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An Evening with Kenzie Allen

Wed, April 9, 2025 7:00 PM at RCAH Theater, Snyder-Phillips Hall, 361 Physics Rd, East Lansing

Part of our Witness Remember Resist: A Spring Poetry Festival

Presented in part by MSU Native American Institute (NAI)

 

Join us as we welcome Kenzie Allen for a poetry reading.

Reception and book signing to follow in the LookOut Gallery, 2nd floor, Snyder Hall.

 

Public parking is free after 6 p.m. in lot 9 (located across Physics Rd. from Snyder-Phillips Hall) and in non-metered spaces and spaces unmarked by permit signs around Snyder-Phillips Hall. Click here to view a detailed map including accessible parking and entrances.

 

 

Smiling woman with head tilted wearing yellow fringe earrings and blue top

Kenzie Allen is the author of Cloud Missives (Tin House, 2024). She is a Haudenosaunee poet and multimodal artist, and the recipient of a 92NY Discovery Prize, an inaugural James Welch Prize for Indigenous Poets, the 49th Parallel Award in poetry, broadside prizes from Sundress Publications and Littoral Press, and fellowships from Vermont Studio Center, Aspen Writers’ Foundation, and In-Na-Po (Indigenous Nations Poets). A finalist for the National Poetry Series, her poems have appeared in Poetry magazine, Boston ReviewNarrative magazine, Poetry Daily, Best New Poets, and other venues. She is a first-generation descendant of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin.

Kenzie’s most recent project is a multimodal book of poetry and creative ethnography that incorporates intergenerational histories and diasporic movements, Haudenosaunee traditions, and archival materials of the Carlisle Indian Boarding School. She received her PhD in English & Creative Writing from University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, her MFA in Poetry from the Helen Zell Writers’ Program at the University of Michigan, and her BA in Anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis. She is currently an Assistant Professor of English at York University, where her research centers on documentary and visual poetics, literary cartography, and the enactment of Indigenous sovereignties through creative works.