Asian American Voices in Poetry
Asian Americans have been contributing to US literature for over a century, but their role did not gain recognition in mainstream culture or academia until the 1970s. Since then, over 50 Asian American studies programs, centers, and institutes have been established on university campuses, and organizations such as Kundiman and the Asian American Writers’ Workshop, presses, and journals have helped to further cultivate Asian American poetry. As a result, Asian American writers may no longer feel compelled to write in particular traditional or protest modes or represent the external cultural labels pressed upon them. In her 2004 introduction to Asian American Poetry: The Next Generation, Victoria Chang writes, “new Asian American poets have captured the power of the past but have ventured into new territories and discovered, created, and revealed new voices and styles.”
The following poets in the US have emerged out of a broad range of Eastern and Western influences. Many are first- to fourth-generation Asian American poets whose heritages (part or whole) originate from South or East or West Asia. Some were born in the US, and others are expatriates or poets-in-exile. They all help to broaden our understanding of contemporary American poetry.
This collection is intended to introduce new readers to Asian American poets and to help those who are interested in learning more about these poets and their poetry. It is an ongoing project to make visible the vastness and variety of U.S. literary culture and to expand our notions of human experience in our time.
Please contact us if you wish to make suggestions for additions to this sampler, or if you are listed here and wish to be removed.
The editors would like to thank Kundiman, and our advisors Monica Youn, Raza Ali Hasan, and Ravi Shankar for their help in compiling this selection, and to those readers who write in to help us improve this feature. (Last updated March 2021.)
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Chen Li
Chen Li on Chinese language differences in poems from Mainland China and Taiwan
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Barbara Jane Reyes
Barbara Jane Reyes on Filipina voices and lives in literature.
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Barbara Jane Reyes
A survey of recent Asian Pacific American literary journals,
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Cathy Park Hong
Cathy Park Hong on the fallacy of poetic “voice” and the failures of language.
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Amy Lam
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Larissa Pham
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Tsering Wangmo Dhompa
Tsering Wangmo Dhompa addresses Tibetan identity and poetry in her “Writing About” series.
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Kathleen Rooney
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Alan Gilbert
Alan Gilbert interviews Vivek Narayanan, part I.
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Alan Gilbert
Alan Gilbert interviews Vivek Narayanan , part II.
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Major Jackson
Major Jackson on the Asian American Writers’ Workshop.
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Ruth Graham
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David Winter
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Lawrence-Minh Bùi Davis, Tarfia Faizullah & Timothy Yu
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Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center
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Jaswinder Bolina
Jaswinder Bolina on the issue of obligation to racially identify one’s poems, as a first-generation minority poet.
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Nick Ripatrazone
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Christopher Spaide
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From NewsHour Poetry Series
Li-Young Lee reads his poems on PBS NewsHour
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
Kazim Ali discusses Agha Shahid Ali's ghazal “Tonight”
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From NewsHour Poetry Series
Lawson Inada discusses the U.S.’s WWII Japanese internment camps
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From The Poetry Magazine Podcast
Jennifer Chang reads her poems on the Poetry magazine podcast.
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From Poetry Off the Shelf
Li-Young Lee on valentines and the difficulties of love and childhood.
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From Poem Talk
A PoemTalk discussion of Linh Dinh's “Eating Fried Chicken”.
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From The Poetry Magazine Podcast
Karen An-hwei Lee reads her poems on the Poetry magazine podcast.
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From The Poetry Magazine Podcast
Cathy Park Hong discusses her poems with the Poetry editors.
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From The Poetry Magazine Podcast
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From VS
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From VS
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From VS