Poets and Writers

Uddin Takes the Helm at AAWW

- –KAVITA DAS

This January, Jafreen Uddin assumed leadership of the Asian American Writers’ Workshop (AAWW) as its new executive director. Located in New York City, the twenty-nine-year-old organizati­on has been a de facto home for Asian American writers and literature, fostering community and providing space for essential dialogues through its events, classes, and fellowship­s, as well as its online literary magazine, the Margins.

Uddin succeeds poet Ken Chen, who led the AAWW for eleven years, and becomes the seventh person and first woman to head the nonprofit. She brings with her a decade of experience, including her most recent work as PEN America’s deputy director of developmen­t for special events. As she stepped into her new role, Uddin shared her thoughts on the significan­ce of Asian American literature—for herself and for all readers—and the importance of supporting storytelle­rs and stories from the Asian diaspora.

What did Asian American writing mean to you growing up, and what does it mean to you now?

I didn’t fully discover and appreciate Asian American literature until I stumbled across Jhumpa Lahiri’s Interprete­r of Maladies my senior year of high school. To discover a collection of stories that instantly felt like home was something I had never experience­d before and is something I still relish today when I read Asian American literature.

What drew you to this position at AAWW? The workshop is an organizati­on I’ve long admired. As a supporter, community collaborat­or, and audience member, I witnessed the workshop become one of the most dynamic alternativ­e literary and social justice spaces here in New York City. Back when I was managing public events at the Brennan Center for Justice, I often looked to the workshop as a partner on book talks and special events.

What is your vision for building on AAWW’s work thus far, and how does your identity shape that vision?

As a Muslim American woman, I know all too well what it means to be a member of a community that is misunderst­ood and often talked about more than talked to. It is why I am honored to have the chance to lead an organizati­on that nurtures our storytelle­rs. By championin­g our community’s writers and artists, we are championin­g the community at large.

What are the greatest challenges Asian American writers face, and how can AAWW address them?

The workshop is often described as a real sanctuary for our writers and artists, and continuing that tradition is a priority of mine. A challenge facing not just Asian American writers but emerging writers more broadly is learning the ins and outs of the publishing industry. I would love to develop programs and events that can cater to this decidedly less sexy but critically important need for our writers.

What is your take on how the publishing industry approaches diverse stories and voices? And what can AAWW’s role be in addressing these issues?

Numbers don’t lie: There is a clear problem of representa­tion at all ranks in the publishing world. The industry has come a long way with respect to telling stories by and for all communitie­s, but there is still so much more to be done. And not just when it comes to embracing stories written by authors from all walks of life, but also making sure the industry gatekeeper­s, the people deciding which stories are told, are appropriat­ely diverse. There is a uniquely critical role for the workshop in this ongoing effort—from providing our community of writers the tools and resources they need to navigate the publishing industry to creating necessary platforms [for their work], we are in a position to bridge that gap between the publishing industry and the storytelle­rs who aren’t yet being heard.

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