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a mixed chick on a mixed-up world

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Season 3, Episode 24: Author Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan, Sarong Party Girls

June 24, 2016 by admin Leave a Comment

RECORDED 7/18/16: It was so great to speak with Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan about her new book Sarong Party Girls. You can listen to it here or download it on itunes.-Heidi Durrow

My interview w/ @cheryltan88 Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan abt her excellent book Sarong Party Girls.

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cheryl photoCheryl Lu-Lien Tan is a New York-based journalist and author of “Sarong Party Girls” (William Morrow, 2016) as well as “A Tiger In The Kitchen: A Memoir of Food & Family“ (Hyperion, 2011). She is the editor of the fiction anthology “Singapore Noir“ (Akashic Books, 2014).

She was a staff writer at the Wall Street Journal, In Style magazine and the Baltimore Sun. Her stories have also appeared in The New York Times, The Paris Review, The Washington Post, Bon Appetit, Food & Wine, National Geographic, Foreign Policy, Marie Claire, Newsweek, Bloomberg Businessweek, Chicago Tribune, The (Portland) Oregonian, The (Topeka) Capital-Journal and The (Singapore) Straits Times among other places.

Cheryl SPG_FINALCOVERShe has been an artist in residence at Yaddo, where she wrote “A Tiger in the Kitchen,” Hawthornden Castle, Le Moulin à Nef, the Djerassi Resident Artists Program, Headlands Center for the Arts, Ragdale Foundation, Ledig House and the Studios of Key West. In 2012, she was the recipient of a major arts creation grant from the National Arts Council of Singapore in support of her novel.

Born and raised in Singapore, she crossed the ocean at age 18 to go to Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill. Unsure of whether she would remain in the U.S. after college, she interned in places as disparate as possible. She hung out with Harley Davidson enthusiasts in Topeka, Kan., interviewed gypsies about their burial rituals in Portland, Ore., covered July 4 in Washington, D.C., and chronicled the life and times of the Boomerang Pleasure Club, a group of Italian-American men that were getting together to cook, play cards and gab about women for decades in their storefront “clubhouse” in Chicago.

An active member of the Asian American Journalists Association, she served on its national board for seven years, ending in 2010.

“Utterly irresistible. I fell in love with the fresh, exuberant voice and trenchant wit of Jazzy … In her debut novel, Tan is saying something profound and insightful about the place of women in our globalized, capitalized, interconnected world.” — Ruth Ozeki
 
“In Singapore this satirical novel of predatory beauties would be regarded as deeply subversive – for the rest of us, and anyone familiar with life in that little island city state, it is hilarious and original.” — Paul Theroux
 

“Scarlett O’Hara would have met her match in Jazeline Lim, the brazen, striving, yet ultimately vulnerable heroine of this bold debut novel. Tan paints a stark portrait, comic yet chilling, of a society in which a young woman who seeks a way out risks falling in too deep.” — Julia Glass

www.cheryllulientan.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cheryllulientan

Filed Under: Books, Episodes Tagged With: biracial, biracial artists, growing up biracial, heidi durrow, mixed chick, mixed experience, mixed race, mixed remixed festival, mixed roots, mixed roots festival, multiracial, multiracial artists

Season 3, Episode 23: Debut Novelist Phenom Natashia Deon

June 24, 2016 by admin Leave a Comment

RECORDED 7/11/16: Please don’t miss my talk with Natashia Deon whose debut novel, Grace, has announced her as a major new novelist to watch! We talked about her book, but also the need for stories and the relevance of the stories of her novel still in this traumatic and difficult time.  You can listen here or download it on itunes.-Heidi Durrow

.@heididurrow interviews the amazing @natashiadeon about her debut novel! #multiracial

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natashia deonNatashia Deón is the recipient of a PEN Center USA Emerging Voices fellowship and her debut novel, Grace, debuted June 2016 with Counterpoint Press.

An attorney, writer, law professor, and creator of the popular L.A.-based reading series Dirty Laundry Lit, Deón was recently named one of L.A.’s “Most Fascinating People” by L.A. Weekly.

natashia deon bookDeón has been awarded fellowships and residencies at Yale, Bread Loaf Writer’s Conference, Prague’s Creative Writing Program, Dickinson House in Belgium, and the Virginia Center for Creative Arts.

