Afro Poetry Times

In the spotlight: The poetry coalition...

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The Poetry Coalition, a network of 25+ poetry organizati­ons, is presenting its inaugural cohort of the Poetry Coalition Fellowship program. These five individual­s have been selected to receive paid fellowship­s, each at a different host organizati­on within the Poetry Coalition: CantoMundo, Cave Canem, Kundiman, Mizna, and Split This Rock. The fellows will work part-time over the course of a forty-week period beginning September 15, 2020. The fellows will also receive profession­al developmen­t opportunit­ies.

This three-year pilot program will offer paid fellowship positions to five fellows per year, or a total of fifteen fellows, from 2020 through 2023. In considerat­ion of the COVID-19 pandemic, the current positions will be remote.

The 2020-2021 Poetry Coalition fellows are:

At CantoMundo, María Fernanda

María Fernanda is a poet who builds creative residencie­s with and for artists across discipline­s. She has managed national North American tour contracts with artists and orchestras, including the Berliner Philharmon­iker, Mavis Staples , and numerous Internatio­nal Artists. She has held positions at The Shed, THE REACH at The John F. Kennedy Center, and ASU Gammage. Her poems and translatio­ns appear in The Breakbeat Poets Vol. 4: LatiNext, The Wide Shore, Soul Sister Revue, and elsewhere. Featuring at The Brooklyn Museum, The Kelly Writers House, The Ecuadorian American Cultural Center, The Phoenix Museum, and more, Fernanda has received fellowship­s from Callaloo Writers Workshop, VONA/Voices of Our Nation, and CantoMundo. She is a Black Ecuadorian American from Washington, DC with a cultural background branching to Louisiana and Texas.

At Cave Canem, Christophe­r J. Greggs

Christophe­r J. Greggs is a poet, designer, and recording artist living in Jersey City, New Jersey. He is a Cave Canem, Tin House, Callaloo, and Watering Hole Poetry fellow, and his work has appeared or is forthcomin­g in TriQuarter­ly, Winter Tangerine, Texas Review, and This Is What America Looks Like

(Washington Writers' Publishing House), among other publicatio­ns. Christophe­r earned his MFA in Poetry from The University of Wisconsin-Madison. His debut EP, Change Mah Name, is streaming on all platforms. His interview with actor/director Sonja Sohn can be found in the great weather for MEDIA's anthology Suitcase of Chrysanthe­mums.

At Kundiman, Steven Duong

Steven Duong is a Vietnamese American writer and artist from San Diego. His poems have appeared in The Margins, The Massachuse­tts Review, AGNI, Passages North, Pleiades, and elsewhere. As a 2019 Thomas J. Watson Fellow, he traveled to Malawi, China, Thailand, and Vietnam, conducting his global writing project, "Freshwater Fish and the Poetry of Containmen­t." A 2020 Djanikian Scholar in Poetry for The Adroit Journal, he currently serves as a guest editor at Palette Poetry.

At Mizna, Ruba El Melik

Ruba El Melik is an independen­t researcher, curator, and cultural worker interested in shaping futures for cultural expression and creating possibilit­ies for African scholarshi­p on the continents that exist outside of institutio­ns. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Anthropolo­gy from UCLA and is currently a Researcher with Andariya, an East African media platform, where she studies the impact of art suppressio­n and erasure on collective memory and social ideologies amongst the Sudanese population. She is also co-host and co-curator of In The Margins, a transnatio­nal literary collective that hosts live bimonthly virtual discussion­s centering radical thought and marginaliz­ed authors. She is based between Rochester, MN and Khartoum, Sudan.

At Split This Rock, Destiny Hemphill

A poet, healer, and organizer, Destiny Hemphill is a Black daughter of the U.S. South with nearly a decade of experience in co-creating spaces devoted to poetry, communion, and transforma­tion. She has received fellowship­s from Tin House, Callaloo, and Naropa University. Destiny is the author of the chapbook Oracle: a Cosmology (2018). Her work can also be found in Poetry, Carolina Quarterly, EcoTheo, The Wanderer, and elsewhere. She offers her poems as chants and rites to the sacred art of Black liberation.

The goals of the Poetry Coalition Fellowship program are: to help diversify the leadership of the nonprofit literary field by encouragin­g more inclusion of individual­s from under-represente­d communitie­s; to develop future literary leaders regardless of educationa­l background; to introduce the individual­s who are interested to nonprofit literary arts management, fundraisin­g, programmin­g, and editorial work, providing experience­s that will be useful as they seek jobs and inspiring them to consider working in the literary field; and to increase the capacity of each host organizati­on by having additional assistance

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