Home Places: Stories of Knowing and Finding Home (2024)
Harward Center for Community Partnerships, Bates College
5 Sessions: Thursdays, September 12 - October 10 from 5:30 to 7:00 PM.
Home Places welcomes BIPOC community members to reflect on stories, words, and moments from their lives as we build connections over a meal.
Lead by Ian-Khara Ellasante, this Community Word creative writing workshop series is FREE. No previous writing experiences necessary. Registration is preferred but not required and will open in mid-July. For more information, email Taryn Bowe.
Ian-Khara Ellasante (they/them) is a Black, queer, gender-infinite parent, poet, and cultural studies scholar. Ian-Khara’s poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in We Want It All: An Anthology of Radical Trans Poetics, Pipe Wrench, The Feminist Wire, Nat. Brut, Hinchas de Poesía, The Volta, Writing the Land: Maine, From Root to Seed: Black, Brown, and Indigenous Writers Write the Northeast, and RHINO. Ian-Khara is a Cave Canem fellow and recipient of the New Millennium Award for Poetry. Their critical writing, including the essay “Dear Trans Studies, Can You Do Love?,” has appeared in Transgender Studies Quarterly, Ethnic and Racial Studies, and Families in Society. Proudly hailing from Memphis, Ian-Khara has also loved living and writing in Tucson, Brooklyn, and now southern Maine, where they teach Gender and Sexuality Studies and Africana at Bates College.
These writing gatherings are co-hosted by Maine MILL, Maine Writers & Publishers Alliance, and The Third Place and our made possible by a grant from the Onion Foundation.
The Community Word Program reaches back into the long history of the MWPA to offer writing workshops with a social mission. We are a fragmented society, with fewer and fewer opportunities to see outside our bubbles of class, race, and geography. Telling and hearing each other’s stories is one way to see across that gulf. There are particular segments of our society, including the homeless, the working poor, immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers, recovering addicts, the elderly, and veterans, who we often hear about, but much less often do we hear from them directly.
Community Word workshops empower participants to learn how to tell their stories effectively, building confidence and literacy skills, while also bringing those stories into the public sphere, building more empathy in our community through the airing of such stories. Each workshop is a partnership between MWPA and a local community organization.