case, with two of the final rulings the Court handed down this term, on Friday, in Hollingsworth v. Perry, which upheld a federal court ruling that invalidated Proposition 8, that state referendum that had abruptly halted and prevented same-sex marriages in California, and in United States v. Windsor, which struck down the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), introduced by Republicans, passed by bipartisan US Congressional majorities and signed into law by then-President Bill Clinton in 1996, banning federal recognition of same-sex marriages well in advance of any state allowing them.

As a result of these two findings, same-sex marriages can resume in California, perhaps within days, and the federal government will now recognize same-sex marriages in those states that allow them, a number that continues to increase, by according them an array of federal rights and benefits that had previously been available only to opposite-sex couples. Coming on the cusp of LGBTIQ Pride weekends around the country, both rulings count as major victories in the long struggle for gay rights and marriage equality, but in the case of the latter victory, the effects remain unclear and will certainly be limited by the fact that a majority of US states not only do not permit same-sex marriage, but have changed their constitutions specifically to bar it. In addition, neither ruling goes as far as 2003's Lawrence v. Texas, which removed a major federal disability from LGBTIQ people's (and heterosexuals') lives by striking down all state-based sodomy laws. In a number of US states, LGBTIQ people can still be fired from their jobs, lose their children, be barred from visiting ill partners and loved ones, and incur other forms of discrimination just for being perceived to be gay.

In the case of my home state, New Jersey, we have civil protections for LGBTIQ people, but although our legislature did vote up a same-sex marriage bill, our conservative governor, Chris Christie, not only refused to sign it, a position he reiterated after the SCOTUS rulings came down, but has called for a statewide referendum to determine whether we will have a right that nearly all the surrounding states (including all of New England, New York State, and Maryland) now enjoy. It seems likely that New Jerseyans would affirm marriage equality at the ballot, since polls show a majority of state residents support it, but putting rights to a vote is never a good idea, and a positive outcome is always uncertain. In any case, Chris Christie appears to be doing this primarily to stay in the good graces of the national GOP, in hopes of gaining the 2016 President nomination, if not a subsequent one. On a personal level, as a product of the post-Gay Liberation moment, I remain critical of the mainstream gay rights movement's focus on marriage, a problematic, often oppressive bourgeois institution on many levels, and its drive towards homonormativity and uniformity, the latter of which has been especially destructive to and for queer people. We have not decided to get married, and I am not sure if we will. Yet I also support ending discrimination in all forms, and of being able to gain recognition, and removing economic burdens, under federal law, something that people in same-sex marriages until Friday rulings could not do. I think this is especially crucial for older queer couples, married queer couples with children, and queer couples who are experiencing serious health crises.

More in keeping with the Supreme Court's horrendous rulings, and with, as scholar Tavia Nyong'o put it so aptly in a tweet to me, the increase both in tolerance and inequality, were two others I want to highlight, that undercut even more the happiness I felt at the DOMA and Prop 8 rulings. First was the Court's gutting of the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act, signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson, to address the decades-long efforts to prevent black people and other minorities from voting and exercising our democratic rights. By a 5-4 majority in Shelby County, Alabama v. Holder, Attorney General, the Court essentially struck down Section 4, which provided a "coverage formula" defining "covered jurisdictions" as states or political jurisdictions that had "maintained tests or devices as prerequisites to voting" and had had low voter registration or turnout levels in the 1960s and early 1970s, and thus required, as per Section 5, "pre-clearance" by the US Justice Department before they could enact new voting laws.

As a result, all of the states formerly labeled as covered jurisdictions, which had egregious histories of barring African Americans and other people of color from voting, ranging from poll-taxes to changing election sites and dates, to canceling elections outright (all of which were accompanied by violent, sometimes mortal, forms of intimidation), can now revert to form if they like, and once again start legislating laws making voting burdensome to impossible for black voters and others. Chief Justice John Roberts delivered the Court's majority opinion, declaring among other things that "Blatantly discriminatory evasions of federal decrees are rare." In his opinion, it would be up to Congress to clarify the law, a likelihood that seems dicey given the current obstructionism of the GOP. Associate Justice Clarence Thomas wrote a brief, separate concurrence calling for Section 5 to be struck down as well. Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg delivered her dissent, joined by the three liberal justices, from the bench, stating in her opening paragraph that Congress, "recognizing that large progress has been made...determined, based on a voluminous record, that the scourge of discrimination was not yet extirpated" in 2006. She is right, and the potential for voter suppression and discrimination in the former "covered jurisdictions" is, as the past has shown, going to require not just vigilance and resistance but new laws to counter the actions of this activist court.

Another deeply problematic ruling that flew under the radar, but which reporter John D. Echeverria of The New York Times astutely caught was Koontz v. St. John's River Water, which may have the effect, as Associate Justice Elena Kagan wrote in her dissent, of "work[ing] a revolution in land-use law," and not in a way beneficial to most residents of a given jurisdiction. In essence, the 5-4 ruling, written by Associate Justice Samuel Alito, severely harms sustainable development laws, by creating an incentive for local government officials to, as the Times notes, reject development plans or allow developers to run amok rather than risk a lawsuit that could very well go against these governments based on the new post-Koontz standards. In addition, the finding places a new burden on local governments to justify mandated fees for permits, making compromises to address potential environment degradation less likely given the court's ruling in favor of developers and corporations. The Times points out that in the case of waste disposal


Many communities impose development-impact fees on developers if a proposed project would require expanding waste-disposal sites or building new ones. Before Koontz, a developer could raise a constitutional challenge if the charges were unreasonable, but judges typically deferred to local governments in such cases.

After Koontz, developers have a potent new legal tool to challenge such charges because now the legal burden of demonstrating their validity is on the communities themselves.

Finally, there was Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin, the court's most high-profile affirmative action case this term, in which 7 members of the Court, with Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy delivering the majority opinion--and with both Associate Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas delivering concurring opinions (Thomas's included the perversely ironic line "The Constitution does not pander to faddish theories about whether race mixing is in the public interest")--vacated a lower court decision to defer to the University of Texas's use of race in achieving and maintaining diversity in its student body and in deciding whether its plan to do so was narrowly enough tailored to meet the stricter standards required by two previous SCOTUS decisions, Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger, and the infamous Regents of the Univ. of California v. Bakke. With Justice Kagan recusing herself, only Justice Ginsberg offered a dissent, writing that she has "several times explained why government actors, including state universities, need not be blind to the lingering effects of “an overtly discriminatory past,” the legacy of “centuries of law-sanctioned inequality," and thus voted to affirm the Court of Appeal's decision in favor of the University of Texas. The practical outcome does not ensure admission to Abigail Fisher, the 22-year-old white plaintiff, but it does mean that the University of Texas will now have to go back and rethink its admissions plan so as not to fall easy pray to a similar lawsuit in the future.

In many online discussions of this decision, I or any reader could quickly spot the rants against affirmative action, the alleged deleterious effects on white applicants, the dismissal of the sustained impact of past discrimination, and on and on, but very rarely did I see a basic fact that Time presented in clear and fairly concise fashion, which is that over the entire history of affirmative action, white women--i.e., people just like Abigail Fisher--not black people, not latinos, not native americans, not asian americans, but white women, have been the primary and majority beneficiaries of affirmative action policies. I remember a good friend of mine who taught at NYU pointing this out to me and others at a panel debate with conservatives at Rutgers back in the late 1990s, and then coming across this information repeatedly online over the last 15 years, but what continues to adhere in the public discourse is the belief, articulated on Friday, by radio talkshow host Brian Lehrer on his WNYC, that black people have been the main beneficiaries of affirmative action, which represents discrimination against white people. I should also note Abigail Fisher's suit failed to point out that Texas admitted only 5 black or latino students with lower scores than Fisher, but did extend admission to FORTY-TWO WHITE students. Additionally, 168 black or latino students with scores better than Fisher were not admitted. But fact, facts.

