“How to Survive as a Writer Under American Capitalism” Reading & Talk by Rita Banerjee – University of North Dakota * October 7, 7pm CT on Zoom

Dr. Rita Banerjee will be reading from her personal essay “American Caste” and presenting a short lecture on “How to Survive as a Writer under American Capitalism” for the University of North Dakota Virtual Speakers Series in Writing, Editing, & Publishing on Tuesday, October 7 at 7 pm CT via Zoom. Audience members can join the Zoom webinar by scanning the QR Code above. And here’s more information about the talk:

How to Survive as a Writer under American Capitalism

In the 21st Century, creative writers in the United States are facing unprecedented challenges to their discipline, craft, and survival. In 2025 alone, writers have witnessed large cuts in government funding for universities and humanities departments, the suspension of the NEA Fellowship for Creative Writers, and a number of class-action lawsuits against Artificial Intelligence companies, such as Bartz vs. Anthropic, in which A.I. companies are accused of illegally downloading 7.5 million literary and scholarly books and 81 million research papers to train their Large Language Model systems.[1] In this era of late capitalism, how can writers find viable ways to maintain and grow in their craft, seek the education in the humanities they desire, and create sustainable careers and communities in creative writing? As a multi-genre writer who is deeply inspired by world literature and transnationalism, Dr. Rita Banerjee will discuss her journey as a writer and literary citizen, and will share resources on how creative writers can create sustainable, nurturing, and viable careers, writing practices, and literary communities despite the pressures of American capitalism.

About the Author:

Rita Banerjee is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Director of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. She received her doctorate in Comparative Literature from Harvard University and her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Washington. She is editor of the forthcoming anthology Disobedient Futures (University Press of Kentucky) in which writers imagine what the future cultures of the United States and the world could look like if folks disobeyed gender, tribal, and class paradigms, and explored disobedient forms of environmentalism and borders. She is also the author of CREDO: An Anthology of Manifestos and Sourcebook for Creative Writing, the poetry collections Echo in Four Beats and Cracklers at Night, the novella โ€œA Night with Kaliโ€ in Approaching Footsteps, and is co-writer of Burning Down the Louvre, a forthcoming documentary film about race, tribalism, and intimacy in the United States and in France. Her work appears in Sign & Breath: Voice and the Literary Tradition, Academy of American Poets, Poets & Writers, PANK, Nat. Brut., Hunger Mountain, Tupelo Quarterly, Isele, Vermont Public Radio, and elsewhere. She serves as Senior Editor of the South Asian Avant-Garde and Executive Creative Director of the Cambridge Writersโ€™ Workshop, which she co-founded at Harvard in 2008. She received a Vermont Arts Council Creation Grant for her new memoir and manifesto on female cool, and one of the bookโ€™s opening chapters โ€œBirth of Cool,โ€ was a Notable Essay in the 2020 Best American Essays, and another chapter, โ€œThe Female Gaze,โ€ was a Notable Essay in the 2023 Best American Essays.


[1] Reisner, Alex. โ€œThe Unbelievable Scale of AIโ€™s Pirated Book Problem.โ€ The Atlantic. Online. March 20, 2025.

Sign & Breath: Voice and the Literary Tradition Anthology Launch feat. Rita Banerjee – September 18, 6:30 pm EDT on Zoom

On September 18, 6:30 pm EDT, Shanta Lee and Philip Brady, the editors of Sign & Breath: Voice and the Literary Tradition, will be celebrating the launch of their new anthology with a reading featuring their Sign & Breath Authors. Featured authors will include Tim Seibles, Rita Banerjee, Diana Whitney, Ru Freeman, Diane Raptosh, Philip Metres, Haleh Gafori, Claire Bateman, Carolyn Finney, and Bruce Smith. Please register on Zoom to attend the reading at 6:30 pm EDT.

Rita Banerjee will be reading from her flash essay “The Spirit Door” during the Sign & Breath Reading Launch.

