Interviews – Page 34 – Michigan Quarterly Review

Interviews

Limitless Research: An Interview with Stephanie Troyak

“Dance is all about expressing with the body, but acting is narrowed down to the smallest facial movements, expressions, and body language. It’s helped me become more detailed and specific in my language as a dancer.”

Limitless Research: An Interview with Stephanie Troyak Read More »

“Dance is all about expressing with the body, but acting is narrowed down to the smallest facial movements, expressions, and body language. It’s helped me become more detailed and specific in my language as a dancer.”

To Describe Our World: An Interview with Kevin O’Rourke

“Unless one practices medicine or works with medical literature, one is unlikely to encounter the enormous mass of words used to describe the things that go wrong with us. But the words are out there, multisyllabic and waiting.”

To Describe Our World: An Interview with Kevin O’Rourke Read More »

“Unless one practices medicine or works with medical literature, one is unlikely to encounter the enormous mass of words used to describe the things that go wrong with us. But the words are out there, multisyllabic and waiting.”

Somewhere Unanticipated: An Interview with Nguan

“Several friends and journalists have noted the absence of text in Singapore. I have the most immense respect for the authority of words; that’s why I’ve not allowed any into the book.”

Somewhere Unanticipated: An Interview with Nguan Read More »

“Several friends and journalists have noted the absence of text in Singapore. I have the most immense respect for the authority of words; that’s why I’ve not allowed any into the book.”

On “Psalms for the Wreckage”: An Interview with Joshua Young

“You don’t need an MFA to be a good writer, but you need readers who understand what you are trying to do, and won’t let you get away with not doing that.”

On “Psalms for the Wreckage”: An Interview with Joshua Young Read More »

“You don’t need an MFA to be a good writer, but you need readers who understand what you are trying to do, and won’t let you get away with not doing that.”

“A Woman is a Woman Until She is a Mother”: An Interview with Anna Prushinskaya

“In particular with these essays, I don’t think they can be finished in the sense that they represent an imprint, a moment of motherhood in my life. It’s hard for me not to want to rewrite aspects of them as my thinking or experience changes.”

“A Woman is a Woman Until She is a Mother”: An Interview with Anna Prushinskaya Read More »

“In particular with these essays, I don’t think they can be finished in the sense that they represent an imprint, a moment of motherhood in my life. It’s hard for me not to want to rewrite aspects of them as my thinking or experience changes.”

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