I'll end with a slightly adapted version of note I sent to some friends in reference to affirmative action, American institutions of higher education, one several I have had very close ties to:


I recently finished reading Craig Steven Wilder's book, Ebony and Ivy: Race, Slavery and the Troubled History of America's Universities (Bloomsbury, forthcoming fall 2013), which I picked up at BookExpo America, and will just say that if the oldest universities and colleges in this country (including Harvard, founded in 1636, or Rutgers, founded in 1766) ever fully addressed their horrific history--and it is very, very bad, as Wilder's excellent, authoritative historical study makes very clear--on slavery, the extermination and forced removal of native peoples, the development of medical and the natural sciences using black and brown bodies, the enrichment of elites (whose names, from Williams to Bard to Amherst, etc. are all over these institutions) and so much more, they would have to admit black and native people free for hundreds of years. Most of us don't have a clue about the full and ugly early history of this country, or the institutions that made it possible, and how race, racism and anti-affirmative policies towards a sizable portion of us have continually privileged and benefited white Americans, including people who only later became white.


I do plan to review Wilder's book, but I also hope it informs future discussions about race and higher education, because ignorance of this history has meant a severely underinformed discussion and debate.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in affirmative action, civil rights, DOMA, land-use law, LGBTIQ, LGBTQ Pride, Prop 8, race, Racism, SCOTUS, sustainable development, voting rights, Voting Rights Act | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Bill de Blasio's Victory (& Secret Weapon)
    Dante, Chiara, Bill and Chirlane de Blasio (© David Handschuh, New York Daily News ) Below I've posted bit of silliness from one of my l...
  • Poem/Translation: Xavier Villaurrutia
    For a long time I've loved the poetry of Xavier Villaurrutia  (1903-1950), one of the greatest poets in Mexican  and Latin American lite...
  • Rugby League Four Nations Tournament 2010 + Casula Powerhouse Body Pacifica Calendar
    It's the holidays, which means its time for what one J's Theater reader once charitably called "rugby porn." Not real por...
  • Neuroaesthetics, Part 2: Fiction's Effects
    Last week I posted a summary of Alexander Kafka 's discussion, in the Chronicle of Higher Education , of Eric Kandel 's newest book...
  • Lucian Freud in Pictures
    Lucian Freud, ArtNewsBlog In tribute, here are a few of the paintings by Lucian Freud (1922-2011) that I either am drawn to or admire, thou...
  • Goodbye to the Summer / Back in Class
    Rutgers undergraduate Paul Robeson with fellow football players On Tuesday, I resumed my old new  fall rhythm. "Old," because I ha...
  • Three From Kluge & Richter in NYRB
    Alexander Kluge , Germany's living avatar of analytical fiction (and a cinematic pioneer in the l950s and 1960s), and Gerhard Richter , ...
  • California's New Poet Laureate + Poem: Juan Felipe Herrera
    Congratulations to California's new Poet Laureate, Juan Felipe Herrera (1948-). This week Democratic Governor Jerry Brown appointed th...
  • Photos: Life Burning In Every Moment, Part 2
    _____ was here (building site, John St. at the Fulton St. station, lower Manhattan) World Trade Center Freedom Tower, nearing completion Wor...
  • Poem: Tan Lin
    Lest we forget that in the digital age new kinds of poems are possible, and that writers are creating them, here is one by Tan Lin (19_?-),...

Categories

  • "'like' culture" (1)
  • 1960s (1)
  • 1966 (1)
  • 1970s (3)
  • 1980s (6)
  • 1990s (2)
  • 19th century (3)
  • 2012 (1)
  • 2012 election (3)
  • 2012 Olympics (1)
  • 2013 (2)
  • 2016 Olympics (1)
  • 20th century (3)
  • 4th of July (1)
  • 9/11 (2)
  • A Bolha Editora (1)
  • A. Philip Randolph (1)
  • Aaron Shurin (1)
  • Aaron Swartz (1)
  • Abdellah Taïa (1)
  • Abdias do Nascimento (1)
  • Abraham Lincoln (1)
  • abstract art (5)
  • abstraction (2)
  • academe (3)
  • academic journals (1)
  • academics (1)
  • Academy of American Poets (2)
  • acorn squash (1)
  • acting (1)
  • activism (7)
  • Adam Johnson (1)
  • Adam Pendleton (1)
  • Adbusters (2)
  • Adélia Prado (1)
  • Adeline Koh (1)
  • Adepero Oduye (1)
  • Adrian M. S. Piper (1)
  • Adrienne Klein (1)
  • Adrienne Rich (1)
  • Adunis (2)
  • aesthetics (1)
  • affirmative action (2)
  • Afghan poetry (1)
  • Afghanistan (2)
  • Afghanistan War (1)
  • africa (6)
  • African American art (1)
  • African American history (3)
  • african american literature (10)
  • African American music (2)
  • african american poetry (20)
  • African American Studies (5)
  • African Americans (16)
  • African Diaspora (6)
  • African Diasporic writing (2)
  • African literature (2)
  • African music (1)
  • African Poetry Book Series (1)
  • African writing (1)
  • Afro-Brazilians (4)
  • Afro-Latin (1)
  • Afro-Latin literature (1)
  • Afro-Latin people (4)
  • Afrolatinos (3)
  • Ai (1)
  • Ai Weiwei (1)
  • AIDS (1)
  • Akilah Oliver (2)
  • Al Qaeda (1)
  • Alain Ménil (1)
  • Alban Berg (1)
  • Albert Ayler (1)
  • Albert Pujols (4)
  • Aldon Nielsen (1)
  • Alexander Kluge (2)
  • Alexander McQueen (1)
  • Alexander Nazaryan (1)
  • Alice Yard (1)
  • All Blacks (2)
  • Alphonso Lingis (1)
  • ambiguity (1)
  • Amendment One (1)
  • America (3)
  • American (2)
  • American Academy of Arts and Letters (1)
  • American art (3)
  • American fiction (3)
  • American history (2)
  • American literature (8)
  • American Literature Association (1)
  • American music (1)
  • american poetry (28)
  • American writers (1)
  • Americas (1)
  • Amy Lowell (1)
  • Amy Winehouse (1)
  • Ana Cristina Cesar (1)
  • Anaheim (1)
  • analysis (1)
  • analytical fiction (1)
  • Anderson Cooper (1)
  • André Breton (1)
  • André Derain (1)
  • André Watts (1)
  • Andrea Lunsford (1)
  • Andrei Levkin (1)
  • Andres Serrano (1)
  • Andrew Blackley (1)