Her writing has appeared in American Short Fiction, The Rumpus, The Feminist Wire, Asian American Lit Review, Rattling Wall, B O D Y and other places.

She has an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of California, Riverside–Palm Desert, has two perfect children, and a lovely husband whom she met while living and working in Kent, England.

Filed Under: Books, Episodes Tagged With: biracial, growing up biracial, heidi durrow, mixed remixed, mixed remixed festival, multiracial, multiracial artists

Season 3, Episode 22: Award-winning Writer Dmae Roberts

June 24, 2016 by admin 1 Comment

RECORDED 6/30/16: I was so excited to talk with my friend and writer-filmmaker Dmae Roberts about her wonderful new book The Letting Go Trilogies Stories of a Mixed Race Family.  Listen to her interview here or download it from itunes!-Heidi Durrow

Listen to my interview with @dmaeroberts about her excellent book! #multiracial

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dmae LettingGo-CoverDmae Roberts has recently completed her memoir book The Letting Go Trilogies: Stories of a Mixed Race Family which traces four decades of what it means to be a mixed-race adult who sometimes called herself A Secret Asian Woman. With her personal essays written over a ten-year period, Dmae Roberts journeys through biracial identity, Taiwan, sci-fi, and the trials of her interracial Taiwanese and Oklahoman family amid love, loss and letting go of past regrets and pain.

Dmae RobertsDmae Roberts is a writer/producer who received two Peabody Awards for her documentary Mei Mei, a Daughter’s Song and the Crossing East series. She received the Dr. Suzanne Ahn Civil Rights and Social Justice award from the Asian American Journalists Association and is a USA Fellow. She’s been published in Oregon Humanities, The Sun, Where Are You From? (Thymos Group) and Mothering in East Asian Communities (Demeter Press). Her book is The Letting Go Trilogies: Stories of a Mixed-Race Family.

Filed Under: Books, Episodes Tagged With: biracial, biracial artists, growing up biracial, mixed race, mixed race artists, multiracial, multiracial artists

Season 3, Episode 16: Mixed-Race Korean DNA Project & the Nina Simone BioPic Controversy

March 6, 2016 by admin Leave a Comment

2013-12-26 12.24.05LIVE 3/7/2016 5PM EASTERN: 325kamraI’m excited to speak with the president of 325kamra.org, a new non-profit organization that seeks to provide DNA testing for Korean adoptees. Sarah Savidaki, a mixed-race Korean adoptee, is the organization’s president and will talk about the organization’s mission.

It’s a special double episode with a special visit from guest co-host Tiffany Jones originally of The Mulatto Diaries.  Jones and I talk about the controversy concerning the forthcoming Nina Simone biopic starring Zoe Saldana.-Heidi Durrow

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Season 3, Episode 15: Award-winning Debut Novelist Kaitlyn Greenidge

February 20, 2016 by admin Leave a Comment

Greenidge collage TEXTRECORDED 2/29/16: My talk with Kaitlyn Greenidge about her excellent debut novel, We Love You Charlie Freeman is really fascinating.  We talk about the genesis of the book, the elasticity of the black experience, and the need to use humor in our stories about race and racial and cultural connection and difference. Her book is getting rave reviews and rightly so.  Listen in here  or download the episode from itunes.-Heidi Durrow

Listen to my conversation with talented @kkgreenidge about her debut novel! #algonquinbooks

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Kaitlyn Greenidge received her MFA from Hunter College, where she studied with Nathan Englander and Peter Carey, and was Colson Whitehead’s writing assistant as part of the Hertog Research Fellowship. Greenidge was the recipient of the Bernard Cohen Short Story Prize. She was a Bread Loaf scholar, a Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Workspace artist-in-residence, and a Johnson State College visiting emerging writer. Her work has appeared in the Believer, the Feminist Wire, At Length, Fortnight Journal, Green Mountains Review, Afrobeat Journal, the Tottenville Review, and American Short Fiction. Originally from Boston, she now lives in Brooklyn.