Sign & Breath: Voice and the Literary Tradition is a new critical anthology that takes a different approach to exploring these questions:ย What is poetry? What defines voice?

Featuring a range of contemporary artists, many of whom work across different mediums and genres, Sign & Breath introduces the reader to one page that sings in any genre โ€“ prose, fiction, poetry, spoken word, hybrid forms, and song โ€“ across diverse traditions. Rather than define poetry as a genre with conventions, traditions, codes, and modalities, this book features poetry as a faculty that thrums in all written and spoken art. Readers are introduced to a text followed by a discussion with the author about creating the piece, ties to creative lineage, and the definition of voice through their practice. This anthology contributes to the dialogue among genres which will reframe understanding of poetry as an aesthetic experience of language. With one page that sings in any genre, Sign & Breath presents a new, inclusive perspective on poetry while two questions remain: Do we have a clearer understanding of what defines poetry? Do we have a clearer understanding of voice?

Sign & Breath: Voice and the Literary Traditionย debuted on August 26, 2025. You canย orderย Sign & Breathย hereย and read Rita Banerjeeโ€™s personal flash essay โ€œThe Spirit Doorโ€ and interview, which are featured in the anthology.

What the Universe Is Reading feat. Rita Banerjee & Amanda Shaw – February 11, 2025 * 7:30 pm EST on Zoom

Poet Michael Mercurio hosts and curates “What the Universe Is,” a poetry reading series featuring poets and writers Rita Banerjee and Amanda Shaw reading at 7:30 pm EST on Tuesday, February 11, 2025. Register for the reading on Zoom and join the reading live at: bit.ly/WTUIFeb2025! And here’s more information about the reading & writers below:

Make some time for poetry during this shortest of months. Come hear two exceptional poets read for you on Zoom, so you donโ€™t have to leave the house in these cold & dark days. Let these poets bring you light & warmth! ย 

Rita Banerjee is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Director of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. She is author of Disobedient Futures, CREDO: An Anthology of Manifestos and Sourcebook for Creative Writing, Echo in Four Beats, โ€œA Night with Kaliโ€ in Approaching Footsteps, and Cracklers at Night, and co-writer of the documentary Burning Down the Louvre. Her work appears in Academy of American Poets, Poets & Writers, PANK, Nat. Brut., Hunger Mountain, Tupelo Quarterly, Isele, Vermont Public Radio, and elsewhere. She serves as Senior Editor of the South Asian Avant-Garde and Executive Creative Director of the Cambridge Writersโ€™ Workshop. She received a Vermont Arts Council Creation Grant for her new memoir and manifesto on female cool, and one of the bookโ€™s opening chapters โ€œBirth of Cool,โ€ was a Notable Essay in the 2020 Best American Essays, and another chapter, โ€œThe Female Gaze,โ€ was a Notable Essay in the 2023 Best American Essays

Amanda Shaw is the author of It Will Have Been So Beautiful (Lily Poetry Review Books, 2024). Based in Washington, DC, she is a teacher and editor at the World Bank and other international organizations. Her poems have appeared in LEON Literary Review, Spoon River Poetry Review, The Mid-Atlantic Review, and Lily Poetry Review, which she recently joined as the reviews editor. Over the last 25 years, she has taught students of all ages and backgrounds in New York, Boston, Detroit, and Rome, Italy. 

Itโ€™s very easy to register at bit.ly/WTUIFeb2025 โ€” make sure you donโ€™t miss out!

January 2025 Faculty Lectures from the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College Now Available

Theย MFA Program for Writersย recently celebrated its annual winter residency this past January. The residency featured inspiring lectures and classes from both faculty and graduating students. And writers and readers can access the wonderful craft discussions and lectures from the MFA Program for Writers facultyย online here. All MFA Store proceeds directly support graduate student scholarships in the MFA Program for Writers.

