Rita Wong
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Rita Wong | |
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Born | 1968 Traditional Territories of Niitsitapi, Nakoda, Tsuut'ina Peoples |
Genre | Poetry |
Website | |
blogs |
Rita Wong (born 1968) is a poet, teacher, community educator, artist
Contents
Biography
Rita Wong grew up on the traditional territories of the Niitsitapi, Nakoda and Tsuut'ina Peoples, and currently lives in Coast Salish Territories. She is the author of monkeypuzzle published Press Gang, a groundbreaking feminist press that sadly closed in 2002, as well as forage, "sybil unrest" (co-written with Larissa Lai), "perpetual" and "undercurrent." Her work investigates the relationships between social justice, ecology, decolonization, and contemporary poetics. Rita Wong is also a teacher and works at Emily Carr School of Art and Design, teaching Critical and Cultural Studies. She has a course in development, Cultivating Ecological, Cross-Cultural, and Interdisciplinary Contemplations of Water. She has been a visiting instructor at the University of Miami, and is also a community educator and artist.
Education
Wong graduated with a BA (Hons) in 1990 from the University of Calgary. She received master's degrees in 1992 from the University of Alberta and in 1996 from the University of British Columbia. In 2003 she received her PhD from Simon Fraser University.
Published works
monkeypuzzle
Wong's first poetry collection, monkeypuzzle, was published by Press Gang in 1998. Reviewer Sook C. Kong in Herizons called it "a huge achievement."[1] Mark Libin for Canadian Literature agreed that the collection "does indeed, as the book jacket declares, announce a promising new voice in Canadian literature."[2] Wong's poems in the volume address her identity as a bisexual Asian woman.[1]
forage
forage, a second collection, was published in 2007; it explores how ecological crises relate to the injustices of the international political landscape. In Wong's words, "the next shift may be the biggest one yet, the union of the living, from mosquito to manatee to mom." Aaron Giovannone in Canadian Literature called the book "a dynamic mixture of styles .... [that] coheres because of the author’s voice, which is emboldened by a sense of sheer affront and the need to find “ground to push against, red earth, / bloody earth, stolen earth.”"[3] The book won the 2008 Dorothy Livesay Prize.[4]
Wong and the Environment
Wong's poetry often addresses her relationship with her environment. Her poems show a close connection with nature and a support for local product, while expressing distaste for genetically modified foods. In forage, her poem 'the girl who ate rice almost every day' encourages the reader to look up Monsanto in the US patent database, and see how many patents there are for genetically modified foods, including the type of foods affected. There is also a poem, 'canola queasy' dedicated to Percy Schmeiser, the Saskatchewan farmer sued by Monsanto because he intentionally propagated genetically engineered canola that had blown into his fields. Her work challenges the reader to think about how they affect their environment. For instance, in 'sort by day burn by night' Wong brings attention to Guiyu village, a small village in China whose main profit comes from disassembling circuit boards, usually with a sharp rock because they cannot afford a hammer. When asked about her own computer use Wong notes, "as someone who relies heavily on computers, I am implicated in the degradation and eventual destruction of ecosystems (mining for coltan)", but writes to try to "reconcile [her] intent (to work toward peace and social justice) with [her] consumption patterns as a citizen in North America".[5]
Awards
2008
- Contemplative Practices Fellowship
- Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize for forage
1998
- ACWW Emerging Writer Award for Poetry
- Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
- Fellowship
1997
- Canada Council Literary Arts Development Grant
- Willard Ireland Prize
- Asian-Canadian Writers Workshop Emerging Writers Award for monkeypuzzle
1996
- Margaret Burke Scholarship
1994-1996
- Basant Singh Fellowship
1991
- Arnold Edinborrough Scholarship
1990
- Trent Honours English Award
Bibliography
Books
- forage. Nightwood Editions, 2007. ISBN 0-88971-213-1
- monkeypuzzle. Vancouver: Press Gang, 1998. ISBN 0-88974-088-7.
Journals
- "Decolonizasian: Reading First Nations and Asian Relations in Literature", in Canadian Literature 199 (Winter 2008): 158-80.[6]
- "Market Forces and Powerful Desires: Reading Evelyn Lau's Cultural Labour", in Kam Louie and Tseen Khoo (eds.), Culture, Identity, Commodity: Diasporic Chinese Literatures in English. Hong Kong: Hong Kong UP. 2005.
- "Re Sounding Dissent", in Open Letter, 2004.
- "Troubling Domestic Limits: Reading Border Fictions Alongside Salt Fish Girl by Larissa Lai", in BC Studies 140 (Winter 2003/04): 109-24.
- "Globalization and Poverty as Violence Against Women." in Paul Taylor (ed.) The Heart of the Community: the Best of the Carnegie Newsletter. Vancouver: New Star Books, 2003. 227-28.
- "Historical fictions, or when is an arrival not an arrival?" in K. Love (ed.) Facing History: Portraits from Vancouver. Vancouver: Presentation House and Arsenal Pulp Press, 2002. 38-39.
- "Influences", in Contemporary Verse 2 25.1 (Summer 2002): 79-80.
- "Partial Responses to the Global Movement of People", in West Coast Line 34.3, No. 33 (Winter 2001): 105-19.
- "Market Forces and Powerful Desires: Reading Evelyn Lau's Cultural Labour", in Essays on Canadian Writing 73 (Spring 2001): 122-40.
- "The I in Migrant", in West Coast Line 33.3, No. 30 (Winter 2000): 105-8.
- Interview, by Larissa Lai. In West Coast Line 33.3, No. 30 (Winter 2000): 72-82.
- "An Intelligent and Humane Response", in Kinesis (November 1999): 12, 17.
- "Writing History in Fiction", in Rice paper 4.1 (1998): 33.
- "Asian Heritage Month in Vancouver: Building Community", in Kinesis (1997): 16.
- "Jumping on Hyphens", in Makeda Silvera (ed.) The Other Woman: Women of Colour in Contemporary Canadian Literature. Toronto: Sister Vision Press, 1994. 117-53.
- "Have You Eaten Yet? Two Interviews", in Edna Alford and Claire Harris (eds.) Kitchen Talk. Red Deer: Red Deer College Press, 1992. 149-57.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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- ↑ Forage at Harbour Publishing
- ↑ Rita Wong interview at 12 or 20 questions
- ↑ Canadian Literature online
External links
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- 1968 births
- 20th-century Canadian poets
- 20th-century women writers
- 21st-century Canadian poets
- 21st-century women writers
- Canadian people of Chinese descent
- Canadian women academics
- Canadian women poets
- Canadian writers of Asian descent
- Emily Carr University of Art and Design alumni
- Lesbian writers
- LGBT poets
- LGBT writers from Canada
- Living people
- Simon Fraser University alumni
- University of Calgary alumni
- University of British Columbia alumni
- Writers from Calgary
- Writers from Vancouver