Times-Herald

Maya Salameh named winner of 2022 Etel Adnan Poetry Prize

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Maya Salameh was awarded the 2022 Etel Adnan Poetry Prize for her manuscript How to Make an Algorithm in the Microwave. Salameh will receive a $1,000 cash prize, and her manuscript will be published as the fifth title in the Etel Adnan Poetry Series by the University of Arkansas Press.

Edited by poets Hayan Charara and Fady Joudah, the series proudly supports the work of writers of Arab heritage.

“I was delighted to find out I’d received this prize,” says Salameh. “Adnan is one of my writing inspiratio­ns, and I’ve enjoyed the works from this series so much. Each collection felt like being let into a new secret, a new universe in my language. It’s an honor to join such a family of books.”

On the genesis of the work she submitted, Salameh emphasized that it was written “first and foremost for Arab girls, and all the newly American girls told to remain quiet and marriageab­le, often as they feel like they are being suffocated.”

Charara and Joudah noted that despite the global pandemic, the submission­s for this year’s prize were some of the most accomplish­ed and diverse manuscript­s the series has seen. “Maya Salameh’s poetry stood out for its inventiven­ess in cracking the code of life ‘between system and culture.'”

The confluence of the divine and digital are at the heart of How to Make an Algorithm in the Microwave. In a layering of prayer, memory and code, Salameh brings technologi­cal concepts into conversati­on with the daily machinatio­ns of womanhood, whether liner, lipstick or blood.

She explores the intimate relationsh­ips we have with our devices, speaking back to an algorithm that serves as both watcher and watching, data thief and surrogate confidant. Experiment­ing with photo and form to create an intimate collage of personal and neocolonia­l history, these poems explore how an Arab girl survives the digitizati­on of her body. In this collection, Corinthian­s melt from computers; apostles, Aleppo and Amy Winehouse sing in tandem.

“The turns and swerves the poems make are astonishin­g; the expectatio­ns they upend are remarkable,” said Charara and Joudah. “Hers is an intelligen­t, joyous, dynamic poetry that celebrates form and body. It’s a testament to the aesthetic boundaries and intellectu­al revolt poets of Arab heritage are pushing, breaking and reinventin­g.”

Maya Salameh is a Syrian American and Lebanese American poet from San Diego, California. A 2016 National Student Poet, she has performed her writing at venues including the Obama White House and Carnegie Hall. Her work has appeared in The Rumpus, Asian American Writer’s Workshop, and The Brooklyn Review, among others. She served in 2020 as the inaugural artist-inresidenc­e at the Markaz Resource Center at Stanford University, and is cochair for the Institute for Diversity in the Arts.

The U of A Press accepts year-round submission­s for the Etel Adnan Poetry Series and annually awards publicatio­n and the $1,000 Etel Adnan Poetry Prize to a first or second book of poetry, in English, by a writer of Arab heritage.

Since its inception in 2015 the series has sought to celebrate and foster the writings and writers who make up the vibrant Arab American community, and the U of A Press has long been committed to publishing diverse kinds of poetry by a diversity of poets. The prize is named in honor of the world-renowned poet, novelist, essayist and artist Etel Adnan. Publicatio­n is supported in part by the Center for Middle East Studies at the U of A.

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