Family Histories & Political Violence in the Americas: A Poetic Discussion

Published: Dec. 22, 2023, noon

Three acclaimed poets with new books in multiple genres take on questions of history, trauma, and family in the Americas. This event took place on June 9, 2023.\n\nTo celebrate the publication of Julie Carr\u2019s Mud, Blood, and Ghosts: Populism, Eugenics, and Spiritualism in the American West (University of Nebraska Press, May 2023), she will be joined by award winning authors Cristina Rivera Garza, whose new book is Liliana\u2019s Invincible Summer and Brandon Shimoda, whose forthcoming book is Hydra Medusa for a joint reading and to discuss how family histories unearth the remains of patriarchal, settler-colonial, and white supremacist violence in the Americas.\n\nIn Mud, Blood, and Ghosts, Julie Carr traces her own family\u2019s history, and the story of her great-grandfather Omer Madison Kem \u2013 three-term Populist representative from Nebraska \u2013through archival documents to draw connections between U.S. agrarian populism, spiritualism, and eugenics, helping readers to understand populism\u2019s tendency toward racism and exclusion.\n\nPart coping mechanism, part magical act, Hydra Medusa was composed while Brandon Shimoda was working five jobs and raising a child\u2014during bus commutes, before bed, at sunrise. \u200bA book of poetry, dreams and speculative talks, collected from the psychic detritus of living in the US-Mexico borderlands.\n\nLiliana\u2019s Invincible Summer is the account\u2014and the outcome\u2014of Cristina Rivera Garza\u2019s quest to bring her sister\u2019s murderer to justice. Through this remarkable and genre-defying memoir, Rivera Garza confronts the trauma of losing her sister and examines from multiple angles how this tragedy continues to shape who she is\u2014and what she fights for\u2014today.\n\nSpeakers:\n\nJulie Carr\u2019s most recent books are Mud, Blood, and Ghosts: Populism, Eugenics, and Spiritualism in the American West, Real Life: An Installation, Objects from a Borrowed Confession and the essay collection, Someone Shot My Book. She lives in Denver where she helps to run Counterpath and teaches at the University of Colorado in Boulder.\n\nCristina Rivera Garza is the award-winning author of The Taiga Syndrome and The Iliac Crest, among many other books. A recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship and the Sor Juana In\xe9s de la Cruz Prize, Rivera Garza is the M. D. Anderson Distinguished Professor in Hispanic Studies, and director of the PhD program in creative writing in Spanish at the University of Houston.\n\nBrandon Shimoda is the author of several books of poetry and prose, most recently The Grave on the Wall (City Lights, 2019), which received the PEN Open Book Award, and Hydra Medusa (Nightboat Books, 2023). He is co-editing, with Brynn Saito, an anthology of poetry on Japanese American/Nikkei incarceration, forthcoming from Haymarket Books in 2025.\n\nMary Sutton (moderator) is senior content editor for Academy of American Poets. Before joining the Academy, Mary was public humanities fellow at Library of America, where she worked with Kevin Young on African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song and the book\u2019s companion website. Mary is currently also poetry editor at West Trade Review.\n\nWatch the live event recording: https://youtube.com/live/MAOpEZ984qg\n\nBuy books from Haymarket: www.haymarketbooks.org\n\nFollow us on Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/haymarketbooks