Showing posts with label writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writer. Show all posts

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Queer saints on Huff Post! Interview with writer Noah Michelson

Noah Michelson

Queer saints are going mainstream with a major article at Huffington Post, a news website that gets more than 35 million visitors per month.

Joan of Arc and 9 Other ‘Queer’ Saints” by Noah Michelson was posted there this month for Christmas. It is a valuable overview with a slideshow of 10 queer saints (all names listed below).


Michelson introduces the concept of queer sainthood by saying, “While many would freely admit that most of the men and woman of yore were not gay or transgender as defined by our modern standards, they would assert that these people were involved in non-heteronormative relationships, presented non-traditional gender identities, or understood, approached, and complicated aspects of faith with relation to sexuality and/or gender identity.”

This week I interviewed Michelson, who is the editor of Gay Voices at Huffington Post. He received his MFA in Poetry from New York University and his poems have been featured in The New Republic, The Best American Erotic Poems: From 1800 to the Present, and other publications. Before joining the Huffington Post, Noah served as Senior Editor at Out magazine and he has also contributed to Details and served as a commentator for the BBC.

Kittredge Cherry: Why did you decide to write about queer saints?

Noah Michelson: I grew up in a strange environment as far as religion is concerned: I was raised half Jewish (my father), half Lutheran (my mother) and I attended Catholic school for 10 years.

So, I had a lot of religion -- and a lot of conflicting ideas -- coming at me from the very beginning.

I learned to love aspects of all three religions and I was obsessed with the saints when I was younger. There was something so simultaneously morbid and hopeful about their lives that mystified me.

So, that's part of the reason and the other part is that as someone who has a background in queer theory and queer activism, I think it's important to approach, understand, complicate, and re-appropriate history when and where possible in order to see ourselves.

So much of queer history has been deleted, bleached, and hidden and so a piece like the Queer Saints slideshow lets us (re)consider what it might mean for there to have been figures in history who were living what we might now call "queer lives."

KC: What reactions did you get from Huff Posts editors and readers?

NM: Many people found the piece incredibly intriguing and hadn't heard of queer saints before.

Some thought it was unfair to examine or classify these people's lives in this way as they didn't live "queer lives" as we understand them today.

And there were some who were offended by it.

However, to those people I ask what is offensive? The idea that religious figures could have been queer? I find _that_ to be offensive.

________
Click here to go to “Joan of Arc and 9 Other ‘Queer’ Saints” at HuffingtonPost.com

The 10 queer saints in the HuffPo slideshow are:
Joan of Arc
Wilgefortis/Uncumber
Sergius and Bacchus
Anselm of Canterbury
Apollinaria/Dorotheos
Alcuin Of Tours
Cardinal Newman
Julian of Norwich
Paulinus Of Nola
Symeon of Emesa and John

Most of these same saints are also covered in the LGBT Saints series by Kittredge Cherry at the Jesus in Love Blog. Saints, martyrs, mystics, heroes, holy people, deities and religious figures of special interest to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) and queer people and our allies are covered on appropriate dates throughout the year.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Wanted: LGBT-positive Christian poetry




An open and affirming Christian poetry contest is being sponsored by NuWine Press, an independent publishing company offering fresh perspectives on Christianity. The deadline is March 15 and winners will be featured in an upcoming book.

For the contest, NuWine Press is seeking poems and free verse about encounters with God from individuals disenfranchised by the Christian community. These “writers at the extremes of Christ's body “ may include Christ-followers of all races, denominations, genders, sexual orientations and socio-economic backgrounds, as well as those who may be physically and mentally challenged.

Aimee Maude Sims
NuWine Press was founded in 2007 by Aimee Maude Sims, a multimedia reporter and music writer. Her own writing embodies a playful, intelligent spirituality in which God embraces gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people. Watch her YouTube video above for her wonderful poem “Come Claim Me Jesus” said to her own music.

Her wit and spirit also sparkle in her recent essay “ Top 10 ways we know God loves gay people.” It includes such gems as “LBGT = Loved By God Truly!”

Sims’ award-winning work has appeared in The New York Times, USA Today, The Associated Press and international papers. She holds a B.S. In Political Science and Urban Affairs from Barnard College, and a M.S. In Journalism from The Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. She also completed studies in web design at Medger Evers College.

For more info on the NuWine poetry contest, visit nuwinepress.com.

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Friday, July 09, 2010

Invite your friends to visit our blog

Please invite your friends to visit this blog, sign up for our newsletter, and befriend us on Facebook. More people need to hear that God loves all people, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity.

We’re looking for new friends who are:
  • Gay, lesbian, bisexual, trans, queer or allies
  • Spiritual
  • Artists and art lovers
  • Writers and book lovers

Invite a Friend Month begins today at the Jesus in Love Blog. So take action, right now!

*Share this blog with your friends using the share button.

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* Suggest Facebook friends for Kittredge Cherry, who runs this blog. Here’s how: Find us on Facebook and use the “suggest friends for Kittredge” link on the lower left. 


*Invite your friends to our Newsletter Archive. They can see past newsletters and join our list for a free subscription.  If you don’t get our newsletter yet, please join our list now.


Please make a special effort to invite GLBT artists and writers with spiritual interests. Many of them get discouraged because there doesn’t seem to be a “market” for LGBT spiritual art. Our goal is to match these artists with the people who want to see their work

By supporting the Jesus in Love Blog, you also support the artists and writers who do LGBT spiritual work. More people here will mean more friends for you, too. We’ll have more comments, more news tips and build a stronger community

We’re expecting a breakthrough. For example, the Jesus in Love Newsletter has 494 subscribers. When we hit 500 subscribers, our annual fee will go up from $210 to $336 per year -- and we will pay the same amount until we reach 2,500 subscribers.

Thank you! We appreciate your friendship and your help in building an online community that supports LGBT spirituality and the arts. As the Bible says in 1 John 4:7, “Dear friends, let us love one another, for love comes from God.”