Chapbook Launch & Poetry Reading featuring Marisa Lin and Cianga

Marisa Lin & Cianga, Chapbook Launch & Poetry Reading."
April 17, 2024

Chapbook Launch & Poetry Reading

featuring Marisa Lin and Cianga

Wednesday, April 17, 2024

5pm

Arts Research Center, Hearst Field Annex D23


Join the Arts Research Center in celebrating the first chapbook publications of Poetry & the Senses Fellows Marisa Lin and Cianga. Each poet will read for 20 minutes, followed by a book signing. Free & open to the public.

Marisa Lin’s chapbook Dream Elevator is just published by Kerpunkt Press NY. Academy of American Poets Laureate Fellow Aileen Cassinetto writes “In this stunning debut chapbook, Marisa Lin delivers a vision that transcends distance and memory to examine race, gender, daughterhood, and the body politic.” You can read a review of Dream Elevator in Heavy Feather Review. Marisa Lin (she/they) is a daughter of immigrants and Minnesota native. She was a 2023 Poetry Fellow at UC Berkeley’s Arts Research Center and her work is published or forthcoming in Poetry South, Porter House Review, Cimarron Review, and the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-A-Day. Her debut chapbook, DREAM ELEVATOR, is published by Kernpunkt Press (2024). Marisa graduates in 2024 with a Master’s Degree of Public Policy from UC Berkeley.

Cianga‘s chapbook, Congo, seen from the heavens, is the third winner of Start A Riot! Chapbook Prize. In response to rapid gentrification and displacement of QTBIPOC+ literary artists in the San Francisco Bay Area, and in celebration of these communities’ revolutionary history, Foglifter Press, RADAR Productions, and Still Here San Francisco joined forces to create a chapbook prize for local emerging queer and trans Black writers, indigenous writers, and writers of color. Cianga (she/they) is a Congolese artist based in California, by way of South Africa. A recipient of the Cave Canem + EcoTheo’s Starshine & Clay Fellowship, Cianga creates interdisciplinary work that seeks to decolonize and disrupt language. They are currently an MFA candidate and have received residency and fellowship support from UC Berkeley’s Arts & Research Center, Brooklyn Poets, and Atlantic Center for the Arts. Her work can be found or is forthcoming in Foglifter JournalRappahannock ReviewEcoTheo Review and elsewhere. They write, draw, compose, perform with the belief of black art as radical joy and critical protest.