Rita Banerjeeโ€™s Opening Lecture,ย “The Poetry and Power of Witness” asks, “How do we as writers process the various kinds of social trauma that inform and affect our daily lives?” In Against Forgetting, Carolyn Forchรฉ argues against an easy descent into forgetfulness or a culture of oblivion as espoused a constant carousel of rotating news headlines. She instead introduces the notion of โ€œpoem as trace, poem as evidenceโ€ and how the work of a writer can serve as a witness to and record of history. And in her introduction to Playing in the dark, Toni Morrison writes that, โ€œWriting and reading mean being aware of the writerโ€™s notions of risk and safety, the serene achievement of, or sweaty fight for, meaning and response-ability.โ€ Some authors, studied in this talk, who wrestle with both their response and responsibility as witness to their particular social and historical moment, include Carolyn Forchรฉ, Solmaz Sharif, Fatimah Ashgar, Paul Celan, George Abraham, Noor Hindi, Jo Ann Beard, Yoko Tawada, Julio Cortรกzar, Agyeya, James Baldwin, Carvell Wallace, and Carl Phillips.

The Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers store features a rich archive of faculty lectures and craft discussions from January 1992 โ€“ January 2025, and can be accessed here: https://www.wwcmfa.org/store/

South Asian Avant-Garde’s 2024 in Reading feat. Rita Banerjee

In describing the complex and thought-provoking readings of the SAAG Masthead in 2024, Associate Editor of the South Asian Avant-Garde Iman Iftikhar writes, “Reading in 2024 often felt like fumbling for grounding amidst relentless upheaval. At times, it offered escape and solace. At others, it demanded grappling, interrogation, and a necessary confrontation. Whether through poetry, history, fiction, or essays, our reading this year insisted on engagement: on seeing, feeling, and remembering to live, even when it felt unbearable.

“These reflections do not aim to present a neat list of 2024โ€™s ‘best; books or ‘essential reads.’ Instead, they are fragments of what stayed with us: works that lingered and called us back. Our favorites include a novel set in Baltimore tracing the lives of the Palestinian diaspora, texts that provide much needed clarity on revolutionary politics, a quiet yet searing study of sound and space, some comfort reads, and much more. These books held mirrors to the year and world we lived through, compelling us to look even closer when we could not look away. Here, in the voices of those who read and felt with these works, we share not only our most loved reads of the year but the struggles they opened up for us, allowing us to see anew.”

And of her selected readings in 2024, SAAG Editor Rita Banerjee writes:

“This year, every book I read felt like a knock-out including: Animal by Dorothea Lasky, Yellowface by R.F. Kuang, Letters to a Writer of Color edited by Deepa Anappara and Taymour Soomro, Fling Diction by Frances Canon, Riambel by Priya Hein, Dumb Luck and Other Poems by Christine Kitano, Letter to the Father by Franz Kafka, Another Word for Love by Carvell Wallace, Cloud Missives by Kenzie Allen, A Fish Growing Lungs by Alysia Li Ying Sawchyn, and The Psychology of Supremacy by Dwight Turner, among many others. Each book I read challenged and changed my approach to creative writing craft, human psychology, how we process social trauma, and what we can learn from community, as well as demanding systemic change. 

One poetry collection that showed me how form could explode on the page, and how polyvocality and the acknowledgement of our ancestors could be conveyed, was JJJJJerome Ellisโ€™s Aster of Ceremonies. The collection plays with the idea of โ€œMaster of Ceremoniesโ€ as someone who both entertains and has authority over the stage. With his stutter, Ellis has difficulty pronouncing ‘master’ (which then becomes ‘aster’ in his work). Throughout the collection, Ellis interrogates the notion of master, both as the figurehead who controls the lives of others, often under authoritarian or tyrannical rule, and as a symbol of accomplishment and the mastery of craft.”

Check out the South Asian Avant-Garde‘s 2024 in Reading here.

