Digital Salon Interview with author Angelique V. Nixon

On Thursday May 2nd, I have the honor of hosting the New York book launch of Saltwater Healing by Angelique V. Nixon.  This myth memoir and poetry collection is an intimate articulation of self, family herstories, and personal reflections. I am ecstatic to share this brief interview ( there were so many more questions I wanted to ask) where Angelique discusses the book and her creation process.  I could go on and on here but I’ll let you read Angelique’s words for yourself. If you’re your in NYC, come out and join us Thursday at Bluestockings Boookstore! You’ll want to get a copy of this amazing piece of literary artwork.  

***

Jess: What is a myth memoir and why did you choose this genre form to negotiate with/and present your story?

Angelique V. Nixon: I call my literary artwork “A Myth Memoir” because this describes the blending of stories, experiences, memories, dreams, and mystical elements of the narrative and poetry in the artwork. Also, I am working in the tradition of Black women writers who insist upon our need to create our own stories out of what we know and what we don’t know — because so much of our histories and herstories are unknown. I am particularly inspired by the great Black feminist poet and activist Audre Lorde’s biomythography Zami where she defies literary boundaries by creating a new genre using storytelling, dreams, myths, and histories/herstories to tell her story.

 

Jess: Did you make a deliberate decision to handcraft the memoir? Does the physical form of the book become an extension of the reckoning process for you as it pertains to healing? If so, how?

AVN: I started the art pieces in a creative writing workshop as an assignment to tell our story using a graphic novel style. And so in some ways it was deliberate, but it grew organically and in ways I didn’t envision when I started the project. The entire process was very tactile and physical – creating each of the 18 pages and transforming them into art pieces and then putting it all together for an art exhibit. And then creating the book was another part of this very tactile process. The first few pages started with an adult me telling stories and then the later pages transformed into a childhood persona re-telling and re-imagining my childhood through the land/seascape and my grandmother’s mythic voice. Some pages started with the stories, while others started with photographs and scraps of materials.

I went back and forth with inspiration from the materials (cotton, fabric, seeds, dried plants and seeds, straw plaits, and sand) and with the stories that emerged as I wrote and created each page – interplay between visual and text. I used Androsia fabric and plaited straw specifically because of how these materials are used in Bahamian cultural production and for tourism. This vision expanded as I worked with the fabric and straw as a reflection of the obvious to tell what is not so obvious – the hidden from view, the unspoken, the silenced. The creation process was an incredible healing journey and the pieces transformed each day I was at home in March 2012 to do the installation for Transforming Spaces in the Bahamas. I was fortunate to be home during Woman Tongue season – trees being ripe with pods and the beautiful sounds they make during our Bahamian spring time. This took my project to the healing and mythic space I had envisioned through the stories, and working with the woman tongue seeds and pods captivated my poet self.

And so the pieces grow from distance and longing in photographs of the first few pages to a more physical closeness with tactile offerings of the last pages and the frame of woman tongue pods and coconut tree branches. I ended the memoir with a kind of opening and circular movement that I hope pulls readers/viewers back into the piece to share in my vision of Saltwater Healing. The book grew out of my original idea for this project, which blossomed into a visual art piece. I see the book as an extension and movement of the piece that includes the myth memoir and several of my poems that brought me to this creative journey of self love and survival.

 

Jess: You write in your memoir: I rememory the stories of my birth with fire tongue. Can you talk more about the act of rememory- your act of rememory?

AVN: I am inspired by and work in the tradition of other women writers of color who insist upon our need to create and re-create our stories. We must do this because so many of our stories have been marginalized, lost, stolen, misnamed, undervalued, and invisible. The act of rememory for me is acknowledging that these memories are with us always through shared experiences, ancestors, and the land/sea/environment. And its using these memories to tell, create, recreate, transform, and make new stories.

 

Jess: Your writing,  in many ways, speaks of crossing boundaries be them emotional, familial, geographic, social, or sexual. I’m thinking here of the line from the poem ” I am, we are, silent no more” which reads : and the in/betweens trouble boundaries/these must be spoken. What does it mean for black women to cross these boundaries? How have you crossed boundaries in your own life?

