Visiting faculty member Airea D. Matthews, winner of the Yale Younger Poets award for her debut collection Simulacra, reads from her work. This event is virtual; free and open to the public. 

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Airea D Matthews

Airea D. Matthews’ first collection of poems is the critically acclaimed Simulacra, which received the prestigious 2016 Yale Series of Younger Poets Award. The collection explores the topics of longing and desire with power, insight, and intense emotion. New Yorker critic Dan Chiasson describes Matthews’s experimental forms as, “Fugues, text messages to the dead, imagined outtakes from Wittgenstein, tart mini-operas, fairy tales: Matthews is virtuosic, frantic, and darkly, very darkly, funny.”

For her writing, Matthews earned a 2020 Pew Fellowship as well as the 2017 Margaret Walker For My People award. In 2016, she received both the Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award and the Louis Untermeyer Scholarship in Poetry from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. Her work has appeared in Callaloo, Gulf Coast, Best American Poets, American Poet, The Rumpus, Tin House, Los Angeles Review of Books, Harvard Review, and elsewhere. A Cave Canem, Callaloo, and Kresge Literary Arts Fellow, Matthews is a founding member of the transdisciplinary art studio The Teeth Factory.

Matthews holds a B.A. in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania as well as an M.F.A. from the Helen Zell Writers’ Program and an M.P.A. from the Gerald Ford School of Public Policy, both at the University of Michigan. She is an assistant professor and directs the poetry program at Bryn Mawr College, where she was presented the Lindback Distinguished Teaching award.


Curated by directors of the Institute for the Study of Global Racial Justice at Rutgers-Camden, Occasions for Gathering provides opportunities for discussion, group writing, reading, collaboration, and art making throughout the academic year. 
 
This program is also part of a collaboration between the Institute and the Writers House. Throughout the year, this partnership will work with artists to imagine new formats for the presentation of challenging, interdisciplinary literary work that engages questions of racial reckoning.

Date & Time
September 29, 2021
7:00 pm-8:00 pm

Event posted in ISGRJ, poetry.