Description
Poetry. Fiction. Literary Nonfiction. Asian & Asian American Studies. African & African American Studies. Latinx Studies. Native American Studies. Middle Eastern Studies. Jewish Studies. LGBTQIA Studies. Editor Kyoo Lee describes QE3 as an anthology "focusing on the expressive diversity of English in transition. Fifty+ poets, writers, and scholars coming together here show, telegraphically, ways in which they creatively engage the world of dynamic 'Englishing' and its polyphonic futurity." Caroline Bergvall says in her Aferword, "Although this anthology is a literary poetic volume, written by a great many hands, it is built and seems to want to function like a grammar or a manual for the sociolinguistic study of a region with topical testimonies and local ethnographic samples provided."
Contributors include Dohra Ahmad, Dina Al-Kassim, Steven Alvarez, Kostas Anagnopoulos, Bruce Andrews, Rae Armantrout, Daisy Atterbury, Caleb Beckwith, Caroline Bergvall, Lee Ann Brown, Laynie Browne, Vahni Capildeo, Chia-Lun Chang, Valentine Conaty, Jonathan P. Eburne, Tongo Eisen-Martin, Norman Fischer, Michael Gottlieb, Carla Harryman, Erica Hunt, Paolo Javier, Vincent Katz, erica kaufman, Kyoo Lee w/Amy Evans Bauer & Laura Wetherington (annotators), Virginia Lucas w/Jen Hofer (translator), E.J. McAdams, Thurston Moore, Tracie Morris, Eileen Myles, Shelagh Patterson, Julie Patton, Marjorie Perloff, M. NourbeSe Philip, Sarah Riggs, Kit Robinson, Dannie Ruth, Jocelyn Saidenberg & M. Ty, Sophie Seita, James Sherry, Simon Shieh, Rommi Smith, Christopher Soto, Keijiro Suga, Scott Thurston, Edwin Torres, Robin Tremblay-McGaw, The Urban Mythfits, Jeffrey Yang, and Yanyi.
Author Bio
Kyoo Lee, "Q," a transdisciplinary traveler, thinker, reader, writer, and the author of Reading Descartes Otherwise (Fordham UP) and Writing Entanglish (Belladonna*), teaches Philosophy, Gender Studies, and Justice Studies at the City University of New York. A recipient of faculty fellowships from Cambridge University, KIAS, the Mellon Foundation, and the NEH, among others, she publishes and lectures widely in the interwoven fields of the Arts and the Humanities. Throughout her site-specific philopoetic practices, Professor Lee explores co-generative links between critical theory and creative prose. A member of AICA-USA actively engaged in art critical, editorial, and public-facing fieldwork, she is the faculty leader for mp3: merging poetry, philosophy, performativity at the CUNY Graduate Center, and is part of the new book series initiative, Bloomsbury Studies in Critical Poetics.
Author City: NEW YORK, NY USA