AVN: Black women writers have long taken up this work of exploring and exploding boundaries because as Black feminists have argued since the 1960s, we exist within the boundaries, at the intersections, and therefore have unique insights into the commonalities of oppression – and we have a right to theorize, study, explain, and write about our own experiences. The writings of Black women like Audre Lorde, Sylvia Wynter, June Jordan, Angela Davis, Erna Brodber, M. Nourbese Philip, Alice Walker, Jacqui Alexander, Michelle Cliff, and Dionne Brand, among others, have blessed me with tools, language, and inspiration to understand and explicitly trouble boundaries. I am a Black mixed-race queer migrant woman with poor working class roots, living abroad yet deeply tied to home and the Caribbean as homeplace. And so I feel as if I exist in the “in-between” all the time.

I rarely fit easily into any one particular space and so I have had to cross boundaries, but I do so with consciousness of my gender, race, color, class, sexuality, nationality, histories/herstories, etc. I am also keenly aware of where I come from and the politics of mobility and access. So I have had to stay grounded, and I keep my work and myself honest and true to my politics and my communities. As a person of African descent and a person of color, I feel deeply a sense of responsibility to my ancestors and the shared oppression marginalized peoples have experienced and continue to experience. Yet I am female, same-sex loving, light-skinned, immigrant, raised in poverty, etc. with my own stories but these are connected. And so the personal stories I share in my work reflect these larger stories that must be told.

 

Jess: In recent years, we’ve seen more black women writers being published by major houses. In your opinion, is this indicative of a wider climate change about the importance of black women’s stories?

AVN: There has certainly been an impressive and growing body of Black women writers across the diaspora getting published by major publishing houses. And perhaps this does indicate that Black women’s stories are finally getting more attention. But I think there is still so much work we have to do. Our stories and our lives continue to be either hypervisible or invisible. I believe that Blackness continues to be denigrated and devalued, and we must constantly be wary of how our bodies and our stories are used – in mass media especially.

 

Jess: On the opposite end of the spectrum, I personally have been invigorated by the number of black women story tellers using small presses and even self publishing their novels, memoirs, poetry collections etc. Why did you choose to publish via a small press?

AVN: I chose to publish with Poinciana Paper Press because I believe in small independent publishing, and I want to support local businesses in the Caribbean. Also for me, its an honor to be published, recognized, and supported by a local Bahamian press because my work is about home – and no matter how long I have lived away – The Bahamas is always my home.

 

Jess: How does your literary artwork inform your academic and activist work?

AVN: I would have to say that my poetry has long inspired me to stay rooted in community in  my academic work, and that my activist work has been fed by and feeds my poetry. The visual and mixed media art is a new creative exploration for me over the last year, and its been a welcome and needed escape from the rigidity of academic work. My creative work is vital to my very existence and so is my community work.

 

Jess: How can Zora and our readers continue to support you?

AVN: Please come out the New York launch and reading of Saltwater Healing on Thursday, May 2nd at Bluestockings at 7pm! And if you want to know more about my work, check out my blog conscious vibration, which is part archive of my writing life and part monthly musings/updates about what I’m working on at that particular time. Follow my blog at consciousvibration.blogspot.com. Follow me on instagram at “sistellablack.”

***

Angelique V. Nixon is a Caribbean writer, scholar, teacher, community worker, artist, and poet – born and raised in The Bahamas. She earned her Ph.D. in English specializing in Caribbean literature and culture at the University of Florida. She teaches in the Department of English and Creative Writing at Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania. Her work as a scholar and poet has been published widely in academic and literary journals, namely Anthurium, Black Renaissance Noire, Journal of Caribbean Literatures, MaComere, small axe salon, tongues of the ocean, and WomanSpeak. Angelique is deeply invested in grassroots activism and is involved with a number of community-based organizations, including Ayiti Resurrect, Caribbean IRN, and Critical Resistance, among others. She works through her writing and activism to disrupt silences, challenge systems of oppression, and carve spaces for resistance and desire.

Yari Yari Ntoaso Digital Salon: Kadija George

We’re not quite done with our digital salon series. Today we feature author and publisher Kadija George. It is not too late for you to support these women writers as Yari Yari Ntoaso draws near.  Donations continue to be accepted via Paypal and check; Visit www.indiegogo.com/owwa!