  • Andrew Cuomo (2)
  • Andy Mister (1)
  • Andy Warhol (1)
  • Angela Carter (1)
  • Anglophone Africa (1)
  • Anglophone literature (1)
  • animation (1)
  • Ann Dunham (1)
  • Ann Hamilton (1)
  • Ann Lauterbach (1)
  • Ann Patchett (1)
  • Anna Deeny (1)
  • Anna Olga Brown (1)
  • Anne Carson (1)
  • Annie Murphy Paul (1)
  • anniversary (1)
  • Anonymous (1)
  • anthology (1)
  • anti-gay (1)
  • anti-poverty (1)
  • anti-racism (1)
  • anti-sodomy (1)
  • Antilles (1)
  • antiwar protests (1)
  • Anton Chekhov (2)
  • Antoni Gaudí (2)
  • Antoni Tàpies (1)
  • aphorism (1)
  • apocalypse (1)
  • app (3)
  • Apple (1)
  • Arab American poetry (2)
  • Arab cultures (1)
  • Arab world (4)
  • Arabic (1)
  • Arabic fiction (1)
  • Arabic literature (1)
  • Arc de Triomf (1)
  • architecture (3)
  • archive (4)
  • Archivo F.X. (1)
  • Argentina (2)
  • Argentinian literature (1)
  • Armond White (1)
  • Arnold Schoenberg (1)
  • art (48)
  • art criticism (1)
  • art exhibit (4)
  • Art Expo 2013 (1)
  • art film (2)
  • art history (1)
  • Art Institute of Chicago (1)
  • art museum (1)
  • art music (4)
  • Arthur Rimbaud (1)
  • artistic gymnastics (2)
  • arts (1)
  • Ashford and Simpson (1)
  • Asia Society (1)
  • Asian American athletes (1)
  • Asian American literature (1)
  • Asian American poetry (6)
  • Asian Americans (1)
  • Asian poetry (1)
  • assemblage (1)
  • association (1)
  • atheism (1)
  • athletes (1)
  • athletics (1)
  • austerity (2)
  • austerity bomb (2)
  • Australia (2)
  • Australian literature (1)
  • authors (1)
  • automat (1)
  • avant (1)
  • avant-garde (5)
  • awards (1)
  • AWP (4)
  • Ayn Rand (2)
  • Back Bay (1)
  • Bakare Gbadamosi (1)
  • Balthus (1)
  • Baltimore (1)
  • Baltimore Orioles (1)
  • bankruptcy (1)
  • Barack Obama (23)
  • Barcelona (5)
  • Barkley L. Hendricks (1)
  • baseball (6)
  • Basho (1)
  • basketball (3)
  • Bayard Rustin (1)
  • Baz Luhrman (1)
  • BEA (1)
  • Beacon Hill (1)
  • bears (1)
  • Beat Poets (1)
  • beauty (3)
  • Belle da Costa Greene (1)
  • Ben Vinson (1)
  • Benjamin Moser (1)
  • Berlin (2)
  • Betsy Wing (1)
  • Bette Davis (1)
  • Betty Ford (1)
  • Beyonce (1)
  • Big 10 (1)
  • Big Brother Brazil (1)
  • big-box (1)
  • Bill Clegg (1)
  • Bill Clinton (1)
  • Bill de Blasio (1)
  • Bill Thompson (1)
  • Billy Collins (1)
  • Binyavanga Wainaina (1)
  • biography (1)
  • biology (1)
  • biopower (1)
  • birthday (4)
  • black academics (1)
  • black actors (1)
  • black art (7)
  • black art. (1)
  • Black Arts Movement (4)
  • black culture (2)
  • black dandy (1)
  • black gay (2)
  • black history (2)
  • Black History Month (4)
  • black LGBTQ (11)
  • black liberation (1)
  • black literature (2)
  • black men (1)
  • Black Mountain school (1)
  • black music (2)
  • black people (3)
  • black poetics (1)
  • black poetry (2)
  • black surrealism (1)
  • black women (2)
  • black writing (6)
  • blackness (1)
  • Block Museum of Art (1)
  • blogging (5)
  • blogiversary (2)
  • Bloomsday (2)
  • blue (1)
  • blues (1)
  • Bob Marley (1)
  • bodies (1)
  • bohemian (1)
  • Book Expo America (1)
  • book reviews (1)
  • books (15)
  • bookselling (1)
  • bookshelf (1)
  • bookstore (1)
  • bookstores (1)
  • Borders (2)
  • Boris Akunin (1)
  • Boris Pasternak (1)
  • Boston (6)
  • Boston Marathon (1)
  • brain science (3)
  • Brasília (2)
  • bravery (1)
  • brazil (16)
  • Brazilian literature (4)
  • Brazilian poetry (5)
  • Brent Hayes Edwards (1)
  • British (1)
  • British literature (2)
  • British poetry (1)
  • Bronx (3)
  • Brooklyn (4)
  • Brooklyn Museum (1)
  • Bruno Carvalho (1)
  • Buddhism (1)
  • budget cuts (1)
  • Busboys and Poets (1)
  • butterflies (1)
  • C's Holiday Kitchen (1)
  • CAC Digital Arts (2)
  • cafe (1)
  • cake (2)
  • California (5)
  • Camille T. Dungy (1)
  • campaign (1)
  • campesino (1)
  • Canada (1)
  • Canadian film (1)
  • Canadian poetry (1)
  • Cape Verde (1)
  • capital punishment (1)
  • capitalism (1)
  • Caribbean (2)
  • Caribbean art (1)
  • Caribbean music (1)
  • Caribbean poetry (2)
  • Caribbean writing (2)
  • Carl Phillips (1)
  • Carl Sandburg (2)
  • Carlos Fuentes (1)
  • Carlos Skliar (2)
  • Carmen Herrera (1)
  • Carnaval (2)
  • Carnival (1)
  • Carter G. Woodson (1)
  • Catalonia (1)
  • catastrophe (1)
  • cathedral (1)
  • Catherine Barnett (1)
  • Cathy Davidson (1)
  • Cave Canem (3)
  • Cecil Taylor (1)
  • celebration (2)
  • censorship (1)
  • census (1)
  • centenarian (1)
  • Cervantes Prize (1)
  • César Aira (1)
  • Cesária Évora (1)
  • chamber music (1)
  • championship (1)
  • chancellor (1)
  • chapbook (2)
  • Chapbook Festival (1)
  • Charles Baudelaire (1)
  • Charles Ives (1)
  • Charles Rice-González (1)
  • Charles Yu (1)
  • Cheim & Read (1)
  • Chelsea (3)
  • chemistry (1)
  • Chester Himes (1)
  • chicago (27)
  • Chicago Book Expo (1)
  • Chicago Poetry Project (1)
  • Chicago Writers' House (1)
  • Chicano poetry (3)
  • Chile (3)
  • Chilean poetry (4)
  • China (3)
  • Chinese Americans (1)
  • Chinese literature (1)
  • Chinese writing (1)
  • chocolate (1)
  • Chris Carpenter (1)
  • Chris Christie (1)
  • Christchurch (1)
  • Christian Bök (1)
  • Christian Marclay (1)
  • Christine Brooke-Rose (1)
  • Christine Quinn (1)
  • Christine Smallwood (1)
  • Christmas (2)
  • Christopher Cozier (1)
  • Christopher Hitchens (1)
  • Christopher Stackhouse (2)
  • Chronicle of Higher Education (3)
  • Chulito (1)
  • cinema (5)
  • City Lights Books (1)
  • civil liberties (1)
  • civil rights (1)
  • Civil War (1)
  • Claire Denis (1)
  • Clarice Lispector (2)
  • class (1)
  • class struggle (1)
  • classes (1)
  • classical music (4)
  • classics (2)
  • Claude McKay (1)
  • Claudia Rankine (2)
  • Claudia Roquette-Pinto (2)
  • clerihew (1)
  • Cleveland (1)
  • Clifton Gachagua (1)
  • climate change (1)
  • Clint Eastwood (1)
  • clothing (1)
  • cloud (1)
  • codex (1)
  • cognitive linguistics (2)
  • cognitive psychology (4)
  • cognitive science (5)
  • Colin Powell (1)
  • collaboration (1)
  • collapse (1)
  • Colm Toibín (1)
  • Colombia (3)
  • Colombian poetry (1)
  • colonialism (2)
