They are abundant.” She is tired of women’s bodies having to bear the brunt of all reproductive issues. In an essay on female friendship, Gay instructs “Don’t flirt (too much), have sex, or engage in emotional affairs with your friends’ significant others. If you want to be with an asshole, get a fresh asshole of your very own. They have proven that not only does contemporary culture still need a tireless beat cop when it comes to thinking about women’s issues and how we talk about race and racial difference: but that our patrolwoman ought to be enormously funny. Her essays about film, politics, sports, and books for, the Rumpus and the Virginia Quarterly have poured out at an astonishing rate.
Over the past decade, Gay has proven just how much she contains. “I contain multitudes,” she says cheerfully, when demonstrating a bit of identity negative capability. A pop culture fiend with a feminist streak, a woman who listens to hardcore rap but still calls out Chris Brown for his misogyny, she is a walking set of contradictions and refuses to apologize for them. Roxane Gay is the best thing to come out of Nebraska since the 1971 Cornhuskers football team. at the Whitney Biennial / "Supposium 2014" at MoMAby Mónica de la TorreĬhristine and Margaret Wertheimby Marianne Shaneen Semiotext(e): 28 Pamphlets for the 2014 Whitney Biennialby Corina Coppīrenda Coultas's The Tattersby Ammiel AlcalayĬritical Practices, INC. Philip Glahn's Bertolt Brechtby Richard Foreman The George Kuchar Reader, Edited by Andrew Lampertby Kalup Linzy.Richard Barnett's The Sick Rose: Disease and the Art of Medical Illustrationby Andrew Bourne Paul Chan's Selected Writings, 2000–2014 edited by George Baker and Eric Banksby Alan Gilbert Zero (an excerpt)by Azareen Van der Vliet Oloomi Soft/Not-soft Doppelgänger (12 Meditations)by Eleni Sikelianos