******

Zora:  I write because…

KG: It’s like a healthy snack in between my breakfast, dinner, and lunch which is the activism work I do – It’s very enjoyable, often hidden but absolutely necessary to my sanity and survival!

Zora:  If you were only allowed to own one piece of literature by a single author (e.g novel, short story collection, memoir, poetry collection), what work would you choose and why?

ZG: This isn’t a fair question. I need to have one for each genre,  so just know that I’m allowed to change this if anyone asks me, so today I will say Segu by Maryse Conde. Why? Because of the way she presents an epic African tale in a contemporary way. It is one of the few books that I really want to read again  -something I rarely have the time to do .

Zora:  Has the emergence of new media or electronic forms of outreach (e.g., blogging, social media) changed how you write or interact with readers?

KG: The only thing that has changed for me is that I have forced myself to work directly on to my computer rather than handwriting first, but I still keep my drafts and number them, and I still ‘think’ and do some edits on paper. It has changed how I interact with writers I work with in regards to their professional development so yes, I expect it to change how I interact with readers although I haven’t found the most satisfying/comfortable way to do that yet.

Zora:What is your proudest artistic moment thus far?

ZG: I’m proud of all my artistic achievements so there isn’t ‘one’ – I don’t want to upset the other achievements

Zora: What should people know about women writers in and of the African Diaspora?

KG: That one, does not speak for all. We are a wide range of voices, in different languages, tones, colours and emotions.

Zora: Why should people support this year’s Yari Yari Ntoaso indiegogo campaign?

ZG: These are tough times and however people have supported Yari Yari so far, is wonderful. It goes to show that it is needed and that that the team who have made it happen this year are marvelous. They could have given up after their charismatic leader Jayne Cortez passed away but they renewed their energies and moved forward. It couldn’t have been easy. What it does show is that women need this – it has been a struggle  financially for many of us to get there  – but we know that it will be worth it as the support and vibe that emanates from this gathering  is unique (a word I rarely use)  and I’m sure we will be looking forward to planning and ensuring that there will be a 4th one.

Zora: How can Zora Magazine and our readers learn more about you and your work?

Readers can visit SABLE LitMag to learn more about me and my work.

** Kadija (George) Sesay is a graduate of Birmingham University (Maj. West African Studies). She is the founder/publisher of SABLE LitMag, and SABLE LitFest. She is the editor of several anthologies of work by writers of African and Asian descent, the latest fiction one being, Dreams Miracles and Jazz: New Adventures in African Fiction (Picador Africa 2008) edited with Helon Habila. She is the series editor for the Inscribe imprint for Peepal Tree Press, their first anthology is Red: Contemporary Black British Poetry (2010). Other anthologies include, Dance the Guns to Silence: 100 Poems for Ken Saro-Wiwa (with Nii Ayikwei Parkes) and IC3: The Penguin Book of New Black Writing in Britain (with Courttia Newland) and Write Black, and Write British: From Post Colonial to Black British Literature. She is also an Associate Editor for Callaloo, the premier journal of arts, letters, and cultures of the African Diaspora. She has published her own poetry, short stories, essays and articles in magazines, journals, anthologies and encyclopedias in the UK, USA and Africa and has been broadcast on BBC World Service.  She is the General Secretary of African Writers Abroad (PEN) Centre, a fellow of the George Bell Institute, a Fellow of the Kennedy Arts Centre of Performance Arts Management and an associate of Vision Quest International. She has received several awards for her work in the creative arts.

Yari Yari Ntoaso Digital Salon Series: Rosamond King

Today’s Digital Salon Interview features Rosamond King- writer, performer, scholar and director of The Organization of Women Writers of Africa. We’ve also caught her interview on film! We hope that you will join us in celebrating the fullness of black female literary artists and support OWWA in their mission to raise the necessary funds for all the women writers participating in Yari Yari Ntoaso!

Yari Yari Ntoaso Digital Salon: Mamle Kabu

Happy Monday Zora Family! There are just FOUR days left in the OWWA indiegogo campaign. Have you donated? If not, we hope this third salon interview with Ghanaian author Mamle Kabu will be just the right amoung of good energy you need to make a contribution.