  • color (1)
  • color of change (1)
  • Colorado (1)
  • ColorOfChange.org (1)
  • Columbia University (2)
  • comedy (4)
  • comics (1)
  • coming out (2)
  • Common (1)
  • common words (1)
  • communism (2)
  • community (1)
  • commuting (2)
  • comparative literature (1)
  • computers (1)
  • conceptual art (6)
  • concision (1)
  • conference (4)
  • Congress (3)
  • Connecticut (1)
  • conservatism (2)
  • contemporary art (2)
  • controversy (2)
  • conversation (1)
  • cooking (1)
  • Cooper Union (2)
  • Copley Square (1)
  • Cornell University (1)
  • corporeality (1)
  • Cory Arcangel (1)
  • Cory Booker (1)
  • Countee Cullen (1)
  • couplets (1)
  • courage (2)
  • creative nonfiction (1)
  • creative writing (3)
  • creativity (2)
  • Crispus Attucks (1)
  • criticism (9)
  • critique (3)
  • cross-cultural imagination (1)
  • cuba (1)
  • Cuban American (1)
  • Cuban painting (1)
  • cuisine (1)
  • cultural studies (1)
  • culture (2)
  • CUNY (4)
  • curator (1)
  • curry (1)
  • Curtis Allen (1)
  • Cy Twombly (1)
  • cycling (1)
  • Czech Republic (1)
  • D21 Kunstraum (1)
  • DADT (2)
  • DADT Repeal (4)
  • Damien Hirst (1)
  • dance (5)
  • dancing (1)
  • dandyism (1)
  • Daniel Barenboim (1)
  • Daniel Sada (1)
  • Dark Room Writers Collective (7)
  • Daron Acemoglu (1)
  • Data Garden (1)
  • David Belle (1)
  • David Freese (1)
  • David Hockney (2)
  • David Kato (1)
  • David Moore (1)
  • David Wojnarowicz (1)
  • death penalty (1)
  • debt-limit ceiling (1)
  • Dee Rees (1)
  • delicious food (1)
  • dementia (1)
  • democracy (1)
  • Democratic National Convention (1)
  • Democratic Party (1)
  • Democrats (4)
  • Denis Villeneuve (1)
  • Denise Levertov (1)
  • Denver (1)
  • Derek Jeter (1)
  • Derrick Bell (1)
  • development (1)
  • Diedre L. Murray (1)
  • difficulty (2)
  • digital humanities (1)
  • digital library (2)
  • digital literature (1)
  • digital music (1)
  • Digital Public Library of America (1)
  • digitization (3)
  • Dilma Rousseff (1)
  • disaster (1)
  • disco (1)
  • Discovering Columbus (1)
  • dissent (2)
  • dissident writing (1)
  • DNA (1)
  • Dodge Poetry Festival (1)
  • DOMA (3)
  • domestic workers (1)
  • dominican republic (6)
  • Don Lemon (1)
  • Donna Summer (1)
  • downloading (1)
  • DPLA (1)
  • draft poetry (1)
  • drama (2)
  • dramaturgy (1)
  • drawing (8)
  • drawing illustration (1)
  • drawings (3)
  • Drinking Gourd Chapbook Poetry Series (2)
  • driving (3)
  • Dublin (1)
  • Dubose Heyward (1)
  • Duke University (1)
  • DUMBO (1)
  • Dutch (1)
  • e-books (6)
  • E. L. Doctorow (1)
  • earthquake (3)
  • East Africa (1)
  • East River (1)
  • East Village (1)
  • Easy Art Salon (1)
  • eating (1)
  • ebook (1)
  • ECB (1)
  • economics (16)
  • Ed Roberson (2)
  • Edgar Degas (1)
  • editing (1)
  • Edmond Jabès (1)
  • Edouard Glissant (1)
  • Édouard Glissant (2)
  • Eduardo C. Corral (1)
  • education (2)
  • Edward Field (1)
  • Edward Said (1)
  • Edwin Thumboo (1)
  • Egypt (3)
  • Egyptian women's writing (1)
  • election (2)
  • elections (1)
  • elites (1)
  • Elizabeth Alexander (2)
  • Elizabeth Catlett (1)
  • Ellen Stewart (1)
  • Elliott Carter (2)
  • Elsa Dorfman (1)
  • Emancipation Proclamation (1)
  • embodied cognition (2)
  • embodied practice (1)
  • embodiment (1)
  • Emily Dickinson (1)
  • Emily Prince (1)
  • emotion (1)
  • Emotional Outreach Project (2)
  • empire (1)
  • Empire State Building (1)
  • Encyclopedia (2)
  • end of the quarter (1)
  • England (1)
  • English (1)
  • English literature (1)
  • English Renaissance (1)
  • enlightenment (1)
  • Enrique Vila-Matas (2)
  • entomology (1)
  • environment (1)
  • environmentalism (1)
  • Equality (3)
  • erasure poetry (1)
  • Eric Kandel (1)
  • Erica Doyle (1)
  • Ernesto Rashaad Green (1)
  • Esai Morales (1)
  • essay (3)
  • essays (1)
  • Essex Hemphill (1)
  • ethics (1)
  • ethnicity (2)
  • etymology (1)
  • Euro 2012 (1)
  • Europe (1)
  • European Community (1)
  • European literature (2)
  • Eurozone (1)
  • Evanston (2)
  • Ewan Morrison (1)
  • exam week (1)
  • execution (1)
  • exhibit (1)
  • exile (1)
  • experimental cinema (2)
  • experimental music (1)
  • experimental poetry (2)
  • experimentalism (4)
  • Exterface (1)
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald (1)
  • faculty (1)
  • fantasy (2)
  • fascism (1)
  • fashion (4)
  • Fashion Week (1)
  • favelas (1)
  • Federal Reserve (1)
  • Federico García Lorca (1)
  • fellowships (1)
  • feminism (2)
  • feminities (1)
  • fiction (26)
  • fiction writing (7)
  • Field Research Study Group A (1)
  • FIFA Women's Soccer World Cup (1)
  • figuration (1)
  • figurative painting (1)
  • film (6)
  • films (2)
  • finance (2)
  • fiscal cliff (2)
  • fitness (1)
  • flanerie (19)
  • flash fiction (1)
  • Flesch-Kincaid test (1)
  • flora (1)
  • Florida (2)
  • flowers (3)
  • Flowers of Evil (1)
  • Foldit (1)
  • Folger Shakespeare Library (1)
  • folktale (1)
  • food (2)
  • football (1)
  • Forrest Gander (1)
  • Fox News (1)
  • France (4)
  • Frances E. W. Harper (1)
  • Francisco Alvim (1)
  • François Hollande (1)
  • Francophone (1)
  • Frank Kameny (1)
  • Frank Lautenberg (1)
  • Frank O'Hara (1)
  • Frank Ocean (1)
  • Fred Joiner (1)
  • Frederick Douglass (1)
  • free (1)
  • free internet (1)
  • free jazz (2)
  • free running (1)
  • freedom (4)
  • Freedom Budget (1)
  • French literature (1)
  • French movies (1)
  • French poetry (3)
  • fruits (1)
  • Fukushima reactor (1)
  • fun (1)
  • funding (1)
  • future (1)
  • future of writing (1)
  • G. C. Lichtenberg (1)
  • Gabriel Garcia Marquez (1)
  • Gabrielle Giffords (1)
  • galleries (1)
  • Ganzfeld effect (1)
  • Gardening (1)
  • Garry Wills (1)
  • Gary Simmons (1)
  • Gary Snyder (1)
  • Gavin Brown (1)
  • Gawker (1)
  • gay (2)
  • gay equality (1)
  • Gay liberation (2)
  • gay marriage (1)
  • gay rights (1)
  • gender (2)
  • Gene Sharp (1)
  • General Assembly (1)
  • Generation X (1)
  • genetics (1)
  • genius (3)
  • Genius awards (1)
  • gentrification (2)
  • George Dureau (1)
  • George Gershwin (1)
  • George Lakoff (1)