Friends of Writers Fall Fรชte feat. Sarah Audsley, Rita Banerjee, Megan Pinto, Carter Sickels, and Connie Voisine – October 26, 2024 * 7 pm EDT

Join Friends of Writers onย October 26th at 7:00 PM ETย forย FOW Fall Fรชte, a celebration and fundraiser honoring the work of Friends of Writers in Hillsborough, North Carolina presented by FOW and House Party Reading Series. The evening will feature readings by alumni and faculty from the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College including Sarah Audsley, Rita Banerjee, Megan Pinto, Carter Sickels, and Connie Voisine.ย 

The event is free and open to the public. Limited edition broadsides made by Trish Marshall will be available for sale. Audio recording will be available after the event to registrants. RSVP required.

Please Register & RSVP Here:
https://friendsofwriters.org/2024-fall-fete/

Sarah Audsley is the author of Landlock X (Texas Review Press). A Korean American adoptee, a graduate of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College, and a member of The Starlings Collective, Audsley lives and works in northern Vermont. She is the Writing Program Director at Vermont Studio Center.

Rita Banerjee is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Director of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. She is the author of the poetry collections Echo in Four Beats, which was named one of Book Riotโ€™s โ€œMust-Read Poetic Voices of Split This Rock 2018,โ€ and Cracklers at Night. She is also editor of CREDO: An Anthology of Manifestos and Sourcebook for Creative Writing, and author of the novella โ€œA Night with Kaliโ€ in Approaching Footsteps. She received her doctorate in Comparative Literature from Harvard University and her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Washington, and her work appears in Academy of American Poets, Poets & Writers, PANK, Nat. Brut., Hunger Mountain, Tupelo Quarterly, Isele Magazine, Los Angeles Review of Books, VIDA, Vermont Public Radio, and elsewhere. She serves as Editor-at-Large of the South Asian Avant-Garde and Executive Creative Director of the Cambridge Writersโ€™ Workshop, and she is the co-writer and co-director of Burning Down the Louvre, a forthcoming documentary film about race, intimacy, and tribalism in the United States and in France. She received a 2021-2022 Creation Grant from the Vermont Arts Council for her new memoir and manifesto on female cool, and one of the opening chapters of this new memoir, โ€œBirth of Coolโ€ was a Notable Essay in the 2020 Best American Essays, and another chapter from her new memoir, โ€œThe Female Gaze,โ€ was a Notable Essay in the 2023 Best American Essays.

Megan Pintoโ€™s debut collection, Saints of Little Faith, is forthcoming with Four Way Books in September 2024. The winner of the 2023 Halley Prize from the Massachusetts Quarterly Review, Meganโ€™s poems can be found or are forthcoming in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Guernica, Ploughshares, Lit Hub, and elsewhere. Megan has received scholarships and fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writersโ€™ Conference, the Marthaโ€™s Vineyard Institute of Creative Writing, the Port Townsend Writersโ€™ Conference, Storyknife, The Peace Studio and an Amy Award from Poets & Writers. She lives in Brooklyn and holds an MFA in Poetry from Warren Wilson. http://www.meganpinto.com

Carter Sickels is the author of the novel The Prettiest Star (Hub City, 2020), winner of the Ohioana Book Award in Fiction, the Southern Book Prize, and the Weatherford Award, and selected as a Kirkus Best Book of 2020 and a Best LGBT Book by O Magazine. His debut novel The Evening Hour (Bloomsbury, 2012) was a Lambda Award and Triangle Publishing Award finalist, and adapted into a feature film that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2020. His writing has appeared in publications including The Kenyon Review, The Atlantic, Oxford American, Poets & Writers, BuzzFeed, and Guernica. Carter has received fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writersโ€™ Conference, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and MacDowell. He is an assistant professor of English and Creative Writing at North Carolina State University. You can find more information at http://www.cartersickels.com.

