Kay Gabriel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kay Gabriel is an essayist and poet.[1][2] Gabriel and Andrea Abi-Karam co-edited an anthology of trans and gender non-conforming poetry, titled We Want It All: An Anthology of Radical Trans Poetics, published by Nightboat Books in 2020.[3] Her writing and poetry has appeared in The Brooklyn Rail, Social Text, The Recluse, and The Believer amongst others.[4] She lives and works in New York.

Work[]

Gabriel graduated from Princeton University with a PhD in classics.[5][6] Gabriel's scholarly work surveys the intersections of classics and modernist studies. She is concerned with historical materialism, utopia, and aesthetics and explores this through a series of case studies in the 20th-century interpretation and adaptation of Euripides.[7]

In 2017, Gabriel wrote and published a book titled: Elegy Department Spring / Candy Sonnets 1 through BOAAT Press.[8] She is the recipient of Poetry Project fellowship and the Lambda Literary fellowship.[9]

She is a co-editor of the anthology on trans poetics with writer Andrea Abi-Karam published in 2020 by Nightboat Books.[10][11] Poets featured in the book include Joshua Jennifer Espinoza, Sylvia Rivera, Bryn Kelly, and Leslie Feinberg.[12]

References[]

  1. ^ Gabriel, Kay. "The Limits of the Bit". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  2. ^ "Kay Gabriel". The Poetry Project. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  3. ^ "We Want It All: An Anthology of Radical Trans Poetics". Nightboat Books. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  4. ^ "kay gabriel". b l u s h. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  5. ^ "Kay Gabriel". Princeton Classics. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  6. ^ "We Want It All: An Anthology of Radical Trans Poetics (Paperback)". Women & Children First. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  7. ^ "Kay Gabriel *20 | Princeton Classics". classics.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  8. ^ "The Care and Feeding of Your Sex Change: Vegan Passover with Kay Gabriel". entropymag.org. 2019-04-18. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  9. ^ "Kay Gabriel". The Poetry Project. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  10. ^ "Call for Submissions: Radical Trans Poetics Anthology". Nightboat Books. 2019-04-22. Retrieved 2020-05-04.
  11. ^ Sanders, Wren. "This Trans Poetics Anthology Imagines a World Where "Everything Belongs to Everyone"". them. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
  12. ^ Sanders, Wren. "This Trans Poetics Anthology Imagines a World Where "Everything Belongs to Everyone"". them. Retrieved 2020-11-28.
Retrieved from ""