Posts Tagged ‘ Andre Yang ’

Kudos: Andre Yang

Andre Yang has been awarded the College of Arts and Humanities Dean’s Medal. Congratulations on such a distinguished achievement!

KUDOS: Andre Yang

Andre Yang’s poems “B.B King’s Box” and “She’s Been Gone Months” have been accepted by Crate magazine. Andre has also been invited to be a panelist for the Kartika Review at the 2012 Asian American Festival in San Francisco.  Congratulations Andre!

KUDOS: Andre Yang

MFA student Andre Yang has been invited to be a panelist at the 2012 Asian American Festival to be held in March at SOMArts in San Francisco.   The festival is organized by the API Cultural Center and Kartika Review.   Some of the other writers invited to speak include: Yiyun Li, Elaine Kim, Karen Tei Yamashita, and Bharati Mukherjee.   This is a huge and well-deserved honor. 

Congratulations, Andre!

KUDOS: Andre Yang

Andre has won a Robert and Norma Craig Fellowship.  He richly deserves it, and this good news, as all good news, comes at precisely the right time.  Congratulations Andre!

KUDOS: Andre Yang

Four of Andre’s poems: “Why You Still Frown When Talking about Breastfeeding,” “Waiting,” “Pastoral,” and ”Meeting a Young Monk in late Spring,” will appear in  the Journal of Southeast Asian American Education and Advancement (JSAAEA). 

Congratulations, Andre!

EVENT: Fresno Poets’ Association reading with Hmong American Writers’ Circle (HAWC)

The FRESNO POETS’ ASSOCIATION and Fresno State’s MFA PROGRAM IN CREATIVE WRITING

Present their Fall Reading Series with:

THE HMONG AMERICAN WRITERS’ CIRCLE (HAWC)

Thursday, September 29, 2011, 7 p.m. at:

Fresno State Madden Library, Auditorium Room 2206 (2nd floor, South Wing)

Members of HAWC will read from their recently released anthology:

 

“HOW DO I BEGIN?: A HMONG AMERICAN LITERARY ANTHOLOGY”

Readers Include:

ANDRE YANG is a founding member of HAWC. Currently studying in the MFA program at Fresno State, he is a Provost Scholar and a Philip Levine Scholar. He is also a Kundiman Fellow, and his poetry has appeared in “Paj Ntaub Voice,” “Hyphen Magazine,” and the chapbook anthology, “Here is a Pen” (Achiote Press). He is the coeditor of “How Do I Begin?”

BURLEE VANG is a graduate of Fresno State’s MFA Program in Creative Writing. He is also the author of “The Dead I Know: Incantation for Rebirth” (Swan Scythe Press, 2010) and co-editor of “How Do I Begin?: A Hmong American Literary Anthology” (Heyday, 2011). His prose and poetry have appeared in “Ploughshares,” “North American Review,” “Alaska Quarterly Review,” “Massachusetts Review,” “Asia Literary Review,” among other literary journals. His work has also been anthologized in “Twentysomething Essays by Twentysomething Writers: Best New Voices of 2006” (Random House), “Highway 99: A Literary Journey Through California’s Great Central Valley” (Heyday), and “New California Writing 2011” (Heyday). He founded HAWC in 2004 to encourage and nurture emerging Hmong writers in the San Joaquin Valley.

Shaping the Hmong American literary voice

Hmong history and culture can be found in the form of oral stories, oral poetry, textile art, and music but there is no written account of Hmong life, by a Hmong hand, passed down through the centuries. As an undergraduate, Burlee Vang experienced this void when he received valuable advice from his English professor: “Write about your people. That story has not been told. If you don’t, who will?”

“How Do I Begin?” is the struggle to preserve on paper the Hmong American experience. In this anthology, readers will find elaborate soul-calling ceremonies, a woman questioning the seeming tyranny of her parents and future in-laws, the temptation of gangs and drugs, and the shame and embarrassment of being different in a culture that obsessively values homogeneity. Some pieces revisit the ghosts of war. Others lament the loss of a country. Many offer glimpses into intergenerational tensions exacerbated by the differences in Hmong and American culture.

“How Do I Begin?” signifies a turning point for the Hmong community, a group of people who have persevered through war, persecution, and exile. Transcending ethnic and geographic boundaries, it poignantly speaks of survival instead of defeat.

HAWC serves as a forum to discover and foster creative writing within the Hmong community. HAWC’s efforts and achievements have been geared toward the creation of a visible body of Hmong American literature and the establishment of a Hmong literary culture.

http://www.hmongwriters.org/

http://heydaybooks.com/book/how-do-i-begin-a-hmong-america/

Book signing and reception to follow. This event is FREE and open to the public. Limited seating.

Free parking passes are available from the volunteers standing near the parking kiosks. Look for their poetry-reading signs as you enter the south side of the campus.

For more information about this event, contact Cindy Wathen at ciwathen@csufresno.edu.

