
Meena Alexander: Quickly Changing River – Reading And Discussion Moderated By Sukhdev Sandhu
- Organizer: A/P/A Institute at NYU
- Venue: NYU Kimmel Center, Eisner & Lubin Auditorium, 4th Floor
- Address:
60 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10003 United States
With her strong voice and precise language, Meena Alexander has crafted this visceral, worldly collection of poems. The experience she brings to the reader is sensual in many senses of the word, as she invokes bright colors, sounds, smells, and feelings. Her use of vivid imagery from the natural world—birds, lilies, horses—up against that from the world of humans—oppression, slavery, and violence—ties her work to the earth even as she works a few mystical poetic transformations. In Alexander’s world, the songs of a bird can become the voice of a girl in a café and the red juice of mulberries can be as shocking as blood. When she focuses her attention on the cloth of a girl’s sari, the material of a woman’s life, or the blood in her veins, she speaks to the particular experience of women in the world. The women are vividly present—sometimes they are hidden or veiled, juxtaposed with open gardens in full bloom. It is difficult not to come away from Quickly Changing River without a new sense of the power and frailty of being alive.
Join author Meena Alexander for a reading of her poetry and a candid conversation with moderator Sukhdev Sandhu, Assistant Professor of A/P/A Studies and English at NYU.
Meena Alexander, Distinguished Professor of English at Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, is the author of several books of poetry, most recently Raw Silk and Illiterate Heart, winner of a 2002 PEN Open Book Award. She is the editor of Indian Love Poems. Her memoir Fault Lines was one of Publishers Weekly’s best books of 1993, and her novel Nampally Road was a 1991 Voice Literary Supplement Editor’s Choice.
RSVP by February 27, Wednesday
Co-sponsored by: Supported by the Indo-American Arts Council and the Asian American Writers’ Workshop