With support from an Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Advocacy (IDEA) Innovation Grant, and in conversation with the Institute for the Study of Global Racial Justice, the Writers House welcomes writer Dilruba Ahmed for a reading and Q&A.
Dilruba (Ruba) Ahmed is the author of Bring Now the Angels (Pitt Poetry Series), with poems featured in New York Times Magazine, The Slowdown, and Poetry Unbound with Pádraig Ó Tuama. Her debut book of poetry, Dhaka Dust (Graywolf Press), won the Bakeless Prize. Her poems have appeared in Kenyon Review, New England Review, Ploughshares, & Virginia Quarterly Review. Her poems have also been anthologized in The Best American Poetry 2019 (Scribner); Halal If You Hear Me (Haymarket Books); New Moons: Contemporary Writing by North American Muslims (Red Hen Press); They Rise Like A Wave: An Anthology of Asian American Women Poets (Blue Oak Press); Border Lines: Poems of Migration (Knopf); Literature: The Human Experience (Bedford/St. Martin’s); and elsewhere.
Ahmed is the recipient of
The Florida Review’s Editors’ Award, a Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Memorial Prize, and the Katharine Bakeless Nason Fellowship in Poetry awarded by the Bread Loaf Writers Conference. She holds B.Phil and M.A.T. degrees from the University of Pittsburgh and an MFA in Creative Writing from Warren Wilson College’s MFA Program for Writers. A former project manager with The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Ahmed has taught with Warren Wilson College’s MFA Program for Writers, Chatham University’s MFA Program, Bryn Mawr College, Hugo House, and elsewhere. She is currently a Visiting Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Swarthmore College.
Lunch will be provided. Enter at the rear door of the Writers House. Registration encouraged: Register
This event is made possible by an IDEA Innovation Grant from the Rutgers-Camden Division of Diversity, Inclusion, and Community Engagement.