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by Anna Learn
When translator Sarah Booker came to Coffee House with pitches for the translation of both novels of Ojeda’s, the press thought it best to have JAWBONE precede NEFANDO, allowing the former to serve as amuse bouche to the latter’s more toothsome topics.
[TW: sexual abuse, child abuse]
Nefando — Mónica Ojeda
When translator Sarah Booker came to Coffee House with pitches for the translation of both novels of Ojeda’s, the press thought it best to have JAWBONE precede NEFANDO, allowing the former to serve as amuse bouche to the latter’s more toothsome topics.
[TW: sexual abuse, child abuse]
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w/ Alana Mohamed
It’s easier to stay in a place that’s known to you even if it’s hurting you. So there’s a question of loyalty, whether to your country or your family, that is complicated by being a colony.
Claudia Acevedo-Quiñones
It’s easier to stay in a place that’s known to you even if it’s hurting you. So there’s a question of loyalty, whether to your country or your family, that is complicated by being a colony.
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by Shane Burley
Often, the kind of research getting funded, printed, and promoted has more to do with the agenda of those writing the checks, the institutions that support them, and the schools who are stacking their faculty rolls, than the provable consequence of the research.
An Antisemitism Studies Primer
Often, the kind of research getting funded, printed, and promoted has more to do with the agenda of those writing the checks, the institutions that support them, and the schools who are stacking their faculty rolls, than the provable consequence of the research.
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by Rex Bowman
If It Gets Quiet Later On is its own tabletop display, a grouping of poems, short stories, and essays connected (mostly) by Thran’s life as a writer, reader, and bookseller.
If It Gets Quiet Later On, I Will Make a Display – Nick Thran
If It Gets Quiet Later On is its own tabletop display, a grouping of poems, short stories, and essays connected (mostly) by Thran’s life as a writer, reader, and bookseller.
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by Anna Learn
When translator Sarah Booker came to Coffee House with pitches for the translation of both novels of Ojeda’s, the press thought it best to have JAWBONE precede NEFANDO, allowing the former to serve as amuse bouche to the latter’s more toothsome topics.
[TW: sexual abuse, child abuse]
Nefando — Mónica Ojeda
When translator Sarah Booker came to Coffee House with pitches for the translation of both novels of Ojeda’s, the press thought it best to have JAWBONE precede NEFANDO, allowing the former to serve as amuse bouche to the latter’s more toothsome topics.
[TW: sexual abuse, child abuse]
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by Shane Burley
Often, the kind of research getting funded, printed, and promoted has more to do with the agenda of those writing the checks, the institutions that support them, and the schools who are stacking their faculty rolls, than the provable consequence of the research.
An Antisemitism Studies Primer
Often, the kind of research getting funded, printed, and promoted has more to do with the agenda of those writing the checks, the institutions that support them, and the schools who are stacking their faculty rolls, than the provable consequence of the research.
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by Rex Bowman
If It Gets Quiet Later On is its own tabletop display, a grouping of poems, short stories, and essays connected (mostly) by Thran’s life as a writer, reader, and bookseller.
If It Gets Quiet Later On, I Will Make a Display – Nick Thran
If It Gets Quiet Later On is its own tabletop display, a grouping of poems, short stories, and essays connected (mostly) by Thran’s life as a writer, reader, and bookseller.
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by Lora Maslenitsyna
The caretaker tries to keep the objects in his collection from speaking about the lives they have lived . . . reducing them to mere list of objects. The more he fights the resonance of their voices, the more they resist becoming metaphors of the past.
The Caretaker – Doon Arbus
The caretaker tries to keep the objects in his collection from speaking about the lives they have lived . . . reducing them to mere list of objects. The more he fights the resonance of their voices, the more they resist becoming metaphors of the past.
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w/ Alana Mohamed
It’s easier to stay in a place that’s known to you even if it’s hurting you. So there’s a question of loyalty, whether to your country or your family, that is complicated by being a colony.
Claudia Acevedo-Quiñones
It’s easier to stay in a place that’s known to you even if it’s hurting you. So there’s a question of loyalty, whether to your country or your family, that is complicated by being a colony.
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w/ Abdul Manan Bhat and Partha P. Chakrabartty
The ghazal is a cumulative form that builds on established metaphors in a non-linear fashion. . . . I see tremendous liberatory potential in its cumulativeness. . . . When writing a ghazal, my poetic voice is not just my own, just like my pain is not just my own.
On the Poetics of Congregation amid Dispossession: A Conversation
The ghazal is a cumulative form that builds on established metaphors in a non-linear fashion. . . . I see tremendous liberatory potential in its cumulativeness. . . . When writing a ghazal, my poetic voice is not just my own, just like my pain is not just my own.
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w/ Sebastian Castillo
I try my best not to think too hard about categorizing what is part of my work as an “artist” or “writer” and what’s a diversion.
Joseph Grantham
I try my best not to think too hard about categorizing what is part of my work as an “artist” or “writer” and what’s a diversion.
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w/ Amy Bobeda
That sense of the un-holdable world-horrors and calls to action alongside pictures of scarves that my friends knitted and soup that they made and thirst traps and flowers and trees and cats, the sort of simultaneity and unprocessability . . . vibrating in your pocket, definitely fed METABOLICS.
Jessica Johnson
That sense of the un-holdable world-horrors and calls to action alongside pictures of scarves that my friends knitted and soup that they made and thirst traps and flowers and trees and cats, the sort of simultaneity and unprocessability . . . vibrating in your pocket, definitely fed METABOLICS.
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by Joyelle McSweeney
Just as this ardent, well-honed collection coaxes Mansour’s “molecules of revolt” into jewel-bright, posthumous flares, so may surrealism’s many ambient, alert, electrifying molecules flare up to reverse the annihilating currents of our present moment.
“Yet Another Dagger Pulsing Under the Rain”: Why We Need Joyce Mansour—and Surrealism
Just as this ardent, well-honed collection coaxes Mansour’s “molecules of revolt” into jewel-bright, posthumous flares, so may surrealism’s many ambient, alert, electrifying molecules flare up to reverse the annihilating currents of our present moment.
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by Omar Zahzah
By imagining new worlds and countering Zionist mythologies that deny them their history, Palestinian poets challenge the colonial history into which they have been brutally implicated by the Israeli apartheid regime.
Giving Language to the Language of That Which Cannot Be Constructed
By imagining new worlds and countering Zionist mythologies that deny them their history, Palestinian poets challenge the colonial history into which they have been brutally implicated by the Israeli apartheid regime.
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by Gabriel Rogers
Perhaps, without realizing it, a part of me had begun to wish Pancake’s fame had never grown beyond the depths of the library where I found him, to wish his brutal brilliance was a secret known only within the state borders.
Lucky Over There: Meeting the Greek Translator of Breece D’J Pancake
Perhaps, without realizing it, a part of me had begun to wish Pancake’s fame had never grown beyond the depths of the library where I found him, to wish his brutal brilliance was a secret known only within the state borders.
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by Liam Bishop
But, really, how many of us in Europe are aware of our own country’s dark histories?
Oblique Memories: Montserrat Roig and Literature of Forgetting
But, really, how many of us in Europe are aware of our own country’s dark histories?
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by The Editors
Full Stop invites applications for two Full Stop Editorial Fellows. These three-month-long fellowships will invite early-career writers or editors to independently envision, commission, and edit an issue of the Full Stop Quarterly.
Call for Applications: 2023 Full Stop Editorial Fellows
Full Stop invites applications for two Full Stop Editorial Fellows. These three-month-long fellowships will invite early-career writers or editors to independently envision, commission, and edit an issue of the Full Stop Quarterly.
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by The Editors
Communities in . . . different parts of the world face connected forms of political repression, which are themselves buttressed by racial and religious chauvinism, the political apparatus of the nation-state, and neoliberal free trade agreements. . . . In these land-based struggles, cultural production has functioned as a unique political tool.
Full Stop Quarterly: Fall 2023
Communities in . . . different parts of the world face connected forms of political repression, which are themselves buttressed by racial and religious chauvinism, the political apparatus of the nation-state, and neoliberal free trade agreements. . . . In these land-based struggles, cultural production has functioned as a unique political tool.
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by The Editors
With readings by Semyon Khokhlov, Sadie Dupuis, and Anni Liu, and comedian Arthur Tarley, & musical performances by Philadelphia-based musician Spidr and Or Best Offer from Providence, RI.
Full Stop Fundraiser at Lot 49 Books
With readings by Semyon Khokhlov, Sadie Dupuis, and Anni Liu, and comedian Arthur Tarley, & musical performances by Philadelphia-based musician Spidr and Or Best Offer from Providence, RI.
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by The Editors
To meet our full match and make the most of this opportunity, we need your help in raising $1,500 by the end of the year.
Full Stop’s 2023 Whiting Matching Grant
To meet our full match and make the most of this opportunity, we need your help in raising $1,500 by the end of the year.