we love you charlie freeman“Kaitlyn Greenidge’s masterful debut novel We Love You, Charlie Freeman is at heart an examination of race and language — an African-American family is hired by a New England research institute to raise and teach sign language to a chimpanzee, but the institute has a shockingly dark past. We Love You, Charlie Freeman skillfully tackles history and heavy subjects with both humor and thoughtfulness; this book proves Greenidge will be a literary force to be reckoned with.” —Buzzfeed.com

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Season 3, Episode 14: Filmmaker of Evoking the Mulatto Talks Multiracial Identity & Experience

February 20, 2016 by admin 1 Comment

evoking mulatto textRECORDED 2/22/16:  I was thrilled to speak with filmmaker Lindsay C. Harris about her compelling film series Evoking the Mulatto.  Listen in here or download the episode on itunes.-Heidi Durrow

Listen in to my conversation with filmmaker @lindscathar about @evokingmulatto series. #multiracial #mixedrace

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Interdisciplinary artist Lindsay C. Harris was born in Southern California in 1986 and raised in Santa Fe, NM.

Receiving her B.A. in Africana Studies & Art from Vassar College and M.A. in Arts Politics from NYU,

she is an arts educator, writer, critical thinker, cultural worker, comedian, designer, and performer.

Through fragmented modes of representation and voyeurism, bemusing through visual stimulation and often

comic bizarre, her artistic body of work seeks to complicate and fracture the rigidity of identity manifested in

racial and sexual classification as a means of controlling and otherizing marginalized bodies.

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Season 3, Episode 13: Multiracial Award-Winning Writer Matt de la Pena

February 17, 2016 by admin 1 Comment

mattdelapenaTEXTRECORDED 2/17/2016: I had the most excellent conversation with Matt de la Peña about growing up biracial, writing to explore the questions, and the need for diversity within diversity. You can listen to the episode here or download it from itunes. –Heidi Durrow

A great conversation about #multiracial #mixedrace stuff with @mattdelapena & @heididurrow

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Last-Stop-MedalsMatt de la Peña is the New York Times bestselling, Newbery Medal winning author of six young adult novels (including Mexican WhiteBoy, The Living and The Hunted) and two picture books (A Nations Hope and Last Stop on Market Street). Matt received his MFA in creative writing from San Diego State University and his BA from the University of the Pacific, where he attended school on a full athletic scholarship for basketball. de la Peña currently lives in Brooklyn, NY with his family. He teaches creative writing and visits high schools and colleges throughout the country.

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Season 3, Episode 9: Traveling Abroad While Mixed & Other Musings

January 11, 2016 by admin Leave a Comment

the mixed experience by heidi durrowRECORDED 1/11/16: In the first episode of the season, I took the opportunity to muse a little bit about my recent trip to a remote island and my search for a “tribe” that looks like me.  Also, I share a recent blog post about my thoughts on the state of Multiracial America.  Is this a multiracial or biracial moment or is it a multiracial or biracial movement?  I say there is no multiracial movement (at least not yet).  What do you say?  Listen here or download the episode from itunes.-Heidi Durrow

Traveling abroad while #mixedrace or #multiracial & trying to find my “tribe”.

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Filed Under: Episodes Tagged With: mixed, mixed chick, mixed experience, mixed festival, mixed race, mixed race artists, mixed remixed, mixed remixed festival, mixed roots, mixed roots festival, multiracial, multiracial artists

Season 3, Bonus Episode 1: The Mixed-Race Mixtape

December 3, 2015 by admin Leave a Comment

RECORDED 12/9/15: Okay, these guys are amazing.  I’m was so excited to talk with these exciting emerging artists from the Mixed-Race Mixtape who are mixing up the stories of the Mixed experience in a whole new way.  But the thing is: they were even more awesome than I imagined.  This is what they say in their own words in advance:

Through the eyes of Fig, a young mixed-race chicano man, we watch as he struggles with his identities, issues of class and casual and not-so-casual racism – all performed through Hip-Hop on the theatre stage. Mixed-Race Mixtape portrays the experiences that shaped one young person’s identity and through these interactions with police, teachers, friends and family, we are led to reflect on what has shaped our identities.

Fusing theatre and Hip-Hop, Mixed-Race Mixtape makes difficult topics relatable, stirring and vivid. It’s a performance experience accessible to all, and specifically designed for communities typically excluded from traditional theatre spaces. It’s the coming of age story we need to hear. 

