Gabrielle Brant Freeman

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Fierce Friday: Celestine Davis

April 17, 2020 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in blog, Fierce Friday, poetry

“I want [people] to understand that it is everyone’s responsibility to be visionaries and socio-political activists to engage, instruct, and inspire our communities to become better. Age, occupation, education, or income level should not limit one’s sense of responsibility to help create a better world.” Celestine Davis

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April 17, 2020 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, fierce women, Fierce Friday, activism, visionary, NC Poetry Society
blog, Fierce Friday, poetry

Fierce Friday: Cassie Premo Steele

April 10, 2020 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry, blog

“ This year, as we stay home and dig deeper into the earth, I am writing in a way that allows me to say things as if they were the last things I would say.” Cassie Premo Steele

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April 10, 2020 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, poet, ecofeminist, novelist, TEDx, Fierce Friday, fierce women
Fierce Friday, poetry, blog

Fierce Friday: Glenis Redmond

March 02, 2018 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry

"I am passionate about dismantling racism: one-on-one, creatively and systemically. It is systemic. It will take all of us to defeat this man-made design." Glenis Redmond

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March 02, 2018 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
Glenis Redmond, poetry, poems, fierce women, what my hand say, Road Warrior Poet
Fierce Friday, poetry

Fierce Friday: Malaika King Albrecht

February 23, 2018 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry

"If someone hit me on the head with a frying pan, no one would confuse that with cooking. And damn sure no one would ask me if I enjoyed the meal..."

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February 23, 2018 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, poets, Heart of Pamlico Poet Laureate, Rocking Horse Ranch, Malaika King Albrecht, Press 53, Main Street Rag, Fierce Friday, women's rights, strong women, #resist
Fierce Friday, poetry

Fierce Friday: Jasmine Farrell

June 09, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry

"My aim is to let us black women know that we have value, worth, and a voice that is just as imperative as everyone else." Jasmine Farrell

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June 09, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, poet, #poetsofinstagram, Jacar Press
Fierce Friday, poetry

Fierce Friday: Jessica Jacobs

June 02, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry

"I have two hopes: the first is that queer readers can see a different part of their lives reflected [in my poems], and the second is that straight readers can read these queer poems and, just as I did with the poems of straight writers, find themselves there, as well." Jessica Jacobs

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June 02, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, Jessica Jacobs, poet, Four Way Books
Fierce Friday, poetry

Fierce Friday: Nickole Brown

May 26, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry

"[T]he crux of what I’m seeking is a continuation of what I’ve always done—using poetry to attempt to find words for those who have no voice of their own, to try to save stories that don’t have a language, at least not a kind of language with access to the kind of words that will save it in this world." Nickole Brown

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May 26, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
Nickole Brown, poetry, Fanny Says, Koko
Fierce Friday, poetry

Fierce Friday: Rhonda Browning White

May 19, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, fiction

"An MFA is not required to be a good writer, nor is it necessary for publication, but it opens so many doors; not only in a networking sort of way, but in one’s own mind. It absolutely changed my writing—and my life—for the better." Rhonda Browning White

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May 19, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
short story, Hospital Drive, Leslie Pietrzyk, Julia Frank, West Virginia, Appalachia, writing
Fierce Friday, fiction

Fierce Friday: Jennifer Thielen

March 17, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday

"One of the underlying principles that guides my moral framework is the inherent worth and dignity of every person.  That means that people don’t have to meet some kind of threshold, they don’t have to look like me, think like me or worship like me in order to gain their worth, it is part of them just because they exist." Jennifer Thielen

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March 17, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
Jennifer Thielen, Fierce Friday, Universalist Unitarian, Unitarian Universalist, Crossfit, women's rights, LGBTQIA
Fierce Friday

Fierce Friday: Julie Marie Wade

March 10, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday

"I want the next generation to grow up embracing feminism as a word and concept--women, trans-people, and men alike.  I believe in the intersectional ideals of third-wave feminism--the need for all civil rights movements to collaborate with each other, to build strong coalitions." Julie Marie Wade

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March 10, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
Julie Marie Wade, poetry, essay, feminism, third-wave feminism, same-sex marriage
Fierce Friday
Comment

Fierce Friday: Leslie Pietrzyk

March 03, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, fiction

"It seems sort of crazy to say that my proudest accomplishment is being stubborn. But without stubbornness (or its kinder cousin, perseverance) I can’t imagine that anything I value having achieved would have come about." Leslie Pietrzyk

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March 03, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
fiction, Leslie Pietrzyk, writing, Fierce Friday, strong women, This Angel on My Chest
Fierce Friday, fiction
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Fierce Friday: Mel Sherrer

February 24, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry

"[I]t is refreshing to me to listen to [...] screaming examples of women’s voices in action. It reminds me that women have been creating discourse around the realities of sexism and other atrocities for as long as we have existed." Mel Sherrer