******

Zora: I write because…

MK: I have an impulse to do so and it always feels good.  I don’t feel fulfilled unless I’m doing something creative.  There are many creative things I dabble in when I have the time but writing is probably my favourite.

Zora: If you were only allowed to own one piece of literature by a single author (e.g novel, short story collection, memoir, poetry collection), what work would you choose and why?

MK: If I were only allowed to own one piece of literature by a single author I would rebel against whoever was in charge or go underground with my collection!  It would include the complete works of many including the Brothers Grimm, Charles Dickens, the Brontës, Thomas Hardy, Evelyn Waugh, Lord Byron, Scott Fitzgerald, Chinua Achebe, Chimamanda Adichie, Chuma Nwokolo, Mario Vargas Llosa and Laura Esquivel for starters.

Zora:  Has the emergence of new media or electronic forms of outreach (e.g., blogging, social media) changed how you write or interact with readers?

MK: It has mainly given me the opportunity to interact with other writers eg. sharing our work via facebook.  I also participated in a British Council Programme called ‘Crossing Borders’ many years ago, which paired up new African writers with professional British writers via email.  I plan to publish some of my writing on e-books.

Zora: What is your proudest artistic moment thus far?

MK: Knowing that my short story ‘The End of Skill’ was shortlisted for the Caine Prize without ever being edited.  Especially in view of several frustrating editing experiences I have been through.

 Zora: What should people know about women writers in and of the African Diaspora?

MK: I don’t think I’m well placed to answer this one as I’m on the continent, not in the diaspora.  Unless it applies to writers on the continent too?

Zora: Why should people support this year’s Yari Yari Ntoaso indiegogo campaign?

MK: Because it will promote the voices of African women writers and through them, the voices of other African women who will probably not be heard any other way.

Zora: How can Zora Magazine and our readers learn more about you and your work?

 MK: By googling me.  And most of my publications are available through Amazon.com

 

** Mamle Kabu, a writer of Ghanaian and German parentage, was born in Ghana and moved to the United Kingdom in her early teens, where she completed her education, graduating from the University of Cambridge.  She returned to Ghana in 1992 where she has since been resident and works as a freelance consultant in development issues.  Mamle took up fiction writing in the late 1990s and has since written a number of short stories, all of which have been published in various anthologies and journals.  In 2009 she was nominated for the Caine Prize for African Writing for her story “The End of Skill.”  In 2011, for the first time, she branched into writing for children and wrote ‘The Kaya-Girl,’ a young adult novel, published under the name Mamle Wolo.  This book won her the 2011 Burt Award for African Literature in Ghana. Mamle has also written poetry, two screenplays and is working on a novel.  She is a co-director of the Writers’ Project of Ghana and a mother of two.**

Yari Yari Ntoaso Digital Salon Series: Camille Dungy

We’re excited to kick off our first ever Digital Salon featuring some of the most talented women writers of the African Diaspora! Today we’re highlighting poet Camille Dungy. Through this interview series, we aim to honor the legacy of black women writers- young,old, near and far- in support of this year’s Yari Yari Ntoaso Conference. Yari Yari cannot happen without your help. Please consider making a financial contribution in support of these women storytellers. Visit www.indiegogo/owwa to give.  

******

Zora: I write because…

CD: I must.

Zora: If you were only allowed to own one piece of literature by a single author (e.g novel, short story collection, memoir, poetry collection), what work would you choose and why?

CD: Sometimes I worry about this.  In the way that I worry about things I know I won’t likely actually have to worry about.  This is one of the reasons I try to memorize poems I love.  That way even if I were forced to choose just one book to take with me, I would still have others in my head.

Zora: Has the emergence of new media or electronic forms of outreach (e.g., blogging, social media) changed how you write or interact with readers?

CD: New media has the potential to take a lot of time.  I’ve taken Facebook off my phone and don’t check email on the weekends, or I’d lose hours that could otherwise go to writing.  That said, I keep in touch with people easier, build a broader community, have an easier time knowing, as O’Hara would say,  “what the poets/ in Ghana are doing these days” and so I wouldn’t want to lose these advances completely.

 Zora: What is your proudest artistic moment thus far?

