Cathy Park Hong

Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning’s Exploration of Solidarity

Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning’s Exploration of Solidarity

Though published in 2020 before the advent of the pandemic and the racial unrest that marked the year, Cathy Park Hong’s collection of essays explores the complexities of Asian American identity in ways that speak to the conversations around racial identity and solidarity that continue into 2021.

Out with T.S. Eliot, and In with Cathy Park Hong: Poetry Criticism in the 21st Century

Out with T.S. Eliot, and In with Cathy Park Hong: Poetry Criticism in the 21st Century

The debate about whether Rupi Kaur’s poetry (and by extension, the whole genre dubbed “instapoetry”) is good or bad has apparently been revived. Whether that debate is actually useful in the terms it has set out for itself remains to be seen. Most often, it seems, when the poet in question is a young woman…

Imagining the Anthropocene: Cathy Park Hong’s Engine Empire

Imagining the Anthropocene: Cathy Park Hong’s Engine Empire

In the nineteenth century, Manifest Destiny cast pillage as a moral imperative. Its rallying cry re-ignited the American founding’s genocide and environmental destruction to fuel westward expansion. Cathy Park Hong’s sonorous triptych Engine Empire reshapes the Western’s tropes into a chilling interrogation of digitally facilitated detachment.

Just Suppose: Poetry for Fans of Speculative Fiction

Just Suppose: Poetry for Fans of Speculative Fiction

Robert Heinlein, the prolific author of Starship Troopers and other sci-fi works, coined the term “speculative fiction” in 1947. In the essay, Heinlein defines “speculative fiction” as “the story embodying the notion ‘Just suppose—’ or ‘What would happen if—’.” For Heinlein, this narrative hypothesis creates “a new framework for human action.”