  • George W. Bush (2)
  • George Zimmerman (1)
  • geosynchronies (1)
  • Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation (1)
  • Gerhard Richter (1)
  • German (1)
  • German literature (3)
  • German poetry (2)
  • German-language literature (1)
  • Germany (5)
  • Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1)
  • Gillette Four Nations (1)
  • giovanni singleton (2)
  • Glenn Ligon (2)
  • global literature (2)
  • globalism (1)
  • globalization (1)
  • Goldie Goldbloom (1)
  • Google (2)
  • GOP (2)
  • gospel (1)
  • government (1)
  • graduation (1)
  • graffiti (2)
  • Grant Park (1)
  • Great Britain (3)
  • Great Migration (1)
  • Greece (1)
  • Greek (1)
  • green politics (1)
  • Greenwich Village (1)
  • Greg Bordowitz (1)
  • Greg Tate (1)
  • grief (1)
  • Guggenheim Museum (1)
  • Guild Complex (1)
  • Gun Hill Road (1)
  • Gustav Klimt (1)
  • Guy-Mark Foster (1)
  • gymnastics (1)
  • hacktivism (1)
  • haiku (1)
  • Haiti (2)
  • Hall of Fame (1)
  • Halloween (1)
  • Hampton University (1)
  • Hanukkah (1)
  • Happy Holidays (2)
  • Happy New Year (4)
  • Harlem (5)
  • Harlem Book Fair (2)
  • Harlem Renaissance (1)
  • Harmony Santana (1)
  • Harryette Mullen (1)
  • Haruki Murakami (2)
  • Harvard (4)
  • Harvard Law School (1)
  • HathiTrust (1)
  • Haymarket Affair (1)
  • HBCU (1)
  • health care reform (1)
  • Helen Frankenthaler (1)
  • Helen Vendler (1)
  • Hennessy Youngman (1)
  • Henry James (1)
  • Henry Louis Gates Jr. (3)
  • herbs (1)
  • Herta Müller (1)
  • heteronormativity (1)
  • heterosexism (2)
  • High Line Park (1)
  • higher education (2)
  • Hilda Hilst (7)
  • hip hop (3)
  • Hispaniola (1)
  • Hispanophone literature (1)
  • historian (1)
  • history (29)
  • HIV/AIDS (5)
  • Hoboken (1)
  • hodgepodge (1)
  • holidays (2)
  • Hollywood (2)
  • homonormativity (1)
  • homophobia (3)
  • homosexuality (1)
  • House (1)
  • Houston (1)
  • Human Micropoem (2)
  • humor (3)
  • Hungarian literature (1)
  • hurricane (2)
  • Hurricane Irene (2)
  • Hurricane Sandy (3)
  • ice (1)
  • IDAHO (2)
  • ideas (2)
  • identification (1)
  • identity (1)
  • illustration (1)
  • Ilya Kutik (2)
  • image (1)
  • imagery (1)
  • imaginary maps (1)
  • Imagism (1)
  • immigrant (1)
  • immigration (1)
  • impressions (1)
  • improvisation (1)
  • inaugural poet (2)
  • inauguration (1)
  • Incendies (1)
  • independence day (1)
  • independent cinema (1)
  • indigenous cultures (1)
  • inequality (2)
  • injustice (1)
  • innovative writing (1)
  • installation (2)
  • installation art (1)
  • intellectual (1)
  • International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia (1)
  • international poetry (5)
  • international poetry month (6)
  • international writing (1)
  • Internet (5)
  • iPad (5)
  • iPhone (10)
  • Ira Gershwin (1)
  • Iraq (1)
  • Iraq War (3)
  • Ireland (1)
  • Irish (1)
  • Irish literature (1)
  • irony (1)
  • Isaac Julien (1)
  • Isabel Wilkerson (1)
  • Ishmael Reed (2)
  • Islam poetry (1)
  • Israel (1)
  • It Gets Better (1)
  • Italy (1)
  • J. P. Morgan (1)
  • Jack Spicer (1)
  • Jakob Jensen (1)
  • Jamaica (2)
  • James Baldwin (1)
  • James Fenton (1)
  • James Joyce (3)
  • James Laughlin (1)
  • James Richardson (1)
  • James Schuyler (1)
  • James Shapiro (1)
  • James Turrell (1)
  • Jane Austen (1)
  • Jane Brox (2)
  • Janny Scott (1)
  • Japan (1)
  • Japanese literature (1)
  • Jaron Lanier (4)
  • Jason Collins (1)
  • Javier Marías (1)
  • Jay Wright (1)
  • Jayne Cortez (1)
  • jazz (4)
  • Jean Valentine (1)
  • Jean Wyllys (1)
  • Jean-Christophe Cloutier (1)
  • Jean-Luc Godard (1)
  • Jean-Michel Basquiat (2)
  • Jeffrey Eugenides (1)
  • Jen Hofer (1)
  • Jennifer DeVere Brody (1)
  • Jennifer Egan (1)
  • Jennifer Karmin (1)
  • Jennifer Scappettone (2)
  • Jeremiah Moss (2)
  • Jeremy Lin (1)
  • jersey city (25)
  • Jesmyn Ward (1)
  • Jewish American writers (1)
  • Jewish writers (3)
  • Jill Biden (1)
  • Jim Baital (1)
  • Jim Goodman (1)
  • Joaquim Barbosa (1)
  • Joe Biden (1)
  • John Ashbery (3)
  • John Cage (1)
  • John Chamberlain (1)
  • John Coltrane (1)
  • John Donne (1)
  • John Florio (1)
  • John Lawrence (1)
  • John Roberts Jr. (1)
  • Jonas Mekas (1)
  • Jonathan Galassi (1)
  • Jorge Carrera Andrade (1)
  • Jorge Frisancho (1)
  • Jorge Luis Borges (1)
  • José Celso Barbosa (1)
  • José Reyes (3)
  • Joseph Biden (1)
  • Joseph Stalin (1)
  • Josh Dixon (1)
  • Joshua Marie Wilkinson (1)
  • Juan Dicent (1)
  • Juan Diego Tamayo (1)
  • Juan Felipe Herrera (2)
  • Juan Rodríguez (1)
  • Juan Rulfo (1)
  • Juan Vico (1)
  • Judy Reyes (1)
  • Juna Vico (1)
  • June Jordan (1)
  • junot díaz (1)
  • Juscelino Kubitschek (1)
  • Justin Torres (1)
  • Kamau Brathwaite (2)
  • Kamran Mir Hazar (1)
  • Kansas (1)
  • Kanye West (1)
  • Kate Daniels (2)
  • Kathy Westwater (1)
  • Kenneth Fearing (1)
  • Kenneth Goldsmith (1)
  • Kenneth Koch (2)
  • Kenning Editions (1)
  • Kenya (2)
  • Keorapetse Kgositsile (2)
  • Kevin Jerome Everson (1)
  • knowledge (1)
  • Kofi Anyidoho (1)
  • Kristiana Rae Colón (2)
  • Kwame Dawes (3)
  • Kwanzaa (2)
  • Kynaston McShine (1)
  • La MaMa e.t.c. (1)
  • labor (4)
  • Labor Day (1)
  • Ladbrokes (1)
  • land-use law (1)
  • Langston Hughes (6)
  • language (4)
  • Larissa Volokhonsky (1)
  • Larry Bartels (1)
  • Larry Sawyer (1)
  • Laszló Krasznahorkai (1)
  • Latin (1)
  • latin america (2)
  • Latin American literature (3)
  • Latin American poetry (6)
  • Latino (3)
  • Latino art (1)
  • Latino literature (1)
  • Latino poetry (4)
  • Latinos (2)
  • Laura Hartmark (1)
  • law (2)
  • Lawrence Lessig (1)
  • Lawrence v. Texas (1)
  • learning (1)
  • leave-taking (1)
  • lecture (1)
  • Lee Drutman (1)
  • Left (4)
  • legal systems (1)
  • Leipzig (1)
  • LentSpace (1)
  • Leon Panetta (1)
  • Leonard Bernstein (1)
  • lesbians (4)
  • letters (3)
  • LGBT (2)
  • LGBTIQ (5)
  • LGBTIQ art (3)
  • lgbtiq literature (2)
  • lgbtiq writing (6)
  • LGBTQ (30)
  • LGBTQ Pride (2)
  • lgbtq writing (6)
  • lgbtqi youth (1)
  • Li-Young Lee (1)
  • liberalism (2)
  • liberals (1)
  • liberation (1)