CD: That I wake up and write.  There are so many things that could keep me from writing, and there are so many people who are not able to wake up and write.  That I can wake up and write and also do, this is the first, most important, thing.

Zora: What should people know about women writers in and of the African Diaspora?

CD: This is a huge question with a huge number of specific answers.  The African Diaspora is huge.  I will say simply that people should know that women writers in and of the African Diaspora exist and that we are writing and that we are writing wonderfully.

Zora: Why should people support this year’s Yari Yari Ntoaso indiegogo campaign?

CD: Yari Yari Ntoaso promises to be a history making event.  This campaign will help expand its breadth and reach and allow access to those who might not otherwise be able to attend.

Zora: How can Zora Magazine and our readers learn more about you and your work?      

CD: One of my poems is featured in the March issue of O Magazine (p. 112), I am also featured on the  Poetry Foundation website and other places around the web and several new poems are in the March/April issue of American Poetry Review. You can  learn more about my work by visiting my website.

** Camille T. Dungy is author of Smith BlueSuck on the Marrow, and What to Eat, What to Drink, What to Leave for Poison, editor of Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry, co-editor of From the Fishouse: An Anthology of Poems that Sing, Rhyme, Resound, Syncopate, Alliterate, and Just Plain Sound Great, and assistant editor of Gathering Ground: A Reader Celebrating Cave Canem’s First DecadeShe recently served as guest editor for Two Lines: World Literature in Translation. Her honors include an American Book Award, two Northern California Book Awards, a California Book Award silver medal, a fellowship from the NEA, and two NAACP Image Award nominations.  Dungy’s poems and essays have been published widely in anthologies and print and online journals including Poetry, Callaloo, and The American Poetry Review. Dungy is a Professor in the Creative Writing department at San Francisco State University. **

Interview Hotseat Part 1: Tell Me About Yourself

With the new year in full swing, Zora readers are doubling down on 2012 goals and searching for new opportunities. Whether you’re graduating this year, looking for an internship, or readying yourself to move on to your next job, interviewing will likely be a part of the experience.

Interviewing provokes major nerves in most of us.  This is an odd phenomenon because most interviewers aren’t that creative and typically ask the same questions. This means that the interview experience can be conquered. With sufficient preparation, you may even find yourself enjoying interviews. That’s where this blog series comes in. Over the next few weeks, Interview Hotseat will provide relevant advice and tips to tackle the most commonly asked interview questions.

I’ve spend many hours interviewing candidates for various positions, both on the phone and in person. They’ve ranged from internship and college hires to full-time professionals. It is always evident, usually from the first few minutes, whether a candidate has sufficiently prepared. A good resume or recommendation is not enough, and many great-on-paper candidates have blown opportunities by failing to prepare for common questions.

We begin the series with what is not only a very popular question, but likely to be one of the first encountered:

“Tell Me About Yourself”

Before explaining how to answer this question, let’s first look at how not to answer.  Typical but bad approaches to this question include:

  • Rambling: Hopefully this won’t apply to you after reading this post, but one of the worse things people do when answering this question is to talk too long. Five minutes into it, the interviewer has completely forgotten who you are and most of what you’ve said. She’s probably thinking about what she’s having for lunch. Less is more!
  • Talking only about yourself: No one likes a egomaniac and though this question ostensibly asks about you, interviewers are really looking for more. The point of the interview is to see if you’ll be a good fit for the company. Let that fact guide your answers. If all you do is talk about how great you are without any connection to the position for which you’re applying, you’re missing out on a big opportunity

Instead of the above, you should:

  • Tell A Story: When the interviewer asks this question, she is definitely not looking for encyclopedic, biographical details. Instead, she wants information to contextualize you. Think about what happens after the interview: the company will have likely interviewed a few candidates and a committee may meet to discuss them. At this point, your interviewers will need to be able to clearly describe you. They’ll be pitting your 30 second “elevator pitch” against that of other candidates. What information do you want the interviewer to remember and recall about you if she only has 30 seconds? This is what you need cover in this question.
  • Be concise:  Because this question is so broad, it gives you the opportunity to craft your story and introduce its main points (see above) but you should not use it to go into detail. So while it may be fine to say “I’ve spent the past few years building my personal brand in the nonprofit sector,” you should not go into detail about your blog, all the things you’ve written about, responses to it, etc. There’ll be time later for that. The key here is to present a short, compelling story that leaves the interviewer wanting to know more.
  • Be natural: While you should prepare ahead of time, do not memorize a paragraph about yourself. Do this and you risk coming off as uncreative, scripted, and annoying. There is an easy way to avoid this: DO NOT MEMORIZE A PARAGRAPH. Seriously, you will practice  your interview questions until you’re comfortable answering them. In the process you may find yourself using the same key phrases, but you should avoid the urge to memorize

