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Poetry and Parenthood: How Amy Bornman Mines Domestic Practice for Creative Power

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Manage episode 422081490 series 3345051
Content provided by Kaitlin Solimine. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Kaitlin Solimine or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

We’re so excited to introduce listeners today to Amy Bornman: a poet, textile artist, and parent living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, as well as the author of two books of poetry, There is a Future (Paraclete Press Poetry, 2020), Broken Waters (forthcoming), and co-author of How to Sew Clothes (Abrams Books, 2023). Amy has literally made creative pieces out of the experiences of the births of her two children, and she's even birthed the small press Imaginary Lake, which supports her creative production.

Amy's work focuses on themes of domesticity, caregiving, confession, and spirituality. In this conversation, we deeply appreciated Amy's perspective on art making and the domestic space, and how art making can be a radical act, especially when it sits outside the capitalist context.

In today’s conversation, Kaitlin and Amy discuss:

  1. The importance of sharing diverse birth stories, including those that are not safe, supported, or desired, to provide a full range of human experience
  2. Art making in the domestic space, finding success with small press and zine publishing, and writing without traditional publishing barriers
  3. Amy’s two birth experiences, and how the the experience of birthing her first child helped her step into power as a mother with her second

More of Amy’s work:


Referenced in the Podcast:


Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.

For regular updates:

Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com

Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcast

Subscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com

  continue reading

40 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 422081490 series 3345051
Content provided by Kaitlin Solimine. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Kaitlin Solimine or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

We’re so excited to introduce listeners today to Amy Bornman: a poet, textile artist, and parent living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, as well as the author of two books of poetry, There is a Future (Paraclete Press Poetry, 2020), Broken Waters (forthcoming), and co-author of How to Sew Clothes (Abrams Books, 2023). Amy has literally made creative pieces out of the experiences of the births of her two children, and she's even birthed the small press Imaginary Lake, which supports her creative production.

Amy's work focuses on themes of domesticity, caregiving, confession, and spirituality. In this conversation, we deeply appreciated Amy's perspective on art making and the domestic space, and how art making can be a radical act, especially when it sits outside the capitalist context.

In today’s conversation, Kaitlin and Amy discuss:

  1. The importance of sharing diverse birth stories, including those that are not safe, supported, or desired, to provide a full range of human experience
  2. Art making in the domestic space, finding success with small press and zine publishing, and writing without traditional publishing barriers
  3. Amy’s two birth experiences, and how the the experience of birthing her first child helped her step into power as a mother with her second

More of Amy’s work:


Referenced in the Podcast:


Please subscribe wherever you get your podcasts and give us a rating. This will help us reach more listeners like you who are navigating the joys and pitfalls of artistic and parenting identities.

For regular updates:

Visit our website: postpartumproduction.com

Follow us on Instagram: @postpartumproductionpodcast

Subscribe to our podcast newsletter on Substack: https://postpartumproduction.substack.com

  continue reading

40 episodes

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