  • libertarianism (1)
  • liberty (1)
  • libraries (3)
  • library (1)
  • life (2)
  • life drawings (1)
  • light (2)
  • light rail (2)
  • Lincoln Center (1)
  • Linda Hogan (1)
  • literary agents (1)
  • literary studies (1)
  • literary study (1)
  • literature (66)
  • lockout (1)
  • London Olympics (2)
  • Long Island (1)
  • Lorna Dee Cervantes (1)
  • Los Angeles (5)
  • Los Angeles Angels (1)
  • loss (1)
  • Lower East Side (1)
  • Lubna Azabal (1)
  • Lucian Freud (1)
  • Luis Alberto Urrea (1)
  • lunch (1)
  • luncheon (1)
  • lyric (2)
  • lyric poetry (1)
  • MA/MFA program (1)
  • MacArthur Foundation (1)
  • Macintosh (1)
  • Maggie da Silva (2)
  • Maja Djikic (1)
  • Major Jackson (1)
  • Major League Baseball (1)
  • Malcolm Gladwell (1)
  • Malcolm X (1)
  • Man Booker International prize (1)
  • Manhattan (4)
  • Manning Marable (1)
  • Maori (1)
  • maps (1)
  • Marc Bamuthi Joseph (1)
  • Marcel Proust (1)
  • Marcellus Blount (1)
  • march (1)
  • Mardi Gras (1)
  • Margaret Porter Troupe (1)
  • Marianne Moore (1)
  • Marina Abramovic (1)
  • marinara sauce (1)
  • Mark Anthony Neal (1)
  • Mark Bradford (1)
  • Mark Carson (1)
  • Mark Duggan (1)
  • marriage equality (1)
  • Martha Collins (1)
  • Martin Heidegger (1)
  • Martin Luther King Jr. (4)
  • Marvin Lee Wilson (1)
  • Marxism (2)
  • Mary Ruefle (1)
  • Maryemma Graham (1)
  • masculinities (1)
  • masculinity (1)
  • mathematics (1)
  • May Day (1)
  • mayor (1)
  • Medgar Evers College (1)
  • media (1)
  • Mel Edwards (1)
  • Mellon Foundation (1)
  • melodrama (1)
  • Melvin Van Peebles (1)
  • memorial (2)
  • Memorial Day (2)
  • memoriam (1)
  • memory (4)
  • Mendi + Keith Obadike (1)
  • Merce Cunningham (1)
  • Merkozy (1)
  • Meryl Streep (1)
  • Mesea (3)
  • metaphor (4)
  • metarealism (1)
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art (1)
  • Metropolitan Opera (1)
  • Mexican literature (2)
  • Mexican poetry (2)
  • Mexico (2)
  • MFA (2)
  • MFA program (2)
  • Miami Marlins (1)
  • Michael Agger (1)
  • Michael Bloomberg (1)
  • Michael Cunningham (1)
  • Michael Musto (1)
  • Michelle Obama (3)
  • Mickalene Thomas (2)
  • microeconomy (1)
  • microfiction (1)
  • micrograms (1)
  • Middle East (2)
  • Midtown (1)
  • Mike Bloomberg (2)
  • military (4)
  • mind (1)
  • Miriam Pace (1)
  • MIT (2)
  • Mitt Romney (3)
  • MLA (3)
  • MLB (4)
  • MLK Jr. Day (1)
  • Modernism (9)
  • Mohja Kahf (1)
  • MoMa (3)
  • Mona Van Duyn (1)
  • monetization (2)
  • Mordechai Noah (1)
  • Morgan Library (1)
  • morna (1)
  • Morocco (1)
  • Mothers Day (1)
  • movies (2)
  • moving (1)
  • mulatto (1)
  • multiculturalism (1)
  • murder (2)
  • Muriel Rukeyser (2)
  • museum (1)
  • music (12)
  • musical theater (1)
  • Muslims (1)
  • Myriam Moscona (1)
  • mysticism (1)
  • n+1 (1)
  • Nancy Cantor (1)
  • Naomi Shihab Nye (1)
  • Natalie Angier (1)
  • Natasha Trethewey (1)
  • Nathalie Stephens (1)
  • Nathanaël (5)
  • Nathaniel Mackey (1)
  • Nathaniel Tarn (1)
  • National Book Awards (1)
  • National Book Foundation (1)
  • national poetry month (63)
  • national security (1)
  • Native American (1)
  • Native American writing (2)
  • NATO (1)
  • natural disaster (1)
  • nature (1)
  • Nayland Blake (2)
  • NBA (3)
  • Negro (1)
  • Negro History week (1)
  • neighborhoods (1)
  • Neil Postman (1)
  • Neil Strauss (1)
  • Nelson Mandela (1)
  • neocolonialism (1)
  • neoconservatism (2)
  • neoliberalism (5)
  • neuroaesthetics (1)
  • neuroscience (3)
  • New Directions (2)
  • New England (1)
  • New Jersey (5)
  • New Year's Day (1)
  • New York (44)
  • New York Botanical Garden (1)
  • new york city (52)
  • New York Giants (1)
  • New York Knicks (1)
  • New York Mets (1)
  • New York Philharmonic (1)
  • New York Public Library (1)
  • New York School (4)
  • New York Times (4)
  • New York Yankees (3)
  • New Yorker (1)
  • New Zealand (5)
  • Newark (9)
  • Newark subway (1)
  • news (1)
  • Next Big Thing (1)
  • NFL (3)
  • Nicanor Parra (2)
  • Nicholas Carr (1)
  • Nick Ashford (1)
  • Nick Cave (1)
  • Nick Flynn (1)
  • Nicolas Bourriaud (1)
  • Nicolas Sarkozy (1)
  • Nigeria (1)
  • Nigerian poetry (1)
  • night (1)
  • Nightboat Books (1)
  • Nikki Giovanni (1)
  • Nikky Finney (1)
  • Nina Gourianova (1)
  • Noam Chomsky (1)
  • Nobel Prize (8)
  • nommo (1)
  • nonfiction (2)
  • North Africa (1)
  • North Carolina (1)
  • Northwestern (6)
  • Northwestern University (8)
  • Norway (1)
  • Nothing Personal Tour (1)
  • novel (3)
  • novella (1)
  • novels (1)
  • numerology (1)
  • Nuyorican writing (1)
  • NYPL (2)
  • NYU (7)
  • Oakland (1)
  • Obamacare (1)
  • obituaries (2)
  • obituary (6)
  • Occupy Chicago (4)
  • Occupy Together (4)
  • Occupy Wall Street (8)
  • Oceanic literature (1)
  • oculus (1)
  • Odd Future (1)
  • Olympics (1)
  • open culture (2)
  • open source (2)
  • opera (2)
  • orphan works (1)
  • Osawatomie (1)
  • Oscar Niemeyer (3)
  • Osip Mandelshtam (1)
  • Osvaldo Lamborghini (1)
  • Other Countries (1)
  • Pablo Picasso (1)
  • Pacific writing (1)
  • packing (1)
  • painting (8)
  • pajamas (1)
  • Palabra Pura (1)
  • Palestine (1)
  • Papua New Guinea (2)
  • Pariah (1)
  • Paris (4)
  • Park Avenue Armory (1)
  • parkour (1)
  • parliament (1)
  • participatory art (1)
  • Pascale Casanova (1)
  • passing (1)
  • PATH (3)
  • Patricia Grace (1)
  • Paul Celan (1)
  • Paul Krugman (3)
  • Paul Ryan (2)
  • Paul Verlaine (1)
  • Paula Ettelbrick (1)
  • Paulo Coelho (1)
  • peace (1)
  • PEN (1)
  • Penguin (1)
  • Pennsylvania (1)
  • people (1)
  • perception (1)
  • Performa (1)
  • performance (8)
  • performance art (2)
  • Peru (1)
  • petition (1)
  • Philadelphia Museum of Art (1)
  • Philip Levine (1)
  • Philip Roth (1)
  • philosophy (4)
  • photo essay (1)
  • photography (10)
  • photos (9)
  • Phyllis Diller (1)
  • Pierre Boulez (1)
  • Pierrot Lunaire (1)
  • PIPA (1)
  • Pippin Barr (1)
  • Piri Thomas (1)
  • Piss Christ (1)
  • pitching (1)
  • plants (1)
  • play (2)
  • playoffs (3)
  • plays (3)
  • playwrighting (1)
  • plutocracy (1)
  • poem (2)
  • poems (1)
  • Poesia Marginal (1)