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February 24, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, fishing, largemouth bass, Mel Sherrer, Converse, women, feminism
Fierce Friday, poetry

Fierce Friday: Margaret Bauer

February 17, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday

"People think I’m outspoken, but I have nothing on [Dorothy Scura]. The best lesson she taught me was to support other women." Margaret Bauer

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February 17, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
North Carolina Literary Review, NCLR, Margaret Bauer, Scarlett O'Hara, creative non-fiction, Fierce Friday, strong women
Fierce Friday

Fierce Friday: Sarah Cooper

February 10, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry

"There isn’t one milestone that I am most proud of.  However, something that I am grateful for is that I don’t fear change." Sarah Cooper

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February 10, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, Crossfit, Tiger Town, Sarah Cooper, feminism, activism
Fierce Friday, poetry
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poet Denise Duhamel

poet Denise Duhamel

Fierce Friday: Denise Duhamel

February 03, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in Fierce Friday, poetry

"I grew up on that kind of [second wave] feminism and thought, with Hillary in the White House, I would be in the zeitgeist.  Little did I know I would instead be part of the resistance." Denise Duhamel

Six years ago, I met poet Denise Duhamel at the Pine Crest Inn in Tryon, NC. It was my first residency for my MFA, and I was nervous and a little afraid. This was it; I was either a writer, or I wasn't. Denise taught me to trust my instincts, but to also actively think about them. She taught me to be brave in my writing by being brave in her own. I would not be the poet I am today without this wonderful, fierce woman.


Out of all of your accomplishments, what are you most proud of and why?

That is a hard question, but I would say I am most proud that I “stuck to my (poetic and therefore metaphorical) guns” and didn’t give up on poetry when so many rejections kept coming.  I went to school (both undergrad and grad) with extremely talented classmates who, for one reason or another, stopped writing poetry.  There is no judgment as many have gone on to have happy lives outside of literature.  I just knew that, for me, writing was my way of being in this world.


What are you currently working on? How long have you been working on it? How did you become interested in it/ where did you get the idea for it? 

My new book Scald is out any day. My last book Blowout was so personal that I wanted to leap into something else.  The book is arranged into three sections dedicated to Shulie Firestone, Andrea Dworkin, and Mary Daly—three controversial second wave feminists.  I grew up on that kind of feminism and thought, with Hillary in the White House, I would be in the zeitgeist.  Little did I know I would instead be part of the resistance.  The post-Scald poems seem to be about feminism and pop culture as well, but it’s too soon to tell what will develop.  Like so many others, I am writing about Trump and most recently cast him as a Legally Blond figure in “Lethally Orange.” 


What issue are you currently most passionate about? What is the one thing you would like people to know or understand about this issue?

I am constantly trying to articulate my views on feminism to people who think “humanism” is a better term, people who think I am a nag.  This is the first time in a long time that there are fewer women on the planet (some say because of China’s “one-child policy” and the preference for male heirs.)  In any case, this is a big problem—women live longer than men on average, so there should be more of us.  I truly believe that the feminization of culture could lend itself to a healing of the planet, especially when it comes to climate change.  


What book or film with a female protagonist would you recommend and why? What female author’s, artist’s, or musician’s work would you recommend and why?

Lisa Glatt’s novel The Nakeds is a hilarious and poignant take on what it is to be female child in a body cast with a mother who joins a nudist colony.  

I absolutely love the film Blue is the Warmest Color in which there is a beautiful and sexy teenager who actually eats two bowls of pasta. 

As for musicians—Margaret Cho’s “I Wanna Kill My Rapist” is terrific. 

As for poetry, Amy Newman’s re-writing of Howl is simply brilliant.  

Aria Watson, only 18, has done a photo series of women using Trump’s own misogynist words.


Name one woman who has influenced you/ had an impact on you, perhaps as a mentor. Why and how did she impact your life? 

My friend and collaborator, the poet Maureen Seaton, is a woman who lives with integrity and grace.  She was “ahead” of me in terms of publishing and poetic maturity when we first met in 1987, but she always treated me as an equal.  She and I talk endlessly about feminism and poetry and social justice through literature.  She is often fearless when I am afraid—and has always believed in me, even when I didn’t truly believe in myself.  She is a shining example of Poet!

 

February 03, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, Denise Duhamel, second wave feminism, feminism, Maureen Seaton
Fierce Friday, poetry
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Fierce Friday: Suzanne Cleary

January 27, 2017 by Gabrielle Brant Freeman in poetry, Fierce Friday

"Following your own vision is political, and it is vital. Write what you must write, I say." Suzanne Cleary

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January 27, 2017 /Gabrielle Brant Freeman
poetry, Suzanne Cleary, women, poet, interview, feminism, writing
poetry, Fierce Friday

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