Dylan Amaro-McIntyre is a reformed former misanthrope who finds beauty in the details because the big picture terrifies him. He draws words and writes pictures. He also writes poems, sometimes well. He has been published in various poetry collections and has been featured as a performer at well known venues throughout the Bay Area. On Thursday nights he binge eats peanut butter; he recently discovered Macadamia butter and it is ruining his life.
[youtube]www.youtube.com/watch?v=cycp1-6yYFc[/youtube]
Taking part in the “You don’t look Irish!” panel: Clare Ramsaran, Caroline Mar, Dylan Amaro-McIntyre, and Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu on March 27th 2015
Biracial Historical Figures on Being Mixed: Hans Massaquoi, Mixed-Race in Hitler’s Germany
Hans Massaquoi–born Jan. 19, 1926–was the German-born son of a white German mother and black Liberian father. He grew up in Hamburg, Germany during the Nazi rise to power and at one point considered joining the Hitler Youth. Learn more about him and his later life in America as a journalist for Ebony Magazine here.
“I was six years old when I started school in 1932. Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933. I was too young then to understand what this would mean for me. I didn’t know that my mother, a nurse, had lost her government job because of me. The teachers who had objections to the new regime were quickly replaced by younger teachers who were openly pro-Nazi. Some of them, including the head teacher, were plainly hostile to me and did their very best to insult me and to make disparaging remarks about my race. One time – I must have been about ten – one of the teachers took me aside and said, ‘When we’ve finished with the Jews, you’ll be next.’ The most important reason why I survived Hitler and was not killed during the Holocaust was that there wasn’t a large Black community in Germany.”–Hans Massaquoi
Mixed Love Notes #21 #mixedlovenotes
Mixed Love Notes #20 #mixedlovenotes
Mixed Love Notes #19 #mixedlovenotes
Biracial Historical Figures on Being Mixed: Isamu Noguchi
Isamu Noguchi (1904-1988) was the son of a Japanese writer and a white American woman. He became one of the greatest sculptors of his time. You can learn more about him here.
“First of all, my mother was American. And going to Japan with an American mother and being half-Japanese puts on in a very anomalous position. On the one hand, she is of Japan, she wanted to be in Japan. But the fact of the matter is that the Japanese do not accept foreigners as another person equal to themselves because Japanese are Japanese and everybody else is foreign, you understand. It’s a very traditional country in that sense; and very unusually so, perhaps. I mean very exclusive in a sense. And, on top of that, my mother was separated from my father when I was very, very young so that I didn’t have that contact that I might have had to one-half parent anyway. So I was an appendage on a stranger; that is to say….And yet, as I say, she loved Japan, let’s say, had friends and pupils there. She taught English. But I was more or less a kind of waif because she was always working a great deal of the time and I was sort of thrown onto the neighboring children and so forth who, of course, were Japanese. So my playmates and so forth were Japanese but I was not Japanese, you see. And, you know, people talk about the discrimination that exists against half-breeds. And, it is probably so. Although I mean, personally, I can’t say that I experienced discrimination as such, a third person looking at it more objectively would probably say that it’s a classical case. I, for instance, have never felt discriminated against in this country either, for that matter, but somebody else looking at it might say: “Well, but you don’t realize that this is evidence of discrimination.” And my own attitude, of course, is another question. Am I really free? Or am I really inherently self-protective against incipient discrimination. Do you understand?”–Isamu Noguchi
Mixed Love Notes #18 #mixedlovenotes
Mixed Love Notes #17 #mixedlovenotes
Caroline Mar – mixed race poet
Caroline Mei-Lin Mar was born and raised in the Bay Area. Carrie is a queer mixed-race Chinese-Irish femme who was raised to cause trouble by her radical lefty parents (her first childhood St. Patrick’s Day parade participation involved staging a pro-IRA “die-in”). She currently works as a secondary Special Education teacher and owes great gratitude to her students and colleagues for what they teach her every day. A recent graduate of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College and an alumna of the Voices at VONA workshop, Carrie is seeking publication of her first book, Special Education. Her poems have been published in The Collagist, Shadowgraph, As Us, and others.
Taking part in the “You don’t look Irish!” panel: Clare Ramsaran, Caroline Mar, Dylan Amaro-McIntyre, and Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu on March 27th 2015
Mixed Love Notes #16 #mixedlovenotes
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 35
- 36
- 37
- 38
- 39
- …
- 61
- Next Page »