  • Poet Laureate (3)
  • poetics (6)
  • poetry (123)
  • poetry for labor (1)
  • Poetry Foundation (1)
  • Poetry Month (32)
  • Poetry Project (1)
  • Poetry Society of America (2)
  • poets (1)
  • Poets House (5)
  • Poets Theater (1)
  • Poland (1)
  • police (3)
  • Polish poetry (1)
  • political art (1)
  • political prisoner (1)
  • political science (1)
  • politics (22)
  • polymath (1)
  • pop music (1)
  • pop-up gallery (1)
  • popular culture (1)
  • portraits (4)
  • post-colonialism (2)
  • post-Sandy (2)
  • post-WWII (1)
  • posthumanism (2)
  • postmodernism (2)
  • poverty (3)
  • power (2)
  • Prageeta Sharma (1)
  • pragmatism (1)
  • Praxis-International (1)
  • preservation (2)
  • presidency (2)
  • President Barack Obama (1)
  • presidential debate (1)
  • Presidential election (3)
  • prizes (2)
  • process-driven art (1)
  • progressive politics (8)
  • progressivism (4)
  • Prop 8 (1)
  • prose (2)
  • prose fiction (1)
  • protest (6)
  • protests (2)
  • PS1 (1)
  • psychological effects (2)
  • psychology (3)
  • PT (1)
  • public affairs (1)
  • public art (1)
  • public intellectual (3)
  • public transportation (2)
  • publishing (11)
  • Puerto Rican writing (1)
  • Puerto Rico (2)
  • Pulitzer Prize (3)
  • punk music (1)
  • Pussy Riot (1)
  • Qiu Xiaolong (1)
  • queer (18)
  • queer art (9)
  • queer studies (1)
  • Quincy Troupe (1)
  • Quintilian (1)
  • race (6)
  • Rachel Gontijo (3)
  • Rachel Levitsky (1)
  • racial profiling (1)
  • Racism (9)
  • radicalesbians (1)
  • Rahm Emanuel (1)
  • Rainer Maria Rilke (1)
  • rallies (1)
  • rally (3)
  • random photos (20)
  • random posts (2)
  • ranking (1)
  • Raphael Rubinstein (1)
  • Rastafari (1)
  • Raúl Zurita (2)
  • Ray Bradbury (1)
  • Raymond Carver (1)
  • Raymond Roussel (3)
  • reading (8)
  • reading tour (2)
  • realism (1)
  • recipe (2)
  • reconstruction (1)
  • Red Hen Press (1)
  • reelection (2)
  • reflection (1)
  • Reg Gibbons (1)
  • reggae (1)
  • Reggie Harris (4)
  • relational aesthetics (3)
  • religion (1)
  • Republican National Convention (1)
  • Republicans (3)
  • resistance (1)
  • restaurant (1)
  • reunion (1)
  • review (1)
  • revolution (2)
  • Rey Andujar (2)
  • rhetoric (2)
  • rhythm (1)
  • rhythm and blues (3)
  • Ricardo Osmondo Francis (1)
  • Richard Blanco (2)
  • Richard Iton (1)
  • Richard Nixon (1)
  • Richard Pevear (1)
  • Richard T. Greener (1)
  • Richard Wright (1)
  • right-wing (1)
  • Rigoberto González (1)
  • Rio de Janeiro (2)
  • riots (1)
  • RIP (1)
  • Rirkrit Tiravanija (2)
  • Rita Dove (3)
  • rita indiana (1)
  • ritual (1)
  • rivalries (1)
  • Robert Barchi (1)
  • Robert Darnton (2)
  • Robert Duncan (1)
  • Robert Frost (2)
  • Robert Lowell (1)
  • Robert Reid-Pharr (1)
  • Roberto Bolaño (4)
  • Roberto Sierra (1)
  • Robin Coste Lewis (1)
  • Rocinha (1)
  • Rockefeller Center (1)
  • Rod Blagojevich (1)
  • Roger Guenveur Smith (1)
  • Roman Catholicism (1)
  • Romania (1)
  • Ron Washington (1)
  • Ronald Kellogg (1)
  • Ronaldo V. Wilson (2)
  • Roosevelt Island (1)
  • Roosevelt Island Tramway (2)
  • Roscoe Mitchell (1)
  • Rosmarie Waldrop (2)
  • Rotimi Fani-Kayode (1)
  • Rowan Ricardo Phillips (1)
  • rugby (3)
  • Rugby World Cup (2)
  • Rupert Murdoch (1)
  • Rush Holt (1)
  • Russia (3)
  • Russian (1)
  • Russian book art (1)
  • Russian literature (2)
  • Russian poetry (3)
  • Rutgers Newark (5)
  • Rutgers University (4)
  • Rutgers-New Brunswick (1)
  • Rutgers-Newark (5)
  • Ryan Lizza (1)
  • Sabin Howard (1)
  • Sadakichi Hartmann (1)
  • safety net (1)
  • sagging (1)
  • Sahar Tawfiq (1)
  • Saint Louis (2)
  • Saint Louis Cardinals (4)
  • Saint Louis Rams (1)
  • Saint Patrick's Day (1)
  • sales (1)
  • salon (2)
  • Sam Rivers (1)
  • same-sex marriage (3)
  • Samuel R. Delany (1)
  • San Diego (2)
  • San Francisco (2)
  • San Francisco Renaissance (1)
  • Santo Domingo (1)
  • Santo Domingo Invita (1)
  • santorum (1)
  • Sarah Jaffe (1)
  • Sarah Schulman (1)
  • Saul Frampton (1)
  • scholar (1)
  • scholarly publishing (1)
  • scholars (1)
  • Schomburg Center (1)
  • schoolchildren (1)
  • science (1)
  • SCOTUS (4)
  • sculpture (3)
  • Seagull Books (1)
  • Sébastien Foucan (1)
  • Second Viennese School (1)
  • Seismosis (2)
  • September 11 (1)
  • sequence (1)
  • Seth Cooper (1)
  • settlers (1)
  • Seven Corners (1)
  • sexism (1)
  • sexuality (1)
  • SF (1)
  • SFF (1)
  • sgl (1)
  • Shaun El C Leonardo (1)
  • Sherwin Bryant (1)
  • Shin Yu Pai (2)
  • short stories (2)
  • short story (1)
  • Showcase (1)
  • Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky (1)
  • Sigmund Freud (1)
  • signandsight.com (1)
  • silence (1)
  • Sillerman First Book Prize (1)
  • Simon Critchley (1)
  • Simon Keenleyside (1)
  • Simone White (1)
  • Singapore (1)
  • Sketchbook (1)
  • Sketchbook Pro (1)
  • Sketchbook Pro II (2)
  • sketches (1)
  • Slate (1)
  • slavery (2)
  • sleeper effect (1)
  • snow (2)
  • snowstorm (2)
  • soccer (3)
  • social good (1)
  • social history (1)
  • social unrest (1)
  • socialism (2)
  • Socialist Party (1)
  • society (3)
  • software (1)
  • SoHo (2)
  • Sonia Sanchez (2)
  • SOPA (1)
  • soul (2)
  • sound (2)
  • sound poetry (1)
  • South Africa (2)
  • South African literature (2)
  • South Asian American writers (1)
  • South Carolina (1)
  • South Sudan (1)
  • Soviet Union (1)
  • space (1)
  • Spain (7)
  • Spanish (3)
  • Spanish Harlem (1)
  • Spanish literature (1)
  • Spanish-language poetry (4)
  • spectacle (1)
  • speculative fiction (1)
  • spirit (1)
  • spirituality (1)
  • sports (2)
  • Sports Illustrated (1)
  • spring (3)
  • spring semester (1)
  • St. Louis (1)
  • St. Mark's Bookshop (2)
  • St. Mark's Church (1)
  • Stanford (1)
  • Stanford University (2)
  • Starving Artists Movers (1)
  • state execution (1)
  • state murder (1)
  • state power (1)
  • statehood (1)
  • states (2)
  • statistics (1)
  • Stefan Zweig (1)
  • STEM (1)
  • Stéphane Mallarmé (1)
  • Stephen Greenblatt (1)
  • Stephen Motika (1)
  • Stephen Sondheim (1)
  • Steve Fulop (1)
  • Steve Halle (1)
  • Steve Jobs (1)