But check out what they had to say on the fly on the show.  These are young artists who are making the change happen!  The watchword from today’s show: Liberation! Listen here or download the episode from itunes. DON’T MISS THIS!-Heidi Durrow

Listen to @heididurrow interview with @tweetmrmt about Mixed Race Mixtape incredibly show! #multiracial #mixedrace

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Jorrell SpeakerJorrell Watkins (Artistic Director) is an interdisciplinary artist of martial arts, poetry, dance, and theater. Most of his work is contextualized through an historical framework that serves to bridge the gaps between written history and collective memory. Watkins’ education and experience background includes but is not limited to: B.A. from Hampshire College, certified conflict resolution trainer, and educator at North Star Self-Directed Learning for Teens.

figAndrew J. Figueroa (Writer/Performer) better known by “Fig,” is an up and coming Hip-Hop artist, theatre maker and arts educator from Southern California. With a Mexican father and British mother, he is the first US-born member of the household and the younger of two. He is a recent graduate of Hampshire College, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Latino Studies, and Performance through Theatre and Hip-Hop. His art strives to challenge how society engages with traditional theatre spaces and to open dialogue around how we can re-imagine the stage to include historically marginalized communities through a critical Hip-Hop lens. His work aims to exist as an agent of educational and social change directed at youth (specifically youth of color) by tapping into the influence Hip-Hop has on US culture and young people.

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Season 3, Episode 10: Author Sunil Yapa, Connecting Multiracial Experience with Global Identity

November 11, 2015 by admin Leave a Comment

Sunil Yapa Mixed Race WriterYour Hear is a Muscle the Size of a Fist

RECORDED 1/18/16: You know how you meet someone and you think: this person’s doing some really important work.  That was my impression of Sunil Yapa when I met him almost 8 years ago.  So it was particularly exciting to read his book, Your Heart Is A Muscle the Size of a Fist, and see the incredible reception it’s already getting.  You are going to love this book.  And you’ll love hearing more about his journey as a writer and the inspiration for this great story.  You can listen here or download the episode from itunes! – Heidi Durrow

Listen to @heididurrow interview with debut novelist phenom @sunilyapa  #multiracial #mixedrace

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Sunil Yapa on Heidi Durrow podcast

Sunil Yapa by Beowulf Sheehan

Sunil Yapa holds a bachelor’s degree in economic geography from Penn State University and an MFA from Hunter College. The biracial son of a Sri Lankan father and mother from Montana, Yapa has lived around the world, including time in Greece, Guatemala, Chile, Argentina, China, and India, as well as London, Montreal, and New York City.

 

Filed Under: Books, Episodes Tagged With: biracial, biracial artists, mixed experience history month, mixed festival, mixed race, mixed race artists, mixed remixed, mixed remixed festival, multiracial artists

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Host Heidi Durrow

Host Heidi Durrow

Heidi Durrow is the New York Times best-selling writer of The Girl Who Fell From the Sky and the founder of the original mixed roots film and book festival and now the founder of Mixed Remixed Festival , an annual film, book and performance festival, which will be held next on June 10-11, 2016 at … [Read More]

Recent Posts

  • Season 5, Episode 3: Award-Winning Writer Amina Gautier November 14, 2017
  • Season 5, Episode 2: New York Times Bestselling Writer Julie Lythcott-Haims October 12, 2017
  • Season 4, Episode 19: Writer/Literary Critic Janet Savage July 3, 2017
  • Mixed Experience History Month 2017: Paula Gunn Allen, writer and scholar May 17, 2017
  • Mixed Experience History Month 2017: Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, Educator & Activist May 16, 2017

The Mixed Experience Minute Vlog

the mixed experience by heidi durrow

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In 2007, I instituted Mixed Experience History Month to celebrate historical stories of the Mixed … [Read More...]

Guest Host Jennifer Frappier

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I'm so excited that Jennifer Frappier will join The Mixed Experience as a guest host on future … [Read More...]

Podcast Episodes

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The Mixed Experience Podcast

You can find all episodes and information about guests of The Mixed Experience podcast here and also … [Read More...]

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