
“You are on the enemy list of The Black Tarantula.”
The 18th piece in the Polity of Literature series describes the range of tools Kathy Acker used to work freely outside the literary establishment.
The 18th piece in the Polity of Literature series describes the range of tools Kathy Acker used to work freely outside the literary establishment.
The 13th piece in the Polity of Literature describes the illustrator’s process in making a graphic novel about Hannah Arendt’s life and work.
The 12th piece in the Polity of Literature series is an excerpt from The Faces of Justice (1961), a description of trial court procedures observed with the writer’s fierce sense of justice.
It Was More than the Chat On the second week of protests calling for the resignation of former governor Ricardo Roselló, every Boricua on the island had eyes locked on
By documenting women of different ethnicities, ages, and occupations, this series documents a cross-section of women’s beauty, strength, and empowerment in the Cold Mountains of Southern Sichuan, China.
In February this year, Arbert Santana, my friend and collaborator, died in a hospital in New York City. I miss him. Deeply. The last time I saw Arbert alive he
Poetry that attempts to create moments of understanding, connection, and healing for Indigenous People.
On International Women’s Day, March 8th, 2018, the GSG intercepted and engaged passers-by with a small gesture. The subtitle of the first issue is a sort of paraphrase that led
[roundtable_menu] [contributor]Stephanie Bailey & Mark Woytiuk[excerpt]They ask questions that persist: How do we commemorate the victims of ongoing, systemic forms of misogynistic violence? How do we begin to work against
Through conversations, dinners, walks, and Ball performances, a city discusses how we live, work, share and survive different LGBT+ stories and realities.
A gay couple live with their grandmother, “the Lady of Sufferin’ street, the presiding princess of the palace, the countess of our modest estate, and the queen of her own two cats.”
A collection of essays, artistic contributions, and two inserted zines, Queer City, a reader was developed as part of an 18-month inquiry in São Paulo. Initiated by Lanchonete.org and ArtsEverywhere/Musagetes, the