Spring 2022

Khalamuni

Efadul Huq
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This poem is an act of mourning, remembering, and grieving a loved one taken by the pandemic.

इंसानियत का लॉकडाउन

Richa Nagar and Richa Singh
This image, titled 'Singh-Nagar-3.jpg', captures an overwhelming scene of a massive crowd of people and numerous buses on a wide road, likely a highway or major thoroughfare,

The title of this piece translates to—Humanity in Lockdown. It documents the plight of migrant workers who fled Indian cities en masse, the deepening religious divide, and intensifying poverty in the context of COVID-19 pandemic and the nation-wide lockdown that was instituted in April 2020.

The Passage

Marijana Hameršak and Selma Banich
This image is a large square collage, composed of a 7x7 grid of smaller squares, creating a patchwork effect. The central 5x5 grid (25 squares) features individual portraits

This work of Selma Banich & Marijana Hameršak that emerged in collaboration with the Women to Women Collective is a collection of portraits of migrants who lost their lives on the perilous journeys in the Balkans.

Remembering, Honoring and Grieving Migrant Deaths: Unsettling the Politics of Grave Silence

Emina Bužinkić
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Emina Bužinkić I write these lines to remember, record and grieve fallen migrants who fiercely fought against the relentless border regimes in the Balkans and wider European geographies. Pushed into despair and ultimately robbed of breath, thousands of migrants attempt to cross the perilous terrains of the Balkans only to meet police batons, electric shocks,…

This is Not an Eggplant

Katayoun Amjadi
This image captures an artistic installation featuring several dark, pear-shaped objects, which strongly resemble eggplants, suspended on thin red rods against a soft, light background. The accompanying context, "This is Not

Katayoun Amjadi’s multimedia installations and visual poems, This is Not an Eggplant and Diaries of a Village Potter, question the “collective” and meditates on the course of political and environmental shifts.

Basic Demographic Questions

Suzanne Chew
This image captures a wide outdoor scene in a snowy, residential area, likely during winter. The sky is a clear, pale blue, suggesting a bright but cold day, possibly early morning or late afternoon, as the sun casts long,

Suzanne Chew’s poem grapples with the question of a “good interview” and the extractive nature of traditional academic research.

Autopsy and State Violence: Implications in the Death Investigation of George Floyd

Deondre Smiles
This image captures a wide view of George Floyd Square in Minneapolis, a memorial site at what was formerly a gas station, under a bright, partly cloudy sky. The scene is filled with memorials, graffiti

This essay examines the circumstances surrounding the death investigation of George Floyd, tying it into larger discussions surrounding the role of law enforcement and state structures in death investigations and autopsies. Drawing upon indigenous studies research, the piece looks at the undue influence upon coroners and medical examiners in cases of death by police brutality that do not put law enforcement in legal jeopardy.

Healthy Living

Jordan Starck
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This set of companion poems agitates the dominant narratives that, for marginalized peoples, silent compliance will best secure their safety and wellbeing.

Imagining Transnational Solidarities: Speaking Across Divides

Imagining Transnational Solidarities Research Circle
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Imagining Transnational Solidarities: Speaking Across Divides is a series of webinars that centered transnational feminist, Black, indigenous, migrant voices speaking to the contestations and possibilities emerging for social movements, art-making and political shifts in the midst of multiple crises.