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About Jennifer Tseng Jennifer Tseng doesn’t remember much about her first poem. It was about a flying carpet. And imagination. And probably—like many of her early poems—it was about love, she remembers wistfully. A high school English teacher by the name of Mike Edwards (a female teacher, despite the name), encouraged Tseng to write her first poems. “She was the type of teacher who was always on the verge of getting fired,” Tseng remembers. “The administration didn’t like her, but the students loved her. She was unique. To me, it always seemed like she had another voice. And my writing has always seemed to me like that—like it has another voice.”
Mike Edwards entered her flying carpet poem in a contest, and Tseng won $100. The 33-yearold writer has come a long way since then, creatively speaking, and also in the size of her writing awards. Tseng, the first recipient of the $50,000 Gift of Freedom award from A Room of Her Own Foundation, is a writer, essayist, poet and teacher who recently completed her MFA and a draft of her first novel. The novel, Woo, is the imagined story of her father’s life as he immigrated from China to Taiwan and finally to the United States. She began work in February 2003 on a second book of poetry under the sponsorship of her $50,000 Gift of Freedom Award. The daughter of a German mother and a Taiwanese father, Tseng says both her parents—who met at a dance in Illinois—were artists in their youth. Her dad was a poet and writer; her mother was a painter. Today, Tseng’s sister is an artist and sculptor in New York. “I think my dad raised us to love the arts,” she says. “I think in China it’s more respectable to be artists, even if you don’t make money at it.” Just the same, both her parents gave up art careers for the sake of family and money. “It was pressing in that era to give up those things to do something practical,” she says. Her life as a writer began seriously after graduation from Colorado College with a series of residencies at writer’s colonies, including Syvenna Foundation, Cottages @ Hedgebrook and the MacDowell Colony. During those periods, Tseng completed her first poetry manuscript, The Man With My Face. Along the way she won several writing awards, including one for poetry. Her work has appeared most recently in Indiana Review, Massachusetts Review and Zyzzyva and is forthcoming in APA Journal, Artful Dodge, Barrow Street and Grand Street. Tseng received her Master’s degree in Asian American Studies from UCLA and went on to be a fiction fellow for two years at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts. She then enrolled in the MFA program at the University of Houston. She has lectured in Asian American Studies and English at UCLA and the University of Houston, respectively, and was the Spring 2003 Writer-in-Residence at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. Although she also writes some fiction and nonfiction, Tseng says her first love is poetry. Also an activist, she finds she is most comfortable as an “activist” when she expresses herself writer. For instance, she is part of a group called Poets Against The War and was scheduled to read her poem pushing peace at the White House for a Laura Bush poetry reading this winter, but that poetry reading was cancelled. Tseng plans to spend the two-year sponsorship under her Gift of Freedom grant working on a second book of poems, already titled Dark Logic. And the topics? Pretty much the same as they were 20 years ago, with a twist. “I still write about love and imagination,” she says. “From the beginning, what I’ve loved about poetry is the quality of intimacy. It’s like someone whispering in your ear.” Where her poetry differs from the flying-carpet era is perhaps where that intimate message is directed. “My newer poems have a broader scope. As opposed to a poem addressed to one person, I love poems lately that double as poems written for a century, or for a country. I have a friend who says the best love poems are love poems also written for God. That’s what I’m looking for.” |
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