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In The Cancer Journals, Audre Lorde reminds us that the body is a barometer, registering the earth's wounds on a cellular level. The permeable body may be particularly susceptible to toxins, but it is also remarkably receptive to the healing possibilities of interconnectedness. Well, a testament to the experience of living in a female body objectified by the cancer industry, is a hybrid text that seeks to reopen the body, not to further harm, but to transformational healing. Exploring the work of other women writing through their own, or their loved one's, cancer diagnosis, the book is particularly influenced by Audre Lorde, Susan Sontag, Rachel Carson, Terry Tempest Williams, Fanny Burney, Alice James, and Kathy Acker. Committed to connectivity, the journal, the diary, the letter and the poem emerge as forms through which the body can both speak its wounds and commit itself to the care of other vulnerable bodies. What People Are SayingWell sounds the depths of what it means to be a subject with breast cancer subjected to the violence Western medicine calls care. Like the harm tucked inside of charm, this book bears witness to Steensen's own injury as a way to endure treatments at once wound and cure. It also gathers the words of other women who've written through the experience of breast cancer, offering something like a poultice to draw out poison in order to soothe and repair. Insisting on agency even while dwelling in "the margin where ill and well meet," this vital and necessary book asks the questions we find only "at the extremity of this life." That's the point: to survive to offer others the hardest questions, the ones that love for our mothers, sisters, and daughters requires us to ask. -Brian Teare, author of Poem Bitten by a ManNear the end of her extraordinary new book, Well, Sasha Steensen says, "I write to you to expel the barrier between." Between the presumed-to-be-healthy and the body that is not well. Between the body that is not well and whatever comes next. Between what has been written about the body and what can never be written. Between what must be said about the body and what ought never be said. Between the poet's mind and the minds of other women writers whose own lives have hung in these margins. Between the poet's body and my own. Between happiness and hope. In a series of poems at once contrarian and comforting, Steensen lays bare her own mind and body. In her revelations, she enters a communion with women whose lives, whether we know it or not, are as vulnerable and resilient as her own. Steensen's Well is a masterful collection of philosophy, politics, passion, and poetry. -Camille T. Dungy, author of Soil: The Story of a Black Mother's Garden About the AuthorSasha Steensen is the author of six books of poetry: A Magic Book, The Method, and House of Deer (all from Fence Books), Gatherest (Ahsahta Press), and most recently, Everything Awake (Shearsman Press), and Well (Parlor Press). She is a poetry editor for Colorado Review and an editor for the Test Site Poetry Series. Learn more about her work at https: //sashasteensen.com/.
JAEPL Volume 28 - 2023 THE JOURNAL OF THE ASSEMBLY FOR EXPANDED PERSPECTIVES ON LEARNING, JAEPL, provides a forum to encourage research, theory, and classroom practices involving expanded concepts of language. It contributes to a sense of community in which scholars and educators from preschool through the university exchange points of view and cutting-edge approaches to teaching and learning. JAEPL is especially interested in helping those teachers who experiment with new strategies for learning to share their practices and confirm their validity through publication in professional journals. CONTENTS OF VOLUME 28: Our Perspectives Continue to Expand by Wendy Ryden MOFFETT'S CORNER: Why Moffett Matters Now by Stephen Lafer and Jonathan Marine SPECIAL ISSUE: COMMUNICATING SCIENCE: Julia E. Kiernan, Special Issue Editor Rethinking Science Communication: The Need for Dialogic, Transdisciplinary Collaboration by Julia E. Kiernan Science Storytelling beyond the Dramatic Arc: Narrativity and Little Red Schoolhouse Principles in Science Communication by Daniel A. Newman Public Narratives, Storytelling, and Trust: A Case Study in a STEM-Based Writing Program by Jeffery C. Gagnon Storying Science: Preparing STEM Students to Engage with Discipline-Specific and Public Audiences through the TED(x) Genre by Erica M. Stone and Sarah E. Austin Getting Beyond "CRAAP" Scientific Literacy in FYW and WAD by Erica Duran and Lauren Mecucci Springer Embedding the Scientists: Civic Issues as Context for Teaching and Learning by Heather G. Lettner-Rust, Alix D. Fink, Edward L. Kinman, JoEllen G. Pederson, and Phillip L. Poplin Coastal Communications: Teaching Civic Scientific Literacy in English and Environmental Science and Resource Management Classes by Stacey Stanfield Anderson and Kiki Patsch Weaving Science Communication Training through an Undergraduate Science Program with a Focus on Accessibility and Inclusion by Adina Silver, Zoya Adeel, Tim Li, Abeer Siddiqui, Alexander Hall, Sarah Symons, and Katie Moisse Addressing Gaps in Science Competencies: Incorporating Science Communication into Existing Classes by Amy J. Hawkins, Melissa Rowland Goldsmith, and Nicole C. Woitowich Negotiating Scientific Identity and Agency: Graduate Student Perspectives on a Public Science Course by Lillian Campbell CONNECTING: Christy Wenger English 101 by Naomi C. Gades Sessional spa time by Amber Moore BOOKS: Responding to Lynn Z. Bloom's Recipe by Lynn Z. Bloom, Bruce Novak, Geri DeLuca, Elizabeth Falk Jones, Jeffrey Seizer, and Elizabeth Vickers Contributors to JAEPL Vol. 28
Community literacy is the domain for literacy work that exists outside of mainstream educational and work institutions and in programs in adult and early childhood education, reading, lifelong learning, workplaces, or marginalized groups.
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