  • Steven Lonegan (1)
  • Stonewall Uprising (2)
  • stop and frisk (1)
  • storm (1)
  • story (1)
  • street art (1)
  • street life (16)
  • structuralism (1)
  • Studio Museum in Harlem (1)
  • subway (1)
  • summer (4)
  • Sunlight Foundation (1)
  • surrealism (2)
  • Susan Howe (1)
  • sustainable development (1)
  • Suzan-Lori Parks (1)
  • Sweden (1)
  • Swedish Academy (1)
  • Swedish poetry (1)
  • swimming (1)
  • symbolism (2)
  • symposium (1)
  • T.S. Eliot (1)
  • tablet (1)
  • Tahrir Square (1)
  • talk (1)
  • Tampa (1)
  • Tampa Bay Rays (1)
  • Tan Lin (1)
  • Tatzu Nishi (1)
  • Tavia Nyong'o (1)
  • taxes (1)
  • Tayari Jones (1)
  • Taylor Siluwé (1)
  • teaching (15)
  • technofiction (1)
  • technology (1)
  • Teresa Sullivan (1)
  • Teri Cross Davis (1)
  • terrorism (3)
  • Terry Eagleton (1)
  • Tess Gallagher (1)
  • Texas (1)
  • Thanhha Lai (1)
  • Thanksgiving (2)
  • THATCamp Publishing (1)
  • The Center (1)
  • the crazy (1)
  • The Great Gatsby (1)
  • The Kitchen (1)
  • The Tempest (1)
  • The Waste Land (1)
  • Theaster Gates (1)
  • theater (2)
  • theory (4)
  • This Red Door (1)
  • Thomas Adès (1)
  • Thomas Glave (1)
  • Thomas Sayers Ellis (1)
  • thought (4)
  • Tim Parks (1)
  • time (2)
  • tisa bryant (4)
  • Togo (1)
  • Tom Wirth (1)
  • Tomas Tranströmer (2)
  • Tommy Shepherd (1)
  • Toni Morrison (2)
  • Tony LaRussa (1)
  • Toronto Blue Jays (1)
  • Tottenham (1)
  • touch (1)
  • tours (1)
  • traceur (1)
  • Traci Tolmaire (1)
  • track and field (2)
  • Tracy K. Smith (1)
  • transgender (1)
  • transhumanism (2)
  • translation (21)
  • transphobia (1)
  • trauma (1)
  • travel (3)
  • traveling (2)
  • Trayvon Martin (2)
  • trees (1)
  • tribute (1)
  • Trickhouse (1)
  • Trinidad (2)
  • Trinidad and Tobago (1)
  • trope (1)
  • tropical storm (2)
  • Trotskyite (1)
  • Troy Davis (1)
  • Tunisia (2)
  • tweets (1)
  • Twitter (2)
  • Twitterature (1)
  • Tyler Perry (1)
  • Tyler the Creator (1)
  • Tyrone Garner (1)
  • U.S. Civil War (1)
  • Uganda (1)
  • UK (1)
  • Ulli Beier (1)
  • Ulysses (1)
  • undergraduates (1)
  • union (1)
  • United Kingdom (3)
  • United Nations (1)
  • United States (14)
  • universities (1)
  • University of California Berkeley (1)
  • University of California Press (1)
  • University of Denver (1)
  • University of Nebraska Press (1)
  • University of Toronto (1)
  • University of Virginia (1)
  • University of Washington (1)
  • unpacking (1)
  • uprising (1)
  • Uptown (1)
  • US Civil War (4)
  • US economy (1)
  • US House (1)
  • US Navy (1)
  • US Senate (3)
  • USA (2)
  • utopia (1)
  • Václav Havel (1)
  • valedictions (1)
  • Valerie Simpson (1)
  • vegetables (1)
  • vegetarianism (1)
  • Victor Cruz (1)
  • victory (1)
  • VIDA (1)
  • video (2)
  • video game (1)
  • Vietnam War (1)
  • Village Voice (1)
  • violence (1)
  • Virginia (1)
  • Virginia Tech (1)
  • Virginie Despentes (1)
  • visas (1)
  • vision (2)
  • visionary (1)
  • visual art (14)
  • visual arts (1)
  • visual representation (1)
  • Vladimir Nabokov (1)
  • Vladimir Putin (3)
  • Vladimir Sorokin (1)
  • voting (1)
  • voting rights (1)
  • Voting Rights Act (1)
  • voucher (1)
  • vouchers (1)
  • W. H. Auden (2)
  • walking (9)
  • Wall Street (2)
  • Walt Whitman (1)
  • Walter Van Beirondonck (1)
  • war (3)
  • War Diaries (1)
  • Washington (6)
  • Washington Senators (1)
  • Washington University (1)
  • Wayback machine (1)
  • wealth (1)
  • website (1)
  • Webster Groves (1)
  • Wellington (1)
  • West-Eastern Divan Orchestra (1)
  • whiskey (1)
  • white gay men (1)
  • White House (1)
  • white supremacy (1)
  • Whitney Houston (1)
  • Whitney Museum (3)
  • Will Sheridan (1)
  • William Butler Yeats (1)
  • William Carlos Williams (1)
  • William Shakespeare (3)
  • William Villalongo (1)
  • Williamsburg (1)
  • Willie Perdomo (1)
  • Wilson Harris (1)
  • winter (5)
  • wisdom (1)
  • Wislawa Szymborska (2)
  • wit (1)
  • women (19)
  • Women's History Month (1)
  • women's writing (7)
  • Woodland Pattern Bookstore (1)
  • Woodlawn Cemetery (1)
  • word cloud (1)
  • work (1)
  • working class (1)
  • world cup (1)
  • World Cup 2014 (1)
  • World Series (1)
  • World War II (2)
  • World Wide Web (3)
  • writer (1)
  • writers (1)
  • writers' festival (1)
  • writing (27)
  • writing assessment (1)
  • Writing Festival (1)
  • x-ray (1)
  • Xavier Cha (1)
  • Xavier Villarrutia (2)
  • Xenotext (1)
  • Yiddish (1)
  • Yoruba (1)
  • young people's literature (1)
  • Yunel Escobar (1)
  • Yves Malartic (1)
  • Zadie Smith (1)
  • zine (1)
  • ZZ Packer (3)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (98)
    • ►  September (3)
    • ►  August (6)
    • ►  July (11)
    • ▼  June (15)
      • SCOTUS: The Good, the Bad & the Horrendous
      • Celebrating Countee Cullen @ Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx
      • Random Photos
      • Reinventing Abstraction: New York Painting in the ...
      • Emotional Outreach Project 5.0 @ TRD/REH-KUNST Berlin
      • Brazil's "Vinegar Uprising"
      • New Chancellor at Rutgers in Newark
      • Random Photos
      • "not only this but "New language beckons us'" @ NYU
      • Mendi+Keith Obadike @ Studio Museum / Tisa Bryant ...
      • 48
      • Poem: Roberto Bolaño
      • Bloomsday: Ulysses in 3 Minutes
      • Today: Brazil's Marquise de Sade: On Translating H...
      • Random Photos
    • ►  May (10)
    • ►  April (18)
    • ►  March (10)
    • ►  February (8)
    • ►  January (17)
  • ►  2012 (185)
    • ►  December (13)
    • ►  November (8)
    • ►  October (10)
    • ►  September (12)
    • ►  August (8)
    • ►  July (16)
    • ►  June (11)
    • ►  May (21)
    • ►  April (42)
    • ►  March (18)
    • ►  February (11)
    • ►  January (15)
  • ►  2011 (207)
    • ►  December (17)
    • ►  November (10)
    • ►  October (17)
    • ►  September (21)
    • ►  August (20)
    • ►  July (26)
    • ►  June (21)
    • ►  May (14)
    • ►  April (29)
    • ►  March (8)
    • ►  February (10)
    • ►  January (14)
  • ►  2010 (10)
    • ►  December (10)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile