![]() He is the editor of The History of Irish Literature and the Environment (New York: Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2021). Sen is co-editor of Postcolonial Studies and the Challenges for the New Millennium (Routledge, 2016), and a co-editor of Race in Irish Literature and Culture (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2022). His monograph, entitled Unnatural Disasters: Literature, Climate Change and Sovereignty, will be published by Syracuse University Press in 2021. His research focuses on questions of sovereignty, sustainability, migration, and race as they emerge in climate change discourse. ![]() Malcolm Sen teaches in the Department of English at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Juliana Spahr's most recent book of poetry is That Winter the Wolf Came. She teaches in the MFA Programs at the University of Arkansas and the Institute of American Indian Arts. She is also the author of the story collection From the Hilltop. An NEA Creative Writing Fellowship recipient in 2020, Jensen's essays have appeared in Orion, Catapult and Ecotone, among others. Toni Jensen is the author of Carry, a memoir-in-essays about gun violence, land and Indigenous women’s lives (Ballantine 2020). ![]() Malcolm Sen will moderate a conversation following the reading. Prose writer Toni Jensen and poet Juliana Spahr read from their work and discuss their commitment to art and climate activism. ![]()
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