Ching-In Chen is a genderqueer Chinese American poet and multi-genre writer.[1]
Ching-In Chen | |
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Born | Binghamton ![]() |
Alma mater | |
Occupation | Poet ![]() |
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Awards | |
Website | https://www.chinginchen.com/ ![]() |
They graduated from Tufts University, University of California, Riverside, and the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. They are the author of recombinant,[2] The Heart's Traffic,[3] and to make black paper sing. Chen is also the co-editor of the anthologies The Revolution Starts at Home: Confronting Intimate Violence Within Activist Communities and Here Is a Pen: An Anthology of West Coast Kundiman Poets. They are a Callaloo, Kundiman, and Lambda Fellow.[4]
Chen has taught in Sam Houston State University's English department,[5] and currently teaches undergraduate courses in the Culture, Literature, and the Arts and Interdisciplinary Arts departments at the University of Washington Bothell campus. They presently serve as the staff advisor for Clamor, the Bothell campus's literary magazine, alongside Amaranth Borsuk.[6][7]
Chen's first book, The Heart's Traffic (2009), is a "novel-in-poems" that employs multiple poetic forms, including the sestina, villanelle, haibun, and pantoum. The book focuses on the experiences of Xiaomei, a young immigrant from China to the United States.[8]
Chen's second book, recombinant (2017), received the 2018 Lambda Literary Award for Transgender Poetry.[9]
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