Connie Voisine is the author of the recent book of poems, The Bower, begun on a Fulbright Fellowship to Northern Ireland. A previous book, Rare High Meadow of Which I Might Dream, was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award. Her first book, Cathedral of the North, won the Associated Writing Programโ€™s Award in Poetry. She has poems published in The New Yorker, Ploughshares, Poetry Magazine, Black Warrior Review, The Threepenny Review, and elsewhere. Educated at Yale University, University of California at Irvine, and University of Utah, Voisine directs the creative writing program at New Mexico State University and teaches in Warren Wilson Collegeโ€™s MFA for Writers. She was a 2021-2022 Guggenheim Fellow.

Bryant Park Reading Room feat. Rita Banerjee, Kate Gale, Erika Meitner, and Jason Schneiderman – August 13, 2024 * 6 pm EDT

On August 13, the Bryant Park Reading Room (curated by Jason Schneiderman) will feature poets Rita Banerjee, Kate Gale, Erika Meitner, and Jason Schneiderman for a reading from 6:00-7:00 pm EDT.

If you are available in NYC, please stop by, and learn more about the August 13 Bryant Park Reading Room reading here. Books by authors will be available for purchase via Kinokuniya.

Featured Authors:

Rita Banerjee is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Director of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. She is author of Disobedient Futures, CREDO: An Anthology of Manifestos and Sourcebook for Creative Writing, Echo in Four Beats, the novella โ€œA Night with Kaliโ€ in Approaching Footsteps, and Cracklers at Night. She received her doctorate in Comparative Literature from Harvard and her MFA from the University of Washington. Her work appears in Hunger Mountain, Isele, Nat. Brut., Poets & Writers, Academy of American Poets, Los Angeles Review of Books, Vermont Public Radio, and elsewhere. She received a VAC Creation Grant for her new memoir and manifesto on female cool, and one of the opening chapters of this memoir, โ€œBirth of Coolโ€ was a Notable Essay in the 2020 Best American Essays, and another chapter, โ€œThe Female Gaze,โ€ was a Notable Essay in the 2023 Best American Essays.

Dr. Kate Gale is co-founder and publisher of Red Hen Press. She is the author of Under a Neon Sun from Three Rooms Press and The Loneliest Girl from the University of New Mexico Press and of seven books of poetry including The Goldilocks Zone and six librettos including Rio de Sangre, a libretto for an opera with composer Don Davis, which had its world premiere at the Florentine Opera in Milwaukee.  Her opera on Esther was written for the singer Hila Plitmann and is in process with the composer Mark Abel. 

Erika Meitner is the author of six books of poems, including Useful Junk (BOA Editions, 2022), and Holy Moly Carry Me (BOA Editions, 2018)–winner of the 2018 National Jewish Book Award and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in poetry. Her poems have been published most recently in Electric Literature, Oxford American, The New Yorker, Orion, The New Republic, Virginia Quarterly Review, and The Rumpus. Meitner is currently a professor of English and MFA program director at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Jason Schneiderman is the author of five poetry collections, most recently Hold Me Tight (Red Hen, 2020), and including the forthcoming Self Portrait of Icarus as a Country on Fire (Red Hen, 2024). He edited the anthology Queer: A Reader for Writers (Oxford UP 2016). His poems and essays have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. His awards include the Emily Dickinson Award, the Shestack Award and a Fulbright Fellowship. He is longtime co-host of the podcast Painted Bride Quarterly Slush Pile and a guest host for The Slowdown. He is Professor of English at the Borough of Manhattan Community College and teaches in the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College.

Rita Banerjee’s poem “Sleep” featured in the “Bijou” Opening Reception at the Salem Arts Festival – June 7, 2024 – July 31, 2024

Rita Banerjee’s poem “Sleep” is featured in “Bijou” Opening Reception at the 2024 Salem Arts Festival from June 7, 2024 – July 31, 2024. The “Bijou” World Poetry Collection is curated by poet Diana Norma Szokolyai and the Chagall Performing Arts Collaborative. You can visit the”Bijou” exhibit at the ChagallPAC / Cambridge Writers’ Workshop Studio at Artist’s Row, 24 New Derby Street, Salem, MA 01970 USA this weekend! More info follows below:

Join us on June 7, 2024 from 7-9 pm ESTfor our Opening Reception for “Bijou,” with live music and mingling.