Prepare the specifics of your story:

The story that you tell in your answer to this question is key to the rest of your interview. You should spend some time crafting it. Everyone’s story will be different but at minimum, yours should:

  • Provide an overview of your academic and/or professional background (e.g.,” I graduated from NYU and have spent the past few years as a producer at WNYC’s news desk. I’ve covered a range of local news stories from politics to education and social policy”)
  • Explain why you are interviewing (“I’ve enjoyed working in radio and over time I’ve found that I have a passion for reporting on education issues which is why this position is so interesting to me”)
  • Provide humanizing tidbits that reveal your interests and personality (“Writing is my first love so I’d love to return to a career that involves writing. Plus I probably spend more time than I should keeping up with edchats and educator meetups)

After crafting your story, the next and final step is to practice. Answer this question out loud to yourself while looking in the mirror. Better yet, have someone listen to and critique your answer. You’ll be an interview ace in no time!

New Artist Thais Has A Song to Sing and Wants You to Listen

I have officially declared 2012 the year of La Artista. That’s artist in spanish, gender specific for women.

Why?

Because, well, there are a hosts of new artists emerging onto the scene and I am invigorated by all of the good energy. One such artist is Thais, an eccentrically cool singer with with a fierce ‘fro and even fiercer voice. This Maryland native is one vocalist you should pay attention to throughout the upcoming months. Zora had the opportunity to sit down with the talented musician and chat about her quirks, confidence and creative pursuits. Read our interview below:

Who is Thais? What makes her special?

Thais is a young woman who is speaking her truth. I’m special because I’m generally placed in a certain box because of my appearance and sound, but I challenge that with my creativity. I’m not what you expect, I love Katy Perry, Pink, the Spice girls to name a few and they influence me.  Its not often that you see someone remix a Britney Spears song on an African drum, and make it work.

Can you talk about some of the experiences that have led you to the decision to pursue singing as a career?

I was in a play called Da Kink in my Hair last summer, and I would take early morning swims in the pool by myself, and one morning the maintenance guy heard me singing and he was like “you need to pursue singing!” but I’ve always been afraid to do it because I haven’t trained in it as extensively as I have in other fields. Then I decided its 2012 and fear is for the “birds.”

Your version of Childish Gambino’s So Fly is garnering a significant amount of attention. Did you expect the cover to gain the notoriety that it has?

Well, I’m not sure if it has notoriety yet, I would say it is gaining attention that I did not anticipate. I expected my friends to like it but  when people I didn’t know started emailing/ liking the Facebook fan page, I was really surprised and then having it play at a clothing store in Washington DC was mind boggling in a great way.

As a trained dancer, actress, and singer, I’m sure you have many creative muses. Who are some of your artistic inspirations and why?

My artistic inspirations are people that I see doing what I’m doing. Like Erykah Badu because she also studied theater ( I snuck into her camp to meet her once and was chased by security), Bob Marley because he was truthful, Bob Dylan because he’s unabashed, Katy Perry because of her resilience, Solange Knowles because she’s different. Jesse J…her voice.. Childish Gambino because he’s ironic and passionate.

What new projects can Zora expect from you in the upcoming months?

I’m in  a production of Julius Caesar in New York City  and I’m doing a talent show in February at NYU. I’m probably going to keep performing for my friends in my living room but I’m getting into the studio more to produce some music. I’m also going to open for some established artists too,  they just don’t know it yet. I might just drop a mixtape too. What do you think of the title: “Memoirs of a Unicorn Hustler?”

Be sure to follow Thais on twitter: @shebethais and connect with her on Facebook.

And check out the video for her cover of Childish Gambino’s So Fly: