There’s the facts, and then there’s the truth
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Having survived a dictatorship, exile, and constant threats to her life, the French-Moroccan journalist is not interested in anything less than liberty.
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Eileen Myles talks pitbulls and pronouns with Sampsonia Way.
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Min Jin Lee talks with Sampsonia Way about her family’s own immigration experience, her fascination with work, and the history of Korea and Japan.
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Poet Ladan Osman talks about her experience growing up Somali-American, writing across languages, and the responsibility she feels to tell the stories her younger self was looking for.
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Natalie Diaz talks with Sampsonia Way about her language revitalization work, poetry, how we talk about anxiety and what it might have to tell us.
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Mark Doty looks back on life and poetry during and after the AIDS epidemic, and talks about his book-length essay, “Still Life with Oyster and Lemon.”
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Dawn Lundy Martin is interested in the ways that language is a time traveller- how it lives in the past and present, and how it can be used to create a future to live within. She […]
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Nigerian writer Unoma Azuah discusses her writing process, spirituality, and her journey from Nigeria to the United States.
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Porochista Khakpour talks with Sampsonia Way Magazine about crafting her characters, her own identity, and her thoughts on the use of fabulism and absurdity as a means of political resistance.
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