ChagallPAC is delighted to announce a group exhibition titled “Bijou,” featuring the visual works of Ray Gilbert, Rachel Redux, Zenovia, Osmar K de Leon, Salem Fairy Forest, Diana Norma Sozokolyai, and Holy Crow. This exhibition will run from June 7 – July 31, 2024. Our opening Reception on June 7th will feature some of our artists in attendance, and live music by Victor Pachas.

BIJOU is desirable, sought-after, elegant. A jewel, a trinket, a treasure. Shaped by fingers, ornamental, delicate, prized workmanship. From haunting photos, dreamlike paintings, and bejeweled shrines, the selected works are modern treasure. Rare, handmade, and elegant.

Poets in Exhibition:
Anonymous
Rita Banerjee
Shari Caplan
Wang Chien
Grace Harrington Murdoch
Pete Murdoch
Nancy Pantano
Corrine Previte
J.D. Scrimgeour
Diana Norma Szokolyai
Jezmina von Thiele
Sophia Vassallo
Dan Rice
Jamie Spallino
Maria Silvia Rodrigo Leaman

#RitaBanerjee #poetry #EchoinFourBeats #ChagallPac #cambridgewritersworkshop #DianaNormaSzokolyai

Tongass Mist Writing Retreat featuring Visiting Writer Rita Banerjee in Sitka, Alaska (April 13-16, 2023)

The Tongass Mist Writing Retreat featuring Visiting Writer Rita Banerjee will take place at the Tongass Fine Arts Campus in Sitka, Alaska from April 12-16, 2023. Applications are now open through March 19, 2023 at tongassmist.com.

Tongass Mist Writing is owned and operated by Ruth Underhill @ruth_elizabeth_underhill, a local Sitkan with a dream to see more writers experience and cherish the mists of the Tongass National Forest with the knock of raven call and sound of rocks rolling up the shores of this beautiful Tlingit Aรกni land where she lives as a very lucky guest. Ruth shapes retreats and writing resources to allow #artists to carry its wild and beauty into their diverse and empowered writing. The retreat includes lodging on an oceanfront campus, daily meals, wilderness excursions, six literary salons, fireside readings, a wildlife cruise, and sauna. Tongass Mist welcomes its second visiting writer to Sitka in April 2023. Rita Banerjee will join the Sitka Fine Arts Campus April 12-16th for a four day retreat featuring wilderness excursions, generative writing salons, readings by a fire, literary craft talks and the incomparable experience of creating, enjoying a welcoming art community in the heart of the Tongass National Forest. Rita comes to visit us with incredible experience writing, film making, teaching, publishing and directing writing programs across the country. To apply, submit an application on the Tongass Mist Writing Retreat website by March 19, 2023 at 3 pm Alaska Standard Time.

Rita Banerjee judges the 2019 Vermont Poetry Out Loud State Championship at Vermont’s PBS Studios

PrintRita Banerjee will serve as a judge for the 2019 Vermont Poetry Out Loud State Championship.ย  ย The Poetry Out Loud Championship will take place on Monday, March 18 from 5-7 pm EST at Vermont’s PBS Studios and will be broadcast on PBS and live-streamed online here: https://www.facebook.com/VermontPoetryOutLoud/

More than 5,000 high school students have participated in Poetry Out Loud in Vermont this year.ย  During the March 18 Poetry Out Loud Championship, judges will review the performances of the 10 finalists, and choose three top-scoring student poets. Two of those students will receive cash prizes and poetry books for their school library. One of those students will move forward to a national competition in Washington, DC.

Congratulations to State Champion Vera Escaja-Heiss & Runner-Up Sam Bulpin!!!