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=194001247338275

THE FRESNO POETS’ ASSOCIATION is now a formal program of Fresno State’s MFA Program in Creative Writing in conjunction with the Madden Library. Please consider supporting our organization:

Annual memberships: Student $5; Individual $10; Family $15; Contributor $25; Patron $50; Sustaining $100.

Please mail a check made payable to Fresno State Foundation to:

Office of the Dean, Madden Library,

5200 N. Barton Ave. ML 34

Fresno CA 93740-8014

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Located in the heart of the San Joaquin Valley, the Creative Writing Program at California State University, Fresno, has a long history of literary excellence. The program combines studio and academic approaches, providing students with substantial workshop experience and a solid background in theory and literature. The soul of the Creative Writing Program is its nationally and internationally acclaimed faculty, whose writing as well as their commitment to teaching lie at the heart of the program’s ability to attract the best students from across the nation and beyond. Their award-winning faculty has over 20 published books to date. Current MFA faculty include: Steven Church, Alex Espinoza, Corrinne Clegg Hales, John Hales, Randa Jarrar, and Timothy Skeen.

KUDOS: Andre Yang

Congratulations to Fresno State MFA student, Andre Yang, who has been awarded a four-week residency at the UCROSS Foundation for the month of November. The Foundation’s mission is to “foster fresh and innovative thinking in the visual arts, literature, and music by providing residencies, work space and uninterrupted time to individual artists, writers, and composers.  The Foundation supports Residents whose work reflects a depth of individual creative exploration and the potential for significant future accomplishments.  Situated on a 20,000-acre working cattle ranch, the Ucross Foundation’s unique geographic location introduces individuals to the land, people and ethos of the northern High Plains and Rocky Mountain region.  Through its Residency Program, Art Gallery, conferences and special projects, Ucross actively seeks to support an appreciation for vibrant human creativity and aims to cast a reflection into the future from the cultural mirror of our lives and times.”

Congratulations on this great accomplishment!

Andre Yang is a founding member of the Hmong American Writers’ Circle (HAWC). Currently studying in the MFA program at California State University, Fresno, he is a Provost Scholar and a Philip Levine Scholar, and works on the editorial staff of The Normal School. Andre is a Kundiman Fellow, and his poetry has appeared in Paj Ntaub Voice, Hyphen Magazine, and the chapbook anthology Here is a Pen (Achiote Press). He is a coeditor of How Do I Begin? A Hmong American Literary Anthology (Heyday, 2011) due out this August.

KUDOS: Andre Yang

The moderators of “Poets Responding to SB 1070″ have selected Andre Yang’s poem “Why I Feel the Way I Do About SB 1070″ for the May 17, 2011 online issue of La Bloga. Watch for it!

Congratulations, Andre!

KUDOS: Creative Writing Award Winners and Honorable Mentions

In case you missed it, at last Friday’s reading Connie Hales announced the winners of the 2011 Creative Writing Awards for graduate and undergraduate students in all genres. Here’s a list of winners and honorable mentions:

Creative Nonfiction, judged by Marilyn Abildskov

Undergraduate Winner: “A Boundless Bind” by Sally Brown

Graduate Winner: “Traffic Jam: Lagos, Nigeria” by Carole Firstman

Graduate Mentions: “The Fall” by Ashley Wells, “The Spirit of Consumption” by Andrea Mele, “Crevice Dwellers” by Liza Butler-Aveson, and “Action Potentials” by Brenda Rankin

Fiction, judged by Liza Wieland

Undergraduate Honorable Mentions: “Ripples and Foam” by Grant Dempsey, “Maria” by Heather Ashcroft, and “Girls With Wings” by Blair Olivia Nishkian

Undergraduate Winner: “Foxes Have Homes” by Hannah Thompson

Graduate Honorable Mentions: “Hard” by Rafael Sanchez, “White Bear Lake” by Anders Peterson, and “Growing Season” by Tiffany Crum

Graduate Winner: “Lucky” by Peter Driscoll

Poetry, judged by Philip Levine

Undergraduate Honorable Mentions: “Blown Away” by Hilary Pacheco and “whiteblonde” by Carleigh Takemoto

Undergraduate Winner: “To My Mother” by Sean Patrick Kinneen

Graduate Honorable Mentions: “Debt” by Michelle Brittan, “Garage Sale” by Gabriel Ibarra, and “Insomnia” by Andre Yang

Graduate Winner: “If You Set Your House on Fire” by Megan Baptista Geist

Congratulations to all of our winners and honorable mentions! What a great way to end a great year.

KUDOS: Andre Yang

MFA student Andre Yang has been named the Fresno State campus nominee for the William Hearst/CSU Trustee Scholarship.  He was selected from outstanding nominees across the entire campus and will be Fresno State’s nominee for this CSU system-wide scholarship awarded for outstanding achievement.

Congratulations, Andre! And good luck!

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